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Slow Hand Luke. Debbi RawlinsЧитать онлайн книгу.

Slow Hand Luke - Debbi  Rawlins


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       Slow Hand Luke

       Debbi Rawlins

      

www.millsandboon.co.uk

      Contents

      Chapter 1

      Chapter 2

      Chapter 3

      Chapter 4

      Chapter 5

      Chapter 6

      Chapter 7

      Chapter 8

      Chapter 9

      Chapter 10

      Chapter 11

      Chapter 12

      Chapter 13

      Chapter 14

      Chapter 15

      Chapter 16

      Chapter 17

      Epilogue

      Coming Next Month

       1

      A NOTHER SUNNY SPRING day in Brooklyn. The punks would be out in full force. Annie Corrigan sighed as she stared out the small square window from the office she shared with three other cops. One more report to write and then she’d be out there, arguing with her partner over their cruiser’s temperature controls.

      Her phone rang and she had to stifle a yawn before answering. “Sergeant Corrigan.”

      “Hey, baby, it’s me.”

      She closed her eyes, her chest tightening. “What do you want?”

      “Is that any way to speak to—”

      “Don’t tell me.” Her voice started to rise and she quickly lowered it. “You’ve been arrested again.”

      “Look, Annie, I was going to call you last week, maybe buy you some dinner, but I got busy. You know how it is.”

      Nothing changed. Nothing ever changed. Did he really expect her to believe more of his lies? “I told you not to call me at work.”

      “See, the thing is, baby, I did get in a small scrape. But I swear to you, this time it wasn’t my fault.”

      She shook her head. It never was. “I have to go.”

      “Come on, baby, you aren’t going to leave me locked up for the weekend.”

      “See you around, Pop,” she said, and hung up.

      She stared at the phone for a long time, anger and resentment burning in her gut. The guilt that crept in made her even angrier and she had to force herself to breathe. How many times had she bailed him out? Used her hard-earned money or called in one too many favors? When had he ever been there for her? All he’d done was lie. About Annie’s mother. About everything.

      “Monday’s the deadline and you haven’t done squat.” Lisa dragged a chair closer to Annie’s cluttered gray metal desk and adjusted her holster and gun before planting herself in Annie’s face. “What’s up with that?”

      “Not now, okay?”

      Lisa’s blue eyes clouded with concern. “What’s wrong?”

      Annie started to shake her head although she knew better. She knew Lisa—her best friend, the sister she never had and an incredibly pushy broad. “It was Larry.”

      “In jail again?”

      “Yep.”

      “Forget him.”

      Annie sighed. “Yep.”

      “Don’t you dare feel guilty.”

      “Me? Hell, no. I’m not the parent. He’s the one who screwed up.” Except she did feel guilty, because she hated and loved him at the same time. Especially hated him for her longing for family and love that she couldn’t quite shake. “Let’s talk about something else.”

      Lisa hesitated, obviously wanting to belabor the moot point, however her face brightened. “Like the detectives exam?”

      Annie stared at her friend. Another annoying issue. “I haven’t decided to take it yet.”

      “Why not? You’d ace it.”

      “It’s the cool uniform. I don’t want to give it up.”

      Lisa laughed. “Yeah, guys think we’re hot.”

      Annie smiled wryly. Guys either really got off on the whole uniform thing, or they ran the other way. Not much happened in between. Which left Annie with going to the movies on Friday nights with Lisa and playing softball with the whole gang at the neighborhood park on Saturday mornings.

      “I like where I am.” Comfortable. Familiar. Safe. Everything Annie wanted in life. “What’s the big deal, anyway?”

      “Ah, gee, let me think about it. Hmm, what sounds better…Sergeant Corrigan…Detective Corrigan? Not to mention a huge pay raise.” She gave Annie a flat look and then her trademark nasal, “Hel-lo.” Loud enough that the few officers still hanging around the precinct turned to look at them.

      “Why aren’t you taking the exam?” Annie asked.

      “And embarrass my father? I barely made sergeant. I couldn’t even pass that the first time.”

      Old argument. Useless to say anything. Annie had never figured out Lisa’s lack of confidence. Sure, her dad was a decorated police captain, but he and Mrs. O’Brien were encouraging and understanding, the kind of great parents every kid dreamed of. Annie knew firsthand, since she’d lived with them for half her teen years.

      Of course, Great Aunt Marjorie had always been there for Annie, a shoulder to lean on, someone who always listened without judgment—mostly from long distance. She lived on a small ranch in Texas where Annie had spent a few summers when she was little.

      “Seriously, Annie, you’d be crazy not to go for it. Sanders and Jankowski are both taking the exam.” Lisa didn’t bother to lower her voice when she added, “Those morons can barely spell. You’ve seen their reports. A fifth-grader could do better.”

      “Lisa.” Annie glanced around, hoping no one overheard, although everyone in the precinct pretty much felt the same way about the pair. “Look, you like being a beat cop, so why can’t you understand that I like being a beat cop, too?”

      “Because I know you better than that.”

      Annie made a point of checking her watch. “Your shift started three minutes ago.”

      Lisa gathered her dark blond hair back into a ponytail and secured it while getting to her feet. “Who’s supposed to make dinner?”

      “Why do you always ask that when it’s your turn?”

      Lisa grinned. “Just in case you forgot.”

      “O’Brien. This isn’t a day at the spa.” Rick Thomas, Lisa’s partner, motioned impatiently.

      Lisa motioned back. It wasn’t nice. Then she turned once more to Annie. “I’ll probably bring home takeout tonight.”

      “Not cheeseburgers again, please.”

      “Fine.”

      Annie watched Lisa go, looking trim and sharp in her crisp blue uniform. Lisa was one of those disgusting women who ate anything yet never gained an ounce. And it was tough being her roommate because she tended to bring home junk food that was hard to resist.

      Annie got up for more coffee, weaving between the desks that crowded the room, and trying not to yawn as she passed Captain Hansen’s office. After working nights for almost five years, it was hard to get used to the day shift. But she needed the


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