Warning: one dirty-talking detective and one feisty crime lab technician collide in the second installment to the sizzling NOLA Heart series! Mixing business with pleasure just got a little hotter down in the Big Easy ...
Nathan Danvers has cultivated a certain, sexy reputation among the ladies in New Orleans. As an ex-marine and current homicide detective for the New Orleans P.D., Nathan is just fine with being the guy women take home to bed, but not the guy they take home to mom. It’s exactly what he wants--until he spots the black-haired beauty, Jade.
Jade Harper is over men. After four years too many with her ex, she’s ready for a fresh start. Goodbye Miami; hello New Orleans. Everything is perfect, including her new job with the NOPD--until she meets Nathan Danvers. Jade isn’t looking for Mr. Right--hell, she’s not even looking for Mr. Right Now--but this hot cop has a way of blurring the lines between lust and love. Will he tempt her to take a chance? Or will the shadows lingering in Nathan's dark eyes prove that some closely guarded secrets are better left hidden?
CHAPTER ONE
MIAMI, FLORIDA
Jade Harper was over Miami. She was over her waitressing gig. And she was most definitely over men.
Not particularly in that order, though.
Unfortunately, there was one person who did not feel the same.
Her mother swept into the bedroom just as she stuffed a handful of socks into her suitcase. With the dramatic flair of a telenovela star, Lucia Margarita Tomás Harper collapsed onto the bed and exclaimed, “Mi vida, mi querida, why must you leave us?”
The short answer to that question was that Jade was ready for a fresh start. She was tired of being the predictable Harper daughter (Rita, the eldest, was a celebrity hair stylist in Hollywood, and Sammie, the youngest, was an aspiring fashion designer). Unlike her sisters, Jade was a little less Project Runway and a little more Dateline. And, until now, she’d always done what was expected of her—date the right man, work a boring job, live at home.
Jade moved to the side, accidentally striking her foot against the suitcase. She bit back a curse. Nestled at the bottom were four forensic pathology textbooks—her true passion. The crime lab technician job with the New Orleans Police Department was just the start up the ladder.
But there wouldn’t be a ladder if she didn’t get out of Miami or if she got back together with John Thomas, whom she’d dumped last week . . . while he’d been down on bended knee.
The proposal had come, with John Thomas flicking lint off his pant leg and Marc Antony singing in the background. Candles flickered throughout the room, and sweat began to gather between Jade’s boobs, as was the curse of all women bedeviled with too much cleavage.
“Marry me?”
If John Thomas had stopped there, she might have fallen prey to the same guilt that had trapped her to him for years. Guilt that she might once again disappoint her mother, who adored John Thomas and who thought snagging him was Jade’s biggest life accomplishment. Guilt that she’d wasted four years on a man to whom she felt no deep connection.
Except that as John Thomas waxed on with all the speed of a sloth—and, more importantly, as her boob sweat verged on becoming the next Great Lake—Jade had a vision of herself at the ripe old age of eighty.
And she didn’t like it one bit.
When John Thomas rounded up all the reasons they should marry, starting and ending with the fact that he was rich, Jade did what any girl would do when pressed between a rock and a hard place. She downed the rest of her wine for fortitude, recalling the fact that she was Jade Lucia Harper and that she had dreams, too, and said, “I’m sorry, but I don’t think that’s for the best.”
The proposal had been the kick in the butt she’d needed to make a major change with her life, even if she was throwing her mother into a tailspin as a result of it.
“Ma,” Jade said as she snagged a pair of underwear from her laundry basket, “I’m not abandoning you.”
“But, querida, you can’t leave—John Thomas wants to propose!”
Lucia clapped a hand over her mouth at the same time an all-too-familiar voice exclaimed, “When were you going to tell me that you broke up with John Thomas?”
Thong still clutched in hand, Jade watched in horror, panic, and something that felt undeniably like relief, as her younger sister burst into the bedroom with the force of a hurricane.
Sammie’s dark brown eyes, so similar to Jade’s, dropped to the pink thong as she skidded to a halt. “How many times do I have to tell you? Thongs are so 2007.”
As Lucia straightened slowly from the bed, Jade busied herself with shoving the thong in the mesh part of the suitcase.
Don’t make eye contact, don’t make eye contact, don’t make eye contact.
“What does your sister mean, you broke up with John Thomas?” Lucia demanded in that soft-toned, maddening way that only mothers knew how to make sound threatening. Where “do you want me to get mad?” suddenly took on the edge of, “if you pull your sister’s hair one more time, I will personally ensure you three hours of misery.”
Jade met her sister’s apologetic gaze and sighed. “I wasn’t happy.”
Lucia’s eyes narrowed. “You were happy, mi vida. You and he went to Mexico last year! You swam with los delfines.”
Because swimming with dolphins equated to happiness with a man. Jade bit her lip. Actually, she’d had fun in Mexico, but she’d gone without her boyfriend. A “work emergency” had popped up last second and John Thomas had urged Jade to go on the trip anyway.
“Take Sammie with you,” he’d told her over the phone, just before the line went dead.
Once again, Jade met her sister’s gaze, and this time Sammie looked on the verge of vomiting. This is all my fault, her brown eyes read.
Jade hoped Sammie read her own gaze loud and clear: You owe me.
Sammie nodded. Understood.
“It’s for the best, really,” Jade tried again. “The relationship wasn’t really growing, and with me moving . . . it was just time.”
And it definitely isn’t heading to Orgasm-ville, of which I’ve visited a grand total of zero times with him.
On that note, she nudged her suitcase with her foot. Tucked away with the books was also her vibrator, and she prayed that her mother wouldn’t decide to go snooping around. Because that was what Lucia did—snoop. The woman was practically a professional.
“Please, mi querida, think this over.” Lucia stood, reaching for Jade’s hands with desperation pinching her expression. “John Thomas is perfect for you. Who else will love you the way he does?”
Her mother may not have meant the words as an insult, but Jade heard them for what they were: who will love you, for all of your weirdness and your faults, if not him?
Predictable. Weird. That was her calling card.
Jade slipped her hands from her mother’s grasp. “I’ll be all right.”
“I should kick your papi out,” Lucia muttered grumpily. “He shouldn’t have gone behind my back to his friend.”
“Don’t be mad at Dad. That ‘friend’ pulled some strings and landed me a job that’s the first step to the dream one. If anything, send Mr. Cartwell some of your flan as a thank you.”
“Gracias, but no. I will not thank the man for taking away my daughter.”
From her perch on Jade’s bed, Sammie said, “Jade wants to be on her own, Ma. She doesn’t want to be tied to a man.”
In theory, Sammie’s comment should have gone unnoticed. In theory, it should not have been even a blimp on the Harper matriarch’s radar. But it was too little too late that Jade saw exactly where her mother’s whirling mind went, and by the time she opened her mouth to right her sister’s wrong, Lucia was rushing toward her.
Tripping over the luggage . . .
And somehow upending Jade’s pink vibrator from the depth of her suitcase and onto the hardwood floor, where it rolled to a stop just before her mother’s horrified face. Lucia Margarita Harper was a product of her conservative Cuban upbringing—there was very little doubt in Jade’s mind that her mother even knew what a vibrator was.
Except that frequently women used vibrators on other women.
If there was ever a moment for sororicide, this was it.
“Ma, I can explain. I’m not—”
But then something weird happened—slowly, Lucia lifted herself up onto her elbows and met Jade’s gaze head on.
She couldn’t say for certain if her mother’s speculative glance was the direct cause, but Jade felt her girl parts clench in warning. Possibly fear. Definitely wariness. Since the girls downstairs had done something similar at the sight of John Thomas dropping down to one knee, her gut told her to run.
Nothing good had come of the proposal—except, obviously, that the proposal had led to their breakup—and nothing good would come of that look on her mother’s face. She’d seen it once before, years ago when Jade had walked right into a matchmaking setup.
The result?
John Thomas.
The world was a cruel, cruel place.
“Ma,” Jade began slowly, “whatever you’ve got in your head, stop thinking it.”
And then life, in perfectly imperfect harmony, brought forth the one person Jade did not want to see.
She heard his heavy footfalls thundering up the stairs before she heard his deep baritone. Out of breath, her ex braced his hands on the doorway.
“Jade, babe, you can’t go like this.” Another heaving breath—this one crackled as if his lungs might implode. John Thomas wasn’t out of shape, necessarily, but he preferred to do his ball-busting from behind the safety of his desk. “I love you, babe. You’ve got to take me back.”
Before she even had the opportunity to open her mouth, Lucia was there, still on the suitcase with the pink vibrator within reach, exclaiming, “You’re too late, mi hijo. Jade is a lesbian now.”
John Thomas’ hazel eyes swerved to Jade, wide and unblinking as his mouth dropped open.
Maybe Jade should have explained the miscommunication.
Maybe she should have explained that she would like sex with a guy as much as the next heterosexual girl, if only she’d had the chance to experience good, non-boring sex for once in her life.
Maybe she should have, but Jade didn’t.
Instead she jumped on the Crazy Bandwagon, held on tight with two hands, and flashed her most sympathetic smile at her ex. “I’m so sorry it had to come out this way.”
Pun intended.
And now? Well, now Jade was going to New Orleans as a free woman. So, this was what success felt like.
CHAPTER TWO
NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA
“Danvers! In my office. Now.”
At Lieutenant Josh Cartwell’s booming baritone, Nathan Danvers’ balls shriveled like he’d dipped them into a bucket of ice.
“What does L-T want with you?” Nathan’s coworker and best friend, Brady Taylor, asked from one desk over. Recently, Brady had been promoted from homicide detective to sergeant, and although he’d been given leave to take his own office, he still preferred to slum it with the rest of them plebeians.
“Hell if I know,” Nathan muttered as he set his desktop to sleep mode. “Ever think that maybe I’m the favorite around here?”
“If by favorite you mean you’re Cartwell’s bitch, then yes.” Brady went for his cup of office coffee. Nathan preferred Starbucks on principle alone, preferably one of those frothy concoctions with chocolate shavings on the top.
“I bet you don’t speak to Shaelyn like that,” he said, referring to Brady’s girlfriend, who would no doubt rise to fiancée status any day now. The two of them were ridiculously in love, and Nathan often felt the urge to coo at them whenever they were all together, just as often as he desperately wanted to tell them to get a room.
Brady raised his coffee mug to his mouth. “Not if I want to keep getting laid, I don’t.”
He wouldn’t speak to Shaelyn like that even if she wasn’t putting out, and they both knew it.
Still . . . “How am I supposed to wake up each morning knowing you constantly spurn my advances?”
“Advances?” Brady snorted into his mug. “It’s just not the right time, dude.”
Falling into the same rhythm they’d adopted since meeting a little over a year ago on the job, Nathan put a hand to his chest and mock-gasped. “You’re just another shit-eating jerk, who—”
“Danvers. Where the hell are you?”
“Jesus H. Mary, I’ll be right there.” Nathan gathered his files, shoved them in the top drawer of his desk, and pointed a finger at his best friend. “No commentary from the peanut gallery.”
“Yeah, yeah, yeah,” Brady grumbled good-naturedly. But as Nathan turned to head for Cartwell’s office, the peanut gallery added, “Let me know if you’re going to be pushing papers for the rest of the day.”
Nathan indiscreetly showed him the bird behind his back.
Much as he hated to admit it, somehow he’d fallen into the role of desk officer. Sometimes he thought back over the years, about the two tours of duty he’d done in the Middle East as a marine. About coming back home to a city that hadn’t felt like home any longer, even as he’d visited the same bars, the same grocery stores, the same everything. For the two years after being honorably discharged from the USMC and before joining the NOPD, he’d lived an aimless life where very little had meant very much.
Getting on the NOPD should have alleviated the bleakness coating his soul—and maybe it would have, had he been allowed to actually do his job as opposed to being made to feel like a charity case every time he clocked in.
He paused outside the lieutenant’s door, struggling with the urge to just say, “fuck it,” and head out to work.
“That better be you lollygagging, Danvers.”
Nathan swallowed his frustration and thrust the door open. “You’re showing your age again, L-T. No one has said the word ‘lollygagging’ since Armstrong reached the moon in 1969.” He kicked the door closed behind him with the heel of his boot and made himself at home in the chair that might as well have had his name engraved on the back, he sat in it so often.
Better yet, maybe he should just piss on it and claim it as territory. Show it who was boss.
Nathan interlaced his fingers over his stomach and stared at the man who’d gotten him into this shitty position in the first place. “So, what’s going on today, Dad? Anything special you need me to take care of? Running errands for you? Scrubbing toilets with my toothbrush, maybe?”
Joshua Cartwell had married Nathan’s mother, Beth, just after Nathan’s seventeenth birthday. He’d never been one of those kids to beg for a father figure—he’d had a father, and Nathan was much more of the ‘been there, done that’ mindset.
You tended to get that way when your father was a raging alcoholic who liked to push his wife around, and then got started on his children.
Even though Nathan had never begged for Dad 2.0, he was thankful that his mom had met the love of her life. That Beth’s “love of her life” was also the cold son of a gun seated across the desk from him was just one of life’s funny ironies.
Cartwell and Nathan had never been close, but the distance between stepfather and stepson had truly escalated after Nathan got on the force. Everything had been fine during his early days as a P-1 patrolman—hell, Nathan had never even seen the old man save for Sunday family dinners. But then a slot had opened up in the homicide department and Nathan had wanted it bad.
So badly, that he’d made one fatal mistake: asking Joshua Cartwell to pull a little leverage.
If Nathan had the ability to time travel, he’d look his younger self in the face, hogtie the bastard to a chair, and stop him from ever knocking on Cartwell’s office door. Because nothing, nothing, was worse than your stepfather limiting your ability to do your job. Nathan understood that Brady had made the paper-pushing comment as a joke, because their friendship was founded on trash talk, but the same couldn’t be said for some of his coworkers.
If they ever found out that he was Lieutenant Cartwell’s stepson?
He might as well kiss his career good-bye.
“Are you done?” Cartwell asked stonily. “I have something to discuss with you.”
You always have something to discuss with me.
Swallowing the hot retort, he cleared his throat. He’d learned early on that silence was best—when he managed to keep his big mouth shut, that is.
The old man leaned back in his desk chair and crossed his arms over his chest. Despite being in his late fifties, Josh Cartwell was as robust and athletic as a man half his age. The only sign of aging was his thinning gray hair, and the fact that a pair of glasses sat perched on his nose.
“I know it’s Thursday, but we’re having a guest over for dinner and I’d like for you to be there.”
Nathan didn’t miss the unspoken words: Your mother would like for you to be there.
Thursday nights were usually dedicated to volunteering at the local V.A., not that he expected Josh to know that. Nathan wasn’t exactly forthcoming about his work with veterans. He didn’t want to hear the compliments for helping a fellow vet or see the interest spike when the speaker inevitably asked about Nathan’s time spent overseas, as though they secretly hoped that something horrendous had happened to him, so they could hear the gory details. Nathan wasn’t interested in spilling anything, gory or otherwise.
He tilted his head. “Who’s the special guest?”
“Old buddy of mine—you don’t know him.” Cartwell’s gaze lost its focus as he stared at something behind Nathan. Then, quick as a shot rifle, Cartwell looked his way. “His girl was looking to get out of Miami.”
“You helped his girlfriend leave him? Now that’s a friendship.” Nathan said it so flippantly that to anyone else his comment would have elicited a good laugh.
Cartwell’s mouth didn’t so much as twitch. “His daughter, Danvers. I’m not stealing the man’s wife.”
“Ah. That makes more sense.”
“I’d hope so, considering I’m married to your mother.”
The pause that followed signaled Cartwell’s expectation that Nathan might feel compelled to make another asinine comment, but no, he’d reached his quota. Not to mention that Beth and Josh were a great match. Even if Nathan wasn’t the man’s number one fan professionally, he wouldn’t wish anything less for his mother than a man who loved her as much as her second husband did.
“Are you going to ask me why she’s here?”
Nathan lifted his shoulders. “I figure you’re about thirty seconds away from telling me yourself.”
“Do you ever lay off the sarcasm?”
“Not on Thursdays.”
Cartwell’s brows lifted, revealing for the first time that emotion existed beneath the gruff exterior. Nathan shifted in his chair. “So, you want me to go to this dinner. Am I supposed to bring flowers? Is she old—how does she feel about scratch tickets?”
If looks could kill, Nathan would already be filleted, skewered, and smoking on the grill.
“You’re not dating her, Danvers.” Cartwell’s gaze dipped to Nathan’s work shirt, which was still lightly creased despite two go-rounds through the dryer. The disapproval in the older man’s eyes could have been etched in stone, it was so clear.
“Okay, no flowers. No scratch tickets. Why do I need to be there again?”
“It’s her first time in N’Orleans. I’m assigning you to be her personal tour guide. Show her around. Share some of that . . . great personality of yours with her. She doesn’t know anyone, and your mother told me you need more friends.”
Nathan winced. He had friends. They were, however, mostly of the one-night-stand variety. “I’m not lonely,” he muttered. He liked his life just fine. Really. Though maybe he should cut back on hanging out with Brady and Shaelyn. They were so damn affectionate that they’d make Hugh Hefner rethink monogamy, and, lately, Nathan had started to think insane thoughts. Insane, maybe I should try dating, thoughts. Okay, so maybe he did need a new friend or two—outside of the bedroom, that is.
“I’m going with a woman’s intuition on this one,” Cartwell said.
“Fine.” Nathan dropped his elbows to the desk. “Just spit it out, Josh. I’m her babysitter but not her date. I’m just gonna pretend it’s because she’s got the face of a bulldog and the voice of a Chihuahua, and deep down inside you don’t want to do that to me.”
“She got a job with crime lab,” Cartwell said, completely ignoring Nathan’s side commentary. Per usual. “You’ll probably run into her in the field. Take her out. Show her around. Make her comfortable—but not that comfortable, ya heard?”
Yeah, Nathan “heard” all right. “You got her that job with the lab, didn’t you.”
Cartwell’s expression didn’t crack. “That’s classified information.”
“So, yes.”
“What do you think ‘classified’ means?”
“Hold on, let me think.” Nathan held up a finger, then snapped his middle and thumb together. “Oh, yeah—it means that nepotism isn’t dead.”
Cartwell’s brows furrowed so tightly together, each could have fused with the one next door. “It worked out well for you, didn’t it?”
The jury was still out on that one, but there was no reason to go down that particular road. “Can’t complain.”
“So, you’ll show her around?”
For the first time, Cartwell sounded uncertain and it was nice to be on the other side of the coin. But Josh had to know that Nathan would say yes—at the end of the day, Nathan was a “yes” man when it came to helping others, even if that meant he screwed himself over in the end. Didn’t mean that he couldn’t make his stepdad sweat a little bit.
He popped his ankle on his opposite knee and resumed his stance, lacing his fingers over his flat stomach.
“Danvers.” Cartwell’s tone was all impatience.
“Yeah?”
“Answer.”
And so, with a grin that he didn’t much feel, he said, “Don’t worry, L-T. I’ll be sure to show her the time of her life.”