Read Dangerous Waters Online

Authors: Toni Anderson

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Women Sleuths, #Romance, #Romantic Suspense, #Mystery & Suspense, #Suspense, #Series

Dangerous Waters (2 page)

BOOK: Dangerous Waters
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Holly Rudd stepped off the speedboat and looked around. Vancouver Island was the size of Scotland, but with a population of only three-quarters of a million people, most of whom where based in the provincial capital, Victoria. The rest were scattered among tiny outports and communities like this one—Bamfield, population one-hundred and fifty-five hardy, adventurous souls, according to the last census.

“You can’t moor that there.”

She looked the guy up and down. Surfer blond hair and bare feet. Rugged good looks and attitude to match. She dumped her bag at her feet and turned to the guy who’d ferried her over from Ucluelet. Tipped him fifty bucks. “Thanks for the ride.” He waved as he sped away.

She turned back to the dude who stood with arms crossed over his broad chest, radiating impatience and hostility. Sexy as hell. She was tired from lack of sleep, exhilarated by the thought of what the day might bring, but she sure as heck wasn’t blind.

“This is private property.” Blue eyes glittered. Pale hair glowed like white gold in the rays of the rising sun. Hot, tanned, gorgeous. Just her luck.

She raised a brow and checked her watch. “I’m meeting someone here.”

“Public dock is another minute that way.” He jerked his thumb down the inlet.

She smiled coolly. Twelve long years on the job and she was still dealing with macho bullshit. “Except someone’s dropping a car off for me
here
.” She pointed up at the Department of Fisheries and Oceans sign on the side of a large wooden building and started toward it.

He blocked her path. “There’s no one there today.”

She rocked back on her heels, let her eyes range over the square jaw and heated eyes. “You’re not very friendly.”

He didn’t crack a smile. “Not in my job description.”

Not in hers either, but she found smiles worked better than growls when gathering information.

His mouth pinched, then he backed off, relenting. “Tell me who you’re supposed to meet, and I’ll get someone to track them down.”

“Who are you?” She had a feeling she knew.

He blew out an impatient sigh. “Look, lady, I don’t have time for this—”

“Sergeant.”

“Excuse me?” Those pale brows formed a formidable line.

She held out a hand. “Sergeant Holly Rudd. I’m with the Vancouver Island Integrated Major Crime Unit.”

“You’re a Mountie?”

A proud member of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police by any other name. She nodded.

He stood stock still, nothing moving but the glitter in his eyes. Finally he sucked in a breath and shook her hand. “Nice uniform.”

She glanced down at her ragged old T-shirt, cutoffs, and thongs. “I was caught a little unprepared this morning, as I was officially on vacation. Thankfully, I always pack a uniform.” She tapped her bag with her foot, smiled widely, and watched his eyes grow a lot more friendly. And then they shifted straight back to suspicious as he realized she was cataloging his expressions like a facial analysis program. “And
you
are?”

“Finn Carver.”

Ah
. Her fingers tightened on his when he would have let go. “You called it in?”

“I did.” He forcibly disconnected her fingers.

“I’m going to need all the gear you wore last night and the other diver’s. Forensics will want to check it out.”

He regarded her with one of those silent, steady gazes people used when they wanted to argue but couldn’t. “I’ll need it back ASAP. I have a busy dive schedule this week.”

“You can use something else for a day or two, right? I’ll make sure they do a quick turnaround.” She needed this guy on her side.

The little time she’d had before the boat trip she’d used to pull up background information on the two guys who’d found the body. Finn Carver had been in the military. Right now he looked ready to go into combat. “Any chance the dive team arrived yet?” she asked.

“No. Their ETA is eleven o’clock. West Coast Marine Service had a call north of Prince Rupert last night. It’s going to take them a few hours to get back here. So far you’re it.” His eyes scraped her form. He didn’t look impressed. She should be insulted, but she worked best when people underestimated her.

“I want to check out the crime scene ASAP.”

His face gave away nothing but skepticism. Those arms crossed again over that muscular chest. Mouth pressed into a firm line. She let her eyes wander over him. He really was very attractive and absolutely untouchable. Knowing that gave her a distinct advantage.


You
can take me down,” she suggested.

He gave her one of those sideways glances. Not hostile. Not friendly. “Whoever is in charge of the investigation probably wouldn’t be very happy about that.”

“Me. I’m in charge. On the ground anyway.” Although she was the newest member of the major crime unit here on the island, she had plenty of experience. She let her grin reach her eyes this time. This was her first case as primary investigator in a murder investigation, and she didn’t usually have to work this hard to charm anyone. “I just helped solve a case down in Blaine.” RCMP, municipal, and FBI collaboration. A hell of a big deal. “Guy murdered his wife, dumped her in Semiahmoo Bay. We found enough evidence to prove he was lying and he confessed.” To her, at the end of a bloody knife. She rubbed the newly healed scar on her arm. “I’ve been working with forensic experts in Burnaby for some time, looking at decomp after seawater submergence.”

His lip started to thin. He was definitely not buying it.

“If you’re too scared to go back down there…”

He snorted and whirled away. “What am I, eight?”

“If you don’t take me down, I’ll find someone who will,” she called to his retreating back.

He stopped, tension stretching the muscles tight across his shoulder blades. “I thought people who found the bodies were suspects?”

Knowledgeable about police investigations
. Check. “At this stage, everyone’s a suspect, but I can take care of myself.”

A harsh sound was forced out of his mouth. “Just what a potential dive buddy wants to hear.” He swiveled back to her and moved so close she smelled his scent and felt his body heat. She held her ground, watching his nostrils flare. He was trying to intimidate, but she’d been a cop for over a decade, had grown up with cops. There wasn’t much she hadn’t seen or dealt with, and brawny guys with bad attitudes did not scare her. “This isn’t some macho pissing contest. Wreck diving is dangerous, especially at this sort of depth. Only experienced divers should be down there.”

“I can handle it.” Her voice was sharp. He wasn’t a pushover for female charm or pretty smiles. Perhaps proving she was damn good at her job would work instead.

He went to walk away, but she reached out to touch his arm.

“I have dive training.” She spoke softer this time. She’d learned to dive exactly so she could pursue this sort of investigation.

He paused, those eyes of his diamond hard. “Prove it.”

She let go of his arm and bent to pick up her bag. Unzipping the tote, she pulled out her brand-new PADI diving certificate. “I just completed the basic dive training yesterday.”

“Fortuitous.” He plucked the book from her fingers and flipped through it. “You did four open-water dives and think you’re ready for a thirty-meter wreck dive?” He shoved the book back in her hand and stalked away. “Not on your life, Sergeant Rudd.”

“I checked you out, Mr. Carver.”

“I bet you did.”

She followed him into a low-slung single-story building, the room full of tanks and neoprene. The desk overflowed with papers, keys, coffee mugs. Where was everyone? The place was quiet as a graveyard. He picked up the phone.

“I heard you’re the best dive instructor this side of the Pacific. If anyone can get me into that wreck, it’s you.”

“Getting you into the wreck wouldn’t be the problem.” His eyes flicked over her, unmoved by flattery. He started talking on the phone. “Johnny? Finn Carver here. I’ve got a woman called Holly Rudd claims she just completed a PADI course with you?”

It went silent, and Holly leaned against the doorway, straining to hear above the background sound of running water.

“What was she like under pressure? Think she could hold her own on a thirty-meter wreck dive?”

She watched his face, trying to gauge the answers, but his impassive features gave nothing away.

“Would you trust her with your life?” The reply made Finn smile. “That’s what I figured. Talk to you later.” He hung up.

“What did he say?” She could have kicked herself for asking.

He stared at her, then bent down and started filling an air cylinder. “You don’t want to know.”

Her eyes widened despite her efforts to conceal her emotions. “Well, it won’t be anything I haven’t heard before.” She lived in a man’s world and never forgot the fact, but she was done playing games. “Are you taking me down or not? So far we’ve only got your and Professor Edgefield’s word a body even exists. And even if there’s a body, it doesn’t mean it’s a homicide.”

He snorted. “Trust me, it’s a homicide.”

This was her first murder as lead investigator, and she would not be thwarted. Checking out the crime scene with the body still in place was imperative, as long as she didn’t contaminate the scene. The guys on the Underwater Recovery Team were no more likely to take her down than he was. She geared herself up for an argument.

“You do
exactly
as I say. No pulling rank or cop bullshit when we get down there. And you’ll owe me.” Carver disconnected one cylinder and began filling another. His eyes were flat and hard.

“You’re going to take me down?” A rush of adrenaline shot through her. “As long as it isn’t illegal, I’ll owe you.” She nodded.

“Down there I’m boss. You have to trust me implicitly.” He took a step closer and her mouth went dry. “If I put my hands on you…” He rested both hands on her hips and she felt the imprint of each burning hot finger. She forced herself not to react. This was a test. She didn’t fail tests. Ever. “If I grab you, you
don’t
freak out. You help me do whatever the hell it is I want to do. You follow my lead exactly and we’ll both get out of there alive.”

She found herself staring up into those bright blue eyes, only inches from hers. Energy sizzled between them. A sudden wave of sexual awareness mixed with mutual mistrust, a subtle perfume of complication.

Red burned his cheekbones. He released her. He hadn’t expected it either.

“I have to trust you. Think I can do that?” Blue eyes held her gaze.

She didn’t make a joke about putting her hands on him because suddenly it wasn’t funny. One, he was a suspect, and she refused to feel anything for him that wasn’t strictly professional. Two, they were going to dive a hazardous shipwreck at thirty meters with a rotting corpse at the end. It wasn’t the sort of treasure most divers dreamed of, but she wasn’t most people. She kept her mouth shut. Nodded.

The shipwreck looked different by day. At this depth, in pristine water, the hull took on a romantic aspect, an adventure, a mystery. But it was also a coffin, and the thought of entering it willingly twisted Finn’s guts. He looked at Holly. Indicated she stay still while he circled her, checking that the hoses were taped down tight against her body. He tested her by poking and prodding to make sure everything was secure. She held fast, tense, but doing what he’d told her to do even though she didn’t like it.

She went up a notch in his estimation. Not because he liked women docile, but because he liked people smart.

The advantage of her being newly qualified meant she should treat her instructor like God because the basics had been freshly drilled into her mind. The disadvantage was he was about to put his life in the hands of a novice who’d never gone inside a wreck before and would probably screw up the dive before they even got to the engine room. Which was fine as long as neither of them ended up dead in the process.

He’d found her a dry suit and rigged them both with double tanks with separate regulators, plus an independent pony rig. They had as much safe air as a person could carry, and still it didn’t guarantee they’d survive the experience.

But a Coast Guard vessel acted as the surface crew this time, and there wasn’t much current. Twelve hours later and he’d hit another low tide. Lucky him.

Nothing for it, he approached the wreck the same way as before. He turned on his light and flashed her the OK signal. She mirrored her reply, gray eyes serious now.

He pointed to his flippers and shook his head. A reminder not to fin inside the vessel. She nodded, gave him the OK signal. So far, so good. He used momentum to drift into the broken ship, used his hands to pull himself slowly and steadily along. It was so tight and dark they had to go single file. He couldn’t believe he’d managed to get Thom out of here alive last night. It had been a close thing, and he’d been foolish to bring him down.

Yet here he was again with a frickin’ novice.

He entered the wheelhouse and waited. There was plenty of light here, but inside the stairwell there was almost complete darkness for about five meters. He’d talked Holly through it, but the reality was different. He checked both their gauges. Her eyes tracked him, looking for something he couldn’t define. Weakness? Aggression? Guilt?

BOOK: Dangerous Waters
4.1Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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