Desperate to the Max (3 page)

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Authors: Jasmine Haynes

Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Supernatural, #Ghosts, #Psychics, #Romance, #Paranormal, #Mystery & Suspense

BOOK: Desperate to the Max
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Damn. She sounded like a pathetically jealous heroine in a romance novel. She was also absolutely
dying
for a cheeseburger with fries and a strawberry shake.

Her stomach growled.

Oh no. No, no, no. Please. Not again.

There was no getting around the plain truth. Like those other times, her brain had been invaded by the personality traits of the victim. Life, or death, wasn’t fair.

A siren wailed, closed in. The promised black-and-white wheeled around the corner, pulled to the curb facing the wrong way, and stopped nose to nose with her little Miata. The uniformed officer climbed from the car, and the crowd, driven by the blue-haired woman, parted like the Red Sea. The cop smiled broadly at the elderly lady from a too-young face. “Thanks, Ladybird.” The name sounded like a cute little garden bug.

Sweeping the gate aside, the cop crossed the lawn with long strides. Witt met him halfway, leaving his ... witness by the edge of the driveway. The uniform clapped him on the shoulder. Witt clapped back. Jees, cop fraternities; he hadn’t even pulled his badge to ID himself. Witt grabbed the younger, smaller man’s forearm while they talked. Cops were a touchy lot in a macho, big guy sort of way. Witt sure did his share of touching
her
now that she was neither a victim nor a suspect. Touchy, yeah, in a very different way that usually left her panting for more. Between the two men, there was a lot of pointing, first at the girl, then the house, finally at Witt’s department vehicle parked across the street.

Max felt conspicuous in the fact that Witt acknowledged her with neither a look nor an introduction. She stood stranded in the middle of the walkway, but retreating to her car would have been akin to defeat.

The officer’s mike, clipped to his shoulder, crackled. He spoke into it softly. Witt left him, and finally came to Max’s side. For some strange reason, she wouldn’t have minded if he put his arm around her shoulder as he had the baby-faced officer. He didn’t. “Meat wagon’s ordered, and the on-duties’ll be here soon.”

“On-duties?”

“Detectives. Harmon over there called ’em out. We’ll wait. They’ll want my statement since I was first on the scene.”

She really hadn’t meant to put him in an awkward position. “Do they want to know why you happened to be first one here?”

Witt stared at her. He was detached, his usually expressive blue eyes now bleak and cold, and his cop jargon callous.

Max shivered. The sun was going down on the early October afternoon. She wondered if this was what he’d meant when he said—what, a week, two weeks ago?—that most women wouldn’t understand a man like him. He was like a chameleon, changing his colors, his mood, his manner, and even his voice to fit the surroundings.

Finally, he said, “Told ’em my Mom lives in the area.”

Max gave him an admiring wide-eyed look. “Wow, that’s great thinking.” She tipped her head. “What if they decide to check out where your mom really lives?”

“They won’t.”

He was so sure. She let him be so she wouldn’t have to worry about him. “I suppose they’ll want to talk to me, too.”

He gave her a look, his head tilted back, his nose appearing longer than usual. “Why?”

She smiled thinly. “They’ll want to know what I saw.”

“You didn’t see anything. You dreamed it.”

“Since when did you stop believing in me?” Jees, that sounded bad. Proprietary. Needy even. She couldn’t remember him saying he believed in
her
, only that he believed some of the things she told him. “I mean since when did you question my psychic abilities?”

“Since the day I met you.”

Men. They were all scumbags. She narrowed her eyes. “You know I was right the last time. You know it wasn’t a lucky guess. You saw that with your own eyes.” On video even, played out exactly like her vision.


I
know. These guys don’t. Stay out of this mess.”

She narrowed her eyes on him. “What did you see in there?”

“Classified until I give my statement.”

“Bullshit.”

He raised a brow at the word.

“It was exactly like I told you, wasn’t it? Right down to the peach-colored robe she was wearing and the truffles she hadn’t finished eating.”

Something flickered in his eyes. Fear maybe. No, he wasn’t afraid of anything. When he spoke, his voice had hardened. “Stay. Out. Of. It.”

Oh yeah, that’s exactly what he’d seen. Bastard for not admitting she’d been right. He was worse than a plain old scumbag, he was a dictatorial one. Well, he’d find out fast that attitude had never—and she meant
never
—worked on her. “How will they know she was a phone sex operator? How will they know to look for the guy on the phone? How will they know he knew where she lived? If. I. Don’t. Tell. Them.”

His hand whipped out and cupped her cheek. The abrupt change in attitude stole the breath from her lungs and set her skin buzzing while his eyes suddenly blazed. “Trust me.”

God, the worst words any man could ever say in a rasping tone that melted her from the inside out. Yes, yes, yes. She wanted to, she really did, wanted to lean into that warm touch, lean on him, and turn her lips to his palm. But ... “You already know the answer to that.”

He dropped his hand. “Do I gotta be dead, Max, before you trust me?”

She hissed in a breath. “Low blow, Detective.” It didn’t hurt. It really didn’t. He was right. She trusted Cameron with things she wouldn’t tell a living soul. Let alone Witt.

Witt shook his head. “Don’t wanna fight, okay. Let the case alone for now. We’ll figure out the phone sex angle later.”

“And you’ll somehow lead your detective friends in the right direction without involving me? How chivalrous.” Her tone was snide—she hated being left out—but there was something so damn sweet about the way he tried to protect her.

He smiled, one sexy dimple appearing. She’d been forgiven. “I resemble that remark.”

God, he did. Dudley Do-Right of the Royal Canadian Mounties. Damned if she wasn’t his little Nell. Perpetually out of his reach through no fault of his own.

She tugged on the knot of his red tie, a singularly intimate gesture. She wondered if he knew that or if, like most men, he was oblivious to a woman’s odd signals.

“What are you doing, Max?” Suspicion narrowed his eyes.

She eyed the little waif now talking with Harmon by the drive gate. Staking a claim, that’s what she was doing. Making sure little Miss Stick, Harmon, and the small crowd by the fence didn’t mistake their relationship.
He’s mine, mine, mine, mine

God, she was hungry, starving, dying for one of those Sara Lee’s Raspberry Cheesecake Bites.

There she was again. The dead woman. Wheedling her way into Max’s subconscious, giving her strange thoughts she’d never have on her own in a million years, and making her feel emotions that simply were not her own.

A chill scraped across Max’s scalp. She stepped back, stared at Witt. She was skirting the hairy edge of a relationship she really wasn’t ready to handle. And dreaming about food as if it was somehow better than sex.

She stared at the gaping door of the house. “No way. Not again. Not this time.”

Witt’s brows pulled together. “What?”

Didn’t he know? Couldn’t he tell? Wasn’t it obvious?

Max was possessed.

Again.

 

Chapter Three

 

 

The whole possession thing
was
happening again. Max knew it. Psychic emanations oozed from the house. A supernatural bond with a dead woman stole out to stake its claim on
her
.

“I have to get out of here.” Or go stark raving mad. “I’ll wait in the car. Didn’t you tell me that’s what I was supposed to do anyway?” she said, hoping compliance would sidetrack Witt.

She backed away from him toward the gate in the picket fence. His eyes tracked her as if she’d grown a second head. Once at the gate, she pushed through the knot of crime-scene gazers, pulled the door of the Miata open and flopped down in the seat. Thank God she’d put the top up before Witt arrived. She didn’t have time to deal with the damn thing now.

Starting the car, she rammed it into reverse and pulled three car lengths away from the cruiser. Parked once more, she turned the engine off, and looked up. The blue-haired lady’s eyes had followed her, and a hint of a smile crossed her lips. She plucked at the folds of her flower-print dress, the silver-blue petals matching the color of her hair. Max received the air waves between them as if she were a fortune teller reading tea leaves. Mrs. Blue’s life story seemed to be suddenly right there in Max’s head. The woman wore polyester for durability and cost, machine washable, lasted forever, and she lived in one of these small, modest homes with exceptionally neat lawns. She’d raised her child here, survived her husband’s death, and now watched Maury Povich religiously.

Still looking at Max, the woman gave a tentative wave before turning back to the spectacle. Max didn’t even begin to wonder how she knew all that about the woman, nor did she doubt her assessment was correct. This “sensing” had happened before. She
knew
things about people, the soul-deep stuff that a person kept hidden, sometimes even from themselves. Max somehow tapped into the knowledge even without trying.

Strange psychic things like that had started when Cameron was killed two years ago, the incidents increasing exponentially over the last few weeks. As if Max were racing toward ... something. She hadn’t a clue as to what.

Harmon had the yellow crime-scene tape out. A tan sedan, a twin of Witt’s, pulled in. Another black-and-white arrived with two officers. They pushed the crowd back with easy authority.

Max passed a tired hand over her eyes and leaned her head against the driver’s side window, the glass cold against her cheek. The weather had turned yesterday. October was so unpredictable. Sometimes hot like summer, sometimes cold and wet and blustery. She hated October. So many bad things happened in October. Black Monday, the day the stock market fell in the 80’s, and wow, again, just a couple of years ago. The Loma Prieta earthquake of 1989. The Oakland firestorm. Her birthday; she’d be thirty-three this year. Cameron’s murder at the corner 7-11 two years ago. Yeah, October was a really bad month.

Dammit, why was this happening to her again? “Cameron, you get in here and talk this woman out of me right this minute.”

She didn’t care that someone might see her. They’d think she was talking to herself. Maybe she was, since she was the only one who heard Cameron. Then again, maybe she was crazy. As with Cameron himself, the question had never been laid to rest.

The air shifted in the close confines of the car, and the scent of peppermint wafted past her nose. “Her?”

“Bethany Spring. She’s in me, I can feel her. I won’t stand for it this time, Cameron.” Brave words. She didn’t have a clue how to exorcise the woman
now
, without first finding her killer. “Use your ghostly wiles on her.”

A soft sigh across her nape. She closed her eyes briefly.

“How many times must I explain, my sweet? She’s on another plane. She isn’t even aware of me. You’re the only one who can oust her. By finding her killer.”

Her stomach growled. “She’s hungry.”

“Feed her.”

“I will. Turkey.”

“I think I resent that.”

“I meant I’m having turkey for dinner.”

He laughed softly. “Ah yes. Dinner with Witt’s mother. How pleasant.”

She swallowed her sudden panic. “Cameron, I can’t go through this again. I really can’t.”

“You can, and you will. You get better at figuring out the truth every time. Run with her feelings. Let her go deep inside you. Find out all her secrets.”

The idea terrified her. Bethany Spring was the third phantom to haunt her dreams. The third victim crying out for justice. The third ghost trying to take over her mind and her body.

“I don’t want to let her in.” The statement was just short of admitting she was scared to death of these soul intruders.

“That’s not what you’re really afraid of.”

She rolled her eyes. He always thought he knew her mind better than she did. “I know you’re dying to tell me, aren’t you? Well, go ahead. I’m ready, Dr. Freud.”

“You’re afraid of Witt’s mother.”

Her blasé laugh resembled a mouse squeak.

“You’re afraid of getting serious about Witt. You’re afraid of meeting his mother. You are, in short, afraid of this weird little relationship that’s cropping up between the two of you.”

“He’s a cop. He’s helping me out with these investigations. Hey”—she stabbed a finger in the air as if she could see him—“you’re the one who said I had to solve their murders before these ghosts would leave me alone.”

“You don’t need him for that. You’ve got the answers all up in your head if you’d just let them come.”

“He’s helping me on the technical aspects.” Like breaking alibis and finding missing witnesses.

“When are you going to have sex with him?”

She strangled a frenzied laugh. “Not. I’m still pining for my late, lamented husband.”

“Are you?”

“Yes.” She waited for his usual double whammy, her heart stuck way up in her throat.

“Maybe I’m just another excuse not to commit?”

The thought was more than frightening. It clenched her heart and squeezed until her eyes watered. “I’m not interested in committing to Witt.”

“You sure weren’t acting disinterested out there. Straightening his tie. Nuzzling his palm. You’ve got it bad, sweetheart, and you don’t even know it.”

She stabbed her finger again. “That was her. Bethany. She needs a man. She needs romance. She needs to be wanted.” Which is why she took the calls, waiting for Prince Charming, waiting for the one guy who would fall in love with her voice, waiting ...

Cameron’s sigh floated through the interior of the car. “You’re still in denial.”

She looked up. The blue lady watched her instead of what was happening in and around 452 Garden Street. Max lowered her hand and said nothing.

“It’s all right to find someone new, Max, someone to fill your life, someone to love, to laugh with.”

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