The Officer Breaks the Rules

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Authors: Jeanette Murray

BOOK: The Officer Breaks the Rules
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Copyright © 2013 by Jeanette Murray

Cover and internal design © 2013 by Sourcebooks, Inc.

Cover design by Dawn Adams

Cover images © Rob Lang/Getty Images; David De Lossy/Getty Images; Alessandro de Leo/Alamy

Sourcebooks and the colophon are registered trademarks of Sourcebooks, Inc.

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any
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in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews—without permission
in writing from its publisher, Sourcebooks, Inc.

The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious or are used fictitiously.
Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental and not intended
by the author.

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Chapter 1

Jeremy Phillips settled the protectors over his ears, adjusted his glasses more comfortably
on the bridge of his nose, and took a relaxed stance. Then, at the signal, he picked
up his Beretta, clicked off the safety, and fired fifteen rounds. As the smell of
black powder and CPL agent filled his nostrils, he checked his gun, set the safety,
then slapped a hand over the switch to draw the paper target forward.

His best friend, and today’s shooting partner, Timothy O’Shay ducked his head around
the divider and mouthed something.

“What?” Jeremy yelled back.

Tim cocked one eyebrow and tapped a finger to his ear, pointing out the obvious.

Oh. Shit. Right. Jeremy took the protectors off and set them on the ledge in front
of him, next to his Beretta. “What?”

“I asked how long you were going to waste bullets when your head’s not in the game.”

Jeremy gave him a withering look. “I’m not wasting bullets.”

Tim’s answer was a glance between the two targets—his and Jeremy’s—now only a few
feet away. Jeremy took a look also.

Tim’s dummy showed two tight clusters of bullet holes, so close together they’d ripped
large chunks from the paper. Several in the head, the other in the chest. Not a stray
hole at all.

His dummy, by comparison, looked like a constellation of wrongness. Half the bullets
sprayed over the outline’s shoulders, the other half catching the figure in the arm
or some other undesirable area.

“You’ll have to remind me how you shot expert at the last firearms qual,” Tim said
casually as he stripped the target down and replaced it with a fresh one.

“Just having an off day.” When Tim said nothing, Jeremy glanced over his shoulder.
His friend smirked and shook his head. “Bite me, O’Shay.”

“You know what Dwayne would say to that.” Tim straightened his shoulders in an effort
to look taller. “If you were a female, I just might take you up on that one,” he said
with an exaggerated drawl.

Though he tried to fight it, Jeremy cracked a smile. Their deployed friend, Dwayne
Robertson, always did let his natural drawl thicken up to an almost obscene level
when he was telling a joke. Tim nailed it perfectly. Jeremy clipped on his own fresh
target and sent it back. “Yeah, yeah. When’s that big lug coming home, anyway?”

“He just left not that long ago. For all we know, he might get delayed past the original
seven. Stuff’s shifting over there. Makes for interesting deployments.” As he thumbed
the last few bullets into his clip, he pushed it in and locked it. “Seriously, what’s
going on? You’ve shot for shit all day, and I know you could do better than this blindfolded.
What’s up?”

Because Tim was holding a loaded weapon, now was absolutely not the time for the truth.
So instead he lifted a shoulder and dismissed his friend’s concern. “If marriage is
gonna turn you into some walking therapy session, I’m not so sure we can be friends
anymore.”

Tim just laughed and flipped the switch to send his target flying back. “It’s not
the prison sentence you make it out to be.”

“Right.”

“No, really. I guess it could be if you were unhappy. But when you’ve got the right
partner, it works out. Pretty damn well, I think.” A self-satisfied smile crossed
Tim’s face as he watched his target settle into place. But the preoccupied look in
his eye behind his protective glasses said he wasn’t actually seeing the target at
all. He was thinking about Skye, his wife.

Jeremy gave a grunt and rolled his shoulders. Tim might be blissful in love and all
that, but it wasn’t for everyone. At least, not for him. Not right now. He had shit
to do before he thought about settling down. And his mind wasn’t in the dating game.
Not when he was too hung up on one irritating, annoying, always-in-the-way female
who made his teeth grind and his blood boil.

In all the right ways… and wrong ones.

He waited for his own target to settle before readjusting the mufflers over his ears
and reloading his weapon. Deep breath in, then back out. This time he wasn’t going
to rush it. Wasn’t going to just punch holes through the paper for the satisfaction
of the hit. Conciseness, precision, accuracy.

He sighted the target, then took a calm breath in. Waited until his heartbeats slowed
enough to time the trigger squeeze between them. And on a slow breath out, he fired
one shot.

And his brain exploded in color and sound, light and movement. Voices. Action. Motivation
and intrigue.

Before he even glanced at the target to check his shot, Jeremy clicked on the safety,
set the gun down, and started patting his pockets for a pen. Where the hell did he
put it? Aggravated, he turned in a tight circle around his cubicle before spotting
his pen on the ground by the bag he used for his ammo. He sifted through the bag but
came up with no paper. Terrified he was about to lose the scene playing out in his
mind, he pushed up the sleeve of his Henley and started to write across the underside
of his arm, from biceps to elbow to wrist. Black ink smudged, but he kept going, knowing
he’d have an interesting time deciphering it later but not caring in the moment. He
had to get the idea down or he’d lose it.

Writer’s block was a bitch in heat. And he wasn’t about to let the perfect solution
to the corner he’d written himself into last week slip through his fingers because
of a lack of paper.

Distantly, he realized he no longer heard the muffled pops of Tim’s gun. Quickly,
before his friend could realize what he was doing, he jotted the last few words down
across the inside of his wrist and pulled his shirt down.

“Hey, what stopped you?” When Tim glanced around the divide and saw Jeremy squatting
on the floor, his brows rose in question. “You okay?”

“Yeah.” Standing, stuffing the pen back in his pocket, he shrugged. “Decided you were
right. My head’s not in the game. No point in wasting bullets.”

“I was planning to go a few more, if you don’t mind waiting.”

Jeremy smiled, feeling more relaxed now than he had in a week. “Sure, maybe I’ll go
one more round.” He waited until Tim was settled, then lined up his own fourteen remaining
shots. With a more relaxed breathing rhythm, and a looser stance, he fired until he
came up empty. And when he recalled his paper target this time, he couldn’t hold back
the satisfied smirk.

Fourteen head shots, one through the chest—the chest shot being his first before he’d
started jotting notes. Not a single stray in the bunch. “Not bad,” he mumbled to himself.

Then everything in his brain stalled as he caught a whiff of something feminine, something
that climbed over the scent of black powder and CLR and made its presence known. A
scent he knew too damn well.

“Not bad at all.”

And with that light, airy voice from over his shoulder, his mood dipped dangerously
low once more.

***

“Mad, hey.” Tim leaned over to give her a hug. Madison hugged back tightly.

“Thanks for letting me know you were out here.” She hefted her bag from over her shoulder,
taking the stall on the other side of Jeremy. “Empty for a Saturday.”

“It’s early yet. Lazy people are still in bed.” Tim peeked around her arm. “What’d
you bring?”

She held up her .22, brand new and ready to be tested.

“Ah. See you broke out the Desert Eagle for this one,” he said solemnly, then laughed
when she punched him in the arm. Her brother’s face twisted in comedic dismay. “Well,
hell, Mad. That’s a girl gun.”

“I
am
a girl, you ass.” She kicked at his feet and he shuffled back, laughing all the way
to his stall. “And this little sucker fits in almost any purse,” she added, then felt
stupid for justifying the completely frivolous purchase of the small handgun. It really
was a girly gun. But it was so cute…

Not able to avoid it any longer, she glanced at Jeremy’s face for the first time since
she got to the range.

Thunderclouds would have been a friendlier welcome. His face was a mask of annoyance
and frustration. Well, that made two of them. Though God only knew what he was so
frustrated about. If he thought she was stalking him, he had a more self-inflated
ego than she thought.

But either way, she’d play it cool. “Morning Jeremy,” she said, keeping her voice
light and casual.

“Morning.” His own voice was tense. With stiff motions, he turned back to his target
to set up a fresh paper outline.

She watched him for just a moment, taking in the rigid line of his spine, the hard
set of his shoulders. The way his head looked so tightly screwed to his neck he might
as well have been in a brace.

She’d been the one to initiate their kiss months ago. She’d been the one to keep trying,
keep showing him there was nothing wrong with them trying each other out for size.
And he was the one who’d retreated. And she knew it was her fault he’d lost that loose
gait, that easy stance, that distant, dreamy set to his eyes he’d had when she walked
up.

Well, not her fault. Not quite. It wasn’t like she walked up and punched him or something.

Now that she thought about it, the idea had merit…

No. Madison snapped her ear protectors on and slipped on the glasses before loading
up. She wasn’t going to do anything to tick him off or give him ammo—pun intended—to
ignore her further. He was doing a damn fine job of it all on his own.

Lining up her shot, she took the breath she knew she needed to calm her down, then
fired until she ran empty.

Not her best, but she’d never been the marksman her brother was. Every Marine was
a rifleman first. She was more of a healer, really. Though it didn’t hurt to kick
a little ass on occasion. Which made her job as a Navy nurse a near perfect fit for
her.

She ejected the clip and peeked around the corner of the partition to see Jeremy packing
up his things.

“Leaving already?”

He didn’t glance up. “Yeah. I have stuff to get done today.”

It was a lie, she knew that much. He probably would have stayed another hour or two
if she’d not shown up. But she refused to feel any guilt about it. That was his choice.
All of it—the entire situation—was his choice. There was one very simple solution,
and he refused to take it.

“Have a good day, then. Make sure to tell Tim bye before you leave.” From the sounds
of it, Tim had just started a new round and would be a minute.

“Right. Got it.” Hefting his bag over one shoulder, he straightened and finally looked
her in the eye.

Jeremy sucked at hiding anything from her. He might just seem sullen or closed off
to her brother and Dwayne, his two best friends. But men weren’t the most perceptive,
and Madison could always see the little wounds he hid with his quiet nature. They
called to the healer in her, even as she wanted to strangle him for being so damn
stubborn about letting her inside his emotional walls.

“Jeremy,” she started, not sure where to take it. Not that she had the chance.

He shook his head once. “Not now, Mad.” And he turned on his heel and pushed through
the door leading to the lobby.

Not now. That was a first. Normally he said
No. Never.
Was it a slip of the tongue? Or a hint there was hope?

“Where’d Jeremy go?”

Madison snapped from her zoned-out stare at the door and looked at her brother. He
wore the confused puppy face she always teased him about when they were kids.

“Said he had things to do. Guess he forgot to say good-bye,” she said lightly.

“Oh. Huh.” Tim shrugged then flipped the switch, waiting for his target to zoom in.

Men, she thought with affectionate irritation. Undercurrents were lost on them. To
fill the silence, she asked, “How’s Veronica settling in?” Veronica Gibson, Skye’s
cousin, had moved into the area a month ago from… well, she wasn’t entirely sure where
she originated. She was currently taking up residence in her brother’s extra bedroom.

“Good. Great, actually.” Tim rubbed the back of his neck. “She and Skye are constantly
talking or hanging out. She’s coming out of her shell more now, thank God. You should
come by later, have lunch. They both have the afternoon off.”

“You just want me to drag Veronica away so you have your wife and your house to yourself,”
she joked. And when a flush crept up his neck, she laughed.

It did funny things to her heart to see her brother find the woman he loved more than
anything. And what an unlikely combination. But love didn’t always ask for opinions,
as Madison clearly learned the hard way. Otherwise she wouldn’t have fallen for the
one guy determined never to be with her.

Dammit, Jeremy. Why are you so stubborn?

***

“Dammit, son. Why are you so stubborn?”

Jeremy sighed and let his head hit the back of the couch. “Sir, I—”

“No. You listen to me, Marine.”

Jeremy rolled his eyes, though it was only for his own benefit, given his father was
across the country at the moment and his phone didn’t have a “smartass” alert system.

“You’ve put ten good years into the Corps. And you want to piss it away now?”

“No, sir. I don’t think anything about my time in the Corps is wasted if I put it
to good use in the civilian sector. From my understanding, a military background on
a resume can—”

His father huffed out a breath. “Don’t give me any of that wishy-washy civilian crap.”

Right. Anything not Marine-related was absolute crap. How could Jeremy possibly have
forgotten?

“You’ve got ten more years, then you can retire. Pick up pension, become a contractor.
Do consulting work. Damn good living.”

Your
living, Dad. Your choice.

Jeremy made a noncommittal noise.

“I know I’m repeating myself.” His father sighed. “And I’d prefer not to have this
conversation over again myself. But I’m saying this because I believe it’s the best
for you. Stay the course. Stick to the plan. I didn’t raise you to be a quitter.”

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