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This is an excerpt from the first in Louise
Gaylord's Allie Armington mystery series, Anacacho:
CHAPTER 1
I scan it, suppressing a thundering roll of envy.
I am an Assistant District Attorney in the Grand Jury Division.
Duncan works in Major Fraud. This file covers a big-time white-collar
theft of more than a million dollars and a glaring paper trail.
Lucky you. I
hand his plum back and turn to the stack of fifty-plus cases
my panel of grand jurors will hear on Wednesday. Most deal
with possession or delivery of a controlled substance or the
never-ending auto thefts.
Duncan can read me
like a book. Tired of
your gig?
I sigh. Somebody has to do it. Too bad the
bastards are out on the streets before they ever serve a day.
But this is just the small stuffthe end of the pipeline.
Id give a million bucks to get my hands on the really
big boys.
Better up that ante since the government
has already spent billions. Duncan takes a few steps toward
the door, then turns. How about dinner? I have some great
homemade ravioli and salad fixings ready to go.
This is too good to pass up. Not only is Duncan
a master chef and a great kisser, he lives three floors above
me.
Youre on, I say to his retreating
back. Ill bring the wine."
The evening starts
well enough. A glass of Chianti Classico, then a few very
nice long kisses followed by a crisp romaine with crumbled
Blue Cheese. Finally, the piéce
de résistance, morel ravioli with a subtle cream sauce
that melts the minute it passes my lips.
In between cool spoons of spumoni, I bring up
the disparities between my caseload status and his.
Duncan is a reasonable
man, but he can home in on a problem with the precision of
a military strike. If
you dont like your job, quit.
Did I say that?
He takes the dish of
spumoni from my hands, sets it on the coffee table beside
his, and turns to face me. No,
you didnt exactly come right out and say it, but every
chance you get, you complain about how hard you work and never
get a decent case.
I stiffen and pull
away. Gee, thanks.
He gives me his attorneys once-over. Tell
me why the only woman in her class to serve on Law Review, is
hiding in the Grand Jury Division of the Harris County DA?
Damn, Duncan. Hes
evidently picked up on my one horror: presenting a case. I
love doing the research and prepping witnesses, but the thought
of standing up in a courtroom before a judge and jury makes
me weak in the knees.
For some reason I cant bring myself to tell
him that, so like most cornered women, I come out swinging. Ill
tell you why, if you tell me why you left Chicago?
This is the one question that Duncan has left
unanswered.
He gives me a pained
smile. I wondered how
long it would take you to bring that up.
Something in his voice
makes me immediately regret my boldness. I put my arms around
his neck, drawing his face close to mine. Ill
strike that question, counselor, if you can think of a decent
bribe.
His relief is more
than obvious. How about
this? He plants a long sweet kiss on my lips and ushers
me out the door.
I pout all the way
to my apartment, longing for a cat to kick or a roommate to
rag on, but by the time I crawl in bed, my focus is on tomorrows
lunch with Reena. What on earth was I thinking? Facing my
enemy after all these years will only bring back the pain.
I groan into the darkness,
wondering if I have some sort of built-in mechanism that sabotages
every male-female relationship Ive been in since Paul
Carpenter walked out of my life.
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