He looked down at the logs that were banked in the hearth. He imagined how nice a fire would be in there during the winter. How you could sit on the silk couches and watch the flickering flames. How that butler would serve you hot toddies or something.
What the hell was that bunch of thugs doing in a place like this?
From down the hall, he heard the sounds of the men. They'd been in what he assumed must be a dining room for hours, just running their mouths. At least their choice of dinner music was appropriate. Hard-core rap thumped through the house, 2Pac, Jay-Z, D-12. Occasionally, he heard shouts of laughter over the beats. Taunts of the macho variety.
He eyed the front door for the one millionth time.
When the men had shoved him into the drawing room and then headed down the hall a lifetime ago, his first thought was of escaping, even if he had to put a chair through a window. He'd call José. Bring the whole station house to their front door.
But before he could act on the impulse, a voice had filled his ear. “I hope you decide to run.”
Butch had spun around, crouching. The skull-trimmed, scarred one was right next to him, though he hadn't heard the guy move.
“Go 'head.” Those freaky-ass black eyes had stared at Butch with the dead intensity of a shark. “Crack open that door. Run your little heart out. Run fast, run smart, call for help. Just know that I'll come after you. Like a hearse.”
“Zsadist, leave him alone.” The guy with the great hair had stuck his head out into the room. “Wrath wants the human alive. For the time being.”
The scarred man had spared Butch one last look. “Try it. Just try it. I'd rather hunt you down than eat dinner with them.”
Then he'd sauntered out.
Threat notwithstanding, Butch had cased what he could see of the house. There wasn't a phone that he could find, and judging by the security system panel he'd spied in the front hall, all the windows and doors in the place had to be wired for sound. Busting out discreetly wasn't an option.
And he didn't want to leave Beth behind.
God, if she died…
Butch inhaled. Frowned.
What the hell was that?
The tropics. He smelled the ocean.
He turned around.
A breathtaking woman was standing in the doorway. Waif-like, elegant, she was dressed in a filmy gown, and her gorgeous blond hair drifted to her hips in waves. Her face was all delicate perfection, her eyes the pale blue color of sea glass.
She took a step back, as if in fear of him.
“No,” he said, lurching forward, thinking of the men in the room down the hall. “Don't go back there.”
She looked around, as if she wanted to call for help.
“I'm not going to hurt you,” he said quickly.
“How do I know that?”
She had a subtle accent. Like all of them did. Maybe Russian?
He held his hands out, palms up, to show he didn't have a weapon. “I'm a cop.”
Yeah, okay, so that was no longer exactly true, but he wanted to reassure her.
She gathered the skirt of her dress up, as if she were going to take off.
Hell, he shouldn't have used the C-word. If she was the moll of one of them, then she was even more likely to bolt if she thought he was the law.
“I'm not here in an official capacity,” he said. “No gun, no badge.”
Abruptly, she dropped the gown, and her shoulders straightened as if she were drafting her courage into service. She came forward a little, moving fluidly, gracefully. Butch kept his mouth shut and tried to look smaller than he actually was, less threatening.
“He doesn't normally let your kind be around,” she said.
Yeah, he could imagine cops didn't hang out too often in this house. “I'm waiting for… a friend.”
Her head tilted to the side. As she got closer, her beauty nearly blinded him. Her facial structure was the stuff of fashion magazines, her body the kind of long, lovely sweep he imagined trotted down runways. And that perfume she wore. It got into his nose, into his brain. She smelled so good his eyes watered.
She was unreal, he thought. So pure. So clean.
He felt like he should brush his teeth and shave before saying one more word to her.
What the hell was she doing hanging out with those lowlifes?
Butch's heart cramped with the idea of how useful she'd be to them. Dear God. On the sex market, you