Licensed for Trouble (2 page)

Read Licensed for Trouble Online

Authors: Susan May Warren

“Boo!” Davy jumped out at her, holding his toy .45. “Hands up!”

PJ put up her hands. “Don't shoot; I'm an unarmed frankfurter!”

“Don't believe her, partner.” The voice came from behind her—low and laughing—and accompanied the dangerous swagger of Boone Buckam, six feet two inches of lean trouble, with lethal blue eyes and a too-familiar I-caught-you-now expression on his face that made PJ tremble just a bit. More than once she'd wondered at her decision to cut him loose and declare herself a free agent.

Especially since it didn't exactly seem like Jeremy might be snatching her up anytime soon. Six weeks since the kiss that had seemed more desperation than a romantic move, she'd started to wonder if she'd hallucinated what she considered interest on his part.

“Boone!” Davy bounded toward him, wrapping his arms around one of Boone's legs. “I love the handcuffs.”

PJ met Boone's smirk with a withering look. “I thought so. You haven't learned how dangerous it is to arm a Sugar?”

“I'm hoping he redeems the family. Maybe he leans toward a different side of the law.”

“Hah. I'm on the right side of the law.” Speaking of—she tried to jump, get a glimpse of Bix over the top of the hay mounds, but she couldn't quite get high enough.

“Oh, sure. By cheating?” He patted Davy on the head. “I think she needs a lesson in what happens to lawbreakers, don't you, Davy?”

As if on cue, Davy whipped out his handcuffs. “I have to take you in, Auntie PJ,” he said, with such a serious look on his pudgy face that PJ couldn't help but hold out her hands.

He snapped the cuffs on, put his hands on his hips as if to survey his handiwork, and took off.

Leaving her handcuffed in front of Boone like a criminal, while the
real
criminal downed apple fritters and pumpkin bread at the Girl Scout fund-raiser booth.

“Davy, come back here!” She held up her hands to Boone. “Please?”

He gave her a lopsided smile. Thankfully, it didn't hold the same power it once did. “I don't know. I think it's safer for mankind to keep you a little handicapped.”

“Oh, whatever.” She turned and waddled around the hay bales. “Davy!”

“I've been meaning to talk to you, PJ.” Boone edged up behind her.

“Get me out of these cuffs, Boone.” She whirled, held out her hands.

“Do I look like I have a key on me? And anyway . . .” He jutted out his chin, shook it a little, then lowered his voice. “I can't take sides against the family, you know.”

Oh, good grief. “Brando? Seriously?”

“I'm hurt.” He stepped back as if taking a bow. “Don't I look like the Godfather?”

“You're wearing a tux. I thought you were a groom or something.”

His smile deflated. “No, I'm not a groom, PJ.”

Then he turned and strode away.

Not a groom
. Oh, that's right. He'd asked her to marry him. Twice.

Why did her mouth run out ahead to ambush her? Wow, she knew how to destroy a Sunday afternoon. “Davy! Get over here with that handcuff key!”

She ran through the maze, into dead zones and out again, finally emerging on the other side.

Davy crouched below a model cow, spraying dyed “milk” into a metal bucket. “Look, Auntie PJ, I'm milking a cow.”

“I'm going to milk you, little man, if you don't come over here and uncuff me.” She held out her hands.

“Davy, did you handcuff your aunt?” Sergei strode toward them, carrying two cups of steaming cider.

Davy glanced up at his six-foot, muscle-cut Russian stepfather and went white for a moment, long enough for PJ to remember that he and Sergei still treaded on new soil.

“It's okay. We were just playing.” PJ crouched next to Davy. “Hand me the key, kiddo.”

Davy fished around in his pocket and gave her the key. PJ unlocked herself as Connie swished up in her elegant Maid Marian dress—a complement to Sergei's dashing Robin Hood costume. Sergei handed Connie the other cider cup.

“PJ, do you have a second?” Connie tugged on her elbow. “I have to talk to you about something.”

Connie was grinning, the old warmth in her eyes. Maybe Connie had begun to forgive her. PJ shot a look toward the apple-dunking bin, the band, then spotted Bix near the Girl Scout booth, buying a cookie. That probably meant she would stick around for a moment.

“Sure, Connie.” PJ followed her sister, tucking the handcuffs into a handy, concealed front pocket between bun and dog.

Connie had changed over the past six weeks—maybe the way she left her brown hair down to blow in the slight wind, or the shine in her green eyes. PJ could attribute it to any of the things that suddenly felt acutely absent from her life. Newlyweds. Marriage. A life on track.

“Thanks for coming today. Davy has really missed you,” Connie said, blowing into her cider. “And I have too.”

PJ smiled at her. “I can't say I miss the fried fish.”

Connie's gaze tracked over to Sergei. “We've gotten the fish eating down to once a week. And his parents' visas have been extended another year.” She said the words without any malice in her eyes. Yes, perhaps things had smoothed out at the Sukarov household. Without PJ's troublemaking.

A knot began to tighten in her stomach.

“Great costume, by the way.” Connie wore amusement at the corners of her mouth.

“Please. Jeremy worked as a street advertisement in Dinkytown. He inherited his costumes.”

“You two seeing each other now?” Connie had the good taste not to glance at Boone, currently hauling a pumpkin from the patch.

“Besides work every day?”

“You know what I mean.”

“I don't know. We haven't exactly progressed past our one impulsive kiss. I'm not sure he even remembers it.”

“But you do.” Connie's eyes twinkled.

PJ didn't answer her. But yes, she well remembered being in his arms, the way he kissed her as if suddenly something sweet had unhinged inside him.

“Yes,” she finally said quietly.

“Where are you staying these days? Please tell me you're not in your car.” Connie bore genuine concern in her eyes.

“Hey, the Crown Vic has enough room for the entire family.”

Connie didn't smile.

“Jeremy's office. On the sofa.”

Connie stared into her cup.

The sun had started to slip into the dusky October horizon, the heat of the day moving with it. A slip of crisp breath dried the sweat around PJ's face. How she longed to remove her sauna dog.

Still, Connie didn't move.

PJ had sort of expected something like “Well, those days are over. Please move back in.” Or at least “That has to be awkward.”

But nothing. Until . . .

“I'm pregnant, Peej.” Connie brought her gaze up, wearing a hesitant smile. “I'm pregnant.”

Oh.
Oh.
Well. “That's great!” PJ's voice sounded strange, though. Too high, too happy.

Connie didn't seem to notice. “Yes, I think so.” She again glanced past PJ. “
We
think so.”

We. As in Sergei and Davy and Boris and Vera, and probably also their mother, Elizabeth Sugar, strangely absent from today's activities.

“Congratulations.” There. Now her voice sounded normal. She leaned forward and wrapped Connie in a one-armed hug. “That's wonderful.”

Connie returned the hug, but when she stepped back, she still didn't meet PJ's eyes.

“Okay, what's the deal?”

Connie shrugged as she looked out into the fields of pumpkins. “You can't move back in, Peej. We need the room for the baby, and besides, it's time for you to set up your own home.”

“Oh, I . . . I knew that, Connie.” Except there went that strange voice again. Happy, happy PJ. “Of course you need the room.”

Connie glanced at her fast as if testing PJ's words.

PJ took her hand. “Really. I need to find my own place anyway. I'll be fine.” Really. Fine. Just.
Fine
. “In fact, we need to celebrate the good news with some pumpkin cookies, don't you think?”

“Well, I am eating for two.” Connie slid her hand over her stomach.

Right. Cookies, pronto.

A crowd had formed around the dunking-for-apples trough, and as PJ approached the cookie stand, a cheer went up from the ensemble. Boris broke through the crowd a moment later, an apple clutched in his golden teeth, water dripping down his wide, grizzled face and onto his sopping shirt.

Vera applauded behind him, dressed as . . . well, a Russian babushka, in her curly lamb's-wool jacket, a blue polyester housedress from the early seventies, and a pair of flat boots. She took the apple from her husband and handed him his leather jacket.
“Maladyets!”
she said, taking a bite of apple.

And right behind them appeared Bix the Raccoon, laughing at Boris's heroic performance, clutching her pumpkin with one hand, her six-year-old Tinker Bell with the other.

She locked eyes with PJ. For a moment, everything went silent as PJ read Bix's face, those conniving eyes, those tight, budded lips, and deciphered two things.

Bix knew PJ had been hunting her.

And after today, PJ wouldn't have a prayer of capturing her.

“Meredith,” PJ said, and that's all it took.

Bix whirled, dropped her daughter's hand, and took off as fast as her paws would carry her.

Which turned out to be considerably faster than PJ, who sort of half ran, half bounced after Bix. “Stop! Stop, Bix!”

But Bix wasn't having any part of
stop
. She shoved past the gawkers in front of the Great Pumpkin cutouts, past the bluegrass band, and through the split-rail fence out into the parking lot. Then she turned and hurled her pumpkin at PJ.

And PJ, encased in a giant foam pillow, couldn't dodge it. It thumped her hard in the thighs and she went down like a bowling pin, spinning out on the dirt.

“What in the world?”

Jeremy. All seven feet of ketchup, looming over her and then peering after her prey.

“It's Bix!” PJ said, pointing above her head. “Help me up.”

Jeremy tossed his cup of hot cider and held out both hands. “Who?”

“Meredith Bixby!”

Recognition registered on his face as PJ bounded to her feet. But she didn't wait for him to catch up, just turned and watched as Bix skidded to a stop beside a shiny yellow Vespa scooter, threw a furry leg over, and inserted a key.

She wasn't getting away—not on PJ's watch.

PJ heard ripping as she threw herself at the raccoon in an all-out tackle. She took her out just as the bike lurched forward. They flew off together, rolling into the ditch with a bell-ringing landing that huffed the breath out of her.

Ow.

“Get off me!” Bix slammed an elbow at PJ's face. It landed on the bun.

PJ wrapped her arms around Bix, trying to roll on top of her. “Meredith, you jumped bail—”

“Of course I did, PJ. I'm not going to jail!”

PJ finally got ahold of Bix's wrist, both hands fighting for control. “You . . . should . . . have . . . thought . . .” She groped for the cuffs, curling her fingers around them just as Bix rolled out from under her.

Then, in a move that both Boone and Jeremy should have been cheering, she whipped out Davy's handcuffs and managed to snap one cuff on Bix's wrist.

But instead of giving the snarl PJ expected, Bix looked at PJ with an expression of horror, her black-rimmed eyes filling. Her voice dropped, low, desperate. “You have to listen to me. I'm not the person they're saying. I'm not a thief. It was an accident. I meant to pay for the wallet. I just slipped it into my pocket while I was looking at a pair of earrings. I swear it was an accident. My lawyer is trying to sort it out, but until he does, I can't go to jail.”

PJ hovered above her, her hand searching for Bix's other wrist. “What about the other three charges?”

“Years ago, when I was a mess. I'm not that person anymore. I swear it. Please.” A tear rolled into Bix's ear. “My kid is watching, PJ.”

Her expression whisked PJ back a decade, to the humiliating moment when the Kellogg police hauled her away in her grass-stained prom dress, the smoke from the country club kitchen inferno blotting out the starry night. The false arrest had driven her out of Kellogg, put her on the run for nearly ten years, and kept her under suspicion until Boone had come clean and cleared her name.

PJ found the woman's eyes, pinned hers to them. “I don't want a scene either. If I take off the cuffs, do you promise to come in quietly? You can even call your lawyer on the way, and he can meet you there. And then neither one of us will make the papers.” She gestured toward the crowd behind them.

“Really?” Bix wiped her eyes with the back of her free paw, smearing makeup into her ear.

PJ nodded. “Promise?”

Bix nodded.

PJ rolled off her, and Bix offered a paw to help her to her feet. PJ handed Bix the key to the handcuff.

“Sorry. It's just a misunderstanding,” she said to the crowd. She searched for Jeremy, but he seemed conspicuously absent.

Tinker Bell ran and embraced her mother, who crouched beside her and whispered in her ear. The little girl skipped away, her thin legs barely able to stretch out, thanks to the slim green skirt. She must have hiked it up past her knees to ride behind her mother on the small . . . one-person . . . Vespa. Wait—Bix couldn't have ridden here with Tinker Bell. Which meant someone else was taking care of her daughter. Which meant she probably wasn't going home. . . .

Oh no.

And then, as all her instincts fired off like little explosions in her head, Bix slapped a cuff around PJ's left wrist. She had the other wrist caught and the cuff snapped on before PJ could turn.

“Bix! Don't—”

“Stop following me, PJ, or you're going to get hurt!” Bix snarled as she pushed her, hard, into the dirt.

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