This was the
last place she expected to spend Christmas. Callie Rayburn glanced around the
puke-green, cinder block cell in the basement of the Hawthorne Springs,
Missouri police station. In jail for Christmas. It figured, given the downward
spiral her life had taken during the past twenty-four hours.
A tear slid down
the side of her nose. She dashed it away with the back of her hand and
snuffled. She didn’t even have a tissue because that jerk Billy Freeman had
taken her purse. What kind of town let a pubescent little snot like Billy wear
a badge and carry a gun? It seemed like just last week she’d babysat him and
his obnoxious younger brother to earn enough money to buy her dream dress for
the senior prom.
Another tear
followed the track of the first. If Billy Freeman was old enough to be a police
officer, what did that make her? Ancient. Over the hill. Thirty years old, and with
nothing to show for it. Two days ago she’d been living the high life in St.
Louis with a job, a cute apartment she couldn’t afford, and a future.
Today—zip, nada, bupkis. And now, to tie the whole thing up with a big, fluffy
bow, she’d been arrested by Billy Freeman for breaking and entering. Un-freaking-believable.
Disgusted, she
pulled out of her slouch and straightened her spine. If Officer Billy thought
she was going to take this lying down, he had a lot to learn. She might have
temporarily sunk to the level of pathetic loser, but heaven help her, she would
sleep in her car before she spent Christmas Eve in a jail cell.
Callie shot
another glance at her barren surroundings. Where was a tin cup when you needed
one? Wasn’t that what prisoners used in the old movies? She’d have to settle
for her shoe. She was lucky this pair didn’t have laces—Billy probably would
have taken them to keep her from hanging herself.
She slipped off one
sleek black ankle boot and thumped it against the metal bars, wincing at the
resulting scuff that marred the smooth surface. Damn. She loved those boots.
She hadn’t even paid the credit card charge for them yet.
“Billy Freeman,
you little weasel, let me out of here!” she shouted at the top of her lungs.
Nothing.
“Billy, if you
don’t unlock this door right now I’m going to tell your mother!”
Still no answer.
Her righteous
indignation slipped a notch. Surely he hadn’t locked her up and abandoned her
to spend the whole miserable holiday alone. She was starving. Even the
condemned got a last meal, didn’t they?
“Billeeeeeee!”
The big metal
door from the stairwell clanged open, and a man stepped through. But it wasn’t Billy
Freeman. This man was taller, broader, and darker. His brows drew together in a
fierce “V”.
“Stop that
caterwauling. I sent Officer Freeman home to spend Christmas Eve with his
family.”
Double damn. It
was the man himself, Chief Thomas H. Blackstone, AKA Tommy Blackstone, the
hottest, baddest boy in the Hawthorne Springs High School class of ’98. A devil
in worn denim. The kind of boy girls yearned to regret. Callie and her older
sister had been no exception.
During the fall
of her freshman year, she had watched Susan sneak out their bedroom window
every Saturday night for six weeks to ride off into the night on the back of Tommy
Blackstone’s magic motorcycle. Her jealous fourteen-year-old imagination had
concocted a whole array of shocking and titillating scenarios which Susan
refused to confirm or deny. Each time, her sister had slipped back through the
window an hour before dawn with a dreamy smile on her face and a finger pressed
to her lips.
The infatuation
had burned itself out quickly, and since Susan hadn’t nursed a grudge or broken
heart, Callie had never squealed to their parents. Over the past fifteen years,
Tommy Blackstone had drifted off her radar screen. At some point Susan had
mentioned he’d joined the Marines right after graduation then returned to
Hawthorne Springs and become a police officer. But by that time Callie was in
St. Louis, clawing her way up the ladder in the marketing department at Van
Pelt and Van Pelt Advertising. She’d never crossed paths with Tommy on her
brief visits home. Then again, she’d never managed to get arrested before
either.
She gritted her
teeth in a facsimile of a smile. “Since Officer
Freeman is gone, you can let me out. I’m sure you’ve got the key there on your
super-duper police utility belt.”
He nodded. “I
do, but you’re not going anywhere.”
“Tommy
Blackstone, you let me out of here!”
He turned his
attention to the clipboard in his hands. “My friends call me Tom. You can call
me Chief Blackstone, but I still can’t let you out. You were caught breaking
into an unoccupied residence—”
She threw her
hands in the air and rolled her eyes. “My parents’ house! I forgot my key. ”
His stern
expression didn’t falter. “Tell it to the judge. You also resisted arrest. You
bit Officer Freeman—I saw the teeth marks. I ought to charge you with
assaulting an officer.”
“He put his hand
across my mouth!”
“To shut you up.
You were creating a disturbance.”
Callie gave an
unladylike snort. “I remember when you used to create plenty of disturbances.
When did you become such a hard-ass?”
“You don’t want
to know.”
His tone stopped
her cold, and a flippant response died on her lips. She regarded him critically
for the first time. He still bore a passing resemblance to the rebellious
hell-raiser she’d secretly pined for in high school, but he’d changed. He stood
taller and straighter now. His lean jawline could have been carved from granite,
and his dark blue eyes held a new gravity. Devil-may-care Tommy Blackstone might
have left Hawthorne Springs, but tough, serious Tom had returned in his place.
He flipped the
papers on his clipboard back into place. “Besides, based on your behavior, I’m
not convinced you’re not a danger to yourself or others.”
“Don’t be
ridiculous. I’ve never been a danger to anyone.”
His fine, firm lips tilted up in a slow smile. “I don’t know about that.”
10 comments:
Nice! Great characters!
A great dose of holiday mayhem to start my day. Nice!
Great start to another great story.
We definitely think alike, Alison. Not sure what that says when the "alike" concerns jail time! Great beginning!
Fantastic! I love these characters and the situation, and the humor. It all feels so real. LOL, yeah, it's funny you and Jannine both had jailbirds in your story. :)
Thanks, everyone! Jannine, I'm taking bets you and I aren't the only ones who had this idea. LOL
Oh, the sparks are flying around those jail cell bars. Awesome chapter. Love it!!!
Great minds think alike. At least three of us have heroines stuck in jail. Love it.
Thanks, Vonnie!
Betsy, I'm not surprised. It seemed like a natural to me. LOL
Another story with fun characters. Can't wait to read the next chapter.
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