
How to Land Her Lawman
Author
Teresa Southwick
Reads
18.9K
Chapters
15
Chapter One
Will Fletcher would rather face an armed felon than have the conversation he was about to have with his ex-girlfriend. But, as the saying went, this town wasnât big enough for the both of them. For better or worse, this summer he was the acting sheriff in Blackwater Lake and she was a freelance photographer who occasionally did work for the department. She also had a studio on Main Street across from his office.
There was no way he wouldnât see her and the sooner this confrontation was behind him the better.
Heâd been watching the Photography Shop all morning, waiting for her to be alone, and now stood on the sidewalk in front of the sheriffâs office ready to head over. Hesitation was costing him a hell of a lot of time when there was work to do. He looked left, then right before crossing the street. Her window had big, fancy letters telling the establishmentâs name, then smaller print in the right hand corner proclaiming April Kennedy, Photographer. There was a list of services in the right cornerâPortraits, Family Sittings, Weddings and Special Occasions.
Will stared at the displayed dance-hall girl and gambler forms with cutouts where the tourists put their faces for a fun souvenir picture of a visit to Blackwater Lake, Montana. Technically he was a visitor but definitely not a tourist. Born and raised in this town, he was only here to help out and would go back to being a detective for Chicago PD in three months when his dad, the real sheriff, got a clean bill of health to resume his job.
âMan up, Fletcher,â he muttered. âWhatâs the worst that could happen?â
She could cry. The thought made him cringe.
Heâd seen her do that and it ripped him up. But that was a lot of years ago. He didnât know whether or not sheâd still be angry but the first face-to-face since then was no doubt going to be awkward.
Will braced himself and pushed open the glass door. The bell above it rang as he walked inside. There was no one in the front but a familiar female voice called out, âIâll be right with you.â
It was cheerful and sweet and the sound echoed inside him, stirring the cobwebs of tucked-away memories. It was impossible not to notice the framed photos displayed on the walls, examples of her skill as a photographer. There were individuals, families, babies. Some were black-and-white portraits, dramatic and really good. Thereâd always been something about April that people responded to, something that made them relax and allowed the camera to capture a special look or smile. The only black-and-whites he usually saw were cop cars, so this was a pleasant change.
âIâm so sorry I kept you waitingââ April Kennedy came through the open doorway and froze in her tracks when she saw him.
âHi,â he said.
At one time theyâd practically been engaged, but Will felt as if he was seeing her for the first time. Her shiny long brown hair was pulled into a ponytail with wisps coming loose around her face. She was wearing jeans and a purple Photography Shop T-shirt that clung to every sweet curve. Big hazel eyes stared back at him and right now they were more green than brown, which meant she wasnât happy to see him. He couldnât blame her.
âWill.â
âYou look really good, April.â
âThanks. So do you.â
âIâm pretty sure you didnât want to tell me that, so Iâll take it as a compliment.â
âGotta be honest.â She shrugged.
âAnd Iâve always liked that about you.â
âI heard you were coming back to Blackwater Lake.â
He didnât have to ask how sheâd heard. April was best friends with his younger sister, Kim. She and her teenage son lived with their dad and Will had moved into his old room for the summer. One big happy family again. The backyard of Aprilâs little house was separated by an alley from his dadâs rear yard. Hank Fletcher had watched over April and her single mom because it was the neighborly thing to do. And, unlike himself, his dad had been there when Aprilâs mom died of breast cancer. The Fletchers had kind of unofficially adopted her, so of course they would warn her that he was coming back.
âThe thing is, this is a small town,â he started.
âAs opposed to Chicago.â Her voice was as icy as a Windy City blizzard.
âRight. Thereâs no way we wonât run into each other and I wanted to make sure the first time wasnât public and uncomfortable for you.â
Heâd checked one out of two boxes. This wasnât public but she had to be as uncomfortable as he was.
âKim told you to do this.â She wasnât asking a question.
âMy sister mentioned that it would be better if the first time we saw each other it was just the two of us, without a big crowd of people looking on. And talking about it.â Because the only thing folks in Blackwater Lake were better at than being neighborly was gossiping.
âStill, you didnât have to take her advice. Itâs actually very thoughtful of you, Will.â Her tone implied his consideration was unexpected.
Or maybe it just sounded that way because his conscience was passing the words through the guilt filter. Either way, he figured it was a good idea to clear the air. âI donât think I ever apologized for what happened in Chicago.â
âYou mean the time I came to surprise you and a woman answered the door wearing nothing but your shirt?â
âYeah. That.â He was staring at her mouth, the way she pressed her lips together. It had always made him want to kiss her and unfortunately now was no exception. Normally it was comforting knowing things didnât change but this wasnât one of those times.
âYou tried to apologize, actually.â She met his gaze directly. âBut I wasnât speaking to you, so that made it kind of hard.â
âWell, let me say it now. Iâm sorry for what happened.â
âLet it go, Will. I have. That was a long time ago. It was my idea not to be exclusive when you went to Chicago and entered the police academy. It seemed the right thing to do since I couldnât go with you and everyone knows long-distance relationships are a challenge. We found out the hard way how true that is. Technically we didnât have a relationship and it still fell apart.â
Will remembered trying to talk her into going to Chicago with him, but her mom had just been diagnosed. April had never known her dad and wouldnât abandon the mother who had raised her daughter alone and always put her first. Sheâd suggested they date other people but keep in touch and after a year reevaluate things between them. He was glad she hadnât forgotten that.
âI didnât expect you not to date,â she said. âAnd you did.â
âFor what itâs worth, you were right about everything.â
âThings happen for the best. Water under the bridge. Let bygones be bygones. And any other clichĂ© you can think of to put this behind you.â She shrugged as if it made no difference to her.
âOkay, then.â
Will felt oddly dissatisfied with her response. Maybe the altitude was getting to him. That was the best explanation he could come up with for why he wasnât completely relieved that she didnât scream or cry or seem the least bit emotional about what had happened. Or maybe he was simply an egotistical jerk who expected her to still be a little bothered about something heâd done six years ago.
Possibly his reaction was colored by the fact that heâd married the woman wearing nothing but his shirt and it had been a failure. On top of that, heâd always had the nagging feeling that what heâd done to April was the biggest mistake heâd ever made. For a man who hated to fail, doing it twice at the same time didnât sit very well. And it was kind of annoying that she seemed completely at peace with how things had turned out.
âSo, if thatâs allââ She cocked a thumb over her shoulder toward the back room, where a camera sat on a tripod.
âJust so you know, Iâll be here until the end of summer while Dad is recuperating from his open-heart surgery.â
âThat was a scare.â She put her hand to her chest. The first honest emotion sheâd exhibited since heâd walked in. âFirst the heart attack, then surgery. It was like watching the Rock of Gibraltar crack. Your sister has been his diet-and-exercise drill sergeant ever since he got out of the hospital and started cardiac rehab.â
âKim is hard to say no to.â He was here talking to April, wasnât he? âThe sheriff has always protected the citizens of his town first and himself a distant second. Maybe he saw God when the doc put him under for the procedure because right after he got out of the hospital he asked me to fill in for him. Then he got the mayor and town council to approve my temporary appointment.â
âIt would be just like him to push himself to go back to work too soon. Iâm sure your family is glad to have you here.â Her tone said she felt differently. âAnd a good thing you could take extended leave from your job.â
Maybe the job needed time off from him. Between that and his sister nagging him to not be an ass and do it for Dad, he had decided to take one for team Fletcher. All he was willing to say was, âI have a lot of days on the Chicago PD books.â
âSo youâre the sheriff now.â She folded her arms over her chest.
âActing, but yeah. And I wanted to make sure I can count on you for freelance work when needed.â Sometimes there were multicar accidents that required photos with more detail than an untrained photographer could capture with a cell phone. Insurance companies were funny that way when a settlement was involved. Mug shots were part of the official record.
âOf course Iâll continue the arrangement. Itâs important that Hank knows everything will go smoothly in his absence. Just as if he was at the wheel.â
âSo youâre doing it for Dad.â
âAbsolutely. After you and I didnât work out, you got whatâs-her-name, but I got your family. Iâd do anything for them.â
âTheyâre lucky to have you.â
âNo.â She shook her head and her ponytail swung from side to side. âIâm the lucky one.â
The weird feeling in his chest felt a lot like envy. He was jealous of her loyalty to his dad, sister and nephew even though heâd given up any right to her commitment. He might not have cheated officially but it was a betrayal of spirit. And he still didnât feel as if the air was cleared.
âI should have told you I was dating someone, but I didnât want to hurt you.â
âAnd that worked out so well.â She smiled, but it didnât turn her hazel eyes from green to warm. They went almost chocolaty brown. âGolly, this has been fun, but I have someone coming in for a sitting and need to get things set up.â
âOkay. I didnât mean to keep you.â
âNo problem. I appreciate you stopping by. Now when we run into each other it wonât be awkward at all. See you around, Will.â She turned and walked into the back.
âBye, April.â
He left her shop and felt like gum on someoneâs shoe. Kim had said seeing her would take the heat off, but she couldnât have been more wrong. The heat was on and it had nothing to do with their history and everything to do with the beautiful, sexy woman April Kennedy still was. And when had she gotten so confident and sassy? So independent?
That was different. She was the sameâbut different.
Man, it was going to be a long, hot summer.
* * *
April heard a knock on the sliding glass door in her kitchen and hurried to answer it. Kim Fletcher was standing on the back porch and she yanked the other woman inside.
âThanks for coming. Iâm glad you didnât have plans with Luke.â
âIâd have canceled if I did. You said it was vital that we talk. Whatâs up?â
Her friend was engaged to be married this summer to another teacher at Blackwater Lake High School, where she worked in the English Department. Luke was the football coach in addition to teaching science. Her son, Tim, played freshman football and approved of the man his mom was going to marry. Sheâd found her happily-ever-after and April was glad at least one of them had.
âDid anyone at home know you were coming over here?â
Kim gave her a âreally?â look. âNews flash. My father, brother and son are guys. They donât pay any attention to me. I could announce that I was going to be a fire eater in the circus and theyâd say âHave a good time.â Iâm invisible to them.â
âOkay.â With Will in Chicago all this time, April had forgotten how inconvenient it was that her best friend and her ex were siblings. Who now temporarily lived together under the same roof. All sheâd thought about was her own personal emergency and made an SOS call to her bestie. âI need to talk to you and the conversation calls for wine.â
âTwist my arm.â Kim held it out. âI promise I wonât say no.â
Kim Fletcher was pretty and for a long time April hadnât thought about how much she looked like her brother. Same blue eyes and brown hair, although her friendâs was heavily highlighted, making her look more blonde. The thought of manly, masculine Will with highlighted hair almost made her smile.
After April poured Chardonnay into the two wineglasses waiting on the kitchen island, they carried them to the family room and sat on the sofa.
Kim scooted back and tucked her legs up beside her. âYou saw Will.â
April sipped her wine then nodded. âIâd say youâre psychic except that he admitted the meeting was your idea. To avoid an awkward, public encounter.â
âYouâre welcome,â Kim said.
âHold it. Iâm not on the gratitude train yet.â April had been jittery and uneasy ever since seeing him again. She liked status quo and really wanted it restored but wasnât quite sure how to stuff all the emotional junk back in the jar. âIt might have been better to take my chances. Maybe I wouldnât have run into him at all.â
âSeriously?â The other woman gave her a youâre-kidding-yourself look. âThis town is the size of a postage stamp. The sheriffâs office is right across the street from your shop. Heâs living not very far from your back door. If you really believe your paths wonât cross in the three months heâll be here, youâre in serious denial.â
âI know. And youâre right. But I wish youâd warned me.â
Kim shook her head. âSurprise was better. Your reaction had to be natural. Unscripted.â
April wanted to crawl into a hole when she thought about how it had gone seeing Will again. She hadnât been prepared and preparation was her thing. When she got in the car, she mentally plotted the route to her destination. Writing a grocery list started on aisle one and ended at produce. For a photography sitting she always had cameras, lenses, backdrops and props ready.
Even though he lived in Chicago, she knew Will would return to Blackwater Lake from time to time because his family was here. Kim had always warned her when he was visiting and sheâd successfully avoided him. In fact she hadnât seen him at the hospital when his dad had surgery, but she knew heâd been there. She managed to stay out of his way. None of that stopped her from picturing how a meeting between them would go and in her imagination sheâd always been less tongue-tied, her wit sharp as a stiletto. Her moment to make him sorry he hadnât waited for her.
âI donât know about unscripted,â April said ruefully, âbut it was unsomething.â
âHow was it? Seeing him again, I mean?â Sympathy gathered in Kimâs eyes.
âHe looks good.â Really good. April hated to admit it, but heâd been right that she hadnât wanted to tell him so. âAnd itâs nice of him to put his life on hold and come back to help the family.â
Kim nodded absently. âDonât get me wrong. I love my brother. But I think thereâs something going on with him. Career-wise, I mean. There have been family crisesâGod knows I was one. Being an unwed teenage mother certainly qualifies for family-crisis material. Mom was killed in that car accident not long after he entered the police academy. Itâs not to say he doesnât care because I know he does. But he never put work on hold to be here for us before.â
âHas he said anything?â
The other woman shook her head. âNo. He just seems edgy, tense. Different. I donât know. Maybe Iâm seeing ghosts where there arenât any.â
âMaybe you should talk to him about it.â April didnât have the right to be involved in his life and it annoyed her that she couldnât shut off her concern. âGet him to open up.â
âYou know better than anyone that my brother doesnât talk about stuff. Right now getting Dad back on his feet is the most important thing. Will stepping in for him as sheriff means Dad wonât worry about this town and can focus on getting strong again.â
âThatâs true.â But Aprilâs life would be far less complicated if the sheriff trusted someone besides his son. No matter how well Chicago PD trained its officers. On top of that Will knew Blackwater Lake inside and out. There was no doubt he would take good care of the town. âI just wish I knew how to get through the next three months with Will here.â
Thoughtfully, Kim tapped a fingernail against her wineglass. âA statement like that makes me think youâre still in love with my brother.â
âNo. Youâre wrong. Itâs been a lot of years.â April rejected that suggestion with every fiber of her being. âThat would just be stupid. Fool me once shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me.â
âHmm.â The woman stared at her. âWhere thereâs smoke, thereâs fire.â
âA clichĂ©? From Blackwater Lake High Schoolâs favorite honors English teacher?â
âClichĂ©s work because they convey a lot of truth. In this case, you seem to have strong feelings about seeing Will again. That doesnât happen if you donât care.â She finished the wine in her glass. âHence, smoke and fire.â
âI can assure you that what I feel for Will isnât love. Itâs ancient history. Iâve had relationships since him.â
âBut you make sure they never work. You always find an excuse to not take things to the next level. As soon as a guy even hints at getting serious, you shut down and blow him off completely.â
April shrugged. âSo sue me. I want something special, to be swept away. Settling for less isnât an option for me. And you have to kiss a lot of frogs...â
âMaybe.â Kim didnât sound convinced. âOr maybe you need closure with the first frog. Maybe you never moved on after Will hopped away.â
âFinding him with another woman seemed like closure to me.â But, darn it, today heâd looked genuinely sorry about what had happened.
âThen why did you call me over here to talk? Whatâs the problem?â Her friend didnât sound annoyed as much as frustrated that she couldnât help.
âI guess the problem is that I really want to hate him. That would make this summer so much easier and less awkward. Hate is simple, straightforward and sensible. I can deal with hate. But he was nice.â
âRest assured Iâll give him a stern talking-to about that.â There was a teasing look in Kimâs eyes.
âYou know what I mean,â April protested.
âI do. And I still say your problem is about closure.â
âI wish I could be the opposite of a bear and hibernate in the summer. Go to sleep and wake up after Labor Day. If I havenât gotten closure by now, Iâm never going to.â
âMaybe thereâs a way.â Her friend had a familiar expression on her face, the one that hinted inspiration was knocking on the door.
âEnlighten me.â Aprilâs interest was piqued.
âSeduce him.â
âWhat? Are you crazy?â
âIn the best possible way, or so my fiancĂ© says. That Luke is a keeper,â she said with a sigh.
âNo argument. But can we go back to where you just told me to seduce your brother in order to find closure?â
âAnd then dump him. Did I leave that part out?â
âYes.â April sat up straighter. âHow does that give me closure?â
âYour last breakup was situational and one-sided. Your emotions are stuck in neutral. Flirt with him. Have a fling. When heâs putty in your hands tell him Jean Luc, your winter-ski-instructor-lover, is due to arrive any day and you have to end your summer dalliance.â
âOn top of the fact that there is no Jean Luc, I donât think I can do that.â
âDonât you see?â Kim said, warming to her proposal. âYou finally have your chance for revenge. Of course you can do it.â
April shook her head. âIâm not that person.â
âLook, I know youâre really nice. Itâs why I love you and why weâve been best friends forever. But, trust me on this, you need to get some perspective and the best way to do that is to take control.â
âBut heâs your brother,â April protested.
âAll the better. I give you my permission. If I approve no one can judge you harshly.â
âBut Iâm not very good at seduction.â
âYouâll be fine. And I have a feeling it wonât take much effort or finesse. You need this and revenge is swift and satisfying. Humility would give Will a little character.â
April was starting to weaken. âBut he married Miss Naked-Under-His-Shirt. And now theyâre divorced.â Surely she could be forgiven for feeling the tiniest bit of satisfaction about that. âI would think that gives him a lot of character credits.â
âNo. He left her, remember?â Kim made a face. âI never liked that woman.â
April loved her for that. âStill, it seems inherently dishonest. Because it is inherently dishonest.â
âIf you flirt with him and he responds, how is that dishonest? It would be if you hated him, but you said you canât do that.â
This whole scene tipped into weird territory because that actually made a twisted sort of sense. âSo you really donât think this is a despicably underhanded thing to do? Intentionally flirting with every intention of dumping him? Thatâs the very definition of premeditated.â
âYouâre so overthinking this.â Kim sighed. âJust get my brother in bed, then say goodbye. Heâs moving back to his life in Chicago at the end of the summer anyway. The two of you have a good time and it ends. Things will work out. Trust me.â
Famous last words.
But a lot of what her friend said made sense. It was a proactive way to deal with the problem. If he felt nothing for her, no way would there be sex. That in itself would be confirmation theyâd never have worked out. Pretty much all she had to do was be nice to him and see what happened.
She leaned over and hugged her friend. âThatâs why I needed to talk to you.â
âHappy to help.â
âYou definitely did,â April said.
And now she had a plan.
Harlequin











































