
In the Line of Duty
Author
Ami Weaver
Reads
19.4K
Chapters
15
Chapter One
THE FIRST THING Matt Bowden had unpacked was the coffee machine, from the same box as his toothbrush, phone charger, a change of clothes and his dogās bowls. A guy had his priorities. And this morning, after heād let Aldo, a German shepherdāGod-only-knew-what mix, out in the backyard, he was glad he had planned ahead.
He inhaled deeply as he came back into the kitchen of the ranch house heād rented and reached for a mug. Mmm. Coffee. Heād never thought heād move back to his childhood city of Grand Rapids, Michigan. But when his former army buddy Brice and his wife, Marley, had called him with the offer of a partnership in an adventure tour company, and heād just been discharged from the army, it seemed like a great fit. As a guy who loved very physical sportsākayaking, mountain biking, white-water raftingāit was perfect. So here he was. For now. Heād never been big on putting down roots, which was why army life suited him so well.
There wasnāt much left for him here, and maybe that was a good thing. His mother had moved to Texas after Matt had joined up, straight out of high school, so with the exception of the very occasional wedding, he hadnāt been back to Michigan in nearly twenty years.
Heād come back now because he owned part of a business. Matt shook his head. Heād never thought heād end up here. Heād figured he had another ten years in the army in him, but after this brutal last tour in Kabul that plan had abruptly changed.
Barking caught Mattās attention as he poured his first cup of coffee. He frowned and set the mug on the counter. Odd. It sounded like his dogāexcept it was coming from the front of the house. Aldo was in the backyard. Matt wove his way through the unpacked boxes to the front door just in time to see his overfriendly dog leap at a red-haired woman across the street, planting his undoubtedly filthy paws on her chest.
With a curse, Matt wrenched open the door and raced outside in his socks. In March. Ignoring the cold and the slush, he ran down the driveway and across the street, yelling for Aldo. Crazy mutt was nothing but trouble, and way too friendly. Zeroing in on his dog, he didnāt notice much about the woman, but he could almost feel the anger pouring off her. Not that he blamed her.
āMaāam, Iām so sorry,ā he panted as he wrenched Aldo by the collar and got him to sit. āSomehow he got the back gate open. I must have not latched it properly.ā Matt lifted his gaze, then, to look at her. Past the muddy footprints on her shirtāover a nice pair of breasts, he couldnāt help but notice; he was a guy, after allāto her face.
He stared at the red-haired woman in front of him. Her angry but beautiful features coalesced into a face he knew. Callie Marshall. Wow. His pulse gave a sharp kick and awareness stabbed him low in the gut.
And that was a completely inappropriate response to his childhood best friendās widow.
He recovered quickly. āSorry, maāam. Callie. He doesnāt usually get away from me like that.ā
Aldo panted and sat on his foot, tongue lolling, eyes fixed on Callie.
She frowned at Matt and cocked her head. Her expression went from angry to puzzled to shocked, and she gave a little gasp as she stepped back. āMatt? Wait. YouāI didnāt knowāyouāre the new neighbor?ā
An unfamiliar awkwardness swamped him. āYeah. I am. We are. I was planning on looking you up. How have you been?ā The question seemed insufficient, given all sheād been through in the past year and half.
His friendās widow. God. Living across the street from him.
She gave him a tight smile. āIāve been better. But thanks for asking.ā She brushed futilely at the mud on her shirt and his eyes zeroed right back in on her breasts.
Hell. He swallowed and forced his gaze away. āIām sorry about your shirt. Iām not sure what came over Aldo. Heās not usually so uncontrollable.ā
Her frown returned as her gaze shifted to Aldo. āI donāt know if you know this, Matt, but I have two little kids. Lots of people around here do. We canāt have an uncontrollable dog running around, knocking people down. Itās not safe, for them or for your dog.ā
āI understand.ā He did. But did she really think heād let his dog run around and hurt people? āHe was excited. New neighborhood.ā To put it mildly; Aldo had come all the way from Afghanistan. And after the hell-and-back deployment theyād been through, Matt hadnāt brought his buddy all the way here to have something happen to him.
She eyed Aldo. āIām sure he was. But Iāve got to change now so I wonāt be late for work.ā She frowned as she looked at Mattās feet. āSeems like you might need some new socks.ā
He glanced down at his half-frozen feet. āYeah. I was in a hurry. Again, Iām sorry, Callie.ā
āJust keep him under control. Nice to see you again, Matt.ā She turned and walked away, and he dragged his unrepentant pet back across the street and into the yard. While Matt wasnāt sure if the dog had opened the gate or if it had come open on its own, he would replace the latch anyway. He shook the gate and noted how it wiggled. As soon as the hardware store opened, heād pick something up. Callie was right. He couldnāt have Aldo slipping out and jumping on people. Or getting hit by a car.
But Callie... He whistled and Aldo came loping back over, to follow him into the house. Matt had meant it when heād said he planned on looking her up. Checking on her. He hadnāt been able to be at the funeral. Heād been in the sandbox at the time. Jasonās being gone still gave him a bad jolt whenever he thought of it, which was often.
But Matt hadnāt planned on seeing her quite this soon. Or having her in his line of sight every day. She hadnāt seemed any more thrilled to see him. Maybe the last thing she wanted was a reminder of her husband in her line of sight every day. If Matt had known she lived there, would he have rented a different house?
That didnāt matter now.
He saw a dark blue minivan back out of the garage across the street. Aldo whined and shoved at Mattās hand with his nose. āWhat got into you? You should have left her alone, boy,ā he said as he rubbed Aldoās ears and watched her drive away. Theyād done some training since heād picked Aldo up from the rescue group that had gotten him home from Afghanistan, but the mutt had a long way to go. He tended to forget his mannersāsuch as they were. But itād been a long time since heād jumped on someone like that. It was one of the first things Matt had worked on with him when they were still overseas.
As if they were on a loop, his thoughts returned to Callie. How was she doing? It was hard to tell from their unfortunate encounter, but from what he could see, the house was well cared for, so hopefully that meant she wasnāt struggling. Heād thought of her occasionally over the past few months, and often of his old friend. Heād caught a glimpse of the kids yesterday morning when theyād been walked to a neighborās. Heād thought nothing of it because he hadnāt known whose kids they were.
Now he did, and things had shifted somehow.
* * *
Callie was still fuming when she left the house for the salon. It wasnāt a Monday but it sure felt like one. The boys dragging their feet. The change of clothes when the bowl of cereal ended up in Liamās lap. The forgotten blankieāthat was her fault, since in the cereal melee sheād forgotten to grab it from Liamās bed. Which was why sheād run back home to get it after taking the kids to Colleenās, only to have her shirt nearly ruined when she was jumped on by a huge dog with filthy paws.
Not to mention the shock of her life when Jasonās old friend Matt Bowden had come racing out of the house across the street, yelling for the mutt. That had been what nearly knocked her over, not the dog. Which was apparently his.
She took a deep, shaky breath. Jasonās friend. Matt was a link, however tenuous, to her husband. To her past. She wasnāt quite sure how she felt about that. Oh, she ran into people all the time whoād known Jason, whoād been in her life before and after his death. But with one exception, none of them were people Jason had considered his best friend. Whoād known him his entire life.
Still. Callie hadnāt really known Mattāheād been sort of remote, but to be fair, theyād never really had a chance to get to know each other. Sheād accepted him on faith, because heād been Jasonās friend. Since Matt had been in the military, it wasnāt like there were backyard barbecues and time to get to know him. Heād been deployed when Jason, a firefighter, had died in the line of duty, and Matt hadnāt been able to attend the funeral. Heād sent condolences, but that whole time was such a blur. Details kind of got lost in the haze of grief and disbelief that had shrouded everything for months.
Sheād eventually emerged from that haze for the sake of her kids, but the shock of seeing Matt now threw her off balance. It would have been nice to be prepared, to know that he was moving in so close to her. But heād seemed just as surprised to see her. To her knowledge, while heād been in the States on leave, he hadnāt been back to Grand Rapids at all. As far as not knowing whoād moved in, she and the kids had spent the weekend with Jasonās parents, celebrating her father-in-lawās birthday.
She had a little twinge of conscience. Sheād been borderline rude to Matt. Yes, the dog had jumped on her. Yes, she was apparently having a bad day and it wasnāt even nine in the morning yet. But that wasnāt any reason to snap at him, when heād been so clearly apologetic about the whole thing.
She pulled her van into her usual spot behind Time For You Salon and hurried in. Lori was behind the desk. āIām sorry, Lori,ā she said, even though sheād called to let her know she was running behind.
āNo problem,ā her friend and boss said. āYou know that. What happened?ā
Callie hung up her coatāsomehow it had missed getting dirtyāand filled her in on the morning. She downplayed Matt, but Lori must have picked up on some odd vibe.
āHmm, a new neighbor. Single?ā
Callie actually froze while reaching for a towel. She forced herself to move. āI have no idea, actually. Heās an old friend of Jasonās. I hadnāt seen him for years, until today.ā That was the truth. Last she knew, Matt had been engaged. That had been several years ago, which most likely meant there was a wife by now. Matt had said āweā moved in. But Jason had never mentioned anything about a wedding. Callie would have thought he would have been in it, or at least sent a gift to the happy couple. Funny how sheād forgotten all about that until now.
āAn old friend of Jasonās. Well, well. Weāll hope heās single,ā Lori said cheerfully, and Callie managed to recover enough to send her a mock glare. āIs he hot?ā
Well, yeah, actually. She was astounded sheād actually noticed that, in all the commotion and her anger. But she easily recalled his broad shoulders, big hands, sweatpants stretched over muscular thighs, and ice-blue eyes. His eyes had always been striking. His hands on the dog had been firm but gentle. His brown hair was military short.
āIāll take that as a yes,ā Lori said, her voice smug, and Callie felt her face turn bright red. Damn her pale redheadās skin.
āI donāt really know,ā she managed to reply. Sheād gone for so long without really seeing another man that the whole idea of being attracted to oneāa man who knew her husband, a man who wasnāt her husbandācaught her completely off guard and unsettled her. āThe whole thing was kind of quick and I was really sort of focused on the dog and the mud.ā
āUnderstandable,ā Lori said. She sent Callie a sly look. āMaybe next time you see him you can check.ā
Callie laughed. āOr you can come over and check him out yourself.ā
Lori sent her an assessing look that made her uncomfortable. āMaybe I will.ā
The first of the dayās clients came through the door then and Callie didnāt get a chance to warn her friend off matchmaking. Sheād decided it was better all around to raise her kids on her own, and besides, she didnāt think sheād find anyone who could take Jasonās place in her life. She couldnāt imagine looking. It just seemed wrong. And if she ever was open to the possibility, itād be with a guy who wasnāt big on risk taking. Sheād had enough of that for a lifetime. It for sure wouldnāt be with a guy whoād been a friend of her husbandās.
Whoād been a part of her wedding.
No, she wasnāt taking any chances with her heart or her kidsā.
* * *
Callie got through her day with no further mention of Matt, but he wasnāt far from her thoughts. It made her irritable, but she tried to keep a lid on it. Her clients and now her kids didnāt deserve to have her snappish. She pulled into her driveway and checked carefully for a big dog before she got out of the van. Sheād been serious when sheād said she couldnāt risk a badly behaved dog around her kids. Heād seemed friendly enough, just not well trained. Add it to the list of things she wasnāt willing to chance.
Nothing jumped at her, so she hurried over to collect the boys from Colleen, her neighbor who ran an in-home day care.
āHi, Callie,ā Colleen greeted her. āTheyāre all ready for you. I noticed you met our new neighbor this morning.ā
āAh. Yeah. Or his dog, rather,ā she said, plucking the kidsā backpacks from their hooks.
Colleen made a little humming noise in her throat. āMmm. If I wasnāt married...ā
Callie laughed. āBut you are,ā she teased. She paused a second. āHis nameās Matt Bowden. He was a friend of Jasonās.ā
The teasing look fell from Colleenās face. āOh, Callie. Iām sorry.ā
She shook her head. āItās okay, really. I didnāt know him that well. Heās army. Or he was. I donāt know if heās in anymore.ā She paused another second. Would he have moved into a house so far from an army base if he was still in? It didnāt seem likely. āHe and Jason were childhood friends.ā The words gave her a little pang. Did Jasonās parents know heād moved back? They hadnāt said anything to her, and it seemed theyād have mentioned something about it. Since he and Jason had been such good friends.
āAre you going to be okay with that? With him?ā
She gave Colleen a little smile. āI doubt Iāll see him that much. But either way, it will be fine.ā
As long as he kept that dog of his under control. Otherwise, she had no intention of interacting with him beyond basic pleasantries and neighborliness. She could handle that. The kids didnāt need to know him as their dadās friend.
Both boys burst into the foyer and greeted her with hugs, and the discussion of Matt was dropped.
In fact, she didnāt think of himāmuchāduring the predinner chaos at her own house. The promise of spring was in the air, enough so that she left the front door open, even though the glass was still up over the screen door. So when she looked out into the living room and saw her two little brown-haired boys clustered in front of the door, she frowned and went to see what they were looking at.
That dog was on the porch.
āDoggie!ā Liamās squeal made her heart sink.
āNot our doggie,ā she said firmly, and looked past the dog to the house across the street. A light was on, and a car was in the driveway. The gate hung open. āGuys, give me some room. Iāll take him back across the street.ā
āCan we come?ā Eli asked eagerly, and Callie shook her head.
āBut,ā she added at their crestfallen expressions, āyou guys can stand on the porch. Howās that?ā That way they could see her and the dog, and she could keep an eye on them. Win-win. āLet me go first, so I can get hold of his collar.ā She didnāt relish getting jumped on again, and she definitely wasnāt willing to let the big mutt knock down one of her boys.
She edged out the door, speaking softly. āHey buddy, stay right there.ā The dog perked right up, his tail wagging so hard his whole body shook. He made little whining noises in his throat and she held out a hand cautiously. He dropped to his belly and rolled right over. āNo! I need you to get up. I need to take you home.ā She managed to get hold of his collar, and got him back on his feet. She gestured to the boys. āYou can come out now,ā she said, and they did.
āPat doggie?ā Liam asked. His big blue eyes were fixed on the dog, and Eli was already edging closer.
āHeās not very well trained,ā she began. But then the dog sat on her foot, his eyes fixed on the kids, ears pricked. Itād probably be all right but... āHeās not ours, guys, and Iām just going to take him home. Maybe another time.ā
āWhereās he live?ā Eli asked, and Callie pointed across the street.
āJust over there.ā With your dadās friend, she didnāt add. Why was she so fixated on that fact?
Sheād got the dog down the steps when Matt strode out onto the front porch of his house. āWhat theāCallie, Iām so sorry. Crazy mutt.ā He strode across the front lawn, shaking his head. āAldo. How did you get out?ā
The dog, Aldo, wagged his tail and barked.
āThe gateās open,ā she said, and tried to withdraw her hand from the collar before the transfer. Touching Matt seemed almost dangerous. Still, his big hand brushed hers when he grasped the collar. The heat from that brief touch nearly had her stumbling back. Sheād touched plenty of guys casually in the year and a half or so since her husbandās death. A handshake, a haircut, an accidental bump in the grocery store. Never had she felt it like this.
She tucked her hand in her sweatshirt pocket, not wanting him to see her trembling fingers.
His chuckle was a low rumble and it reverberated...everywhere inside her. āSo it is.ā He rubbed the top of the dogās head affectionately. Then he looked straight at Callie. Those ice-blue eyes seemed to pierce her soul. āIām sorry, Callie. Iām not sure what the problem is here. But he likes you.ā
He almost sounded surprised. Callie stiffened. āYeah, itās weird, isnāt it? Hope you get that gate fixed. You donāt want him to get hit by a car.ā She gave him a small smile and turned to go back home. Back where sheād be safe.
His hand on her arm stopped her.
āHow old are they now?ā The question was low, and his gaze was on Liam and Eli. In spite of herself, her heart gave a little tug. Of course, heād see them as the kids of his childhood friend. It had to be hard on himāhe hadnāt been here for Jasonās funeral, and for a while before that.
āLiamās three and Eliās five,ā she said. āAnd I donāt want them to decide to come over here. Have a good night.ā
She walked away and left Matt standing on the sidewalk, his misbehaving dog sitting on his foot.
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