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  “Can you help me out of this shirt?”

  Can’t you just sleep in it? she wanted to ask. Helping him put it on had been intimate enough. Taking it off…

  She was about to straighten and leave the room when his fingers caught her shirt, then slid up into her hair, around to her neck and pulled her closer.

  Before she could ask what he was doing, his mouth touched hers—just a solid pressure, lips against lips, a platonic kiss. Then his tongue levered between her lips, dipping into her mouth, and her knees damn near gave way. There was no hurry, no desperation or need, just wanting. He wasn’t going to die without her, or starve, or burst into flames.

  No, the dying/starving/flame-bursting was all hers.

  When he released her, his eyes remained closed. “Damn” was all he said, a hint of all his years in Texas creeping into the word, making it twice as long.

  Yeah. Damn.

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  Dear Reader,

  I’ve loved every book I’ve ever written and feel a great fondness for every couple that peopled them, but something about AJ Decker and Masiela Leal just grabbed me and wouldn’t let go. I can’t tell you why. They’re smart and capable and mature—but so are my other heroes and heroines. They’re flawed and human—but so are the others. They’ve suffered some deep hurts—but so have… Well, you get the idea.

  Maybe it’s because Decker is a cop, like my husband. Maybe because he has a deep sense of honor, like my father. Or maybe his hardheadedness reminds me of my son. And Mas—she’s a strong woman, not just physically but in every other way. Like my mom, my sisters, my best friends. Like me.

  Whatever the reason, I loved every moment I spent in Decker’s and Mas’s company, and I hope you do, too!

  Marilyn

  MARILYN PAPPANO

  Protector’s Temptation

  Books by Marilyn Pappano

  Silhouette Romantic Suspense

  *Michael’s Gift #583

  *Regarding Remy #609

  *A Man Like Smith #626

  Survive the Night #703

  Discovered: Daddy #746

  *Convincing Jamey #812

  *The Taming of Reid Donovan #824

  *Knight Errant #836

  The Overnight Alibi #848

  Murphy’s Law #901

  **Cattleman’s Promise #925

  **The Horseman’s Bride #957

  **Rogue’s Reform #1003

  Who Do You Love? #1033

  “A Little Bit Dangerous”

  My Secret Valentine #1053

  **The Sheriff’s Surrender #1069

  The Princess and the Mercenary #1130

  **Lawman’s Redemption #1159

  **One True Thing #1280

  **The Bluest Eyes in Texas #1391

  Somebody’s Hero #1427

  More Than a Hero #1453

  One Stormy Night #1471

  Forbidden Stranger #1495

  Intimate Enemy #1529

  Scandal in Copper Lake #1547

  Passion to Die For #1579

  Criminal Deception #1591

  Protector’s Temptation #1625

  MARILYN PAPPANO

  has spent most of her life growing into the person she was meant to be, but isn’t there yet. She’s been blessed with family—her husband, their son, his lovely wife and a grandson who is almost certainly the most beautiful and talented baby in the world—and friends, along with a writing career that’s made her one of the luckiest people around. Her passions, besides those already listed, include the pack of wild dogs who make their home in her house, fighting the good fight against the weeds that make up her yard, killing the creepy-crawlies that slither out of those weeds and, of course, anything having to do with books.

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 1

  The blow was sharp and unexpected. An elbow slammed AJ Decker in the gut, followed by a bite to his left hand. His grunt bit off into a curse, drowned out by a shout from the uniformed officer hustling around the car.

  “Watch out, Lieutenant! Willie likes to go for the—!”

  The warning faded as the prisoner, hands still cuffed, kicked out with regrettable accuracy. Blood drained from AJ’s face, and little more than a huff of breath escaped him as he sank to the ground on hands and knees. Pain washed up in waves, creating a roaring in his ears that reduced the pounding of feet and the struggle between prisoner and officers to a distant rumble. Oh, God, he was going to be sick.

  Gritting his teeth, he willed the nausea away. He would never live this down—the growing crowd of witnesses spilling out of the police department confirmed that—but damned if he’d make an embarrassing situation worse by puking up his guts in front of the whole damn department.

  AJ’s vision cleared as three or four officers dragged Willie away kicking and screaming obscenities, and he focused on a hand stuck out to him. He took it, and Tommy Maricci, one of the detectives who worked for him, pulled him to his feet. Maricci was trying hard not to grin when he let go.

  “Rule one in dealing with Willie Franklin—always protect your nads,” Maricci said mildly.

  “I’ve never dealt with Willie Franklin before.” AJ’s voice was reasonably strangled, since even the shallowest of breaths hurt deep inside. “Please God, I never will again.”

  The officer who’d been bringing Willie in for booking—thirty pounds over department fitness guidelines and two years short of retirement—reluctantly approached. His cheeks were red, and sweat gleamed on his forehead. “I should’ve warned you sooner, Lieutenant, but I just figured everyone knew you don’t give Willie a chance to kick.”

  “Yeah, well, now everyone knows.” AJ straightened to his full height, then sucked in a pain-filled breath. He’d managed to reach the age of thirty-eight without ever taking a hit to the testicles, but now he understood why guys who did curled into the fetal position. It hurt. Like hell.

  As his audience drifted back inside the building, he took a tentative step, then another, grinding his teeth against the throb. He wasn’t sure he would ever walk normally again. He managed a few more steps before a voice cutting through the warm afternoon brought him up short.

  “Jeez, Decker. Brought down by a woman—and a scrawny one at that. You’re slipping.”

  Slowly he turned, staring at the owner of the voice. The man stood on the curb ten feet away, wearing a gray suit, a lighter gray shirt and a burgundy tie. He looked as if he could be on his way to court, except for the lack of a briefcase…and the fact that the courtrooms where he prosecuted cases for the State of Texas were nowhere near Copper Lake, Georgia.

  “Scrawny women are usually the dirtiest fighters,” AJ replied evenly before extending his hand. “Donovan. What the hell are you doing here?”

  Ray Donovan closed the distance between them, shaking hands. “Looking for you.”

  That couldn’t be good news. They’d been friendly enough back in Texas, but not really buddies. It had been their jobs that brought them together: AJ had been a homicide detective with the Dallas PD and Donovan had been an assistant district attorney. You catch ’em, I’ll clean ’em and we’ll let the state fry ’em, he used to joke. They’d done just that often enough.

  AJ drew a careful breath and decided he might live after all. “Ray Donovan, Tommy Maricci.” He didn’t bother with any further introduction. Donovan had probably already noti
ced the badge clipped to Maricci’s belt, and any cop as good as Maricci recognized a prosecutor when he saw one.

  The two men shook hands, then Donovan gestured toward a bench shaded by an overgrown crape myrtle. “I’d ask you to take a walk, but since you probably wouldn’t make it to the curb, can we talk over there?”

  Maricci snickered as AJ scowled. The hell of it was, Donovan was right. He wasn’t going to be moving too fast or too far for a while.

  “I’ll give Wilhelmina your best,” Maricci said, slapping AJ on the back before he headed into the police station.

  Hiding a wince, AJ limped the ten feet to the wrought-iron bench and gingerly eased down. Damn. Sitting was no more comfortable than standing. Lying down—after guzzling half a bottle of whiskey—was the only thing that was going to make him feel better.

  Donovan didn’t sit but stood gazing into the distance.

  When he didn’t speak, AJ did. “You ever get out of that suit?”

  Donovan’s gaze flickered over him. “You’re not my type.”

  AJ snorted. He knew Donovan’s type too well. How many women had he dated in Dallas who’d dropped him for Donovan? Two? No, three, counting the cheerleader.

  They could make small talk until Donovan was ready, but AJ wasn’t very good at small talk, so he went straight to the point. “What do you want with me?”

  “An old case came across my desk a few weeks ago. A pimp convicted of killing one of his girls. Got a life sentence. His lawyer didn’t like the verdict and wouldn’t leave it alone. She kept poking around, asking questions, reviewing statements. Now she thinks she’s uncovered some serious problems with the investigation.”

  “What do you think?”

  Donovan’s smile was rueful. “I’d like to believe she’s wrong. I prosecuted the case. Sending the wrong man to prison doesn’t look good on my record. But based on what I’ve seen so far, she might be right.”

  “You think he’s innocent?” AJ asked.

  “Not by a long shot. But he might be innocent of this particular crime.”

  “What does any of this have to do with me?”

  Donovan glanced toward the parking lot, where patrol cars were pulling in for shift change, then lowered his gaze to the ground. “Since word got out that we were taking another look at the case, she’s gotten some threats. Someone took a shot at her. Someone broke in to her house. They’ve left messages and notes warning her to drop it.”

  Which meant she was probably right. Still, Dallas was a long way outside AJ’s jurisdiction. He wasn’t with DPD anymore. He hadn’t stayed in touch with anyone once he’d left. Donovan’s story was vaguely interesting, but there was no reason for him to be telling it now, unless AJ had worked the case, which he hadn’t. He remembered every homicide case he’d ever worked, and none had involved a pimp and one of his girls.

  “What does this have to do with me?” he asked again.

  Still staring down, Donovan traced a crack in the pavement with the toe of his shoe before looking up hesitantly. AJ was surprised. He’d never seen Donovan anything less than supremely confident.

  “I’m looking for a place to put the lawyer for a few days. I don’t want anything to happen to her while I go over her information.”

  For a moment AJ looked blankly at him, then Donovan’s meaning penetrated. “You want to bring her here? To Copper Lake?” He snorted. “Come on, Donovan, the State of Texas can do better than this. You can set up a safe house almost anywhere. You’ve got the entire DPD to help you out, and if they’re not enough, there’s the Rangers and the feds.”

  Again, Donovan avoided his gaze for a moment before sighing heavily. “I don’t know who I can trust in Texas. The guys who threatened her, who shot at her and broke into her house…we have reason to believe they’re cops.”

  Damn. “Dallas cops?”

  Donovan nodded. The state didn’t pay him anywhere near what he was worth, but he had family money. He didn’t need the salary. That helped make him a hell of a prosecutor: he couldn’t be bought.

  AJ didn’t have family money, but he couldn’t be bought, either. Though he’d run across plenty of people who could.

  Easing to his feet, AJ grimaced at the discomfort that intensified before settling into a dull throb. He wasn’t naïve. Cops were like any other professionals: some good, some bad, some indifferent. Some were tempted by power, by greed, by ego. The good ones outnumbered the bad a hundred to one, but it only took one to taint an entire department.

  “So you’re requesting the assistance of the Copper Lake Police Department.” AJ shook his head. Big city coming to the small town for help. Who would have believed it?

  “No, actually, I’m requesting your assistance. I’d like to put her up with you for a while. The fewer people who know, the better.”

  “Why me?”

  “Because I can trust you. You’d never be tempted by money or brotherhood or friendship. You do what’s right.”

  Strict moral code. That was what AJ’s dad called it. Right and wrong, good and bad were concepts Adam Decker lived by. He’d never wavered, even when it would have been easy, even when it would have profited him. AJ had done his best to do the same.

  He walked a few feet, his gaze on the traffic on Carolina Avenue. Copper Lake was your average small town: twenty-thousand people, relatively pleasant, relatively safe. The population covered the spectrum of race and social and economic status, with an average ratio of criminals to law-abiding citizens and those skirting the edge. It wasn’t the kind of place anyone would expect a homicide detective from Dallas to choose.

  Or a defense attorney in hiding.

  Then something Donovan had said echoed in his head. You’d never be tempted by…brotherhood or friendship. Abruptly he turned back. “I know these cops?” Donovan nodded.

  “Who are they?”

  “Your old running buddies from Homicide. Myers. Taylor. Kinney.”

  Muscles tightening, AJ got a really bad feeling in his gut. He looked at the parking lot, scanning for a car that didn’t belong, and found it in a black sedan with tinted windows and a lone figure sitting in the passenger seat. From this distance, and with the tint, it was impossible to make out anything about her, but he knew pretty much all he needed to.

  Heat rose into his face, carrying with it anger that he’d thought he’d put behind him years ago. He scowled at Donovan. “This is about the Riggs case, isn’t it? Teri Riggs. Israel Rodriguez. And her.” He stabbed a finger in the direction of the car. “You brought her here, expecting me to take her in, let her stay at my house, keep an eye on her? You’re nuts!”

  Donovan dragged his fingers through his hair. If AJ’s was long enough, he’d be tearing it out. “I brought her here because I know that case is important to you. You of all people would want to be sure that the man in prison for Riggs’s murder was the one who actually killed her. I know you two—” his gesture toward the car showed agitation, a rare thing in a hotshot prosecutor “—have a history. But she trusts you, and so do I. There aren’t many people capable of protecting her that we can say that about.”

  Before AJ could repeat his last words, Donovan went on. “Look, you’re off work now, right? Can we go to your house and talk about this, all three of us?

  “You can go back to whatever the hell airport you came in at and go home. I don’t want a damn thing to do with it.” AJ spun around, wincing, and headed for the building fifteen feet away. He would clear his desk, go home, get an ice pack and a cold beer, then sack out on the couch and do his best to forget how crappy this afternoon had turned out.

  But he’d gone less than five feet when another voice spoke. “Hey, bitch, you know what’s good for you, you’ll mind your own business. If you don’t, whatever happens, it’s all on you.”

  Slowly he turned back.

  Donovan was holding a small tape recorder. “You know that voice.”

  AJ wanted to deny it, but he didn’t waste his breath. “Yeah.” Dave Kinney, former f
ellow homicide detective, an overall decent guy who cut a few corners but always for the better good. It was not only his voice, but the final words—it’s all on you—were a favorite phrase of his.

  “Can we talk at your house?”

  It took a moment to force the words out, but AJ managed. “Give me five minutes. You can follow me there.”

  Masiela Leal sat in the car, steadfastly refusing to watch the conversation between Decker and Donovan. When Donovan had pulled into the parking lot, she’d caught a glimpse of Decker on his way to the patrol unit parked at the curb, and that glimpse had hurt, God, so much more than she’d expected. All the time since, she’d looked anywhere, everywhere, but at him.

  This was a bad idea. True, she hadn’t felt safe anywhere in Texas—not at her condo in Dallas, her sister’s house in Austin or her brother’s apartment in Houston. As a former cop, she knew too well how cops stuck together. If you were a part of the brotherhood, it could be a wonderful thing. If you weren’t, it could be damned scary.

  And she’d been scared since that first phone call.

  The driver’s door lock clicked, and an instant later, Donovan slid into the seat.

  “Let me guess,” she said as he buckled his seat belt. “He wasn’t overjoyed to hear my name.”

  Donovan flashed her a rueful smile. “I didn’t even have to say your name. But we’re going to his house, so that’s something.” He sounded tired, as if he’d just put on the best closing argument of his career.

  And he must have, if Decker had agreed to let her set foot inside his house.

  Donovan added reassurance. “I still think this is the best place for you.”

  Who do you trust? he had asked after the gunshot that shattered the office window she had been gazing from. She hadn’t even needed to think about it. The one person she’d ever trusted one hundred percent was her ex-partner and friend, no matter that the friendship had been over for a long time. He was as willing to risk his life for a scumbag in protective custody as he was for a fellow officer. His feelings for you, good or bad, had nothing to do with it. It was his feelings for himself that counted. He had a code of honor, and by God, he lived by it.