Dangerous to Touch
Silhouette Romantic Suspense
June 2008
ISBN 978-0373275885
All her life Sidney Morrow had tried to repress
her disturbing psychic visions. Until a vision of
murder shattered her fragile serenity. She had to go
to the authorities—make them listen. But Lt. Marc
Cruz didn't trust her one bit. In fact, the sensual
homicide cop treated her like a suspect. And sent
her senses haywire.…
The dark-haired beauty knew something about the
serial killer Marc was after. But he was certain
"visions" had nothing to do with it. Determined to
be her constant shadow, Marc wasn't prepared when
desire blindsided him—and put them both in the path
of a relentless killer.
"With a compelling hero and heroine
facing precarious circumstances throughout the story, Jill
Sorenson gives readers an enthralling debut story. The
lurking danger all through the book keeps one quickly
turning the pages to determine what will occur in the lives
of this dynamic couple. Kudos to Ms. Sorenson for her
first romantic suspense story. DANGEROUS TO TOUCH
is a captivating and complex love story where emotional and
physical risks are continuously taken." -- Amelia
Richard,
CataRomance
"Jill Sorenson debuts in
Silhouette Romantic Suspense with style!
DANGEROUS TO TOUCH
is an engrossing, very sexy psychic thriller.
One thing I love about good category romance novels
is how neatly everything is tied up at the end.
Sorenson understands her genre well, and supplies a
taut thriller with passion. She'll go far!" --
Heather Hiestand,
Romance Reader at Heart
"Dangerous to Touch
by Jill Sorenson is an intriguing tale of
deception, danger and desire. The action in
this story was exhilarating and intense as was the
passion between the characters. Ms. Sorenson
has proven herself as a talented writer and one to
watch with this first book. I will be eagerly
awaiting her next. 5 Angels!" -- Tammy,
Fallen Angel Reviews
"DANGEROUS TO TOUCH
takes two characters: a lonely misfit and a man who
believes himself incapable of emotion, and throws
them together in some very interesting
circumstances. The romance between Sidney and
Marc is neatly interwoven with the murder case that
brings them together, creating an engaging story.
DANGEROUS TO TOUCH is Jill Sorenson’s
debut novel, and this is definitely an author I look
forward to reading again." -- Jennifer Bishop,
Romance Reviews Today
"DANGEROUS
TO TOUCH is an edge-of-your-seat adventurous
romance. Filled with very steamy romance, a
thrilling, suspense-filled plot and well-drawn
characters, this is a book you will think about long
after it is closed. This
is the first book I have read by this author, but it
has made me a fan of her work. For those who love
steamy, adventurous romance, do not miss
DANGEROUS TO TOUCH!" -- Dottie,
Romance Junkies Reviews
"Dangerous
to Touch is a perfect title by this taunt
romantic thriller by Jill Sorenson.
For a romance that has
a pretty good suspense and two characters who are
not the stereotypical hero or heroine, I recommend
Dangerous to Touch."
-- Kate,
Simply Romance Reviews
"Dangerous
to Touch is Jill Sorenson's debut for the
Silhouette Romantic Suspense line, and let me tell
you, it's hot, hot, hot! Heat level is highly
sensual, and you feel it all the way through the
book my friends! It's a really fun book to
read and I don't want to give away much more of the
plot, since it is suspense. Enjoy!!" --
Enduring Romance
"Jill Sorenson sets up an interesting mystery..."
-- Sandra Garcia-Myers,
RT BookClub
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CHAPTER ONE
Sidney
woke to the sound of a dog barking.
For a moment, she thought she'd fallen
asleep in the office at the kennel again, but when
she opened her eyes she saw the pale yellow paint
and outdated light fixture gracing the ceiling of
her own bedroom. Her cat, Marley, was curled up
into a soft tortoiseshell ball at the foot of the
bed, unperturbed.
She threw back the rumpled sheet and
climbed out of bed, wondering who had gotten a dog.
In this neighborhood, just steps away from Oceanside
City Beach, everyone owned or rented tiny two-story
houses, like hers, each with the same nonexistent
yard space. Dogs weren't allowed on the beach,
either, so most area residents didn't own them.
Especially not large, menacing dogs with deep,
resounding barks, which was most assuredly what
she'd heard.
Yawning, Sidney strode over to the open
window in her underwear and pushed aside the gauzy
curtains to catch a glimpse of heaven. She inhaled
the salty ocean scent, studied the play of the early
morning light off the rippled water, listened to the
rhythmic crash of waves breaking against the
shoreline.
There was no dog barking.
Rubbing the sleep out of her eyes, she
stepped away from the window, dismissing the noise
as a remnant of a particularly vivid dream. Visual
illusions, unfortunately, were not an infrequent
occurrence for her. Now she was going to have to
add auditory hallucinations to her list of oddities.
With a wistful glance at her comfy
wrought-iron bed, Sidney grabbed a pair of jeans off
the floor and pulled them up her slender hips.
Shoving her feet into old sneakers, she performed a
hasty morning toilette that consisted of washing her
face and brushing her teeth.
As she left the bedroom, Marley let out a staccato
farewell meow, indicating that she was sleeping in.
Downstairs, while Sidney waited for a bagel to
toast, she turned the knob on the ancient ten-inch
television atop her kitchen counter, more to
distract than to entertain herself. She only had
three channels, and all of them were broadcasting
news, the Sunday-morning variety, high-fluff,
low-violence. As she sipped hot coffee, enjoying
the jolt of caffeine to her system, Crystal Dunn—a
petite blonde reporter whose sweet countenance and
angelic blue eyes couldn’t mask a cut-throat
nature—broke in with an important newsbreak.
"Hal and Sandra, I'm on location in a
quiet residential neighborhood known as Sunshine
Estates. Candace Hegel, who lives in the area, was
last seen walking her dog here early yesterday
morning. Her sudden disappearance has caused a
local panic. Friends and family fear Miss Hegel may
have fallen into the hands of a serial killer."
At the news desk, even the co-anchors
appeared skeptical. "Crystal, has law enforcement
given any indications of foul play?"
Crystal batted her dark lashes
engagingly. "No, Hal, they have no comment, but if
you remember Anika Groene, the killer's first
victim, you'll note the similarities. Anika was
presumed to be taken while walking her dog, a dog
which was never found, I might add. Miss Hegel's
dog is also missing."
Sidney's half-eaten bagel transformed
into a hard lump in the pit of her stomach. Photos
of Anika Groene, a fresh-faced college student, and
Candace Hegel, an attractive woman in her thirties,
flashed across the screen, along with home-taken
snapshots of both dogs.
"Anyone with information should contact
the Oceanside Police Department…" Crystal
continued, reciting a hotline number.
Anika Groene's dog was a goofy-looking Doberman with
a poorly done ear crop. Sidney felt a rush of
sympathy at the sight of his sweet, lopsided mug,
sure the dog had met the same fate as his owner.
Candace Hegel's dog elicited a very
different reaction. He was an Australian Shepherd
mix, by the look of him, although he didn't appear
to have the friendly personality typical of the
breed. With his mottled blue-gray coat, mangy
appearance, and fierce, colorless eyes, he was the
kind of dog you crossed the street to avoid.
He also looked perfectly capable of making a loud,
insidious bark—just like the one she'd heard that
morning.
"Ridiculous," she said, switching the
television off abruptly and promising not to turn it
on again for another six months.
At Pacific Pet Hotel, the business she'd
been scraping a living off of for the past five
years, Sidney found something far more unsettling
than the Sunday morning news: Candace Hegel's
hellhound, stalking the fence line.
"Why me?" she whispered, slowing to a
stop in front of the gate and resting her head
against the steering wheel. It made no sense. The
kennel was miles from Sidney’s house, but she knew
with one hundred percent accuracy that this dog's
barking had disturbed her slumber.
Grumbling, she got out of her truck to
unlock the gate and roll it open. As she drove into
the small parking lot, the dog made no move to
follow. He merely watched as she exited the vehicle
again. By the time she called the police
department, he could very well bolt.
She knew enough about dogs to understand
that this one would need careful handling and a lot
of finesse, two attributes she didn't associate with
most officers of the law.
Keeping her truck door open, she
whistled engagingly. "Go for a ride?"
He sat on his haunches.
On impulse, she lowered the tailgate and
sat, thumping the space next to her. "Go for a
walk?" she tried.
He didn't move an inch.
She sighed, feeling a reluctant respect
for a dog that couldn't be bought so cheaply.
After disengaging the kennel's
rinky-dink security alarm and entering through the
side door, she wrenched open a can of puppy food and
dumped it into a stainless steel bowl. Grabbing
another bowl, she filled it with water from the sink
and walked back out.
He was still sitting there, watching
her.
She placed the bowls just inside the
fence line. His jet-black nose quivered with
interest, but he didn't move. Intending to trap him
in once he did come forward, Sidney rolled the gate
until it was almost closed, leaving him just enough
space to get through. As she waited for hunger to
overcome good sense, she studied him.
It had to be the same dog. He was tall
and rangy, more German Shepherd than Australian, now
that she saw him in person. He probably weighed at
least 90 pounds, and he didn't have that energetic,
innocuous expression Aussies wore. His ears were
straight up, not floppy, alert rather than playful,
and his coat was more wiry than soft.
If not for his coloring, he'd look
purebred, but that thick, charcoal-gray fur,
liberally spotted with black, was a dead giveaway
for his mixed heritage. Blue roan, they called it.
"So what'll it be, Blue?"
He cocked his head to one side.
"Is that your name?" she asked softly,
not surprised she got it on the first try. She had
a gift—or a curse, to be honest—for guessing right.
The dog entered the space warily, his
hind legs shaking, ready to run. Instead of going
for the food, he came right to her, sat down and put
his head against her jeans-clad thigh in a move that
was positively heartbreaking.
"Oh, honey," she said, securing the
fence behind him and placing her hand on his
trembling head.
In an instant, she was swept away into a
maelstrom of images.
Blue was running, running. His teeth
were numb from chewing and his head hurt. Fuzzy.
Everything was fuzzy.
He was running in shallow water, through
fields and over gravel roads, running. Running away
from the bad man, the pain, the sound of gunshots
and the acrid odor.
He had to follow the river.
He had to get back home.
The last thing he remembered was walking
with his mistress, like any other day, before
everything went fuzzy. He woke up in a strange car,
chewed and clawed and broke his way out. He
searched for his mistress, knowing she was hurting.
He smelled her blood.
Then gunshots and the bad man and now he
was running.
He had to get home, find his mistress.
So he was running. Running along the river that
flowed into the ocean, running home…
Sidney lifted her hand, returning slowly
to reality as the stream of consciousness ended,
feeling drained. She hadn't experienced such a
strong outpouring of emotion in a long time, maybe
never, and she was far out of practice.
She didn’t always get visions, which
made her particularly unprepared for powerful ones.
Normally she took precautions against physical
contact, even with animals, but the dog had been so
forlorn, so needy. She couldn't deny him the simple
comfort of her touch.
"Damn," she whispered, hating herself
for being so careless. Keeping this information
from the police would be like failing to report a
heinous crime. Whether they believed her or not,
she led the risk of ridicule, humiliation, and
exposure. "Damn," she repeated, trying to think of
a way to share what she knew without sacrificing her
anonymity or revealing how she’d discovered the
information.
She clenched her hands into fists, and
felt a hot sting cut into her palm. Opening her
hand, she saw that a chunk of safety glass had
imbedded itself in her skin. Scowling, she yanked
the glass out and threw it aside before she realized
it might be evidence.
Examining Blue critically, she saw
burrs, stickers, and a few more shards of safety
glass. Perhaps he was carrying enough clues in his
mottled gray coat as to make divulging her secret
unnecessary.
After all, what did she know? Dogs
weren't exactly a fountain of specific information,
any more than humans were. Brain waves weren't as
easy to read as story books.
Sometimes she was plagued by self-doubt,
unsure if her feelings were real.
She rested her elbows on the top of the
fence, a more practical problem occurring to her.
The police would have to open the gate to get in, or
to get Blue out. If he ran away, and she figured he
was wily enough to do just that, so would the
evidence.
She'd have to take this troublesome mutt to the
station herself.
***
Lieutenant Marc Cruz had seen better days.
Deputy Chief Stokes had sentenced him to
two Sundays of desk duty as punishment for failing
to use his allotted vacation time. He couldn't, in
good conscience, take off in the middle of a case,
and it seemed he was always in that unenviable
position. Worse, she was making him catch up on
paperwork, his least favorite activity.
He hated sitting at his desk almost as
much as he hated idle time, but for every minute of
actual police work it seemed like he had to complete
an hour of computer-generated logs.
"I've got a lead on a missing person,"
Stokes said to the mostly empty room.
Marc straightened immediately.
"Some woman outside says she's got
Candace Hegel's dog."
Dog? He hunched down at his desk,
trying to make himself invisible.
No such luck. "Cruz, you and Lacy take
it," she said, narrowing her shrewd eyes on him.
"After Crystal Dunn yapped her fat mouth all over
the news about the connection to Groene, we can't
afford to treat this like anything but a possible
homicide."
He arched a glance at his partner,
Detective Meredith Lacy, who was hiding her smile
behind a manila folder. She was here on Sunday
because she was new, barely out of beat, and didn't
have any choice in the matter.
"Yes, ma'am," he said under his breath.
"What was that?"
"I said we're on it," he replied, and
Lacy strangled a laugh.
Stokes waved a hand in the air,
indicating that his presence was annoying and
superfluous. She'd been especially testy since the
trail for Anika Groene's killer had grown cold, but
she couldn't seem to stay home, or let it go.
"Your favorite," Lacy said as they
walked down the hall.
"What's that?" he said, his mind still
swimming with computerized forms.
"Dogs."
"Don't get smart, Lacy," he muttered,
striding into the lobby. The last time Stokes had
taken out her petty revenge on him, she'd made him
stand in as a training dummy for patrol's attack
dogs. He had all of the protective gear on, but one
of the ferocious beasts had knocked him down and
dislodged his face mask. The handler called off the
dog, but not before Marc humiliated himself by
fainting. That was two years ago, well before Lacy
joined homicide, but he still hadn't lived it down.
Apparently, stories like that never got old.
When the woman standing alone in the
lobby turned toward him, all thoughts of dogs and
deskwork vanished.
At first glance, she wasn't his type.
She was dark-haired, for one thing, and
short-haired, for another. Nothing about her
clothes or manner was designed to attract a man's
attention, either. Maybe he was shallow, but he
liked women who weren't afraid to show a little
skin. She looked like she might jump out of hers.
Her faded green t-shirt was several sizes too big,
and her battered blue jeans were two inches too
short, exposing a pair of trim, nicely tanned
ankles. She was wearing dingy white sneakers with
Velcro straps, no socks.
The clothes were atrocious, but the body
underneath warranted further examination. She was
tall and slim, almost to the point of being skinny,
except for her breasts, which looked soft and
malleable. If she had a bra on, it was one of those
no-frills types that molded to her shape as well as
the worn cotton t-shirt.
Her face was even better than her
breasts. Her features were finely drawn and
angular, her eyes a misty, ethereal gray, framed by
lush black lashes. With her close-cropped black
hair, unisex style, and no make-up, she resembled an
exceptionally beautiful teenaged boy. He dismissed
her as one of those women who couldn't be bothered
with men. She already had one, she wasn't looking
for one, or she'd given up on finding one.
"Miss Morrow?" he inquired, introducing himself
politely.
She looked down at his outstretched hand
with undisguised distaste. Puzzled, Marc dropped
his arm. Taking the hint, Lacy didn't even attempt
a handshake.
"I have the dog in the back of my truck," she said
quickly, pointing outside. She was wearing latex
gloves. "If you can just tell me where to take him,
I'll be out of your way."
He looked out at a sturdy red pick-up in
the parking lot. Sure enough, an ugly mongrel just
like Candace Hegel's was in an extra-large dog cage
in the back. "Any chance of him getting out?"
"Not unless he grows human hands."
He waited for her to claim that was in
the realm of possibility. When she didn’t, he
shoved his own hands in his pants pockets, for they
seemed to make her uncomfortable. It was as if she
feared he was going to reach out and touch
her, of all horrors.
"Let's talk," he said. "Do you have
time for a short interview?"
"Can't we do it here?"
"This is a sensitive case. We have to keep the
information confidential, if possible."
She looked around the empty lobby in confusion.
"Witnesses tend to remember more in a place free of
distractions," he added.
"Oh, I didn't witness anything—"
"Do you have something more pressing to take care
of?" he interrupted.
"It will only take a few minutes," Lacy said with a
reassuring smile, probably because he was being
rude. "A woman is missing. Anything you could tell
us would be greatly appreciated."
"Of course," she said, resigned.
Marc's curiosity was piqued further.
Most people couldn't wait to share everything they
knew, to contribute, to feel important. Most
innocent people, anyway.
He followed Lacy and the mysterious Miss
Morrow, employing the age-old "ladies first" excuse
men used to ogle women behind their backs. There
was nothing boyish about the way she filled out her
jeans, he noted.
As he and Lacy took seats opposite her
at the table in the interrogation room, it occurred
to him that there was another reason women opted to
downplay their femininity, one that had nothing to
do with men. His partner, Meredith Lacy, was living
proof of that.
He gave himself an illicit thrill,
wondering if she was Lacy's type. "Where did you
find the dog?" he asked, dragging his mind out of
the gutter.
When she met his eyes, her own darkened
slightly, an almost imperceptible expansion of
pupils signaling her awareness of him as a man.
Not indifferent to the opposite sex, he
decided. Too bad, Lacy.
"He was outside the fence this morning,"
she said, staring down at her gloved hands. "At
Pacific Pet Hotel."
A kennel worker, he thought with mild
distaste. "You're an employee?"
"I own it."
He raised his eyebrows. She didn't look
old enough to own a business. "How'd you get him in
that dog carrier?"
"I offered him some food and water. He
wasn't interested, but he seemed to trust me after
that. Enough to go in the carrier, anyway."
"Did he bite you?"
She followed his gaze to her left hand.
Under the latex, in the middle of her palm, there
was a bandage. "No. He had glass in his fur. And
quite a few burrs and foxtails."
"Did you take them out? Clean him up?"
"No. I just reached down to pet him
and…the glass cut into my hand."
Marc read a lot into that short pause.
She wasn't telling the whole story. "Anything else
we need to know?"
"I think he'd traveled for miles," she
hedged. "He was panting, and his feet were wet.
Smelly wet, like river. The San Luis Rey is
nearby."
He'd never before felt as though a
person were lying and telling the truth at the same
time. He leaned back in his chair, paradoxically
pleased. It wasn't every day that plausible
suspects walked in off the street.
***
"Would you like some water?" Detective Lacy asked
after an uncomfortable silence. "A soda?"
"No thanks," Sidney said, tucking her
gloved hands under the table, annoyed with Lt. Cruz
for scrutinizing her so blatantly. He was one of
those effortlessly handsome men who made her feel
sloppy, awkward, and unkempt.
He was taller than she was, and his clothes fit him
perfectly, hinting at a nicely formed physique.
Even motionless, he managed to convey grace and
power. His features were well-arranged but
unyielding, showing no trace of softness or
compassion. He might have appeared cold if not for
his coloring. His skin was dark, his hair a rich,
warm brown, and his eyes a shade lighter, like
smooth Kentucky whisky or strong iced tea.
With brown hair, skin, and eyes, and a tobacco-brown
suit, he should have looked average, even drab. He
didn't. There was an elusive quality about him that
probably intrigued women, a dangerous edge that
excited them, and an overall appeal she couldn't
describe but responded to nevertheless. He was also
quite young, in his early thirties at the most,
although he appeared worldly rather than naďve.
Staring back at him, Sidney was
uncomfortably aware of how long it had been since
she'd hazarded the perils of a man's touch.
Lt. Cruz must have decided the interview was over,
because he stood abruptly. Lacy followed suit, so
Sidney rose to her feet as well.
"If you think of anything else," he said, holding
out a card with his name and number on it, "feel
free to call."
She took it from him gingerly, not allowing his
fingers to brush over hers, and shoved it in her
pocket. "What are you going to do with him?"
"The dog? Process him for trace."
"And then?"
He shrugged. "Turn him over to the pound, unless
his owner or another family member comes to claim
him."
"If they don't, will you call me?" Sidney posed
this question to Detective Lacy, deciding she was
the more amenable officer. "I'd hate to see him put
down." Large, mean-looking dogs were rarely placed
in good homes.
"Absolutely," she promised as they walked out
together.
"Is Gina working today?" Lt. Cruz asked Detective
Lacy.
"Yep."
"Why don't you go sweet-talk her into meeting us
over there?"
"You don't want help with the dog?" she asked with a
slight smile.
"Why would I?" he returned.
"Whatever you say, Marcos," she said, punching him
lightly on the shoulder before she ambled away.
Sidney watched her go, feeling a spark of envy for
the basic human ability to touch another person in
kindness, humor, or affection.
Detective Lacy's tone was teasing, but something
about what she said bothered him. "Marcos? Is that
your real name?"
"Just Marc," he replied as he held open the door for
her. Ever-cognizant of his proximity, she moved by
him carefully, resisting the urge to tell him to
call her by her first name, as well. She didn't
want to remind him of her embarrassing refusal to
shake his hand upon their initial introduction.
As they approached the back of her truck, he didn't
make direct eye contact with the dog or do anything
else cornered animals considered threatening, but
Blue let out a series of rapid barks, gnashing at
the grate.
Lt. Cruz didn't even flinch. "Friendly, isn't he?"
She smiled at his dry humor. "Don't you like dogs?"
"They don't like me," he corrected.
When she laughed, he turned his head to study her
face. He was attracted to her, she realized in a
flash of intuition that was more feminine than
supernatural. Something must be wrong with him.
Men were always put off by her aversion to physical
contact.
"As much as I'd like to wrestle him out of there and
into my own vehicle,” he gestured to a
champagne-colored Audi with all-leather interior, "I
think he's more comfortable with you. If you don't
mind."
"Not at all," she said. "Where to?"
"Vincent Veterinary Clinic. You can follow me."
"I know where it is," she said, finding the
situation highly ironic.
She was accompanying Lt. Cruz, the first man she’d
wanted to touch her in ages, to see Dr. Vincent, the
last man who had.
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