“Be careful,” he murmured, his face close, his eyes soft and warm.

My breath caught.

I nodded and whispered, “I will.”

We left and I swung into the passenger side of the Explorer.

“King Sooper’s checkout boys?” Luke asked after I’d buckled in.

“My dream men,” I replied.

“Babe.” He started up the SUV and we headed out. “At least you aren’t wearing purple pants tonight,” he noted.

“I didn’t want to embarrass the team.”

“I’m thinkin’ that’d be impossible.”

Wow.

That was huge.

Even with that hugeness uttered, I decided to take a page out of Luke’s book and be quiet.

* * * * *

It wasn’t a silent night for Luke.

He talked.

He told me Nightingale Investigations had a varied clientele. The bulk of which was corporate investigations, background checks on employees, looking into fraud, that kind of thing. This was done in-office, usually by their computer hacker, a guy named Brody, as well as through surveillance. They did some domestic investigations, cheating husbands, cheating wives, pilfering money from joint bank accounts. They used to do security but now only watched Fortnum’s and recently my place. They took on some government contracts, federal, state and local. They also took on specialized cases. These Luke didn’t share much about but explained they were worked almost exclusively by what I was realizing were the “Top Four”: Lee, Luke, Mace and Vance. The team also did a lot of skip tracing and this they did nationally if the skip seriously skipped. Mostly it was done in a six or seven state area which Luke considered “local”.

Vance, Luke confirmed, was their top tracker. He also did all their wire work. Further, he was the guy they chose to do most reconnaissance because he was ultra-quiet, something he’d learned during his past as a felon.

Lee was ex-special operations force, Army Night Stalkers. Monty was an ex-Navy SEAL. Lee’s specialty was everything. Monty’s specialty was planning operations (these operations Luke also didn’t go into detail about).

Matt and Bobby, two more of Lee’s team, were local boys who should have been cops but preferred an extra challenge. They spent a lot of time pulling in skips, taking photos during dangerous liaisons, doing stakeouts, providing security (as in bodyguards) when a client needed it and they acted as added manpower. “Foot soldiers” was how Luke described them.

“Good ones,” he said.

Ike had been a cop until something ugly went down. That something ugly wasn’t shared by Luke either. He was tracker number two on the team and was often out-of-town, the same as Vance.

Jack, another guy I hadn’t met, was muscle.

“That’s it?” I asked.

“Except for taking most night shifts in the surveillance room, yeah.”

Mace sounded interesting mainly from what Luke didn’t say. Apparently he used to be a world-class surfer. He was half-Native Hawaiian and he came to Colorado to take up snowboarding, something at which he also excelled. Mace, like Lee and Vance, was good at everything he did, he had no specialty, they were all his specialties (except wirework which Luke explained only Lee, Monty and Vance knew how to do). This was due to a life as an athlete, some of that professional, he knew how to use his body and his instincts and reflexes were sharp.

“How did he go from a professional surfer/snowboarder to a private investigator/bounty hunter? That seems a strange career move.”

I thought of surfers and boarders as Zen masters, riding the waves and the snow, one with nature, not out cracking heads and looking pissed off all the time.

“Personal reasons,” Luke answered.

“What personal reasons?” I asked.

Luke didn’t answer.

I gave up mainly because I knew I’d get nowhere as well as the fact that it was none of my business.

“And you?” I went on.

“Me?”

“Why are you in the game?”

He turned to look at me with a half-smile on his lips. “Shits and grins.”

His eyes went back to the road.

He was holding back, how I knew this I didn’t know, I just knew it.

“Bullshit,” I muttered.

The air in the SUV changed rather dramatically and my body automatically tensed at the feel of it.

Then Luke spoke and it wasn’t with his usual somewhat-teasing, bordering-on-affectionate tone. “Babe, there comes a time when you’re sharing’ my bed and you feel free to turn your attitude on me with your body pressed against mine then you’ll be in the position to know.”

Well then, there you go.

I suspected Luke was “good” with the situation just as long as I didn’t push it.

Good to know.

I decided to change the subject. “What’s on tonight?”

“Search. Got a client who wants dirt on his wife before he asks for a divorce.”

“Is she cheating on him?”

“He’s the one who found a replacement. Lookin’ for a way to make the divorce payout more comfortable.”

Um.

No.

“This guy sounds like a jerk,” I said.

“He is a jerk,” Luke replied.

Luke pulled over and parked in a well-lit street in a neighborhood filled with comfortable houses of the nearly very rich. He made to exit the vehicle.

“Wait,” I called.

He turned to me and raised his brows.

“We can’t do this,” I told him.

“Why not?” he asked.

“It’s not right.”

Luke twisted his body fully to face me. “We don’t make judgments. We send invoices.”

I could see right away where there might be a problem with my being on the team. I didn’t make judgments but I sure as hell had a moral code.

I decided not to debate this point with Luke mainly because I didn’t figure I’d change his mind in the few minutes I had.

I tried a different tactic. “I don’t see how this is going to help me be more of a nuisance to drug dealers.”

“This isn’t training, babe, this is a ride-along. You go where I go. You don’t like it, I’ll take you home and you can have a bubble bath.”

In truth a bubble bath sounded good. However I figured if I f**ked up this chance there wouldn’t be another one. I was too curious about what this team of badasses did for a living, considering I was “with” one of them (I didn’t know how to describe my relationship with Vance except that calling him my “boyfriend” sounded pretty stupid… we were exclusive, Vance made that clear, but how to translate that into a descriptive modifier was unclear). Also I had the impression that the team liked me, respected me. I had this impression because somewhat easily they’d accepted me. If I went home and had a bubble bath I knew that would disintegrate faster than the bubbles.