I laughed. “No, the expression is there is more than one way to skin a cat. But I think you meant only one way to find out.”
He smiled. “I like cats—and I will tell her.”
“Good.”
My buzzer went, and he grinned. “Perfect timing.”
“Who is it?”
“Pizza.”
“I didn’t order pizza.”
He winked. “I did.”
He went to the door, hitting the enter button. In the kitchen, I got some plates from the cupboard and took them to the table. A moment later, I heard footsteps, and a delivery man walked in, his hat pulled low.
I felt a frisson of nerves until he lifted his head and I was met with warm blue eyes.
“Pizza,” Damien said with a wink. “Hot and ready.”
* * *
Damien handed me the pizza box, which I slid onto the table. He shrugged off the jacket and hat, handing them to Egan, who slipped them on. I noticed they both wore jeans and dark sneakers.
“Thanks.”
Egan shook his head. “All good.” Then he turned to me, lifting my hand and kissing it. “You are lovely woman for my friend. Thank you for advice.”
He left, and Damien shut and locked the door. He turned, holding out his arms. “Come here, Raven.”
I flung myself into his hard embrace, the worry and stress of the day fading away.
“You’re here,” I breathed.
“I’m here, Raven,” he murmured back. “Right here.”
“How?” I asked into his neck.
He pulled back, cupped my face, and kissed me gently. He took my hand and tugged me to the table. “The pizza place close to my building was having trouble last year. Constantly being robbed. Egan and I set up a sting and caught them. We suspected an inside job, and we were right. Idiot was even depositing the money in a bank account, so we got the owner all his money back. Frank was, is, very grateful. On occasion, we borrow his pizza delivery car. Egan said you were feeling pretty low, so I got us a pizza, brought it here. Egan will drive the car back and head home. Anyone looking will see a pizza guy go in and a pizza guy come out. Hiding in plain sight.”
I reached for his hand. “I felt terrible about this morning.”
He chuckled. “I knew it wasn’t real, Raven.”
“Still, saying those words. It felt awful.”
He leaned close and kissed me. “You’re almost forgiven.”
“Almost?”
He lifted one eyebrow, regarding me with a serious expression.
“Oh, the old policemen and the mall security cop thing?”
“Low blow, Ms. Raven.”
“Egan didn’t like it either,” I said, trying not to laugh at his stern expression.