apologize now for my furniture. I picked most of it up at thrift stores because I wasnât planning on staying this long.â
âWhere did you expect to be?â
Ah, there was a bit of curiosity in her. âWherever they needed me. Most likely overseas.â
âSo, what is the holdup?â
Dean wasnât about to tell her he was waiting on his psychiatrist to clear him; she might start thinking he really was dangerous. âJust a lot of factors and red tape. It will happen, though.â
âHuh.â She didnât press him for more details, just sat quietly as he turned right on El Camino, and then left a few minutes later into his garage. Heâd been lucky enough to rent the townhouse for a decent price, and the landlord hadnât even had a problem when heâd brought his dog, Dilbert, home. Some places had a thing against pit bull mixes, but Kenneth had been cool.
Dean parked and unbuckled his seat belt. âI just need to let my dog out back. Heâs super mellow, so you donât have to be afraid, heâs just big.â
âWhat kind of dog?â
âPit bull mix.â Best had guessed Dilbert was a pit because it was such a concentrated breed in the Sacramento area, but Dilbert could have been boxer and bulldog for all they knew. Whatever he was, he was a sweet, lazy-as-hell dork that Dean loved.
They walked inside, and Dilbertâs heavy breathing deepened the closer Dean got to his kennel. âHey, buddy, you need to pee?â
Dilbert kept looking beyond Dean to Violet, his tail wagging low and fast. Dean glanced back at Violet, his smile fading as he took in her wary expression.
âYou got something against bully breeds?â he asked.
âYou could say that.â
He waited for her to say something else, but she just stood back behind his kitchen table. âWhy?â
âI almost had my calf taken off by one before, so yeah, Iâm a little nervous around them.â
It was a tale Dean had heard often, but since working with Best and the other trainers at Alpha Dog, he had learned a lot about dogs. The biggest thing was that you couldnât judge an entire breed on a few bad examples.
âWell, Iâm sorry to hear that, but DilbertââDean paused to grab his dogâs leash before opening the cage and clicking it on his collarââis just a big doofus. Heâs pretty low energy and might sniff you to death, but other than that, heâs a pussycat.â
âHeâs a little big to be a cat, donât you think?â She eyed Dilbert, holding their food against her chest like a shield.
âIâm going to put him outside for a bit, anyway, but heâll win you over. Just wait.â He walked past her with Dilbert, who tried to pull toward her for a split second before Dean corrected him. He opened the back door, and Dilbert lumbered outside before sitting patiently while Dean unclipped his leash. âOkay.â
At the release command, Dilbert started sniffing across the lawn until he reached his favorite tree and lifted his leg. Dean snuck back inside to find Violet opening up his cupboards.
âHasnât anyone ever told you itâs rude to snoop?â
âI was looking for plates, not snooping,â she said.
âUh-huh.â
âOkay, youâre right. I was checking for body parts and pints of blood,â she said dryly.
Geez, the girl had an obsession with morbidity. âHoly shit, what kind of movies do you watch?â
âI love true crime. For some reason, serial killers fascinate me.â
âThat is terrifying,â he said. âBut Iâd never be stupid enough to keep trophies.â
Her full lips twitched as if she was fighting a smile. âTrophies, huh? What kind of movies do you watch?â
âI donât watch a lot, but sometimes when Iâm kicking back on my day off, Iâll watch a Criminal Minds
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