Bodyguard (26 page)

Read Bodyguard Online

Authors: Suzanne Brockmann

BOOK: Bodyguard
9.55Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

But he wasn’t even going to bring up the possibility again. He’d promised no pressure, promised to be good. Unless she was the one who changed her mind, he wasn’t going to have sex with Allie tonight.

Tomorrow, however, he’d have the opportunity to get into her shirt. Too bad she wasn’t going to be the one wearing it, though.

“What are you smiling about?” she asked.

He shook his head.

“Don’t move!” She leaned forward to position his head again.

Ah, yes. Harry closed his eyes.

Nobody noticed her.

As Alessandra followed Harry into the bar, slouching the way he’d taught her, a few people looked up, but they immediately looked away, dismissing her just like that. She was not worth a second look.

She tried to tell herself that was a good thing. She had achieved the anonymity necessary to stay alive.

Still, a part of her—a large part of her—felt like crying.

“You want a beer?” Harry shouted to be heard over the pounding music.

She hated beer. But plain Alice Plotkin wasn’t the type to have a glass of white wine—if they even served such a thing at a place like this. She forced a smile and nodded.

Harry frowned at her and said something that she couldn’t quite make out over the noise. She gave him a questioning look and he leaned closer.

“Don’t smile,” he said. He was so close, she could feel his breath warm against her ear.

“Why not?”

But he’d already moved away, toward the bar.

His haircut looked good. He looked good. A little tired, maybe, but very good. In fact, he’d caught the attention of more than one woman sitting at the bar. Now there was true irony.

She’d cut his hair short enough so that it didn’t matter if it stood up straight. The new length gave an edge to his face. It made his eyes stand out, made him look a little bit dangerous.

The faded T-shirt he wore clung to his muscular back and shoulders, and his jeans … His jeans fit very nicely.

The woman next to him at the bar was a redhead who had obviously learned how to apply makeup at the Barnum and Bailey School for Clowns. She leaned toward Harry, smiling as she spoke to him.

He grinned back at her, and she glanced back at Alessandra as she spoke again, crossing two very unremarkable-looking legs, letting her short skirt ride up just a bit.

Alessandra turned away. She didn’t want to watch Harry check out the redhead’s legs.

Lord, this was harder than she’d anticipated.

It was much easier to be Alice Plotkin when she was alone with Harry. He didn’t look at her differently now
that she no longer wore nice clothes and makeup. In fact, she’d caught him watching her when he thought she wasn’t looking more often now than before. And sitting in the car, talking about anything and everything, it didn’t matter that she didn’t look like a beauty-pageant winner. In the car, she’d often forgotten she had the haircut from hell. In the car, when Harry smiled at her as if he genuinely liked her, she didn’t feel lost and afraid.

Something bumped her arm, and she turned around to see him standing behind her, holding two mugs of beer. She took one from him.

“Wanna find a table?” he shouted.

Alessandra nodded, miserably aware that the redhead’s eyes followed them all the way across the room.

The floor was sticky. The decor consisted of rough wood and a few grimy mirrors here and there. The overall appearance was aided by the poor lighting. The tables were small and round, with uneven pedestals that made them tilt back and forth. Harry set his beer on one near the back exit, by the rest rooms, and pulled out a chair for her.

She sat down. “You shouldn’t do that.”

“What?” He pulled his own chair close to hers. Too close—but necessary if they were going to attempt to talk.

She shouted into his ear. “You shouldn’t—”

He quickly pulled away, nearly knocking over his beer. Gesturing for her to move closer, he put his mouth next to her ear. “Don’t shout,” he told her. “If you get real close, you don’t have to shout, okay?”

He was speaking in a quieter than normal voice, and it gave the illusion of intimacy. It was as if she were in his arms, as if he’d lifted his head from a kiss.

“Now what shouldn’t I do?” he continued. He turned his head, giving her his ear.

He smelled incredibly good even though he wasn’t
wearing aftershave. Come to think of it, she couldn’t remember Harry ever wearing aftershave. He smelled like the cheap soap that came with the motel room, like the bargain shampoo he’d picked up so as not to use up her more expensive brand. He smelled like Harry, clean and honest.

“You shouldn’t pull out the chair for me, or even open doors for me,” she told him.

He pulled back slightly to look at her, his face only inches from hers. Even in the dim light, she could see that his eyes were brown and only brown. There were no flecks of gold or green, just one single, deep shade of chocolate.

He studied her intensely then leaned toward her again, his breath warm against her neck as he spoke. “You don’t think Alice Plotkin deserves that kind of respect?”

“She’s supposed to be invisible.”

“She’s not invisible to me.”

Again, he pulled back, and the warmth in his eyes seemed to heat her from within. His gaze flicked down to her mouth, and Alessandra knew with complete certainty that he was going to kiss her. In just a moment, he was going to pull her toward him and kiss her. She couldn’t think of anything she wanted more.

Cutting his hair had been torture. He’d sat there, without a shirt on, Ace bandage around his ribs, obliviously sexy. She’d touched the hard muscles of his shoulders and back more than once, using the lame excuse of brushing cut hair off him.

Sometimes—okay, more than sometimes—the hair had been imaginary.

Touching Harry was like touching electricity. She hadn’t wanted to stop. His hair was so soft and thick, his skin silk over steel.

Silk. Silk boxers. Dear Lord. The thought of Harry in his silk boxers was a dizzying one.

The fact that he wore silk boxers didn’t really surprise her, though. It made sense that beneath his rumpled and rough exterior lay the delicate smoothness of silk.

She held his gaze for what seemed to be forever, remembering the way he’d kissed her before, nearly giddy with anticipation.

He moved then, but instead of moving toward her and catching her mouth with his own, he sat abruptly back in his chair.

He didn’t kiss her.

And he didn’t look at her. He looked around the room, looked at his beer, even drank some of it, tapping his fingers on the table in time to the blaring music.

What had just happened here?

Alessandra followed Harry’s gaze, thinking something had distracted him and …

One of the mirrors on the wall was positioned just right—she stared into her own eyes, gazed into her own pale face. Oh God, her hair looked awful. Everything about her looked awful. No wonder he didn’t want to kiss her.

But looking bad was a good thing, she reminded herself. Except, right now, it felt awful.

She had to remember Ivo. Remember that look in his eyes in the Stop and Shop. Remember the way he’d aimed his gun directly at her and fired. If it were up to Ivo, she’d be dead right now. He was out there, still, maybe looking for her right this very minute. Having him find her and kill her—now that was a bad thing. Looking awful was merely an inconvenience.

Harry knocked on the table, and she glanced at him, startled. He gestured to her untouched beer. “Aren’t you going to drink that?”

He didn’t move toward her—she read his lips across the table.

She shook her head, pushing the mug toward him. He took it by the handle, careful not to touch her hand.

Harry took a healthy slug of Alessandra’s beer, cursing himself, cursing Allie, cursing the fact that he hadn’t had enough money to get them separate motel rooms. They had been on the road long enough for him to relax. If Ivo had managed to follow them, he would have put in an appearance before this. And if he hadn’t followed them, he wasn’t going to find them now. Harry’s car was as traceproof as possible. It was the most common make and model on the road. He’d switched plates from a collection he had in the trunk a number of times, even changed the color at a body shop when Alessandra had her hair done.

But it was all moot. He didn’t have the money for separate motel rooms.

And Allie wasn’t in danger from Ivo. The only person in danger here was Harry. He was in danger of making a complete fool of himself. Again.

The back door opened with a crash, and he spilled the beer down the front of his shirt as the rest-room lights glinted weakly off the barrel of not one, but three—no, four—rifles.

He’d been wrong. Allie wasn’t out of danger. He’d made a mistake, and it was probably going to cost them their lives. He pushed her down onto the floor, thrusting himself in front of her as he drew his gun from the back waistband of his jeans.

Four to one, no six—shit, there were six gunmen! He might’ve been able to take four if he used up his life’s allotment of miracles all at once, but six! He’d have to fire first and keep firing even after he was hit.

They were all heading directly for him, all carrying the same odd rifle and …

All carrying the rifle barrel down.

Harry hesitated, a heartbeat away from spraying the wall with the first man’s brains, searching their faces for Ivo’s pale eyes.

Ivo wasn’t there. All of the men were young, in their early twenties. They weren’t looking at him or Allie at all. They were laughing and …

They walked right past him, and he realized why the rifles seemed so odd.

They were the kind of rifles that fired paint balls.

These clowns weren’t Trotta’s men. They were assholes who didn’t have the brains to know not to bring weapons into a bar, even if they were only for sport.

As Harry lowered his gun, he watched the bartender and several other men converge on the men with the paint-ball rifles. And the six of them were escorted right out the front door.

Allie was clinging to him. He’d pushed her back, against the wall, pinning her with his body. “My God,” she breathed. “I thought …”

“I know. I did, too. Jesus, I almost killed them.” He pulled away from her, aware that he was crushing her, aware how soft she felt against him. He winced as he re-holstered his weapon. Hitting the floor that way had definitely not been what the doctor had in mind when he’d told Harry to take it easy on his broken rib.

It was strange. No one had noticed. They’d made a dive onto the floor, he’d pulled a deadly weapon, and no one in this bar had given them a second glance.

Shit, maybe Allie was invisible.

Allie touched his chest, lightly at first, then harder, pressing her hand against the beer-drenched front of his shirt. “You’re not wearing a bullet-proof vest this time.”

She was shaking even more than he was.

Harry shook his head. “No, I’m not.”

“From now on you wear one!” There was more than fear in her eyes now. There was anger. She was positively blazing mad, shouting loudly enough for him to hear her over the music.

Her eyes were brimming with tears, and she was nanoseconds from losing it. Maybe she was invisible and no one would notice, but he wasn’t going to take that chance.

He stood up, pulling her with him toward the back door.

The night air was cool and fresh. The decibel level of noise dropped instantly as Harry closed the door tightly behind them.

“I didn’t bring a vest,” he told her. The back parking lot was dimly lit by a neon sign for the motel that sputtered and flashed.

“Then you better get one. Tomorrow.”

He laughed at her vehemence. Bad mistake.

“Don’t you laugh at me—I’m serious!”

“Al, it’s not like I can just go out and pick one up at the grocery store.”

“Don’t you understand? If those men had been after me, you would have been killed!”

“But they weren’t—”

“Don’t you ever, ever do that again! Don’t you dare die for me!”

She was serious. She was fighting her tears, willing them from escaping. “Promise me,” she said fiercely. She all but stamped her foot. “You have to promise me, Harry!”

“Thing is, Al,” he said carefully, “I could think of worse things. See, I’m kind of … kind of fond of you, and …” He shrugged.

The tears won, streaming silently down her face.

Her knees looked as if they were about to buckle, and Harry did the only thing he could possibly do. He pulled her into his arms. “Hey,” he said. “Hey. Come on, Allie. It’s okay. It was a false alarm. We’re both okay, everyone’s safe and—”

“I’m kind of fond of you, too,” she whispered, and his heart nearly stopped. “I couldn’t bear it if something happened to you. Your friendship means so much to me.”

Harry laughed. Friendship. Right. For a moment he’d actually had the audacity to think—

Allie reached up around his neck and lifted her own face and …

For about three seconds, he stood there like an idiot, unable to react, unable to comprehend.

Then his synapses fired, and he realized that yes, she was kissing him.

Once comprehension dawned, reaction didn’t take long to kick in. He pulled her hard against him in an embrace that had absolutely nothing to do with friendship and everything to do with the fact that he’d wanted to be inside her since that very first moment he’d gazed into her eyes.

He kissed her ravenously, angling his head to inhale her completely, meeting and matching her explosion of passion. The sensation of her tongue thrust boldly into his mouth was completely knee weakening, and he felt them both sway.

He pressed her more completely against him, his hands cupped around the soft roundness of her rear end, kissing her even harder, even deeper. She made a low sound in the back of her throat, a soft moan that accurately expressed everything he was feeling.

She tasted like fire, sweet and hot, like his idea of
heaven. Her hands slid up beneath the edge of his T-shirt, cool against his bare skin as she gripped his thigh with her legs, pressing herself even closer to him, her message unmistakable.

Other books

Las Dos Sicilias by Alexander Lernet Holenia
Whiskey Kisses by Addison Moore
Paris Noir by Aurélien Masson
NOT What I Was Expecting by Tallulah Anne Scott
Luck of the Bodkins by P G Wodehouse
Cuestión de fe by Donna Leon
Long Lost by David Morrell
Almost an Angel by Katherine Greyle