Read Explosive Alliance Online

Authors: Catherine Mann

Tags: #General, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Romance, #Contemporary, #cookie429, #Extratorrents, #Kat, #Managed Care Administrators

Explosive Alliance (20 page)

BOOK: Explosive Alliance
3.56Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

"Leaving so soon?" His leggy athlete friend smirked.

"Do you need a ride or anything?" Honor compelled him to ask in thanks for all her help, even as he prayed overtime she would say no.

"No."

Yes!
"Well if you're sure."

"I'm good." Nikki waved him on. "I'm actually playing designated driver like a grown-up."

"Cool. I'll catch ya later when I get back in town again."

Nikki fanned a wave. "Night, Paige, great meeting you. Hope we get to see you again."

Paige hmm-ed an answer along with a return wave before tucking her hand back into Bo's. "She's nice."

"Yeah, she is." Tracking up the dunes to the haphazardly parked vehicles, he led her toward his Jeep.

"Why aren't you going off with her instead?"

What? He studied her face for signs of jealousy...and only found confusion. And damn, that tugged at him far more than if she'd been spitting green fire. He released her hand to hook an arm around her shoulders, tucking her closer to his side. "She's more like family."

"That's what she said."

So Paige had asked? Interesting. And how ironic that he had Sister Nic as a mother figure and Nikki for a sister sort. Maybe it was sort of symbolic how they had similar names, like some kind of cosmic family connection to make up for his biological parents. "Besides Nikki's not my type, and even if she was, her father would kill me."

"Like Vic."

"Well, yeah, but I guess
you
are worth the risk." He pivoted her back against his Jeep, liking all over again the way she looked in his shirt.

"She seems perfect for you." She toyed with his top button. "I can't see why she wouldn't be your type."

"Oh, really?" He let his gaze linger on her incredible chest with an obvious leer.

She swatted his shoulder. "You are such an outrageous pig sometimes."

"Made you laugh, though, didn't I?"

"Yes, you did." She stretched up on her toes to press a simple kiss to his mouth.

Simple for about four seconds, and then the heat started again. Next thing he knew a horn was honking and Cobra was heckling the hell out of him.

With more than a little regret, he pulled himself away from Paige and opened the passenger door. "Sorry about that."

"It's okay. Really. We have all night."

Ooh-rah.
He closed the door.

She rested her hand on top of his on the open window. "Since we have all night, if you're not too tired, would you mind if we took a drive first?"

A drive? His libido shouted in hoarse frustration at the delay, but if that was what she wanted, patience and foreplay would eventually pay off. He'd learned long ago the best way to romance a woman was to listen. Eventually she made her needs clear.

"A drive sounds great. I got my second wind right about the time they cut the cake." He circled the hood and climbed behind the wheel.

"So you have an extra week in North Dakota and then you're back here for good." She twirled a lock of hair around her finger, threatening his control behind the wheel more than if he'd dipped into the punch.

Which he hadn't. He didn't want anything dulling his senses tonight.

Time was most definitely running out. "That's the schedule."

"How wild that it takes three weeks to fix an engine."

"Bureaucracy." He steered the Jeep onto the road. "Sometimes it takes forever to get the parts. Once, I sat in Spain for six days waiting for them to send a crew chief out to hit something with a rubber mallet."

"What is Mako's job, then?" She gestured for another turn.

Why the sudden interest in his military life? Idle curiosity or true desire to learn more about him?

And where the hell was she taking them on this surprise drive? "He's an in-flight mechanic, actually works over in the maintenance squadron. We don't always fly with one. Depends on the mission."

She pointed to the sprawling brick sign illuminated with a spotlight, marking the exclusive subdivision entrance. "Turn left here."

"Not that it really matters to me, but do you have a destination in mind?" He slowed along the quiet street in the sleeping neighborhood.

"Uh, take the first right then left." She kept her head tipped toward the sprawling homes that bordered on mansion size with their manicured lawns. "I've been mulling over what you said earlier."

"Which something?"

"About needing closure." She pointed to the yellow home at the end of the cul-de-sac. "There. Pull over and stop, please."

Realization cold-cocked him. This was
her
old neighborhood, her old house. He pulled alongside the curb and slid the Jeep into neutral.

Holy crap, crime paid well. Even in the dark of night with only the stars and a couple of security lights, he could see she'd lived in one helluva place during her time here as Mrs. Haugen. Two stories, the house was easily four thousand square feet of fairly new construction to go with those columns and wraparound porch.

He would never be able to give a wife anything close to this. Not that he was thinking in those terms about the woman next to him. Sure he wanted to get married someday when the right one came along, but he and Paige had never discussed there being anything beyond next week.

Still, he tried to reconcile his image of the practical woman next to him in that house. He'd seen enough of her brother's faltering business to know she was more than pulling her weight around there, and he'd never heard her complain.

His mind tripped over a question he hadn't considered before. How badly did Vic need money?

"I forgot about the flowers."

Her amazed whisper closed off other thoughts.

"What about the flowers?"

"Kirstie and I planted flowers just like those." She nodded toward the overflowing bed of marigolds shaded by taller daffodils. "And she and I had picnics under that oak tree by the azalea bush. She had little friends here, too, and they raced bikes along the sidewalks."

"All the things kids should do."

"Memories that have nothing to do with Kurt and his damn money." She sagged back in her seat, her thumb toying with the collar of her shirt.

His
shirt.

Lust tightened inside him with an urgency to claim her as his, totally separate from this world. "You and Kirstie are well on your way to making more happy memories in a new place."

"I know. But I needed to see this. I needed to know that I didn't screw everything up, that her years here weren't a total mistake."

"She's a good kid. That doesn't happen overnight."

"A good kid who thinks a case of sunburn must be rubella."

"A good kid who's had a rough year, but is putting everything back together just like her mama. I happen to think both you ladies have done a damn fine job."

"Thank you." Her eyes darted as if taking in everything one last time to record each detail. "And thank you for bringing me here so I could remember all those good things Kirstie and I did together."

"What about her father?" He couldn't resist asking.

"He always said he loved her, like in the letter." Shuddering, she skimmed her hands along her bare arms in spite of the eighty-degree evening. "How awful is it to be relieved I never have to show the hypocrisy to Kirstie?"

"Where does he play into those memories you have of this house?"

Yeah, yeah, he knew he had a selfish reason for wondering. Major "duh" moment. He was less than an hour from being with this woman. She'd said she didn't love the scumbag anymore, but she must have at some time. Had that love stopped in the police station? Or earlier, as Vic had hinted?

It mattered to him right now, a helluva lot.

"He was obsessed with getting ahead with his restaurant so he could give us more. We really didn't see him all that often, and if he made it to preschool plays or gymnastic shows, he came late and spent half the time on his cell phone. I used to think if we had more time together, I could figure out what was wrong with him, me, the way I was feeling about him. Or rather, the way I wasn't feeling anymore."

Vic had told him the same thing about her faltering relationship with Haugen, but it felt damn good hearing the words from her mouth. It also gave him a few more ideas on how to romance this woman the way she deserved.

"Silly me, I thought I just had a workaholic husband like most everyone else in the neighborhood. I used to joke he took his cell phone and pager into bed with him."

She tried for a smile. No luck.

Paige glanced down at her lap, tracing a purple flower on the shirt before sucking in a brave breath and meeting him eye-to-eye. "I haven't been with anyone except Kurt."

The conversational shift jolted through him. Then understanding followed about her reasoning for this detour. Listening would definitely work best here because one misstep would cause far more pain than just an end to their evening plans. He stayed silent and let his touch speak reassurance for him by tunneling into her hair to cup her head.

"All I have to go by is sex with a man who had no morals. How
ewww
is that?"

There was no answer he could offer up so he continued a slow stroke of his thumb along her neck, a non-threatening touch to let her know he was still here. Serious brown eyes stared back at him, brave and determined eyes that made him more than a little sad because making love shouldn't have to be this serious and fearsome.

"Okay, Bo, here it is, straight up. I'm afraid that even as much as I want you, sex could have been ruined for me because it's somehow associated with him, who he was and what he did. I need you to reassure me."

"With sex?" Did she want him as some sort of therapeutic fling? Or did she want
him?

She crinkled her nose. "Maybe that didn't come out quite right. I didn't mean to sound so...clinical about it all. Let me try again."

It was tough to be insulted when she was being so sweet and earnest. "I'm all ears."

"You are the most honorable, charming and giving man I've ever met. And that's saying a lot considering I think my brother and Seth are really great guys. And of course you're hot as hell and not a relative."

"That last part's definitely a plus." He shrugged off the compliments he wasn't sure fit with a joke.

A smile lit her eyes as much as the stars glinting off her gold glasses. "I need to move forward with my life, and while sex shouldn't be everything, I think the longer I wait to figure this out, the more I'm going to worry and freeze up inside."

She gripped his shirtfront, twisting, her small fist resting against his chest. "And, God, please say something soon, before I absolutely die of embarrassment. I thought men wanted the chance at uncomplicated sex."

"Lady." He paused, shaking his head. "There isn't one thing about you that's uncomplicated. And that's one of the many things I like about you."

"So all my babbling there made sense somehow?"

"Absolutely." Easing back with a quick, tender-as-he-could-make-it kiss, he shifted the Jeep into gear.

Later he would think about the fact that he didn't feel much like the man she described. In spite of his countless flaws he recognized well, he'd always prided himself on never starting a relationship if it didn't stand at least a chance of going somewhere. For the first time, he was about to break his rule.

Because no way in hell could he turn his back on the chance to be with this woman even just once.

Chapter 12

Outside Bo's house, Paige grappled for the Jeep's door handle while chanting in her head that she could do this, she
would
do this. She wanted this, him, all of it, so don't think.

Do
not
think. After a mad dash across town for privacy— a mad dash across the country since they'd left North Dakota, for that matter—finally they were alone.

Bo grazed her arm with his knuckles. "Sit tight. I'll be right around."

To open the door for her? Old-fashioned, but sweet nonetheless. Although, she hoped he would hurry before she thought too much about all the embarrassing things she'd told him while sitting outside her old house. She watched Bo through the windshield as he sprinted around the hood with a speed and obvious urgency that sent a jolt of anticipation through her.

He swept the door open, dropped his keys in her hands and scooped her out of the front seat, startling a surprised yelp from her as she grabbed his shoulders for balance. "You're crazy."

"For you? Hell, yeah." He charged up the front walk to his house carrying her, stars dancing overhead as she jostled. "Unlock the door, would ya? Use the key with the red-tape marking."

"You could put me down."

"Or you could just open the door so we can get inside sooner."

"Fair enough. One red-tape key coming up."

Once inside, he slid her down along the front of him until there was no mistaking how very much he wanted her. "Finally."

"Finally," she echoed against his mouth.

Looping her arms around his neck, she urged his head down and took the most from the moment as fully as she took his mouth, his kiss, the heat of more dry lightning and want that had been building for weeks.

Even longer perhaps, years since she'd indulged in fantasies of a man and a moment just like this.

Bo skimmed more kisses along her cheek, up into her hair until he nuzzled in that way he had of catching her fragrance, which sent a whole new shiver through her. Thank goodness she'd allowed herself the silly vanity of jasmine-scented shampoo and loose hair for the evening.

Her hands climbed inside his shirt to hold him closer, and yes, to feel the warmth of his skin. "I think it's time we test out your sexual peaking theory."

"With any luck," he paused, inhaling along her neck, "there's going to be plenty of peaking going on soon."

"How soon?" She arched to look up at him, which happened to bring her hips closer to his, cradling the hard ridge of his obvious desire against her stomach with delicious intimacy.

"Not too soon, I hope. Although if you keep wriggling like that..." He groaned, backing her toward the hall, his arms linked around her waist guiding her along with him in a sort of tuneless dance toward his bedroom.

BOOK: Explosive Alliance
3.56Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Enchanted Rose by Konstanz Silverbow
The Vanishing Point by McDermid, Val
The Thirty-Nine Steps by John Buchan
Outcasts of Velrune by Isaac Crowe
Without Chase by Jo Frances