Authors: Nauti,wild (Riding The Edge)
life? His kind of life wasn’t suitable for a woman in it, and
especial y not a woman like Ava.
Even if he wanted to—try to make things work between
them—he’d be no better than Bo if he tried to drag Ava into
his lifestyle. She had a career ahead of her. More school. Her
Ph.D., fol owed by a job in social work. Her future didn’t
include him any more than his included hers.
But they could have fun fucking until it was over. Then he’d
walk away, disappear, and she’d move on with her life,
thinking he was some dickhead biker who’d found better
things to do. Yeah, it would make him look like an asshole, but
it was better for her this way. She’d forget about him soon
enough. They always did.
But for now? Yeah, he’d enjoy the hel out of her for now.
“So I’m good for al of you, huh? I’l have to see ‘al of you’ to
find out if I’m good for it.”
She laughed. “I’m sure that can be arranged . . . uh, later.”
“What? Not here in the middle of the party?”
“You have a wicked mind, Rick.”
He bent her over his arm and kissed her, long and hard,
then tilted her back up on her feet. “And that’s why you like me.
”
She blew out a breath and smoothed her skirt, then leaned
into him to whisper in his ear. “That’s one of the reasons why I
like you. But not the only one.”
She pivoted and walked away, found Lacey, and the two of
them took up a conversation.
Yeah, he was in deep shit with Ava. The woman rocked him
back on his heels. He usual y found women pretty predictable.
Easy to come by, easy to fuck, easy to drop and forget.
Ava? There was nothing easy about her.
For the next few hours, Ava divided her time between him
and Lacey. He liked that she didn’t cling to him, needing him
for her entertainment. She even talked to some of the other
people there, since there were women as wel as men. She
wasn’t uncomfortable at al in her surroundings, though he kept
an eye on her at al times. If any of the guys got too close,
thinking she might be there on her own, he was right there by
her side to let those guys know she was off limits. From the
scowl on his face they got the message loud and clear and
backed off right away.
Which seemed to amuse Ava. She started referring to him
as her Knight in Shining Armor.
If only she knew how little that applied to him.
Rick divided his time between keeping an eye on Ava, and
surreptitiously watching Bo. Though Bo made no moves other
than drinking and partying with his guests and with Lacey,
Rick knew tonight was the night, and he planned to be right on
top of it when it happened.
The suite was packed a little after one in the morning.
Lacey was either drunk or stoned, sitting on one of the plush
white leather sofas near the open doors by the balcony,
looking pale as death and like she might puke at any minute.
Which gave Bo the perfect opportunity to slip away. He
motioned to the guys he’d been talking to earlier, and they
walked out the front door.
“Lacey doesn’t look like she feels wel .” Rick pointed to
Lacey, and that’s al it took.
“Oh, no. I’d better go take care of her,” Ava said.
Ava was off seeing to Lacey, which left him free to fol ow
Bo. He walked out the front door and down the stairs, taking
three at a time so he’d be there before the elevator. He inched
the main floor door open, watching as the elevator doors slid
open.
Bo and his friends came out, made a left turn, and headed
in his direction. Rick closed the stair doors in a hurry and
hoped like hel they weren’t going to take the stairs. After
counting a few seconds, he breathed a sigh of relief and
cracked the door open again.
Bo and the others had headed though the back doors and
toward the parking garage.
Rick fol owed, keeping a respectable distance so Bo
wouldn’t see him.
Lacey’s car had been parked outside the garage, toward
the back of the lot, far beyond where anyone usual y parked.
Either Bo had her park there, or had moved her car to this
remote location.
Rick moved around the back of the building where it wasn’t
lit so he could observe without being seen.
And watched another car pul up beside Lacey’s. They cut
the lights, the trunk popped open, and within a minute they’d
opened Lacey’s trunk and popped down a false inside top
from the hood of her trunk. In the space there, Bo and his
friends placed several packages. It was too dark to see
shapes or sizes or even how many, but Rick knew it was the
drugs Lacey was going to transport across the border
tomorrow.
Asshole.
They finished up and climbed into the car that had dropped
off the drugs, then sped out of there. Rick melted into the side
of the building until they passed, then walked toward Lacey’s
car.
He waited a good fifteen minutes to be sure no one came
around.
They didn’t. It took a little maneuvering but Rick had been
stealing cars since he was twelve years old. No amount of
today’s technology could get in his way. He popped the trunk
and the false inside top, whistling low as he saw the booty
there.
Cocaine. Nicely packaged up in tight, brown-wrapped
bundles. Probably the same amount on the other side, too.
If Lacey were caught by the authorities smuggling this
amount of dope, she’d do maximum time.
And Bo wouldn’t give a shit. He’d just pick up some new,
naïve chick and do the same thing to her.
That wasn’t going to happen.
Not this trip.
Never again.
A
va finished wiping up the bathroom in the suite, washed up,
then switched off the light and went into the bedroom to check
one more time on Lacey.
Her breathing was shal ow, but she seemed to be resting
now.
God, what a mess. Ava had barely gotten Lacey into the
bathroom before she’d lost it. She didn’t know what Lacey
had eaten, drank, smoked, or snorted, but she’d heaved for
nearly an hour straight, then nothing at al . Once she was
empty, Ava had cleaned her up and poured her into bed. Light
snores were al she heard now.
If that was the result of drugs, alcohol, and excess partying,
Ava wanted no part of it. She was grateful al she’d managed
was a few hors d’oeuvres and one glass of wine. Right now
her stomach felt queasy after witnessing Lacey’s
gastronomical debacle. She turned off the light, closed the
door, and went down the hal , making a beeline for the bar so
she could grab a club soda with lime.
She searched for Bo, found him, and told him Lacey was
sick and out cold.
He rol ed his eyes. “She never could hold her stuff. Guess
my party is over for the night.”
How sweet of him to be so concerned about her. “She’l be
fine. Thanks for asking.”
She walked away before she could say anything more to
him, like what she thought about his inability to watch over his
own girlfriend, and went in search of Rick. He was just
stepping back through the front door.
She quirked a brow as he approached. “Where did you go?
”
“I had to make a phone cal and it was too noisy in here.”
“International?”
He laughed. “Wel , it’s not like I know anyone in Mexico. I
have a line on a job.”
She glanced down at her watch. “It’s almost three in the
morning.”
“It wasn’t an interview. Buddy of mine I’ve been trying to get
hold of final y got back to me, and I didn’t want to miss the cal
again since he’s on the road a lot.”
“Oh. So, what kind of job is it?”
“Construction. That’s why he’s hard to get hold of. He’s
leaving in a couple hours for Texas and wanted me to hop on
this job with him.”
Her stomach clenched. “Do you need to leave right now?”
“No. I’l meet him in a couple days.”
“Oh. Wel , that’s great.” She ignored the stab of
disappointment. Of course he was leaving. So was she. They
both had lives separate from each other. This . . . thing
between them wasn’t permanent. How many times did she
have to keep reminding herself of that?
Many, apparently.
“How’s Lacey? She didn’t look good.”
At least someone cared about her. “She’s okay. She was
pretty sick there for a while, but she’s resting now.”
He swept his hand down her back. “She’s lucky she has a
friend like you to look after her.”
“Thank you, Rick. That’s nice of you to say. I’m not sure how
much help I am to her, but I was glad to be here.”
“You help her more than you know. Not everyone has
someone to care about them.”
He led her to the table where the food was, his cryptic
words ringing in her ears.
The party had started to break up, so they found Bo and
said good night, made plans to meet tomorrow. Bo and Rick
would fol ow on their bikes while Ava and Lacey drove the car
back into the States.
But for now, al Ava could think about was getting back to
her room and being alone with Rick. Their last night in Mexico,
alone. Probably their last night together, period.
She felt the melancholy settle over her, but brushed it away,
refusing to let it ruin what little time she had left with Rick.
The sound of the water crashing against the shore was a
musical interlude as they stepped into the room. She was
going to miss this tropical paradise.
“This has been a nice little vacation,” she said, stepping out
onto the balcony. “I’m afraid I’l be spoiled when it comes time
to settle back into academia again.”
Rick came up behind her and placed his hands on her
shoulders. The smel of the ocean, salty and tangy, tantalized
her almost as much as the man whose body heated her.
“You’re way too practical to be swept away by vacations.”
She turned in his arms. “Am I? I’m not so sure. You’ve swept
me away.”
“Yeah?”
She tangled her fingers in his hair, loving its softness, so
incongruous to the hard body pressed against her. “Yeah. I
think I like this.”
“It’s a fantasy. Not reality. Reality is you being a social
worker, doing the right thing, helping kids.”
Her brows rose. “Real y? I thought you didn’t believe in
social workers.”
“I didn’t believe in the ones who’d been assigned to me. I
believe in you. I believe you can help people.”
The sting of tears pricked her eyes. He had such faith in her.
She wasn’t so sure she had that same faith in herself. But to
know a guy from the streets, a man the system failed, stil
believed in that system, in her ability to effect change, made
her heart leap.
“Thank you.” The words tumbled out in a whisper, her heart
fil ed with emotions she couldn’t—wouldn’t—think about. She
sifted her fingers through his hair, then let her palm slide down
his cheek, over the scruff of his unshaven jaw. “You do
mystifying things to my heart and soul, Rick.”
This time, he didn’t smile. “I’m just a guy. A guy with a lot of
flaws.”
“No one is perfect. I’m not looking for perfect.”
Just someone to love me.
She didn’t say it, but the words were there, hanging
suspended somewhere between thought and voice. She so
wanted to say it, but was too afraid she wouldn’t like the
response—if there even was one.
And maybe she didn’t want a response—not from Rick.
Maybe she just wanted to make up his reply in her head. After
al , wasn’t al this a fantasy anyway?
And wasn’t love the ultimate fantasy?
He kissed her, a perfect kiss that was no fantasy at al . His
mouth against hers, coaxing a response that was oh so real.
She held on to that reality, the feel of his body, so hot and hard
against her. That’s what she wanted, what she needed tonight.
And the way he touched her—the slow glide of his hands
down the bare flesh of her back—was both perfect and
frustrating. She wanted to make it last forever, but she wanted
to hurry up, get naked, feel his skin against hers.
And yet out here on the balcony, the night was oh so right.
Warm, a soft breeze ruffling the hem of her dress, and Rick’s
mouth intoxicating her senses.
He backed her against the wal , his body fol owing, pressing
against hers. Al that hard male flesh she wanted access to
was impeded by clothing. That wasn’t going to do at al .
She pul ed away from his kiss, pressed her hands to his