Excerpt . . .
Connor eased the Cadillac into a parking space on the airport
skyway level, and glanced at his watch. Erin’s plane
wasn’t due to land for twenty minutes. It would take
ten minutes or so to for her to disembark and make her way
to the luggage claim, where Ranier’s limo driver was
supposed to meet her.
Over his dead body.
His eyes fell on the sheaf of info that Davy had gleaned on
Claude Ranier, scattered across the passenger seat. He’d
memorized every fact. He should be relieved that Erin’s
mystery client checked out, but the ghost hand was squeezing
his throat even harder. His instincts had never played him
false before—but he’d never been in such a fucked-up
state before, either. Even Sean and Davy thought he was going
off the deep end. That made him feel so alone.
But he couldn’t let it go. Not if Erin was at stake.
The only plan he’d come up with so far was to spirit
her away from the airport without making a scene. A neat trick,
considering that the old you-are-in-mortal-danger-and-only-I-can-save-you
line had fallen pretty flat last night. He’d never been
that smooth with the ladies. That was Sean’s special
talent, not his.
Thinking about Sean made him glance self-consciously into
the rear-view mirror. He’d made an effort today, but
it hadn’t done a whole lot of good. He’d put on
the nicest shirt he could find, a rough-weave beige designer
thing, a Christmas gift from the ever-hopeful Sean. The shirt
still had the creases from the packaging, and his chinos were
crumpled from their sojourn at bottom of the clean laundry
basket, but that was just too bad. There were some lengths
to which he would not go, and ironing was one of them.
But he’d shaved. He’d combed his unruly blond
mane, forced it to lie as smoothly as possible in a thick
ponytail. His hair had always had a mind of its own. He should
probably just chop it all off. Problem with cutting your hair,
though, was that then you had to keep on cutting it. All the
time. Big pain in the ass.
Oh, Christ, enough already. This wasn’t a goddamn beauty
contest. If he’d come here sporting his usual Clan of
the Cave Bear hairdo, the airport National Guardsmen would’ve
hauled him away before he even got in the door. Even decently
groomed, dragging a beautiful, protesting young woman through
an international airport was a delicate undertaking. The trick
would be in that fateful split second that Erin caught sight
of him.
He’d be lucky if she didn’t scream.
He let his breath out slowly. He felt so damn nervous. He’d
looked death in the face plenty of times and kept his cool,
but one quiet, self-possessed girl scared him to death. Maybe
he really was losing it. Interpol was dead sure that Novak
was in Europe. Nick was convinced that Novak was no threat
to Erin. Her mystery client checked out. There was no reason
he could put his finger on to follow her around and hassle
her. So why?
Fuck it. He just had to. It was one of those bone-deep feelings
that could not be reasoned with. He shoved the Mueller papers
into the glove compartment and got out of the car.
He could torture himself all day, and he would just keep limping
along, following marching orders from an authority deep inside
himself. His conscience, maybe. Davy and Sean called it his
hero complex. He himself sometimes referred to it as dumber
than shit, particularly when it almost got him killed.
It didn’t really matter what it was called. Fact #1,
he was doing a stupid, self-destructive thing that could prove
to be dangerous, not to mention embarrassing. Fact #2, there
wasn’t a damn thing he could do to stop himself. Conclusion?
Go for it.
First he checked out the shuttle carousel in the luggage claim,
to see who was waiting for Erin. Sure enough, a big, dark-haired,
Spanish looking guy in a uniform was holding a sign that read
“Erin Riggs.” Connor scanned the rest of the crowd.
His plan would only work if Erin hadn’t checked her
luggage. Chances were good she just had a carry-on, but with
women, you never knew.
And she wouldn’t take kindly to being separated from
her bag. Hell hath no fury like a woman deprived of her toiletries.
He took the escalator back up. There was a quivery feeling
in his belly. He glanced at his watch. Eight minutes. He sauntered
over to the Coffee People booth in the mall, bought a cup,
drank it down faster than he should. He fingered the bag of
tobacco in his pocket. He should have had the presence of
mind to have a quick smoke outside. Damn smoke-free environments.
Three more minutes to wait. Coffee had been a big mistake.
He studied the people around him. A woman with a baby and
a four year old boy jumping up and down, waiting for his dad
to come home.
An elderly couple, their faces creased with smiles as they
waited for their grandkids. Finally, the shuttle passengers
started trickling out. One minute . . . two . . . and there
she was, dressed in a deep green suit. Hair swept up, gleaming.
Gold earrings dangled beneath her ears. She looked so gorgeous,
he wanted to kick himself for not at least attempting to iron
the shirt. It wouldn’t have killed him to try.
Too late for regrets. She was wheeling a carry-on suitcase
behind her, thank God. Time to put his half-assed plan into
action.
His heart slammed against his ribs like a jackhammer as she
came through the gate. She still hadn’t caught sight
of him. He chose a diagonal collision course that brought
him up right behind her, and grabbed her arm. “Hey,
sweetheart.”
She spun around. He took full advantage of her shocked confusion
and yanked her closer, staring down into wide, startled gold-brown
eyes. Her mouth was moist with tinted lip gloss, hanging open
in adorable confusion.
“Good to see you again, babe.” He scooped her
close and tight against his body, and kissed her.
She stiffened, latching onto his upper arms for balance. She
made a soft, frightened sound against his mouth.
He deepened the kiss, sliding his arm to the deep flare of
her hip, splaying his hand over her beautiful ass. He hadn’t
planned on kissing her. The impulse had sneaked up on him,
but it was perfect. Inspired. It all looked like lovers’
play, and that soft, luscious mouth of hers was too busy to
complain.
Then her scent rose up around him, like a hot pink cloud,
and his mind went blank. It was spring-like and tangy and
sweet. Intensely female. A secret weapon that he was unprepared
for. He wanted to gasp in huge, gulping lungfuls of it, like
a man who’d been trapped underwater and finally reaches
air.
Her scent blended with her taste, just as silky sweet, and
a confusion of soft, unbelievable textures, the yielding tenderness
of her lips, the satiny wisps of hair at the nape of her neck,
her baby smooth skin. His senses were overwhelmed.
She vibrated in his arms, a delicate tremor like a trapped
bird. He forgot about Novak, about the airport, about the
National Guardsmen. He forgot everything but his own desperate,
clawing need to coax her mouth to open, to taste more of her.
She flung her head back, gasping for air. A stain of wild-rose
pink was burned into her cheeks, startling against the delicate
gold tone of her skin. Her pupils were black wells ringed
with jewel-toned agate brown. Sunset, honey and chocolate.
Her dark, curling lashes fluttered with dazed confusion.
She licked her lips. “Connor? What . . . what are you—”
He shifted to keep her off balance and slanted his mouth across
her lips again. He slid his hand down her graceful spine and
pressed her against his lower body as he cupped the nape of
her neck. He dove deep into one of those waves-crashing-on-the-beach
kisses, sweet and devouring and desperate. When he finally
released her, he was trembling harder than she was.
She dragged in a deep, hitching breath. He leaned his hot
forehead against hers, making a cage of privacy with his cupped
hands around their faces. “Shhh,” he murmured.
He grabbed the suitcase out of her hand. “Let’s
go.”
He wrapped his arm around her shoulder and pulled her along
with him. She had to scurry to keep up. “Go where?”
Her voice was still soft and uncertain. Not yet an attention-getting
bellow of outrage. “Connor, please. I—”
This time he bent her over backwards so that she had to cling
to his neck to stay on her feet. He moved his mouth across
her lips, muffling her protests until finally she was just
holding on, swaying. He pressed soft kisses over her face,
her throat, and nuzzled the perfumed, tickling wisps at her
neck.
“Shhh,” he urged. “Trust me.”
Into those big revolving doors, and he’d be home free.
“Trust you?” Her voice shook as he swept her into
movement once again. “About what? Connor, I’m
supposed to meet someone at baggage claim! Slow down!”
She was starting to splutter and struggle in his grasp, but
they were out the revolving door, and he was hustling her
across the skyway. No airport security. Just travelers going
about their business, shooting them the occasional curious
glance.
Erin dug in her heels and dragged him to a halt. “Wait
a goddamn minute, Connor McCloud, and—no! Don’t
you dare kiss me again!” She shrank away. “That’s
a dirty trick! That’s not fair!”
“I never claimed to be fair.” He stared at her
tender, reddened lips and realized that he was panting. Openmouthed,
like an animal. He grabbed her hand and yanked her along.
“Hurry.”
“To what? For what? What the hell are you doing here?”
They were in the parking garage elevator well, bells were
pinging, doors were about to open, and she was gathering her
breath to yell at him again. He wrapped his arms around her
and slid his tongue into her mouth.
A tiny squeak, a speechless gasp, and she went limp.
So far this had gone more smoothly than his wildest hopes.
The only trick would be getting himself to stop kissing her.
She was so sweet. He could get lost in the sensual world of
her moist, yielding mouth. He could get sucked in. Forget
his own name.
He waited until the elevators emptied and the people had cleared
out before he dared to release her. He cupped her face in
his hands, stared into her eyes. Trying to communicate his
urgency with all the force of his will. It actually seemed
to work. He took her by the arm. She stumbled after him, unresisting.
He popped open his trunk, flung in her stone-heavy suitcase,
and slammed it shut. “Let’s go.”
She wrenched herself out of his grasp. “Wait. I’m
not going anywhere with you, Connor. Explain yourself to me.
Right now.”
Whatever spell the kiss had cast was short-lived. He backed
her up against the Cadillac and boxed her in with his arms.
“I’m driving you to the coast,” he said.
“I’m booking us a room in a different hotel. Tomorrow
I accompany you to that meeting. Afterwards, I drive you home.
Any questions?”
“Connor, I told you last night I didn’t want a
bodyguard—”
“Too bad.”
She shoved against his chest. “I refuse to be pushed
around. You have no right. You can’t—oh!”
“Watch me.” He shoved her back against the car,
bending her over backwards. She blinked up at him, her chest
heaving.
He knew it wasn’t fair to intimidate her with his size
and his strength. It didn’t work in the long term anyway,
it was just a quick and dirty temporary solution, but she
was so warm, her tits straining against her blouse. He felt
every tremor that rippled through her soft, pliant body. And
her scent was a low-down, nasty trick. A drug that went straight
to his head and made him stupid.
Her thick eyelashes swept down, veiling her eyes. She wiggled
against him, unintentionally sensual. “Connor,”
she whispered. “Please. This isn’t right.”
“I’m holding your suitcase hostage, Erin. I mean
business.”
“I am not your responsibility, Connor.” Her voice
had a stern, lecturing tone that was strangely at odds with
the vulnerable pose of her body. “You have no right.
I can decide for myself—”
“I have to do this,” he broke in. “You know
why?”
He waited to answer his own question until her eyes flicked
up to his. “Because this is what your dad would’ve
done,” he said flatly. “He had the right to shove
you around, but he’s not here.”
Her mouth opened. Nothing came out. He seized her chin and
forced her to meet his eyes again. “You’ve got
no clue, Erin. No clue what Novak is capable of. Do we understand
each other?”
She licked her lips, her throat bobbing. “But it’s
so rude!”
He was totally lost. “Rude? Who? Me?”
Her mouth tightened. “Yes, you, now that you mention
it, but I wasn’t referring to you. There’s a driver
waiting for me. It’s rude to just not show up without
even calling them!”
He was so startled, he laughed out loud. “Is that all?
Who cares if Mueller’s flunky waits at the airport?
He won’t get his feelings hurt.”
She frowned. “If I had wanted to change the travel arrangements,
I should’ve notified them in advance! I can’t
just—”
“So call them when we get to the coast. Tell them you
had a change of plans. You met someone, you brought someone.
Tell them your boyfriend decided to come along at the last
minute.”
“Boyfriend?” She shrank back.
“Why not?” He couldn’t keep his eyes from
her breasts, which were straining the buttons of her blouse
to their utmost. “Don’t you think they’d
buy it? A woman like you, and a lowlife like me?”
She shoved him away, clearing just enough space for her to
stand up. “Stop acting like a lowlife, Connor McCloud,
if you don’t want to be taken for one!”
“You’re pissed at me because I kissed you?”
His voice was dangerously unsteady. “I dared to touch
the princess with my rude hands. Is that what’s bothering
you?”
She made a break for it, trying to duck out from under his
arm. He blocked her. She straightened up, adjusted her jacket,
tugged her skirt into place. She wasn’t up to a physical
tussle with him. She couldn’t win it, and dignity was
more important to her.
“To be perfectly truthful, no,” she said stiffly.
“That’s not what’s bothering me at all.
It’s just not that flattering to have a man kiss you
only because he wants to shut you up.”
He pulled that statement to pieces in an instant, looking
at it from every side. Then he waited until curiosity compelled
her eyes to flick up again. He stroked her exquisitely soft
cheek with his thumb until the pink stain deepened to wild
rose. He looked around. No one to see or hear. No reason at
all to shut her up.
He kissed her again.
He wasn’t sure what he expected. Maybe for her to stiffen
up, shove him away. Anything but the roar of heat swelling
inside him, the dazzling explosion of sparks. She clutched
his upper arms; for balance, to pull him closer, he couldn’t
tell, he didn’t care. He coaxed her mouth open. He wanted
to touch that succulent pink tongue, to dance with it. He
didn’t mean to stick his hand in her jacket, he just
found his calluses snagging her blouse as he explored the
exquisite heft of her tits, the small nipples tightening under
his palm. He had no deliberate intention of pressing the aching
bulge of his crotch against her.
Jesus. What was he thinking? They were in an airport parking
garage. He’d come down her to protect her.
Fucking her was not part of the plan.
He pulled away, with enormous effort. “I wasn’t
trying to shut you up that time,” he said raggedly.
“You feel flattered now?”
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