Cassandra gave up on the bedroom and walked back out into the living room. Even so long after the fact, knowing that it was the scene where Laura Granger had died gave Cassandra the creeps.
“It’s got to be here somewhere,” she said, more to herself than to Jack, and more because she hoped that it was true, rather than because she expected it to be.
Jack was still looking around, here and there, and Cassandra watched as emotions flickered across his face: anger, sadness, resentment. If she found the house unbearably creepy, it obviously had a lot more complicated associations for the man she had entered it with.
They went through into the kitchen, and Cassandra began to carefully inspect the room. She noticed that a knife had been taken out of the block and tried to remember if the coroner’s report or any of the subsequent notes had mentioned stab wounds.
“If I’d known I was going to be kidnapped and taken on a wild goose chase to find Laura Granger’s real killer, I would have had the presence of mind to bring my case notes with me,” Cassandra said dryly.
Jack didn’t seem to appreciate the joke. “If I see something that might be what you’re looking for, I’ll point it out to you,” he said, turning his back and inspecting the cabinets carefully, holding a layer of paper towel between his hand and the surfaces.
Cassandra bent to look into the half-open silverware drawer. Something about the weak gleam of the light on the stainless steel tableware tugged at her mind, the same way Lenny’s mention of jewelry had. She contemplated the problem until the sharp, high-pitched wail of a distant siren cut through her thoughts.
“Shit,” Jack said behind her.
Cassandra turned to look at him, pushing the silverware drawer shut once more.
“They’re coming towards the house.”
Cassandra listened closely, and hearing two sirens she did the mental math: two sirens meant two cars, and two cars meant four police.
“Maybe they’re passing through,” Cassandra said hopefully. “Maybe someone up the street got broken into.”
“Let’s not take that chance,” Jack suggested.
He grabbed for her hand and pulled her in his wake, moving confidently to the sliding glass door that opened out into the home’s back yard. He pushed up the lock and hurried through, dragging Cassandra over the threshold and steadying her when she stumbled, unprepared for the door’s track.
Jack slid the door shut behind them, almost slamming it in his hurry.
“With any luck they’ll just think it’s teenagers, getting their thrills visiting a crime scene,” he told her lowly, propelling her into the inky darkness of the back yard.
Cassandra felt the grass brushing against her legs, some of the sharper-leaved weeds poking through the fabric of her pants. She looked around, her eyes slowly adjusting to the lack of light. The back yard seemed just as overgrown as the front had been. Jack came up next to her and as one they plunged through the almost knee-high grass towards a thick clump of shrubbery.
They reached the dubious cover at almost the same moment, and sank down into the leafy branches, the smell of rotting vegetation filling their noses. Cassandra saw flashlight beams inside of the house. She took a deep breath as her heart hammered away in her chest, willing her body to calm itself down. She felt the sweat gathering at the small of her back, dampness dripping down between her breasts. Crouching low in the bushes, she pressed her lips together to force herself to breathe more quietly through her nose.
“Don’t move,” Jack murmured, his voice much steadier than Cassandra felt.
One of the cops stepped out onto the patio, directing the flashlight beam slowly over the back yard.
“Yeah, I think you’re right,” he called over his shoulder. “Probably those damn kids again.”
Cassandra heard a muffled radio message from inside; something to the effect of making sure the premises were clear and then moving on.
“Right. Nothing moving out here. Whoever it was, they made tracks.”
The beam of the flashlight trailed slowly from one corner of the yard to the other, and Cassandra felt a flurry of panic as she momentarily lost her center of balance, her feet tingling from the position she had taken.
She wished uselessly that they could have had time to get to her car. As the police search of the house continued, she struggled to stay motionless in her hiding spot, inches away from the convicted murderer of the woman whose house they had broken into. It was impossible to know how long they were hiding there for, but Cassandra guessed that maybe half an hour passed. There was a crackling, electronic sound, and then the officer who’d come out onto the patio spoke into his radio, responding to something that distance garbled and muffled, keeping Cassandra from hearing what was said.
“Yeah. Yeah. So far it looks like they left. We’ll have to contact whoever’s responsible for the estate and tell them about the door.”
The flashlight beam disappeared and Cassandra saw him heading into the house once more, rejoining his colleagues. Cassandra’s relief at not being caught dissolved as she remembered his earlier comment about ‘those damn kids.’ If a bunch of teenagers had been consistently raiding the house since the forensics team had left it, there was no chance that she’d find what she’d come to see.
All at once, her knees gave out, her ankles turning slightly as Cassandra swayed and then fell forward. Something hard and sharp dug into her left knee and Cassandra yelped in surprise and pain, flailing uselessly at the bushes to try and keep herself from falling flat on the ground.
The next instant, a hand clamped over her mouth and Cassandra stiffened in panic until she realized that it was Jack, that he was muffling any other sounds she might make, his confident grip steadying her. She could still feel something digging into her skin, and as she heard the faint sound of the police officers leaving the property, Cassandra shifted her weight onto her right knee, lifting her other leg and reaching underneath it to grope in the darkness and dirt for the source of the pain.
Cassandra’s breath hitched in her chest as she lifted the object out of the dirt and held it up, carefully, in the lingering light of the patio security lamp. As she examined it—the ostentatious diamond that winked in the darkness, and the heavy engraving she could feel under her fingers—Cassandra felt a spurt of triumph. She knew the ring well; she had seen it dozens of times. She had noticed its absence but had assumed that the wearer had separated from his wife. A new picture began to form in her mind, and Cassandra smiled to herself bitterly.
When Max Adelman had patted her on the shoulder that day in the courtroom three months earlier, breaking with his usual icy formality, Cassandra had instinctively looked at his other hand. That’s when she had noticed that he was missing his ring. She hadn’t thought anything much of it at the time, but now the question loomed large in her mind: what was Max’s ring doing in Laura Granger’s garden?
Chapter Nineteen
“We can go now,” Jack said. “They’re gone.”
Cassandra looked at the ring for a moment longer, trying to work its sudden appearance into the larger puzzle she’d been assembling in her brain.
“What have you got there?” he asked.
Cassandra gave herself a shake, slowly standing up and slipping the ring into her pocket.
“I’m not one hundred percent sure,” she admitted. “But I think that was what I was looking for when we came to Laura’s house. I think we’re done here.”
“Let’s get back to the car,” Jack said, getting to his feet.
Cassandra nodded. As she followed him out of the back yard, keeping to the deep shadows created by the trees and bushes, she considered the bizarre clue hidden in the dirt. She had never at any point thought there might be a connection between Max and Laura—but if he hadn’t known her, why would his ring be in her back yard?
They came out into the front yard and Jack hurried onto the sidewalk, avoiding the security lights on the street. Cassandra followed him around the corner, jogging
to keep up with his fast pace.
Well, she thought with a wry grin to herself, I do know one person who should have a very good idea of what Max Adelman’s wedding ring would be doing in Laura’s back yard. And this time, I know where to find him.
When they finally reached her car, Cassandra’s whole body tingled with the possibilities of what she might have learned in their few moments of hiding.
Jack looked around quickly, making sure that they were alone.
“What’s going on? What was with that ring you picked up?”
Cassandra took a deep breath and slid the jewelry out of her pocket, examining it in the feeble light of the parking lot lamps.
“It’s Max—well, it’s Max’s ring,” she said, the words tumbling out of her mouth. “I don’t know what it was doing at Laura’s, but I think it means he had to have been involved.”
As she gazed at the ring, a scenario started to form in her mind. Cassandra thought about Max’s overly-familiar shoulder pat in the courthouse, the way he’d encouraged her all along in pursuing Laura Granger’s murder investigation, the way he’d subtly pushed her to new discoveries.
“He didn’t separate from his wife—he lost his ring. He murdered her…or at least, he had something to do with getting rid of her.”
Cassandra looked up into Jack’s face, holding up the ring for him to look at it again.
“It has to be Max’s. I’ve seen his ring enough times; this gaudy thing wouldn’t be caught dead on anyone else’s finger. But it’s not enough.”
Jack stared at the ring in confusion for a moment, then looked at Cassandra, the expression on his face unreadable, but unmistakably intense; it reminded her of the way he’d looked at her in the courtroom, the day he’d been convicted of Laura’s murder.
“How did you…?”
He shook his head in disbelief, his lips curving up in a slow smile. Before Cassandra could begin to answer, Jack wrapped his arms around her waist tightly, lifting her up against his body.
“You gorgeous, brilliant woman,” he murmured, bringing his lips down onto hers.
Cassandra stiffened against him as Jack deepened the kiss, his hands tightening on her body. A moment later she felt her body relaxing, the surprising warmth that radiated from Jack seeming to sink into her through her clothes, drenching her skin.
Jack’s tongue probed her mouth, tasting, testing, and Cassandra tilted her head up towards him, trying for a greater advantage. She draped her arms around his shoulders, barely able to bring her hands together against his back.
He spun her around, pinning her to the car, reminding Cassandra of the moment, hours earlier, when she’d gone into her kitchen only to find herself immobilized, a hand over her mouth, pinned against the wall. She moaned softly against Jack’s lips as desire flooded through her body, every little lustful half-thought she had entertained over the course of their time together flitting through her mind, heating her up from the inside out.
She felt the hard ridge of Jack’s cock digging into her hip, rubbing against her. Jack broke away from her lips, panting slightly; Cassandra’s heart pounded in her chest, rabbit-fast. She could taste Jack on her lips, feel the tension in his body pressed to hers.
“Unlock the car,” he told her, his voice tight with desire.
Cassandra frowned in confusion; her whole body tingled with need, her nerves were exquisitely awake, and for a moment her brain was too hazed over with the arousal coursing through her that she couldn’t make sense of the words that had come out of his mouth.
“Cass?”
Jack rocked his hips against hers, rubbing the hard ridge of his cock against the juncture between her thighs.
“Oh—yeah. Yeah, the door,” she said, exhaling sharply.
She reached into her pocket and pulled out her keys, nearly dropping them to the ground in her haste.
Jack chuckled lowly, his head dipping down. He dragged his lips along the column of her throat, and Cassandra shivered at the contrast of the coarse stubble rasping against her sensitive skin, interrupted by the softness of his lips.
“I can’t—I can’t unlock it if you don’t let me go,” she said, shivering as Jack’s teeth grazed the pulse-point just below her jaw.
Jack paused, then his grip on her slackened, and Cassandra sank down along the curve of her car until her feet came in contact with the asphalt of the parking lot. Cassandra slid her arm out from under Jack’s body and awkwardly inserted the key into the driver’s side lock. Twisting the key twice, Cassandra heard the mechanical click as the door locks popped open.
Jack’s hand snaked around her, and Cassandra stumbled as he opened the back door of the car. Before she could fully comprehend what was happening, she found herself tumbling into the back seat, one of the seatbelt buckles poking into her back. Then Jack was on top of her, kissing her, his hands moving over her body as if he could barely restrain himself.
The fact that Jack had been in prison for three months—that it had been at least that long since he had been with a woman—flitted through Cassandra’s head as he nibbled her bottom lip, making her gasp at the unexpected pleasure. The ridge of his erection in his jeans felt like a hot lead pipe pressed against her, digging into her thigh, and Cassandra couldn’t deny that she had—in the back of her mind, at least—been wondering ever since he’d shown her the names inked on his hip what it would look like, what it would feel like inside of her.
They writhed together, trying to get comfortable and vying for control of the kiss. Cassandra’s hands wandered all over Jack’s body, exploring the ridges and planes of his back, feeling the ripple of muscles under the skin. Within moments, she felt as though she might actually die if she didn’t feel his skin against hers, if she didn’t feel him inside of her soon.
She tugged and pulled at Jack’s tee shirt, struggling to guide it up along his back, past his broad shoulders. Jack’s hands were busy as well, peeling her blouse up along her waist, tickling her ribs. He lifted her up and they broke apart long enough for Jack to pull the blouse over Cassandra’s head and toss it aside.
Jack buried his face against Cassandra’s breasts, nuzzling into her cleavage, his hot breath tracing where his lips and tongue and skin left off.
“Fuck, Cassie,” Jack murmured, tugging the thin fabric of her bra down to expose her breasts more fully. “You have no idea how long it’s been… How hard it’s been to keep my mind…” He claimed one of her nipples with his mouth, sucking and licking the firm little nub, sending crackling waves of electric pleasure straight to Cassandra’s throbbing, soaking wet pussy. “When we stopped at that gas station, all I could think of was bending you over the hood of the car and making you moan for me.”
Cassandra shuddered, remembering how attracted to Jack she had been even that far back in their adventure, even as deeply apprehensive as she had felt, given his reputation.
“You—you could have had me…” She gasped again as Jack switched from one nipple to the other, barely grazing her sensitive skin with his teeth. “Back—back at the apartment,” she finished, letting her head fall back onto the seat as her hands tightened on his back.
Jack’s hands shifted down along her ribcage, sliding against her skin.
“Wish I’d known,” Jack murmured, breaking away from her breasts to kiss her on the lips once more. “It would have been worth taking the time to get rid of some of this tension.”
One of his hands slipped underneath the waistband of her pants and Cassandra squirmed as his fingertips brushed against the soaked front of her panties. Her breath caught in her throat as Jack rubbed downward, shifting his weight on top of her. Cassandra’s hips came to life, twisting underneath Jack’s touch as his fingertips pressed between her labia, stroking up and down, barely missing her clit.
She struggled with his shirt, her arms tangling with his as she fought to get it off of him. Finally she threw it across the interior of the car, uncaring of where it ended up as Jack worked his fingers around the thin laye
r of lace that made up her panties and began to rub her bare skin underneath. He found her clit and began to stroke her, swirling his fingertips around the bead of nerves, sending jolts of pleasure through Cassandra’s body.
Cassandra dragged his face back up to hers and kissed him hungrily, twisting her hips and pushing them down for better contact with his fingers as they writhed together. Her inner walls flexed and tightened in erratic spasms as Jack teased and touched her, sliding his fingertips down to her inner labia and giving her a few firm strokes that didn’t quite penetrate before slipping them along her drenched folds to play with her pleasure center once more.
“If you’ve been waiting so long, why aren’t you fucking me?” Cassandra broke away from Jack’s lips, panting and gasping for breath, desperation palpable in her voice.
Jack chuckled lowly, slipping one finger inside of her tightening pussy achingly slowly.
“I think I’d rather make you wait,” he murmured, curling the finger along her inner walls, rubbing her clit even as he probed her slowly, pushing deeper and deeper, “just a little while longer; just until you can’t stand it for a second more.” He added a second finger and Cassandra shivered at the tight, full feeling. “It’s been a while for you too, hasn’t it?”
She nodded breathlessly, bringing her hips up to take his fingers deeper, while her inner walls tightened around him; her body didn’t want the rough, thick intrusion to leave.
“Fuck, Cassie,” he groaned, rocking his hips against her, rubbing his still-covered erection along her thigh. “I’d give up a month to have the whole night to fuck you over and over again.”
He kissed her hungrily, plunging his fingers deeper and deeper inside of her. Cassandra shuddered, crying out with pleasure as his fingertips brushed against her G-spot. Her hands tightened on his shoulders, her nails digging into his skin, but she didn’t care whether or not she hurt him—she couldn’t even imagine hurting the big, muscled man who had her pinned underneath him.
Fake It For Me - A Fake Wife Billionaire Romance Page 36