Reckless Passion

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Reckless Passion Page 6

by Stephanie James


  "The choice of surroundings was yours!" Yale suddenly snapped, his fists planted on his hips. He stood in front of her, uncompromisingly naked and intimidatingly male. The deep amber hair was ruffled in a rakish, dangerous-looking style and the hazel eyes gleamed with determination. The Southern ac­cent had lost most of its polish.

  "There certainly isn't much to your gentlemanly veneer now, is there?" Dara taunted, her rage threat­ening to overwhelm her. "I even get the blame for choosing a cheap, one-night-stand sort of motel! Well, I suppose that's the proper setting, after all. A one-night stand is certainly all this affair is ever going to amount to!"

  "The hell it is! I've got news for you, Dara Ban­croft! You handed yourself over to me, lock, stock and barrel, last night. It's too late now to back out!"

  "Don't be so anxious to conclude the bargain," she warned scathingly. "If I ever get my hands on your account I'd pump every last dime into surefire losers! I'd take great pleasure in ruining you! You're damned right I'm feeling like a woman scorned, and just remember hell hath no fury like one! Give me a chance and I'll pay you back a hundredfold for what you did to me last night!"

  "Your warning is duly noted," he drawled, stalk­ing forward with slow, deliberate strides.

  "Don't come any closer," she ordered seethingly, holding the sheet in place as she backed away. "I mean it, Yale! I don't want you touching me. Not ever!"

  "But I'm going to touch you," he promised with silky menace. "Often and in the most delightful places. You belong to me now, temper and all. Like I said, I'm satisfied with the transaction, and I'll make sure you are, too...."

  Dara came up against the wall, her eyes blazing as she realized she was trapped. "You really can't get it through that thick head of yours that I didn't go to bed with you in order to get your account, can you? Well, try writing it on the blackboard a few hundred times. Because I didn't! I don't want your account! I never cared one way or the other about it!"

  "Too bad, because you're stuck with it," he grit­ted, his fingers curling over her bare shoulders. He pulled her away from the wall, close to his naked strength. "And believe me, I'll take every dollar you lose out of your soft hide." His mouth curled devil­ishly. "But I will also be very generous with my thanks for every dollar you make, too!"

  "Take your hands off me!'

  "I can't," he confessed almost ruefully. "I only have to look at you, and I want to touch you. Stop fighting me, honey. You know as well as I do that what we found together last night was very, very good. I'll admit we rushed into things, but—"

  "We rushed into things!" she yelped, incensed at the blithe accusation. "I had nothing to do with it! You're the one who hitched a ride for us to the middle of nowhere! You're the one who got us one room in a sleazy motel when I told you to get two! You're the one who assumed that just because we were forced to share a bed, I would let you make love to me! You're the one who seduced me while I was asleep, long after I'd made it clear I had no intention of going that far! You took advantage of me! And you ignored me at the last moment when I finally realized what was happening and told you to stop!"

  "Of course I ignored you," he murmured, bending his head to brush his mouth affectionately across her forehead and then the tip of her nose. "You'd really have been angry at me this morning if I hadn't!"

  "You're despicable!" She brought up a hand, wedging it against his chest and trying to shove him away. It was like pushing the Rock of Gibraltar.

  "What if I told you I was also sorry?" he whis­pered tantalizingly, his mouth seeking out the vulner­able place behind her ear. Lazily his hand toyed with the wing of hair in the way.

  "Sorry! Sorry for what?" she challenged, wishing she could cry but far too angry to do any such thing. She stood rigidly in his embrace, stoically ignoring the inviting gentleness of his mouth and the sensuous heat of his body. She had learned her lesson last night. Never again would she let her emotions run away with her common sense. What a fool she had been!

  "For getting you involved in that stupid tavern brawl last night, for the cheap motel room, for strand­ing you two hours away from home in strange sur­roundings, for taking you out of your world and showing you something of mine...."

  "Beginning to realize you handled it all wrong, are you?" she flung back waspishly, closing her eyes fiercely against the tenderness in his mouth and hands. She would not let herself be seduced again!

  "Yes," he admitted wryly. "I never meant to put you in a temper like this! I never meant to spend our first night together in a place like this and I never meant to wind up in a honky-tonk with you, either. But you just kept pushing..."

  "So now it's my fault again, is it?"

  He sighed. "Why don't we call it quits and start over again? I'll take you home and we can do things right this time around. I'll go back to my Southern-gentleman accountant role and show you that I've put truck stops and barroom brawls behind me. Trust me, Dara," he added on a low, husky note. "You won't regret it...."

  "You're right. I won't regret it because I don't intend to let you try to repolish your image! I'll al­ways have the memory of waking up in this place and hearing you tell me you were pleased with the trans­action. Nothing will wipe that out of my mind, Yale! And I'm smart enough to know better than to cast pearls before swine twice!"

  He whitened at that. She felt the sudden tension in him and knew a moment's genuine fear. Uncon­sciously, she touched her tongue to her lower lip, wondering if she really had gone too far this time. Eyes wide and reflecting an appeal of which she wasn't aware, Dara waited for his reaction.

  "Your temper is as strong as your passion, isn't it?'' he finally observed in an even tone which startled her. She knew he was exerting a considerable effort to avoid wrapping his hands around her throat. The knowledge gave her a perverse pleasure.

  "You haven't seen the half of it yet," she vowed feelingly, tossing her head with scorn. "Give me an opportunity and I'll prove my temper is a lot more interesting than my passion!"

  A slow smile twisted his mouth as he ran a remi­niscent gaze over her face and bare shoulders. "Noth­ing could interest me as much as the feel of you com­ing alive under my hands!" he retorted gently, eyes softening. "You are all the woman a man could want, my sweet Dara. Go ahead and threaten me all you like, it won't make any difference. You're mine now."

  Her eyes narrowed. "I don't belong to you or any other man. Take your hands off me, Yale. I want to go home."

  He hesitated, as if considering the best method of handling her. "Maybe you'll be in a better mood after breakfast," he tried lightly, sliding his hands sensu­ously down her arms and catching hold of her wrists. "Shall I feed you, little tabby?" he asked whimsi­cally, turning his head to kiss the delicate inside of her wrist. His eyes gleamed. "Will that put you in a more loving mood?"

  "What do you care?" she challenged icily. "You're not interested in love. Only a business trans­action!"

  "I'll bet," he hazarded sadly, "that if I made an apology for that remark this morning you wouldn't accept it, would you?"

  "No, I would not! Nothing you can say now will wipe out your earlier words! I know better than to trust you, Yale Ransom. I've learned my lesson!"

  He drew a deep breath, and Dara knew he was still undecided about how to deal with her mood. "Well, we might as well try the food first. If that doesn't work, I'm sure I'll think of something else. Go and get dressed, honey. We'll talk this out eventually...."

  She tugged free of his hands, walking regally across the room to retrieve her clothes and then sweeping into the bath without a backward glance. Damn the barbarian! She would not give in to tears. Not over a man like that!

  She tried vainly to plot revenge in the shower, us­ing the washcloth savagely in an effort to remove all traces of him. The rush of water over her face made the desire to cry even stronger. But she stifled it, keeping her anger whipped up instead.

  By the time she had stepped out and toweled briskly, Dara felt she had herself under control.
She had sternly opted for a cold, austere manner in the hope it would help her get through the next few hours with some dignity. It was all a woman had at a time like this. Revenge was wishful thinking.

  "Well, it's safe to say there won't be many women dressed like that at breakfast!" Yale quipped humor­ously as she stepped out of the bathroom.

  She chose to ignore him, turning to the mirror to run a comb through her hair. His eyes met hers there and he smiled, trying to coax her into a better mood.

  "But you do look good in green," he tried, study­ing the dress. He was wearing his jockey shorts now, his tanned body looking lean and powerful as he held the dark slacks and white shirt lightly clasped in one hand.

  "Go to hell," she told him briefly and had the sat­isfaction of seeing his eyes narrow.

  Without another word he stalked into the bathroom.

  Twenty minutes later he ushered her into the twenty-four-hour coffee shop next door to the motel, gallantly moving to put himself between her and the curious eyes which glanced up from early-morning coffee to blink at the sight of a woman in an emerald cocktail dress. Dara made no objection as Yale seated her in a far booth and slid in beside her.

  He was wearing his glasses again this morning and his sleeves were neatly buttoned at the cuff. The honey-colored hair was tidy and there was a general air of restraint about him. Dara's lips quirked down­ward in disgust. Nothing Yale Ransom did now would fool her. She knew the kind of man he really was.

  "What would you like?" he asked politely as the waitress appeared to take their order.

  "Cold cereal, please," Dara said crisply, giving her order directly to the brunette woman holding the pad and pencil. "And coffee."

  "You need more than that," Yale interrupted with a frown, scanning the menu. "Bring her a number three. And the same for me."

  The woman dutifully scratched Dara's order from the pad and wrote the new one. With a casual nod, she left.

  "That was a waste of food and money," Dara in­formed him coldly. "I'm not hungry."

  "You need a nice, hot breakfast," he began in a lecturing tone.

  "Forget it," she gritted in resignation, lifting her eyes heavenward in silent appeal. "I'll eat it if it will stop you from talking to me as if I were a child!"

  "You're not a child, you're a woman scorned, re­member?" he muttered grimly. "Except that you're not exactly being scorned. But those are petty details to a female in your present frame of mind."

  Dara refused to look at him, her eyes following the waitress as the woman returned to the table with cof­fee.

  "At least she isn't staring at your outfit," Yale observed quietly when they were alone.

  "She's probably been on duty since midnight. You see a little of everything sooner or later on that shift," Dara explained woodenly, sipping her coffee with care.

  "How do you know?" Yale sounded mildly sur­prised.

  "Because I've worked it." She shrugged, still re­fusing to glance in his direction.

  "You've worked in a place like this?"

  "Every summer while I was in college," she ex­plained shortly, not particularly interested in pursuing the conversation.

  "No kidding? What else have you done? I think you said something last night about only recently hav­ing become a stockbroker."

  Dara favored him with a baleful gaze at that ques­tion. "Why do you want to know?"

  He shrugged, lifting his coffee cup and eyeing her over the rim. "I suppose I'm kind of curious."

  “Take a tip from me. Curiosity doesn't pay," she retorted flatly.

  One amber brow went up. "We are singing a dif­ferent tune this morning, aren't we?"

  Dara gritted her teeth, about to dredge up a scathing reply when a deep, cheerfully rumbling male voice interrupted the conversation.

  "Excuse me, folks, but the little lady in green wouldn't happen to be a stockbroker by any chance, would she?"

  Dara glanced up, startled, to find a huge, friendly-looking man in his mid-forties staring down at her with smiling gray eyes. He reminded her a lot of Hank Bonner in his choice of a size thirty-four belt for a waistline considerably larger. The man was dressed in a plaid flannel shirt and faded jeans. He had long­distance trucker written all over him.

  "May I ask who wants to know?" Yale's question was polite, but there was a firmness to it that drew the man's respectful attention.

  "Sam's the name. Sam Tyler," he said at once, extending a wide paw of a hand to shake Yale's. "And I'll bet your name's Ransom, right?"

  "You seem to know a great deal more about us than we know about you," Yale pointed out with a deliberate smile.

  "There couldn't be two ladies in green at this par­ticular truck stop on this particular morning. Mind if I join you for a cup? Hank Bonner's the source of my information, by the way."

  "I see," Yale said slowly, speculatively. "Sit down, by all means. Where did you ran into Hank?"

  "Having coffee a ways down the line. He knew I was headin' north and asked me to deliver a message if I found you two at this café. Also suggested you might be needing a ride into Eugene!"

  "That was thoughtful of him," Dara said quickly, wondering why Yale seemed a little aloof. She had been wondering how they were going to get home.

  "He also said to tell you the hand was doing fine," Sam added with a smile.

  "I'm glad. What was the message?" Dara asked encouragingly. Yale seemed a little more relaxed now.

  "Well, I guess I'd have to say that's a tad more serious...." The big trucker's gaze sobered and he turned to face Yale.

  "Trouble?" Yale's eyes were cool and more alert than the situation seemed to call for, Dara decided.

  "A little, I reckon. Hank said he mentioned his, uh, special cargo to you?"

  "He did," Yale said briefly, ignoring Dara's frown.

  She glanced from one man to the other, perplexed. "What are you talking about? What 'special cargo'?"

  A silent look passed between the two men. The sort of Do-we-tell-the-little-lady-about-this-or- not? glance that was enough to boil a woman's blood. And Dara was already on a high simmer.

  Yale considered the relentless expression in the gray-green ice of her eyes and appeared to come to a reluctant decision.

  "A short while before we met Hank last night he stumbled across something unexpected being shipped in his truck. Something which had been taped to the cab in an inconspicuous place by someone who ap­parently intended to retrieve it later. Probably after Hank had obligingly brought it down from Canada and across a couple of state lines...."

  "What sort of 'something'? Drugs?"

  "She's right quick, ain't she?" Sam Tyler offered admiringly to Yale as if complimenting him on a well-trained horse.

  "A little too quick at times, I'm afraid," Yale growled, shooting Dara a withering glance. "At any rate, Hank removed the stuff and then put out a quiet warning to friends at a few stops. They didn't spill it on the CB because he had hopes of catching the guy when he came looking for his stuff."

  “Why didn't Hank go straight to the police with it when he found it?" Dara demanded, brows drawing together across her nose.

  Once again Yale and Sam traded glances, and Yale finally said quietly, "There were reasons. Besides, it was just a small, er, personal amount...."

  "We all figure it's a one-man maneuver. It's been done before," Sam tossed in helpfully, "the logical place for the pickup is somewhere south of the Cal­ifornia-Oregon border...."

  "After it's been driven across the state fine," Dara put in.

  "Right. But it didn't happen that way. The guy came for his pickup at the first stop Hank hit after letting you two off. Even though they weren't really expecting him that soon, Hank and a friend damned near caught him." Sam hesitated. "They did get a description of him which, after what you might call due consideration"—he grinned—"they turned over to the police. The sonova—pardon me, ma'am—the joker's got both the cops and half the folks on the Interstate watching for him now. Sooner or lat
er he'll turn up."

  "The situation seems to be under control," Yale murmured, clearly waiting for a punch line. Sam de­livered it.

  "Hank's pretty sure the guy will be picked up soon. Which will be a great relief to all concerned, naturally...."

  "Naturally." Yale grinned, and once again Dara had the feeling she wasn't being told everything.

  "But it occurred to him that if this, uh, joker's monitoring the CB jabber it might explain why he came for his stuff before it crossed the border...." Sam let the sentence trail off suggestively.

  "Damn CB gossip!" Yale muttered.

  "Okay, guys," Dara began vengefuUy. "Let's not lose the 'quick' one in the crowd just as she's begin­ning to catch up! What's the real problem? Why is Hank sending messages back to us?"

  Sam looked at Yale and lifted a huge shoulder. Yale nodded and turned to Dara.

  "Shortly after he let us off last night, at the very next stop, in fact, someone came looking for the 'cargo'...."

  "And...?" It was like pulling teeth, she decided grimly, but her pride wasn't going to get in the way of her overriding curiosity. Dara was determined to get all the answers.

  "By then the shipment had been removed," Yale went on gently.

  "Obviously! You said Hank removed it at once!'

  "And you and I constitute the main alteration in

  Hank's normal routine on the Interstate through Oregon. Whoever taped that staff on the truck wouldn't have had much trouble learning that Hank had given a lift to a couple of strangers. He might have come to check that the cargo was still in place after the Mtchhikers got off. Finding it gone, a dis­interested observer might be excused for wondering if the cargo had gotten off with us."

  "Oh," Dara muttered weakly as the light dawned. "The guy might think we hijacked his drugs?"

 

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