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Harlequin Blaze June 2015 Box Set: Midnight ThunderFevered NightsCome On OverTriple Time

Page 62

by Vicki Lewis Thompson


  A few gyrating bodies away, a man in a leather vest and pants was doing his best impression of moonwalking. He turned, and his eyes locked on Gabe. A slow, sardonic smile spread across his face as he held out his thumb and index finger in the shape of a gun. He pointed it at Gabe, then shifted his aim to Devin before pulling the imaginary trigger.

  Fuck. Gabe knew that ugly mug. Had seen it in court every day for three months, felt those eyes boring into the back of his head from the gallery when the jury announced its guilty verdict and the judge pronounced sentence—life in prison without parole.

  “We’ve got to get out of here,” he yelled, unwrapping Devin’s arm from around his neck. “Now.”

  “What—”

  “No time for questions.” He pulled her farther into the fray, away from both the mock gunman. And, unfortunately, the door they’d come in. “Is there another exit?”

  “This way,” she hollered back, taking the lead and pushing through the crowd toward the stage. “Like Carlos said, I’ll take care of you.”

  * * *

  “WHAT THE HELL was that all about?” Devin asked when they were finally outside the building and she didn’t have to scream her lungs out to be heard. One minute she was sure Gabe had been about to let go, to give in to the music and the crazy, crazy lust swirling between them. The next, he’d bolted for the door, colder than a flat frog on the Cross Bronx Expressway.

  “Not yet.” His eyes flicked from left to right, settling on an alley alongside the warehouse. “Come on. We can hide down here for a few minutes. I want to make sure we’re not being followed.”

  “Followed?” She struggled to keep up with him despite her long legs. “What is this, CSI?”

  “No.” He ducked into the alley, grabbing her arm and pulling her into the shadows with him. “This is real.”

  The tone of his voice made goose bumps rise on her arms.

  “What happened back there?” she whispered.

  “Nothing you need to worry about.”

  “Then why am I cowering in an alley at one in the morning?”

  He put a hand against the brick wall and let out a long, slow breath. “Let’s just say I ran into someone I’d rather not see.”

  She surveyed the overflowing dumpster, the abandoned refrigerator, the puddle of something a little too close to her left boot that didn’t look or smell like water. Mr. Clean had to be desperate to drag her into this cesspool. “You must really hate this guy. What’d he do to you?”

  “It’s what I did to him.” Gabe gave her a sidelong glance. “I put his younger brother in prison.”

  “Oh.” She nodded. “I can see how that’d piss him off.”

  “The guy was guilty.”

  “I believe you. But I’m guessing big bro was harder to convince.” She wrinkled her nose. “How long do we have to hide down here? It smells like a sewer. And I think there’s something moving in that pile of newspapers.”

  “Just a few more minutes.” He poked his head around the corner then pulled it back again. “Until I’m sure the coast is clear.”

  She flexed her tired toes in her boots and looked for someplace to sit down. Her choices were a plastic milk crate with a hole through the bottom, an overturned five-gallon bucket that looked like it hadn’t been washed since Obama took office or the suspicious newspapers. She gave up and leaned against the wall next to Gabe. “Not exactly what I had planned for tonight. But at least it’s out of your comfort zone.”

  “I think it’s safe to say this entire evening’s been out of my comfort zone.”

  She turned her head to study him and found his eyes on her. Something in his stare made her breath catch, and it was a second before she could form a coherent sentence. “I don’t know. I thought you were doing pretty good in there. A few more minutes and you’d have been glow-sticking with the best of them.”

  Or I’d have been dry humping you in the middle of the dance floor.

  She tried to tell herself what she felt for him was purely physical. Gabe was a certified hottie. She’d have to be six feet under not to want him. That must be why her knees were wobbly and her heart was practically pounding out of her chest. Well, that or their sprint to the alley.

  The trouble was she suspected it was something more. She was starting, God forbid, to actually like the guy. When she’d shown up at his apartment, unannounced and dressed like a throwback from the sixties, she’d half expected him to slam the door in her face. Instead, he’d been a good sport, going along with her crazy plan and letting her drag him and his two left feet onto the dance floor. Hell, she’d even been having fun until he went all cloak and dagger on her.

  “Glow-sticking?” He shifted closer to her and rested his forearm against the wall above her head. The stench of the alley faded, replaced by a mix of toothpaste, soap and his woodsy cologne.

  “It’s pretty self-explanatory.” She swallowed hard to relieve the sudden dryness in her throat. “You...”

  “Quiet.” He held up a hand.

  “What the...?”

  He cut her off with a finger on her lips as the sound of footsteps and distant chatter grew louder.

  “Damn it, we lost him.” A male voice, tight and gruff.

  “Are you sure it was him?” Another man, this one higher pitched.

  “Sure, I’m sure. Do you think I’d forget the face of the scumbag who locked Frank up?”

  “What’s a district attorney doing at a rave?”

  “How the fuck should I know? Maybe he’s undercover.” The footsteps stopped and Devin could just make out two hulking shadows at the mouth of the alley. Their backs to her, they looked like linebackers, big and bulky and capable of inflicting serious bodily injury without breaking a sweat.

  Shit. The night had gone from bad to worse to flat-out disastrous.

  She held her breath and shifted nearer to Gabe, who slipped his hand from her mouth to her wrist and pulled her around the Dumpster.

  The sharp rasp of a match strike echoed in the muggy August air. “How about that chick he was with? Sweet piece of ass.”

  Instinctively, Devin lunged toward the voices, but Gabe held her back, wrapping a protective arm around her waist and tugging her against his rock-solid torso. She pressed her lips together, her heart beating fast from the threat of being discovered—and from Gabe’s hot, hard embrace.

  “Put that damn thing out. We don’t have time for a smoke break. They can’t have gotten that far. Come on.”

  The men moved off, their steps and voices fading into the darkness.

  “Christ, that was close.” Devin let out the breath she’d been holding and shuddered, prompting Gabe to wrap his other arm around her and draw her closer. “Think it’s safe to head out?”

  “Too soon.” His mouth was at her ear, his lips tickling the lobe as he spoke. “We need to give them a head start.”

  “Sounds like a plan.” He was too tempting, too close, the inexplicable pull he had on her too strong to resist. She spun in his arms so that the fringe on her tube top swung wildly, brushing his chest. “Got any ideas how we can pass the time?”

  “Oh, I’ve got ideas.” He loosened his hold and tried to step away from her, but she followed him, twining an arm around his neck to keep him from escaping.

  “Let me guess. Charades? Would You Rather? Pin the Banana Peel on the Dumpster?” Her hand threaded through the short crisp hairs at the nape of his neck, and she guided him with one knee, backing him up against the exposed brick of the warehouse. “Or maybe something a little more...intimate?”

  “You realize we’re on a public street, right?” He looked both ways like he was casing the area for witnesses. “Anyone could come along and find us. Hell, someone almost did.”

  She laughed softly and tossed her hair, making sure to give him a whiff
of her perfume. Chanel No. 5. Endorsed by Marilyn Monroe and guaranteed to drive a man wild. Was that what she’d been planning when she’d given in to a last-minute whim and dabbed it on before leaving her apartment? She shook off the question and trailed a finger down his arm. “That didn’t stop you from making out with me on my doorstep.”

  “I wasn’t...myself that night.”

  Her wayward finger traveled up his chest and undid one of the buttons on his polo. “And you are now?”

  “I’m not sure anymore.”

  She eased a leg between his, rocking into him.

  He moaned. “You make me crazy.”

  “Crazy can be good.” She tilted her head to run her lips along his jawline. “Very, very good.”

  “Or very, very bad.” His silky voice was almost a caress, so low she barely heard him.

  “That’s what I’m counting on.”

  With a groan, he turned his head and their mouths met in a frenzy of need. His hands came up to cup her face, his grip gentle yet firm enough to keep her lips exactly where he wanted them. Devin sighed and relaxed against him, needing the support since her legs felt like two strands of overcooked spaghetti. She may have been the one to start the fire, but Gabe’s kiss left no doubt who was in control now. And while she wasn’t normally into the whole dom/sub thing, it was different with Gabe. Giving in to him felt right. Safe. And at the same time scary as shit.

  After what could have been one minute or twenty, he lowered his hands to her shoulders and the kiss softened, his mouth more patient than plundering. She reached up to undo the last button on his polo, needing to see more of him, feel more of him, when something in the air made her break off.

  “What’s that smell?” She gave a little sniff.

  He ran a hand through his hair and frowned. “We’re in an alley. Everything smells. You’ve got to be more specific than that.”

  “I’m glad one of us can crack jokes.” The pile of newspapers rustled and Devin had the sudden suspicion that whatever was under there was black and white and the source of the scent that interrupted their kiss. “Think we can get out of here before this night gets any freaking worse?”

  “Oh, I don’t know.” Gabe titled her chin so she was forced to look at him. Instead of the annoyance she expected to see, his eyes sparked with mischief. “It’s had its moments. I can’t wait to see what you’ve got in store for me next.”

  “Next?” Was he serious?

  “But not tonight.” He let go of her chin and took her hand. Together, they left the dim alley and stepped into the streetlamp-flooded street. “We’ve had about as much fun as I can handle in one evening.”

  5

  “WHAT’S THE MATTER with you, man?” Cade Hardesty flopped into the bleacher seat next to Gabe and nudged him with his elbow. Beer sloshed from his plastic cup onto Gabe’s Top-Sider shoes. “Not a cloud in the sky, the Yanks are ahead by three and Sabathia just struck out the side. And you’re sitting there looking like you lost your best friend.”

  Gabe dabbed at the stain on his left shoe with a napkin. “Maybe I’m rooting for the Sox.”

  “Fat chance,” Cade said when the cheering died down from Teixeira’s lead-off single. “Your mind’s been somewhere else the whole game. Bad week at work?”

  “You could say that.” The Park Avenue case was turning out to be a huge headache. No physical evidence. No motive. Nothing even missing from the apartment. And the only witness who could put the defendant in the area at the time of the murders was waffling more than Brett Favre in the off-season. It’d be a miracle if Gabe got it past the grand jury.

  He wasn’t having any better luck with Victor. Gabe had managed to dig up the name of his old caseworker, but she wasn’t returning his calls. Maybe Monday he’d track her down at her office. Better that than disappoint Devin.

  Devin.

  Two times he’d been alone with her, and both had ended the same way. With him hot, hard and horny. He had to keep reminding himself that their arrangement was a business deal, nothing more. That they couldn’t keep their hands off each other was just an added complication. And the last thing he needed in his life right now was complications. Not when he was so close to climbing the next rung of his career ladder.

  “Wanna talk about it?” Cade drained his beer and waved to the pretty, ponytailed vendor making her way up the aisle.

  “What are we, girls?” Gabe sneered. “What’s next? We paint our nails and give each other makeovers?”

  “Hardly.” Cade winked at the vendor and gave her a twenty. She blushed and handed back his change and two beers, one of which he passed to Gabe. “Ten bucks says next round I get her number.”

  “No bet.” Gabe shook his head. He wasn’t an idiot. Women flocked to Cade. He had an easygoing charm Gabe had never been able to master. Plus, the guy looked like a California surfer: buff, blond and perpetually happy. The polar opposite of Gabe, who had once been called Heathcliff on the moors by a particularly astute lit major he’d dated.

  “Just as well.” Cade shrugged and swigged his beer. “I’d hate for your week to get even worse.”

  A buzzing in his back pocket stopped Gabe’s snappy comeback. He stashed his beer under his seat, pulled out his cell phone and swiped a finger across the screen to unlock it.

  One new message. From Devin.

  He hesitated, almost afraid to read it. Did she want to schedule their next little adventure? Or call the whole thing off? And which answer was he hoping for?

  “Devin?” Cade peered over his shoulder. “Why’s Elvira, Mistress of the Dark texting you?”

  Gabe winced at the nickname he and Cade had come up with for her back when Holly had first brought Devin home to Stockton. She’d reminded them of the horror hostess, with her wide eyes, full mouth and long inky black hair. She’d acted like her, too, all moody and mysterious.

  But she wasn’t, not really. Okay, she was sassy and sharp and sarcastic as hell. But she was also full of light and life and...

  “Are you going to open it or stare at your phone all damn day?” Cade asked.

  “Open it.” Gabe tapped the screen, thankful that Cade had interrupted his thoughts before they crossed into the danger zone. The strains of “Take Me Out to the Ballgame” rang through the stadium and the crowd stood for the seventh inning stretch and sang along.

  Gabe joined them—in the standing, not the singing—and read Devin’s message to himself.

  Phase two. Tomorrow. 7:00 p.m. My place.

  “Phase two of what?” Cade stood shoulder-to-shoulder with him, his eyes locked on the screen.

  “Stop doing that. It’s an invasion of privacy.” Gabe turned away from his friend and texted back.

  Where are you taking me this time?

  He only had to wait a few seconds for a reply.

  It’s a surprise. You’ll like it, I promise. No dancing.

  He grinned and tapped out another message.

  That’s reassuring. But how will I know what to wear? I don’t want to be caught with my pants down, so to speak.

  Her answer came quickly.

  I’ve got it covered. Just get your butt to my place. And don’t be late.

  With a chuckle, he stowed the phone back in his pocket and sat.

  “So are you going to tell me what the hell’s going on between you and Devin?” Cade crossed his arms and leaned back in his seat.

  “It’s nothing. Really,” Gabe added when Cade raised an eyebrow.

  “Fine. Don’t tell me, your best friend since kindergarten. The guy who took the fall for you when you broke your mother’s antique vase. Who helped you move to your first apartment in the city, up five flights of stairs. In July. With no air conditioning. Who—”

  “Okay, okay.” Gabe held up his hands in mock surrender. “I g
et the point.”

  He paused, debating how much to reveal and opting to leave out his part of the bargain. He had a feeling not many people knew about Devin’s brother, and he didn’t want to be the one to open that can of beans. “She’s helping me with a problem at work.”

  “On a Saturday night? At her place?” Cade rolled his eyes and took another slug of beer. “And what, she’s a lawyer now? Last I heard she tended bar and tattooed the masses.”

  “Yes, yes and no, she’s not a lawyer.” Gabe reached under his seat for his beer. Expensive Scotch and fine French wines be damned, some occasions called for a plain, old American Budweiser. And a ballgame on a sweltering summer evening was one of them.

  “Then how the hell is she helping you?”

  Gabe stared down at the field. Teixeira had a huge lead off first, daring the catcher to pick him off. “I’m running for DA. Filed the papers last week.”

  Cade clapped him on the back. “Holy crap, man. That’s fantastic. You’d make a great district attorney. New York would be lucky to have you.”

  “Thanks.” Aside from Holcomb—and Devin—he hadn’t told anyone his plans, not even his family. Cade’s support meant more to him than Holcomb’s. Unfortunately, it wouldn’t get him any votes. “But they won’t have me if I don’t get my boss’s endorsement. He wants me to be more relatable. A man of the people. That’s where Devin comes in.”

  “What’s she going to do? Turn you into some sort of political puppet?”

  “Not exactly. Just loosen me up a bit.”

  “You know, there are professionals who do that kind of stuff. Image consultants, I think they’re called. The captain brought one in to help the department deal with the backlash from that moron Frazier’s sexist tweets.”

  “Yeah, I thought about calling one of them. But then I met up with Devin, and she offered to help, so...” Whatever lame excuse he was about to give got mercifully swallowed up by the cheers of the crowd as Teixeira stole second.

 

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