Prince Charming

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Prince Charming Page 4

by CD Reiss


  His eyes take a quick, almost imperceptible tour of my body. I’m in sensible work clothes and naked at the same time.

  I’m wary. He senses it.

  I’m turned on. I’m sure he senses that too.

  “Fancy meeting you here,” I say.

  “I stay in the club when I’m in town. The suites are quite nice.”

  Is that an invitation? Am I supposed to answer that with a yes or no?

  He doesn’t wait for my response. “You’d better sit before I have to kill a man to save it for you.”

  “I want to be clear,” I say. “And honest.”

  “I expect no less.”

  “I’m not sleeping with you.”

  “Indeed.”

  He indicates the stool again, and this time I slide onto it. For the first time, I wonder how this will look. The patrons seem like regular folk from Barrington and Doverton. The Doverton customers have the smack of wealth. I could separate them out if I had to, but I don’t. I’m not interested in who’s from where. I’m concerned with being seen. I don’t see anyone from the bureau in the bar, but you never can tell.

  “Are you looking for a boyfriend who might see you with me?” Keaton asks.

  “No.”

  “Then who?”

  I don’t answer. He knows damn well.

  “What are you drinking?” he asks.

  “What are you drinking?” I touch his half-empty glass with its pale fizzy liquid and mint leaf.

  “Bitters and ginger beer.”

  I think that’s non-alcoholic. I don’t want to drink around him. I already had a glass of wine, and that’s my limit if I want to keep my wits about me.

  “I’ll have one of those,” I say, hoping I’m right.

  He orders it with a tilt of his chin and a flick of his fingers. The bar is packed but the bartender gets right on it.

  “Wow,” I say. “I would’ve had to wave a twenty at her for half an hour.”

  He shrugs as if he doesn’t know the reason for his superpowers. I’ve noticed no one with them knows where they come from.

  “How have you been?” he asks.

  “Fine.”

  “Did you ever get where you wanted to go?”

  “No,” I say with regret and a little shame. I tried and failed the forums while Ken and I followed other leads.

  “Do you like puzzles?” he asks.

  “Actually, yes.”

  He leans forward, elbows on the bar, closer to me than I expect but not as close as my body wants.

  “To your left,” he says, pointing at the couple next to us. His limbs are so long he could wrap himself around me. If I turn, my nose will brush his neck, and that’s exactly what I want/don’t want.

  I look at the couple. He’s young, with a short haircut and a clean-shaven face. She’s got long curly brown hair, a skinny-strapped, over-the-shoulder bag, and a giggle. She likes him, and he’s trying to impress her with a bar game. He’s set up drinking straws in a tic-tac-toe pattern, and he shakes a little stack of coins in his closed fist.

  The crowd groans at something on the screen, but these two don’t care. He hands her the coins.

  “Six coins,” Keaton says. “Place them so that they don’t make a line of three.”

  She places the first one in the middle.

  “She’s already lost,” I say.

  “Really? You know this one?”

  “Four sides and two corners. You don’t have to know the game to win.”

  “But you do.”

  “I know them all.”

  He leans back. The bar has settled into a murmur. It’s the halftime show, and no one cares about dancing girls.

  My drink arrives. He gets a refill without asking.

  “Let’s make a bet,” he says.

  “I don’t make bets I can’t win.”

  “If you show me a pub game I don’t know, I’ll answer any question truthfully. If I show you one, you’ll do the same.”

  “I can’t give you any classified information. Anything I know from the bureau.”

  “Personal information only.”

  Is his connection to Alpha Wolf personal? Can I ask, and will he answer?

  Is that the question I want answered?

  I want more, somehow. I know he’s Alpha Wolf, but I can’t prove it. A verbal confirmation is meaningless. I want to know about him, who he is, what he does, what he likes. I want to know things about his past that I can’t find in a dossier, and things about his future outside the newspapers.

  “Deal,” I say.

  “Let’s make it even more interesting.”

  Spoken like a true gambler. Interesting means riskier.

  “How?”

  “We’ll each mention a pub game and answer a short question if the other knows it.”

  “Fine. But that’s as interesting as I’m getting tonight.”

  He nods. Reaches for bar straws. “Front-facing dog.”

  I stay his hand, then pull it away. “No need to demonstrate. Pivot the nose so he’s looking back.”

  “Yes. Your question?”

  “Are you single?” It shoots out of my mouth before I even filter it. “Still not sleeping with you,” I add when he looks at me. His eyes don’t wander away from mine, but I feel naked again. “Just asking.”

  “I am single. And I promise, you won’t do much sleeping.”

  My cheeks tingle. I’m glad it’s dark because my face must be beet red. I rush to the next game. “Dime in a shot glass. Remove it without touching it.”

  “Blow on it. Hard.” When he takes a drink, he moves the straw to the side and sips from the edge of the glass. He puts it down before his question. “Are you single?”

  “Yes.” My face tingles. I don’t know if he can see it in the dim light of the bar.

  He reaches behind the bar for two brandy snifters. The bartender shoots him a look but lets him get away with it. Being seen, caught, and walking away is its own superpower.

  He drops an olive on the bar and covers it with one of the snifters, leaving the other face up. “Move the olive—”

  “Please.” I hold up my hand. “Allow me.”

  I rotate the down-facing snifter against the bar until centrifugal force pulls the olive into the deep part of the glass. I pick it up and drop the olive into the upturned one.

  “Very nice,” he says.

  Without the football game on, my trick has gotten us some attention. The couple with the tic-tac-toe quarters is leaning forward with the guy explaining the trick to the shoulder-bag girl.

  I hold out the snifter with the olive in it. “Want it?”

  “No, thank you.”

  “Are you Alpha Wolf?”

  “Want it? is a question.” He smirks. “But I’ll change the answer.” He plucks the olive out of the glass and pops it in his mouth.

  “Fine.” I put down the glass. “Let’s make this more interesting.” The tilt of his head is a show of respect, and I let it warm me. “Let’s play a lying game.”

  “As opposed to this dance we’re doing now?”

  “If you don’t know the next trick, you lie to me for as long as it takes the trick to complete. If you know it, I’ll lie to you.”

  “You’re on.”

  I get the bartender’s attention. “Can I have a shot of whiskey and a shot of water? Fill both to the rim. And if you have a playing card?”

  “Yep.” She pours out the whiskey.

  “Do you know this one?” I ask him. I haven’t done this trick in years. I almost hope he knows it.

  “Nope. Spent a lot of time at the pub, have you?” Keaton asks.

  “My mother taught me.”

  I swallow the rest of the story. How she practiced on me. How she told me her cons, testing the tricks to see if they were easy enough for a child to figure out.

  The bartender places the two shot glasses and a joker card on the bar.

  “I’m going to move…” In the middle of the sentence, I stop, bec
ause I’m not invisible. A dozen sets of eyes are on me, not the least of which are as blue as the deep side of twilight. “I can switch the whiskey and the water without dumping either glass out.”

  He stares at the glasses and the playing card. Glances at me as if the instructions might be written on my face, then turns back to the tools of the trick. “You’d better start the trick.”

  “And you’d better start lying.”

  Placing the card over the water-filled shot glass, I turn it upside down and place it over the whiskey so that the rims would touch if the card wasn’t there. It stays. Everyone in the bar gasps, and Keaton leans forward so only I can hear him.

  “My lies are facts.” His shoulder is an inch from my lips. I smell the tweed and the remnants of the morning’s aftershave. “I’m a black hat hacker trying to establish an honest career.”

  Turning away just enough to finish the trick, I tap the card. Nothing. Tap harder. It shifts.

  What does he mean by his lies being facts? I keep tapping while Keaton keeps talking.

  “I have a long list of criminal activity I’ve covered up. I have no morals. No ruler except money.”

  The tapping moves the card enough to open a space between the glasses. The bartender gasps, but there’s no need. Because both glasses are full, they create a vacuum and there’s no spill.

  Keaton continues. “I’m a cold, empty person and I don’t want you.” I hold my breath, watching the whiskey swirl upward like a marble cake. “I don’t wonder what you taste like behind your knees, inside your thighs, or where your cunt is soft and wet.”

  “Keaton.”

  “That’s my name.”

  I turn my head slightly, and he’s turned his. Our noses are so close, I feel his breath on my lip.

  “This isn’t what I had in mind,” I say.

  “I haven’t thought about holding your arms behind your back while I fuck you from behind. Taking you by the hair and pulling your head back until I see you breathless when you come.”

  I sit back with my hands clutching the seat. My face is frozen in a rictus of shock, but my body’s melted into a puddle of desire.

  He smirks. Without taking his gaze off me or moving away, he says, “I think your trick is complete.”

  “You knew it,” I say without even looking at the glasses. The lying is over. The football game has started again. I can see the green mass around the line of scrimmage in the mirror behind Keaton.

  He shrugs. “There are some lies that need telling.”

  The spell is broken, but the damage is done. I cross my legs, but I’m engorged and it sends a shot of pleasure through me.

  Snap out of it.

  Holding the card in place, I flip the whiskey, losing only a few drops.

  “Now you know.” I push the whiskey toward him. “I’m driving.”

  He picks it up and drops the liquid in one of the brandy snifters he took for the olive game, swishing it around. “What do you want, Cassandra? No games. What do you want?”

  I want a reason to touch you.

  “I want a lot of things.”

  “What do you want badly enough to invite me into your car?”

  One glass of wine isn’t enough to affect my judgment. I sip my drink, thinking of what I want and how much of it I can tell him. “I want to get reassigned out of Doverton. I want to say I’m Special Agent Grinstead with CID. But I’m not part of the old-boy network. I don’t get invited out. I don’t get mentored. I’m not good at cozying up to my boss. So I need to do something big enough that someone notices. Something they can’t ignore.”

  “And getting into Third Psyche will do that?”

  “Yes.” I’m so sure of it that there’s not an ounce of doubt in my voice.

  He drinks the whiskey in a gulp. “I think you’re beautiful and sexy. But mostly, you are fascinating.”

  “That was a cute trick you just did.” I put a ten on the bar for the whiskey. “But I’m not available for you, and I’m not fishing for compliments.”

  He pushes the ten back toward me. “I have a tab.”

  “Leave it for a tip then.” I slide off the stool and shoulder my bag. “It’s been nice hearing your lies. Bring your A-game next time.”

  He helps me get my jacket on. It’s silly to think so hard about how he does it, but I have time, because his motions are efficient and languid. The sleeves are placed perfectly. The satin lining is cool against my skin, and when the coat drops on my shoulders, I feel the weight folding around me as a comfort.

  Which is a completely pointless thought process, but I can’t help it. Being around him is like stepping into a world where every part of my body is sending data to my brain.

  As I tie the belt around me, he grips my shoulders from behind. My hair flicks against my ear when he speaks. “Come upstairs with me. Like I said, we won’t be sleeping together. You don’t have enough fingers to count all the times you’d come.”

  I’m red. For the record, my cheeks don’t tingle. I don’t get flushed. I started perfecting my poker face in third grade. Sure, the unexpected sex talk is enough to make any girl tingle, and he delivers it with a matter-of-factness in his English accent that only accentuates how damn sexy it is.

  “I can’t.”

  I finish tying my belt, and his hands slide down my arms. When he’s no longer touching me, I feel my attention turn back to the room, the sound of the game, the placement of my body as it relates to the world, not to him.

  “I’ll walk you out,” he says when my silence is long enough to tell him how far off course he’s thrown me.

  “No.” I’m too curt. I blink hard. Soften. Impulsively, I take his hand and squeeze it. “Just let me go. I had a really nice time.”

  He brushes his thumb along the top of my hand, and it feels so good, he might as well be drawing his tongue along the seam between my thighs. My cheeks tingle all over again.

  “Me too,” he says, bowing slightly. He lowers his head further and brings his lips to my hand, kissing it.

  He’s chaste and respectful, but those lips on my skin will be the end of me. Every nerve in my body goes dead so my brain can process the softness of their touch and the firmness of their intent.

  I pull my hand away.

  “I hope I see you again,” he says.

  “I hope it’s not at the field office,” I reply, leaving open a door I shouldn’t. I should cut this off right now. Tell him not at the field office or anywhere. I have to get my shit together. He’s a potential informant. A person of interest. Maybe a target.

  Backing away, I wave at the statuesque man against the backdrop of a busy bar, then I use every ounce of my willpower to spin on my heel and walk out.

  I can barely breathe.

  8

  KEaton

  The strands of my plans are like strands of yarn waiting to be woven into a fabric. In the dark, I ask myself how much I’m willing to unravel for her. For one night. Two. A fling. A relationship that takes its course.

  When Cassie turns, she takes a bit of my willpower with her. When I first arrived in New Jersey, tired and dirty, blood boiling with adolescent desires, America seemed like a dangerous jungle. Once I had the lay of the land and the jungle lost its danger, it was boring. The newness of everything wasn’t posh. It was flat. Dull.

  Until her.

  I have a plan to fold myself back into a world built on facts and realities, leaving this name behind. I will disappear. I will turn my back on her because I don’t know her. I don’t love her. I owe her nothing and she owes me the same. By the time the FBI has enough to get me back into an interrogation room, I’ll be—

  I need to make a mark on her life. Now.

  How long are my feet nailed to the floor before I run outside? Too long. She’s in her car. She’s pulling along the drive.

  I can hack her. I can get her phone. Email. Address. I can have her social security number on the tip of my tongue, but that’s not the kind of intimacy I crave.


  The cold air is dry tonight, cutting through the thin fabric of my shirt and snaking along my open collar as I run across the club’s drive. She’s stopped at the sign, but not for long. The car starts forward. I bang on the boot. The car jumps when she hits the brake.

  Her window is half open when I get around the car.

  “What is—”

  But I cut her off. Rude. My mother would have my head. “Special Agent?”

  Once the window is all the way down, I put my hands on the top of the door. She’s incredulous, beautiful, her nose red at the tip from the cold.

  “What?”

  “You want to be a special agent with criminal investigations. Yes?”

  “Yeah? I mean, everyone wants that.”

  I put my elbows on the bottom of the window and fold my arms together. “If you get into this forum you asked me for?”

  “Third Psyche?”

  “Will you get the promotion?”

  “Maybe? I mean, I want to get in to stop what’s happening in there. Or what we hear is happening. That’s first.”

  “And second?”

  “They won’t be able to ignore me.”

  Her sentence is loaded with disappointment and isolation. “They” have ignored her for the last time, the blind buggers.

  “Go home and sleep,” I say, standing. “I’ll do what I can.”

  She doesn’t move, looking up at me from the open window. Her breath clouds and dissipates, as does mine. Our streams do not meet. There’s a discontent in the early disintegration.

  She jumps when a horn blasts. I find the source. The car behind her. I want to punch the driver for giving her a fright.

  “Thank you,” she says. “Do you know how to get me? If you find it?”

  “I do.” I step back, giving the twat behind her a dirty look, as though I can shove that horn right up his arse.

  When I look back at her, she’s pulled onto the road, left indicator on. She makes a turn into the darkness and is gone.

  9

  cassie

  Nana’s up watching QVC. The sound is off, and the diamond solitaire that fills the screen gets rotated by disembodied female fingers so it reflects the spotlights over and over. When I got stationed in the Doverton field office, she came with me from Flint “to take care of Cassie.” It was the only way to get her to join me here, but it’s pretty clear to me who’s taking care of who in the Doverton suburbs.

 

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