by Linda Howard
He squatted half-naked, unconcernedly rubbing the damp handkerchief across his sweaty chest, lifting his arms to wash under them, exposing the smooth undersides and intriguing patches of hair. He was so fundamentally, elementally male, and so purely a warrior, that her breath strangled in her lungs as she watched him.
The rush of warmth through her body told her that she was more female than she’d ever imagined.
A little dazed, she sat back, resting against the wall. Absently she made certain the shirt tail preserved her modesty, but thoughts were tumbling through her mind, dizzyingly fast yet very clear.
They weren’t out of danger yet.
During the past twenty-four horrific hours, she hadn’t spent a lot of time wondering about the motive behind her kidnapping. She’d had too much to deal with as it was, the sheer terror, the confusion, the pain of the blows they’d given her.
She’d been blindfolded much of the time, and disoriented. She’d been humiliated, stripped naked and roughly fondled, taunted with the prospect of rape, and yet they had stopped short of rape—for a reason. Sheer psychological torture had undoubtedly played a role, but most of all they’d had orders to save her for the man who was to arrive today.
Who was he? He was the one behind her kidnapping; he had to be. But why?
Ransom? When she thought about it now, coolly and clearly, she didn’t think so. Yes, her father was rich. Many a diplomat came from a moneyed background; it wasn’t unusual. But if money had been the motive, there were others who were richer, though perhaps she had been chosen specifically because it was well known that her father would beggar himself to keep her safe. Perhaps.
But why would they have taken her out of the country? Wouldn’t they have wanted to keep her close by, to make the exchange for money easier? No, the very fact that they’d taken her out of the country meant they’d kidnapped her for another reason. Maybe they would have asked for money anyway; since they already had her, why not? But money wasn’t the primary object. So what was?
She didn’t know, and since she didn’t know who the leader was, she had no way of guessing what he truly wanted.
Not herself. She dismissed that notion out of hand. She wasn’t the object of obsession, because no man so obsessed with a woman that he was driven to such lengths would let his men maul her. Nor was she the type to inspire obsession, she thought wryly. Certainly none of the men she’d dated had shown any signs of obsessive behavior.
So…there was something else, some piece of puzzle she was missing. Was it someone she knew? Something she’d read or seen?
Nothing came to mind. She wasn’t involved in intrigue, though of course she knew which employees at the embassy were employed by the CIA. That was standard, nothing unusual. Her father often spoke privately with Art Sandefer and, lately, Mack Prewett, too. She’d often thought that Art was more bureaucrat than spy, though the intelligence in his tired gaze said he’d done his time in the field, too. She didn’t know about Mack Prewett. There was something restless and hard about him, something that made her uneasy.
Her father said Mack was a good man. She wasn’t certain about that, but neither did he seem like a villain. Still, there had been that time a couple of weeks ago when she hadn’t known anyone was with her father and had breezily walked in without knocking. Her father had been handing a thick manila envelope to Mack; both of them had looked startled and uncomfortable, but her father wasn’t a diplomat for nothing. He’d efficiently smoothed over the slight awkwardness, and Mack had left the office almost immediately, taking the envelope with him. Barrie hadn’t asked any questions about it, because if it was CIA business, then it wasn’t her business.
Now she wondered what had been in that envelope.
That small incident was the only thing the slightest bit untoward that she could remember. Art Sandefer had once said that there was no such thing as coincidence, but could that moment be linked to her kidnapping? Could it be the cause of it? That was a reach.
She didn’t know what was in the envelope, hadn’t shown any interest in it. But she had seen her father giving it to Mack Prewett. That meant…what?
She felt as if she was feeling her way through a mental maze, taking wrong turns, stumbling into dead ends, then groping her way back to logic. Her father would never, in any way, do anything that would harm her. Therefore, that envelope had no significance—unless he was involved in something dangerous and wanted out. Her kidnapping made sense only if someone was using her as a weapon to make her father do something he didn’t want to do.
She couldn’t accept the idea of her father doing anything traitorous—at least, not voluntarily. She wasn’t blind to his weaknesses. He was a bit of a snob, he didn’t at all like even the idea that someday she might fall in love and get married, he was protective to the point of smothering her. But he was an honorable man, and a truly patriotic man. It could be that the kidnappers were trying to force her father to do something, give them some information, perhaps, and he had resisted; she could be the means they were using to force him to do what they wanted.
That felt logical. The envelope probably had nothing at all to do with her kidnapping, and Art Sandefer was wrong about coincidence.
But what if he wasn’t?
Then, despite her instincts about him, her father was involved in something he shouldn’t be. The thought made her sick to her stomach, but she had to face the possibility, had to think of every angle. She had to face it, then put it aside, because there was nothing she could do about it now.
If the kidnappers had been going to use her as a weapon against her father, then they wouldn’t give up. If it had just been ransom, they would have thrown up their hands at her supposed escape and said the Arabic equivalent of, “Ah, to hell with it.”
The leader hadn’t been here. She didn’t even know where “here” was; she’d had too much on her mind to ask questions about her geographic location.
“Where are we?” she murmured, thinking she really should know.
Zane lifted his eyebrows. He was sitting down, lounging against the wall at a right angle to her, having finished cleaning up, and she wondered how long she’d been lost in thought. “The waterfront district,” he said. “It’s a rough section of town.”
“I meant, what town?” she clarified.
Realization dawned in his crystal clear eyes. “Benghazi,” he said softly. “Libya.”
Libya. Stunned, she absorbed the news, then went back to the mental path she’d been following.
The leader had been flying in today. From where? Athens? If he’d been in contact with his men, he would know she’d somehow escaped. But if he had access to the embassy, and to her father, then he would also know that she hadn’t been returned to the embassy. Therefore, she would logically still be in Libya. Also logically, they would be actively searching for her.
She looked at Zane again. His eyes were half-closed, he looked almost asleep. Because of the heat, he hadn’t put his T-shirt back on. But despite the drowsy look on his face, she sensed that he was vitally aware of everything going on around them, that he was merely letting his body rest while his mind remained on guard.
After the humiliation and pain her guards had dealt her, Zane’s concern and consideration had been like a balm, soothing her, helping to heal her bruised emotions before she even had time to know how deep the damage went. Almost before she knew it, she had been responding to him as a woman does to a man, and somehow that was all right.
He was the exact opposite of the thugs who had so delighted in humiliating her. Those thugs were probably searching all over the city for her, and until she was out of this country, the possibility existed that they would recapture her. And if they did, this time there would be no respite.
No. It was intolerable. But if the unthinkable happened, she would be damned if she would give them the satisfaction they’d been anticipating. She would be damned if she would let them take her virginity.
She had never thought of
her virginity as anything other than a lack of experience and inclination. At school in Switzerland there had been precious few opportunities for meeting boys, and she hadn’t been particularly interested in those she had met. After she left school, her father’s protective possessiveness, as well as her duties at the embassy, had restricted any social life she might have developed. The men she met hadn’t seemed any more interesting than the few boys she had met while in school. With AIDS added in as a threat, it simply hadn’t seemed worth the risk to have sex simply for the experience.
But she had dreamed. She had dreamed of meeting a man, growing to love him, making love with him. Simple, universal dreams.
The kidnappers had almost taken all that from her, almost wrecked her dream of loving a man by abusing her so severely that, if she had remained in their hands much longer, she knew she would have been so severely traumatized that she might never have been able to love a man or tolerate his touch. If Zane hadn’t taken her out of there, her first sexual experience would have been one of rape.
No. A thousand times no.
Even if they managed to recapture her, she wouldn’t let them murder that dream.
Scrambling to her feet, Barrie took the few steps to where Zane lounged against the wall. She saw his muscled body come to alertness at her action, though he didn’t move. She stood over him, staring at him with green eyes burning in the dim light. The look he gave her was hooded, unreadable.
“Make love to me,” she said in a raw voice.
Chapter 5
“Barrie…” he began, his tone kind, and she knew he was going to refuse.
“No!” she said fiercely. “Don’t tell me I should think about it, or that I really don’t want to do it. I know what I went through with those bastards. I know you don’t believe it, but they didn’t rape me. But they looked at me, they touched me, and I couldn’t stop them.” She stopped and drew a deep breath, steadying herself. “I’m not stupid. I know we’re still in danger, that you and your men could be wounded or even killed trying to rescue me and that I could end up back in their hands anyway. I’ve never made love before, with anyone. I don’t want my first time to be rape, do you understand? I don’t want them to have that satisfaction. I want the first time to be with you.”
She had surprised him, she saw, and she had already noticed that Zane Mackenzie wasn’t a man whose expression revealed much of what he was thinking. He sat up straight, his pale eyes narrowed as he examined her with a piercing gaze.
He was still going to refuse, and she didn’t think she could bear it. “I promise,” she blurted desperately. “They didn’t do that to me. I can’t have any disease, if that’s what you’re worried about.”
“No,” he said, his voice suddenly sounding strained. “That isn’t what I’m worried about.”
“Don’t make me beg,” she pleaded, wringing her hands together, aware that she was already doing exactly that.
Then the expression in those pale eyes softened, grew warmer. “I won’t,” he said softly, and rose to his feet with that powerful, feline grace of his. He towered over her, and for a moment Barrie felt the difference in their sizes so sharply that she wondered wildly what she thought she was doing. Then he moved past her to the blanket; he knelt and smoothed it, then dropped down on it, stretching out on his back, and watched her with a world of knowledge in his slightly remote, too-old eyes.
He knew. And until she read that knowledge in his eyes, she hadn’t even been aware of what she really needed. But watching him lie down and put himself at her service, something inside her shattered. He knew. He understood the emotions roiling deep inside her, understood what had brought her to him with her fierce, startling demand. It wasn’t just that she wanted her first time to be of her own volition, with the man of her choice; the kidnappers had taken something from her, and he was giving it back. They had tied her down, stripped her, humiliated her, and she had been helpless to stop them. Zane was giving control back to her, reassuring her and at the same time subtly letting her exact her vengeance against the male of the species.
She didn’t want to lie helpless beneath him. She wanted to control this giving of her body, wanted things to move at her pace instead of his, wanted to be the one who decided how much, how far, how fast.
And he was going to let her do it.
He was giving control of his body to her.
She could barely breathe as she sank to her knees beside him. The warm, bare, richly tanned flesh lured her hands closer, closer, until the urge overcame her nervousness and her fingers lightly skimmed over his stomach, his chest. Her heart hammered wildly. It was like petting a tiger, knowing how dangerous the animal was but fascinated beyond resistance by the rich pelt. She wanted to feel all of that power under her hands. Carefully she flattened her hands along his ribs, molding his flesh beneath her palms, feeling the resilience of skin over the powerful bands of muscle and, beneath that, the strong solidity of bone. She could feel the rhythmic thud of his heartbeat, the expansion of his ribs as he breathed.
Both heartbeat and breathing seemed fast. Swiftly she glanced at his face and blushed at what she saw there, the heat in his heavy-lidded eyes, the deepened color of his lips. She knew what lust looked like; she’d seen the cruel side of it on the faces of her captors, and now she saw the pleasurable side of it in Zane. It startled her, because somehow she hadn’t considered lust in the proposition she’d made to him, and her hands fell away from his body.
His lips parted in a curl of amusement that revealed the gleam of white teeth, and she felt her heart almost stop. His smile was even more potent than she’d expected. “Yeah, I’m turned on,” he said softly. “I have to be, or this won’t work.”
He was right, of course, and her blush deepened. That was the trouble with inexperience. Though she knew the mechanics of lovemaking, and once or twice her escort for the evening had kissed her with unexpected ardor and held her close enough for her to tell that he was aroused, still, she’d never had to deal directly with an erection—until now.
This particular one was there for her bidding. Furtively she glanced at the front of his pants, at the ridge pushing against the cloth.
“We don’t have to do this,” he offered once again, and Barrie flared from hesitance to determination.
“Yes, I do.”
He moved his hands to his belt. “Then I’d better—”
Instantly she stopped him, pushing his hands up and away, forcing them down on each side of his head. “I’ll do it,” she said, more fiercely than she’d intended. This was her show.
“All right,” he murmured, and again she knew that he understood. Her show, her control, every step of the way. He relaxed against the blanket, closing his eyes as if he was going to take a nap.
It was easier, knowing he wasn’t watching her, which of course had been his intention. Barrie didn’t want to fumble, didn’t want to underline her inexperience any more than she already had, so before she reached for his belt she studied the release mechanism for a moment to make certain she understood it. She didn’t give herself time to lose her nerve. She simply reached out, opened the belt and unfastened his pants. Under the pants were black swim trunks. Puzzled, Barrie stared at them. Swim trunks?
Then she understood. He was a SEAL; the acronym stood for SEa, Air and Land. He was at home in all three elements, capable of swimming for miles. Since Benghazi was a seaport, that was probably how his team had infiltrated, from the sea. Maybe they’d used some sort of boat to reach land, but it was possible they’d been dropped off some distance from the port and had swum the rest of the way.
He had risked his life to save her, was still doing so, and now he was giving her his body. Everything inside her squeezed tight, and she trembled from the rush of emotion. Oh, God. She had learned more about herself in the past twenty-four hours than in the entire past twenty-five years of her life. Perhaps the experience had changed her. Either way, something had happened inside her, something momentous, and s
he was learning how to deal with it.
She had let her father wrap her in a suffocating blanket of protection for fifteen years; she couldn’t blame him for it, because she’d needed that blanket. But that time was past. Fate had pitched her headlong into life, ripped her out of her protective cocoon, and like a butterfly, she couldn’t draw the silken threads back around her. All she could do was reach out for the unknown.
She slipped her hands under the waistband of the swim trunks and began working them, and his pants, down his hips. He levered his pelvis off the ground to aid her. “Don’t take them all the way off,” he murmured, still keeping his eyes closed and his hands resting beside his head. “I can handle things if I get caught with my pants down, but if they’re completely off, it would slow me down some.”
Despite her nervousness, Barrie smiled at that supreme self-confidence, the wry humor. If he wasn’t so controlled, he could be described as cocky. He had no doubt whatsoever about his fighting ability.
Her hands stroked down his buttocks as she slipped her hands inside his garments. An unexpected frisson of pleasure rippled through her at the feel of his butt, cool and smooth, hard with muscle. Tush connoisseurs would envy her the moment, and she wished she had the nerve to linger, to fully appreciate this male perfection. Instead she tugged at his clothes, pulling them down to the middle of his thighs. He relaxed, letting his hips settle on the blanket again, and Barrie studied the startling reality of a naked man. She’d read books that described sexual arousal, but seeing it firsthand, and at close range, was far more impressive and wondrous.