by Nora Roberts
She looked back over her shoulder, and a wing of hair fell over her eye. “I could say the same about the Levi’s.”
“We’ll give them a minute.” He slid the shirt off, trailed a fingertip down her spine. “Nice back, counselor.”
He drew the skirt over her hips, down and away. She wore stockings that stopped at the thigh with little bands of lace, and a white satin thong he seriously doubted had come from the dignified brothers Brooks.
“The rest of you holds up, too.”
She laughed, started to say something quick and smart. And only moaned when his lips made that same trail down her spine. His fingers brushed up from the back of her knee to the edge of the stocking, and hers dug into the bedspread.
“You know, I’m never going to be able to see you in one of those lawyer suits again without thinking about what’s going on under it.”
His mouth was at the small of her back, and working down. “Okay by me.”
He was nudging her along a plateau of pleasure so that her muscles went lax, her limbs limp. It was like sliding through a soft gray mist, sinking into it without a thought to destination.
Who needed power, she wondered as those mists closed in, when you could just . . . sink.
He heard her sigh, felt her go boneless. Her body was his to explore, to sample, to savor. The narrow waist, the long thighs, that fragrance that clung to her skin at the shoulder blades. He flicked open her bra, rubbed his lips over her skin.
She all but purred.
He turned her over slowly, tasted her lips, her throat, then her breasts.
Soft, scented, silky, and with a heat just beginning to flush along that lovely skin. Her hands stroked over him—his hair, his shoulders, his back. As she sighed into him, she tugged his shirt up, drew it over his head, tossed it aside.
And the slide of flesh to flesh made her tremble.
Patient, she thought dreamily, and oh so thorough. Here was a man who sought to give as much as he took, to please as well as to take pleasure. One who could make her body quiver and her heart stand still.
And because of it, she arched to offer him more. Moaned his name when his lips, his hands grew more impatient. Faster now, just a little faster, stoking the fires already simmering, teasing patience to urgency and dreamy to demanding.
He pressed his hand against her, tormenting them both until he slid a finger under the satin and into her.
Her nails dug into his shoulders. He watched her eyes go opaque, and that beautiful flush rush out on her skin. He caught her cry with his mouth, feasting on her lips as she came.
Sensations tumbled through her, too quickly now to separate, too huge to hold. She fought with the button of his jeans. God, she wanted all of him, wanted that mindless plunge. Her hips moved restlessly as she freed him, as she closed her hand over him.
“Doug. Douglas,” she repeated, and guided him to her.
Pleasure shot through him like a missile, the sheer glory of filling her, of having the wet heat of her surround him. He fought back the urge to plunder and moved slowly, savoring each trembling rise, each shuddering fall of their bodies.
The light was going. The last quiet streaks of it shimmered through the open window, over her face. He watched her lashes flutter, and the pulse beat in her throat as her head arched back. As the pleasure built stroke by slow, deep stroke.
He knew she clung, as he did, to that last slippery edge of reason. When he felt her clutch around him, he lowered his mouth to hers again and took the fall.
Doug?” Lana let his hair sift through her fingers, and looked out the window. From where she lay she could see the glow of the streetlights as they came on.
“Um. Yeah.”
“I have one thing to say about this.” She gave a long sigh, stretched as best she could with his weight pinning her to the mattress. “Mmmmm.”
His lips curved against her throat. “That pretty much covers it.”
“Now I guess I owe you dinner.”
“I guess you do. Does that mean you’re going to put the pinstripes back on and get me hot again?”
“Actually, I was going to ask if you had a shirt I could borrow while I see what I can do with whatever you’ve got in the kitchen.”
“I’ve got a shirt, but I’m warning you, there isn’t much in the kitchen.”
“I can do a lot with very little. Oh, and I have one more thing to say.”
This time he lifted his head and looked down at her. “What?”
“I’ve got the baby-sitter until midnight. So I hope you’ve got some protein in the kitchen, because I’m not done with you yet.”
He grinned down at her—delighted, flattered, aroused. “How’d I manage to miss you whenever I came back to town?”
“I guess it wasn’t time yet. Now you’re going to miss me whenever you leave town.”
Because that rang true, entirely too true, he rolled away and got up. “There’s a library I need to assess,” he said as he walked to the closet. “In Memphis.”
“Oh.” She sat up, kept her tone very casual. “When are you leaving?”
“A couple of days.” He pulled out a shirt. “I’m coming back right after I’m done.” He turned now, walked back and handed her the shirt. “I don’t think it’s a good idea for me to be away for an extended period with all that’s going on.”
She nodded, scooted off the bed to slip into the shirt. “I have to agree. Your family needs you.”
“Yeah. And there’s another thing.”
She glanced over her shoulder as she did up the buttons. “Yes?”
“It doesn’t look like I’m finished with you yet either.”
“Good.” She stepped to him, rose on her toes and brushed her lips to his. “That’s good.”
Leaving it at that, she walked out to the kitchen.
He dragged a hand through his hair and followed her. “Lana, I don’t know what you’re looking for.”
She opened the fridge and with his shirt skimming her thighs peered inside. “Neither do I, until I find it.”
“I wasn’t talking about food.”
“I know what you were talking about.” She looked back at him. “You can relax, Doug. I’m really good at living in the moment, dealing with a day at a time.” She looked back in the fridge and shook her head. “As, obviously, you are, judging by the fact that you have half a six-pack of beer, a quart of milk, two lonely eggs and an unopened jar of mayo.”
“You forgot the deli ham in the drawer there.”
“Hmm. Well, I love a challenge.” She started opening cupboards and found a set of four mismatched plates, three water glasses, one wineglass and a box of Cap’n Crunch, which had her sending Doug a pitying glance.
“It’s a childhood weakness,” he offered. “Like the Pop-Tarts.”
“Uh-huh. You also have potato chips, a jar of pickles, a half a loaf of squishy white bread and a half-eaten bag of cookies.”
Uncomfortable, and afraid she’d poke in his freezer and find the half gallon of ice cream and the frozen pizza, he stepped in to block the fridge with his body.
“I told you there wasn’t much. We can still go out or we can get some carryout.”
“If you think I can’t make a meal out of this, you’re very much mistaken. I need a pot so I can hard-boil these eggs. You do have a pot, don’t you?”
“I’ve got a pot. You want one of those beers?”
“No, thanks.”
He got out the pot, handed it over. “Be right back.”
Lana rolled up her sleeves and got to work.
The eggs were starting to boil when he returned, just a little out of breath and carrying a bottle of wine. “Ran across to the liquor store,” he told her.
“That was very sweet, and yes, I’d like a glass of wine.”
“What’re you making?”
“Ham and egg salad sandwiches. We’ll have them with the chips and consider it a picnic.”
“Works for me.” He opened the wine, p
oured some for her in his lonely wineglass.
“How does your mother feel about the fact that you don’t cook?”
“We try not to discuss it, as it’s a painful subject. You want some music?”
“I would. Got any candles?”
“Nothing fancy, just some for power outages.”
“They’ll do.”
She took the picnic idea seriously and spread a blanket on the living room floor. With the candles glowing, the music as background, they ate sandwiches, drank wine. They made love again, lazily, on the blanket, then curled up together in contented silence.
Neither of them stirred when the sounds of sirens wailed. “It’ll be hot in Memphis,” she said after a time.
“Pretty sure bet.”
“Are you going to Graceland while you’re there?”
“No.”
She rolled so she could lie over him and study his face. “Why not?”
“Because . . . first, it’s a cliché, and second, I’m there to do a job, not to pay homage to The King.”
“You could do both.” She angled her head. “You should go, just for the fun and the experience. Then you should buy me something incredibly silly.”
She kissed the tip of his nose. “I have to go.”
He didn’t want her to go, and the urge to pull her back, hold her to him, with him, was more than a little frightening. “Want to try for the movies again, when I get back?”
It pleased her he’d asked first this time. “Yes.” As she started to rise, the cell phone in her briefcase across the room began to ring.
He saw the instant, primal fear flash into her eyes as she scrambled up. “It must be Denny, the baby-sitter.”
She tore open the briefcase, was ordering herself not to be an alarmist when she snagged the ringing phone.
“Hello? Denny, what . . . What? My God. Yes. Yes, I will.”
She was already running toward the bedroom as she disconnected.
“Tyler. What’s wrong with Tyler?” Doug demanded as he sprinted after her.
“Nothing. He’s fine. Ty’s fine.” She grabbed her shirt. “God, Doug. My God. My office is on fire.”
There was nothing to do but stand and watch. To stand across the street from the smoke and the flames and watch a part of her life burn.
She’d lost far worse, she reminded herself. Far worse than an office, than equipment and papers and some furniture. She could replace everything. She could rebuild. There was nothing in wood or brick that couldn’t be replaced or repaired.
And still she grieved for the old townhouse with its funny rooms and pretty views.
The fire department had soaked the houses on either side of hers, and what had been trim lawns were now churned-up mud filthy with debris. Smoke pumped out of broken windows, out of the roof and into the clear summer night sky.
Dozens of people had come out of their homes or stopped their cars to watch.
She saw the young family of four who lived in the second-floor apartment of the house next door. They looked terrified as they huddled together with whatever belongings they’d grabbed on the way out. As they waited to see if their home would be destroyed.
“Lana.”
“Roger.” She nearly broke. Seeing him there with his pajama top stuffed into trousers, with slippers on his feet, nearly broke her. Instead she gripped his hand and held on.
“The sirens woke me,” he told her. “I got up, got a glass of water. Finally glanced out the window. I could just see the smoke. Were you in there?”
“No. I was with Doug. Somebody called the house, told my baby-sitter. He called me. Oh God, don’t let it spread. Just don’t let it spread.”
Roger glanced over at Doug. “Maybe we should find a place for you to sit awhile.”
“She won’t,” Doug said. “I already tried that.”
“I don’t know how it could’ve happened. I had everything inspected when I rented the building. The wiring was brought up to code. I’ve been careful.”
“We’ll just wait and see,” Doug said, and Roger felt a little weight lift off his heart when he saw his grandson lean down to press his lips to Lana’s hair.
Callie heard about the fire at six-fifty the following morning when Jake shook her out of sleep.
“Go away or I’ll kill you.”
“Wake up, Dunbrook. Your lawyer’s office burned down last night.”
“What? Huh?” She flipped over on her stomach, shoved at her hair and blinked up at him. “Lana? Jesus. Where is she?”
“She’s okay.” He stopped her from leaping up by clamping a hand on her shoulder. “I didn’t get a lot of deets, just what they came up with for the early local news, but they reported no one was in the building when the fire started.”
“God.” She rubbed her hands over her face, plopped back down. “If it’s not one thing around here, it’s two dozen. Do they know how it started?”
He sat down beside her sleeping bag. “Arson’s suspected. They’re investigating.”
“Arson? Well, who the hell would . . .” She trailed off as her mind caught up with the rest of her. “She’s my lawyer.”
“That’s right.”
“Records of our search would have been in that office.”
“You got it.”
“It’s still a big leap.”
“Not so big from where I’m sitting. Maybe it’ll turn out to be kids playing with matches, or it’ll come out that the landlord’s got a gambling problem and torched it for the insurance money. And maybe, somebody doesn’t like the idea of you digging up information about what happened to you twenty-nine years ago.” He touched a fingertip to the raw skin on her brow. “We’re already not so popular around here.”
“I guess I should go see how she is, then fire her. She’s got a kid, Jake. I don’t want her or that little boy in any sort of danger because she’s helping me find answers.”
“I don’t know her very well, but my impression is she’s not the type to back off easily.”
“Maybe not, but I’m going to give her the first shove. Then I’m going to Atlanta. Go away, I need to get dressed.”
“I’ve seen you get dressed before.” He sat where he was as she rolled out of the bag. “You want to tackle Carlyle’s son, face-to-face.”
“You got a better idea?”
“No, which is why I know there’s a Delta flight to Atlanta in just over two hours, with a couple of seats.”
She looked at him as she reached for jeans. “I only need one seat.”
“Good thing, as that’s all you’re getting. I’m in the other one. I’m going, Callie,” he said before she could speak. “I don’t need your permission. We can waste time arguing and I will win this one, or you can accept defeat gracefully for a change. You’re not going alone. That’s all there is to it.”
“We need you here on the dig.”
“The dig can wait. Deal with it, or I’ll make sure you miss the flight. I’d enjoy that,” he said as he got fluidly to his feet. “Because I remember just how interesting a sleeping bag can be when I get you naked in one.”
Since she was wearing nothing but an oversized basketball jersey, she figured he already had the advantage. “If we’re going, you’d better contact Leo. I’ll be packed and ready in ten. We can swing by Lana’s on the way to the airport.”
“Sounds like a plan.” He started for the door, then paused. “I’m not going to let anything happen to you. That’s all there is to it. That’s another thing you’ll have to deal with.”
“We both know I can take care of myself.”
“Yeah, we know it. What you never figured out is that it doesn’t always have to be that way.”
No, it wasn’t kids playing with matches.”
Lana sat in her kitchen drinking the latest cup of an endless stream of coffee. Her voice was raw with fatigue.
“They’re telling me the point of origin was my second-floor office. They were even able to tell that the point of entry was th
e rear door. The lock was jimmied. What they can’t tell me is what, if anything, might have been taken out of my files, off my computer, before the son-of-a-bitching firebug doused the floor and the desk with accelerant, laid a trail of it and paper into the hall, down the stairs, then lit a match and walked out.”
“That’s how they see it?” Callie asked her.
“Arson one-oh-one, according to the firefighters I was able to talk to. The arson inspector may have a little more. Good news is, it didn’t do more damage to the neighboring buildings. The bastard didn’t think about the families sleeping next door, the businesses that might have been ruined when he decided to screw with me.”
She shoved the coffee aside. “Something else he didn’t think about was the fact that I have a copy of every single file here at home. That I back up everything on my computer daily, on disk, and bring them home.”
“So.” Jake stepped behind her, rubbed her shoulders. “You’re saying he didn’t know you were anal.”
“Exactly. Oh, thanks.” She breathed a sigh of pleasure as he unknotted the first layers of tension. “I’d kiss you for that, but I can’t get up. And I don’t think Callie would like it anyway.”
“His lips are his business,” Callie said. And yet she watched the way he kneaded Lana’s shoulders. It was instinctive, she realized. She had a problem, he automatically stepped up to lend a hand.
“I’m sorry about all this, Lana. Really sorry. And you’re fired.”
“I beg your pardon?”
“Send me a bill for services rendered, and I’ll cut you a check. I’m sorry to drag Sven the masseur away, but we’ve got a plane to catch.”
Under Jake’s hands, Lana’s shoulders turned to rock.
“If you think you can pay me off and lock me out because you’re speculating the fire was related to the work I’m doing for you, then you hired the wrong lawyer to begin with. Keep your goddamn money. That way you don’t tell me what to do or what not to do.”
“The rock meets the hard place,” Jake declared, and kept rubbing. Behind her, he decided, was the safest place for a man to be.
“If I don’t want you poking around in my business, then you don’t poke around in my business.”