by Cindy Dees
And all the while, that mind-blowing slide of flesh on flesh, the stretching fullness of him, the throbbing pleasure pulsing through her blood, driving her closer and closer to the edge. His fingers entwined with hers, dragging her hands up over her head. He pressed her deep into the mattress, his body pinning hers in place, claiming her irrevocably and unmistakably as his.
His gaze never wavered from hers, locked in a mesmerizing dance of desire and possession. She stared up at him, hypnotized by the play of emotions raging through that beautiful sea of blue. He demanded all she had to give, but in return, he laid his heart completely bare.
He released one of her hands to reach down between them. He stroked her most sensitive flesh, already engorged with pleasure and on the verge of exploding. He touched her again and she fell apart in his hand, shuddering with ripples of drowning pleasure around him.
A groan of soul-deep gratification escaped his throat. And still he stared at her, willing her to feel what he did, to experience the mind-numbing explosion along with him. His jaw rippled, and with a last apocalyptic thrust into her very core, they detonated together like a nuclear blast.
She released a shattered breath while the fallout rained down around her. Gradually, her breathing slowed and she focused on his face. He remained seated deep within her and continued staring down into her eyes. But now his gaze was filled with something new. Something she’d never seen from him. Joy.
Thank God.
Completely wrung out by the experience, she could only smile at him in speechless awe.
Dutch stared down at Julia, struggling to form a thought. But words floated through his head disjointedly. Inadequate words like amazing. Beyond amazing. Phenomenal.
He propped himself up on one elbow and pushed damp tendrils of hair off her forehead. Were those tears in her eyes? For a second, he jolted in alarm, until he noticed the brilliant smile unfolding across her face. He knew the feeling exactly. No more walls stood between them. Brick by brick, she’d torn them down, ripped them away with her bare hands. How a gentle soul like her had managed to do it, he had no idea. She’d asked him to open himself to her completely, and like a tamed lion, he’d docilely gone along.
Not that he was complaining about it. He’d never experienced anything remotely like what they’d just shared. Never had he let another human being inside his guard so totally, nor had anyone ever given herself to him so without reservation. He was humbled by the gift.
He rolled over onto his back, tucking her against his shoulder. She snuggled close to him, and he reveled in the sleek length of her body against his. He drifted on gentle waves of pleasure, and gradually regained awareness of their surroundings. But the delirious haze of joy remained.
He glanced down, and a faint smile still curved her mouth. Contentment unfolded deep in his soul as he looked into the face of the woman he loved. The thought didn’t even panic him. She was right. They were meant to be and he’d known it from the very beginning. Why he’d wasted so much time and energy fighting it was beyond him. He stroked her hair lazily, enjoying the silky slide of it beneath his fingers.
“I hope you’re prepared to have a lot of kids,” he murmured. “I want a houseful.”
She twirled the hairs on his chest lazily and murmured, “Me, too. I want a home chock-full of noise and laughter and love.”
“I assume there wasn’t much of those in your home growing up,” he replied.
“No. My mom died when Carina was two. I was eight. When she went away, the light went out of our lives.” She propped herself up on his chest to look down at him. “Until now. You’ve changed my life.”
You’ve changed my life. The words swirled around him, glowing in the air. He’d heard those words before.
The room spun around him, growing indistinct, no more than revolving shadows of light and dark. And at the center of it, a pair of dark, seductive eyes, luring him ever onward toward the abyss.
The towering, black wall of memory smashed into him with such force he thought it might shatter his skull. He gasped for air, drowned in cloying darkness. Cold. So terribly cold. He shuddered uncontrollably, frozen until his body was tortured by a thousand ice picks of agony.
Dear God, what was happening to him? Was this what it felt like to die? To drown in the depths of the abyss that was his soul? He struggled against the thick, suffocating weight of it, fighting desperately to surface. To breathe.
An image slammed into him. A jungle. Lit up by gunfire. Simon, lying in a pool of black blood across a suicidally wide expanse of lawn, his body gutted, his throat slit. There’d been no question who was going to make the run to recover him. Not only was the downed man his brother, but Dutch was the biggest, strongest man on the team, and his wounds were the lightest. Doc had hastily patched up the worst of his bleeding, duct taping a pressure pad over his leg wound and pants.
Under a withering blanket of suppression fire from the rest of Charlie Squad, he’d sprinted out of the jungle and picked up Simon like a baby, cradling him in his arms. Miraculously, Simon was still alive. The bastard who’d sliced him to shreds was apparently motivated more by rage than actual skill at gutting human beings.
Every step of that endless run was agony as Simon gasped for air, drowning in his own blood. Between ragged, sobbing pants for breath, Dutch had begged Simon to hang on for a few more seconds. He had no memory of zigzagging across the lawn, but he must have done it. Either that or Providence had looked out for him as he rescued his brother, for he took no more bullets even though Ferrare’s men were firing everything they had.
Back under the protective cover of the rain forest, Doc was waiting, his trauma kit unpacked and ready to go. A pitifully small assortment of medical supplies to throw against his brother’s staggering injuries.
Doc had worked frantically, swearing and imploring and finally shouting at Simon to live. But it wasn’t enough. Simon’s shock was too deep, he’d lost too much blood, his body was too mutilated to repair. Doc finally rocked back on his heels. He had looked up at Dutch and shook his head in mute apology.
Dutch remembered the soft squish beneath his knees as he had dropped to the ground beside Simon.
It was only a few seconds. A couple of shallow, rattling gasps, and then it was over. Simon was gone. Quietly. Without any fanfare.
And Dutch’s heart had broken in two.
Funny that now Simon was gone he’d had no tears to shed. Dry-eyed, he’d looked up at the four men and one woman standing silent watch around him. “We’ve got to get out of here. Ferrare will send his men out looking for us once he figures out we blew all our ammunition on that last barrage.”
Captain Folly’s hand had come down. Landed on Dutch’s shoulder for just a moment. A quick squeeze, and then it was gone. A promise that there’d be time for proper mourning later.
Folly spoke briskly. “Howdy, Mac, you help Doc rig up a litter and the four of us will carry Simon. Dutch, you stick with Julia.”
Painfully, like an old man, he’d stood up. Turned. And saw his immense suffering mirrored in her dark gaze.
Behind him, Folly murmured quietly, “Time to move out. We’ll take the lead. You two follow.”
More dead inside than alive, he’d nodded. Heard the faint rustle of the others heading into the jungle.
“Let’s go,” he had mumbled to the woman before him. She was the one decent thing to come out of this nightmare. The one tiny spark of light in a great, black void that made him believe someday life would be worth living once more.
She’d whispered, “I can’t go.”
He hadn’t heard her right.
“C’mon,” he’d insisted. “It’s time to get out of here. Your father’s men will be here soon.”
“I know. You need to leave. Quickly.”
“I’m not going anywhere without you.” He had felt dense, dumb. What was she talking about?
“Dutch. I’m not going. I’m staying here. With my father.”
“But he’ll k
ill you. You set him up.”
Her gaze had been desperate. Cruel in her urgency to get through to him. “No, Dutch. I set you up. My father made me do it. I’m so sorry…”
He’d stared, dumbfounded. She stepped close and gave him a little push. “Go! Get out of here before he finds you and kills you, too!”
She’d betrayed them? Set them up? His brother died in an ambush she led them into? Understanding finally exploded across his brain like a supernova. The pain of it pierced his eyeballs until he nearly reached up and gouged them out.
Rage roared through him.
And something else. Something insidious that burned a hole in his soul.
He’d known.
There’d been hints all along. Little slips of the tongue. Furtive glances when there should have been direct stares. Evasion when there should have been honesty. She’d given him all the clues that should have told him it was a setup.
And he’d been so damn besotted with her he’d refused to see it all right in front of him.
Like a lamb to the slaughter, he’d let her lead him and his whole team into Eduardo’s trap.
He’d betrayed Charlie Squad.
Chapter 13
She didn’t know exactly when he slipped away from her, but she became aware of a creeping rigidity in his body.
Alarmed, she propped herself up on an elbow to look down at him. His gaze had turned inward and gone empty as it had during that first blackout back at the ski resort.
“Dutch?” she murmured.
Nothing. He’d gone from her. She lay back down beside him, continuing to hold him, to share her presence and her body heat with him. Maybe at some level, it comforted him. She snuggled close to wait it out.
One moment he lay there, stiff and unmoving, and the next, awareness vibrated through his body. She sagged in relief. Thank goodness.
But no sooner had the thought entered her mind, than she knew something was terribly wrong. He was squirming beneath her, scrabbling away from her toward the headboard, struggling to get away from her touch as if she were a leper. Wildness glinted in his eyes and it frightened her. She’d never seen him like this before. He looked left and right, as if seeking an escape route.
“Dutch! Come back to me!” she cried out.
Instead, in a blindingly fast move, he reversed their positions, looming over her, his hands pinning her shoulders flat to the bed. Cold fury filled his gaze. Death glowed, inhuman, in his eyes. She recoiled from the sight of it.
His voice terrible, he snarled, “You made me betray my teammates.”
Julia’s mouth went bone dry. Oh God.
His hands flexed against her shoulders, as if he was seriously considering putting them around her neck. Fear blasted into her. Her breath came short and fast.
He was acting like he’d just realized who she was and what she’d done. But how could that be? Unless…that blackout on the mountain…those odd little gaps in his memory…was it possible? Did he suffer from some sort of memory loss? It made sense.
She jumped as he leaped out of bed and snatched up the pistol he’d left laying on the kitchen table.
She stared into the tiny black bore of the gun and knew he’d have no compunction whatsoever about pulling the trigger. Arguing with him was useless. Finally, it was all going to come full circle. The man to whom she’d entrusted her body, her heart, her very life, was now going to betray that trust. As she’d betrayed him.
There was a certain poetic justice in it. Inexplicably, a sense of calm came over her. Maybe this was why she’d sought him out in the first place. Maybe she’d known at some deep, subconscious level that it would all come down to this in the end.
She sat up in bed and swung her feet to the floor. Slowly, she stood up and walked toward him, holding his gaze the same way she had a few minutes ago. In this final moment, too, there should be no walls between them.
Her limbs felt heavy, weighted down as if she was walking through cold molasses. In slow motion she made her way to him. She bowed her head, vaguely registering that her tears were landing on his foot.
“I deserve your retribution. I lied to you. Led you into that trap. Your injuries, your brother’s death, they’re all my fault.” Ah, Carina. I tried. I did my best to break the chains our father put upon us. I’m so sorry, little sister…
Why didn’t Dutch kill her and be done with it? She looked up at him. His gaze was turbulent. Violent. The pistol wavered, turning in his hand. Away from her. More toward himself.
Growing impatient, she burst out, “Just do it! Go ahead and shoot me. Or if you need the satisfaction of blood for blood, slit my throat and watch me bleed. Gut me or strangle me, but one way or another, please get it over with!”
He took a staggering step back from her. And another. “What are you talking about?” he demanded hoarsely. “I told you. I’m the one who betrayed the team.”
She watched in dismay as he grabbed his clothes, flung them on and headed for the door.
“Where are you going?” she asked, startled.
“I’ve got to get out of here, or I’m going to do something stupid.”
Like kill her. Or maybe in his current frame of mind, stupid meant…she gulped as the door slammed shut behind him.
No. He couldn’t be contemplating suicide.
Sudden silence echoed around her as panic erupted in her breast. She was so alone.
She leaped for the door. Tore it open and shouted his name.
Nothing. The bitter, crystalline cold of the night was silent. Undisturbed. Ice picks of cold stabbed her naked flesh painfully, and she backed inside and closed the door. Shivering violently, she shrugged on clothes and huddled in front of the fire to warm up. She’d go after Dutch right now, except if he didn’t want to be found, there wasn’t a chance in heck she’d be able to find him.
Too agitated to sit still, she jumped up and paced the cabin, which at least warmed her up. The walls closed in on her as she waited, pressing in until she wanted to scream.
Then an idea hit her like a thunderclap. There was something she could do. Something to strike a blow back at her father and maybe give him pause before he murdered Carina.
Fumbling in her haste, she found Dutch’s laptop computer, put it on the table and turned it on. She ransacked the machine, desperately seeking the information she needed. She had to find the account number of Charlie Squad’s overseas checking account—now.
Thanks to her father’s paranoia, she was no amateur when it came to computer security. Once she found Dutch’s private files, it boiled down to getting past his password. That took a while, but eventually she found his operating system’s back door. And then it was a simple matter of opening the file labeled CSBankAccount.
The exact number she needed flashed up on the screen. Hallelujah.
Crossing her fingers that it would work in this weather and in this valley location, she signed on to the Internet using the computer’s wireless capability. Thankfully, her Internet server popped up without incident.
She accessed her father’s secret bank account in Hong Kong, the one she’d found a couple of days ago. While it loaded, she rooted around in her purse until she found a scrap of paper in the bottom. It was a list of her father’s banking passwords that she’d brought with her when she ran away.
She typed in the password when the computer prompted her. A screen loaded with ponderous slowness. Finally, it blinked open. She sagged in relief. She was into the account. She typed frantically and hit the enter button. A second strike of the enter button to confirm that she did, indeed, want to transfer the entire contents of the account, and it was done.
In another hour, when the banks opened in Hong Kong, every last cent in this secret checking account would be transferred to Charlie Squad’s Swiss bank account.
It was her last ace in the hole. If this didn’t give her father pause, Carina was dead.
Exhausted, she shut down the computer. She’d done her best to buy her sister a normal
life. Only time would tell if she’d succeeded or not.
She looked at her watch. Dutch had been gone for almost two hours. Panic hovered very close to the surface, but she pushed it down as best she could. She didn’t have the luxury of freaking out.
The night grew deep and cold around her, and she hauled in more wood to put on the fire. How was Dutch standing the cold for this long? Or maybe he wasn’t standing the cold at all—
She broke off that thought. It wasn’t in his nature to run away from his problems. He would never take the coward’s way out.
Midnight came and went, and her apprehension blossomed into full-blown terror. But not for herself. For him. It was far too cold and isolated outside for a man alone to survive for long, particularly without proper clothing or equipment. Visions of him lying in the snow, injured and half-frozen, tortured her.
She couldn’t find him, but there were others who could. She pulled out her cell phone and punched in the long phone number to Charlie Squad headquarters. Static filled her ear. It beeped to indicate no connection had been made. Damn! Hers wasn’t a fancy satellite model like Dutch’s. She needed to be clear of the surrounding mountains for her phone to work.
She had no idea how to contact Charlie Squad over the Internet. They surely had an e-mail address, and just as surely, she wouldn’t find it in any search engine on the Internet.
She had no choice. She’d have to hike high enough up out of the valley for her cell phone to function. She bundled up in layer after layer of warm clothes, tucked the cell phone inside her sweater to keep the battery warm, and headed for the door.
The night was still and black and the stars glittered like shards of carved crystal in the frigid air. Her breath hung in thick clouds, and within seconds, her teeth ached from the cold. An insidious chill penetrated her clothing. She needed to get moving if she wasn’t going to freeze to death.