Текст книги "Veiled Target"
Автор книги: Robin Bielman
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Текущая страница: 9 (всего у книги 18 страниц)
Chapter Ten
It was a huge mistake keeping Tess close.
Hugh’s pulse didn’t race. Ever. Yet the second she walked into the kitchen everything in his body revved up. She’d looked amazing in that blue dress, but seeing her just out of bed with casual clothes that hugged every curve of her body and noticing that she was comfortable by the confident way she moved, upped her sex appeal tenfold.
He bit the inside of his cheek to stop any lusty sounds from escaping his mouth. The animal in him wanted to strike. Down boy.
“You know,” she said, her voice upbeat, “you’re getting yourself into big trouble by doing all the cooking. Dinner last night. Breakfast this morning. One more meal and I’m going to inform you the duty is all yours.”
She blessed him with a bona fide look of appreciation and sat down at the table.
“I figure if I do all the cooking you can’t poison me.” As much as he wanted to exchange pleasantries with her, it would serve him well to keep some distance between them. Make sure her assignment never left the room despite the fact they were working together. If he let himself forget about that, he’d surely topple the rest of the way over.
“I gave you my word that wouldn’t happen until our partnership is over.” Goodbye appreciative look. “When I give my word, I mean it.”
She mumbled something under her breath that sounded a lot like “dumbass.”
If he issued another uncooperative remark it would keep her kindness at bay, and he needed to do that, but when he caught the hint of hurt in her green eyes, he couldn’t do it.
Wait. Green eyes?
He stepped to the table with two plates of eggs and bacon and looked more closely to be sure he was right. “You’ve got green eyes this morning.”
“So?”
“So last night they were blue.”
“Green T-shirt. Green eyes. Blue dress. Blue eyes. I’m just lucky that way. Confuses people all the time. Do you know how to cook anything besides eggs?” She picked up a piece of bacon and brought it to her mouth.
“Lunch is grilled cheese sandwiches.”
“Cool. So what have you been up to this morning without me? Made any progress or discovered anything I should know about? Or am I privy only to information I’m awake for?”
He deserved that. “I spoke with Dane this morning.” A forkful of scrambled eggs went into his mouth. He wouldn’t tell her it was his second breakfast. “Since last night, everything’s been quiet. There’s no word on Trey or the Wolf Seekers. The Banoth’s been taken care of and the factory cleaned up.”
“Did you expect anything different?”
“I expected some word on the position of the Wolf Seekers. Dane’s got someone who usually gets us what we need to know.”
She got up from the table and went to the fridge. He took in the slope of her neck, her narrow shoulders, her toned arms. The redness around her wrists was gone and he gave silent thanks before his gaze moved to her backside The jeans fit perfectly and allowed him to see what the dress had hidden. An ass he’d follow around the world.
“What’s the deal with you and Dane anyway?”
“The deal?”
“Yeah, you know, what are you guys? Because it seemed to me you were friendly but not friends. I’m guessing he doesn’t like you as an authority figure.” She pulled some orange juice out and examined the carton for an expiration date, he guessed. Satisfied, she found a couple of glasses on the first try and poured.
Hugh took the glass she dangled in front of him. “Thanks. You’re right. Dane hates the fact that I’m the alpha. Hates even more that Trey is my second in command and being groomed to take over.”
She sat back down and took a sip of her juice. “So Dane doesn’t like Trey very much?”
“Actually he likes him a lot. His beef is more with me.” He and Dane had much more history.
Tess studied him, her emerald eyes completely capturing his attention. “A beef over a girl?” She blinked away the connection, redirecting her gaze to the food on her plate.
How the hell had she guessed that? If he had any doubts regarding the undeniable chemistry between them, she was wiping them away. She might be the one woman who could read his mind. Scratch that. She was the one woman who could.
“Not how you might think.”
“Explain it to me.” She put a forkful of food into her mouth.
He didn’t like remembering this part of his past. His jaw clenched, his chest ached. “I’m not sure I can.”
A minute of silence passed while she ate more of her breakfast. Then she looked back into his eyes with so much concern that he relaxed enough to finish his eggs. “I’m positive my knowing will help us work together. I can tell it’s painful for you, so why don’t you just give me the abbreviated version?”
The sweet sound of her voice completely unnerved him. Kick-ass one minute, kind the next—she had no idea how much she complicated things for him. He’d planned on keeping the upper hand here, working together under his terms. But when she got personal and said shit like “I can tell it’s painful for you,” with genuine concern, he had the urge to spill everything and let her run the show.
“It was a long time ago.” Five years next month. “Nothing I plan to elaborate on now.”
“Oh, come on.” She pushed her plate to the side and leaned on the table. “I promise I won’t tell anyone.”
He stayed quiet.
“I know. You both fell for the same girl, you won, and Dane still hates you for it. Am I close?” Long eyelashes reached her arched eyebrows.
The look on his face must have confirmed she was damn close because he didn’t need to say a word for her to beam as if she’d discovered every secret about him. Shit.
“It wasn’t me,” he relented, torn with feelings of wanting to share and keeping the memories bottled up inside.
“There’s no way Dane got the girl over you.”
Flattered—no, horny—because she thought that, he still couldn’t come out and say it. He did have a strong desire to toss the table to the side, grab her and carry her to his bedroom. Probably his way of transferring the emotions plaguing him. At least that was what Gavin had told him on more than one occasion. “He didn’t.”
“You’re wasting precious work time, Hugh. Would you just come out and say it already?” Tenacious as he was, she’d continue until she dragged it out of him.
“Dane’s college sweetheart dumped him for my brother, Max. Her name was Heather and the moment she and my brother met, they fell in love. The kind of love that comes around once in a lifetime. Max took her as his mate.”
“Mates are for life, right?”
“Right. Dane was devastated. Not because he wanted Heather for a mate, but because he was embarrassed and ridiculed by some of the other younger pack members. Myself included. My brother was the leader so it was without recourse that he and Heather became matched. They were madly in love, deeply connected. Their union lasted only a year before Heather passed away. Without her, my brother died inside. I tried everything to bring him out of his depression. Nothing worked and three months later, he was gone. Dane expected to take over the leadership position.”
“But you did.”
“Yeah.”
There was more to it than that, but he didn’t want to delve deeper into what had cost him his best friend and mentor. He’d looked up to Max more than anyone, wanted to be just like him. Wished every day he was still around.
Tess got up from the table, picked up the plates, then put a hand on his shoulder. “I’m sorry about your brother.”
She lingered there for a long moment. He didn’t look up, opting to keep his gaze level with the empty chair across from him. If he looked at her, he was sure her beautiful face would completely rattle him. He had to remind himself that love was a curse, that he didn’t need anyone. Not now. Not ever. Shutting down his growing feelings might not be easy, but it was necessary. When his partnership with Tess ended, he needed to walk away and not look back. The pack depended on him.
Which also meant he had to figure out a way to avoid the hit. Out of the corner of his eye, he watched her move to the sink and wondered how far she’d go. If she’d really eliminate him with something between them. He had no doubt she was ruthless, knew she’d killed before. The job required it. What were her requirements? Did she stop to think about what she did, or had she been trained not to think for herself?
She leaned against the kitchen counter to look out the window. She got up on tiptoes, extending her arms to add a little more height. The simple act was hot as hell. He held on to the side of the chair so as not to get up and go to her. He wanted to wrap his arms around her and see if the side of her neck tasted as good as her lips. He wanted to press against her—press inside her—and never let go. The urges she stirred were so goddamn strong he worried if he took advantage once, he’d be a goner for good.
She whipped around with a huge smile on her face and he nearly fell backwards, chair and all, from the sheer thrill he saw in her twinkling eyes. “You’ve got a Ducati?”
“You like motorcycles?” Why was he surprised? He ought to nickname her daredevil after her performance last night.
“Oh my God. I love them.” She twisted for another peek out the window. “And that’s an 848 Superbike, isn’t it?”
Was there anything about her that would make him reconsider she was his perfect match? Fuck. Trouble didn’t begin to describe his ass right now.
“Yes it is.” He got up and joined her at the counter, keeping a good foot between them. He’d taken the bike out of the garage earlier that morning before he’d been derailed by his conversation with Dane.
“Can I take it for a ride?” she asked, like a kid pleading to stay out past curfew.
“We can.”
“Don’t be silly. It’s much better suited for one-up riding. I promise I’ll come back if that’s what you’re worried about. I am on assignment now, which means you’re stuck with me.”
Like he needed the reminder. He should give her the bike and let her ride away. Forget this temporary alliance. But goddamn it, he couldn’t. He couldn’t picture letting her go now that he had her. “Come on. We’ll manage the both of us.”
She bopped up and down, excitement rolling off her. “Okay, fine. But I’m driving.”
“You think I’m letting you drive?”
“You bet you are.” She dazzled him with a smile, and he knew he’d give her anything she asked for. “I need a pair of shoes though. You didn’t—”
“By the front door.”
“Fantastic.” She pushed back up on her toes and kissed his cheek. “Let’s do this. And I hope you like speed as much as I do.”
Frozen. He stood frozen to his spot as she strode away. Everything in him, every thought, every belief, churned out of control. The familiarity, the passion, the feel of her lips on his face undid him to the point of no return.
Tess wiggled the nail file in the lock of her bedroom door as quietly as possible. Her heart beat a little faster than normal. She sucked in a deep breath. If she didn’t get the damn door open in the next thirty seconds, she was going to scream.
She stepped back, closed her eyes and relaxed her shoulders. She could do this. It would be a hell of a lot easier if it wasn’t pitch dark in the room, but she couldn’t risk turning on the light. It pissed her off that Hugh still didn’t trust her after working together without incident for the past couple of days.
Not that she really blamed him. But the thought of being stuck in the room one more night made her claustrophobic.
Maybe a nail file wasn’t the tool to do the trick? It didn’t seem to be connecting to the locking mechanism. God, she sucked at this. Good thing burglary wasn’t in her job description. She tiptoed to the small desk and found a pen in the drawer. She pulled it apart so she held the thin ink cartridge topped with a ballpoint head. It slid into the tiny hole of the door handle, and after carefully pressing it just the right way, the door unlocked.
She moved down the hallway with light steps, trying her damndest to keep quiet. When she reached the living room, she sighed with relief. An ambient glow spilled into the room from the dim recessed lighting in the kitchen and she methodically made her way around every piece of furniture in search of anything that might help her learn more about Hugh. With his watchful eyes on her during the day, she’d barely been able to notice the types of magazines on the coffee table.
She’d kept her head down while looking around, but lifting it now to take in the room as a whole, she wondered how on earth she’d missed those. Three pictures in dark wood frames on the fireplace mantle.
The first photograph was of Hugh and another man, their arms around each other’s shoulders and huge grins on their faces. The kind of grin that made her wonder what had made them so happy that day. Her gaze traveled to the next picture, a black and white candid shot so beautiful and personal she sucked in a breath. A man—the same one in the shot with Hugh—had his hand near a woman’s ear, his fingers toying with her long hair. He was staring down at her, she was looking up at him, their faces mere inches from each other. Her palm lay flat on his chest, and Tess could feel the beating of their hearts inside her head. The look of adoration that passed between them was palpable.
She didn’t have to ask Hugh who the couple was. It had to be his brother and his wife. Something fluttered in Tess’s stomach as she wondered what it would be like to love someone that much. Because in looking at the photo, there was no doubt they’d loved with an intensity she never had. A lump lodged in her throat. She swallowed and sidestepped to the last photo.
Her legs almost gave out as she stared at an unguarded Hugh. He sat at a formal table, wearing a tuxedo, his arm bent, a hand covering the smile she knew he wore because his eyes crinkled in the corners. His attention was on his brother and sister-in-law, whose arms were intertwined, champagne flutes in their hands, grins on their faces.
Tess backed away, almost falling over the coffee table. Suddenly, she couldn’t take any more. She didn’t want to know anything more about him. Because big, bad, prideful Hugh had a soft spot whether he admitted it or not. And the very real images he kept a part of his home captured something she hadn’t felt since she was a little girl. Unconditional love.
With super speed, she searched the drawers of the hutch in the dining room, the cupboards in the kitchen, rifled through the stack of Sports Illustrated magazines. She searched the closet by the front door, eyed the hardwood floor for loose floorboards.
All of it though, she did half-ass, since she couldn’t stop thinking about Hugh and how very human he seemed. How connected. To his brother, even though he was gone.
Where’s the damn incriminating evidence? “Not here,” she whispered and padded in her bare feet to the front door. The second she stood outside, she inhaled sharply, the fresh air filling her lungs, loosening the tightness in her chest.
Without thinking, she wandered down the driveway, away from the house, away from Hugh. Chewing her bottom lip, she wrapped her arms around herself. A cool breeze carried the smell of pine trees to her nose. Her footsteps faltered and she stopped. Looked over her shoulder. So many emotions she didn’t know how to process swirled inside her. Was the right thing to do leave? Or stay? She turned her head back around and looked at the empty road in front of her.
Go. She’d walked maybe another hundred feet, though, when something weird circulated in the muscles of her legs—resistance. She stopped again and looked up. Stars dotted the black sky. Jagged branches from gigantic trees slashed through the airspace like claws about to swoop down and pick her up. A chill raced down her spine.
“You really shouldn’t walk at night without shoes on.”
Tess jumped at the woman’s voice, both feet literally coming off the ground. People didn’t sneak up on her. How the hell had this woman snuck up on her? She was losing her skills. A harrowing thought flashed through her mind. Did that mean it was time to give up eliminating?
“Sorry, I didn’t mean to scare you,” the woman said, as Tess turned to find an older lady wearing a plaid robe and yellow slippers.
“Blanche?” she asked, recognizing the woman’s voice and assuming no other seventy-something neighbor would be awake at this hour of night.
“In the flesh. You must be Tess. Nice to meet you in person.” She twisted and started toward a house barely visible through the trees in the distance. “Follow me,” she called over her shoulder.
“What?” Tess asked, glancing at her feet before she scurried to catch up to Blanche.
“You can’t get far without shoes and it just so happens we’re the same size.” She picked up her pace, walking with the gait of a woman half her age.
Curiosity spurred Tess to keep up. “What makes you think I’m going somewhere? Maybe I just needed some fresh air? Ow!” she cried, something sharp digging into the flesh of her heel.
“At one in the morning when you should be fast asleep?”
Tess didn’t offer a reply.
They reached Blanche’s house, a cozy log cabin with a wraparound porch. Stairs led up to the glass front door, a motion detector lighting their way the moment they hit the first step. Large pots sat everywhere, overflowing with ivy and yellow daisies, and comfort filled Tess. But when she noticed the rocking chair sitting beside a large front window, she almost gasped. It looked exactly like the one her mother had rocked her in when she was a child. It was the only way she’d fall asleep.
“Your home is lovely,” she said, closing the front door behind her. Blanche had yet to stop her forward momentum.
“Thank you. Have a seat. I’ll be right back.” She waved a hand in the air and disappeared around a corner.
Tess sat down on one of two sofas, the soft chenille fabric giving way to perfect coziness. She sank into the couch and put her feet up on the leather ottoman placed between the couches. Her eyes drifted shut, and for a few minutes she let her mind go blank. Worried she might actually fall asleep, she forced her lids open and took in the room.
A beautiful, but empty china cabinet sat off to the right. A bookcase, almost bare, decorated the left. One painting of snow-capped mountains hung on the wall. In the corner stood a small antique table with a vase of fresh flowers on top. Tess couldn’t remember the last time she’d had fresh flowers in her house.
Blanche entered the room carrying a pair of mugs. Not shoes. “I thought you might be thirsty,” she said, handing one of the steaming cups to Tess.
She sat up and accepted the drink. Then groaned with pleasure when she took a whiff. “Is this Irish coffee?”
Blanche took a seat across from her, a mischievous smile tugging at her wrinkled lips. “After midnight, it’s all I serve.”
“I’ll be back tomorrow.” Tess inhaled deeply before taking a sip.
“I’ll keep you to that.” Blanche took her own sip before getting comfortable and tilting her head. “He’s a good man, you know. Sometimes he’s rough around the edges, but that’s only because he doesn’t know what’s good for him.”
Tess shrugged. “Okay.”
“He do something to piss you off?” Blanche asked candidly.
“You could say that,” Tess answered. “He’s definitely not one for negotiation, no matter how hard I’ve tried.”
“You try asking him naked?”
Tess choked on her Irish coffee. “I beg your pardon?”
“Men can’t think straight when a woman’s naked. Something about their brain cells getting jumbled. And then their favorite word becomes ‘yes.’”
“I, uh…” Tess was at a complete loss for words. She looked into her mug, hoping the blush she felt wasn’t obvious on her face.
“You know how to play backgammon?” Blanche stood and reached for a small leather case on the bookshelf. She had it opened on the ottoman and pieces set up before Tess could answer.
“It’s been a while, but yeah.” Tess didn’t know what to make of Blanche. Or herself. She was happy with the subject change, but even if Blanche had continued to talk about Hugh, she didn’t feel any urge to leave. The older woman gave off a wonderful air of familiarity and warmth and Tess wanted to hang around her.
Blanche drank her Irish coffee while she set up the rest of the game pieces. Tess did the same, the easy rhythm they fell into one she rarely experienced.
Hugh. I fell into an easy rhythm with him.
“You got something on your mind, you should just spit it out,” Blanche said, putting her mug down on the ottoman.
Tess looked at her. Really looked at her. The idea that Blanche might be a Veiler popped into her mind. And with it her defenses went back up. “Right back atcha. I’m not really sure why you invited me here.”
“Make a guess,” Blanche said lightly. She leaned back, ran her hands down her thighs like there might be lint on her robe.
“Okay. I think you like knowing Hugh’s business because you love him like he’s your own son, and you’re trying to figure out what my motives are. You’re disheartened because I’ve apparently tried to sneak away and you wanted to meet me before you decided what to do about that. But it’s not my best interest you’re after—it’s Hugh’s. So I really think you should spit it out, not me.”
Blanche nodded. “See? That wasn’t so hard, was it?” She looked at Tess with genuine interest—and compassion—in her eyes, before gesturing around the room with her hand. Emotion Tess couldn’t put a finger on passed over the older woman’s features as she blinked several times. “He built this house for me. The old one burned to the ground last year. I thought I’d have to go to a senior shithouse, but Hugh wouldn’t hear of it. He took care of the insurance and got his friends to help out. Built this place in less than six months. And never asked me for a penny.”
Tess gulped. Her heart squeezed. “Wow.”
“He’s a private SOB, but if anyone he cares about gets into trouble, he’s first in line to help them out. He’s had more lost souls up to that house than I can count.”
For a brief moment, Tess forgot to breathe. “You think I’m a lost soul?” She shifted on the couch, uncomfortable with that assessment. Was she?
“No.” Blanche shook her head. “I think Hugh’s in over his head and he doesn’t know what to do about it. He smitten with you, that’s for sure. I’ve known that boy a long time, and I’ve never seen him so discombobulated over a woman.”
Something inside her softened, weakened. Awakened. She sighed. And she couldn’t meet Blanche’s eyes, instead picking a spot on the dark wood floor.
“So we’ve established you’re smitten too,” Blanche said, relief in her voice.
Tess lifted her head. “I didn’t say that.”
“Didn’t have to. I don’t know what’s going on between you two, but it’s been my experience that confronting it head on is always the best plan.”
“Oh, believe me, we’ve confronted it.” Tess looked down at the game board they’d yet to touch. “And unfortunately, whatever is going on between us is only short term. Sorry, Blanche.”
Blanche chuckled. “That’s what I thought when I met Artie.”
“Artie?”
“My husband and the love of my life. He passed away a few years ago. Told me on the day we met it would never last because he’d surely screw it up. We were married for fifty-three years and the only thing he screwed was me.” She crossed an arm over her chest so that her palm rested over her heart.
She and Blanche eyed each other for a moment and then both burst out laughing. Tess couldn’t remember ever laughing like this. It felt good. Felt nice to have a grandmother figure share something so unexpected and intimate.
Tess rose from the couch and stretched. “I should probably head back.”
“He’s worth sticking around for,” Blanche said, standing and slowly making her way toward the front door.
“I’m not sure I’m—”
A heavy knock on the door silenced Tess. Only one person would pay a visit to Blanche at this hour.
“Hugh,” Blanche scolded as she opened the door wide enough for Tess to be seen. “What are you doing here in the middle of the night?”
He practically filled the doorway with his broad shoulders and height. “Just thought I should escort this lovely lady back home. You two have a nice chat?”
Clearly, he wanted to know what they discussed, but Tess had no intention of telling him. And the way he spoke made it sound like he’d known all along where she was.
She huffed and darted around him. “Thanks, Blanche, for the drink and the good company,” she called over her shoulder, realizing the older woman probably never intended to loan her a pair of shoes.
“Anytime!” Blanche called out.
A moment later, Hugh was by her side, too close and too far away for her to think straight. She stumbled, not because of his proximity, but because a twig lodged itself between her toes. She swallowed a hiss.
Hugh scooped her up and held her against his chest.
Her entire body went rigid before relaxing. She thought about demanding he put her down. She thought about yelling at him to keep his hands to himself. But the truth was nothing inside her protested. And his quiet action spoke volumes she didn’t want to address.
She put her arms around his neck and rested her head on his shoulder.