Heroes In Uniform (232 page)

Read Heroes In Uniform Online

Authors: Sharon Hamilton,Cristin Harber,Kaylea Cross,Gennita Low,Caridad Pineiro,Patricia McLinn,Karen Fenech,Dana Marton,Toni Anderson,Lori Ryan,Nina Bruhns

Tags: #Sexy Hot Contemporary Alpha Heroes from NY Times and USA Today bestselling authors

“You should go. I’ll be okay tonight. I’ll lock myself in and promise not to open the door for anyone. Go back to your girlfriend. I’m sure she’s missing you.”

“What are you talking about?” Marsh’s brows pinched as his frown deepened. Then his expression cleared and humor lit his eyes, making them gleam wickedly. “Ah, my date from last night?”

Was it only last night since her safe narrow little world had shattered? It felt like a million years ago. Jealousy stirred low in her breast, unfamiliar and ugly. “Did you have the
best-sex-ever
with her too?”

Whoa, where the hell had that come from?
And why did she feel so angry with a man who was doing so much to help her? She was an idiot.

“Lynn’s eighteen and hot as hell.” Marsh moved toward her in a way that made her jealousy morph into unease. There was grace in his movements, banked heat in his gaze.

“And I thought you were too old for me.” She eyed him apprehensively, but forced herself to remain still. On many levels he made her feel safe—all except one. Her awareness of him as a man scared the crap out of her. He stepped closer. Suddenly she was brought up short by the wooden mantel against her shoulders and the realization she’d been backing away.

“I am too old for you.” The wicked gleam turned molten as he glanced down at her lips. He lowered his head, slowly. She watched, fascinated, powerless to move because she wanted him to kiss her. And for all her faults she’d never been a hypocrite, so she rose onto tiptoes and braced her hands on his wide shoulders. Surprise radiated through suddenly taut muscles. Her soft, hesitant lips met a warm, hard mouth. She closed her eyes and let herself kiss him. Savored the careful exploration, the sweet hesitancy. It was so unexpectedly gentle, so foreign and so heady.

He placed his hands on the small of her back, brought her flush against him, every point of contact cycloning excitement through her body like an electric shock. Her breasts tingled, nipples grew aching and tight. She ran her hands through his hair, wondering why every sensation was heightened just because
he
touched her.

His lips released hers, cruised her neck, her ear. Shivers danced along her skin, heat thrumming along her veins like liquid craving. He lifted her off the ground and she wrapped her legs around his hips, his erection rubbing against her center, feeling so amazing she wanted even closer. He braced her against the wall. The unrelenting hardness at her back felt good against her spine. Solid and reliable while the rest of her world crashed around her. He stroked her and sensations exploded between her legs, making her muscles clench and her breath gasp.

“I want you. I always want you even though you drive me crazy.” His breath blistered her ear, his hand rough on her breast, playing with her nipples, making her damp. Making her tremble with desire. He ground against her and she wished he was inside her, filling her as she cascaded over that inexplicable edge, lights flashing, sirens blazing, crying out with astonishment.

It was as spectacular as she remembered. She closed her eyes to absorb the pleasure, but the image of her mother being fucked against a wall drove all the passion from her mind and she shoved away from him.

“Oh, god.” Nausea whirled through her.
Whore. Slut
. She stumbled toward the bedroom.

Marsh grabbed her arm and swung her round. “What’s wrong? Are you okay?”

“I’m like her.” She wiped her hand over her mouth, trying to rub away the memory. “Just like my mother.”

“You’re normal.” Frustration roughened his voice. “Sex is normal.”

But she wasn’t. She pulled away and he released her, anger glowing in the depths of his eyes.

“You have a girlfriend,” she whispered.

“No, and the fact I let you think I do shows how low I’ve sunk. I don’t usually play games, Josephine. I’m not that kind of guy.” He dragged his hands through his hair and took a deep breath. “My mother is trying to set me up and marry me off to any woman who’ll have me. I do
not
have a girlfriend. The whole time we were out I felt like her goddamned father.” He looked so pissed her heart clenched. The thought of him getting married—being permanently unavailable gutted her. And she didn’t want anything to do with him—
remember
?

“I haven’t been with anyone since you…since
we
…had sex. You’ve ruined me for anyone else.” There was a raw honesty in his tone that froze her to the spot.

“That was six months ago.”

His smile was pained. “I know. I can’t get you out of my head.”

She stared at him. She couldn’t get him out of her head either. It wasn’t only sex although that was confusing enough. She wasn’t some shy miss, but this was unfamiliar territory. Complete with forbidden fruit. Bottom line was she was clueless about sex. Sure, she’d seen it in movies and during biology class and god help her, she’d drugged Marsh and seduced him, never thinking she’d
enjoy
what they did. But it seemed so long ago, the pleasure he’d stirred inside her moments ago was so fresh, so…incredible. She wanted it again—to repeat it and try to learn how to be a
normal
woman. But one way or another, sex had been her mother’s downfall and it had cost Josie her childhood. And sex was all there could ever be between a girl like her and the ultra-conservative federal agent.

If sex was dangerous, relationships were warzones.

Marsh turned and walked up to the front door. For one awful moment she thought he was leaving, but he flicked the locks and the deadbolt. Relief surged through her and it wasn’t all to do with evading a serial killer. She watched him stroll down the stairs, graceful as a tiger, charming as the devil, wishing like hell she was good and mad, and could deal with him. Instead his eyes were on her body with
that
look again and she reacted with a sharp inhalation.

They needed a distraction.

“Food.” She dove for the kitchen.

“This isn’t finished, Josephine.” His voice was soft and warm, sending tingles running down her spine.

It was definitely finished.

His laughter chased her and she foolishly thought it
was
over until he followed her into the kitchen, where she was digging into the bottom of a cupboard, searching for a sieve. She glanced over her shoulder. Marsh loosened the knot of his tie and shrugged out of his suit jacket, slinging it over his arm.

Sinful. Gorgeous. Suave and strong. The words didn’t begin to describe how the look of him affected her. And when he wasn’t being an arrogant bastard she actually
liked
SAC Marshall Hayes. And that scared her more than the idea of them screwing like rabbits.

“What are you doing?” He arched a single dark brow, his eyes roving her ass like he couldn’t help himself.

Ignoring an answering pull, she dragged her hair back from her eyes, spotted the white handle of the sieve and grabbed it, straightened up.

“Baking a cake.” She glared when his mouth dropped open in surprise. “What?”

“I didn’t think you even knew how to boil an egg.”

Opening a drawer to find measuring cups, she paused for a moment and took a breath, rather than just reacting. Time to confront this thing. “That’s because we don’t know each other very well, do we?”

“We know each other better than you want to admit.”

Turning to face him, she was rocked by the full force of his gaze.

“I know you’ve got a bitch of a temper, which hides a whole arsenal of insecurity.” His voice was soft and made her shiver. “I know you fight dirty especially when frightened.” He took a step closer and she wanted to bolt. “I know you make a funny little sound in your throat when you come.”

Blushing furiously, she looked away. He was the only person on the planet who knew that about her.

“I know you were a brave little kid who overcame a hell of a childhood to go on to become a successful artist.” He paused and she looked up, unable not to. “And I know you’re true and loyal to those you love.”

His image of her rocked her. She was bitchy, and abrasive, and had spent most of her life running away from her reality. She didn’t know how he saw any good beneath the surface she showed the world.

He took another step bringing him within arm’s length, trailed his index finger gently down her forehead, sweeping her nose and coming to rest on her lower lip, which trembled.

“I know I want you.”

Rattled beneath his perceptive gaze, she fought the pathetic sensation that invaded her limbs. She couldn’t afford to let this man in. She’d never survive losing him too. “Even if I don’t want you for anything but protection from a madman?” She narrowed her eyes against the intensity of his gaze.

“What if I said I don’t want you for anything but sex?” he countered, then tipped her chin up. “But then I’d be lying and I promised I’d stop doing that when it came to you.”

The thump of her heart against her ribs was so violent, she was sure he could hear it. Shoving past him, she crashed out of the kitchen and into her bedroom, slamming the door behind her. So much for not running away, so much for facing her fears. There was no laughter, no joy. Only bleak knowledge that Marshall Hayes was more dangerous to her soul than any knife wielding maniac.

 

* * *

 

He looked at the dead girl on the bed. Wrists and ankles bound. Blonde hair splayed across the dark sheets, almost gold in this light. Blue eyes, fading from bright and terrified to opaque and lifeless. Decomposing before his eyes.
For they have sown the wind, and they shall reap the whirlwind.

It was her own fault.

“I won’t kill you if you don’t make a sound…”
Only the child had remained silent. But she wasn’t a child any longer. A shiver ran through his flesh as he remembered the scars. Perfect silver marks against pale white skin.

His.

The same way this pathetic creature was his.

Blood soaked the mattress. It spattered him too. He stepped out of his coveralls and stuffed them in a black garbage bag that he’d incinerate. The knife handle was solid in his hand. Weighty. Familiar. Latex gloves made his palms sweat. A necessary evil. Duct tape quieted her screams. Another concession to the neighbors.

Killing in the city was more difficult than killing in the great outdoors, but even though he missed the thrill of the noise they made when he cut them, he had no intention of getting caught. Once he’d finished what he’d started all those years ago, once he’d completed the circle, he’d move on. He’d change his identity and stop for a while. Experiment with other ways to calm the bloodlust.

The scars on his chest itched. He couldn’t stop forever. God knew he’d tried.

Memories of violence ricocheted inside his head like a hammer smashing a steel drum. The tightness in his chest made breathing difficult.
Only boys and women scream. It’s time to be a man.
He opened his eyes wide so he could see his power, not remember his weakness. He was a man now, not a child. It was his turn to dominate and control.

He started to shake. It was too soon to have done this again, but the rush was too hot, too intense to fight for long. The drums grew louder. He craved the domination, despised the weakness.

He looked down at the girl’s bloody perfection and breathed deep, trying to calm the fierce contractions of his heart.
He
was the last thing she’d seen on this earth and the knowledge filled him with power that no one could ever take away. He eyed the area of flesh he’d skinned. She’d had a tattoo marring her body. She was his canvas. His work, and she’d been tainted by graffiti. Not a masterpiece, not even close. But she’d served her purpose and now it was time to get out. He picked up the garbage and stroked her face one last time. Maybe once he killed the child he could move on from the past. He’d destroy it all if he had to.

 

* * *

 

A Queen Anne desk and matching chair were positioned before the window overlooking Gramercy Park. Light streamed through the sheer drapes, casting a soft almost spiritual glow over the room. Marsh squinted against the brightness. Josephine wasn’t talking to him. He forced himself to relax his jaw, hoping to alleviate the headache that drilled his temples. It had been a long night on a hard couch, staring up at a dull ceiling while trying not to think about the woman in the next room.

Fresh peonies and gardenia sat in a fat crystal globe adding an overpowering scent to the picture-perfect room. A
Degas
sketch hung over the Adam’s fireplace. Elegant. Expensive. The décor reminded him of a thousand other sitting rooms of a thousand other society matrons whom he’d visited over the years, including his own mother’s.

Leaning against a damask-covered settee he tried to picture Pru Duvall in this setting and failed. Somehow the image didn’t jive. Despite her Southern hauteur and classy pedigree, the hard edge of her personality made her more suited for chrome, marble and splintered glass.

With his expensive suit and highly polished Italian shoes, god help him, he fit right in. Adjusting the strap on his holster allowed him at least the illusion he was something more than society dead weight. The memory of a sulking Josephine sipping coffee and staring silently out of her loft window flashed through his mind. They came from totally different worlds but he didn’t care. He’d almost lost her a few days ago. Tragedy had brought them together but this time he was determined to work things out. Somehow.

So how the hell did I manage to screw up last night so badly?

Pru strode in, followed by the aide he’d seen at the opening. Marsh stood as Dancer straightened from where he’d been examining a
Meissen
snake-handle-vase.

Marsh flicked an uneasy gaze at his agent.
Please, don’t bug a US Senator and his wife
.

“Marshall Hayes.” The crackle in Pru’s voice was husky. “You turn up in the most unexpected places. If I didn’t know better I’d think you’d taken a fancy to me.”

Inside Marsh recoiled, but quashed it. Maybe Josephine was right, maybe Pru was looking for a little extracurricular bedroom action and though he’d rather suck battery acid, he sent her a smooth smile. “A woman as lovely as you must have many admirers.”

Other books

Heaven Beside You by Christa Maurice
Shadow Over Second by Matt Christopher, Anna Dewdney
The Pigeon Spy by Terry Deary
Immortal Bloodlines by Taige Crenshaw
This Gun for Hire by Jo Goodman
Savage Flames by Cassie Edwards