Heroes In Uniform (291 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’re a riot, Wolf.” She tried to get past him on the stairs, but his long legs came up to block her way. “Was there something you wanted?” she asked pointedly, glaring at the boots resting on the rail in front of her.

The cobalt blue of his eyes deepened almost to black, swirling with heat. “Hell, yeah.”

He rose slowly, towering over her like a sequoia. His nostrils flared slightly as he came down the stairs, one by one, until they were sharing the same narrow wooden step.

She could feel the bones slowly melt inside her body. She swallowed, and watched his face come closer and closer, unable to tear away from his hypnotic gaze. Her lips parted slightly, and her heart pounded wildly. “And what would that be?”

“I think you know.” He reached for her, grasping her arms, pulling her against him. “I want
you
.” Winding a hand in her hair, he reeled her even closer. “I want you naked, under me. Moaning my name and trembling in pleasure.”

She squeezed her eyes shut, fighting the agony of desire that swept over her. “That's not going to happen, Wolf,” she whispered hoarsely, trying to back away from him, struggling against his hold on her arm, her hair.

Her heart
.

He held tight. “I think it is.” His gaze seared her. “And so do you.” He released her abruptly, and she braced herself against the stair railing. “Just as soon as we get a few details taken care of.”

If he had kissed her then, it would have been all over for her. His appeal was too strong to resist. She was hanging on by a mere thread. One soft touch of his lips, and she would have been completely under his spell.

She drew herself up as tall as she could, trying to counter his overwhelming presence. “You're wrong. And there aren’t any details to take care of.”

He gave her a look. Disappointment. Disgust. Disbelief.

She groped with her foot for the stair behind her. “I don't have it,” she said deliberately, and turned to flee up the stairs. “So, please, leave me alone.”

And prayed he wouldn't follow.

Barely Dangerous: Chapter Forty-Eight

 

 

Cooper watched Maggie bolt up the stairs, torn between running after her and running just as fast in the other direction.

In the end, he just dropped his forehead against the tower frame with a dull
thud
, and silently cursed himself for losing it so badly. The dream visions had invaded his head, crowding out all rational thought. And once again, he'd almost done something he would have regretted, and done it without looking back.

He needed to salvage the situation.

After several cleansing breaths, he plastered a determinedly
platonic
smile on his face and started up the stairs.

He cringed when he heard Maggie fling open the door with a
smack
and run into the cab. With his luck, she’d probably grab a gun and shoot the first thing that came through the door after her.

He wondered briefly if she even had a gun. Well, he knew she had a knife. He was watching his back.

When he reached the cab, the door was standing wide open. She had put on a khaki uniform shirt, but her fingers were fumbling with the buttons.

“I'd offer to help, but I guess that's probably not a good idea,” he ventured, propping himself against the door frame.

She whirled and backed up against the dresser.

Jeez, was he
that
scary?

“I can manage,” she said, but instead of buttoning it, she pulled the two sides tightly over her breasts and crossed her arms.

He studiously ignored them. “I apologize,” he said, and bowed slightly. “I came up to ask if you feel like going fishing. But I got temporarily waylaid by an acute attack of testosterone. Sorry about that.”

She blinked. “Fishing?” She blinked again.

Okay, so apparently they were going to pretend he hadn’t just told her he intended to bang her until she screamed.

He shrugged. “My article. Got to keep up appearances.”

“Oh. Well. I,
um
...”

Yep. He was really batting a thousand with his brilliant plans to get her to trust him.

She straightened away from the dresser. “I,
um
, have a couple of things to do first. How about in an hour?” She nibbled her lip, and pulled her shirt tighter.

“That works,” he said slowly, a bit surprised, but pleased by her unexpected acceptance. “An hour, it is.”

He glanced around her living quarters for the first time. He made a show of being interested in the Osborn fire spotting instrument. “Mind if I take a look?”

“Sure, I guess.”

He wandered over to examine it, carefully taking in everything else at the same time.
Just in case
.

Spartan, but definitely feminine. The dust ruffle on the cot and her basket of crochet yarn were dead giveaways that a woman lived here. And the lacy cotton nightgown on the bed.

His heart skipped several beats.
Holy shit
. It was exactly the same nightgown as in his crazy erotic dreams. Tiny buttons, and all.

Without thinking, he crossed the floor and fingered them.

Thank God
. They were all intact.

Speaking of which... Maggie had buttoned her uniform shirt, and was now brushing her hair feverishly. She had the strangest look on her face. And she refused to meet his eyes.

He suddenly realized what he was doing, whipped his hand away from her nightgown, and turned abruptly to the window overlooking the lake. He searched around for the small reflective decoration he figured must be hanging somewhere against the glass.

Instead, he found a telescope. A powerful one, sitting on a tripod.

He narrowed his eyes at it, pursed his lips, and bounced a couple of times on the balls of his feet. Okay. That was interesting.

He walked over to stand next to the telescope, and looked down toward his campsite. It lined up perfectly. Okay. Even more interesting.

He could see her reflection in the window, watching him, her eyes getting wider and wider.

He cleared his throat, then casually bent over and peered through the lens. His tent filled the round frame in full, living color.

He smothered a grin.
She was so busted
.

When he turned back to her, he kept his face impassive. He jerked his chin at the scope. “You been watching me, pup?”

“I—” She bit her lip. “Well, I— Watch out!”

His boot landed in the middle of a shattered mug of coffee on the floor below the telescope.

He looked down at the mess with wry amusement. “Was I
that
awful to look at?” He lifted his gaze and their eyes met.

A pink flush washed over her face. “I...wasn't expecting you to be...naked.”

His lips curled into a half-smile. “See anything you liked?” He ran his fingers down the length of the telescope suggestively.

She followed the movement, her eyes glued to his hands.

Instantly, his mind was filled with visions from his dreams, of naked limbs and hot, sweaty bodies melding into one.

She swallowed heavily. “Yes,” she whispered. “Definitely.”

Triumph roared through his whole body, but he stayed rooted to the spot. “It's even better close up,” he murmured.

Her voice came out hoarse and breathy. “I'll take your word for it.”

He knew if he took one step toward her, they'd be locked together in passion in a nanosecond. But he didn't dare. Not like this. Not without getting some answers first. And coming to some kind of terms.

Otherwise, he didn’t like his odds.

He carefully lifted his boot from the puddle and went to the micro-kitchen to fetch the trash bin and a sponge.

“I can do that,” she hurried to say.

“Nah. My fault. I’ll clean it up.” Returning to the shattered mug, he crouched down on his haunches and lifted the shards into the bin.

And took advantage of her fluster. He addressed the sponge as he mopped up the coffee. “What were you talking about when you said you didn't have it? Back on the stairs.”

She straightened her spine, instantly wary.

“I already told you I saw you at the kill site,” he said conversationally. “And I know about Dinny Paxton. I want to know the rest of it. All of it.”

A shadow of panic flashed through her expression.

“Tell me what you found, Maggie. What did you pick up?”

For some reason, the question seemed to calm her. She shoulders notched down a fraction. “A battery,” she said. “Probably from the bear’s ear tag.”

He set the trash bin back into its place, rinsed the sponge, and then his hands. He dried them with deliberate thoroughness. Waiting for more. But she didn’t elaborate.

“You think the poachers dropped it?” he asked.

“Maybe. There was a fingerprint.”

He turned to her. “That’s what you mailed to Paxton?”

She nodded.

“Anything else?”

She shook her head. “You got the bullet, right?”

“Yeah. We got it.” At the reminder, he tamped down a spurt of anger. “Why would you try to remove important evidence, like that? Didn’t you realize that would jeopardize our chances of a conviction?”

She gripped the hairbrush in her hands so hard her knuckles turned white. “The dispatcher said CDFW would take two days to send someone to the crime scene. I thought they’d come back for it.”

“The poachers.”

She nodded.

Ah
.

She looked as if she was about to bolt. Better to end this now, while he was still ahead.

For once.

Gently, he pried the hairbrush from her fingers and tossed it on the bed. He stroked her cheek with the backs of his knuckles. “There. That wasn't so hard, was it?” He smiled. “See you at my place in an hour.”

Barely Dangerous: Chapter Forty-Nine

 

 

An hour later, Maggie walked cautiously into Cooper's camp.

“Wolf?” she called tentatively. “You here?”

No answer.

She stood there for a moment at a loss, then wandered over and took a seat on a smooth granite boulder. She’d give him a few minutes.

She'd changed into shorts and sneakers, and the sun felt warm on her face and exposed limbs. Coming here, going anywhere with him, was probably a huge mistake.
Shocker
. But despite everything going on between her and Cooper, she was actually glad she’d said yes to fishing. She’d seldom taken the time to enjoy the beautiful natural setting she was living in.

She pulled out the paperback she’d tucked into her back pocket and got more comfortable. She hadn't done a lot of fishing, but most of her memories consisted of delightful hours spent lounging in tall, fragrant grass beside cool mountain streams, reading and getting a suntan while the fish refused to bite. It worked out well all around, in her opinion.

Well. Except for the occasional male companion who was invariably under the mistaken impression that the sole reason for fishing expeditions was to catch fish.

Foolish men.

She stretched impatiently, wishing Cooper would get a move on. Suddenly, the air vibrated with a soft ringing from his tent. Must be his cell phone.

Wait. How did he have bars up here, when she didn’t even have reception in the tower? So not fair.

It rang again. She glanced over at the tent, debating whether or not to answer it.

On the fourth ring, she jumped off the boulder, rushed to the tent, and grabbed it. “Hello? Cooper,
uh
, residence.”

On the other end, there was a hesitation, some shuffling, and the hollow sound of the receiver being covered over for a moment.

A male voice came on the line. “Is Coop there, please?”

She glanced around. Still no sign of him. “No, sorry. He's—”
Crap. What?
“He’s...having a swim.”

There was that hollow sound again. This time, she caught the tail end of laughter being shushed.

“Can I take a message?” she asked politely.

“Please tell Coop to call in.” A slight pause. “When he's not too busy.”

She stifled a snicker. In her most sultry voice, she purred, “That might not be for quite some time.” She paused to let the caller absorb that, then said, “Fish and Wildlife, right?”

“Right. I assume he remembers the number.”

She giggled after she hung up. Both from her prank, and from the fact that she’d just confirmed that Cooper really did work for CDFW. Her heart felt a hundred pounds lighter.

She wondered briefly why they’d called. Maybe to tell him the battery had shown up via the FBI? Cooper would know it came from her, because she’d just confessed. And he also said he knew about Dinny...but how much? Did he know about Whitney and the trial? She doubted it. He would have said something.

But she still had to come up with a good excuse for going through the FBI instead of taking the evidence straight to Fish and Wildlife. She was surprised he hadn’t asked.

She hated lying. Invariably, lying just made things
more
complicated rather than solving them. She didn't want to lie to Cooper. But she would have no choice if he started asking questions about the FBI.

She started to put the phone back in the tent, then had a sudden inspiration. She punched the phone’s on button, and then the icon for the Internet. Letting the power drain would buy her a little more time. So she could figure out what to tell him, if he asked.

Annoying him as much as he’d annoyed her was just a nice bonus.

Back on the boulder with her eyes closed and face tilted up to the sun, she still had a mischievous grin on her face when a sexy masculine voice said, “You thinking about me, or the trout?”

Barely Dangerous: Chapter Fifty

 

 

Coop laughed when Maggie bolted straight up in the air, startled.

“I wish you'd stop scaring me like that!” she groused, and started to tumble off the boulder she was perched on.

He snaked an arm around her waist and grabbed her. “Sorry. Occupational hazard of being a sneaky redskin.” There were definite advantages to having a hunter's stealth.

She rolled her eyes. “Of being a macho egomaniac, more like.” She pulled away from him and straightened her shorts. “I'm sure you're used to every woman you see throwing herself at you, but that is
not
what I was doing.”

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