Font Size:  

Dallas had been dead five years. Why hadn’t she remarried, or at least dated someone steadily? She was young—only twenty-five when Dallas died—and pretty. He hadn’t let himself ask, these past five years, hadn’t let himself personally check on her, but this time he had figured enough time had passed and it was safe to ask, to find out she had a hubby and a kid or two, and had gone on with her life.

She hadn’t. She was still alone.

Had she changed? Put on weight, maybe gotten a few strands of gray in her hair? A lot of people began to go gray in their twenties. Did her big dark eyes still look so deep a man could drown in them, and not care?

He could see her. She would never know. He could satisfy his curiosity, smile a little at the physical pleasure seeing her gave him, and walk away. But he knew he wouldn’t see her, some breaks were better made cleanly. He was still who he was and did what he did, so there was no point in daydreams, no matter how pleasurable.

Knowing that was one thing; turning off those desires was another. He would do what he had to do, but what he wanted to do was hold her, just once, and let her know it was him she was kissing, him making love to her. Just once he wanted to strip her naked and have her, and once would have to be enough because he couldn’t dare risk more.

But he had a snowball’s chance in hell of having that “once,” so finally he turned off the daydream, rolled over, and went to sleep.

* * *

John arrived at Frank’s house as he had the night before, in a car with blacked-out windows. He backed into the attached garage, the doors of which slid up as he approached and down as soon as his car was inside. He had spent the day digging out more details about Ronsard, trying to plot a course on getting inside Ronsard’s mansion and getting the information he needed; nothing had immediately presented itself, but eventually it would.

Frank opened the door, an abstract expression on his face that was evidently due to the sheaf of papers he still clutched in one hand. Frank never quit working, it seemed, not even at home; he simply changed locations. While Dodie was alive he had made a real effort to put his job aside and just be with her, but more often than not he had become lost in his thoughts and she would laughingly shoo him into his office. Now, with Dodie gone, Frank often worked sixteen hours a day.

“I was just getting coffee,” he said to John. “Go on into the library and I’ll bring it in there.”

John stopped in his tracks and quizzically regarded his old friend. Frank wasn’t a domestic person; he tried, but he didn’t have a coffee-making gene in his body. John had quickly learned, after Dodie’s death, that if he wanted coffee in Frank’s house he’d better make it himself if he wanted it to be drinkable.

Seeing the look, Frank said irritably, “I didn’t make it, Bridget did.” Bridget was his housekeeper, an Agency employee who had looked after Frank and Dodie since Frank became DDO. She went home after serving Frank his supper and cleaning up the kitchen, assuming he was eating at home that night; she must have made the coffee and put it in a thermos to keep it hot.

“In that case, yes, I’d like a cup.” Grinning, John strolled out of the kitchen, with Frank’s muttered “Smart ass,” following him.

The door to the library was open. John walked in and stopped just past the threshold, his mind blank for a moment except for a silent, savage curse. Damn Frank and his meddling!

Niema Burdock rose slowly out of the chair where she had been sitting, her face pale in the mellow lamplight. Her eyes were as big and dark as he remembered; darker, narrowing as she stared at him and said one word, tight with disbelief: “Tucker.”

John forced himself to move, to step ins

ide the library as casually as if he had known she was going to be there. He closed the door; let Frank make of that what he pleased. “Actually,” he said, as if five years hadn’t passed, “you were right. Tucker isn’t my name. It’s John Medina.”

He was never at a loss; he had been trained not to panic, not to lose focus. But this was a shock, the impact of her sudden presence as powerful as if he had been punched in the gut. He hadn’t realized, he thought, how hungry he had been for the sight of her, otherwise why blurt out something he had kept from her five years ago?

Almost no one who met him knew his real name. It was safer that way, for both parties. So why had he told her, this woman who had every reason, if not to actually hate him, to at least avoid him? She had heard him tell her husband to, in effect, kill himself. She had been standing there staring at him with her eyes black as night, her face paper white with shock, when he told Dallas to press the button that would end his life as well as complete the mission. That wasn’t something a woman forgot, or forgave.

She was almost as pale now. For a moment he hoped she hadn’t heard of him before. It was possible; he was in black ops, his name whispered among people in operations, but she worked on the technical side and would seldom, if ever, come into contact with field operatives.

Her throat worked. “John Medina is . . . just a legend,” she said, her voice strained, and he knew she had indeed heard of him.

“Thank you,” he replied casually, “though I don’t know if I like the word ’just.’ I’m real enough. Want to bite me to prove it?” He sat down on the edge of Frank’s desk, one foot swinging, his posture totally relaxed despite the tension screaming through him.

“I thought pinching was the proven method.”

“I prefer biting.”

Color tinged her cheeks, but she didn’t look away. “Your eyes were brown,” she accused. “Now they’re blue.”

“Colored contacts. Blue is the real color of my eyes.”

“Or you’re wearing colored contacts now.”

“Come look,” he invited. As he had expected, though, she didn’t want to get that close to him.

She gathered her composure and sank back into her chair. She crossed her legs, her posture as relaxed as his. Maybe more so; her movement riveted his attention on her legs, on the few inches of thigh she had revealed. He hadn’t seen her legs before; she had worn pants, and often those had been modestly covered by the chador. They were very nice legs: slender, shapely, lightly tanned. She still looked to be in very good shape, as if she worked out regularly.

Abruptly aware of the response of his body, John snapped himself back under control. He glanced up and found her watching him, and automatically wondered if she had crossed her legs to distract him. If so, it had worked. He was irritated at himself, because sex was one of the oldest, most hackneyed distractions, and still he had let himself slip.

Source: www.allfreenovel.com
Articles you may like