Page 40 of Midnight Rainbow


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He caught her fist and jerked her to him, holding her to him so tightly that she gasped, his face buried against her hair.

She was still struggling against him, beating at his back with her fists and crying again. “Let me go! Please, just let me go.”

“I can’t,” he whispered, and caught her chin, turning her face up to him. Fiercely he ground his mouth down on hers and, like a cornered cat, she tried to bite him. He jerked his head back, laughing, a wild joy running through him. The torn blouse had fallen away, and her naked breasts were flattened against him, their soft fullness reminding him of how good it felt when she wasn’t fighting him. He kissed her again, roughly, and cupped her breast in his palm, rubbing his thumb over the velvet nipple and making it tighten.

Jane whimpered under the onslaught of his mouth, but her temper had worn itself out, and she softened against him, suddenly aware that she’d gotten through to him. She wanted to hold on to her anger, but she couldn’t hold a grudge. All she could do was kiss him back, her arms sliding up to lock around his neck. His hand burned her breast, his thumb exciting her acutely sensitive skin and beginning to tighten the coil of desire deep in her loins. He had no need to hold her still for his kisses now, so he put his other hand on her bottom and urged her against him, demonstrating graphically that she wasn’t the only one affected.

He lifted his mouth from hers, pressing his lips to her forehead. “I swear, that temper of yours is something,” he whispered. “Do you forgive me?”

That was a silly question; what was she supposed to say, considering that she was hanging around his neck like a Christmas ornament? “No,” she said, rubbing her face into the hollow of his throat, seeking his warm, heady male scent. “I’m going to save this to throw up at you the next time we have a fight.” She wanted to say “for the rest of our lives,” but though his arms were hard around her, he hadn’t yet said that he loved her. She wasn’t going to dig for the words, knowing that he might not be able to say them and mean it.

“You will, too,” he said, and laughed. Reluctantly his arms loosened, and he reached up, removing her arms from his neck. “I’d like to stay like this, but we need to get to Limon.” He looked down at her breasts, and a taut look came over his battered face. “When this is over with, I’m going to take you to a hotel and keep you in bed until neither of us can walk.”

They got back in the car, and Jane removed the remnants of the blouse, stuffing it in the backpack and pulling on Grant’s camouflage shirt that she’d put in the pack that morning. It would have wrapped around her twice, and the shoulder seams hung almost to her elbows. She rolled the sleeves up as far as they would go, then gathered the long tails and tied them at her waist. Definitely not high fashion, she thought, but she was covered.

The Ford rolled into Limon in the early hours of the morning, and though the streets were nearly deserted, it was obvious that the port was a well-populated city of medium size. Jane’s hands clenched on the car seat. Were they safe, then? Had Turego been fooled by the abandoned truck?

“What now?”

“Now I try to get in touch with someone who can get us out tonight. I don’t want to wait until morning.”

So he thought Turego’s men were too close for safety. Was it never going to end? She wished they had remained in the jungle, hidden so deeply in the rain forest that no one would ever have found them.

Evidently Grant had been in Limon before; he negotiated the streets with ease. He drove to the train station, and Jane gave him a puzzled look. “Are we going to take the train?”

“No, but there’s a telephone here. Come on.”

Limon wasn’t an isolated jungle village, or even a tiny town at the edge of the forest; it was a city, with all of the rules of a city. He had to leave the rifle in the back of the station wagon, but he stuck the pistol into his boot. Even without his being obviously armed, Jane thought there was no chance at all of them going anywhere without being noticed. They both looked as if they’d come fresh from a battle, which, in effect, they had. The ticket agent eyed them with sharp curiosity, but Grant ignored him, heading straight for a telephone. He called someone named Angel, and his voice was sharp as he demanded a number. Hanging up, he fed more coins into the slot, then dialed another number.

“Who are you calling?” Jane whispered.

“An old friend.”

The old friend’s name was Vincente, and intense satisfaction was on Grant’s face when he hung up. “They’re pulling us out of here. In another hour we’ll be home free.”

“Who’s ‘they’?” Jane asked.

“Don’t ask too many questions.”

She scowled at him, then something else took her attention. “While we’re here, could we clean up a little? You look awful.”

There was a public bathroom—empty, she was thankful to see—and Grant washed his face while Jane brushed her hair out and quickly pulled it back into a loose braid. Then she wet a towel and painstakingly cleaned the wound on Grant’s arm; the bullet hadn’t penetrated, but the graze was deep and ugly. After washing it with a strong-smelling soap, she produced a small first-aid kit from her backpack.

“One of these days I’m going to see what all’s in that thing,” Grant growled.

Jane uncapped a small bottle of alcohol and poured it on the graze. He caught a sharp breath, and said something extremely explicit. “Don’t be such a baby,” Jane scolded. “You didn’t make this much fuss when you were shot.”

She smeared an antibiotic cream on the wound, then wrapped gauze snugly around his arm and tied the ends together. After replacing the kit, she made certain the pack was still securely buckled to her belt-loop.

Grant opened the door, then abruptly stepped back and closed it again. Jane had been right behind him, and the impact of their bodies made her stagger. He caught her arm, keeping her from falling. “Turego and a few of his men just came into the station.” He looked around, his eyes narrowed and alert. “We’ll go out a window.”

Her heart pounding, Jane stared in dismay at the row of small, high windows that lined the restroom. They were well over her head. “I can’t get up there.”

“Sure you can.” Grant bent down and grasped her around the knees, lifting her until she could reach the windows. “Open one, and go through it. Quick! We only have a minute.”

“But how will you get up—”

“I’ll make it! Jane, get through that window!”

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