Читать книгу Trick Me, Treat Me - Leslie Kelly - Страница 10
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ОглавлениеIF I TOLD YOU THATIâd have to kiss you.
Only, he hadnât said kiss, had he? No, surely heâd said kill. But Gwen didnât care. Kiss was what flashed in her mind. Kiss was what echoed in her brain, tempting her to be outrageous. A kiss might be daring enough to test that sexiness, that womanliness, that had eluded her since her failed engagement.
So, kiss she did. When the possible ax murderer whoâd just threatened her life leaned close until their breaths mingled, she grabbed his face and proceeded to kiss the lips off him.
Of course, sheâd known he was joking with the killing part. In spite of the aura of danger, sheâd felt sure from the moment theyâd started speaking that he was no threat to her. At least not physically. Mentally? Well, in that respect, she wasnât so sure. Her libido had been on high alert all night. An unusual occurrence for a woman who hadnât had sex in over a year.
But she was entitled. She hadnât done a single daring thing today. Besides, it wasnât like she was getting engaged to a cheating bastardâagain. She was just stealing a kiss. One kiss.
Twining her fingers in his hair, she tugged him closer until their lips could meet fully. He tasted dangerous and delicious. She didnât get too serious, just slid her lips against his, letting them part the tiniest bit, but no further. His body was close, a thin aura of awareness the only thing separating them. He made no effort to pull her tighter, letting her take what she wanted.
So she took. Without thought, without common sense, with only a bit of Halloween-and-moonlight-inspired madness.
Finally, after what could have been five seconds or five minutes, she pulled her mouth away. She felt no embarrassment. Sheâd kissed a stranger. Not a big deal in the scheme of things, right? She hadnât robbed a bank, or fled from the police or been around during a shootout. Unlike some members of her family.
âOkay,â she said with a soft sigh.
âOkay?â he asked, looking surprisedâbut not displeased.
âYes. That was my one impulsive act for the day.â
âThat was it, huh?â
She nodded. âYep. One a dayâs my quota.â
He frowned. âToo bad.â Reaching up, he traced the line of her jaw with the tip of his finger. âBut, you know, itâs only an hour until midnight. Wanna stick around and see what impulse you feel like giving into tomorrow?â
Naughty. Very naughty. She liked that about him. âIâm afraid Iâve gotten it out of my system. One kiss was all I needed.â
âThatâs like saying all you need is one piece of rich, decadent chocolate.â His voice thickened. âSome things just scream to be tried again.â
She nibbled her lip. He was right. With some things, one was never enough. And this manâs kisses could be more addictive than chocolate. âIâve done enough trying for one night. At least now, if you end up killing me, Iâll die after having enjoyed a nice kiss.â
He tsked. âI only kill bad guys.â
Though she suspected he was teasing, his voice sounded somewhat serious. âIâm not a bad guy.â
âNo, youâre the mysterious, sultry, kissable innkeeper whose story I donât yet know.â He spoke so strangely, playfully almost, fitting in with the surreal mood sheâd felt all night.
âI donât have a story.â
He brushed a long tendril of hair off her face, his fingertips lingering on her temple. âEveryone has a story.â
âWhatâs yours?â She clarified. âOr, at least, what of yours can you tell me without needing to do me in?â
He laughed softly, and her breath hitched at the low, resonant sound. She liked the way this man sounded as much as she liked the way he looked.
âMaybe I donât have a story, either.â
âYou have âstoryâ written all over you.â
âToo bad itâs not in braille,â he said, all flirtatious charm. A twinkle in his eye dared her to follow his meaning.
She didâ¦and chuckled. âOkay, Mr. Stone, youâre very entertaining, but I do like to know something about the men I stumble over in darkened kitchens and kiss against their will.â
âWho said it was against my will?â
âYou certainly didnât ask for it,â she pointed out.
âI didnât ask the cheerleading squad at my high school to flash me and my buddies, either.â He grinned. âSome things you want are just obvious.â
âLike that second piece of chocolate,â she admitted, conceding the point. Then a gentle warmth spread through her as she focused on the want part of his statement. He wanted her. Or heâd at least wanted her kiss. So, she wasnât the only one affected by the seductive atmosphere in the air tonight.
Trying to turn this strange encounter into something more normal, she stepped away from him and walked to the huge storage freezer. Opening it, she pulled out a tray of frozen pumpkin muffins. After sheâd set it on the counter, she glanced over her shoulder, aware that he watched every move she made.
âBreakfast?â
She nodded. âYou are staying the entire weekend?â
âYes.â
She wondered if he could tell she was pleased. Then she sighed. âWeâve got a full house. Itâs going to be busy. Iâm sure Iâll be dead tired by Sunday night.â
He laughed, as if sheâd made a joke. âRight. Dead tired. I probably will be, too.â Though she raised an inquiring brow, he didnât elaborate. âSo, who else is here for this holiday weekend? Just who is sleeping in this house tonight, other than the innkeeper, the ex-movie starsâ¦and me?â
She nibbled her lip as she thought about it, trying to remember everyone whoâd checked in. So many facesâsome familiar, but some having come into Derryville for only this one event. A weekend magazine mention of the new haunted inn had appeared in a Chicago paper in time to get them several last-minute reservations. People appeared willing to travel a long way to spend a night in a haunted house on October 31. A spooky B & B was perfect for grown-ups who wanted to give in to their deep-rooted need to revisit childhood and scare themselves silly on Halloween. Without giving up pampering and comfort, of course.
âWell, in addition to the older couple, thereâs a pretty young doctor,â she said, remembering the woman sheâd shown to the Lady in Red room. âSomeone who says heâs an archeologist, and one woman who works at a museum. An older man with a thick foreign accent and a psychic from New Orleans. A couple of local residents. My aunt checked the rest of them in.â
Theyâd been busy getting everyone settled, plus hosting their spooky cocktail hour in the front parlor, for which everyone had dressed in costumes. She hadnât had time to question Hildy about who the other guests were. Sheâd said her hellos, chatting briefly with the Derryville residents whoâd come for their grand opening. After serving drinks and hors dâoeuvres, sheâd gone to change into her own costume for the trick-or-treaters.
He seemed amused. âSo, we have a couple of movie stars, a doctor, a mysterious foreigner, a professor type and a psychic?â
âAnd the ghosts, of course,â she added, wondering if her tone had made it sound like sheâd thought the foreign-sounding man was mysterious. Because, truthfully, that was what sheâd thought when sheâd met the man, who was probably sleeping peacefully on the third floor. But sheâd hate to think her personal reactions to her guests were so easily discerned.
âOh, yes, of course, mustnât forget the ghosts.â He obviously thought she was joking.
She could have explained, but how could one explain the unexplainable? Hildy did a much better job of that, anyway. Mr. Stone would likely get an earful about the ghosts at some point; she didnât want to spoil the mood now by getting into details about spooks. He probably already thought she was crazy for kissing him. He didnât need any more evidence that heâd landed in the Twilight Zone here at the Little Bohemie Inn.
âSo,â he said, âI guess youâll claim this is your average, everyday collection of guests at an inn?â
She countered with a pointed stare. âNo less average than your everyday assassin.â
âIâm not an assassin.â
âHit man?â
He rolled his eyes. âPlease.â
She waited, raising an expectant brow.
âAll right, Iâll tell you what I can. But you canât mention this to anyone unless you trust them implicitly. No one can know Iâm here yet.â He lowered his voice. âIt could be dangerous.â
Dangerous. Oh, yes, definitely. âTell me at least one thing. Are you running from something or to something?â
He thought about it for a moment. âIâm not running. But I am pursuing.â He gave her a look of startling intensity, loading his comment with double meaning.
Pursuing. Hmm. A hot romance? A weekend tryst? Mindless, erotic sex with a complete stranger?
âGo on,â she prodded, her voice sounding breathy.
He leaned across the counter, resting his elbows on its surface. Meeting her eyes, as if willing her to believe him, he said, âIâm undercover, Gwen. Deep, deep undercover.â
She lifted a brow. âYouâre a cop?â
âItâs a bit more complicated than that.â
When he didnât continue, she speculated aloud. Lifting her hand, she ticked off her fingers one at a time. âDeep undercover, on a mission, deadly if provoked, not a cop, a hit man or an assassin.â Giving him a cheeky grin, she concluded, âHmmâ¦you must be a woman armed with a high-limit credit card, scouting out Sakâs the night before their annual one-day sale.â
Not waiting for his response, she walked around from behind the counter and pulled out a chair at the massive, butcher block kitchen table. She sat down, even as the tiny voice in her brain urged her to go up to her temporary room and go back to bed.
Alone. Now.
But even as that voice of caution whispered, she knew sheâd ignore it. Tonight was becoming too exciting to consider leaving. The thrill was intoxicating. The danger appealed to a part of Gwen she thought sheâd lost forever. She somehow found herself feeling like the wild, uninhibited girl sheâd once been, before tragedy and sadness had made her decideâif only in her subconsciousâto play it safe and careful, to subdue the wild part of herself that had so often led her into trouble.
The floor was cold against her bare toes, so she lifted her feet, resting them on the bottom rung of the chair. Her white nightgown did an adequate job of covering her hips and thighs, but she kept her hands in her lap, holding everything in place.
But the gown was pulled tighter in this position. Sure, her legs were covered, but they were also outlined by the silky fabric. Her thighs were clearly delineated, as was the slight gap between them. She squeezed them together, watching him notice as he took the chair next to hers.
âThat was a good guess,â he finally said, his voice thin.
Good guess. What guess? She suddenly could barely remember her own name, much less what on earth theyâd been talking about.
âBut I donât think Iâd be tempted to kill someone for buying the pair of shoes I wanted.â
Ahh. Now she remembered. âHave you ever seen the discounts at Sakâs one-day sale?â
He shook his head.
âYou might be tempted. Particularly if theyâre great shoes and the person whoâs buying them looks like one of Cinderellaâs stepsisters, jamming a too-tubby foot in because theyâre cheap.â
âPossibly, but there are two things wrong with your theory.â
He leaned closer, until his knees almost touched hers, and her hair ruffled with his softly exhaled breaths. God, the man was seductive. Even talking about ridiculous things like hit men and shoe sales, all her nerve endings were at the highest state of alert. No amber here, she was full on red and waiting to see what sensual weapons he had left in his arsenal.
Though she knew she should have left, she didnât regret staying. She wanted to know what would happen next. What heâd say. What heâd do. And how sheâd react to it.
âWhat two things?â she finally managed to ask, trying to keep a coherent thought in her head. Difficult when she was so distracted by the way his skin smelled, like salty sea air, and the way his breath brought goose bumps to her bare throat.
âFirst, from what I know of Derryville, I donât imagine thereâs a Sakâs within a hundred miles.â
True. Coming here last winter had been definite culture shock. But small-town life had grown on her. âPoint taken.â
âAnd second, I donât use my dangerous weapons against anyone but the really bad people. Not greedy shoppers with fat feet, no matter how annoying they might be.â
âFor the record Iâm not one of those greedy shoppers.â
As if he couldnât help himself, he leaned closer. She had no idea what he was doing until he touched one of her feet, lifting it off the rung and cupping it in his big, warm hand.
Gwen wasnât a petite woman, but she thought she did have rather nice, slender feet. Feet which had suddenly become massive erogenous zones, because she ached to feel his fingers higher on her body. Much higher. Between her legs. On her breasts. At her throat. Against her cheek. Everywhere she wanted to be touched by him.
âAnd you donât have fat feet,â he said, continuing to stroke her foot, as if wanting to warm her sensitized skin. His touch ignited a flood of sensation that increased the temperature throughout her body. She was left wondering why no man had ever found that incredibly sensitive areaâ¦right there. Yes, that spot high on the inside of her foot, near her ankle. The one that almost made her squirm because, though the touch was focused in one location, she was feeling it everywhere.
She couldnât help emitting a tiny moan. God, if the manâs hands on her foot could make her shift in her seat, because of her bodyâs damp reaction, how on earth would she handle it if he ever touched elsewhere?
Finally, as if realizing he was erotically touching the foot of a near stranger, he let her go, gently lowering her leg until she rested her heel back on the chair rung.
When sheâd started breathing again, a day or twoâ¦minute or twoâ¦whateverâ¦later, she cleared her throat. Sitting here, being so affected by him, she needed to know more about the man. âJust who do you use your dangerous weapons on, Miles?â
He paused, looking like he was trying to decide how to answer. She recognized the naughty setup sheâd provided, and wondered if her subconscious had done it on purpose. Probably. Because sheâd certainly been thinking about one of Mr. Stoneâs âweaponsâ in particular, and who sheâd like him to use it on.
Uh, yeah, that one. And oh, right, her.
Finally, seeming to decide not to make a sultry comeback in spite of the opening, he frowned. âCan I trust you?â
She nodded. âEven though I grabbed you and kissed you in a moment of Halloween-induced insanity, yes, you can trust me.â
He tsked, as if reminding her that theyâd already had that argument. Then, reaching into an inside pocket of his black leather jacketâa well-worn, shoulder-hugging kind of jacketâhe pulled out a photo identification card. And a badge.
âYou are a cop?â
He shook his head and pointed to a logo. She made out some words, but didnât recognize them. âThe Shop? Whatâs that?â
âYouâve heard of the FBI, the CIA, the Secret Service, the Department of Homeland Security?â
âSure.â
âWeâre the deepest, darkest subunit of every one of them.â
She raised a brow. âYouâre a secret agent?â
His nod was grave. âYes.â
Gwenâs first thought was that, in spite of his very looks and smooth delivery, Miles wasnât a very good secret agent. Secret agents didnât go around telling people they were secret agents on undercover missions, did they? Except, maybe, for Austin Powers. Or James Bond when he wanted to get laid.
Whoa. That mental image distracted her for a good twenty seconds. She was no Bond girl, but the thought was enticing. Gwen Compton didnât have quite the ring of Pussy Galore or Alotta Fagina, but she was at least dressed for the part. Her hairânormally flat and straightâdid look extremely fabulous tonight, due to the leftover Glenda the Good Witch curls. And sheâd kissed him like some bold, confident mystery woman. Not to mention theyâd met under rather unusual circumstances. In a dark kitchen. On the spookiest night of the year. When she was half-naked.
Well, no wonder heâd started to act like James Bond!
âI wouldnât have told you this,â he continued, âbut I need your help. I need an ally inside this house.â Reaching down, he picked up a dark briefcase. She hadnât even noticed it.
While she watched silently, he opened the case. She glimpsed a manila envelope, in which appeared to be a number of papers and photos, with notations in a foreign language. The case also contained some sort of radio and electronic devices.
Miles pulled out a photograph, placed it on the tabletop, and pushed it toward her with the tip of one finger. âBoris Rockinova. Ex-KGB agent turned international arms dealer.â
Gwen stared at the picture, a black-and-white 8 x 10 of a middle-aged, balding man. Normal-looking. He could have bagged her groceries or sold her a car and sheâd never have given him a second look. She raised a doubtful brow. âHeâs a terrorist type?â
Miles nodded, retaining his serious expression.
âAnd you think he might be here? In Derryville?â She heard the skepticism in her own voice.
âI think he might be right hereâ¦in this house. Our contacts say heâs set up a meeting here this weekend with potential buyers, including a high-level member of an organized crime group from New York. We donât have the identity, but we know heâs working with a woman. This woman, code name Miss Jones, is supposed to make contact with him to arrange a weapons buy in preparation for a crime planned for the port of New York.â
âWho is she?â
âNot sure.â He glanced down at her body. âBut I know sheâs not you. The communication we intercepted says the woman will identify herself to our suspect by her code name, Miss Jones, and will reveal a star-shaped birthmark on her right collarbone.â
She followed his stare toward her own low neckline and grinned. âGood thing Iâm not wearing a turtleneck.â
He nodded, not cracking a smile, still intense and secretive, focused on his mission. âA very good thing.â
The heat in his stare told her he wasnât merely talking about any phantom birthmark. She swallowed hard, trying to focus on their conversation, not the attraction still snapping between them. âHow can you know all this?â
âWe know a lot about the people in this inn this weekend,â he admitted. âThat elderly couple?â
She raised an inquiring brow.
âCounterfeiters.â
Her jaw dropped.
âDouble-check any money they give you.â
âThey paid with a credit card,â she murmured, still not fully able to wrap her mind around this whole crazy scenario.
Maybe this guy was loco, maybe he was playing games with her, perhaps he was even an escapee from a mental institution. Maybe he was playing a big fat Halloween prank. Her instincts said there was more to this story than heâd said, that his charm hid as much as it revealed. Conventional wisdom told her she should be on the phone, out the door or arming herself with something sharp. Thatâs certainly what any quiet turtle would do.
To hell with that.
She forced the thought away. Gwen wasnât stupid enough to react foolishly out of a need to do something reckless and exciting for a change. But something about his story rang true, though she suspected he hadnât told her everything. Perhaps he was telling her only as much of the truth as he could.
He had identification, a briefcase full of documents and, if she wasnât mistaken, what looked like surveillance equipment. He was also intense and charming, suave and smooth-talking. Obviously intelligent, adept at slipping in the shadows.
The CIA, or the Shop, or whatever it was, could do worse. So it wasnât entirely impossible. And if there was any chance, whatsoever, that Miles was indeed who he said he was, she might have a dangerous criminal sleeping under her roof.
An international arms dealer, along with the ghosts, was enough to ruin any fledgling inn. At least for the 51.5 weeks of the year not involving Halloween. And that didnât even take into account the whole âbeing murdered in her bedâ scenario.
âAll right,â she finally said. Her voice sounded both a little skeptical and a little afraid. âIâll help you, Mr. Stone. Iâll be your ally this weekend. Tell me what you want me to do.â