“Yes. It’s in my trunk. I still think gluing the windows down is a stupid idea.”
“Then think of a better one, but do something!”
“But-”
“But nothing. I did the mice and it worked. Jason’s been staying over. But trust me, you owe me for handling that one. It’s your turn.”
“Are you naked?” Derek called out, his footsteps growing closer.
“Gotta go. Bye.” Gabrielle replaced the receiver at the same time Derek opened the bedroom door.
He must have been stripping all the way from the front door, because he was naked by the time he stepped into the doorway.
Gabrielle’s eyes gleamed as she looked at her husband. They might have been high school sweethearts and he’d been her first lover, but time had only made her love him more.
She raked her gaze over his aroused body. God, he was gorgeous. She slowly, seductively slid the sheets over her now fuller breasts and rounded stomach.
Derek’s eyes darkened at the sight. He stepped forward to join her and she thought she was the luckiest woman in the world.
And when his body draped hers, she could no longer think at all.
LIFE WAS all about risks, and Beth had taken a huge one stealing the nurse’s cell phone when the nutty patient at the far end of the hall had an honest-to-goodness heart attack. Nurse Stupid, as Beth liked to think of her, had been on the phone when the alarms went off and everyone ran down the hall.
Beth couldn’t believe her luck. She’d snuck out to find the nurse had dropped the phone on her desk. She already knew the construction work had been winding down and that would leave her without easy access to her lover, so she had to get her instructions to him any way she could.
She left him a message, telling him exactly what her sister had said about the electrical system being perfect. A perfect target that no one would ever follow up on, Beth thought. The perfect thing to sabotage. She instructed him to make sure he caused enough damage that there was no way her sister could close the deal on time. She had to make sure the house remained in her family’s possession until she discovered the diamonds. In her message, she warned that if she didn’t hear from him soon, she’d break out and come after him herself.
Yes, the call had been a risk, but she had him so wrapped around her finger with the lure of love, sex and money, he’d never turn her in.
She wiped the phone clean of prints and erased all trace of any outgoing calls before replacing it on the desk and climbing back into bed.
CHAPTER TEN
LAUREN NOW KNEW what it meant to bring a man to his knees. She relished Jason’s jaw-dropping reaction to her dress, a modern one-shoulder design with metallic gold body-hugging banding that ended midthigh. She hadn’t packed many nice clothes since she’d planned on renovating, not socializing. But she had brought two dresses she’d designed to show to Sharon, and she chose her favorite. She worried she was overdressed until she discovered their destination.
“Amber said the Top of the Hub is the ultimate romantic dining experience,” Jason told her on the car ride into Boston. He split his attention between her and the road.
She smiled. “I can’t wait.”
“I hope it’s worth it because I’m not used to wearing a jacket.” He shifted in his seat, obviously uncomfortable in his clothes.
She grinned. “It’s worth it to me. You look handsome, Jason.”
She realized she was seeing him dressed up for the first time ever, in tan khakis, a black sport jacket and a white shirt. A far cry from the boy she’d known or even the man who worked at her house every day.
At the restaurant they ate in comfortable but aware silence. Throughout the meal, their eyes remained locked on each other and not the view of the Boston skyline or the Back Bay fifty-two floors below.
She barely tasted her pan-seared salmon and would lay odds Jason could say the same of his braised short ribs. The fixed-price three-course meal was elaborate, the service attentive and the view spectacular.
But all she could focus on was the man in front of her.
And what a man he’d become. Caring, tender, dedicated. A man who’d lost everything he’d dreamed of and yet still managed to smile.
At her.
To play footsie under the table.
With her.
To whisper in her ear all the sexual, provocative things he wanted to do.
To her.
She barely tasted dessert. Instead she wanted desperately to taste him.
The car ride home was too long. Lauren was tipsy from champagne, antsy with desire, and she couldn’t control the need to constantly touch him. She nuzzled his neck and kept her hand on his thigh, just to the right of where touching would probably cause a car accident.
By the time they finally reached town and neared the turn for her grandmother’s house, Lauren was surprised the car windows weren’t fogged from their heavy breathing. So when she saw smoke coming from the back of the house, she thought she was imagining it.
“Holy shit,” Jason muttered, pulling into the driveway and slamming on the brakes.
Panic lodged in Lauren’s throat. “Oh my God.” A real fire.
“Call nine-one-one,” he directed, tossing her his cell phone as if she didn’t have one of her own.
She fumbled and started to dial, just as she realized her cat was probably in the house. “Trouble,” she muttered.
“I know. So dial. I’ll go see how bad it is.”
He reached for the door handle but she stopped him with a hand on his shoulder. “No, my cat. Trouble might be in the house!” She scrambled for the door and this time he stopped her.
“No! I’ll go look for the cat, you call nine-one-one. Now-before it spreads.” He jumped from the car before she could argue.
Time passed in a blur.
Jason running in through the front door to look for the cat. Smoke at the back of the house turning to flames. Bile and panic racing in her veins while she waited for Jason to come out. And finally the fire engine, sirens blaring, racing down the driveway, the men pulling out the hose.
Lauren had had the presence of mind to back the car into the street to make room for the fire truck and she stood there now, waiting for Jason to come out. She knew he wouldn’t go near the fire or put himself in direct danger, but her throat was tight until she finally caught a glimpse of him running out, Trouble in his arms.
Grateful and relieved, she bolted across the lawn to meet him, throwing her arms around him. “Thank you!” she said, peppering kisses on his lips and his cheeks.
“You’re welcome. The cat was in the study in the front of the house, looking out the window. Of course it was the last room I checked because it’s the room he rarely goes into.” Jason sounded out of breath but fine.
“You saved my cat!”
Despite the fire, Jason glanced at her and grinned.
“What? What’s so funny?” she asked.
He shook his head. “You said I saved your cat. That’s quite the change of heart from looking for a new owner for him.”
The ungrateful feline obviously didn’t like being squished. He purred loudly in protest and jumped out of Jason’s arms.
Lauren would never be so stupid.
“Excuse me.” A fireman in uniform walked over to them.
“Yes?” Lauren asked.
“Ms. Perkins?”
Lauren nodded.
“Hey, Jason.”
“Frank.” Jason acknowledged the other man with a nod of his head. “What did you find out?”
“The fire started in the electrical box in the mudroom.”
Jason narrowed his gaze.
Lauren knew exactly what he was thinking. “But the electrician signed off on the box. It was one of the few things in the house that wasn’t a problem!”
“Well, someone tinkered with it then,” Frank said.
“Tinkered with it?” she repeated.
“Sabotage?” Jason asked at the same time.
The other man nodded. “Looks that way, but we’ll have a final report in the morning. Another strange thing. Did you know the windows were glued shut? Had to break them to get in. Same with the door, but that’s pretty standard. Sorry.”