Men Out of Uniform: 6 Book Omnibus
Page 27
When had he done this? she wondered, glaring at the car as though she could move it with the force of her gaze. Certainly it couldn’t have been last night--he’d been with her. Her body did a little meltdown, remembering. Before dinner then? She didn’t think so. Someone would have noticed and said something about it. No, it had to have been this morning.
Then it hit her.
He must have turned on his shower, then left it running while he sneaked downstairs and moved the car. She hadn’t heard the motor start, but then she doubted that she would have because she hadn’t been listening for it. She’d been too busy scurrying around, trying to finish getting ready to pay any attention to any noise other than his shower, which she’d noted had taken an especially long time. In fact, it had still been running when she’d hurried downstairs. In retrospect, that should have tipped her off. Payne was too efficient to linger in the shower.
Before completely giving up, she checked the doors to the vehicle and swore when she found them both locked. If he hadn’t locked them, she could have popped it out of gear and rolled the damned thing out of her way. As it was, she was stuck.
And she was fuming.
Muttering a string of curse words which would have made her mother head for a bar of soap, Emma strode back into the house. She made an unnecessary trip upstairs to look for Payne in his room, then backtracked downstairs once more and found him in the dining room.
His hair still damp, he looked up at her and smiled as she stomped toward his table. “You’re joining me for breakfast?”
“No. I’m joining you at your car. Come move it,” she ground out.
Looking slightly smug, Payne calmly slathered butter over his hotcakes. “I will when I’m ready to leave.”
“Do it now.”
“You should really try some of these,” he said, ignoring her order. “They’re fabulous. I missed breakfast yesterday,” he remarked casually, though there was an edge to his voice that made her skin prickle.
An implied “because of you” hung between them.
Emma felt her cheeks pinken. “Could you please just move your damned car?” she pleaded. “I have things to do.”
Payne looked up and his cool gaze tangled with hers. “I know that,” he explained patiently, “because we’re doing the same thing. I thought today we should go together.”
Emma felt her jaw drop. “Go together? Have you lost your mind?”
He selected a piece of bacon. “It saves me the time of having to find you.”
She crossed her arms over her chest and chewed the inside of her cheek to keep from screaming. “Here’s a thought,” she said, practically firing the words at him. “Why don’t you stop trying to find me and start looking for the damned pocket-watch,” she hissed shrilly.
This was completely counter-productive of her plan, but for some reason she’d lost sight of that. She imagined because if he was near her, she wanted to have sex with him and, after last night, grimly suspected she wouldn’t be choosy about where. The Hummer, the Bug, the antique malls, the side of the building. Didn’t matter. He had that kind of effect on her. She became mindless and stupid and desperate and the thought of having that big, hard body of his pumping in and out of hers made her belly and thighs clench and her sex tingle and slicken.
“Why don’t you sit down and have some breakfast?” Payne countered. “It’s the most important meal of the day.”
“I’m not here for a lecture on proper nutrition, Payne,” she snapped. “I’m here to find that pocket-watch before you do. Just because we had sex last night doesn’t mean that anything has changed.”
“I figured that out when you threw me out this morning,” he drawled, shooting her a cool look. “But for the record, I never expected it to.”
Emma inwardly squirmed, not altogether proud of herself for waking him up and sending him on his way. Brian Payne awake was formidable and thrilling--Brian Payne asleep and vulnerable was somehow more so.
Emma had stood next to the bed and traced the beautiful landscape of his face, the straight line of his nose, the angled curve of his jaw and those amazingly perfect lips. She’d been strangely awed by the soft patch of skin next to his eyes, the soft, sweet curl of the little hairs behind his ears. Her stomach had filled with fizzy air, then had shuddered out of her and a weird pang had squeezed her chest, one that was almost too intense to bear because it smacked of a tender emotion which had no business between them.
That’s when she’d poked him.
She’d had to, or she would have crawled back into that bed with him and they would have made love again and then they would have slept until noon and possibly never left the room. And as fantastic as that would have been, it wouldn’t have put her any closer to finding the pocket-watch and securing her future.
Only an idiot would want to nurse a bud of romance between her and Brian Payne, knowing that the inevitable first frost of the relationship would leave her broken-hearted, broke and wretched. And Emma was many things, but an idiot wasn’t one of them. So, though she’d winced inside, she’d woken him up and shown him to the door, firmly convinced that all would go according to her plan.
That part had been wrong, she thought, smiling up at Harry as he slid a stack of hotcakes and sausage in front of her, but the day wasn’t over yet and she still had a few tricks up her sleeve.
He might have won this battle, but he hadn’t won the war.
“Fine,” Emma relented, as though she actually had a choice. “I’ll wait on you to move your car.”
“How about you ride with me today?”
“Sorry,” she said sweetly. “I’m claustrophobic.”
“Then I’ll ride with you.”
No he wouldn’t, Emma thought, but didn’t say anything. She could argue with him, but that would only turn her on, and then she might actually relent. Better to let him think he held the upper hand, then show him otherwise later.
Finished with breakfast, Payne made a point to go and tell Matthew how much he enjoyed it before walking outside where she’d been waiting on him. She climbed into the Hummer and let it warm up while he descended the steps.
“I’ll be right back,” he told her.
Making a point to look stoically resigned to his presence, Emma merely nodded. The instant he moved the car, however, she put the Hummer in gear and spun gravel, shooting out of the driveway. Payne’s thunderous expression filled her rearview mirror, making a long peel of laughter bubble up her throat. She powered the window down and twinkled her fingers at him as she drove away without him.
He followed her, of course, but the priceless look on his face was worth her petty act of defiance. Just because he was used to giving orders didn’t mean she had to take them.
The sooner he learned that, the better off he’d be.
* * *
“You’re a piece of work, you know that?” Payne remarked. He leaned against the building she was about to go into, but didn’t follow her.
“I try,” she said. Hand poised on the doorknob, she frowned at him. “What? Do you have some sort of psychic way of knowing that the pocket-watch isn’t in this store?”
He dumped a package of peanuts down his throat and chased it with a drink of soda. “No.”
She cocked her head, seemingly exasperated. “Then why aren’t you following me?”
“I thought you didn’t want me to follow you.”
Emma looked heavenward, released a small put-upon sigh. “That hasn’t stopped you in the past. So why aren’t you following me now?”
“Because I went into that particular shop yesterday while I was looking for you and I already know that it’s not there.”
She blinked at him, annoyed. “Then why the hell did you let me drive over here?”
“I would have stopped you if I’d been in the car with you,” Payne told her.
Her eyes widened. “You’re still pouting because I left you?”
“I’m not pouting,” Payne said through suddenly clenched teeth. He didn
’t pout, dammit. “I’m just saying that since we’re both looking for the same thing, it would go a whole lot faster if we’d simply combine the search.” And, yes, it had been particularly maddening when she’d driven off without him, but given what he’d witnessed over the past few days, he didn’t know why he’d been surprised. She’d merely been acting in character.
He was the one who’d slipped out of it.
“Then what happens when we both find it, Captain Logic?” she asked, smiling as though he were an imbecile. “Are we going to build a fire and sing Kum By Yah?”
“Whoever puts their hand on it first gets it,” Payne told her.
And he fully intended to let her find it first, then buy it from her for Hastings’ price. Emma wanted to complete the mission--to best him--and get the money. She could have all three and he could fulfill his favor for Garrett.
He would have his freedom, Emma would have her new start, and if it cost him a little cash, then so be it. He inwardly shrugged. It’s not like he didn’t have the money, and in this case, he didn’t mind spending it. A telling truth lay in that insight, but Payne didn’t care to explore it. Instead, he studied Emma and tried to gauge her thoughts.
Several beats passed while she weighed her decision. “Let me think about it,” she finally told him. She grimaced. “Right now I need to find a little girl’s room.”
He nodded, pleased that she hadn’t discounted the idea outright. He’d fully expected her to, but clearly she recognized that she was spending too much time trying to avoid him and not enough time looking for the watch. That was progress, Payne thought, and settled in outside the store to wait for her.
Ten minutes later, cursing hotly under his breath, he realized he’d been had. He strolled around the store, looking for her and when the search came up empty, resigned himself to asking the clerk where she’d gone.
“She asked to use the bathroom. I don’t know where she went after that.”
“Is there a back door?”
“There is, but she couldn’t have gone out that way. We’re unloading a truck right now, and it’s backed flush against the door.”
Then she had to have come out the front door, right past him. As implausible as it seemed, she’d somehow managed to walk right by him without him realizing it. This was freaking unbelievable, Payne thought, as he strode for the door. A stabbing pain developed behind his right eye and he was suddenly hit with the insane urge to lean his head back and howl. How in God’s name had he allowed this woman to get so far under his skin that he couldn’t simply keep track of her? He’d tailed terrorists with better success, dammit.
Payne paused outside the door, forced himself to concentrate. Who’d come out? he wondered. He thought back. A man, mid-forties with a balding pate. An older lady who’d walked with a cane and a younger petite blonde. That’d been it. Emma hadn’t--
A younger petite blonde...
A wig, Payne realized. She hadn’t needed to pee--the ruthless witch had needed to go get into disguise. Payne stood there, astonished, glued to the pavement. A slow disbelieving smile spread across his lips and, were he not so damned annoyed, he’d be mightily impressed. Ruthless and resourceful. With his luck she was going to find the pocket-watch before he did and then she’d disappear without so much as a backward glance.
For some reason, the idea of never seeing her again was a lot more distressing than losing this infernal contest. He frowned, forcing the thought from his mind.
At any rate, his plan was crucial to him finding it first. He was trying to do the right thing, dammit. Was trying to be noble, and she was thwarting him at every opportunity.
Actually, a little voice spoke up, the noble thing to do would be to bow out completely, but for whatever reason, Payne simply couldn’t do it. The idea of losing was so foreign and abhorrent he couldn’t even entertain it. Furthermore, the favor would only be fulfilled if he won--if he delivered the pocket-watch to Garrett. Freedom lay in that plan and God knows he needed it. In fact, he needed that freedom from obligation as much as Emma Langsford needed Hastings money.
Would she see it that way? Payne paused, consideringly. To be fair, yes, she probably would. But that wouldn’t stop her from trying to complete her task any more than knowing she needed the money was making him give up his.
His lips twisted. He supposed that made him every bit as ruthless as her reputation purported her to be.
Determined to find her once again, Payne made his way back to where they’d parked and breathed a silent sigh of relief that the H2 was still there. Knowing where she’d been helped narrow things down, so rather than take off on a fool’s errand, Payne put his pragmatic mind to work and determined that she had to be one of three places.
Naturally, he found her in the third. His lips quirked as he watched her blow the long blonde hair out of her face while she poured over another display case. He noticed that she’d changed sweaters as well. This morning she’d worn a pale green cableknit--now she sported an Ole Miss sweatshirt.
Heat detonated in his loins as he watched her and he was suddenly hit with how arousing this little cat and mouse game between them had been. Aside from being annoying, it was damned fun. She was a worthy adversary, an equal, he realized with a start, wondering if he’d ever met a female counterpart before. He instinctively knew he hadn’t.
Payne spotted a bathroom in the back and calculated the time it would take to get her in there. He quietly stole up behind her, slid his fingers against the back of her neck and heard her gasp. The sound made his dick jerk hard against his jeans.
“Another point for you,” he said silkily, glad that he’d taken the time to hit a drug-store before finding her. “Want to claim your prize?”
Emma turned around. Her sugared-violet gaze was guarded, but dark with a desire he knew matched his own. “What’s that?”
“Me,” he said, bending down and sliding his tongue over her bottom lip.
She whimpered, torn. “Payne.”
“You know you want me.”
He threaded his fingers through hers and tugged her toward the bathroom. The second the door closed behind them, he flipped the lock, tugged the wig off and went for the snap at his jeans. She shucked her own, not bothering with her shirt. A second later, he sheathed himself in a condom, picked her up and backed her against the wall.
Half a second later he was inside of her and his world brightened accordingly.
She laughed, seemingly as relieved as he felt to be holding her, taking her. “Oh, God, Payne. This is crazy.” She nipped at his neck, sucked hard.
He pumped harder, back and forth, back and forth, letting a newer, better tension take hold. “I can’t help it,” he confessed. “When I see you, something inside of me snaps and I’ve got to have you.”
She kissed him, pulled his tongue deep into her mouth and sucked it, mimicking the blow-job she’d given him last night. He felt his legs weaken as the beginnings of climax gathered force in his loins.
“I know what you mean,” she said. “I’ve been thinking about licking you all over since I ran into you at the airport.” He felt her clench her feminine muscles around him, holding onto him. “You’re big and strong and so damned calm I want to shake you up, to make you lose it,” she all but growled.
She certainly had a way of doing that, he thought. He pounded into her greedy body, pushed and pushed until he was certain someone was going to hear them, but he didn’t give a damn. She was hot and tiny and for the moment, his and he wanted nothing more than to lose himself inside of her.
Emma pumped and flexed harder against him, went wild and he knew she was close, knew that the same madness that was pounding through his veins had infected hers as well. Her body suddenly went rigid and she clamped around him over and over again, triggering his own orgasm.
It blasted from his loins with enough force to blow the end out the condom, but at the moment he didn’t give a damn. He locked his knees to keep them from giving way and held her aroun
d him while the last contractions of her own release milked his.
Breathing hard, he kissed her cheek and settled his forehead against hers. “God, woman, you’re going to be the death of me. Don’t hide from me again,” he told her, meaning it in more than ways than he should. “It’s insulting.”
CHAPTER 11
“You know, I’m starting to wonder if the damn thing even exists.”
“The pocket-watch?” Payne asked.
Emma nodded, scooped up a handful of grain and let the strawberry roan nibble from her palm. Dubbed Cinnamon, Emma and the horse had become fast friends over the past couple of days.
Much like she and Payne, she thought, a soft smile curling her lips.
“I’ve wondered that myself,” he said. Looking oddly in his element, he was currently stroking the Lazarus, the dappled gray Harry had told them he’d saved from the slaughter house.
Ever since the bathroom incident, when Payne had told her to stop hiding from him, that it was insulting, Emma had given up trying to give him the slip. There’d been a desperate, almost vulnerable quality to his order that had made something in her heart stir and, while she firmly intended to get to the pocket-watch before him--even if it meant she had to wrestle him for it--she fully believed that he was a man of his word. He’d said whoever put their hand on it first, won. She mentally shrugged.
Simple enough.
It was a waste of both of their time to duplicate efforts and, since they’d combined forces over the past couple of days, they’d covered considerably more ground. They’d canvassed every antique and hole-in-the-wall shop in the area, had cross-reverenced the owners of said shops with the names on the list which had been provided by the auction house, thereby ruling out a few of those so-called leads.
Today they’d interviewed half a dozen people who’d bought watches from that auction and planned to talk to the others tomorrow. After that, they would have exhausted every lead and would either have to concede defeat--a prospect she didn’t even want to entertain--or start from scratch.