Into the Night

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Into the Night Page 29

by Suzanne Brockmann


  He took her hand from his leg—his hand was warm, his fingers big and square and roughened from work. It was a man’s hand. He may have been younger than she was, but his hands were that of a grown man.

  “You’re cold,” he said, still in that same quiet, gentle voice. “Maybe you should get a robe. Then we can talk.”

  This wasn’t happening the way she’d imagined. He wanted to talk. When she’d run this scenario in her head, he was already kissing her by now.

  But he was definitely keeping his distance. And she was cold.

  She pulled back the covers and slipped into bed beside him, shocking them both.

  “Charlotte—”

  “Please don’t tell me to leave!” She reached for Vince and found the warm flannel of James’s pajamas covering his hard, lean body. She fit against him perfectly, and his arms—as they went around her—felt so warm and solid, so familiar, just from the few times he’d held her in the past weeks. It shouldn’t have been, but it was like coming home.

  He was so different, physically, from James. James, whose memory had started to blur around the edges. It was all she could do not to cry.

  Vince held her tightly. “God, Charlie, I won’t. I’m not that strong, I’m sorry to admit. I just…I really don’t want you to do something that you’re not ready for.”

  She may not have been ready, but he certainly was. At close proximity like this, his desire for her was undeniable.

  “Do you really want to marry me?” he asked her.

  “Yes,” she told him. “I’ve thought about it, and yes, I really do.” She might’ve sounded more convincing if her voice hadn’t shook. “We can take the train up to Maryland and get married right away. Tomorrow.”

  He laughed. “You’re serious.” There was wonder in his voice, and he pulled back slightly from her so that he could look down into her eyes.

  “I’ve never been more serious about anything in my life.” Somehow she managed to hold his gaze.

  “Ah, God, Charlie,” he whispered.

  And then he finally kissed her.

  It was not the kiss that she’d imagined, however. Oh, it started that way—sweet and practically reverent. But she was the one who opened her mouth wide to him. She was the one who deepened that kiss, who came close to swallowing him whole. She was the one who took his hand and placed it upon her breast, who leaned into him, and who actually moaned aloud at the sensation.

  For someone inexperienced in the ways of the flesh, Vince had her beneath him in a record amount of time. She could feel him, heavy against her leg, and knew that it wouldn’t take much effort on his part for him to join them. God knows her body was willing even if her soul was stunned at the fact that this was actually happening.

  She’d imagined this, but she hadn’t dreamed she’d feel this way.

  And if James were watching from somewhere in heaven, surely he understood that this wasn’t about him, that she was doing this to keep Vince safe.

  “God, I love you!” Vince kissed her face, her jaw, her throat. “I’ll do everything in my power to make you happy, I swear I will. Tell me what to do. Tell me what you want. Tell me how to make love to you—how to make it last an hour.”

  He was dead serious and as he kissed her again, it was all she could do not to laugh. Or cry. Did she really want him to know what she liked? Did she really want him kissing her where only James had kissed her, touching her, stroking her where only James had touched and stroked?

  Yes!

  No.

  “I don’t know,” she admitted. “It’s different for women and men, and…” She touched his face, hoping he couldn’t tell how close to tears she still was.

  His love for her was so clearly written in his eyes. “I want this to be perfect.”

  She didn’t. She didn’t want it to be anything close to perfect. She just wanted…relief. And the knowledge that Vince was going to be safe.

  “It doesn’t have to be perfect right away,” she told him. “Really. We’ll have a whole lifetime to get it right.”

  “I’ve only got a week.”

  “No,” she said. “You see, that’s just the thing. If you’re my husband, you can still serve in the Marines, but the senator can pull some strings for us. I know he can. His influence, along with the fact that, well…” It was hard to choke out her husband’s name while Vince lay between her legs. She rushed the words. “James won a Medal of Honor. We can keep you stationed here in Washington. It can be done. It’s not talked about, but I know it’s done.”

  But Vincent was shaking his head. “I can’t do that.”

  “There are positions,” she said, “important positions here in Washington, that need to be filled by someone. You’ll still be serving your country, Vince.”

  “Sweetheart, I’m an experienced combat veteran.”

  “Yes,” she said. “You are. It makes more sense for you to stay home then. You’ve done more than your share.”

  He sighed. “Charlie, come on. You know that’s not how it works.”

  “Please.” She kissed him, pressed herself up against him. “Please don’t go back…”

  But Vince rolled off of her to lie on his back beside her, his eyes closed. “Shit! Excuse me. I’m sorry. I’m…God, you don’t know how sorry I am.”

  She reached for him, but he pulled himself out from under the covers. It was rather obvious just how sorry he was, and he quickly sat down on the far edge of the bed. “I guess the big question now is, do you really want to marry a guy who could end up just as dead as James?”

  Her eyes flooded with tears that she could no longer blink back, and the overflow escaped. She brushed them fiercely away. “I thought I could make you want to stay.”

  He turned to look at her. “There’s nothing in this world I want more than to spend the next eighty years right here with you. But I’m not the only man in the Marines who’s in love with someone incredible.”

  Charlotte held out her hand to him. “Please, will you let me try to convince you?”

  He looked at her fingers, saw her tears, but didn’t reach to take her hand. His face was so serious. “Will you marry me after, even when I tell you that I still have to leave?”

  She couldn’t deceive him and she let her hand drop to the blanket below. “No.”

  Vince nodded. “Do you…” He cleared his throat. “Do you honestly love me, Charlie?”

  She didn’t want to answer that, but her silence was just as revealing.

  “Ah,” he said.

  “I don’t want you to die,” she told him.

  “That’s what this is really about, isn’t it?” he asked. He laughed softly. “Wow. You really don’t want me to die, huh? My God.”

  “Is that so awful?” she said. “I care about you, Vince, I do—”

  “But you still love James.”

  She couldn’t deny that.

  “And yet you’re willing to…to give yourself to me as some kind of prize. Some kind of virgin sacrifice. You’re the sacrifice and I’m the virgin—that’s a nice twist, huh? But I’m supposed to be so grateful to you and so enthralled that I simply throw away everything I believe in because making love to you is so great?”

  “You’re twisting it all around.”

  “Am I?” he asked.

  She climbed out of bed, wanting him to understand. “You don’t know what it was like, waiting for news after Pearl Harbor was attacked. I can’t do that again. I can’t spend the next five years or however long this awful war lasts terrified that I’m going to get another of those telegrams. And I am not going to bury another husband.”

  “You’re not going to have another husband,” he told her, quiet again, “until you manage to bury your first. God, you’re beautiful, but I want more than your body, Charlotte.” He turned away from her. “I think you better go.”

  She went.

  Back to her room where, knowing how thin the walls in this house were, she cried as quietly as she could.

  �
��So you’re my consolation prize.”

  Brooke Bryant was more than just a little bit drunk. Joan could see it in her eyes and in the looseness of her movements as she held out her hand to Muldoon in greeting.

  Muldoon glanced at Joan before he answered Brooke. “Yes, ma’am. That seems to be what I am.”

  “You’re a little young,” Brooke said.

  The staff from the White House had discussed the Brooke-Muldoon age difference for several hours. Considering the alternatives, it was decided that it would be addressed in their press releases. They would call Brooke “young at heart,” and Muldoon would be a “mature young officer accustomed to a great deal of responsibility.” Whatever they did, though, the fifteen-year difference would be noticed and commented on. On late-night TV, Brooke would probably be the butt of more than one cradle-robbing joke because of it. But the positive press far outweighed the negative in this case.

  “Although someone with all those medals on his chest can’t be too young, can he?” Brooke continued. “So sure, why the hell not?”

  “My thoughts exactly,” Muldoon said, again with another look in Joan’s direction. When he looked back at Brooke, he bestowed his best smile upon her. It wasn’t as good as his genuine one, but it was pretty damn close. “You look beautiful tonight, ma’am.”

  Her gown was a deep shade of red that few women could wear. Brooke managed, as she always did, to look amazing. The gown was low cut and it seemed to be held on by a single tied bow in the back. When Joan first saw what Brooke was wearing, she’d started praying that the bow didn’t accidentally come undone while she was greeting Admirals Tucker and Crowley.

  There was a picture she didn’t want on page one of USA Today.

  “Thank you, darling,” Brooke said. “So do you. Although, if we’re going to fool anyone into thinking we’ve been fucking for weeks now, you might want to call me something other than ma’am. Unless we want the press to speculate on the intimate details of our so-called relationship. Of course, maybe we should drop them a few hints.” She turned to look for Dick. “What do you think, Dick? How about if Lieutenant Muldoon mentions to the press that I’m particularly good at giving head? Because surely the idea of me going down on a hero would boost my father’s popularity rating.”

  Okay.

  Myra and Dick pulled Brooke aside, as Joan took Muldoon’s arm and dragged him off a few feet.

  “I’m so sorry,” she said. “She’s not usually like this. She’s drunk.”

  “She’s pissed at being manipulated. I can relate.”

  “Will you do me a favor? When you get downstairs, try to keep her from having another drink.”

  Muldoon laughed. “She’s a grown-up. I can’t make her do anything she doesn’t want to do—including not drink.”

  “You can steer her away from the bar,” Joan said. “Please?”

  He didn’t answer right away. He just stood there looking at her. “I don’t think I owe you any favors right now,” he finally said.

  Oh, God. Joan closed her eyes briefly. She felt terrible. “I’ve apologized, Michael. I’ve tried to explain that I didn’t mean for any of this to happen—”

  “Except for the part where I escort Brooke to this party,” he interrupted. “That was your idea, thanks so much.”

  “One you didn’t seem to mind,” she countered sharply. “Especially when you called me up and asked for advice on how to make sure Brooke went home with you tonight, because you thought she was so hot…” Because of her email. Which Joan had written. Which Muldoon had known that Joan had written, which really meant…that he’d thought Joan was hot?

  She looked up at Muldoon and saw him watching her, waiting for her to figure it out.

  “You lied to me, too,” she said. It was not what she should have said, but unfortunately it was the first thing to fly out of her big mouth.

  “No,” he said. “Not really. I was just being stupid. I got it into my head that maybe you’d get jealous or, shoot, I don’t know. Notice me at least. I was going to come back here and lay it on the line—tell you I’m crazy about you. Make it clear that I don’t think of you as any kind of a sister.” He laughed. “Yeah, I had it all figured out. I was going to tell you that I think you’re a goddess and that I’d love to be your personal slave. That was how you put it, wasn’t it? Except now that I’ve been handed off to Brooke as a consolation prize without a single word of protest from you, I’m not sure that I think so highly of you anymore.”

  Joan didn’t know what to say. She didn’t know what to think. She could barely even breathe. She’d received plenty of criticism and her fair share of reprimands throughout her life, but nothing had ever stabbed as deeply as Muldoon’s quiet words.

  And to have it come on top of the news that he was crazy about her…?

  “I’m good at carrying out orders,” he continued. “Apparently tonight’s involve making the world believe Brooke and I have a relationship. Okay. You got it. Can do. And who knows? Maybe by tomorrow morning, it’ll be true. It can be a night of consolation prizes all around. Except for you. You get to win big, right?”

  Brooke was done being lectured by Myra and Dick, and there was no time for Joan to defend herself or rebutt or even say anything to Muldoon at all.

  “I’ve been ordered to muzzle it,” Brooke said as she took his arm. “Under pain of death, I suppose. Shall we face the gauntlet with our heads held high?”

  “Brooke,” Joan said. “Lieutenant Muldoon is not your consolation prize. He’s not any kind of a prize. He’s a…a friend of mine, and I’d appreciate it if you treated him with respect.”

  “Don’t worry, darling,” Brooke called over her shoulder. Muldoon didn’t even glance back. “I’ll take very good care of him.”

  “Brooke, I’m serious!”

  “I am, too,” she said.

  Joan followed them to the elevators, but with all the Secret Service agents piling in behind them, she had to wait for the next one. As the doors closed, Muldoon didn’t even look at her. He was busy smiling at something Brooke said.

  He was wrong.

  Joan wasn’t the one who was winning big here. She wasn’t even close.

  SEVENTEEN

  “AND WHERE EXACTLY do you live?” Mary Lou asked.

  Ihbraham pointed with the hand that wasn’t holding Haley to one of a row of nondescript apartment buildings across the street from the church. “I have a studio apartment on the fifth floor. It’s pretty small but it’s economical. Right now I have more important things upon which to spend my money.”

  “I know what that’s about,” she told him.

  They’d come down here to an AA meeting in Ihbraham’s neighborhood, because when they arrived at the Catholic church up by her house, the meeting room was being painted. There was a sign directing them to another location across town, but Ihbraham shook his head. It was a part of the city he wasn’t comfortable even driving through.

  That was when they decided to come down here. This meeting started a full hour later than most in the city, and it was a larger, open meeting, with chairs set up in anonymous rows instead of a more intimate circle.

  They’d sat in the back, near the door, in case Haley decided to go ballistic.

  The meeting was crowded, and the message, although not at all new, was a good one. Don’t drink tonight. Worry about tomorrow when tomorrow dawned.

  Instead of fighting to the front of the room for some store-bought refreshments, and since Haley was still wide awake and at her charming best after having spent the meeting sitting on Ihbraham’s lap and playing with his set of keys, they decided to go down the block to a little place that served ice cream.

  As usual, many people in the meeting had lit up cigarettes immediately upon exiting the church.

  “She could lose it any second,” Mary Lou warned Ihbraham, pushing the stroller alongside of him as they navigated their way through the crowd. Even though it was night, the sidewalks in this part of the city were bright a
s day. “I can take her now, if you want.”

  “Haley and I have reached an understanding,” Ihbraham said, giving Mary Lou one of what she had begun to think of as his nuclear-powered smiles. “If she won’t pull my beard, I’ll carry her—which we all know is more fun than riding in that stroller. Isn’t that right, little one?”

  He turned his smile on Haley, who laughed and clapped her hands, then reached out to hug Ihbraham tightly around the neck.

  For a moment he actually looked rattled. But only for a moment. Then he laughed, too.

  “She really likes you,” Mary Lou said. “Don’t you, jelly bean?”

  “I like you, too, Haley,” Ihbraham told her daughter. He spoke to her as if she were full grown and able to understand his every word. He didn’t talk down to her the way Bob did. Of course what Bob did was better than Sam, who just plain didn’t talk to her at all.

  Sure, he tickled her and flew her through the air and made raspberry noises on her neck.

  Of course, Mary Lou didn’t know what Sam did when she wasn’t around. It was possible he discussed physics with Haley then—but she wouldn’t bet on it.

  “Isn’t that the best feeling in the world?” she asked Ihbraham. “To get a hug like that from someone so, I don’t know, so…pure and perfect?”

  “It is probably one of them,” he agreed. “Yes.”

  “It’s kind of like hugging God.” Mary Lou laughed self-consciously. “Lordy, listen to me. I sound like I have a future writing sappy greeting cards. ’Course, I happen to love sappy greeting cards.”

  Not that she ever got more than one or two a year.

  Still, she loved looking at them in the grocery store. Thinking of you…Damn, someday she wanted to get a card from someone that said Thinking of you…on the front. Problem was, no one ever was thinking of her.

  “Do you ever think of me,” she asked Ihbraham, “you know, when I’m not around?”

  The look he shot her was indecipherable and he didn’t answer her—at least not right away.

  “I think of you at certain times, yes,” he said.

  “I’m sorry, that was actually a pretty dumb question,” she apologized. “I shouldn’t have asked, because what are you going to say? No, you never think of me at all? I mean, even if it’s true…”

 

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