Authors: Nora Roberts
Teetering on a new brink, she arched toward him. Her eyes locked on his as they linked hands. There was only his face in the moonlight, dark eyes, firm mouth, the rich flow of hair threaded with gold.
Swept by a rushing tide of love, she smiled up at him. "Take more of me." She felt his fingers tremble in hers. "Take all of me." Saw the flash that was both triumph and need in his eyes. "Take everything."
The fire reached out for both of them.
While she slept, he held her close against him and worked out the final points of his plan. It had as much chance of working, he'd decided, as it did of blowing up in his face.
Even odds weren't such a bad deal.
He'd have risked much worse for her, much more to prevent those tears from slipping down her cheeks again. He'd waited thirty years to fall, which, he concluded, was why he'd fallen so hard, and so fast.
Unless he wanted to take the more mystical route and believe it was all simply fated—the timing, the stone, M.J. Either way, he'd come to the same place. She was the first and only person he'd ever loved, and there was nothing he wouldn't do to protect her.
Even if it meant breaking her trust.
If this was the last time he'd lie beside her, he could hardly complain. She'd given him more in two days than he'd had in his entire life.
She loved him, and that answered all the questions.
As Jack lay in the deep country dark, contemplating his life, wondering about his future, another sat in a room washed with light. His day had been full, and now he was weary. But his mind wouldn't shut off, and he couldn't afford the fatigue.
* * * * *
He had watched fireworks streak across the sky. He had smiled, conversed, sipped fine wine. But all the while the rage had eaten at him, like a cancer.
Now, he was blessedly alone, in the room that soothed his soul. He feasted his eyes on the Renoir. Such lovely, subtle colors, he mused. Such exquisite brush strokes. And only he would ever look upon its magnificence.
There, the puzzle box of a Chinese emperor. Glossy with lacquer, a red dragon streaking over it and into a black sky. Priceless, full of secrets. And only he had the key.
Here, a ruby ring that had once graced the royal finger of Louis XIV. He slipped it on his pinkie, turned the stone toward the light and watched it shoot fire.
From the king's hand to his, he thought. With a few detours along the way, but it was where it belonged now.
Usually such things brought him a deep, exquisite pleasure.
But not tonight.
Some had been punished, he thought. Some were beyond punishment. Yet it wasn't enough.
His treasure room was filled with the stunning, the unique, the ancient. Yet it wasn't enough.
The Three Stars were the only thing that would satisfy him. He would trade every treasure he owned for them. For with them, he would need nothing else.
The fools believed they understood them. Believed they could control them. And elude him. They were meant for him, of course. Their power was always meant for him.
And the loss of them was like ground glass in his throat.
He rose, ripping the ruby from his finger and flinging it across the room like a child tossing a broken toy. He would have them back. He was sure of it. But a sacrifice must be made. To the god, he thought with a slow smile. Of course, a sacrifice to the god.
In blood.
He left the room, leaving the lights burning. And most of his sanity behind.
Jack considered leaving a note. When she woke, she'd be alone. At first, she'd probably assume he'd gone out to find that little store she'd spoken of, to buy some food.
She'd be impatient, a little annoyed. After an hour or so, she might worry that he'd gotten himself lost on the back roads.
But it wouldn't take her long to realize he was gone.
As he walked quietly down the stairs, just as dawn broke, he imagined her first reaction would be anger. She'd storm through the house, cursing him, threatening him. She'd probably kick something.
He was almost sorry to miss it.
She might even hate him for a while, he thought. But she'd be safe here. That was what mattered most.
He stepped outside, into the quiet mist of morning that shrouded the trees and hazed the sky. A few birds were up with him, stretching their vocal cords.
Grace's flowers perfumed the air like a fantasy, and there was dew on the grass.
He saw a deer, likely the same doe that had been on the lane the day before, standing at the edge of the woods.
They studied each other a moment, each both interested in and wary of the alien species. Then, dismissing him, she moved with hardly a sound along the verge of the trees, until she was slowly swallowed by them.
He glanced back at the house where he'd left M.J. sleeping. If everything went as he hoped, he'd be back for her by nightfall. It would take some doing, he knew, but he had to believe he'd convince her—eventually—that he'd acted for the best. And if her feelings were hurt, well, hurt feelings weren't terminal.
Again, he considered leaving a note—something short and to the point. But he decided against it. She'd figure it out for herself quickly enough. She was a sharp woman.
His woman, he thought as he slipped behind the wheel of the car. Whatever happened to him in the course of this day, she would be safe.
A soldier prepared for battle, a knight armed for the charge, he steeled himself to leave his lady and ride off into the mist. Such was his mood when he turned the key and the engine responded with a dull click.
His mood deflated like a sail emptied of wind.
Terrific, great, just what he needed. He swung out of the car, resisted slamming the door, and rounded the hood. Muttering oaths, he popped it, stuck his head under.
"Lose something, ace?"
Slowly he withdrew his head from under the hood. She was standing on the porch, legs spread, hands fisted on her hips, venom in her eyes. It had taken only a glance to see that his distributor cap was missing. He didn't even need to look at her to conclude that she'd nailed him.
But he was cool. He'd faced down worse than one angry woman in his checkered career. "Looks that way. You're up early, M.J."
"So are you, Jack."
"I was hungry." He flashed a smile—and kept his distance. "I thought I'd hunt up some breakfast."
She cocked a brow. "Got your club in the car?"
"My club?"
"That's what Neanderthals do, don't they? Get their club and go off into the woods to bash a bear for meat."
As she came down the steps toward him, he kept the smile plastered to his face, leaned back on the fender. "I had something a little more civilized in mind.
Something like bacon and eggs."
"Oh? And where are you going to find bacon and eggs around here at dawn?'
She had him there. "Ah… I thought I could, you know, find a farmer and—" The breath whooshed out of his lungs as her fist plunged into his belly.
"Don't you lie to me. Do I look stupid?"
He coughed, got his breath back and managed to straighten. "No. Listen—"
"Did you think I couldn't tell what was going on last night? The way you made love to me? Did you think you'd soften me up so I wouldn't know that was a big goodbye scene? You bastard!" She swung again, but this time he ducked, so she missed his jaw by inches.
Now his own temper began to climb. He'd never treated a woman with such care as he'd treated her with in the night, and now she was tossing it back in his face.
"What did you do, sneak down here in the middle of the night and sabotage my ride?"
He saw the answer to that in the thin, satisfied smile that spread on her face.
"Oh, that's nice. Real nice. Trusting."
"How dare you talk about trust! You were going to leave me here."
"Yeah, that's right. Now where's the distributor cap?" He took her by the arms, firmly, before she could take another shot at him. "Where is it?"
"Where do you think you're going? What sort of idiotic plan have you mapped out in that tiny, feeble brain of yours?"
"I'm going to take care of business," he said grimly. "I'll come back for you when I'm done."
"Come back for me? What am I, a pet?" She jerked, but didn't manage to free herself until she'd hammered her heel onto his instep. "You're going back to the city, aren't you? You're going looking for trouble."
His fury was such that he wondered only briefly how many bones in his foot she might have broken. "I know what I'm doing. It's what I do. And what you're going to do is give me the cap, then you're going to wait"
"The hell I am. We started this together, and we finish it together."
"No." He swung her around until her back was pressed into the car. "I'm not taking any chances with you."
"Since when are you in charge? I take my own chances. Get your hands off me."
' No." He leaned in, cuffing her hands with his. "For once in your life, you're going to do what you're told. You're going to stay here. I can move faster without you, and I'll be damned if I'm going to be distracted worrying about you."
"Nobody's asking you to worry about me. Just what are you planning to do?"
"I've wasted enough time letting them chase me. It's time to flush them out, on my turf, my terms."
"You're going after those two maniacs in the van?" Her heart lodged in her throat and was ruthlessly swallowed. "Fine. Good idea. I'm going with you."
"You're staying here. They haven't found this place, and it doesn't look like they're going to. You'll be safe." He lifted her to her toes, shook her. "M.J., I can't risk you. You're everything that matters to me. I love you."
"And I'm supposed to sit here, like some helpless female, and risk you?"
"Exactly."
"You arrogant jerk. What am I supposed to do if you get yourself killed? In case you've forgotten, this is my problem, my deal. You're the one who's along for the ride, and you're not going anywhere without me."
"You'll be in my way."
"That's bull. I've held my own through this thing. I'm going, Jack, and unless you want to ride your thumb back to D.C., that's the deal."
He jerked away, snarling. Then whirled to pace. He considered cuffing her inside the house. It would be an ugly struggle—he could almost have looked forward to that aspect of it—and he'd win. But if things went wrong, he couldn't know how long it would be before someone found her.
No, he couldn't leave her alone and handcuffed in some isolated house in the boondocks.
He could lie. Agree to her terms, then ditch her. She wouldn't be easy to shake, but it was an option. Or he could try a different tack altogether.
He turned, smiled winningly. "Okay, sugar, I'll come clean. I've had enough."
"Have you?"
"It was fun. It was educational. But it's getting tedious. Even the fifty thousand you promised me just isn't worth risking my neck for. So I figured I'd cruise up north for a few weeks, wait for things to blow over." He gave a careless shrug as she stared at him. "Things were getting a little heavy between you and me. That's not my style. So I figured I'd take off, avoid the obligatory scene. If I were you, I'd call the cops, turn over the stone, and chalk it all up to one of your more interesting holiday weekends."
"You're dumping me," she said, in a small voice that made him feel like sludge.
"Let's say I'm just moving on. A guy's got to look out for number one."
"All the things you said to me…"
"Hey, sugar, we're both free agents. We both know the score. Tell you what. I'll drop you off at the nearest town, give you a few bucks for transpo."
In answer, she staggered toward the porch, every step a slice through his heart.
When she collapsed, buried her face in her hands, he wished himself in hell.
She'll be safe, he reminded himself. All that mattered was that she'd be—
Laughing her guts out. He gaped as she threw back her head and roared with laughter. Her arms were clutched around her stomach, not in defense against heartbreak, but to keep herself from shaking apart with mirth.
"Oh, you idiot," she managed. "Did you really think I was going to fall for that?" She could hardly get the words out between great gusts of laughter. The darker his expression, the wilder her glee. "Now, I guess, I'm supposed to tearfully hand over the distributor cap and let you leave me off somewhere to nurse my shattered heart." She wiped her streaming eyes. "You're so in love with me, Dakota, you can't think straight."
He was thinking straight enough, he determined. He wondered how she'd like it if he closed his hands over that throat of hers and gave it a nice, loving squeeze.
"I could get over it," he muttered.
"No, you couldn't. It's hit you right between the eyes, and I know the feeling.
We're stuck with each other, Jack. There's no getting past it for either of us."
She breathed deep, rubbed a hand over her aching ribs. "I ought to kick your butt for trying this, but it was too stupid. And too sweet."
He jammed his hands in his pockets. It was the "sweet" that made him feel most foolish. Out-maneuvering her hadn't worked, he considered. Temper and threats hadn't made a dent, and lies had only amused her.
So he would try the truth, he decided. Simple, unvarnished. And he would plead with it.
"Okay, you got me." He walked over, sat beside her, took her hand. "I've never told anyone I loved them before," he began. "I never loved anyone. Not a woman, not family, not a friend."
"Jack." Swamped with emotion, she brushed the hair from his brow. "You just never had a chance to."
"Doesn't matter." He said it fiercely, his fingers tightening on hers. "I meant what I said last night. There's only you, M.J."
He pressed the back of her hand to his lips, held it there a moment. "You wouldn't understand that, not really. You've had other people in your life, important people."
"Yes." Touched, she leaned over, kissed his cheek. "There are people I love.
Maybe there's not only you, Jack. But there is you. And what I feel for you is different than anything I've felt before, for anyone."