Read Into the Crossfire Online
Authors: Lisa Marie Rice
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conversation, be distant when saying good night, avoid the kiss.
But he didn't look smug. He looked serious, stern, as if wild sexual
attraction were the most dangerous thing on earth.
And it was. A loaded grenade, in fact.
Oh God, she had to nip this in the bud, and fast.
"Look, I--" Nicole's eyes widened in dismay. The words didn't come out.
This was terrifying. All that came out was a huff of air as her throat tightened. She
had to stop and try again.
"Look." Through sheer willpower she steadied her voice, tugging her hand
from his. Trying to, anyway. His hold was painless but unbreakable. "There's
something I need to say to you, right up front, Sam. And I need you to listen to me
carefully."
He bowed his head, eyes always on hers. "Fine." He tightened his warm
grasp slightly. "But I want to be touching you while I listen."
Well, hell. Him not touching her was part of what she wanted to say. But
her hand felt...wonderful in his. Warm, surrounded by hard male flesh, somehow
safe.
She took a deep breath because this wasn't going to be easy.
For a moment she simply looked at him, at this very large, very strong,
utterly male man who had most improbably woken up her dormant libido at
exactly the wrong time in her life. She had an enormous pang of regret for what
she had to say to him, but there was no evading it. It had to be done.
From the moment she'd gone to pick up her sick father in Dushanbe and
had been told by the doctors what condition he was in, she'd known that her old
life was over and that everything but caring for her father was going to have to be
tossed overboard. Her carefree single life in Geneva, friends, a love life.
Everything had to go. She'd seen it all in one moment of brutal clarity.
The only other thing she could allow into her life was work, and that was
purely out of necessity.
She hadn't been even remotely tempted to allow anything else into her life
before now, but somehow Sam Reston made her yearn, yearn for the affair they
might have had if things had been different.
But they weren't.
"This...this thing between us--" she waved her free hand between them,
"and you'll notice I'm not denying that there's something. But whatever it is, it has
to stop here. Much as I'd like to explore it, I can't."
His face was utterly impassive and he held himself still. He didn't even
appear to be breathing. He was completely concentrated on her, all that male
power, tightly focused on her.
She'd asked him to listen carefully because she thought he wouldn't want to
hear what she was saying. He didn't show any trace of denial, though, as most men
would have. Maybe that was a soldier's gift--to see what was. If you couldn't see
reality, no matter how unpalatable, you were dead.
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"Explain, please." The deep voice sounded thoughtful, not angry or
defensive.
"Okay. I need to tell you where my life is right now." Deep breath. Let it
out in one controlled stream. Just like her yoga teacher had taught her. "A little
over a year ago I was living in Geneva, where I'd gone to university. I was
working for the UN as a translator. I loved my job and I had a wide circle of
friends and an active social life."
She looked out the window for a second, allowing herself the sharp pang of
pain at what had been lost.
How incredibly happy she'd been. Young, single, earning well. She'd loved
translating, her colleagues, her friends, her life. The UN paid very well, in Swiss
francs and tax free. Geneva was a dream city--pretty and green and safe,
surrounded by gorgeous mountains with the best skiing in the world. A short train
ride away from southern France and northern Italy.
The world had been her oyster. She suppressed a sigh. Those days were
gone, forever.
She looked back at Sam, watching her steadily. "Well," she said briskly, "I
imagine you know all that if you checked my website. Or at least you'd know the
basics."
"Yeah." The deep voice was quiet. "I know you lived in Geneva and
worked for the UN. Sounds interesting."
A sharp little stab to the heart. "Yes, yes it was interesting. I loved it."
Nicole sat up straighter, stiffening her spine. It had been good. It was now over.
Deal. "But now I have other priorities. I've always been close to my parents. My
mother died in a car accident in 2004 and it was a huge blow to my father and me.
We just had each other. When I graduated and started my new job, he was
appointed ambassador to Tajikistan, with special plenipotentiary powers. He
seemed as happy in his new life as I was in mine. So I had no inkling of trouble
when the call came. Midnight, on the fourteenth of May, a little over a year ago.
The call was to say that Dad was in the hospital."
Nicole's mouth tightened. She remembered the scene so vividly. The call
had come on a Friday evening. She'd been packing for a ski holiday on the
glaciers, happily thinking of snow and schnaps and schnitzli. Then her world fell
apart. The caller was an embassy secretary, to say that her father was in the ICU.
An hour later, Nicole had been at the Geneva airport, waiting for the first of four
connections for the 24-hour trip to get to her father's side.
"The Embassy said that my--my father was very ill, in a coma. I left
immediately and when I arrived in Dushanbe, Dad was just coming out of it. In
carrying out a CAT scan to exclude a stroke, they discovered that--"
Oh God. This was so hard to say. Her hand in his started trembling and his
hold tightened slightly.
Just say it.
"They discovered that he has brain cancer. Not one big tumor, which would
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be serious but perhaps treatable. His brain is riddled with them, almost too
numerous to count, the doctors said. Inoperable. The only thing they could do for
him was radiotherapy to extend his lifespan a little, and some chemotherapy. I was
making arrangements to fly him back with me on a medevac flight to Geneva,
when he started waking up. I knew I could cope in Geneva. I could find a larger
house to rent; medical care there is excellent; the UN has a very generous health
plan that includes relatives; I was phoning people, working it all out. When he was
fully awake, Dad was told his condition. And--and he told me he'd served his
country abroad all his adult life, and that now he wanted to go home, back to the
States to--"
Nicole's throat seized up, simply wouldn't work. Her eyes prickled and she
had to look away for a second. She swallowed. Sam didn't show any impatience at
all. He simply sat, looking at her, holding her hand. Quiet and still and focused.
A minute, two. She stared blindly out the window until she could get her
voice back. She drew in a shuddering breath and looked back at him.
"To die. He wanted to come back home to die," she finally whispered. A
single tear spilled from her eye and plopped onto the table. And here she thought
she had no tears left.
Sam dried the track it had left with his thumb. The skin of his finger was
rough, like a cat's tongue, the touch delicate.
"Sorry," she said, bowing her head. A weeping dinner date was no fun.
"Sorry?" He frowned. "For what?"
She was sorry about everything. Sorry that she was soon going to lose her
father, sorry about her reduced life, sorry that this attraction couldn't go anywhere.
Okay, the next bit just had to be said.
"From that moment, from the moment I learned that my father was very ill
and that he wanted to come home, my life changed on a dime. I quit my job and
we moved here, to the house my grandmother left me." Nicole tried to make her
voice brisk. "So, Sam. Like it or not, this is my life. My father is dying and we
have no money. While closing up Dad's affairs, I discovered that Dad had invested
his life savings in a mutual fund run by Lawrence Karloff."
She nodded when he winced. The tangled lawsuits of the thousands of
people who'd lost every cent of their savings in the giant Ponzi scheme run by the
Wall Street legend were still making headlines.
"Yes, indeed. Dad lost every penny he'd ever put aside to that bastard
Karloff. He is essentially penniless. That SOB took everything. And since Dad had
to retire from the State Department early for reasons of health, he has a reduced
pension. Basically, the pension pays for the utilities, food, taxes and that's about it.
The State Department covers hospitalization. But the costs for his nursing care,
our housekeeper, his physical rehab, the drugs...they're all astronomical and they're
all on me. I don't think we could have afforded to actually move back to the States
if my grandmother hadn't left me our house. Luckily, we don't have to pay rent or
a mortgage. Otherwise I don't think it would have worked and Dad wouldn't have
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gotten his--his wish.
"So we came back to the States. I founded Wordsmith with my contacts
from university and from my UN job. I tried to work out of the house all last year,
but it wasn't ideal. Dad, bless him, interrupted a thousand times a day, and I do
need to meet with clients, so that's when I decided to get an office downtown. At
Wordsmith we're good at what we do, but it's a typical small company that is
growing steadily but not always fast enough. With what I earn from it, I can barely
keep up with the medical bills."
She looked him straight in the eye. Recounting her life like this was painful
and depressing. And, unfortunately, necessary.
"I'm not saying any of this to make you feel sorry for me. Please don't. I'm
doing exactly what I want to do and right now, I wouldn't have my life any other
way. But I do need you to know that this is my life and there's no reason why any
of my problems should be a part of yours. It's no fun dating someone who has no
money for anything. And it's not just money I lack. Every second of my day is
dedicated to my father or to work. That's it, that's what I do. I take care of Dad and
I work. I don't go out, I don't go to the movies or to plays or concerts. I can't even
think of a vacation--not even just a couple of days away. I won't leave my father
alone and I couldn't afford it anyway. This is the situation as long as my dad is
alive, which I hope with all my heart will be as long as possible. So you see, I am
not free to just...come out and play with you. There's nothing lighthearted or easy
about my life right now, Sam. I am, in all senses, a burden. I'm saying this to you
because you--well, your body language is pretty clear. You seem to be, for want of
a better word, attracted. Am I right?"
He nodded, eyes never leaving hers. "Jesus. Absolutely. From the first
second I saw you."
She sighed. He wasn't making it any easier. The attraction was mutual.
Except she'd been able to explain away the sharp awareness of him, the
accelerated heartbeat, the slight trembling when she saw him as fear of a
dangerous-looking man.
He was still dangerous-looking, but it wasn't fear she felt. Oh God, no.
He wasn't handsome but he had sharp, clean features, the strong features of
a man used to wielding authority. The whole package--the outsize body, the big
rough hands, the penetrating dark eyes, the no-nonsense air, the deep voice--was
delectable and made her tremble deep inside.
She'd been so caught up in what she was telling him that she had had no
sense of herself, but now sensations came rushing back in.
She was aroused by him, it was absolutely unmistakeable. Right now, in a
perfectly nice Lebanese restaurant, blood was rushing to her sex and her breasts,
her breathing was speeding up, her head filled with heated images of her crawling
onto his lap and simply licking him all over.
Nicole hated machos. She'd grown up in third-world countries where the
most idiotic male felt he was superior to all women because he had a Y
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chromosome and a piece of flesh dangling between his legs.
She was immune to their posturing, to their torrid glances and boasts of
sexual prowess.
But Sam Reston was the real deal. He didn't flaunt his maleness, it
just...was. As much a part of him as his hands or feet. Male strength, not just of his
muscles, but of his will, exuded from him, together with a godzillion male
pheromones that had her heart racing.
He was still holding her hand and the connection felt electric, the heat
running all the way up her arm. Even his smell was delicious. Not a cologne, just
clean male skin, the starch in his blindingly white shirt, and a faint scent of soap.
Not Armani or Boss, but still guaranteed to make female hearts trip up. He simply
exuded power and sex.
Hormone city.
She was as turned on as she'd ever been in her life, yet they were simply
sitting in a restaurant, hand in hand. Though nothing overt was happening at all,
her chest felt tight and it was hard to breathe. She was hot all over, like she had a
fever.
She had never felt this before, and it wasn't...unpleasant. How sad to have
to give it up without even having a chance to taste it first.
With a sigh, she tugged and he allowed her to slip her hand from his. She