Authors: Bobbie Cole
The man didn’t speak but acknowledged Seth by meeting his eyes in his mirror briefly.
“What’s your name?” Seth asked.
“Guillermo. William.”
“William, how would you feel about spending the night in a motel next door to us?” Seth waved his free hand at the storm outside their car. “I’ll pay for your room, your dinner, and I’ll throw in an extra couple hundred dollars for your trouble. Five if you’ll go for supper and bring us back a nice meal.”
William nodded. “Want me to find a place?”
“Please.” Seth’s body visibly relaxed. Charlie could feel the tension ease in the hand that held hers and in the thigh that brushed hers.
William chuckled. “We have what the locals call love motels. Pay by the hour or by the night. There are a couple close by.”
“As long as they don’t have bugs or spiders, and as long as they aren’t easily compromised,” Seth said. “Sure, why not?”
“They’re very nice. Even provide toothbrushes and condoms.”
William lowered his head after speaking and feigned concentrating on the road, but Charlie saw him cut his eyes upward now and then, gauging her reaction.
Most likely because I gasped,
thought Charlie. She couldn’t suppress a smile, though, because she was sure that in his mind, William had been chatting with another male passenger and had forgotten about the female in the backseat.
Oh, perfect, a storm. And a motel with toothbrushes and condoms. Whoopee. Just what I’ve wanted.
With pretty lingerie she rarely got the chance to wear, a new pair of sandals to show off the ankle bracelet she hadn’t worn in over two years and her favorite perfume back at the posh hotel where their luggage sat, unpacked and waiting.
Her eyes grew wide, and she stifled another gasp as William pulled into a motel’s single exit/entrance. This was like some circus ride. Jump in, jump off after the ride was over. She was positive many a man had taken his mistress to this place.
Seth handed over a credit card when William let the electric window down, and the attendant took their information, then swiped the card and directed them to two of the units, side by side. Charlie giggled despite herself. She was sure the attendant received many visitors with a variety of kinky preferences, but she’d never imagined herself going to a love motel with two men, one of whom didn’t remember her and the other a stranger.
William pulled into an open cavern-looking place then pressed a hand-held electronic device that the attendant had given him, and a massive garage door closed behind them. Once he’d killed the engine, William stepped out and opened the door.
Charlie was amazed. The garage floor was tiled, and the ceiling was bóveda, made of bricks that had been widely arched.
Past the garage was a spacious, inviting apartment with a bed, kitchenette and large bathroom. As William had said, there was a basket full of everything a couple would want…for a few hours or a night. Charlie picked up the guest soap and sniffed, surprised and pleased. Maybe this wouldn’t be so bad after all.
Seth could have done without William’s sly comment about the condoms being available, but he hadn’t wanted to brave the storm looking for a different place to crash. He figured he should feel guilty for sending William back into the storm for food, but a local eatery could provide plenty for the three of them, and the trip would be safer and quicker for the driver, who had left only moments earlier, saying he’d be back within the hour with supplies.
Seth sat on the edge of the first bed he came to and leaned against the inviting softness. The mattress was well-worn but not uncomfortable. Yeah, he could fall asleep here.
He sat up, however, not willing to be the first to fall asleep, not when he was responsible for Charlie’s safety and comfort. Some trip he’d provided. He’d had her travel hundreds of miles without feeding her until she looked as if she could pass out. He’d had her traipse all over both a clean, modern hospital and a grungy, inner city clinic where they could have been mugged or killed. She’d been a trooper, flashing her smile and her badge, helping him get the information he needed. Sure, she said she was also working on a cold case from Houston, but he knew she was primarily there to support him and help him find answers to the questions his mind could barely conceive.
“Did you bring in the folder…the information we secured today?” he asked.
Charlie patted the stack of papers she’d set on the table next to a small television. She hadn’t moved once they’d entered the room.
He looked at her apologetically. “I’d have ordered nice weather if it’d been an option,” he said.
“I know that.” She smiled. “It is what it is, as a friend of mine says.” She kicked off her shoes and came to sit beside him on the bed. “Besides, it’s all in a day’s work.”
“I didn’t bring you here for that,” he said, lifting a strand of damp hair from her brow.
“Yeah? Why did you bring me to Mexico?” Her voice was calm, but he saw the pulse jump in her throat, and he longed to taste the smooth skin.
“Maybe this wasn’t such a good idea,” he said, rising.
Charlie sought his hand and pulled him back onto the bed beside her. “That was a provocative question—sorry. I didn’t mean to flirt.”
He looked at her small hand on his larger one then into her eyes. “Don’t misunderstand me. I want you. I’m just afraid of rushing things with you. I know I must’ve done something that hurt you, but I haven’t a clue what it was.”
“You disappeared.” She shrugged. “Not like you could help it if you were knocked unconscious…and hurt.” Her brows puckered into a frown.
“You wonder—so do I, if it makes you feel any better,” he said. “You want to know what I was doing here and if I was with another woman, with Marjorie Lawson.”
“She was pretty. I’ve seen you studying her photograph.”
He nodded. “I’d like to know what she meant to me, whether we were friends, coworkers, whatever. I just can’t remember.”
“We’ll find out. We still have time to go to her hotel tomorrow.”
Seth was pretty sure he didn’t smoke, but at the moment he’d have given anything for a cigarette, something to do with his hands and occupy the thoughts that had derailed somewhere during their flight into Mexico. “Do you have any idea what it’s like to fear your own mind, to know there are secrets hidden somewhere between yesterday and tomorrow if only you could find the key?”
Charlie shook her head slowly.
“Well, I do. Haven’t a clue why my disappearance in Mexico has anything to do with you, but I know it does, and the whole tangled web needs unraveling before I can find any peace.”
She tapped his forearm then splayed her hands before him. “Go over what we know for sure. I’ll handle our relationship—you tackle your memory problems.”
“I don’t get it.” He frowned.
“You will. Pretend we’re in elementary school and have to use our fingers to represent numbers or thoughts. What’s the first thing you remember?”
Seth held up his forefinger. “That’s easy. I woke up in a Mexican hospital and didn’t recognize the people who claimed we were related.” He held up a second finger. “I had no memory of the face that stared back at me when I looked in the mirror.” A third finger rose. “All I had on me that seemed familiar was a telephone number. Yours.”
Charlie ticked off items on her own hand, one finger at a time. “All I know is that one day you were with me, saying you had to go to Mexico on business. Months later, after having not heard from you, suddenly I get a phone call and it’s you, even though you don’t remember me or anything about our relationship.” She thought a moment before continuing, “As for what happened in the meantime…” She frowned. “No. This happened before you left. I was working a cold case on Martin.” She looked up. “Come to think of it, that’s about the time you entered the picture. Seems I hadn’t been working the Martin file long before you and I met.”
It occurred to Seth that he might not want to know the answer to the question forming in his mind, but he had to ask, “Did you ever tell me that George Martin disappeared in Mexico?”
She looked around their room before speaking again. “Our flight doesn’t leave until evening. Why did you only pay for this suite?”
Did she just brush aside the possibility I might be connected to something she’d been working on?
Seth considered her question, but he had no ready answer. It hadn’t occurred to him she might want a room of her own. Of course she would. He shook his head. “I could always crash with William.”
“Uh-uh. I only wondered if it was an automatic reaction or if you’d thought about it.”
“Honestly? It never crossed my mind. It was storming, and we’re in a foreign country. I guess I wanted to protect you. Strange, huh? You’re the one with the gun and the badge, but I guess I have to be a macho—”
Charlie shocked the hell out of him by what she did next. She covered his mouth, first with her hand, then as she climbed onto his lap, she replaced her fingers with her lips. The kiss was his undoing. Long-suppressed need, barely beneath the surface of his consciousness, rose as he possessed her.
His tongue slipped between her teeth and caressed the interior of her mouth, burning her, claiming her, spearing every inch he could find. The soft, warm heat of her lips against his drove him insane with a yearning he’d felt since meeting her at the restaurant. Seth’s arms slipped over and around her, and he lay back on the bed, dragging her on top of him then rolling to his side where he could cradle her while making love to her.
She was his salvation, the one true comfort he’d felt in months, her presence a blanket that surrounded and held him a willing captive. Her tiny hands touched his chest, burning through his shirt, searing his heart. So small yet so powerful. Hands that he knew could probably rip him into shreds or mold him to suit her needs.
“Do you remember this?” she said on a sigh, pulling his shirt from his pants and slipping her hands around to caress his back, sliding them slowly upward over his aching muscles. She lifted her face to kiss him again, softly, tenderly, but passionately. Then she pulled back, raking his back slightly with her nails, grinding her hips against him. “Or this?”
“Yes,” he whispered, kissing her again before she could pull away from him to tease him further. He held her firmly, his heat striving of its own accord, seeking entrance to the sweet folds he knew were mere inches away.
Charlie tossed her head, twisting and turning above him. She gasped as their lips parted, and she asked him, “Really? Is this something you know or wish?”
“Both.” He couldn’t stop kissing her. Her writhing body, her scent, everything about her called to him, and he couldn’t resist, couldn’t deny the attraction, didn’t care if his body recalled what his mind couldn’t or if his brain tricked him into believing the oasis was real.
Only a fool would break the spell, would admit he wasn’t one hundred percent positive that he knew the woman in his arms and that he adored and missed her desperately.
Seth pulled back.
Yeah, and only a jerk would let her believe what she wants, what we both want but can’t prove.
“William will be back in a bit,” he said gruffly, fighting for self-control. “I don’t want to put you in a compromising position when he gets here.”
Charlie blinked. “Sure.” She rose quickly and bolted for the bathroom, straightening her clothing. She was gone before he could call her back, to attempt explaining that she hadn’t done anything wrong, that it was him and his own reluctance to involve her any deeper in his problems than he already had. When she was with him, he wanted her passion, not her pity; her love, not her consolation.
Seth lay on the bed, regulating his breathing and berating himself for being seven kinds of fool. He was screwed no matter what he did. He only hoped she knew it, too, and that she forgave him.
The man is an idiot.
Charlie splashed cold water on her face, more to soothe the sting of his rejection than to cool her flaming face.
You’re no better,
she told herself. He was walking, talking, breathing, but he wasn’t fully living. For whatever his reasons, his life was similar to hers, on hold.
And here you are, waiting for him to make the moves on you.
She stayed in the bathroom, rehashing old memories and present circumstances, trying to think of a way to reach him, to reconnect with the man she’d known. When she heard him talking to William and heard the driver leave to go to his own room, only then did she reemerge, entering the bedroom suite as if nothing had happened.
The meal, however, was a somber affair. The monsoon-like winds and rain raged outside while their personal storm seethed within the walls of the apartment, building with every bite they ate and every breath they took. They barely spoke. She could hardly choke down her meal.
After they’d finished and she helped clear the small table where they’d dined, Charlie took the top sheet from the bed and went to the bathroom again, this time to shower and fashion a toga out of the only material available, considering they had no fresh clothes. She stood beneath the steaming water until she realized she was chilled. Her thoughts had occupied her so that she hadn’t noticed when bathing stopped and passing time began. It wasn’t like her to stand still, quiet, reserved, without emotion.
She surveyed the small basket in the bathroom that held toiletries. Choosing one of the toothbrushes, she performed her usual evening ritual, still taking her time.
If he’s waiting, let him stew.
As soon as she emerged and went toward the bed, the look in his eyes both charmed and alarmed her. She felt simultaneously like the hunter and the hunted.
That’s what bugged her the most. She felt like a big game hunter stalking a large, sleek cat, and she couldn’t make up her mind whether she wanted to trap him and train him, or have him catch her and just have his way with her. Either way equaled unparalleled fun, both avenues promised to be maddening and the outcome would be the same. They’d wind up with a stormy love affair that would keep their adrenaline pumping until they were octogenarians.