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Authors: Doreen Owens Malek

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BOOK: Devil's Deception
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“Neither is your friend,” Philip said sarcastically, nodding to Devlin. “He seems to be thirsty, though. I think he’s getting drunk.”

So he had been keeping track of Devlin. “I’m not surprised. This can’t be too much fun for him,” Angela replied.

“Yeah, well, he won’t be very effective as a bodyguard if he gets plastered,” Philip observed. “He’s fired tonight if that happens.”

Angela’s mouth tightened. “Not everyone passes out after two drinks the way you do, Philip,” she observed sweetly. “It’s just possible that he can handle his liquor.”

Philip’s fork hit the plate with a clink. “What is that supposed to mean?” he demanded.

“Nothing, nothing,” Angela muttered, blotting her lips with her napkin. She took a sip of her wine, not meeting Philip’s eyes.

“You’re really acting weird tonight, you know?” he said.

“Well, how do you expect me to act? My life has been threatened, I can’t even go to a restaurant without a keeper in tow. You’ll have to forgive me if I seem a little edgy.”

Philip sighed. “All right. I know this must be hard for you.” He glanced at her tolerantly. “Do you want anything else? Coffee, dessert?”

“No. I’d just like to go, if that’s okay with you.”

Philip nodded with resignation and signaled for the check. Angela experienced a twinge of sympathy for him; he had wanted this to be a special evening and she had ruined it. But she couldn’t help the way she felt.

It seemed an eternity before they were all back at the town house. Devlin went immediately to his room and Philip turned to Angela with a relieved smile.

“Thank God we’re rid of him,” he said. “Would you like a brandy?”

Angela nodded. He got the drinks from the bar in the corner while she calculated how long she would have to entertain him before she could get him to leave.

* * * *

Devlin yanked his tie loose from his neck and threw it angrily on the floor. What a night! He was soaked with perspiration from the effort of controlling himself. One punch, he had thought in the restaurant, one punch would have put that Cronin’s lights out. Four scotches and several hours later he still hadn’t thrown that punch. Sometimes this job demanded more than a man could give.

No more social evenings with the Greek god sneering at him, Devlin vowed. He would tell Angela that it was too difficult to protect her in a public place; he would tell her something. But the thought of having to sit through another dinner watching that smooth blond—gigolo—making love to her, holding her hand, touching her face, made Devlin want to kick in the walls.

He stripped quickly, tossing his clothes on a chair. He caught sight of himself in the mirror above the dresser and stopped to look. Not much by comparison with Philip Cronin, he thought. Cronin looked like a model in an advertisement for tanning lotion: slim, golden, perfect. Devlin studied his own dark features and snorted derisively. No way. If a pretty boy like Cronin was what she liked, he hadn’t a chance in the world.

Then he realized what he was thinking and cursed out loud.

He had to concentrate on the task at hand. There was a safe someplace in this house, and Angela had access to it. She’d mentioned it when he broke the figurine, and tonight she’d been wearing jewelry that she’d obviously retrieved from a careful hiding place. But how to find it, and how to get into it? He was skilled in many diverse areas but he was no safecracker. He would have to think about this one.

Devlin went into the bathroom and turned on the shower, stepping under the gushing water and letting it run over his body.

When he was finished, he would draw up a plan for getting Angela to open the safe for him.
 

Maybe that would keep his mind off her playing footsie with Cronin in the living room.

* * * *

Angela got rid of Philip as soon as she possibly could. She pleaded an early class, which was true, and a headache, which wasn’t. Fortunately Philip ascribed her funk to her unsettled situation and left gracefully after about a half hour, without the strenuous wrestling match that generally preceded his departures.

Angela took off her shoes and wondered why she didn’t just give in to him. He was handsome, charming, and had a wonderful career. Hundreds of women would probably fall at his feet.

Angela wasn’t one of them.

She had never been able to figure out what held her back exactly. Her one and only lover, a college boyfriend who’d ditched her when Uncle Frank made his presence known, had hardly provided a magnificent introduction to physical passion, but that wasn’t the whole problem.

She didn’t love Philip. She probably should, but she didn’t. She’d been going along with the relationship because he was pursuing her and because Uncle Frank wanted her to do it. But she was realizing that she couldn’t let herself be bulldozed by the two men, forced into a liaison, a marriage, that she didn’t really want.

And she knew why she had come to this conclusion. The reason was just down the hall—a man with soot black hair and smoky topaz eyes.

Carrying her shoes in one hand and her fur in the other, Angela went upstairs to read three hundred pages on the revised copyright laws.

* * * *

Devlin opened his door a crack and peered into the hall. The lower floor was dark. Angela had gone to her room.

Barefoot, dressed only in a pair of jeans, he padded into the kitchen and opened the refrigerator. The booze was taking its toll; he was viciously thirsty. He filled a tall glass with orange juice and ice and was turning to take it back to his room when Angela appeared in the doorway, dressed in a floor length terry robe.

Devlin groaned inwardly. Didn’t this woman ever sleep? She was always wandering around in the wee hours like Lady Macbeth.

“I thought you had gone to bed,” he said.

“I had a lot of studying to do,” she replied. “How about you?”

“Couldn’t sleep,” he answered shortly.

Angela tried not to stare at him but it was difficult. She had never seen him without a shirt, and his body was beautiful, neatly formed and hard, his dusky skin flowing over the sculptured muscles like fine, strong silk. Hair the same color as that on his head, but curling, matted his chest and grew in a line down to his belly. His jeans rode low on his hips, and she could see the faint line of his summer tan ending below his waist.
 

“I’ll just get a glass of milk and go,” she said awkwardly.

“No rush. I was leaving,” he answered. He moved to let her pass by him, and Angela caught sight of a jagged, angry scar just under his left ribs, marring the spare symmetry of his torso. She halted, staring at it.

“You were hurt,” she said softly. “What happened to you?”

“I was cut,” he answered gruffly, forcing himself to keep walking.

“But this must have been serious,” she said, reaching out to touch him. He stopped cold. Angela traced the line of scar tissue with her hand, her fingers leaving a trail of sensation on his skin.

Devlin’s chest heaved and he pulled back convulsively.

“Jesus, Angela, don’t,” he ground out, agonized. The juice he was holding splashed onto his hand as he shoved the glass into the sink.

Angela’s eyes flashed to his face. It was the first time he had used her name.

His gaze held hers intently for a long moment before he muttered something under his breath and pulled her into his arms.

Angela clung to him tightly, rubbing her face on the satiny expanse of his shoulder, kissing him with abandon wherever she could. She felt his lips moving in her hair.

“I was going crazy in that damned restaurant,” he said huskily in her ear. “I wanted you to be with me.

“I was,” Angela whispered. “Oh, Brett, I was.” She ran her hands down his back, loving the feel of his powerful body, and he pulled on her hair to raise her head. Her lips were parting eagerly as he crushed them with his.

This was unlike most first kisses. There was nothing tentative or searching about it. It was as if they had both thought about the moment for so long that when it arrived they fell into it headlong, without hesitation, fused in a sudden burst of mutual passion. Angela’s mouth opened under Devlin’s, and her fingers crept up and over his shoulders, sinking languidly into his soft, thick hair.

Devlin wasn’t content for long just to kiss her; his lips moved to her throat, inside the opening of her robe, and his tongue trailed along her collarbone, making her shiver with delight. He held her to him with one arm clasped about her waist and undid the tie belt of her robe with his other hand. Angela felt the searing brand of his touch through her thin batiste nightgown, the probing of his thumb against a hardened nipple, the sweet weight of his palm as he cupped her breast. She leaned back into the curve of his shoulder and let him caress her, her eyes closed, scarcely able to breathe.

“I didn’t want to sit there and watch you with him,” Devlin rasped, moving his head to kiss her again.

“It’s all right,” Angela murmured against his lips. “I know you have your job to do.”

Devlin stiffened suddenly, pulling away from her. Stunned, still drugged with sensation, Angela straightened, blinking.

“What?” she said. “What is it?”

Devlin thrust shaking hands through his disordered hair. His job. Yes, indeed, he had his job to do, and he mustn’t lose sight of that.

“Angela, I’m sorry,” he said hoarsely. “This shouldn’t have happened. We have to forget it.”

Angela’s gaze fell. Forget it? She wanted to remember it for the rest of her life.

“I’m not going to take advantage of my situation here to lead you into something that wouldn’t be right for either one of us,” he said. “Go back to bed now, and put this out of your mind.” He turned abruptly and walked out of the room. She heard his door close seconds later.

Angela choked back a sob. She had finally let him see how much she wanted him, and he had rejected her. Her humiliation was complete. She stumbled into the living room and sank onto the couch.

Had it really happened? Had she imagined it? No, she could still taste his mouth on her lips, feel the imprint of his hands upon her body. But why had he stopped, why had he left her alone after loving her, in those quicksilver moments, so fiercely, so tenderly?

She brushed her hair away from her face with trembling fingers.

How could she go back to Philip after this?

* * * *

First thing in the morning Devlin called his superior for a transfer. But he could hardly tell the man the truth, and his manufactured reasons availed Devlin little in achieving the desired result. After wrangling with the G-21 for thirty minutes, Devlin slammed the receiver into the cradle in disgust. He was stuck in this assignment for the duration.

Which meant that he was going to have to exercise extreme caution at all times. Angela had penetrated his defenses, and that put him at a tremendous disadvantage. He would have to be more distant than ever.

Two weeks of unbearable tension passed. They went through the motions of normal activity, but beneath the veneer of civilization beat the steady pulse of their true relationship and they both knew it.

Devlin no longer suspected Angela of involvement in her uncle’s activities. She was what she appeared to be, a law student unaware of her relative’s shady dealings. Devlin had watched her too closely to believe anything else. But he needed to be absolutely sure she wouldn’t interrupt his nocturnal searches, so he took to slipping knockout drops into her after dinner coffee. They were harmless, with a delayed action of about six hours, so that she went out cold around midnight, and he could be sure that she would sleep through until morning. But when she complained of headaches a couple of times at breakfast he stopped doing it. He was getting nowhere anyway.

He couldn’t find the safe in Patria’s study. He’d managed to get inside, but the room was as plain and innocuous as a monastic cell. Metal filing cabinets contained folders of invoices and bills of lading that indicated nothing more than the operation of a legitimate business. He pored over their contents several times, until he knew the documents almost by heart, and could detect nothing wrong. On the basis of what he’d found so far, Patria could run for Congress, and possibly for President, without a whisper of scandal attached to his name.

Harold Simmons was no help. Devlin contacted him twice, and discovered that the lawyer knew less than he did. Simmons had no knowledge of a safe in the house and couldn’t tell him where to look.

That left Angela as a source, a reality that didn’t sit well with Devlin. He felt bad enough to be duping her this way, but pumping her for information would be worse. He knew he had to do it, but the idea wasn’t putting him in the best of moods. It had to be done carefully, very subtly. She was innocent, but not stupid. Devlin felt trapped—by his duty, his conscience, his growing feelings for Angela. He went through each day like a man living in a pressure cooker.

Angela wasn’t happy either. She continued with her regular routine because she didn’t know what else to do, but her estrangement from Devlin made her miserable. He hardly spoke to her and kept his distance from her physically as if she were surrounded by a ring of fire.

At night, in bed, she remembered his kiss and relived the moment over and over in her mind.

BOOK: Devil's Deception
11.89Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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