Imposter (15 page)

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Authors: Karen Fenech

Tags: #Suspense

BOOK: Imposter
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She was caught up in the view when Burke streaked by her.   He’d moved like an eel, barely disturbing the water.  Eve felt a smile spread across her face again and dove after him.
She put her all into the swim.  She reached him and then with a smug glance he couldn’t miss, passed him.  At the buoys, she turned around.  Burke was a mere half-length behind her now.  She was laughing and she had to admit, panting, when she reached the dock an instant before he did.  She looped one arm around a low rail on the dock, allowing the structure to keep her afloat.  Burke pushed sopping hair back from his face then positioned himself in front of her and did the same.
He grinned.   “You’re good.”
Eve nodded.  “You should have seen me when I was competing.”
Burke’s gaze fixed on her.  “You must have been quite a sight,” he said softly.
Eve’s heart, just now slowing to its normal rhythm, thumped.  She focused on Burke.  His eyes had darkened and his gaze was now intent on her.  He raised his arm slowly from his side and brought it to her cheek.  His gaze still on hers, he caressed her skin with his thumb. 
Eve’s breath caught.  This was Burke.  The man who believed her a traitor.  She should pull back.  Instead, when his lips parted slightly and he moved toward her, Eve moved to him. 
His breath mingled with her own as their lips touched in a light, soft, caress, then Burke murmured something unintelligible, his hand lowered from her cheek to her waist and he brought her flush against him.  She connected with his hard muscled body.  A thrill coursed through her and she dug her fingers into his shoulder.  Burke deepened the kiss, slanting his mouth across hers, opening his mouth.  When his tongue slid between her parted lips, Eve met it with her own.
Her heart was racing now well beyond what it had been during the swim.  Each breath came shallow and audible.  She was quivering.  Pressed against Burke, she felt every gasping breath he took and she felt the proof of his rampant desire pulse against her.  
Something rang.  Then again.  Eve blinked then realized the ringing was from Burke’s cell phone.  He’d set it down on the dock, she recalled.
Burke’s mouth left hers.  He looked up through the wooden slats to the dock above them then drew back, releasing her.  He was breathing hard.  The tendons in his arms were taut.  He shook his head as if to clear it, then rubbed a hand down his face. He reached up, grabbed the edge of one wooden plank and vaulted onto the dock.  
Eve swam away from the rail she’d been holding.  For some reason, the water now felt ice cold. Goose bumps pebbled her flesh. 
She swam slowly, taking time to shake off what had almost happened with Burke.  She’d literally been saved by the bell.  Catastrophe averted.  But where was the relief that should accompany that thought?  She closed her eyes.  It wasn’t relief she was feeling. 
By the time she reached Burke, he was closing his cell phone.  Eve seized the dock as he had and hoisted herself up.  Burke crouched, grasped her at the waist, and lifted her up beside him.  Then he stepped away from her.  The night air was chill.  She picked up the towel she’d hung over the railing and draped it around her shoulders like a shawl.
“That was Lanski,” Burke said.  “Did Richard Patterson ever mention meeting Alasdair McHampton?”
Burke was all business again.  “No, though Richard wouldn’t have,” Eve said.  “He didn’t know of my friendship with Allie.  We didn’t speak of personal things. But of course they weren’t acquainted, Allie would have mentioned it.” 
“Would he?”
“Of course.  And he certainly would have greeted you differently at the conference when I introduced you as Richard.”
“My people learned that both Richard Patterson and Alasdair McHampton attended a small suburban chemist’s conference several years ago.  When Lanski asked him about Patterson, McHampton said he never knew a Richard Patterson until Dr. Collins introduced him to her business partner.”
“If that’s what Allie said, then that’s it.”
“The fact that Patterson and McHampton were both at that conference bothers me.
But, at this point, we have nothing more to link the two, so, yeah, as it stands now, that’s it.”
Eve nodded.
“Lanski is asking McHampton if he saw anyone handle your purse.”
Eve didn’t hold out any hope that Allie had.  If he had seen anyone with her purse, he would have mentioned it to her.
“I’m heading back,” Eve said.  “See you in the morning.”
* * *
Burke watched her go, watched the gentle sway of her shapely derriere in the swimsuit.  A few moments earlier, he’d had his hands on that beautiful part of her anatomy.  His hands tingled with the desire to touch her again.
He shook his head.  Eve was a suspected traitor.  She was in his charge.  Again, he asked himself: What was the matter with him?
She was attractive, yes, but he’d been attracted to other women many times, and hadn’t been eaten up by the attraction.
That’s what was happening to him.  He was consumed by his attraction to Eve. He wanted to take her to bed so badly he couldn’t think of anything else.  He’d never had it this bad for any other woman. 
Consumed by his attraction.
But it was more than that.  His attraction was more than sexual.  He admired her courage that she’d displayed in this situation.  He didn’t know many others who would have taken death threats, and an accusation of treason with the fighting attitude she’d shown.  She was a fighter, all right.  From what he’d read in her file, she’d needed to be, given what she’d been through in the last years. Dismissal from the LAPD.  The end of her six-year marriage. He’d read the profile on her.  His fact sheets, though, summarized those events.  They hadn’t revealed the devastating impact they must have had on her life. 
Those events took place on the heels of the death of her daughter.  Eve was so hurt.  The thought of her in pain unsettled him.  He didn’t like the fact that it did.
She’d gotten under his skin. 
He had to get her out.   
He rolled his shoulders to ease the tension there.  A few more days and this would all be over.  She would be out of his life.  He would get back to his.  The thought should have satisfied him.  It didn’t. 
* * *
A cool breeze blew in through Eve’s bedroom window, fluttering the gauze curtains.  She was in bed but couldn’t sleep.  Small wonder.  She was so churned up about Burke.  He’d commented on her scent but his own - soap mixed with his own male smell - had intoxicated her.
He hadn’t shaved that day and the dark stubble on his cheeks and chin made him look sexy.  When he’d taken her in his arms she’d been up close to his tough, hard body, and felt each discreet muscle.
And she’d seen blatant desire in his eyes.
She wanted him, too.  The admission stunned her.  She hadn’t been with a man since her marriage ended.  Casual sex was available, should she have wanted it.  She thought of Matt Deligne. She hadn’t wanted it, though.  She’d told herself  that casual sex wasn’t for her, and with Matt or any other man of her acquaintance that’s all there would be.  She told herself she was a relationship person. The desire to get to know a man well enough to want to go to bed with him had just never been there. But here and now, alone, in the dark and the quiet, she admitted the truth: She had simply stopped wanting sex.  Her desire for sex had been gone for five years.  
It was there now.  In spades.  With Burke.
It would have been handy to tell herself that after a five-year abstinence her body’s natural sexual urge had reasserted itself.  But she knew that wasn’t the case. What she was feeling didn’t stem from him as a man, but as
the
man.    
He’d awakened feelings in her she’d thought dead.  She should be applauding.  Had the situation not been what it was, she would have acted on the desire she was feeling.
But their circumstances were what they were. As attractive as she found him, he was intent on proving her a traitor.  If that didn’t tamp down her desire, nothing would.
She rolled over. The short nightie she’d changed into after the swim bunched around her waist and she adjusted it.   Her pillow was warm.  She turned it over then flopped onto her back.  She was making so much noise in here could Burke hear her in the outer room?  She couldn’t hear him.  He was probably sleeping.
A branch snapped outside the cabin, jolting Eve from her thoughts of Burke.  She sprang out of the bed.  She crept to the window and flattened herself against the wall.  The scent of pine wafted in on the breeze.  She peeked out through the break in the curtains.  The trees and underbrush outside her window were distinct in the moonlight, and all there was to see at the moment.  Of course, if someone was out there, he’d hardly be standing in the open for her to view.  Particularly since he’d stepped on a twig and put himself at risk.
Burke said no one knew about this place.  To his knowledge, anyway.  Eve wouldn’t dismiss the possibility that someone had followed her and Burke here.  Maybe wanting another try at killing her.  It was frightening to think that, but also exhilarating.  So far, she and Burke hadn’t been having any success in identifying the one who wanted her dead.  They needed a lead.  Another attempt on her life would give them that and she would be glad of it.  Even if it meant facing a killer.
Eve ducked beneath the window and returned to the bed where she’d left the shoes she’d worn earlier.  She slipped them on then, keeping close to the walls, tiptoed out of the bedroom and into the short hallway beyond.  The thick blue curtains in the outer room were drawn, effectively blocking any outside light.  A small lamp on the long counter that separated the kitchen section from the living room glowed, and provided enough light for Eve to see the shadows of the furniture and to make out the front door.
A large shadow was making its way to that door at the moment.  The arm was extended above the tall silhouette’s head.  At the end of it, was the outline of a gun.  Eve knew that silhouette:  Burke.  He must have felt her gaze - or maybe he just sensed another presence in the room with him - because he turned to her.
“Burke!”  She hissed his name loud enough for him to identify her and not shoot.
But he’d recognized her as well, she realized.  Had known she was behind him before he’d turned.  His gun hand had not wavered.
Eve met him by the door. “I guess you heard it, too.”
“Yeah.  Stay here while I check it out.”
“No. I’m going with you.”
“Stay here.”
Eve shook her head.  “If someone’s followed us, we need to make sure he doesn’t get away.  We need to flank him, cutting off his escape routes.”
“He might not be seeking escape.  The noise might have been deliberate.  A means to flush us out so he could take a shot.  Stay here.”
“More likely flush you out,” Eve said. “Take you out first, then come inside and finish me.  It’s unlikely he’ll be expecting both of us.  I was a cop, remember?  I know what I’m doing.”
Burke’s jaw tightened. A muscle there flexed briefly.  “Hold on a minute.”
Eve stared after Burke as he disappeared into his room, currently being occupied by her.  What was he doing?  They didn’t have time to waste; but he was back quickly.  He held out a gun.
“Take it.”
Eve lowered her eyes to the gun and then raised her gaze to him.  The gesture of trust surprised her and touched her. 
“Ready,” Burke asked.
She nodded and closed her fingers around the gun butt.

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