The Evasion (4 page)

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Authors: Adrienne Giordano

BOOK: The Evasion
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“Yes, ma’am.”

She straddled him and, with her eyes on his, lowered herself onto him. The explosion of heat hit him and he bucked his hips, grabbing her, holding her down. Damn, he loved this part. That first second inside her.

Turbulence shifted the plane and Gabe grabbed her, held her in place as the ding of the seat belt sign sounded. “A little chop,” the pilot said. “Seat belts on, folks.”

Jo burst out laughing. “Now that’s funny. I think we should listen.”

If Gabe knew anything about her, he knew she was breaking balls. When they were together like this, she craved it as much as he did. No way she’d stop now. “I’ll save you.”

On her knees, she slid up, and that same explosion of heat fried him. Reading his signals, she picked up her pace, rocking her hips, driving him to the brink while his hands roamed. Breasts, belly, ass, everywhere he could find, he touched her.

“It’s so good with you,” she said.

And that did it. The sound of her voice, that low raspy tone that meant she was close to orgasm. He knew this woman. Wanted her. Loved her.

She arched, threw her head back sending her hair flying and exposing the long column of her neck. He sat up, devoured it, nipped and kissed as she continued to rock her hips through the shattering orgasm, and then she went quiet. But those hips—those amazing hips kept moving—and his world tilted. The tension in his body built, climbed higher and higher, and then—
snap
. The wave assaulted him, just pummeled him and he held her, digging his fingers into flesh, praying she wouldn’t move. Wouldn’t do anything to take these final seconds from him.

Slowly, she eased forward, rested her head against his heaving chest. Hell of a way to join the Mile High Club. Helluva way.

After a minute, he brought his hand up, set it on her head and rubbed. “Amazing. Total bucket-lister.”

Jo shifted off him, dragged her hand across his still heaving chest. “Now, Mr. August, we have work to do.”

 

Chapter Three

 

Gabe parked the rental car on the street across from the sheriff’s office in Leeville, South Carolina. Stuck in the grass of the house next door was a red and white re-election sign. Sheriff Connelly, the sign said, the man for us. It didn’t take a creative genius to come up with that campaign slogan. Gabe slid out of the car, enjoying the blue sky and fifty-nine degree temperature that welcomed him. Winter in South Carolina.

The sheriff’s office was actually a converted church, one of those old brick deals complete with scrollwork over the red double doors at the entrance. Maybe they had a confessional inside. Talk about multitasking. Bad guys could step into the box and make things right with God and the law all in one stop.

Wait until I tell Tom.
“Un-frigging-believable.”

The passenger door slammed and, unable to resist his habit from home, he hit the lock button.

“Listen, city boy,” Jo said walking around the car, “we’re in someone else’s town. They do things differently here. You’ll need to dial it down.”

He met her at the rear bumper and assumed the I-am-Officer-Townsend stance of squared shoulders and folded arms. “What does that mean?”

She circled her open hand in front of his chest. “All of this. It works at home, but we need to play nice with these people. They probably don’t like Yankees. You’re definitely a Yankee. A big one. You need to get smaller.”

Smaller
. That made him laugh. A good, deep rumbling one that made Jo smile. “Should I go in on my knees?”

She grinned up at him, waggled her eyebrows. “No. But maybe later.”

Damn, he loved this woman. “Oh, honey.”

She threw her hand up. “Zip it. I know I started it, but sometimes you don’t have to take the bait.”

“You know better.”

She spun to the road and took three steps, but a sound—the not-so-distant hum of an engine—made Gabe reach for her—grab the back of her blazer. She stopped, glanced over her shoulder, her eyes questioning. Gabe turned left and all at once, as if fast-forwarded, a black pick-up tore around the corner, its tires shrieking as it swerved and the driver over-corrected. Probably a teenager screwing around.

He glanced back at Jo, in the street, transfixed by the charging truck. A horn blared and Gabe’s chest squeezed. Blood filled his head like a battering ram. “Jo! Back!”

Get her
. He gripped the back of her blazer tighter, checked the oncoming truck—ten yards—and hooked his free arm around her.
Now
. The explosion in his head droned on as he plowed her against the car and pinned her there.

The truck roared by, the driver still sitting on the horn. He glanced at the rear of the truck. No plate. He ticked back a few seconds, replayed what he saw. Front plate. Had a P in it. PC something.

Damn. For a cop, he’d just done a shit job of capturing the details.

Jo pushed away from the car, her body pressing into him. He stared straight ahead into the square where a statue wobbled.
Dizzy
. He shook his head, closed his eyes, focused on controlling his breathing.

“You okay?”

“For God’s sake! He almost killed me. Don’t these people know how to drive?”

“Did you see the driver?”

“Not really. All I saw was that big grill coming at me.”

Gabe rested his forehead against the back of Jo’s skull and let out a soft grunt. One way or another, she’d do him in. “Damn kids.”

“Okay, sergeant. Let me up.”

“Sorry.”

“Don’t apologize, big boy. You just saved me from being a tattoo on the street.” She turned and faced him, patted his chest and went up on tip-toes for a quick kiss. “Thank you.”

“Scared the crap out of me. You need to watch, Jo. Even down here, you gotta look before you step into the street.”

“I know. I’m sorry. I got caught up and wasn’t paying attention.”

“It’s okay.” He pointed across the street. “Let’s find the sheriff.”

After checking traffic—thank you—they crossed the street and climbed the brick steps to the church—ah, sheriff’s office—and tried the door. Locked.

Gabe snorted. Nobody home.

Jo marched back down the stairs, waving her hand at him. “Don’t start. They knew we were coming, but maybe they had an emergency. Let’s take a walk through town. See what’s what. I’m starved anyway. We’ll eat and come back.”

“You’re the boss.”

“Ha! I’ll remember you said that.”

—:—

After finding a café for an early dinner, Jo waited outside for Gabe, who had ducked—literally—into the men’s room. Everything about this town, the doorways included, screamed casual and cozy. A softer way of life so unlike New York and the frenetic pace that intimidated some, but Gabe and Jo thrived on. Still, this way of life offered possibilities in terms of vacations and down time. Short bursts of it she might enjoy.

Behind her, the bells on the door jangled and Gabe came out of the restaurant, his stride, as usual, determined and with a commanding grace that never failed to attract attention.

On the plane, he had changed into his favorite pair of broken-in jeans, a black T-shirt she’d bought him at Eddie Bauer last weekend, and sneakers. Dressed like this, he could have been an average guy out for a meal with his girlfriend.

Could have been.

Anyone with eyes saw he wasn’t any average guy. Gabe’s presence, that relaxed, confident stance that came so naturally to him, screamed power and strength and the ability to rock a woman’s world if she’d let him.

Mr. August. In the flesh.

“You’ve got that look, Jo.”

She knew the look. The one that set both their sexual engines purring. “Can’t help it.”

He grinned. “We can head to the hotel if you’d like.”

“Later, big boy.”

A woman loaded down with bags left the dress shop beside the restaurant and Jo perused the items behind the plate glass window.
Well, lookie here
.

Gabe waved a hand in front of her face. “Jo?” When she didn’t respond, he followed her gaze. “Oh, shit.”

She took two steps, only to have a giant hand grip her arm. “Forget it.”

“Let’s just look. Could be the real thing.”

She doubted it. Her hand over Gabe’s, she walked backward toward the window. “Let’s play tourist. You can be my soon-to-be-hubby. I’ll hang all over you. I’ll even undo a couple of buttons for you. Whaddya, say? Deal?”

“I say nuh-uh. We both know that’s a knockoff Barelli and you’re trying to bullshit me into letting you go in and buy it.”

Jo gasped, but it didn’t pack the wallop of authentic shock.

“You’re full of crap, Jo. The deal was that the sheriff would handle this and you’d stay out of it. You haven’t been in this town two hours and you’re already saddling up. Our only job here is to offer support to local law enforcement and hopefully escort Martinson back to New York. Getting into our own investigation is a giant no-no.”

Of course, she knew all that, but she didn’t see any harm in confirming the bag was counterfeit. Wasn’t that what they were here for?

Yes
.

All she needed to do was convince Gabe to let her take a teeny-tiny step over the line. Teeny step. Not all of her knowledge regarding Gabe Townsend involved creating sexual positions. No, she knew exactly how his mind worked on a professional basis too, and it was time to put that knowledge to work.

“You’re right. I’m sorry.” She turned toward the window, feigning wistful. “I guess I just don’t see how it would hurt to go in and buy the bag?”

“An hour ago you were telling me we were in someone else’s town. These small town sheriffs don’t like us city folk busting into their business. Trust me.”

Now he’s getting mad.
She leaned in, walked two fingers up his chest and rested her head against him. Just a couple in love enjoying the fading sunlight. “We could use it as evidence for the local authorities. Think about it. If we score a counterfeit Barelli bag, we have proof someone, probably Martinson, is moving fakes through this area. And they’re probably coming through the Charleston Port Authority. That’ll be it. I promise. We’ll just hand the bag over to the sheriff.”

He breathed in. Not once. Not twice. Three times.

Come on, big boy, come to the dark side.
Stroking his ego couldn’t hurt.

“Please? You’re with me. I’m safe. What could go wrong?”

He slid an arm around her shoulder, dipped his head and nuzzled her ear. “You are a pain in the ass.”

Gotcha.
“But you love me.”

He pulled her closer, snuggled in and bit her ear. “I’m seriously rethinking that. Let’s go buy you a purse that will probably haunt me for years.”

She patted his chest. “Thank you, honey.”

“Screw off.”

“Your love language is truly wonderful.”

He opened the shop’s door with enough force that the glass panes should have shattered.

“Helloooo!” a tiny brunette with giant hair called from behind one of the clothing racks stuffed into a shop barely bigger than Jo’s office.

The saleslady wore a light blue, long sleeved dress tailored to fit her reed-thin body. A well-dressed woman who understood the benefits of good clothing. Excellent. Jo entered the land of hopefully forbidden fruit and waved. “Hi.”

The woman eyed Gabe and glanced back at Jo. “My, my, my, he’s a big one.”

Sister, if you only knew
. “Don’t let him fool you. He’s a giant teddy bear.”

“Honey,” Gabe said, “you’re killing me here.”

That would be the warning to get this fiasco rolling. Jo spun to the front window. “I saw that lovely purse. Could I take a look at it?”

“Of course. I’m Ellie, by the way. I own the shop. Are y’all visiting?”

Gabe settled himself against a shelf packed with sweaters, his gaze shooting around the shop. She’d known him long enough to know he’d be taking in the details—the oak wall units, the strategically placed clothes, the jewelry and handbags—and mentally cataloguing the items.

“It’s a Barelli,” Ellie said. “They’re such beautifully crafted bags.”

Not this one
. This one was a piece of crap. “Yes, they are.”

Jo dragged her hand along the front of it. The buckle would pop after the second use. A Barelli buckle weighed enough to give someone a concussion. This thing would fall apart on the first swing. “What’s the price?”

“One twenty-five.”

For a so-called Barelli. Please. The purse Jo held in her hand, if authentic, would retail at eight hundred dollars. She turned to Gabe still leaning on the wall unit, and that beautiful mouth of his dipped into a frown.

“Baby? What do you think?”

He offered up an eye roll. Calling him baby might have been pushing it, but, hey, call it method acting. And she was trying to bust a counterfeiter.

“If you want it, buy it.”

“Oh, I want it.”

“Wonderful,” Ellie chirped.

Jo ran her hand over the cheap leather again, eyed it with what she hoped were lustful eyes and held the bag back to Ellie. “I’m terrible with impulse buying. Let me think about it.”

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