Wild Orchids (38 page)

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Authors: Karen Robards

Tags: #Contemporary, #Fiction, #Romance

BOOK: Wild Orchids
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"Tunafish is married and has children? You're kidding!" Lora was amazed. "He's never said a word!"

"Well, if he's not telling you about the wife and kiddies, then what does he spend so much time talking to you about?" '

Lora smiled naughtily. "Wouldn't you like to know?"

Max shook his head. "I don't think so. My ears burn whenever you two get together. If I didn't know better, I'd think he was filling you in on my misspent past."

"Would it bother you if he was?"

"Nope. He doesn't know the best parts." He grinned down at her, looking piratical with those white teeth slashing out of the bristly black beard.

"You're scaring me," Lora replied, and Max's eyes narrowed wickedly.

"I'd rather be doing something else to you."

"Oh?" Lora cast a gleaming look up at him. "Like what?"

"I could show you, but Tunafish might be shocked."

"In that case, maybe you'd better not."

"I could show you in private."

"Sounds interesting."

"It will be. I guarantee it." And he bent his head to whisper in her ear, telling her exactly what he had in mind.

Lora tingled and blushed, and cast nervous glances at the three men behind them. Of course they could have no idea what Max was saying…! But as she listened to his outrageous suggestions, and felt her body quicken she felt almost as exposed as if they were carrying out his indecent ideas in full view of everyone,

"Stop it. Max," she breathed when he got so explicit that she trembled.

"Am I embarrassing you?" He looked down at her pink face and chuckled intimately. "I like embarrassing you."

"I always suspected you had a sadistic streak."

"I do. Didn't I get to that part yet? I want to bare your delicious little bottom and spank it until you—"

"Max!"

"You'd like it. I promise."

"Max! I'm not kidding! Stop it."

He grinned, unrepentant. "Spoilsport."

"Hey, boss!" The call came from Tunafish. Both Max and Lora turned to look at him inquiringly, Lora wondering self-consciously if, at a distance of perhaps fifteen feet, Tunafish could tell that her face was red.

"I'm on. You're off. Go root us up something decent to
eat. Like
meat. I see another banana, I swear I'm gonna start swingin' from trees." Tunafish picked up his gun and got awkwardly up on one foot. Max moved to help him over to the mouth of the cave, and between the two of them they eased him into a position where he could watch both the valley below and the two men behind them, who watched the operation with sullen expressions.

"You all set?"

"Yeah. Get out of here. Catch me a fish. Or better yet, catch me a steak. As God is my witness, I'd kill for a juicy T-bone."

Tunafish rolled his eyes comically, and Lora laughed. The fire in her face had faded, and she felt comfortable again— until Max grabbed her hand and Tunafish grinned.

"Don't forget that steak!" Tunafish called after them good humoredly as Max pulled Lora after him down the slope.

"I won't—fillet of banana," Max called back. As Max culled her into the shelter of the trees, Lora heard Tunafish groan.

"Where are we going?" Lora demanded, half laughing as Max dragged her through the jungle. A bright orange marmoset chattered down at them as it swung from branch to branch high overhead. Lora could just catch glimpses of it through the interlaced greenery. Moist looking green lizards flicked their tongues at her from the trunks of trees, but she barely  noticed them either. She had become accustomed to such denizens of the jungle.

"You'll see," he answered, sounding mysterious, but Lora already knew. They had traveled the path to the plane quite a few times since the first night he had brought her there. He lifted her through the hole with his hands on her waist, then swung up beside her to catch her in a ferocious kiss. Lora returned the embrace with abandon, loving the delicate war of lips and tongues, loving the crush of his body against hers, loving the taste of him…

"I thought we might try out some of my ideas," he said with a teasing leer, thrusting a hand down the back of her jeans to caress her bare bottom as he spoke. Lora jumped, laughed, and submitted. He had her to the point where he could do anything he liked with her, anything at all.

"You're gorgeous," he whispered moments later as he bent his head to press a kiss to the already aching tip of her breast. Lora felt the moistness of his mouth through the layers of her t-shirt and bra and squeezed her thighs together. Right this moment she was ready to take off her clothes and lie down with him…

"You're too slow,'' she protested with teasing breathlessness as he transferred his attention to her other breast, still without removing a single item of her clothing.

"I thought women like a man with slow hands," he answered, biting down on her nipple in punishment.

"Not this woman," she answered, her hands making two fists in his hair to tug his head upward. "Not right now." She slid her hands under his t-shirt, stroking the satiny, hair-roughened muscles of his chest, tugging the garment upwards. He grinned and bent to catch her mouth with his, when suddenly he stopped in mid-motion and lifted his head.

"Listen—do you hear that?" he demanded, his hands catching hers and stopping them from pulling his t-shirt over his head.

"What?" Lora's eyes were on the expanse of bronzed chest she had bared, and her response was absent. He glared down at her, removing her hands from his skin and pulling down his shirt.

"Helicopters,"

"Helicopters!" Now Lora was listening, too. And there it was, a faint droning, barely audible through the cacophonous jungle sounds. "Is that what that is?"

"I think so. Come on, we've got to get back to the cave."

Lora made no protest as he jumped down from the plane. She joined him, her sneakered feet sinking soundlessly into the thick cushion of mulch as she landed.

"Does this mean this is it?" Hope and alarm coursed in equal measure through her veins. The idea of rescue was dazzling. Civilization—she had almost forgotten about it! How wonderful it would be to eat a good meal—to take a bath—to sleep in a bed. With Max. She was very specific about that. But what did rescue mean to her and Max? She wasn't ready—wasn't nearly ready to put their relationship to the test. She needed more time… Anyway, the coming of others need not mean rescue at all. It could mean violence, and death… Her mouth went dry as she once again considered the possibilities.

"Maybe. Maybe not. Depends on who this is. It could be Minelli's friends, it could be the feds, it could be Ortega. Or it could be someone else. Or it could be someone who's not even looking for us. We'll just have to wait and see." He was making his way through the undergrowth as he spoke over his shoulder. Lora's hand was in his, but she practically had to run to keep up with him. She tripped over an exposed root and nearly fell. He slowed down, but not much.

"Max, do you really think your idea is going to work?" The prospect of having to bluff an army of violence-prone men that she had banished so firmly from her mind was suddenly, terrifyingly at hand. Unless the new arrivals—if there were really new arrivals and the sound of the helicopters had not been just a figment of Max's imagination, and if the new arrivals were after the drugs—agreed to Max's deal, they all had very uncertain futures. In fact, it was quite possible that they had no future. The prospect made Lora feel suddenly icy cold.

 

Chapter XXIII

 

"Hit the dirt!"

"Wha—" Lora was only half able to articulate the question before Max was thrusting her down into the softness of the jungle floor with his hand on the back of her neck. He crouched beside her, his hand still on her neck, keeping carefully behind a broad-leaved plant that bore some resemblance to a short tobacco stalk. She was just about to question him again, indignantly, when she heard it too: the faint squelch of footsteps in the loam.

"Who—"

"Shh!" He silenced her with a gesture, his face very grim.

Lora took one look at that expression and cowered silently behind the sheltering foliage. She had never seen him look quite so ferocious. His hand was moving to the waistband of his jeans, stealthily extracting the pistol that he was never without. Lora watched him heft it and silently release the safety. The pistol was leveled at whoever or whatever was approaching through the undergrowth as the footsteps grew closer.

Lora peered cautiously through the screen of sun-dappled leaves, her heart in her throat. What she saw was not as frightening as what she had been imagining: there were perhaps half a dozen men, clad in a miscellaneous assortment of gear that ranged from hiking boots and army pants to jeans and sneakers, advancing toward them through the jungle. One held a small box about the size of a transistor radio in his hand. The box emitted a continuous series of beeps that seemed to increase in volume with every step he took. What on earth… ?

Lora cast an uncertain glance at Max.

"Transmitter. They're zeroing in on the homing device," Max whispered out of the side of his mouth, the words hardly louder than a breath of air across Lora's ear.

Then he frowned at her fiercely, his eyes plainly ordering her not to move, not to make a sound. Lora was willing to follow his instructions, although the tantalizing vision of imminent rescue was still dancing in her brain. But until they found out who these men were, she knew it was wiser not to reveal themselves.

They were moving in a straight line with perhaps twelve feet between them, their eyes darting nervously back and forth over the stunted plants and twisted vines and gnarled tree trunks that made up the rain forest. Every small sound of monkeys chattering or birds calling made one or the other jump and swing his rifle around. They were all armed with rifles, which they held at the ready as if expecting to open fire at any moment. At what? Lora wondered.

"Quiet now. Don't move." Max's words in her ear almost made her jump herself. The men were about ten feet away now, moving toward them in a line that would bring one passing within about four feet of them. The leafy bush would hide them—maybe. Lora looked down at her own bright pink t-shirt with something like horror. She must stand out against this background of emerald green like a parrot in a dovecote, and Max in his white shirt was not much better. Surely they would be seen…

Max motioned at her, silently directing her to curl herself into as small a package as possible. Lora huddled, head bent to her knees, arms clutching her shins, scarcely daring to breathe as the men approached. Beside her. Max crouched, motionless, pistol unwavering at the man who was now less than six feet away…

He was a white man with a swarthy complexion and oily black hair. Like Max, he had a mustache, a neatly trimmed, almost military looking affair that gave his full lips a cruel look. He was young, maybe twenty-five or- six at the most; and clad in army fatigues and hiking boots. His feet made crackling noises as he planted them one after the other in the soft carpet of rotting twigs and leaves… He was almost directly opposite them now, his eyes swinging back and forth alertly, his hands keeping the rifle moving from side to side.

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