Chapter 6
Her second evening there, Liz insisted on moving into one
of the guest- rooms, over Jude's grumbling
protestations. "You like this room better," Jude pointed out flatly. "You
told me."
"I'm not kicking you out of your own bed," Liz
replied firmly. Now if you want to share, she offered
mentally, but despite their earlier teasing, Jude had not pursued any further physical
intimacy with the
reporter. After a few more minutes of spirited debate, Jude finally gave in, moving the
small woman's few
things-- including the laptop computer she had purchased for Liz-- into the bedroom on the
other side of
the library.
The gift of the slender little Powerbook had been
unexpected to say the least. "NO! Jude, I can't accept
this," she protested when the dark woman slid the gift into her lap.
Dark brows furrowed. "Why not?"
"I-- I--" Liz stuttered, trying to kick-start her brain into gear. "I thought we finished with you saying you're sorry about me getting shot."
"Well, I am sorry, but that's not what this is about," Jude smirked. "You're a writer, yes?"
"Yyeesss..." Liz drew out the word.
"So how are you going to write without something to
write on? You don't strike me as the legal pad type.
And this way you can sit out in the sun while you work."
"You don't have a computer?" Liz inquired
innocently. Interestingly enough, Jude's tour had not included
the study which, architecturally speaking, was the most stunning room in the house.
"Yes, I have a computer, but this way you have your own access," Jude answered smoothly, not dropping a beat. "And you won't have to worry about me stumbling into your files."
Or me stumbling into yours, Liz thought wryly. "This is way too expensive, I mean--"
"Liz..." Jude held out a hand to forestall any
further argument. "Look around you. What I spent for the
laptop is nothing to me." It was an offhand comment, meant to convey nonchalance and
totally disguising
the effort Jude had expended. The dark woman had prowled just about every computer store
in the city,
terrorizing store clerks and looking for the laptop that would suit the writer the best.
"Besides," she
shrugged sheepishly, muttering almost inaudibly, "I kind of liked buying something
for you."
There it is again, Liz marveled. The faint blush was
almost undetectable beneath Jude's tanned skin. Its
appearance-- the only indication Liz had discovered of a vulnerable side to the agent--
reaffirmed the
budding friendship that had been in doubt since Jude's surprising revelation the previous
day.
Things settled into an odd, but comfortable rhythm in
Jude's household. Liz learned that Carmina only
came a few times a week and did mostly light cleaning, preparing meals only if Jude was
home-- which
was not nearly as much as Liz would have liked. She honestly didn't know when the tall
woman slept. Liz, however, used the time alone to her advantage, calling Lucas the first
chance she got.
"ARE YOU OUT OF YOUR FUCKING MIND?!?!?!?!?!?" Lucas bellowed after the reporter filled him in on the events that had brought her to Jude's. Liz winced, holding the phone away from her ear, thankful Carmina was nowhere to be found.
"No, Lucas, I'm not," she answered patiently.
Recognizing the resolute tone in Liz's voice, he exhaled heavily into the receiver, signaling his reconciliation to her obstinacy. "Well, have you at least gotten something interesting then?"
Liz hesitated. It was on the tip of her tongue to tell
Lucas everything she had learned-- that Jude was still
working for the DEA and she suspected the dark woman was attempting to bring down the
remnants of
the Massala Cartel-- but she remained silent. "Only bits and pieces, nothing
concrete," she hedged,
knowing that if she gave Lucas even a bare tidbit, that he would hound her until she
worked the story to
its fullest. Quite frankly, she didn't know if she wanted to do that anymore, although her
curiosity had sent her scurrying into the study at the first opportunity. She had stayed
away from the journal and
concentrated on the "Communication" folder, piecing together what she could.
There were still a lot of
blanks; Jude obviously didn't believe in committing much information to paper-- even if it
was only on the
electronic variety. "Look, I don't know when I'm going to get a chance to talk to you
again, so I need you
to do something for me."
She could hear Lucas scrabbling around on his desk for a
piece of paper. "Okay, what can I get you?" he
asked, sounding for all the world like some worker at a drive-through window.
Liz bit back a laugh. "First of all, you need to get
on-line. That way I can update you via e-mail. The
Herald has an e-mail address for you... lucas@mherald.com." Liz was referring
to the office-wide system
of assigning addresses by last name, but she doubted that Lucas even knew he had one.
"I'll send you
periodic messages so you'll know I'm okay. Get someone to show you how to use the system,
all right?"
Lucas grumbled under his breath about technology and going to hell, but he agreed. "Anything else?"
Liz paused a moment, thinking about her apartment. What
were the odds that Jude would want to go
there? She had bought herself a week with the boyfriend story, and she honestly didn't
know where things were headed with the volatile agent, so she crossed her mental fingers
and hoped for the best. "Not right now. I'll let you know if I need something else.
Okay?"
"Got it. And Liz--" Lucas' gruff voice dropped an octave as he added, "Be careful."
She had e-mailed Lucas only once during the last week, just
to let him know things were still fine. Her
time with Jude was fast drawing to a close, and Liz was at a loss for how to propel things
further between
them. The intense attraction was still there, and the reporter watched with growing
frustration as Jude sidestepped even the mere hint of intimacy, despite their palpable
connection. The dark woman didn't avoid Liz-- far to the contrary-- she sought the
reporter out whenever she was home, listening to Liz's vivid stories of her misadventures
in school and growing up. The honey-haired woman truly felt like they had become friends,
but she tossed and turned restlessly in her bed at night, filled with a gnawing hunger and
too-aware of what she wanted to assuage it.
Jude pounded down the beach in a steady, loping rhythm that
ate up the ground below her. Aggie and
Clytemnestra flanked her sides, tongues lolling as they kept pace with their long-legged
mistress. She
splashed through the surf as she ran, letting the salt water cool her heated body,
enjoying the different
textures brushing her skin. The scorching glare of the day had finally passed, as even the
sun began to
weary of its own intensity and sought relief by falling over the edge of the horizon. Jude
was very content
with her lot in life at this moment. The sand was gritty beneath her bare feet; the
water's spray was
refreshing; and her eyes were dazzled by the pastels of the sun's passing. Aggie, bless
his clumsy soul,
occasionally brushed against her as he gamboled down the beach with her, his fur tickling
at her legs.
The sensory input inundated Jude's system, and she consciously let all the tension and stresses of the day ooze from her body. Sasha had been in a mood all week. Sulking no doubt because I haven't been paying enough attention to her... and that had put most everyone else in her close professional circle on edge. As a result, the cooks were throwing tantrums, the waitstaff was dropping things, and the food and liquor shipments were off.
Jude's relationship with Sasha had always been a
complicated one. Lovers, enemies, or allies depending
on the day of the week-- Sasha had been a more or less permanent fixture in Jude's life
since she turned
from the Agency. Jude trusted the caramel woman just about as far as she trusted anyone in
her life.
Together they had a truculent, sensual chemistry that often left both of them breathless.
The last time she had touched Sasha had been just after the
Cartel Massacre, before she had grimly
decided to try and set things right as best she could. Jude had offered no explanation for
the shift in their
relationship, nor had Sasha sought one. The dark woman occasionally felt the burning
intensity still
between them, knew by looking at the smoky saffron of Sasha's eyes that she was aware of
it as well. For Jude, however, a return to Sasha's bed meant a return to the darkness that
she was at last working so hard to be rid of.
Still, Sasha was an important person in the day-to-day
functioning of all Jude's businesses-- both
legitimate and otherwise-- and the only thing Jude kept from the tawny woman was the
knowledge of her
re-involvement with the Agency. She's got her nose out of joint about something, Jude
thought darkly as
she continued to pound down the shoreline. And that makes life suck for everyone
else... Well... she added with a mental grin... Everyone but me. Whatever Sasha's
problem, Jude was exempt from her wrath, treated instead with an icy calm.
At last she rounded the beachhead that brought her house
into view. Come on, Angel... one more mile...
Jason's old chant echoed in her head and brought an unexpected smile to her face. More and
more these
days, Jason was close to her thoughts. Much to her surprise, the memories that surged
forth were the quiet ones-- full of laughter and kindness-- that she hadn't allowed
herself to dwell on since her partner's death. It hadnt escaped her notice that the
memories had returned in force about the same time that Elizabeth had entered her life.
She vacillated between thinking that the memories were reminding her of the joy of letting
someone in or were warning her of the consequences of such a rash act.
Trying to tell me something, Partner? she asked, talking to him in her musings the way she used to in the old days, when she was under and he was far, far away. I think you really would have liked her... She's funny, smart as hell, beautiful... God is she beautiful. The golden outline of the woman slowly coming into focus in the distance brought another wide smile to Jude's face, in spite of the ten miles she had just run. And she's kind, Jase.... like you... I can see it in everything she does... Her eyes just seem to hold me when she's talking and not let me go... I know I've gotta be nuts to keep her here. But at that moment, Jude decided she really didn't give a damn. Didn't care about all the reasons these feelings were wrong and dangerous, and just concentrated on why they were right. She had spent practically every second possible in Elizabeth's company and found herself thinking about the slender woman at the oddest times. Most of all, however, her dreams for the first time in years were filled with the happy times she and Jason had spent together instead of the horror that had ultimately befallen them. Letting go of her caution this night was the single most irresponsible act she had committed in ten years. And damn if it doesn't feel good. A sudden burst of energy sent her sprinting the remaining 100 yards to the deck, and she vaulted over the railing, landing softly on the other side. Show off, a tiny mental voice chortled. "Hey there," she greeted a slightly startled Liz.
Liz pushed her sunglasses up to better survey the woman in
front of her. Skin glistening with the sheen of
exertion and muscles quivering slightly from the effort of the last ten miles, Jude
radiated an animal
exuberance that crackled in the air around her. "Hi," she said. "Nice
run?" Jude's habits were becoming
increasingly familiar to the reporter, although she had only been part of the household
for a week. The
ten-mile torture session was only one part of Jude's exercise routine that made Liz
shudder. The small
woman was in fabulous shape herself and took great pride in working fairly hard to
maintain her fitness,
but the agent's workouts exhausted her just by watching them.
"Great," Jude grinned, stepping behind the wet
bar on the deck and retrieving a bottle of cold water. "I
feel like I could do it all over again."
The reporter shivered at the thought, watching Jude as she
downed half the bottle in a single gulp. "You're
kidding right?" She saved the file on her computer and shut the system down. Much to
her surprise, over
the last seven days Liz found herself writing fiction for the first time since college. It
wasn't anything like
Love's Fevered Embrace, her last novel, and she was rather pleased with her
efforts.
Jude cocked her head as if considering the possibility.
"Yeah, I am kidding," she said at last, grinning.
"How are you doing?" she asked, throwing herself down in the chaise across from
Liz. She stretched
luxuriously against the comfortable pillows and fanned herself with the edge of her
T-shirt, exposing a
length of muscled abdomen to Liz's appreciative eyes. There was something ...different...
about Jude this
evening, she immediately noticed, and the dark woman's rambunctious energy was contagious.
"The doc
get your stitches out okay?"
"What? Oh, right, he did," she affirmed,
remembering the painfully thin man who had arrived this
morning. He had cool hands and an air that was slightly hazy around the edges, but she had
liked him
anyway. As was her habit, she had managed to pull Stephen Ryan's entire story out of him,
including
Jude's own role in it.
"When you think about it," Stephen said dreamily. "She's become something of a guardian angel for me." Then he laughed softly. "I guess that's sort of appropriate though."
"What makes you say that?" Liz asked, intrigued by the light that he cast on the shadowy life Jude lived.
He seemed to focus on her for the first time since they
began talking about Jude. "You are an innocent,
aren't you?" Soft brown eyes appraised her, and a hesitant smile came to his face.
"At first I thought you
were just another of her whores-- she has quite a reputation in certain circles, you
know, but not lately--"
he rambled. Part of Liz wanted to shake the frail man to try and jar some sense from
him, but she held
back, aware that she would ultimately learn far more by letting him rattle on.
"But she was genuinely
concerned about you... I could see it in her eyes... And I never thought I'd see that
from the Archangel..."
"Archangel?"
"That's what they used to call her on the
streets... Back when she was with the DEA... They don't call her
that anymore," he whispered, then shuddered.
Liz could plainly see that the doctor had gone to a
place that was terrifying for the man. She thought
about the description of Jude standing in his doorway-- bloodied and enraged-- and had
a pretty good
idea where the doctor had gone. "Stephen?" she gingerly called him back.
"What do they call her now?"
He blinked rapidly, as if afraid to speak the name. But
the unwavering gentleness of those verdant eyes
coaxed the words from him. "El Diablo..." The name was delivered on a breath
of air, and he quickly
looked around to see if anyone but Liz had heard him.
"The devil..." Liz absorbed this fact for a
moment longer, along with the man's increasingly distraught
state, then tried one more question. "Why is she an appropriate guardian angel for
you?"
A moment of lucidity briefly passed over him, clearing his eyes. "Because she's the one who damned me. And she came back to make sure I have a comfortable ride to Hell..."
"Elizabeth?"
"Whoops! Sorry, I was just thinking about your doctor friend."
"He's not exactly a friend."
"That's sort of what he said. He was kinda fuzzy around the edges, though. He on something?" she asked idly.
Jude groaned and collapsed back onto the chaise.
"Fuck..." she muttered almost inaudibly, then she sat
back up. "I'm sorry. Yeah, he's a junkie, that's why they revoked his license, but I
thought he'd pretty
much cleaned up."
"Well, he was mostly." Liz hesitated about
relating her conversation, unsure what effect it would have on
Jude's euphoric mood. "He just kinda faded out there near the end. He came in, took
my stitches out, and we chatted for a little while. That's all."
"You sure?" Jude's eyes narrowed in concern. "If he was high when he got here, he might have left a stitch in there." She stood and took a tentative step towards Liz. "Would you mind if I took a look? Just to be sure?"
Liz was quite certain that Stephen had gotten the stitches
out, even though he had seemed slightly spacey and had gotten downright spooky when he
started talking about Jude. Liz however, welcomed the
opportunity to feel the dark woman's hands on her again. "Sure," she agreed.
"No sense in worrying over
it." She slid the computer off her lap and onto the deck.
Jude knelt by her side and gently lifted the edge of Liz's
green polo shirt, eyes flickering briefly to the
reporter's face. "Sorry if I smell a little less than fresh," she teased, a
playful light flashing in her eyes.
"Since you're ministering to me, I'll let it slide for
now." Actually, Liz was enjoying the musky scent that
came to her faintly on the breeze, hinting at the parts of Jude that still remained
forbidden to the reporter.
She closed her eyes and enjoyed the delicate feel of Jude's fingers dancing over the
nearly healed wound.
"Looks great. You shouldn't scar," Jude approved,
glancing at Liz's shuttered gaze. Smiling softly, she let
her hands linger for a moment on the lissome muscles, absorbing the warmth of the slender
woman's skin. "How does it feel?" she asked. "You still sore?"
Green eyes popped back open at the question and smiled
reassuringly. "Not really. You've been taking
good care of me," she bantered.
"My pleasure, ma'am," Jude replied quietly. She
gently brushed the rumpled tail of Liz's shirt down over
the khaki shorts and straightened it. A thoughtful silence balanced precariously between
them as green
and blue gazes mingled hesitantly. "Um... Elizabeth..." Jude rubbed a hand
absently across her still-sweaty brow. "If you're feeling up to it... um... would you
like to go out tonight? We could get out of the house for a little while," she
offered tentatively. "But only if you want," she added. "I mean, I don't
want you to think that you have to..."
Liz fought to keep at bay the stupid grin that threatened
to run loose across her features. Jude sounded for all the world like a shy kid asking out
her first date, and it was an unexpectedly endearing side to a
woman who seemed to specialize in consummate control. "That sounds pretty good,"
she replied,
managing to keep her voice casual. "Did you have anything in mind?"
"Nothing too complicated," Jude assured her.
"I was just thinking-- you told me you used to shoot pool in
college. You up for a game or two?"
Although Liz would have agreed to anything from mud
wrestling to cockfighting just to spend time with
Jude, the dark woman's suggestion was truly appealing. Around the Herald she had
something of a
reputation as a little hustler and usually won enough matches to keep her in free drinks
whenever they
played. "I think I could manage that," she said nonchalantly, a gleam in her
eye.
Jude studied her for a moment then smiled, the expression
reaching into the depths of her eyes and
scattering a shining blue over Liz, whose heart lurched painfully at the vision.
"Great, it's a date," Jude
said lightly.
"Is it?" Liz teased.
A lazy smirk curled across Jude's lips, control firmly back
in place. "You bet," she answered. "I've got a
couple of errands to run first, but they shouldn't take long," she continued.
"When I get back we can grab
something to eat and then go play. Does that sound good?"
"I'll go you one better," Liz suggested.
"Why don't I make something for dinner here while you're out and
about? I'm a pretty good cook, if I do say so myself." She bounced to her feet and
padded into the kitchen-- Jude and the menagerie trailing behind. Carmina had the day off,
so Liz plundered unharassed through the housekeeper's kitchen, her face growing more
clouded the deeper she went. "Of course... having some food here is usually a
prerequisite for cooking."
"What do you mean?" Jude objected. "The
market didn't deliver this morning? I could have sworn I saw
them here."
"Well... Jude... yes... they did..." Liz spoke,
opening random cabinets as she went and glancing at the
rather mundane array of pasta, bread and vegetables. "But.. you don't exactly have a
lot of... variety
here..." A search of the refrigerator yielded similarly drab results.
Jude looked around sheepishly. "I eat in restaurants a lot."
"But what about when you want to eat at home?"
"Take out?" she offered hopefully.
The honey-haired woman clucked disapprovingly.
"Drastic measures are called for here. I should have
known better. Anyone who can 'phone in' her grocery order definitely would not
understand."
"What does that mean?"
"Never you mind." Liz turned the tall woman
around, pushing her out of the kitchen and towards the
stairs.
"Hey wait..." Jude spluttered at being woman-handled in her own house.
"You just run your errands," Liz commanded.
"Leave dinner to me," she admonished as Jude dutifully
climbed the stairs towards the shower. "How long do you think you'll be?"
Jude ran though a mental list of the things she had to do
and the things she could weasel out of. "Couple
hours?"
"Perfect," Liz agreed. "Hey!" she
called just before Jude disappeared into her bedroom. "Is it still okay if I
borrow one of the cars in the garage?" Earlier in the week, Jude-- not wanting Liz to
feel trapped-- had
placed at the reporter's disposal both her other cars, a Ford Explorer and a Jaguar XJS.
"Sure," Jude shrugged. "The keys are on the control panel by the kitchen door. Help yourself."
"You're late." Kent drummed his fingers
impatiently on the table's cheap Formica top as Jude slid into the
seat opposite him.
"So sue me," Jude retorted, signaling the
waitress. "Bourbon, neat," she ordered before turning back to
Kent. "Have you got anything on the hit yet?"
"I'm fine, thank you Jude. Yourself?" he mocked.
"I swear Lucien, your manners get worse every time I
see you."
Jude sat back against the vinyl booth, an appraising cast
in her eyes. "Something got your knickers in a
twist, Kent?"
He waited until Jude's drink was settled in front of her
then shrugged. "I'm getting a lot of heat to wind
this operation up," he stated grimly.
Jude snorted derisively. "Since when? This op isn't on the books, and I'm not even supposed to exist in the eyes of the Agency. What gives?"
"The fact of the matter is, you do exist," he
snapped. "To a lot of people. Did you really think the
Archangel's return to the Agency would go unnoticed?"
"I'm not returning to the Agency," she replied
coldly. "Got it? I get Massala and I'm gone. How many
times do I have to tell you that?"
"Fine. Whatever. But they want you to do it now."
"Too fucking bad," she retorted. "I'm
nowhere near ready to bring Massala in. Good God, Kent, we just
sat down last week. You above everyone else should know that it's not going to happen
overnight."
"Have you spoken with Massala since your meet?"
"No."
"Why not?"
"Enough!" she growled, the light in her eyes
turning suddenly harsh as she leaned menacingly forward. "I
am not some cherry that you can browbeat into submission. This is my game. My show.
Without me,
you'd have about as much chance of bringing Massala in as you'd have of getting the Pope
to fuck
Madonna on the altar at the Vatican. Now don't piss me off." She sat back again and
smiled pleasantly.
"Or I just might have to get nasty."
Kent ground his jaw together tightly, aware that everything she said was true. "There's just some.. concern... with the latest hit attempt."
"Speaking of which, have you found anything?" she asked again, downing her drink in a swallow.
"Nothing. And that's got me worried. Usually we hear just about anything that's going down."
Jude considered this for a moment, silently thinking that
the Agency wasn't nearly as up on everything as
they thought they were. "Okay, I'll put my people on it. I don't like doing it
because if they get caught, this guy's gonna know I'm coming after him. Looks like I don't
have a choice this time." She beat a quiet tattoo on the table top, mind racing.
"We done here?"
Kent's face softened. "Hey, don't run off. I'm sorry I
snapped at you. It's just the pressure I'm getting..." he
trailed off.
"It's not a problem," she assured him. "I worked the pressure for a lotta years, remember?"
"Yeah," he grinned. "But it never seemed to get to you."
"Oh it got to me, all right. You just didn't see
it," she answered, her thoughts wandering to her lost
partner, who had seen what the pressure had done to the dark agent, and how it had
terrified him.
He snorted cynically, a ...yeah, right... expression
on his face. "I guess I'll have to take your word for it."
He shifted in his seat. "Look, Tony and I are going over to Barrido del Mar, see
Maria and have some
calamari. Why don't you come with? I know Ria'd love to see you."
An oddly happy grin worked itself over her features at the
thought of her plans with Elizabeth. "I'd love
to, but I've got a date," she demurred.
Kent's brows shot up in surprise.
"Yup," she nodded. "An honest-to-goodness,
no-business-I'm-just-going-out-with-her-because-I-like-her
date."
"Wow..." he smiled. "Can I tell Maria? She'll be thrilled."
"Sure," she replied easily. "Why not? Tell her I said 'hi' and that I'll come see her next week. Okay?"
"She'll hold you to that."
"I know. I'll be there." Jude and Maria had made
their peace over a year ago, forgiven each other for all
the madness that had ensued after Jason's death-- finally letting go of the rage and the
pain that had
consumed them both, leaving only an aching guilt on Jude's part for the tragedy. For some
reason though, tonight the thought of seeing Maria wasn't edged with the wracking sense of
things lost that it usually was, and she wondered if the honey-haired woman had anything
to do with that as well. Elegantly sliding from the booth, she touched Kent's arm briefly.
"Thanks, I'll see you soon." Then she was gone, slipping back into the night.
Jude returned to a house filled with seductive R&B rhythms pulsing softly through the
stereo system and
the tantalizing smells of sizzling chicken, spices, and tangy sauce. She nodded
appreciatively at the music and followed the drifting tentacles of scent into the kitchen.
"Whoa..." she whispered to herself as she pushed open the galley doors.
Clearly, most of the preparation had already been done-- as
the pile of pots, pans and cutting utensils in
the sink testified. A glass of wine sat on the cook's island in the center of the room,
along with a platter of nachos and a spicy-smelling dip that looked liberally laced with
peppers. A matched set of plates, bowls, and eating implements sat neatly in the island's
corner, waiting to be set. What held Jude captivated, however, was the auric vision
dancing by the stove, oblivious to any scrutiny.
Elizabeth's hair was loose, tumbling wildly about her
shoulders with each enticing sway. A burgundy
long-sleeved shirt with a couple of buttons casually undone hinted at the full breasts
hidden underneath
the silk's softness, and it was tucked into a pair of faded blue jeans that seemed to wrap
possessively
around the length of the small woman's legs. Jude drank in the sight as one who had just
emerged from
the desert's heart might survey Shangri-La. With a simple touch, Elizabeth had turned this
place-- Jude's
fortress-- into a home thrumming with life, with heart, with desire.
Swamped by the recondite sensations, Jude opened her mouth
to speak, only to discover her voice was
nowhere to be found. Before she had a chance to try again, Elizabeth caught sight of her,
emitting a
startled yelp at the tall woman framed in the doorway.
"I didn't mean to scare you," Jude apologized softly, grateful her throat had decided to open.
"S'Okay," Elizabeth blushed. "I was just--"
"Dancing," Jude finished for her. "I enjoyed watching you."
Another violent blush seized the small woman's features,
and her eyes burned unusually bright. "I-- um--
thanks."
"You went shopping," Jude observed, sliding into the kitchen and letting the door fall shut behind her.
"Yeah... You just can't play pool in khakis, you know?"
Jude glanced at her own tailored slacks, suddenly inspired
by Elizabeth's example. "How long do I have
before dinner?"
"Stuff's gotta bake for about 45 more minutes. I made us something to snack on in the meantime, though." She gestured to the tray on the island.
Snagging a chip and dousing it liberally in the dip, Jude
moaned in delight as she swallowed. "Mmm...
Those are great, Liz. How about I get changed and then make a pitcher of margaritas to go
with this? I
may not cook, but I'm a helluva bartender," she grinned.
"Deal," the small woman agreed, sending Jude off to change.
Once upstairs, a quick shower freshened her from the sticky
drive home, and she dried her hair in record
time, letting it fall just as freely as Liz's did. She then pulled a favorite pair of
button-fly jeans from the
closet. "Can't go wrong with 501s," she muttered to herself, relishing the feel
of the worn fabric across her
body. Her skin sang with awareness this evening, sensitive even to the fluttering breeze
generated by the
ceiling fans in her bedroom. Tapping her foot on the thickly padded carpet as she stood at
the door of her
closet, she perused the rows of shirts and the stack of T-shirts that Carmina had neatly
organized by color until her eyes lit with sensual glee. "Perfect." Smiling to
herself, she pulled the leather vest off its padded hanger and slipped it over her
shoulders, buttoning it rapidly. Scuffed black boots and a matching leather belt completed
her look. "Not bad," she commented, peering one last time in the mirror and
running long fingers through her hair, settling a few recalcitrant strands into place.
"Hope you like it, Elizabeth," she whispered.
Liz had moved to the living room while dinner finished
baking and was investigating Jude's extensive CD
collection when she heard the dark woman clattering down the stairs. "You have the
most amazing sound system," she called over her shoulder, not turning around.
"I've never heard anything like it."
"Thanks," came the quiet reply. "I had the same people who wired the Club install it."
"Is that where you get all your CDs?" Liz stood,
gesturing to the neatly shelved rows of discs. "I can't
imagine that you have time to shop for all these." She spun around, her gaze finally
landing on her date
for the evening. "Oh my..." The words dropped unexpectedly from her lips, her
eyes traveling up the
length of Jude's long body and back down again. From booted foot to leather-clad
shoulders, Jude was
every bad girl fantasy Liz had ever had come to vivid, dazzling life. "This is...
nice..." she breathed,
stepping closer and letting her fingers brush across the black leather of Jude's vest.
"You like?" Jude murmured, eyes half-closing at
the bare touch of Liz's fingers. They drifted over the
leather and down her shoulder, tracing the curve of a bicep and finally coming to rest on
her forearm.
"I like."
The women spent a soundless moment just absorbing the
closeness between them. The resolute bands of control that kept Jude's soul shuttered
wrenched violently-- corroded by the washing of memories of her
bond with Jason and by the quiet days of conversation that she and Elizabeth had already
shared-- and
Jude realized with a gut-churning clarity that her desire for this woman was rapidly
surpassing want and
coming precariously close to need. Despite Jude's resolve to the contrary, Elizabeth was
sinking into her-- skin and bone, muscle and blood.
The words made flesh, Jude thought dizzily as she
realized her arms were around the honey-haired
woman, and Elizabeth was nuzzling her throat, teeth nipping tenderly at the flaring pulse
point. How did
this happen? Her head instinctively fell back, opening itself to the invader's
assault. Slim hands roamed
the breadth of her shoulders, circling delicately as the lips found purchase on bronze
skin. Her own fingers tangled in the blond hair shimmering with the devil's highlights and
guided the questing mouth to her own.
Yes... her mind breathed in a sibilant whisper.
Elizabeth's full lips parted to meet hers, and there was a
subtle pause before Jude began falling into the exquisite softness of the welcoming mouth.
Their first hesitant kiss gave way to increasingly
confident ones, and a moan rippled from Jude's throat as
the small woman's tongue made its way into her mouth, searching, coaxing and teasing Jude
with its
sweetness. A hunger that had nothing to do with the spicy smells emanating from the
kitchen roared up in Jude's body with bewildering force, jolting the dark woman into
awareness of her surroundings.
She drew her mouth away gently, loathe to leave the lush
warmth of Elizabeth's lips. The small woman
groaned in protest and opened eyes opaque with arousal to gaze at her questioningly. Jude
spoke with an unsteady voice. "Slowing down, yes. Stopping, no," she teased.
"Okay, okay," Elizabeth breathed. "I get it. I don't have to like it, but I get it," she grumbled good-naturedly. "I've wanted to do that since I laid eyes on you," she confessed, resting her head on Jude's chest and smiling at the frantic cadence of the heart underneath her ear.
"Me too," Jude admitted softly. "I just
didn't think..." It would feel like this... so terrifyingly good and
right. She glanced down the length of their bodies, arms and legs entwined so tightly that
not even the
tiniest molecule could pass between them.
"Didn't think what?" Elizabeth prompted.
"That it would be such a good idea for you to get
involved with me," Jude covered smoothly. Just having
these feelings was unsettling enough to the dark woman, but speaking of them to Elizabeth
at this point
was unthinkable.
"Because of your... exotic profession."
"Yeah," Jude chuckled, a low, vibrant sound that rumbled into Elizabeth's hearing. "Something like that."
"Jude?" Elizabeth looked up, the warm depths of
her mossy eyes finding Jude's gaze and holding it. "Don't try and make my decisions
for me." The words were soft, but there was no mistaking the obdurate tone behind
them. "I won't tolerate it," she continued, gaining momentum from her
indignation. "The only
reason for you not to get involved with me is because you don't want me. I realize that
the path you've
traveled has been wildly different from mine. But that doesn't make me stupid. Or
naive." She leveled an
intense stare at the woman in her arms. "Or ignorant of exactly what you are."
Jude watched the
honey-haired woman with amazement. She had expected strength from Elizabeth, but certainly
not this
powerful will that-- she was beginning to suspect-- rivaled her own. "Do you
understand me?"
The final question yanked Jude from her surprise and back
into the small woman's eyes. "I understand
you, Elizabeth, but I can't help but... worry." Her hand ran down Elizabeth's side
and pressed softly
against the wound hidden beneath the jeans. "You got shot just for knowing me.
Imagine what might
happen if you became..." she hesitated, "Something more." Time to fess
up, Angel, Jason's voice crooned in her ear. She's already something more... or
else you wouldn't be feeling like this... What's it like...? his voice asked soft and
low in her ear, To finally feel yourself falling in love...? Jude swallowed hard at
the words clamoring for release that were lodged in her throat .
Liz, seeing the conflict roiling in the azure pools of
Jude's eyes, sought to ease the intensity that was part raw desire and part animal fear.
"Well, at least I won't have to worry about getting bored with you
around," she grinned winningly. "Now that you've shown me the downside of dating
you," she patted the
hand that covered her wounded side. "Why don't you show me the perks? I believe you
owe me at least a
night on the town, Ms. Lucien."
It was an invitation to put down whatever burdens the tall
woman might be shouldering and come out to
play. The combination of Elizabeth's radiant smile and the warm feel of the lithe body in
her arms made
Jude helpless to resist. She bent down and tangled her lips sensually with Liz's for a
moment. "Show me
the way, lady," she whispered, breaking the kiss. "Show me the way."
"You are trying to sabotage me," Jude groaned two hours later as they climbed into the Boxster.
"Whatever do you mean?" Liz batted her eyelashes innocently.
"That dinner," Jude grinned, buckling her seat
belt and cranking the engine to purring life. I can't
remember the last time I ate so much. When we get to the hall, I'm going to bend down to
take a shot and fall over. I'm stuffed."
"Then I take it you liked my Fire-Breathing Dragon Enchiladas?"
"Loved them. Don't tell Carmina. She'll be insanely jealous. She says I don't eat enough."
Liz frowned and poked Jude in the stomach and ribs. "She's right. You're nothing but muscle and bones."
"I thought it was skin and bones," Jude objected.
"Not in your case."
The Boxster carried them to the edge of the drive, where
Jude paused momentarily before launching them
into the night. The sun had taken the worst of the heat with its departure, but the earth
still glowed
warmly from its ministrations, and Jude was grateful for her bare arms as the wind whipped
past.
"You mind if I pick out some tunes?" Liz asked,
holding up the slim CD case that normally rested in the
Boxster's passenger seat.
"Not at all."
Liz flipped thoughtfully through the case, taking note of
the selections-- which leaned heavily towards
blues and jazz, with a couple of classic rock artists thrown in for good measure-- but one
disc brought her up short. "No way!" she laughed.
Jude shot a questioning brow in her direction.
"The Bee Gees?" she asked incredulously.
"You gotta be kidding me?!"
The dark woman laughed ruefully. "It's a long story."
"Spill it," Liz commanded.
"Okay... about five years ago, I was stuck in this
tiny Mexican village waiting on a contact who was late.
Way late." Way dead, you mean... but I think that would pretty much kill the mood
we've got going here. "So there I was... waiting on him with nothing but a
paperback copy of Wuthering Heights and this little transistor radio that only
picked up one station. KRZY-- Where it's all disco, all the time!" she intoned in a
faux announcer's voice. "For two weeks all I did was read Bronte and listen to
'Staying Alive' and 'Night Fever.' By the end of the first week I had memorized the book,
and by the end of the second I was singing along with the radio. Enthusiastically. I've
had a weakness for the stuff ever since." Of course it was either stay in my room
and sing with the radio or start trying to make time with the putas who were
the only people who would talk to me.
"Did you say sing along?" A sly grin creased Liz's face as she slid the disc into the player and punched the select button. "I've gotta hear this."
It only took a few seconds for Jude to recognize the song
before she joined in, a perfect falsetto blending
with that of the Brothers Gibb. Liz laughed in delight at the revelation of this whimsical
side of her companion and insisted the impromptu concert continue all the way to the pool
hall.
The Boxster took them to a seedy-looking set of streets,
far away from the neon and glitter that Liz
associated with Jude, to a nondescript row of bars with no names on them. Liz looked
around them
doubtfully, glancing at her escort with a question in her eyes.
Jude laughed easily as she slid out of the car and stepped
around to open Liz's door. "Don't worry. You're
safe with me," she murmured close to the smaller woman's ear.
A pleasant shiver darted across her skin at the intimate
promise in Jude's tone. "I'm not worried about
me," she assured the dark woman. "But your car-- that's another matter."
Her eyes couldn't help but
wander to the predatory glances of the men standing in the shadowy corners. Parked
proprietarily in front
of a tow zone, the Boxster was a taunting symbol of a prosperity that didn't reach these
streets.
Jude waved away her concern with an elegant hand.
"Nah... they know me." Then she added, "I grew up
here." She grinned, seeing the astonished look on Liz's face. "This one,"
she pointed to an unmarked
green door, opening it for her companion to pass through.
Mick Jagger pleaded for sympathy for the devil as they
entered the hall. Used to the thronging crowds of
her own local yuppie pub, Liz expected the place to be teeming with boisterous people
relieved that the
weekend had finally arrived. What she found instead was a fairly full establishment, where
the conversation was muted by the rapid click of balls rebounding off each other. They
weren't the only women in the bar, but close enough so that Liz felt the wandering gaze of
the bar's patrons. Jude,
however, seemed oblivious to them all as she guided Liz confidently through the maze of
tables to the bar.
A wizened old man whose age the reporter would have put at anywhere from 70 to ageless caught sight of them as they approached. Of course six feet of somebody like Jude Lucien is almost impossible to miss, Liz thought appreciatively, glancing once more at the sculpted profile of the woman beside her. The faint smell of leather and the woman's own spicy scent curled at the edge of Liz's senses, and she fought the urge to find someplace-- anyplace-- to rest her hands on Jude's body.
"Girlie!" the old man cackled gleefully. "Didn't think you was ever goin to come back round."
"Nickie, how you doing?" Jude's voice had shifted cadences, dropping an octave, and was now tinged with a throaty growl.
"Acrk-- you know these boys-- punks tryin to take what
don't belong to them--" He waved his hands in a
dismissive and vaguely obscene gesture. "But I'm still here!" he chortled.
"Somebody trying to hustle you, Nickie?" Jude asked, a mirthful light dancing in her eyes.
"Ain't nobody able to hustle me," Nickie objected
vociferously, then he laughed knowingly. "Cept you...
and you weren't nothing but a punk back then yerself. That pretty face of yours tricked
me, sat's all." The
pair shared a laugh, and then Nickie's eyes left Jude's imposing form to focus intently on
the woman
tucked neatly at her side. "Where's yer manners, girlie?" To Liz's astonishment,
the old man reached out
an imperious hand and smacked Jude smartly on her arm.
The dealer just looked amused. "You know, a lot of people are asking me that today," she said cryptically. "Pardon me. Nickie, this is Elizabeth Peterson."
"Hi," Liz smiled.
Nickie's eyes narrowed to slits as he appraised her, nodding to himself. "Yer a pretty one too," he nodded. "You gotta handle on this one here?" He jerked a thumb in Jude's direction.
"Hey!" Jude protested.
"I'm trying," Liz laughed at Jude's scowl.
"But it's hard." She smiled at Jude, feeling a quiet jolt as their
eyes met over the old man's head.
Nickie shook his head knowingly. "She's a slippery one. You watch her," he solemnly warned.
"Yeah, yeah, yeah-- everybody's a critic." Jude
rolled her eyes and slung a long arm comfortably around
Liz's shoulders. "I don't need you giving her any pointers on how to handle me, old
man. Now, you gotta
table for us or do I have to move one of the punks myself?"
"I'll get you a table. I don't need you tossin
anybody else through my front windows," Nickie proclaimed,
bustling from behind the counter and heading towards the rows of tables.
"Hey Nickie!" A man dressed in stained and faded
work coveralls shouted. "We need another round down
here!"
The old man muttered something unrecognizable and jerked
his head at Jude. "Get them for me, girlie.
Everything's still in the same place."
"Do I look like the help around here?" Jude retorted as the old man shuffled away.
"Close enough, apparently." Liz reached up and squeezed the hand that dangled off her shoulders.
"Uh... sorry," Jude murmured. "I wasn't thinking when I..."
"And I wasn't complaining." Green eyes caressed
the smooth lines of Jude's face, absorbing its tiny
details-- the dark speckles in the pale blue eyes, the thickness of the lashes blinking at
her-- things that,
until now, she had not been allowed the luxury of experiencing up close.
Jude opened her mouth to speak, but the clamoring calls of
"somebody, dammit, get us another round"
interrupted anything she had been about to say. Liz gritted her teeth, annoyed enough to
go over and
smack the owner of the offending voice, but Jude merely smiled as if to say ...next
time... and stepped
behind the bar with quiet ease.
"Hey, get me a tequila shooter while you're back there!" Liz grinned impishly at her date.
Jude shook her head, drawing three beers off the tap and expertly sliding them down the length of the bar.
"That's more like it," the men grunted appreciatively, taking in Jude's sleek figure.
"You Nickie's new help?" the boldest one asked her.
Jude arched a sardonic brow, listening to their patter.
"Yeah, bout time he classed up the joint."
"I love a woman in leather."
"Ain't seen the likes of you around here."
A crowd was beginning to gather, drawn by the increasingly
raucous group at the center of the bar.
Aware of the emerald gaze upon her from the far end of the bar, Jude moved with elegant
precision,
racking her memory for the drinks' ingredients as more and more exotic calls came to the
dark woman.
"Come on, baby, give me a tall cool one."
"Sex on the beach, honey, can you make it?"
"A buttery nipple sounds good right about now."
Another quick glance down the bar... Elizabeth was smiling openly at her now, and warm light pulsing in those green eyes. A fierce grin broke across her face. Instead of groaning at the atrocious puns tossed at her, she began delivering the drinks with cheeky replies of her own, teasing the other customers unmercifully. Nickie's tip jar began to fill rapidly.
"Hey, bartender..." A sweet voice from the
honey-haired vision watching the show caught her attention.
"Can I get some service down here?"
Jude sauntered the length of the bar, a smirk meandering across her face. Propping a long arm on the edge of the counter, she crossed her legs at the ankle, providing an inspiring six-foot vision for the boys at the bar. "What can I get you, darlin'?" she drawled.
"I thought I ordered a tequila shooter," Liz replied archly, crossing her arms. Jude's bare arms glimmered in the dim bar light, the strong muscles finely delineated. She had a sudden flash of those hands, those arms moving against her, over her... pushing her... Whoa right there... Lizzy. Too many margaritas at dinner? Forcing her mind back on track, she slowly licked her lips. "So what do I have to do around here to get a decent drink?"
Jude smiled recklessly and placed her hands on her hips. "One tequila shooter... coming up." She held up a bottle. "You want Cuervo Gold? Or the house brand?"
"I only want the best," Liz shot back saucily.
An eyebrow curled upwards in amusement as Jude replied,
"Then you came to the right place, querida."
She long-poured the shot into a glass and reached into the cooler for a lime which she
neatly sliced into
quarters and placed the items in front of her customer.
"You forgot the salt."
Jude glanced down at the glass' barren ri and then
back up at green eyes dancing with
amusement. "No I didn't..." Thinking rapidly, she held up two fingers in front
of Liz. "Open up," she
softly commanded.
The honey-haired woman obeyed silently, feeling her heart pounding rapidly in its cage. Jude slipped her fingers past Liz's lips, not quite able to swallow the groan that surged forth as their lengths were enveloped by the heat of her companion's mouth. Liz took full advantage of the invasion, brushing her tongue along the sensitive flesh and only reluctantly releasing her hold as Jude tugged them free. Jude swiftly ran the digits through the margarita salt and offered them once more to the smaller woman. "Ready?" she asked hoarsely.
Liz could only nod as she picked up the drink. Her lips
parted, welcoming Jude's offering. The sting of the
salt overwhelmed the sweet taste of skin as Jude's fingers abandoned her once more. She
quickly downed the tequila, sitting the glass on the counter with a thump. Her eyes
watered at the alcohol's bite, and her senses-- already in exquisite torment-- flared even
more.
"You forgot the lime," Jude teased softly.
Liz's eyes flickered to the wedge resting on the bar's surface and shrugged.
"You'll remember it next time?" Jude offered.
Their eyes met for a brief, sensual moment, and Liz grinned
shakily. "I don't know if I could survive a
next time," she admitted.
"What's goin on here?" Nickie came blustering
back behind the bar, interrupting their rapport. "I turn my
back for one second and yer puttin on a naughty show?" Nickie shook his head
reproachfully, but his eyes were grinning. "Git out from behind my bar," he
shooed Jude from her perch.
"But look, Nick, I made you some money," Jude gestured to the now overflowing tip jars.
"You cost me a lotta money," Nickie snorted.
"Now git. Yer at table 6 in the corner. Cues on the wall.
Git."
Jude reached around Nickie's diminutive form and grabbed
the Cuervo, two glasses and a jug of orange
juice from the cooler. "That way you don't have to worry about us," she assured
him.
"Yer takin my best stuff," he mock protested, hands on hips.
"Like any of these guys are gonna notice?" Jude
logically pointed out. "Give 'em a beer and tell 'em to talk to me if they have a
problem." Joining Liz on the other side of the bar, she nodded towards the back.
"Come on, its back here."
"And I don't wanna see anymore of that kinky stuff in
my bar!" he called as they sauntered over to the
table.
Jude sat their stash on a convenient table as Liz strolled
to the wall and weighed a number of cues in her
hand before settling on one. Jude watched with ill-concealed surprise as her companion
went to the table
and expertly racked the balls, looking at the dark woman with an expectant gaze. "You
wanna break?" she asked in a velvet voice.
Jude swallowed hard at both the sight and the sound of the
honey-haired woman, wondering for the first
time what the hell she had gotten herself into. "You go ahead," she managed
before walking to the wall
and selecting a cue for herself. A sharp smack of balls slamming together took her
attention from the
shapely form bent over the table to the green itself where the balls ricocheted off each
other.
"You're stripes," Liz commented, before angling
herself for another shot. The cue ball snicked against the
red two ball, sending it neatly into the side pocket. "Oh, I forgot to ask, do you
want to call our shots?" she asked innocently.
Jude's brows launched themselves skyward as she regarded
her companion anew. Another player, who had been watching the pair with calculating eyes,
chuckled softly. "Looks like you're about to get yourself
hustled," he commented over Jude's shoulder.
Jude pursed her lips. "Seems that way, doesn't it?"
"Where on earth did you learn to play pool like that?" Liz asked hours later as
they sprawled lazily on the
deck outside Jude's home.
The pair had discovered during the course of their evening
that they were almost evenly matched on the
pool table. Whenever Liz would have a spectacular run and think she had Jude on the ropes,
her
companion would come back with a skillful run of her own and balance the score. Eventually
they had lost count of how many games they had played and just relished the competition.
Their combined skill had attracted the attention of several of the better players in the
hall, but all inquires for matches were politely declined. Neither woman was tired when
Nickie eventually ran them out in the early hours of the
morning, so when they arrived back at the house, Jude led them to the deck where they
could watch the
waves washing up on shore.
"I was going to ask you the same thing," the dark woman replied.
Liz shrugged and laughed softly. "My parents had a table in the downstairs den."
"Ah..." Jude's voice echoed in the darkness. The
tall woman was swathed in shadows, sitting in the chair
farthest away from the swimming pool's edge. Liz had taken off her shoes, rolled up her
pant legs, and
was dangling her feet in the water. Moonlight glanced off the golden light of her hair,
creating a halo
that-- in her current condition-- Jude wasn't totally convinced was illusory.
"What's that supposed to mean?" Liz arched back to peer into the shadows, only able to see the barest glint of Jude's pale eyes in the darkness.
A contralto laugh wove through the night, mixing
seductively with quiet murmur of the surf. "Don't get
mad. It's just a million miles away from where I learned, that's all."
"You talk like we're from different planets."
"We might as well be," Jude sighed. There was a
wistful tone in the voice from the darkness that made
Liz's awareness prickle. The whole night had been so sweet, and the honey-haired woman was
damned if
she was going to let it slip away in the agent's unspoken doubts.
"Oh no you don't," Liz warned, standing with a
rolling motion and stalking into the heart of the shadows.
The dark woman had stretched her long legs out, and Liz strode right up to the edge of
Jude's seat, her
thighs brushing the edges of the chair. She could feel the pressure of Jude's legs between
her own, and the dizzying sensation momentarily distracted her from her anger. A brutally
fierce urge to know the power of those sleek muscles wrapping around her waist almost
threatened to overwhelm her purpose, but she pulled herself back from the brink of the
sensual purgatory. "No you don't," she repeated forcefully, feeling the hands
that rose to encircle her stop abruptly at the determination in her voice.
"Don't what?" Jude asked hoarsely.
"Pull that 'I'm not good for you bullshit' out
again," Liz sighed. "We've known each other seven days and
you've done that three times. Twice today. And if you don't stop it, I'm going to--"
Her voice ebbed in
frustration. Her mind was filled everything she had learned about the woman below her,
making her
aware that there were still so many things that she didn't know-- couldn't know really--
unless Jude
decided to tell her. That meant letting her in. And, she realized with a burst of painful
clarity, she really
wanted in, wanted to know Jude Lucien-- newspaper article or book deal be damned. The
laughing,
teasing woman she had glimpsed tonight only made her hunger for more, just as the
tantalizing caress of
the dark woman's lips and hands made her crave their full embrace. But the craving had to
be mutual, or
else it would never work. There was just too much to overcome for both of them for it to
happen any other
way. "Or I'll just have to give up," she finished softly, sadly.
Liz backed away a step before graceful hands came up to
stop her. "Don't," Jude whispered. Long fingers
curled tightly in the rough fabric of Liz's jeans for an endless moment before a dark head
was pressed
against her stomach. Dont give up.
It wasn't a calculated tease or an overture. It was a
plea-- plain and simple-- for Liz to have faith in
something she couldn't see. So, the honey-haired woman did the only thing she could do--
the only thing
her heart would tolerate-- she responded to that call. "I won't."
Chapter 7
For the second time in as many weeks, Jude overlooked the
sun as it swaggered into the day in favor of
standing in a doorway, watching Elizabeth's sleeping form. She studied the supple lines of
the woman
sprawled across the width of the bed, wondering what on earth it was about her that had
such a
devastating effect on the dark woman's defenses.
Jason had always been fond of saying that an avalanche
started with just a single stone; and-- Jude
thought ruefully-- it looked like in this case, he was right. Last night, that single,
choked plea had been all
that she had been able to force out through lungs suddenly constricted from lack of
breath. But it had
been enough to set Jude's emotions into a free-fall that she seemed helpless to stop. Time
had ground to a halt when felt those small fingers running through her hair and over her
back in gentling circles. Jude
didn't know how long their embrace had lasted; but somehow she eventually found herself
standing at her
own bedroom door, Elizabeth's hands clasped in her own. "We'll talk tomorrow,"
the honey-haired woman
had promised before depositing a sweetly chaste kiss on her lips and moving down the hall.
Although exhausted, sleep had deserted Jude at that point,
and even Anna Karenina couldn't distract her.
A hot shower had proven equally useless. Finally in exasperation, she had thrown on a pair
of sweats and a T-shirt and left the room, intent on prowling the kitchen and rescuing
some leftovers. Her steps,
however, had led in the opposite direction, to the open door where her guest slept, along
with the canine
portion of the household.
The sun flashed roseate warning lights to herald its
impending arrival, but the flicker of muscles in
Elizabeth's outflung arm had captured Jude's intent gaze instead. She must be dreaming.
The movement
dislodged Pete who rose unsteadily, his legs still heavy with sleep. The small dog lost
his balance on the
uneven tangle of blankets and fell against Elizabeth with a muffled thump.
"Wha--?" A golden head rose
from its comfortable nest and surveyed the immediate surroundings. "Hi," she
said softly, spying Jude's
tall frame. The honey-haired woman scratched Pete's ears absently, and the dog curled up
next to her
again with a contented sigh.
An exultant kernel of happiness exploded in Jude's belly,
bathing her in light that-- had it been visible--
would have rivaled anything the sun could have dared to offer. "You seem to have
bewitched my dogs,"
she observed. Clytemnestra lifted a dreamy head, brown eyes flickering guiltily as she saw
her mistress.
"Oops..." Elizabeth apologized, not looking repentant in the least.
"Well," Jude drawled, "I can't fault their taste, that's for sure."
That earned her a sleepy smile, as the small woman ran a hand through her tousled hair and narrowed her eyes at Jude. "Have you slept at all?"
The dark woman shrugged. "Some," she fibbed.
"What time is it?"
"A little before dawn."
Elizabeth chewed her lip for a moment. "Come here."
Jude hesitated, then covered the distance in three long strides, stopping at the edge of the bed.
"No, I said come here," Elizabeth
commanded in a quiet voice that brooked no resistance. Pulling the
covers back and sliding over, she dislodged a grumpy Pete who stumbled to the edge of the
bed, flopping
back down next to Aggie who had yet to stir in all the commotion.
The dark woman remained still, staring dumbly at her. Green
eyes sought hers, coaxing the reluctance
from her body, soothing Jude with the verdant lushness of her gaze. Surrendering to the
sweet promise
held out to her, she shucked the sweats from her long legs and slipped into the warmth of
Elizabeth's bed.
"There," the small woman murmured when Jude was settled quite snugly in her arms. "Isn't that better?"
But the dark woman was already asleep, her breathing steady and even, all awareness lost to dreams of a fair-haired man and a green-eyed woman laughing with her in the sun.
Time waits for no woman, even one as exhausted as Jude, and
the next time the dark woman returned to
the land of the waking, the sun was industriously dousing the world in a painfully
brilliant light. "Arrgghh..." she growled, narrowing her eyes to bare slits in a
vain attempt to ward off the day's
luminescence. Failing that, she dropped her head back to its resting-place, nestled in the
dim softness
between Elizabeth's shoulder and neck, burrowing close to the pliant skin.
A gentle laugh tickled her hearing, accompanied by the
slight ripple of muscles underneath her hand.
"You awake?" Elizabeth asked.
"Barely," Jude grunted.
Another laugh, and this time Jude raised her head far enough to see amused green eyes sparkling back at her. "Go back to sleep," the smaller woman urged. "I don't have anywhere to be."
A quick downward glance revealed that in her sleep, Jude
had staked unwitting claim to the lissome body
beneath her. The graceful fingers of one hand had pushed up the edge of Elizabeth's
T-shirt and were now
splayed lazily across an expanse of bare abdomen, while a powerful thigh draped across the
smaller
woman's hips, tucking them neatly against her own. "That's probably a good
thing," Jude noted wryly.
"Because I doubt you could move even if you wanted to."
"Do you hear me complaining?" Elizabeth snickered, her fingers playing idly in Jude's hair.
Jude knew alarm bells should be shrieking in her psyche,
that she should disentangle herself from this
embrace in more ways than one. But her body quite simply refused to obey, and she remained
incongruously cradled by this small woman's strong arms. "What time is it,
anyway?" she yawned.
Elizabeth craned her head around Jude to peek at the digital numbers on the clock. "A little past noon."
"Oh, Christ," Jude swore quietly. "Half the day's gone."
"So?"
Jude looked crossly at her bunkmate. "I have things I
need to do," she replied, confused by the vaguely
petulant tone in her own voice.
The honey-haired woman chuckled. "I know, I know. Bank
heists to plan, jewelry stores to knock off," she teased, blithely ignoring Jude's
skyrocketing brows. "Come on, Jude, its Sunday. I thought one of the
advantages of not playing by the rules was getting to make your own. And that, my bandit
friend, means
taking a day off when you want to."
Green eyes danced in merriment at Jude's poleaxed
countenance. "I do not knock off jewelry stores," she muttered darkly.
"You really do believe in living on the edge, don't you?"
"Hey, my motto is-- See a bear in the woods, walk up and poke it with a stick,"
Elizabeth agreed
cheerfully.
"What happens if you piss the bear off?"
Elizabeth half sat-up and braced on one muscular arm,
twisting her torso so that she could regard Jude
from above. "I run like hell." She studied the play of expressions over the dark
woman's face. "Do I need
to get my track shoes on?"
Cool blue silently took the measure of the woman still
tangled around her-- absorbing the deceptive
strength of the body pressed against her, the quiet wisdom of the emerald gaze, and what
both things were coming to mean to her. Her face relaxed into a disbelieving grin.
"Nah... not unless you plan on joining me for a run on my 'day off,'" she
replied lightly. Another iron band of will crumbled under the tender assault of emotion,
and Jude absently wondered why it seemed so easy to just follow out this path-- wherever
it might lead. "So what exactly did you have in mind for today?"
Elizabeth looked thoughtful. "Oh, I don't know. It's
supposed to be awfully hot today. I thought maybe
we'd go to the movies and find some three hour epic to while away the worst of the
afternoon's heat. Then
we could find some nice cool place with a couple of nice cool drinks and hole up. What do
you think?"
"I think it sounds like a plan. But I do have one
question." On cue, a loud complaint rumbled from Jude's
stomach. "What's for breakfast?"
"Huevos Rancheros."
Liz's hands were a blur as she sliced, diced, and shredded
her way though what looked like most of the
fresh vegetables in the Sunshine state. Huge piles of tomatoes, onions, and lettuce
littered the cook's
island, and pairs of eggs gently fried sunny-side up in the large nonstick pan on the
oven.
"So..." Jude nibbled on the hunk of cheddar
cheese that Liz had thrust into her mouth when she returned
to the kitchen after a shower. "Where did you learn to cook Mexican?" She
surveyed the reporter's blond
hair and green eyes and laughed. "Since you have got to be one of the whitest girls
in America."
The honey-haired woman chuckled in agreement with the
description. "Truthfully? My father was in the
Diplomatic Corps. And that meant that my brother and I were mostly raised by a succession
of nannies
and housekeepers-- which changed, of course, every time he got a new assignment. I spent a
lot of time in the kitchen with my keepers. We were stationed in several Latin American
countries, I guess I just picked it up." Liz shrugged lightly, not sure how Jude
would take the news of her privileged upbringing. From the little information available
about the ex-agent's past, she knew Jude hadn't had much of a home, if any, growing up;
and last night's muttered comment about being from two different worlds nagged at her.
When talking about her youth, Liz had so far skirted around the circumstances of her
upbringing, preferring to discuss instead her friends and life apart from the cold
confines of the Gardener family. She glanced up to see thoughtful eyes studying her.
"Diplomatic Corps, huh?" Jude flicked her gaze
back to the cook's island where she industriously rubbed
at a non-existent stain on the wood. "Guess you got to see a lot of the world growing
up." There was
nothing mocking in the dark woman's words, just an inexplicably wistful tone that the
reporter didn't
understand.
"Guess I did," Liz agreed. Blue eyes returned to
reveal a disarmingly open expression that Liz had never
seen before. She fought to keep her breathing steady and even, recognizing that she was
learning
something about Jude Lucien that no computer file or newspaper article would ever know.
"What was that like?" Jude asked softly. The
question seemed to slip out before the dark woman even
noticed, but the sound of the words falling through the air sent an embarrassed flush
spreading across the bronze features. "I mean," she shifted uneasily, as if
caught admitting something shameful. "I never really left the state of Florida until
I was twenty. Wait... that's not true," she corrected herself. "I did go to
Georgia once with my sixth grade class to see Stone Mountain."
There was nothing that Jude could have said that could have
possibly made her more vulnerable to Liz at
that moment. With a terrifying clarity, the reporter realized that Jude was awkwardly
trying to strip off the
lacquered mystique that had-- until now-- carefully protected the brooding agent. Unsure
of what she
could say to acknowledge such a precious gesture, Liz brought her fingers to Jude's face
and gently
stroked the curve of an elegant cheek. "And here I thought you'd seen
everything," she teased.
A quiet smile played over the elegant lines of Judes
mouth. "You don't need to leave Florida to do that,"
Jude assured the reporter. She nodded to the frying pan. "Those eggs about
done?"
"Eggs?" Liz shook her head swiftly to clear it. "Oh... right... eggs... Yep, hand me those plates, will you?"
The slight tension ebbed away while they piled their plates
high with Liz's breakfast concoction and
settled themselves comfortably at the round oak table. Although she wanted desperately to
continue down the path they had begun, the reporter instinctively knew that if she pushed
Jude too hard those delicate layers that were peeling away would seal back up, and the
smooth varnish of Jude's persona would conceal any evidence that they had ever existed.
Much to the honey-haired woman's surprise, the agent showed
no reticence in returning to their
conversation. "I pretty much grew up on the streets," Jude commented between
mouthfuls of huevos
rancheros. "As if you couldn't tell," she chuckled.
"You can't," Liz replied half-truthfully.
Although camouflaged by indisputably impeccable manners, the
blacksteel core of Judes time on the street remained visible in every supple movement
of the dark
womans form.
If Jude was aware of her friends fib, she let it slide. "My mother would be thrilled," the agent deadpanned. "She was always after me to act like a lady. Don't know why, really. It's not as if we had two dimes to rub together, and the neighbors already considered her a whore." There was a faded bitterness in Jude's voice, as if she had just grown too tired to carry the indignation any longer.
"What about your father?"
"Never had the pleasure of meeting the man,
myself." She shrugged in elaborate nonchalance, rising and
pouring herself another cup of coffee. Holding the pot up in an unspoken question, she
refilled the
reporter's cup as well at Lizs nod. "I never knew anything about him. How they
met. Nothing. A pale
blue eyes seemed suddenly very far away. I saw a picture of them, once though.
Standing together on the beach. He was tall-- a lot taller than her, and she wasn't a
small woman-- and broad shouldered, with hair black as anything I ever saw, and ginger
colored skin that seemed to glow in the sun." She shook her head. "He was a
beautiful man." Her gaze found Liz's, and the dark woman smiled ruefully. The
reporter wondered if her friend realized she might have been describing herself. "I
got my mother's eyes, though," Jude considered absently. "When I found the
picture, I couldn't believe that my mother had kept it all those years. I mean I was a
walking reminder of her wrong as it was."
"Maybe she loved him," Liz tentatively offered.
Jude snorted derisively. "I never knew her to love
anything except God. Then her face twisted, softening
in spite of itself. She never really had a chance, I guess. She was sixteen when she
got pregnant, and her family tossed her out. Thanks to her brother the priest, she
ended up at some home for unwed mothers. Her eyes hardened in memory. From that
day on, the fucking Catholic Church owned her. Convinced her that the only way she would
ever atone for her grievous wrong was to prostrate herself daily at the Lord's feet--
priest's feet is more like it."
"She could have given you up, but she didn't, " Liz pointed out.
Jude ran a hand through the glossy sheaf of her hair and
sighed as if tired of the discussion. "You're right.
And I guess she did love me, on some level. But I was also her cross to bear on the path
of atonement.
She intoned mockingly, The burden that once picked up can never be put down. The
priest never let her
forget that I was the issue of sin-- and as I got older, I did everything in my power to
live up to that title."
"A wild child, huh?" Liz teased, trying to
scatter the foreboding clouds that had dotted the clear blue of
Jude's eyes.
"Oh yeah," Jude sighed again with a wry smile and
glanced at her watch. "Come on. I'll tell you all about
it after the movie. We need to go if we're going to make it to the theater on time."
If Jude had stopped to think about it, she would have
realized that it was probably the most peaceful day
she had spent in the last five years. Elizabeth had chosen a light-hearted, but literate,
romantic comedy as their oasis from the racking July heat, and sitting in the theater,
Jude fought off the desperately silly urge to put her arm around the honey-haired woman in
the darkness. Throughout the movie she almost
succumbed to several such ridiculous gestures, until finally as they were leaving the
theater, she conceded the mental battle and clasped Elizabeth's slim hand in her own,
guiding her through the large Sunday afternoon crowd.
"Where to now, o mighty planner of my day off?" Jude bantered, firing up the Boxster's engines.
"Someplace cool and dark," Elizabeth replied,
falling into the game and gesturing regally with her hand.
"With a view of the ocean," she added as an afterthought.
The dark woman touched a hand to the imaginary brim of a
hat. "As you wish, ma'am."
As they drove in a relaxed silence, Jude allowed her mind to run free with the exuberant
sensations of the
last two days. The ease with which she had fallen asleep in Elizabeth's arms told her more
than any
amount of internal debate ever could about what she wanted from the slender woman. She
wanted
Elizabeth's body, her heart, her words, her kindness-- anything and everything that the
other woman was
willing to give her.
The trouble was, she didn't know what she had to offer in return.
Well... that's the problem, isn't it, Angel? You don't
think you have anything left... any heart, any light
within you. And maybe you don't... But don't you think you should at least find out?
"Hell of a time to take my soul out for a test spin," Jude muttered under her breath.
"Pardon?" Elizabeth asked.
"I said, we're here," Jude smiled blithely back
at her companion. "You said cool and dark with a view of
the ocean. Viola!" She pulled the Boxster into a ramshackle bungalow-type structure,
complete with faux
thatch roof.
They entered through old-fashioned swinging saloon doors, and their eyes were immediately soothed by a welcoming dimness. "Boy, you weren't kidding when you promised dark, huh?"
A rumbling laugh rolled from deep in Jude's throat.
Adjusting her eyes after the brilliance of the day
outside, she glanced around and motioned the bartender over with a wave of her hand. A
swarthy man of
indeterminate years ambled over, a frayed Hawaiian shirt bunched around the waist of his
faded baggy
trousers. His black hair was just turning gray and was a little long, barely brushing the
tops of his
shoulders, and the corners of his eyes bore a fine web work of lines. The entire effect
was that of a sailor
who's had one too many adventures and has finally come home from the sea. He surveyed them
with a
genuinely pleased expression, as if there could possibly be no greater luxury than looking
at the two
women in front of him.
Before leaving for the theater, Jude had changed into a
long-tailed white cotton shirt that hung loose over
a light pair of white linen trousers that were now fashionably rumpled. A smooth length of
tanned flesh
was visible at the shirt's open collar and her neck and ears were bare of any jewelry.
Shaking her hair
loose from the binding that kept it neat in the convertible, Jude cut a picture of elegant
Southern
decadence for the sailor's weary eyes. Immediately at her side, Liz was a golden child of
redemption in a
scoop-necked ochre blouse and a short, russet skirt that left her legs bare except for
thin sandals. Smiling broadly at his two customers, he asked, "And how can I help you
ladies this afternoon?"
Jude cocked a thoughtful brow, glancing at her watch. Hmm...
surely it's cocktail hour somewhere in the
world, she thought with an amused curl of her lip. "Give us something to fight
off the day's heat," she said
with a mischievous grin at her companion.
Jude's high spirits were infectious, and the sailor
bantered back, "Sounds like you're wantin my secret
house brew, then."
"That depends," Liz interjected. "Just how good is this secret house brew?"
"Aye, lady, there's nothin finer. It's as smooth as the ocean breeze caressing your hair, and it cradles you like the gentle rockin of your ship."
"Yeah I bet, right up until the time you try to stand
up," Jude commented wryly. "And then it knocks your
ass back down." Her eyes were bright with a sparkle that belied her ironic comment.
"Well," the sailor allowed, "It has been known to set a lad or two back a couple of steps."
"Great!" Liz slapped her hand down on the teak
bar. "We'll take a pitcher, two large glasses and a couple
of those little umbrellas if you have them." She pointed to a shady table on the
outside deck. "We'll be at
that table over there." She strolled away, oblivious to the fact that Jude and the
sailor stood in rather
bewildered surprise. Halfway through the bar, she spun on her heel and called back to the
sailor, "Hey,
can we get a couple of menus too? I have a feeling we're going to be staying for
dinner." Not waiting for a
reply before she made her way to their table.
Jude and the sailor regarded each other with bemusement. "She's a right handful, isn't she?"
The dark woman rubbed her eyes as she studied the relaxed
length of her companion, now sprawled
comfortably in one of the deck chairs, feet propped on the teak table. "That she
is."
"God, he was right, this stuff is smooth going
down." Liz sat back, a satisfied smile playing over her
features. They had made short work of the first pitcher and were debating the wisdom of
ordering another
one before dinner. Jude had filled the intervening hour with stories about growing up in
Miami, how she
had met Nickie and become a runner for his bar when she was twelve, and the mystery of
where she
learned to shoot pool with the ability of Fast Eddie Felson. Long unused to talking about
herself, at first
Judes words were halting. The honey-haired woman, however, had been a patient and
most-willing
audience, encouraging her sometimes stumbling narrative. Most people acted as if they
assumed she were the amaranthine spawn of some less-than-benevolent-deity who had come to
visit His wrath upon them. Not many people stopped to realize that Jude Lucien was as much
flesh and blood as they were.
It was safer, ironically, for Jude that way. The wide berth
both friend and foe alike gave her made it
difficult for them to perceive any weaknesses that might enable them to bring her down.
Jude realized
now, however, as she sat in the bewilderingly easy comfort of her new friendship with
Elizabeth, it also
distanced her from herself. Without the warmth of human connection, it was simple for her
to start
believing the same things strangers did. That she didn't feel. That she was merciless.
That she was less
than human.
Lost in her thoughts, Jude missed the punch line of a very
long and elaborate joke that Liz had been
telling. "Huh?" she asked. "I don't get it."
"That's because you weren't listening," Liz complained good-naturedly.
Jude gazed solemnly at Elizabeth, her mind noting that the
slender woman's golden hair shone brightly in
the sunlight, turning it into some kind of beacon for Jude's aching soul. Uh-oh...
definitely better wait
until dinner for that next pitcher, Jude cautioned herself. When I start waxing
poetic, it's definitely time
for some coffee. I don't want them to have to carry me out of here.
Judes sometimes distant smile during their
conversation hadn't gone unnoticed by the reporter, who
really, really wanted to know what was going on in the dark woman's head. As far as Liz
was concerned,
the day couldn't possibly be going any better. Whatever had shaken loose last night seemed
to have freed the agent from the worst of her reservations, and Liz had glimpsed an
entirely different person from the one she had thought she was hunting down. This Jude was
a laughing, gentle woman-- one who had the ability to take Liz's breath away with a
single, searing smile that enveloped those impossibly blue eyes. "Take off your
glasses, Jude, I want to see your eyes."
Obligingly, Jude reached for the offending eyewear and tugged them off her face.
Ocean blue vistas opened to Liz at that moment, and without
even pausing to check the water's
temperature, the slender woman dived right in. "God, you are the most beautiful woman
I've ever seen,"
she murmured, bringing a hand up to sketch the bold outlines of the agent's features.
Tender fingers passed over lips that stretched themselves
into a self-deprecating smile. An eyebrow
half-lifted and Liz expected another breezily dry comment to be tossed her way. Instead
Jude only replied, "Thank you." Then she sighed softly. "I like the way you
look at me, the picture of me you seem to hold in your head," she continued, as if
she knew that Liz's words weren't solely about the physical package. "Even though I
don't think it's terribly accurate."
"Tell me what you think I need to know to balance out the picture."
A brilliant smile broke over Judes features, opening
them far wider to Lizs disbelieving eyes than the
reporter ever imagined possible. She felt her breath catch as Jude gently captured the
hand that still
stroked her cheek and pressed a tender kiss into the palm. "I will," she
promised. "But not today. Today's not the day for it."
"Then what is today for?" Liz asked, a dawning sparkle in her eyes responding to the one in Jude's own.
"You," the dark woman replied simply.
"Jude, you have got to try this. It's fabulous!" Liz moaned in delight, taking
another bite of what the sailor
had called his "From the Sea Salad." It was a mixture of pasta, some vegetables
and mussels with a lemon dressing liberally sprinkled over the whole concoction. Liz held
a forkful out in a vain attempt to coax Jude into trying it.
The dark woman curled a suspicious lip at the offering.
"I hate to break it to you, but I'm not putting
anything in my mouth that has that..." She trailed off in search of an accurate
description.
"This what?" Liz examined the morsel in confusion. Looked like mussels to her.
"Consistency..." Jude finished triumphantly. "It just looks... so odd..."
"But it tastes great," the gourmand protested.
"Don't care. Can't eat it. Same reason I can't eat Rice Krispies," Jude shrugged.
"You have got to be kidding me."
"No. Have you ever really felt Rice Krispies as you've chewed them?" Jude shivered. "It's disgusting."
Liz scrunched up her face in confusion, but decided to let
the comment pass. It was obviously an attempt
to divert her attention from the task at hand, which was getting Jude to try her salad. If
forced to answer
that useless question why she had such a desire, the reporter would have been hard pressed
to come up
with a better explanation than-- for some reason-- at this moment in time she found the
idea of feeding the dark woman incredibly erotic. "Are you sure you won't try it? I
mean, you ordered grilled fish-- at a
seafood restaurant-- how original." She pouted.
Jude chuckled at the small woman's dejected expression,
merely arching a wry eyebrow. "It looked like the safest thing on the menu. She
nodded at the second pitcher of home brew that had gone the way of the first. Sailor
boy there can make a mean drink, but he doesn't exactly look like Wolfgang Puck. Know
what I mean?"
The reporter laughed in amiable surrender and shook her
head. "Okay, okay. You win. Now, I've been
meaning to ask you. What did Nickie mean last night when he said that you were the only
one able to
hustle him?"
"Ahh... back to my Fast Eddie days, are we?"
"It was an odd comment," Liz allowed.
"Okay... well, you know that I was a runner for Nickie
when I was a kid. He had a lot of lucrative 'back
door' businesses, the most profitable of which was a small gambling ring. I mean we're not
talking the
Mafia here or anything."
"Nickie was a bookie?"
"Among other things. Anyway... there was this guy, I
think his name was Angelo Something... I don't
remember. But he had lost to Nickie big, and it was money that he didn't have."
"Don't tell me Nickie had you break his kneecaps?" Liz asked dubiously.
"Not quite. He took Angelo's prized, mint-condition
1968 TR25W Triumph motorcycle." Jude's eyes
glazed over at the memory of the machine. "It was a beauty. Completely restored, all
the original
equipment, the works. The sucker purred when you kick-started it. I took one look at it
and I was gone. I
wanted it, boy did I want it. But of course, even if Nickie had wanted to sell it-- which
he didn't-- I didn't
have two dollars in my pocket at any given time."
"Let me guess, this is where the hustle comes in."
"More or less." Jude grinned rakishly. "I
was sixteen and a bit of a hellion. Nickie was always teasing me
that someday someone was going to tame me, teach me some proper manners. Same stuff my
mother did, only I knew he didn't really mean it. He liked me just the way I was-- behind
the bar I was eye candy for the customers, gave 'em something to look at."
"Kind of the equivalent to a pin-up girl."
"Only I got to keep all my clothes on and
all the tips. And if I couldnt handle the guys who got out of
line, Nickie's big brother Tommy was there to back me up."
"That's how you ended up throwing someone through his front window?"
"Happened more than once," Jude commented dryly.
"I didn't really like being pawed. My temper back
then was even worse than it is now, and if I was in a bad mood--"
"Ouch."
"Right, but I digress. Anyway... I told Nickie I wanted the Triumph... Told him I'd work nights, weekends, whatever, but I wanted that bike... He just laughed at me and told me pretty girls like me didn't need things like that between their legs."
"Ooh-- bet that pissed you off."
"That's putting it mildly. So I suggested a small
wager to determine what ended up between my legs-- the
bike or his cock. Liz's eyes flew wide at the statement, and Jude chuckled deep in
her throat. "The
expression on Nickie's face was about like yours. I could tell by the deer-in-headlights
look I was getting
meant I had him. I had been running for Nickie for four years and had... changed... a lot
in that time."
"Puberty does that to a girl."
Jude chuckled ruefully. "It did it to me in a big way.
Instead of this gawky, flat-chested, clumsy girl... by
the time I was sixteen, I had-- as my mother so delicately put it-- filled out." She
spread her arms and
gestured to herself in demonstration. Into something close to this.
"No wonder he took the bet," Liz murmured.
The comment didn't go unnoticed by its subject who paused
in mid-story to give Liz a warm, full-bodied
smile.
"So that was my bet," she grinned wickedly. "One match of pool. Winner take all."
"If you won, you got the Triumph. If he won, he got you." Jude nodded. "High stakes," Liz commented.
"Not really. Nickie-- to put it bluntly-- sucked at
pool. I half-expected him to laugh at the offer. Anyone
with any sense would have," Jude snickered.
"If I had been him, I would have taken it."
"If I'd been playing you, I'm not so sure I would have
offered. You cleaned my clock a couple of times last
night. But Nickie knew he didn't stand a chance."
"Maybe he thought Fortune would smile on him this once."
"Well, it was close there for a while. He broke and
went on this run, nearly cleaned the table. I'd never
seen him play like that. But on his last ball he had ended up with a lousy set-up. He was
going to have this really difficult bank off the eight ball... Fortunately for me, he
missed."
"And then you wiped up the felt with him."
Jude shrugged. "Pretty much. But I'll never forget the
feeling I had when he bent over to take that shot. I
just kept thinking, 'Holy fuck, what have I gotten myself into...'" She laughed.
"It was to become a
common refrain in my life."
"So you won the bike."
"By the skin of my teeth. But, boy, was it worth
it," Jude sighed wistfully. "Once I had that bike... I was
free... You know? As long as I had a couple of bucks in my pocket for gas, nothing else
mattered. She
couldn't get to me anymore-- I wasn't hostage to her piousness. Her God. My sin. Just by
being born I was wrong... but on the Triumph I just was. Does that make any
sense?"
It made perfect sense to the woman who-- as a teenager--
had escaped into the nonjudgmental worlds of
her own creation. Her writing had taken her far away from the chilly glares of her family.
As she grew
older and began to realize just what a wide gulf there was between who her family thought
she should be
and who she really was-- that refuge had become all-important to her. It had allowed her
to form an
identity separate from the rest of the Gardener clan and freed her from that a stifling
life of diplomacy and
discreet intrigue. The identity she created for herself was something that had saved her
life in more ways
than one. "It makes perfect sense," she said softly, a hazy look clouding her
verdant eyes. Absently she
took one of Jude's hands and twined their fingers.
Sailor took their quiet moment to poke his head out of the
door and ask with a questioning glance if they
wanted another pitcher. Thinking ...what the hell... Liz nodded her assent and
simply enjoyed the tactile
sensations of Judes fingers measuring the length of her own.
"So... it didn't scare you?" Liz asked after the
sailor had deposited another pitcher on the table and noted
their clasped hands with a conspiratorial wink.
"What?"
"The thought of sleeping with Nickie."
"Are you asking if I was a stranger to the act?" Jude teased.
"Sort of," she mumbled.
Jude arched a brow in contemplation. "I don't guess I
was. I mean, I knew he wouldn't hurt me, if that's
what you're asking."
"Did someone?" The question tumbled out before Liz could stop it. "Hurt you, I mean."
"Why would you ask that?" Dark brows furrowed. "Because of my 'broken' and 'underprivileged' childhood?" she mocked. "Or because of my criminal past?"
"No!" Liz nearly shouted. "Because--"
she hesitated, stumbling over the truth that was about to pour forth.
"Because I can't stand the idea of someone hurting you," she finished, unable to
stop herself.
"Oh," Jude breathed. Their eyes met and held in a
long moment of understanding that they were taking
without hesitation the next step on the winding path that they were headed down.
"Wow..." the dark
woman laughed in an uneven tone. "I... thank you..."
"For what?"
"For worrying about the girl that I was. That's... nice... Elizabeth. No one's ever... done that."
As she looked deep into those impossible blue eyes, Liz
wondered why no one had ever ventured far
enough into Jude's soul to excavate the fragile remains of the dark womans girlhood.
"Can't help it," she
replied simply. Then, realizing that they were about to get far to serious for such a
beautiful summers
day, she teased, "You seem to have gotten under my skin, Ms. Lucien."
They toasted the statement in silence, enjoying the falling
sun, the slight breeze on their arms, the
nearness of each other. It was one of those rare, utterly tranquil moments when there
wasn't a single thing that could have made it more perfect.
A muffled giggle broke the hush, and Jude leaned a curving
brow in the direction of her companion.
"Yes?"
"So... I was just thinking... If, at sixteen 'the act'
wasn't unfamiliar to you..." Green eyes danced in
merriment. "Then when was it that-- oh, how did my brother put it-- you started
batting for the other
team?"
Jude chuckled at the delicate euphemism. "Ah..." She paused for a moment, thinking. "I guess I've always 'batted for the other team.' I mean, there were a few men here and there, but honestly... nothing ever really compared."
"Compared to what?" Liz asked, slowly becoming
hypnotized by the darkening blue of Jude's eyes. Their
normally pale color seemed to take on new vibrancy, pulsing with a sensuous life all their
own.
"To the feel of a woman in my arms," Jude
answered without hesitation. "I love everything about making
love to a woman, Elizabeth," she murmured, a husky tone edging into her voice.
"The suppleness of their
skin. The warmth of their bodies. The sounds they make when I touch them. There's nothing
like it in the
world."
"I know," Liz swallowed hard. The subject had
been roiling about in the back of her mind since Jude's
mouth had first tasted hers yesterday afternoon. She had no doubt that Jude Lucien was
going to be a
magnificent lover, and she wanted to touch the dark woman so badly it made her muscles
want to cry out
from the pressure.
"Do you, Elizabeth?" If anything, Jude's eyes
burned hotter at that moment, her desire for the reporter
leaping to the front of her gaze.
"Oh, yeah..." Liz agreed. "What do you think I've been thinking about all day?"
"Tell me," the dark woman urged softly. The
delicate trail of learning that the pair had embarked upon
now neared its end as their minds at last acknowledged without equivocation what their
bodies had been
saying to them for over a week. "Tell me what you've been thinking about."
"You," the small woman managed hoarsely.
"The way you feel in my arms, the way I fit in yours. I held
you this morning as you slept-- and I had to fight to let you go when you woke up."
She nudged her chair
closer to Jude's, so their knees softly brushed against each other. "I want to see
you stretched out
underneath me," she confided, her eyes taking on their own shimmering desire. "I
want you open and
wanting me as badly as I want you right now. I want to take you with my hands, my mouth,
my tongue--
any way you want, any way you've ever imagined. I want you helpless to do anything but
respond to me--
to the press of my breasts against yours, the sound of my voice in your ears. And I want
to do it all
knowing that as soon as you come, you're going to turn around and demand the same thing of
me." The
rational part of the reporters brain that remained wondered once again where all
these words were
coming from. Seductions, declarations like this... they werent something she had even
done before-- but
something about this dark woman and her sensual menace, just... inspired... her.
If there had been any doubts that this woman made her living with words, they were shattered by the rapid phrases that fell from the full lips just inches away from Judes. A shuddering pulse visibly worked its way through the dark womans body, and her hands twitched in a slight movement wasn't lost on Elizabeth, who laughed throatily in response. "I suggest we get out of here first though," she added.
All Jude could do was nod wordlessly, tossing a stack of bills on the table to cover their check.
The Boxster made it back to the house in record time, but even so, the sun had made its final appearance over the horizon, leaving the city to its twilight amusements. Jude opened the side door with trembling hands and punched the alarm off as if in a dream. Then Elizabeth's arms were curled around her neck, that sinfully lithe body twining about hers. Oh god... Jude thought incoherently. They backed their way through the house, nimble fingers that didn't belong to her trying to tug the length of her white shirt from her shoulders.
"Why'd you have to pick a shirt that had so many damn
buttons?" Liz muttered inaudibly as she
maneuvered Jude toward the stairs. Eventually surrendering the fight, she grasped the
shirt at its open
edges and ripped the joined material apart. Jude yelped in protest as buttons went flying,
but Liz silenced
her with a throaty growl. "I want to see you... now..."
Jude wasn't about to protest as roaming hands traced the
finely delineated muscles in her abdomen. She
wanted to feel Liz's own skin pressed against hers, but to do so she would have to
separate from the
delightful mouth that was skillfully invading her own. They managed to make it up the
gently curving
staircase without breaking either contact or their necks on the ascent. Jude kicked open
the bedroom door with the back of her foot, sending animals flying in all directions as
they entered the room. "Wait..." Jude gasped, as Elizabeth was about to free the
dark woman's breasts from their surprisingly lacy confines.
Golden brows furrowed in confusion, but the hands ceased
their relentless quest for skin. "Why?" she
asked softly. "Are you having second thoughts?"
"God no!" Jude breathed. "I just... uh... I
just... Oh hell... I just want to take it slow. I don't want us to get
overwhelmed."
Liz grinned in agreement. "Okay, that I can work with."
"And... I wanted to ask you..." Jude fixed her
gaze on the small hands that rested against her skin. "If..
you were... I mean... we had a fair amount to drink... I don't..."
"You don't want to do anything I might regret later,
right?" Liz caught Jude under the chin and focused
blue eyes on her green ones.
"Something like that."
A knowing chuckle emitted from the depths of the reporter's
throat. The only thing I would regret is not
making love with you right now." Then she sobered and added, "Unless you don't
want this too."
"Oh, I do," Jude promised fervently.
"Then I don't think we have anything to worry about."
Mouths met again, this time in a slow, sweetly tender
greeting. Jude discovered that the frantic
aggressiveness had fled Lizs body, replaced by a sensual haze that enveloped both of
them. Jude's tongue traced teasing paths over Elizabeth's lips and down her neck, sending
sparks of delight shuddering through the small woman's body. Elegant fingers tugged the
silk blouse free from the russet skirt and slipped under the material to explore the
defined muscles of Liz's torso. "Oh yes..." Jude murmured, making contact with
the supple skin. "You feel so good." Just holding her feels right, Jude
thought in wonder. And better than I had ever imagined it could be.
They began a leisurely exploration that would have taken
hours except for one simple thing: the phone
rang.
"Let the machine get it," Liz muttered.
And Jude would have, but it was the shrill beeping of her
private line. The line that didn't have a machine.
The line that no one had the number to except Sasha. The line that meant nothing but
trouble.
Groaning, she buried her face in her companion's
sweet-smelling hair. "I have to get it." With a strength
she desperately wished she didn't possess, she broke their embrace and grabbed the handset
from its
recessed position in the night stand. Liz's eyes grew wide as she saw that the white phone
on the same
table remained untouched.
"Lucien," Jude growled into the phone.
"Trouble." Sasha's clipped tones informed her. "Meet me at the office." Click.
Fuck... fuck... fuck... fuck...
Jude wearily replaced the handset and sat on the bed, resting her head in her hands.
"Let me guess, there's a problem?"
There was a frighteningly dead silence, and then slowly
Jude lifted her head. The eyes that moments ago
had been a vivid, pulsing violet were now a pale, colorless wasteland that seemed to
freeze everything in
its gaze. Instinctively Liz stepped back from the harshness of the stare, and Jude's head
dropped again in ragged sadness. "Yeah..." she said, not meeting Liz's eyes.
"I... have to go."
A glimmer of fear rose in Elizabeths eyes, and Jude
wondered if this would be the thing that finally
frightened this exquisite woman away. Much to the dark womans shock, instead of
walking away, Liz
placed tentative hands on Jude's. "Okay," Liz agreed calmly. "I'll be here
when you get back."
"Elizabeth..." The eyes returned to the golden
woman in front of her, and this time they were ringed by a
faint, but unmistakable, warmth. "That might not be... such a good idea."
"My choice, remember? Unless you don't want me here."
Such gentle courage threatened to tear the breath from
Judes lungs. Her instincts told her to argue, to
send Elizabeth away before she got hurt more than she already had been. But she lacked
enough courage of her own to argue with this woman she so desperately wanted to make her
lover. Let her see what happens, she thought numbly. "All right," she
agreed. She glanced down at her half-dressed state and ached for things almost within
reach and now lost. "I've got to get moving," she said, rising in a fluid
motion as her brain finally kicked into gear. Pushing the ache to a far corner of her
soul-- to the place
where Jason still lived-- she methodically began pulling clothes from her closet and
tossing them on the
bed.
Liz watched in confusion as a pair of leather pants and a
black silk shirt landed on the comforter, followed
by a pair of boots and a sinister-looking black belt.
Jude hesitated a moment, knowing Liz was still watching,
then she gave a mental shrug and pulled the
Sig Sauer out of its place in the closet safe along with a spare clip. Those, too, landed
on the bed.
The linen trousers fell in a heap at her feet, and she stepped out of them and began sliding the leather over her legs. She shrugged the silk across her shoulders, buttoning it with rapid precision and tucking in the tails neatly. Boots were next, followed by the belt. She saved the gun for last, sliding the clip into place with habitual precision. This last item of apparel she tucked into the back of the waistband of her pants, its weight an uncomfortable reminder of what she was.
Glancing up, she saw that Liz remained rooted to the spot
Jude had left her in, a helplessly bewildered
look on her face. Covering the room in long strides, she reached out a hand as if to touch
the reporter, but her fingers fell short of the small woman, and she didn't try again.
"I'm sorry," she whispered, then was gone, a chimera chasing down other dwellers
of her adumbral realm.
A sickeningly familiar feeling blossomed in
Jude's belly as she returned to the Boxster, and she shook her head savagely for thinking
that ultimately things could turn out any differently. The day might have been reserved
for the light, for Elizabeth, and the joy she carried within her. But Jude had made the
grave error of forgetting that the day always passes, and when night falls once more, it
brings the darkness with it.