“I need to brush my teeth. No kissing.”

  I laugh but concede, sliding my hand down her hip, and between her legs. “Even here?”

  Her eyes glint with challenge, her hand pressing to the thick line of my erection. “How about here?”

  My cock twitches against her palm and her lips curve. “That’s a yes,” she says, lowering herself to her knees, shoving aside my open zipper, tugging down my underwear just enough to kiss the tip of my erection. I suck in a breath, and a moment later, she’s got my cock in her hand, giving it a lick while casting me a coy, sexy look.

  “You can come,” she says. “I think I owe you that.” With that announcement, she draws me in her mouth, sucking me deep and just like that I don’t own her. She owns me.

  ***

  Lori

  Once Cole and I finally manage to get dressed, we exit the bedroom, and walk down the stairs to find Savage and Adam, sitting on the couches where we left them, both in the same clothes they had on when we went upstairs. “Have you two not slept?” I ask incredulously.

  “No sleep for the weary,” Adam says, rubbing his eyes.

  “Or the wicked,” Savage says, wiggling an eyebrow. “But now we can sleep. Our job is done.”

  “What does that mean?” Cole asks.

  “It means,” Adam replies, “that Blake found dirt on Waller and a link to the police chief.”

  “Offshore accounts,” Savage says, “and it just gets dirtier from there. We’ll spare you the details.”

  “Royce has a message for you,” Adam says. “He said to tell you: He’s got this. They’ll go down. He’s calling in the appropriate people, and getting the job done, but he said call him tomorrow and he’ll fully update you. Not today, he said. He was apparently up with the baby all night and just went to bed.”

  “And if that ain’t a pitch for wearing a condom,” Savage says, “I don’t know what is.”

  “Should we tell Tara?” I ask.

  “No,” all three men say at once.

  “The less she knows,” Cole says, “the better. These kinds of things have to be handled with care.”

  “True that,” Savage says. “We have no idea who else might be involved that we haven’t found out about.”

  “We don’t want them tipped off,” Adam says running his hands through his hair.

  “But I’ll take care of Tara for you when the time is right,” Savage offers.

  “Go for it,” Cole says. “And good luck. She will eat you for lunch.”

  I tune out Savage and focus on Cole. “Is it over? Is that what this means?”

  “If Royce says it’s handled. It’s handled.” His cell phone rings, and he pulls it from his pocket. “The airline,” he tells me before accepting the call.

  Savage gives me a grin and a wink. “Is he still an asshole?”

  I laugh and shake my head. “I’m really glad you live here and not in New York City.”

  “Actually, I live in New York City,” Savage says. “Adam here just needs a He-Man to help him out until he gets his team built. So don’t you worry. I’ll be around to tell everyone all about you, tequila, and Cole’s wrinkled shirt.”

  My lips part, and I’m about to panic when Cole steps to my side. “Hold that story until she graduates law school,” he orders. “Otherwise I’ll kill you, Savage.”

  “Ah, right,” Savage says, winking at me again. “You’re the naughty intern or some shit like that right now. Don’t you worry. I’ll bite my tongue. Your secret is safe.”

  “You have any seats on that plane?” Adam asks, looking at Cole.

  “Why?” Cole asks. “You need one?”

  “No,” he says. “I want you to haul Savage and his big fucking mouth back with you.”

  “He’s joking,” Savage says. “He loves me.”

  “I don’t,” Cole says. “We’re leaving.” He drapes his arm around me and turns me toward the door. Once we’re there, he gives me a quick kiss. “To hold me over until the airplane.” He releases me and opens the door.

  I step into the hallway, and he joins me, and now we can’t touch. Now we are boss and associate. It’s an unwelcome cold splash of water. We’re forbidden and I’m really the naughty associate and nothing will change that for nine long months. Every silent moment of the elevator ride drives home these feelings.

  “The flight is in two hours,” Cole says when we step off the car onto our floor. “The pilot couldn’t do any later due to scheduling conflicts. We’ll need to leave in an hour.”

  “I’ll be ready,” I say, walking to my door as he walks to his. I don’t look at him. I just enter the room. I’ve barely had time to kick off my shoes when my cell phone rings and it’s Cole.

  “Whatever you just let get in your head,” he says. “I’m going to get it out on the plane.” He hangs up.

  CHAPTER FORTY-FOUR

  Cole

  I hang up the phone from calling Lori, fully aware of what is bothering her. I felt, I feel what Lori did when we exited that hotel suite; the separation between us the minute we left a place where we’d freely been together, and when I ended that call with her, I fought the urge to make a few phone calls to deal with speeding up Lori’s program rather than wait on Ashley to handle this. Those calls are not for her, not now. There isn’t time to do it right without being rushed, and I intend to do it right.

  I head for the shower and make fast work of tossing on a pair of dark jeans and a navy “Brooks Legal” shirt that I’ve lived in on weekends forever. I’m contemplating a shave when my phone rings and it’s Ashley. “Hey, boss man.”

  “Oh fuck,” I say, hearing the hesitation in her voice that I know as dread. “You’re not coming.”

  “I am,” she says. “Of course, I am. I just might need to go to Houston to wrap up some issues. Can I work from that office until I can move?”

  “How long?”

  “I don’t know. It could be a month. I’ll spare you the details, but I need to do this.”

  “What aren’t you telling me?”

  “Okay this isn’t about Houston. God, Cole.” Her voice cracks. “I might need you to defend me.”

  “What? Why?”

  “My bastard fiancé was a con man. I signed some documents. I didn’t know what they were.”

  “Stop talking,” I say. “We don’t—”

  “Do this on the phone. I know.”

  “When can you be back here?” I ask.

  “I’m tied up with a visa issue.”

  “Over those papers?”

  “Yes. I don’t even know what they were. I don’t know what they say I did wrong. I can’t understand these people, literally can’t understand them. They keep talking in French. I swear I hate this bastard. He used me. I know to stop talking, but I’m in Europe, Cole. What do I do?”

  “Are you safe?”

  “Yes. I went to the embassy. They’re trying to help me, but even they barely speak good English.”

  “I need a secure line to talk with you on. Can they provide it?”

  “I’ll find out,” she says, but no one seems to be here today.

  “Do you need money?” I ask.

  “I don’t want to ask you for money.”

  “That’s a yes,” I say. “I’ll wire you funds, find out the best way to get them to you, and call you back.”

  “Thank you, Cole.”

  “Don’t thank me. Stay safe.” I disconnect and forget the shave. I need to get us on the road. I work on packing while I dial my bank and inquire about the best way to get funds to Europe.

  I’m done early, and I dial Lori. “Any chance you’re ready?”

  “I am. I can meet you in the hallway.”

  We disconnect and a minute later both of us exit to the hallway. Lori, now dressed in snug faded jeans, boots, and a V-neck pink lace top, casts me a look and frowns. “What’s wrong?”

  I motion toward the elevator. “My assista
nt, Ashley. Apparently, the guy she was going to marry was a con artist. She’s in trouble. I’m going to wire her money and we’re going to have to help her get out of this.”

  “What can I do?”

  It’s the perfect answer, as my woman and as my associate. I update her, and we decide we have to get a temporary secretary into the office. We reach the airport, and I’ve dealt with calling Ashley, and her wire. Lori and I are just stepping on the plane when her phone rings. She digs it out as she claims the window seat in the center of the plane and answers. “Hey, mom.”

  The flight attendant stops beside us, and I order us both coffee and breakfast. “Yes,” Lori says as I tune the conversation back in. “I’m with my boss,” she adds, looking at me. “Cole. Cole Brooks. Yes, he’s still arrogant.”

  I laugh at what is obviously a reference to a conversation about me.

  “Yes, that was him laughing,” Lori says, “and yes, I said it in front of him. No, mother, I’m not going to get fired. For an arrogant man he’s got a fairly decent sense of humor.”

  This exchange goes on for a few minutes before she disconnects and sticks her phone in her purse. “She says hello.”

  “You’re not going to tell her about us, are you?” I ask.

  “This is one of those things, Cole,” she says. “She’ll worry, and her stroke was too recent for me to put that on her.”

  “She’s an ER nurse,” I point out. “That’s real stress.”

  The flight attendant brings our coffee and when Lori sips hers, she looks at me. “You remembered how I take it.”

  “I remember everything about you. Back to your mother.”

  “The ER is about saving lives. She lives for that, not the stress of paying bills.”

  “You know—”

  “Do not finish that sentence, Cole,” she warns. “I’m not letting you pay for anything.”

  But I’m going to, I think, though the hard set of her jaw tells me now isn’t the time to press her. “What happened back there at the hotel?”

  She looks away and sets her coffee down. “Nothing we can change.”

  “The divide of your job and our relationship,” I assume.

  “Yes,” she says, looking over at me. “I just—I felt it when we left that hotel room.”

  “As did I,” I assure her. “I’m going to talk to the Merrick board and to Stanford about turning your nine-month program into six.”

  Her eyes light. “Can you do that? Can they?”

  “Let’s pull up your program on the flight, and talk about how to make that happen. If I present them a plan with my intent of hiring you full-time when you graduate, I don’t see why it can’t happen.”

  “You want to hire me full-time?”

  “Reese and I planned on hiring you full-time before I ever knew who you were. At what level is based on how you perform.”

  “I wouldn’t want it any other way.”

  “I know that is just one of the reasons Reese recommended the hire even before our re-introduction.”

  “Which you’re telling me because you want me to know I’ve earned this.”

  “Exactly. You have, and I have no doubt, you’ll earn the best possible position upon hire. I’ll send you the possible starting positions and pay. That way you can shoot high.” I then give her the only help I know she’ll let me give her right now by adding, “If we get this process approved, your money should be over six months, not nine.”

  She breathes in and her lashes lower, and for just a moment I think she’s fighting tears. She blinks and focuses on me, composed now again. “That would be incredible.”

  “You’re going to need to get started on the classroom curriculum now, in between cases.”

  “I’m ready,” she says. “Can we look at the outline now?” She reaches for her MacBook.

  “Now is how I like to work.” I say, reaching for my MacBook as well.

  We start dissecting her requirements and since the flight attendant doesn’t force us to store our MacBooks, an interesting thing happens. Lori forgets about take-off. She’s that absorbed in the conversation about graduating early. And that tells me that control is what she’s missing. She needs to feel in control of her own destiny. I’m back to the dilemma that hasn’t changed. I can’t just save her and not lose her, which is going to kill me.

  ***

  Lori

  “You’re coming home with me,” is the first thing Cole says when the plane’s wheels touch ground.

  I don’t argue. I want to go home with Cole. “I need to go home and check on things there, and grab a few extra items,” I say.

  “We’ll swing by there on the way to my place.”

  “No,” I say, turning to look at him. “I’ll go on my own.”

  He cups my face and kisses me. “I’m taking you by your place.”

  I’m coming to know him and there’s no arguing. If I go by my place, he’s taking me. “I don’t need to go. Let’s just go to your apartment.”

  An hour later, the car Cole has hired stops in front of my apartment, because that’s Cole. Stubborn. Stubborn. Stubborn. And as I’d feared when I get out of the car, Cole gets out. I meet him at the rear of the vehicle. “I’m not letting you go up there.”

  “I don’t care what your apartment looks like, Lori.”

  “I do. And you will. You’ll do the bleeding-heart thing because as tough as you act, and are, you have a soft spot, which I love, I do, but it will work against our relationship. And this place is a big gossip hotel. My mother will find out you were here, and I told you I don’t want her to stress out.”

  “We’re sharing a life now.”

  “I’m also sharing a life with my mother.”

  A muscle in his jaw ticks. “Which is why I should meet your mother.”

  “Not yet. Please, Cole. Please just—”

  He kisses me. “Don’t pack for one night. I’m not standing outside your apartment if we have to do this again tomorrow night.”

  I press to my toes and kiss him again before I turn and run for the apartment when it hits me that maybe, I think, probably Cole just basically asked me to move in with him. Or more like, told me I am, but I can’t. He’s my boss, and my mother is here, and I won’t leave my mother behind. Cole won’t expect that. I know that. I quickly pack, and text my mother to let her know I’m back in town. Her reply: Tell me all about it over coffee in the morning.

  I finish packing and then realize I have to be here when my mother gets home tomorrow. I leave behind my work clothes. I’ll change here in the morning. With that in mind, I hurry downstairs to find Cole leaning on the car. “I have to leave your place at six in the morning. I need to be here when my mother gets home from work. Any night I stay with you, I have to do that.”

  He straightens and pulls me close. “If it means you stay with me, we’ll make it work.”

  ***

  Twenty minutes later, we stop at the security desk of Cole’s place, and he registers me to be able come and go as I please. Another five minutes, and we walk into his apartment. The instant we’re in the foyer, he kisses me, but this time it’s not about lust and passion, and shoving me against the wall. There is tenderness in his eyes, in his voice. “I’m glad you’re here.”

  “Me too,” I whisper, amazed how true those words are when months ago, when I met him, I was certain that I couldn’t be with him and not lose me.

  “Let’s put our bags upstairs and we can order dinner,” he suggests. “I’m starving. Are you starving?”

  Starving for you, I think. “Yes,” I say. “That sounds nice.”

  An hour later, we’re sitting on his living room floor, laughing and talking, waiting on news from Ashley that doesn’t arrive. Another hour later, we’re in his bed. Two hours later, I’m lying on his chest, listening to his heart beat, his fingers stroking my hair. “This is where I want you every night,” he says. “Here with me.”

  I don
’t reply. I can’t reply. I’m caught between two worlds. I love my mother. I belong with her, taking care of her, but on the other hand, here with Cole feels better than anything I’ve ever experienced in my life. I’m in love with this man. He wants me with him. He’s not the obstacle. The rest of the world is the obstacle.

  CHAPTER FORTY-FIVE

  Lori

  I wake the next morning at five in Cole’s bed, lying on his chest, his heart thrumming beneath my ear. He smells good. He feels good. We feel good. We make love despite the early hour, and when he insists on driving me home, I refuse. We settle on a car service and he walks me downstairs, kisses me thoroughly and shuts me inside my ride. I arrive to my apartment with enough time to shower and start coffee before my mother arrives. I spend an hour chatting with her before I dress for work, choosing a pale blue suit dress that yes, I think Cole will like.

  Once I’m at work, I walk into Cole’s office to find him looking drop dead gorgeous in a blue suit with a gray pinstripe and gray tie.

  “Good morning, Lori,” he greets, sounding quite formal, while giving me a hot once over that says he’s feeling anything but formal.

  “Good morning, Cole,” I say, sitting down in one of his visitor’s chairs.

  “Any news from Ashley?”

  “Nothing,” he says, “and I started making calls early this morning.”

  I notice how he avoids statements like “after you left” with great appreciation. “Are you worried?”

  “Extremely. A foreign country is not where you want to get into trouble.”

  “In the meantime, should I just get a temporary secretary lined up?”

  “Yes,” he says. “A very temporary secretary. I have a meeting with Reese in half an hour about a case he wants me to take. I’m also coming back with a stack of cases he’s been managing through the other attorneys. I need you to review them and flag any problems for me.”

  “You want me to review the other attorneys’ cases?”

  “Outside eyes catch what inside eyes do not,” he says. “Don’t worry, I plan to read them all myself as well, but I don’t expect to be disappointed in your evaluation.”