Page 16 of A Game of Chance


  The afternoon was wearing on when Charlie set the helicopter down in the canyon again. He looked up at the light with an experienced pilot’s eye. “You think you have enough time to get that fuel pump put on before dark?”

  “No problem,” Chance said. After all, as he and Charlie both knew, there was nothing wrong with the fuel pump, anyway. He would tinker around for a while, make it look realistic. Sunny wasn’t likely to stand at his elbow the entire time, and if she did he would distract her.

  He and Sunny jumped out of the helicopter, and he leaned in to get his bag. “See you in a few hours.”

  “If you don’t make it back to the airfield, we know where you are,” Charlie said, saluting.

  They ducked away from the turbulence as the helicopter lifted away. Sunny pushed her hair away from her face and looked around the canyon, smiling. “Home again,” she said, and laughed. “Funny how it looks a lot more inviting now that I know we aren’t stuck here.”

  “I’m going to miss it,” he said, winking at her. He carried his bag and the box containing the fuel pump over to the plane. “But we’ll find out tonight if a bed is more fun than a tent.”

  To his surprise, sadness flashed in her eyes. “Chance…once we’re away from here…” She shook her head. “It won’t be safe.”

  He checked for a moment, then very deliberately put down the bag and box. Turning back to her, he put his hands on his hips. “If you’re saying what I think you’re saying, you can just forget about it. You aren’t dumping me.”

  “You know what the situation is! I don’t have a choice.”

  “I do. You’re not just a fun screw who was available while we were here. I care about you, Sunny,” he said softly. “When you look over your shoulder, you’re going to see my face. Get used to it.”

  Tears welled in her brilliant eyes, filling them with diamonds. “I can’t,” she whispered. “Because I love you. Don’t ask me to risk your life, because I can’t handle it.”

  His stomach muscles tightened. He had set out to make her love him, or at least get involved in a torrid affair with him. He had succeeded at doing both. He felt humbled, and exhilarated—and sick, because he was going to betray her.

  He had her in his arms before he was aware of moving, and his mouth was on hers. He felt desperate for the taste of her, as if it had been days since he’d kissed her instead of just hours. Her response was immediate and wholehearted, as she rose on her tiptoes to fit her hips more intimately to his. He tasted the salt of her tears and drew back, rubbing his thumbs across her wet cheeks.

  He rested his forehead against hers. “You’re forgetting something,” he murmured.

  She sniffed. “What?”

  “I was a ranger, sweetheart. I’m a little harder to kill than your average guy. You need someone watching your back, and I can do it. Think about it. We probably made the news. When we get to Seattle, don’t be surprised if there’s a television camera crew there. Both our faces will be on television. Besides that, we were reported missing to the FAA, which is federal. Information would have been dug up on both of us. Our names our linked. If the mole in the FBI tumbles to who you are, your father’s goons will be after me, anyway—especially if they can’t find you.”

  She went white. “Television?” She looked a lot like her mother; Chance had seen old photos of Pamela Vickery Hauer. Anyone familiar with Pamela would immediately notice the resemblance. As sharp as she was, Sunny also knew the danger of being on television, even a local newscast.

  “We’re in this together.” He lifted her hand to his mouth and kissed her knuckles, then grinned down at her. “Lucky for you, I’m one mean son of a bitch when I need to be—lucky for you, unlucky for them.”

  Nothing she said would sway him, Sunny thought with despair late that night as she showered in the hotel suite he had booked them into for the night—a suite because it had more than one exit. He had been exactly right about the television news crew. Crews, she corrected herself. News had been slow that day, so every station in Seattle had jumped on the human-interest story. The problem was, so had both national news channels.

  She had evaded the cameras as much as possible, but the reporters had seemed fixated on her, shouting questions at her instead of Chance. She would have thought the female reporters, at least, would be all over Chance, but he’d worn such a forbidding expression that no one had approached him. She hadn’t answered any questions on camera, though at Chance’s whispered suggestion she had given them a quick comment off-camera, for them to use as a filler on their broadcast.

  Her one break was that, since it had been so late when they landed, the story didn’t make even the late news. But unless something more newsworthy happened soon, the story would air in just a few hours over millions of breakfast tables countrywide.

  She had to assume her cover had been blown. That meant leaving the courier service, moving—not that she had much to move; she had never accumulated many possessions—even changing her name. She would have to build a new identity.

  She had always known it could happen, and she had prepared for it, both mentally and with actual paperwork. Changing her name wouldn’t change who she was; it was just a tool to use to escape her father.

  The real problem was Chance. She couldn’t shake him, no matter how she tried, and she knew she was good at that kind of thing. She had tried to lose him at the airport, ducking into a cab when his back was turned. But he seemed to have a sixth sense where she was concerned, and he was sliding in the other door before she could give the driver the address where she had to deliver the courier package. He had remained within touching distance of her until they walked into the hotel room, and she had no doubt that, if she opened the bathroom door, she would find him sprawled across the bed, watching her.

  In that, she underestimated him. Just as she began lathering her hair, the shower curtain slid back and he stepped naked into the tub with her. “I thought I’d conserve water and shower with you,” he said easily.

  “Hah! You’re just afraid I’ll leave if you shower by yourself,” she said, turning her back on him.

  A big hand patted her bottom. “You know me so well.”

  She fought a smile. Damn him, why did he have to be so well-matched to her in every way? She could, and had, run rings around most people, but not Chance.

  She hogged the spray, turning the nozzle down to rinse her hair. He waited until she was finished with that, at least, then adjusted the nozzle upward so the water hit him in the chest. It also hit her full in the face. She sputtered and elbowed him. “This is my shower, and I didn’t invite you. I get control of the nozzle, not you.”

  She knew challenging him was a mistake. He said, “Oh, yeah?” and the tussle was on. Before she knew it she was giggling, he was laughing, and the bathroom was splattered with water. She had played more with Chance than she had since she’d been a little girl; she felt lighthearted with him, despite her problems. Their wet, naked bodies slid against each other, and neither of them could get a good grasp on any body part. At least, she couldn’t. She suspected he could have won the tussle at any time simply by using his size and strength and wrapping his arms around her, but he held back and played at her level, as if he were used to restraining his strength to accommodate someone weaker than himself.

  His hands were everywhere: on her breasts, her bottom, sliding between her legs while she laughed and batted them away. One long finger worked its way inside her and she squealed, trying to twist away while excitement spiraled wildly through her veins. Their naked wrestling match was having a predictable effect on both of them. She grabbed for the nozzle and aimed the blast of water at his face, and while he was trying to deflect the spray she made her escape, hopping out of the tub and snatching up a towel to wrap around her.

  He vaulted out of the tub and slammed the door shut just as she reached for it. “You left the shower running,” she accused, trying to sidetrack him.

  “I’m not the one who turned it on.
” He grinned and hooked the towel away from her.

  “Water’s getting all over the floor.” She tried to sound disapproving.

  “It needed mopping, anyway.”

  “It did not!” She pushed a strand of dripping wet hair out of her eyes. “We’re going to be kicked out. Water will drip through the floor into the room below and we’ll be kicked out.”

  He grabbed her and swung her around so she was facing the shower. “Turn it off, then, if you’re worried.”

  She did, because she hated to waste the water, and it was making such a mess. “There, I hope you’re satisfied.”

  “Not by a long shot.” He turned her to face him, holding her lips against his and angling her torso away from him, so he could look his fill at her. “Have I told you today how damn sexy you are?”

  “Today? You’ve never told me at all!”

  “Have so.”

  “Have not. When?”

  “Last night. Several times.”

  She tried not to be entranced by the way water droplets were clinging to his thick dark lashes. “That doesn’t count. Everyone knows you can’t believe anything a man says when he’s in…uh—”

  “You?” he supplied, grinning.

  She managed a haughty look. “I was going to say ‘extremis,’ but I think that applies only to dying.”

  “Close enough.” He looked down at her breasts, his expression altering and the laughter fading. Still holding her anchored to him with one arm, he smoothed a hand up her torso to cup her breasts, and they both watched his long brown fingers curve around the pale globes. “You’re sexy,” he murmured, a slow, dark note entering his voice. She knew that note well, having heard it many times over the past two nights. “And beautiful. Your breasts are all cream-and-rose colored, until I kiss your nipples. Then they pucker up and turn red like they’re begging me to suck them.”

  Her nipples tightened at his words, the puckered tips flushing with color. He groaned and bent his dark head, water dripping from his hair onto her skin as he kissed both breasts. She was leaning far back over his arm, supported by his arm around her hips and her own desperate grasp on his shoulders. She didn’t know how much longer she would be able to stand at all. Her loins throbbed, and she gasped for breath.

  “And your ass,” he growled. “You have the sweetest little ass.” He turned her around so he could stroke the aforementioned buttocks, shaping his palms to the full, cool curves. Sunny’s legs trembled, and she grabbed the edge of the vanity for support. The cultured marble slab was a good six feet long, and a mirror covered the entire wall behind it. Sunny barely recognized herself in the naked woman reflected there, a woman whose wet hair dripped water down her back and onto the floor. Her expression was etched with desire, her face flushed and her eyes heavy-lidded.

  Chance looked up, and his gaze met hers in the mirror. Electricity sparked between them. “And here,” he whispered, sliding one hand around her belly and between her legs. His muscled forearm looked unbelievably powerful against her pale belly, and his big hand totally covered her mound. She felt his fingers sliding between her folds, rubbing her just as she liked. She moaned and collapsed against him, her legs going limp.

  “You’re so soft and tight,” the erotic litany continued in her ear. “I can barely get inside you. But once I do—my heart stops. And I can’t breathe. I think I’m going to die, but I can’t, because it feels too good to stop.” His fingers slid farther, and he pressed two of them inside her.

  She arched under the lash of sensation, soaring close to climax as his fingers stretched her. She heard herself cry out, a strained cry that told him exactly how near she was to fulfillment.

  “Not yet, not yet,” he said urgently, sliding his fingers out of her and bending her forward. He braced her hands on the vanity. “Hold on, sweetheart.”

  She didn’t know if he meant to the vanity, or to her control. Both were impossible. “I can’t,” she moaned. Her hips moved, undulating, searching for relief. “Chance, I can’t—please!”

  “I’m here,” he said, and he was, dipping down and pushing his muscled thighs between her legs, spreading them. She felt his lower belly against her buttocks, then the smooth, hard entry of his sex. Instinctively she bent forward to aid his penetration, taking all of him deep within her. He began driving, and on the second hard thrust she convulsed, crying out her pleasure. His climax erupted a moment later, and he collapsed over her back, holding himself as deep as he could while he groaned and shook.

  Sunny closed her eyes, fighting for breath. Oh God, she loved him so much she ached with it. She wasn’t strong enough to send him away, not even for his own protection. If she had been really trying, she could have gotten away from him, but deep down she knew she couldn’t give him up. Not yet. Soon. She would have to, to keep him safe.

  Just one more day, she thought as tears welled. One more. Then she would go.

  Chapter 12

  Ten days later, Sunny still hadn’t managed to shake him. She didn’t know if she was losing her touch or if army rangers, even ex ones, were very, very good at not being shaken.

  They had left Seattle early the next morning. Sunny was too cautious to fly back to Atlanta; as she had feared, the morning newscasts had been splashed with the “real-life romantic adventure” she and Chance had shared. His name was mentioned, but by some perverse quirk his face was never clearly shown; the camera would catch the back of his head, or while he was in a quarter profile, while hers was broadcast from coast to coast.

  One of the a.m. news shows even tracked them down at the hotel, awakening them at three in the morning to ask if they would go to the local affiliate studios for a live interview.

  “Hell, no,” Chance had growled into the phone before he slammed it down into the cradle.

  After that, it had seemed best they remove themselves from the reach of the media. They checked out of the hotel and took a taxi to the airport before dawn. The plane was refueled and ready to go. By the time the sun peeked over the Cascades they were in the air. Chance didn’t file a flight plan, so no one had any way of finding out where they were going. Sunny didn’t know herself until they landed in Boise, Idaho, where they refurbished their wardrobes. She always carried a lot of cash, for just such a situation, and Chance seemed to have plenty, too. He still had to use his credit card for refueling, so she knew they were leaving a trail, but those records would show only where they had last been, not where they were going.

  Chance’s presence threw her off her plan. She knew how to disappear by herself; Chance and his airplane complicated things.

  From a pay phone in Boise, she called Atlanta and resigned her job, with instructions to deposit her last paycheck into her bank. She would have the money wired to her when she needed it. Sometimes, adrift from the familiar life she had fashioned for herself, she wondered if she was overreacting to the possibility anyone would recognize her. Her mother had been dead for over ten years; there were few people in the world able to see the resemblance. The odds had to be astronomical against one of those few people seeing that brief human-interest story that had been shown for only one day.

  But she was still alive because her mother had taught her that any odds at all were unacceptable. So she ran, as she had learned how to do in the first five years of her life. After all, the odds were also against her getting pregnant, yet here she was, waiting for a period that hadn’t materialized. They had slipped up twice, only twice: once in the canyon, and in the hotel bathroom in Seattle. The timing hadn’t been great for her to get pregnant even if they hadn’t used protection at all, so why hadn’t her period started? It was due two days ago, and her cycle was relentlessly regular.

  She didn’t mention it to Chance. She might just be late, for one of the few times in her life since she’d starting having menstrual periods. She had been terrified when she thought they were going to crash; maybe her emotions had disrupted her hormones. It happened.

  She might sprout wings and fly, too, she
thought in quiet desperation. She was pregnant. There were no signs other than a late period, but she knew it deep down in her bones, as if on some level her body was communicating with the microscopic embryo it harbored.

  It would be so easy just to let Chance handle everything. He was good at this, and she had too much on her mind to be effective. She didn’t think he’d noticed how easily distracted she’d been these past few days, but then, he didn’t know when her period had been due, either.

  She had talked to Margreta twice, and told her she was going underground. She would have to arrange for a new cellular account under a different name, with a new number, and do it before the service she now had was disconnected. She had tried to tell Margreta everything that was going on, but her sister, as usual, kept the calls short. Sunny understood. It was difficult for Margreta to handle anything having to do with their father. Maybe one day they would be able to live normal lives, have a normal sisterly relationship; maybe one day Margreta would be able to get past what he had done to her and find some happiness despite him.

  Then there was Chance. He had brought sunshine into her life when she hadn’t even known she was living in shadows. She had thought she managed quite well, but it was as if B.C., Before Chance, had been in monochrome. Now, A.C., was in vivid technicolor. She slept in his arms every night. She ate her meals with him, quarreled with him, joked with him, made plans with him—nothing long term, but plans nevertheless. Every day she fell more and more in love with him, when she hadn’t thought it possible.

  Sometimes she actually pinched herself, because he was too good to be true. Men like him didn’t come along every day; most women lived their entire lives without meeting a man who could turn their worlds upside down with a glance.

  This state of affairs couldn’t last much longer, this aimless drifting. For one thing, it was expensive. Chance wasn’t earning any money while they were flying from one remote airfield in the country to another, and neither was she. She needed to get the paperwork for her new name, get a job, get a new cellular number—and get an obstetrician, which would cost money. She wondered how her mother had managed, with one frightened, traumatized child in tow, pregnant with another, and without any of the survival skills Sunny possessed. Pamela must have spent years in a state of terror, yet Sunny remembered her mother laughing, playing games with them, and making life fun even while she taught them how to survive. She only hoped she could be half as strong as her mother had been.