Page 17 of Something About You


  Cameron tried to play it casual as she walked over. “We were waiting to make sure everything was safe.”

  Amy pulled her to the side. “I was worried when the two of you didn’t show up downstairs.”

  “I know. I’m sorry.”

  Amy looked her over. “That’s a new way of wearing that shirt.”

  Cameron glanced down and saw her exposed shoulder. Now missing one gray silk camisole strap.

  She was going to burn the stupid sweater as soon as she got home.

  Sixteen

  CAMERON HEARD THE knock on her door and looked up from her computer. Rob Merrocko, an assistant U.S. attorney with the office next to hers, opened the door and poked his head in.

  “How’d the arraignment go today?”

  “He pled not guilty, as expected,” Cameron said. “That’ll change. A jury would convict this guy in all of about two seconds.” The defendant, a youth soccer coach from one of the northern suburbs, had been charged with receiving child pornography on his computer. If his lawyer had an ounce of sense in him, he’d never let the case go to trial.

  It was an ugly case, and one of the few she found difficult to keep a cool head about. Just being in the same courtroom as the defendant had left her feeling disgusted and emotionally drained.

  “Why do you still take these kinds of cases?” Rob asked her. “Pawn it off on one of the new guys.”

  Not really her style of doing things, but Cameron managed a smile, appreciating the sympathy. “I’ll be all right.” She ran her hands through her hair tiredly and eased back in her chair. “How are things on your end?”

  “I just indicted an alderman for bribery.”

  “Nice,” Cameron said approvingly. “Let’s talk about that instead.”

  For the next few minutes, they swapped caseload horror stories, gossiped about a particularly ill-tempered judge in their district, and discussed which law clerk they should assign the ignominious task of cleaning the trial prep room. They were interrupted by a call from Cameron’s secretary.

  “Collin’s here to see you,” she said when Cameron answered. No last name was necessary; in the last four years, her secretary had become familiar with Collin’s frequent visits.

  “Thanks, send him back.” She nodded at Rob, who waved good-bye on his way out. About twenty seconds later, he was replaced by Collin.

  “You sounded terrible on the phone,” he said from the doorway, referring to the quick conversation they’d had about an hour ago. “I’m here to kidnap you.”

  “I had a tough day in court.” Cameron checked her watch. “It’s four o’clock. I can’t leave work now. It would be . . . indecent.”

  Collin laughed. “You’re running yourself ragged these days between work, Amy’s bachelorette party, and that other business we can’t talk about here. You need a break. Come on, counselor—I’ll treat you to a flight at 404 Wine Bar.”

  It was tempting. Cameron eyed him knowingly. “You just finished a column, didn’t you?” She could always tell.

  “Is it so wrong to want to spend quality time with my best friend when she’s had a rough day?” Collin asked innocently. “As for whether I also happened to be particularly insightful and witty while writing today, well, you’ll just have to see for yourself in tomorrow’s paper. It’ll be the big column about sports stuff under my picture.”

  Cameron threw him a wry grin—very funny. Yet despite the pile of work she had stacked on her desk, and also despite the fact that she sensed that Collin was in another one of his god-among-men insufferable moods, she thought that a drink with her best friend didn’t sound like too bad of an idea right then.

  So for the first time in her four years as a prosecutor, she shocked everyone in the office, including herself, by leaving early.

  OFFICER HARPER ENTERED the kitchen, having finished his check of the second and third floors of Cameron’s house.

  “We’re all clear.” He looked at his partner, Officer Regan, who had checked the main level. “You good?”

  Regan nodded. “We’re good.”

  Cameron followed them to the door and locked it behind them.

  “So what do they do now?” Collin asked. He’d taken a seat at the counter while the cops had done their walk-through.

  “They’ll follow us to the bar and wait outside until the night shift shows up.”

  “Why do I get the feeling that things are more interesting when Jack Pallas is around?” Collin teased.

  “Things with Jack have gotten a little . . . complicated lately,” Cameron said.

  “Complicated” was certainly one way to describe it. On Saturday night, after she and Jack had rejoined Wilkins, Amy, and the rest of the bachelorette party, they’d barely said two words to each other—the two words on her part being “thank you” after he and Wilkins made sure the house was secure when they dropped her and Amy off, and the two words on his part being “you’re welcome.” She hadn’t heard from nor seen Jack since.

  Which was just fine with her. Really. Over the last five days she’d had time to sort through her emotions. Sure, she and Jack had done Those Things She’d Never Admit in a random office in a nightclub, but she’d decided this was all simply part of that post-traumatic stress she’d been fighting off lately. She’d been on some crazed high after the excitement of the power outage, had gotten riled up, and Jack just happened to be there. With his mouth on her breasts.

  Tell me.

  Let me touch you.

  Cameron felt a little flushed every time she thought back to that evening. Apparently, there was one level on which she and Jack had no problem communicating openly.

  She filled Collin in on the events of Saturday night, leaving out the most racy parts. Which was odd, because normally she told Collin everything. But some of the things between her and Jack felt . . . private.

  “Sounds like I missed quite a party,” Collin said when she’d finished. “So where do you and Jack go from here?”

  “Nowhere,” Cameron said with emphasis. Hadn’t he been paying attention to the post-traumatic stress part? She’d mentioned that point at least six times. “Saturday night was nothing. A fluke.”

  Collin threw her a skeptical look. “Babe, I hope you’re at least fooling yourself with that.”

  Nope, not really. “All right. So I’m physically attracted to Jack,” Cameron conceded. It was a big step for her to admit even that much out loud. “Who wouldn’t be? You’ve seen him.”

  “Rugged hotness, sex in a shoulder harness—yep, I’m familiar.”

  “Right. But I can conquer a physical attraction. I mean, he told thirty million people I had my head up my ass. What kind of self-respecting woman would I be if I fell for a guy like that?”

  “It would be somewhat ironic,” Collin agreed.

  “Plus, he doesn’t even like me,” Cameron added.

  Collin cocked his head. “Is that what you’re worried about?”

  “No, I’m not worried. I just think, given our history, that it would be foolish of me to think that Saturday night was about anything other than a mere physical attraction on Jack’s part.” Cameron paused. “So it’s a good thing he and I are on the same page with that.”

  Collin seemed to be amused by her assessment of the situation. “I think you need a few drinks to help you sort this out.”

  Cameron waved this off. “I don’t need to do any sorting.” She gestured to her outfit. “But I do need to change out of this suit before we head to the bar.”

  “I’ll head up with you,” Collin said, sliding off the stool and leaving the kitchen with her. “I want to check the guest bedroom. I’m missing my Sox sweatshirt, and I thought maybe I left it here one of the times I stayed over. Either that, or Richard snagged it when he moved out.”

  Cameron followed Collin up the stairs. “Have you talked to him since then?”

  “Not once. I thought I’d get a phone call, or at the very least an e-mail. But apparently he thin—”

  Neit
her of them saw the attack coming.

  A dark figure lunged at them when they reached the second floor, a mere blur that moved blindingly fast. With Collin in front of her, Cameron never saw where the man came from. He struck Collin across the head with something in his hand, and Collin moaned and sank to the floor. Cameron screamed his name.

  The man, dressed all in black, whirled around. He wore a ski mask that covered all of his face except for small openings at his eyes and mouth, and she noticed that he wore black gloves.

  The object in his hand was a gun.

  Pointed straight at her.

  Cameron felt as though her legs were stuck in quick-sand. She looked over to where Collin lay on the floor. He wasn’t moving.

  The man with the gun moved toward her.

  Cameron took a step back, retreating slowly down the stairs. The man followed her.

  “What do you want?” she asked, her voice barely more than a whisper.

  As he took the next step, he lifted his gloved hand and pointed.

  You.

  Seventeen

  JACK LEFT THE Triumph in an open spot near the end of the block and walked over to the unmarked police car parked in front of Cameron’s house. He’d taken his time on the way over, soaking in the fifteen-minute drive along the lake. In about three weeks he’d have to put the motorcycle into storage for the winter and his cold-weather mode of transport, a Ford LTD Crown Victoria, while practical, didn’t pack quite the same punch.

  As Jack made his way over, Harper, the senior cop on the day shift, unrolled the driver’s side window.

  “She just got here a few minutes ago. She’s with McCann.”

  Jack noted this information, not happy about the fact that Cameron wasn’t alone. He’d called her office and had been surprised to learn from her secretary that she’d gone home early. At the time that had seemed fortuitous, since he preferred to talk to her in person, anyway, and her house would be more private.

  He thanked the cops and headed toward the front gate.

  For the past few days, he’d been avoiding this conversation. Mainly because of how surprised he was by his actions on Saturday night. He was not an impulsive man. Impulsive men in his line of work quickly found themselves dead. Or worse. He personally had survived the worst of it at the hand of Martino and knew the only way he had lived to tell was because he’d kept his wits through the pain and waited out those two excruciatingly long days for the right moment to strike.

  What had happened with Cameron at Manor House had left him feeling unsettled. Off his game. He didn’t often let his guard down around people. That made a man . . . vulnerable.

  Somehow, she had gotten behind his defenses. And now, every instinct told him to stay as far away from her as possible, to harden himself against her even more than he had in the past. He would ride out the remainder of the Robards investigation, and then walk away without a second glance.

  Except for one thing.

  You saw what you wanted to see.

  That slip-up of hers had been in the back of his mind, nagging him, ever since she’d first said it. Who knew what she meant by that? But if there was some other explanation for her being in Davis’s office that morning—the day he’d been transferred by the DOJ—he wanted to know about it.

  He needed to know.

  So this time, he wasn’t leaving until she talked. He would get the answers he wanted. Today.

  Jack strode up the steps to her front door. He rang the doorbell and waited.

  No response.

  He tried again.

  Still nothing.

  Jack looked back at the undercover car parked on the street behind him.

  In the passenger seat, Officer Regan rolled down the window and shrugged. “Maybe they’re in back. McCann said something about having a drink while we were checking out the house. They’re probably sitting on the deck or something.”

  Officer Harper stepped out of the car. “You want us to check it out with you?”

  She probably was just sitting on the deck, having a drink.

  But probably was not good enough.

  Jack took the steps two at a time. “One of you guard the front and keep trying the doorbell. The other of you should go around the east side of the house.” There was a gate that blocked access to the back of the house from that side, but it was still worth checking.

  Drawing his gun, Jack went the opposite direction and cut around the side of the house. All the windows appeared undisturbed, and as he carefully peeked in each one, he saw nothing. Nor did he hear anything.

  He moved cautiously around the house and into the backyard. Seeing that Cameron and Collin weren’t there, he crept up the steps that led to the deck and pressed his back against the house. On his one side was the door, on the other a window. The door was nearly all glass except for a solid oak border. The window at least had curtains that would provide some cover. Being careful to remain as concealed as possible, he peeked through the window.

  Nothing.

  The kitchen and great room were empty.

  She wouldn’t leave without the police escort.

  Jack tightened his grip on his gun. His eyes searched the house as he tried to stay out of view.

  Then he saw it—something that made his pulse race.

  On the other side of the kitchen, a large decorative mirror hung on the wall opposite the stairwell. He could see Cameron in the mirror—she was standing on the stairs.

  A man wearing a black mask stood behind her, holding a gun to her head.

  The front doorbell rang and the masked man looked in that direction, clearly using the gun to keep Cameron quiet.

  From the east side of the house came a sudden clanging sound, and Jack ducked out of the window. The sound had come from the gate, and he silently cursed whichever of the two cops had been careless enough to make so much noise. He peeked back into the window.

  Cameron and the masked man were gone.

  Knowing they had to have gone up the stairs, Jack ran for the fire escape that led to the upstairs balcony, being careful to move stealthily enough so as to not make a sound. He reached the second floor and headed to the French doors outside the master bedroom. He reached out with one hand and quietly checked the handle of the door. Locked. Staying out of sight as much as possible, he looked through the glass.

  He watched as Cameron entered the bedroom, the gunman right behind her. The man gripped her neck with one hand, pushing her, and held the gun to her head with the other.

  “I never saw your face,” Cameron was saying. “You don’t have to do this.”

  Hearing the fear in her voice, a fury took hold of Jack. He raised his gun to take a shot through the window.

  But the man must have seen the flash of movement. He looked over, saw Jack through the glass, and yanked Cameron in front of him, blowing the shot. Refusing to leave Cameron alone with the gunman one second longer, Jack reared back and fired his gun twice at the glass French doors.

  He dove through.

  Jack burst into the bedroom, barely aware of the glass shattering all around him. He hit the ground on one knee, slid across the floor, and hurtled himself up with his gun aimed at the masked man—

  —who had his arm wrapped around Cameron’s neck. His own gun pointed at her head.

  “Let her go,” Jack growled.

  The masked man tightened his grip around Cameron’s neck. Using her as a shield, he backed out of the bedroom, into the hallway.

  Jack followed, his gun trained on the man and ready to fire the moment he had a clean shot. “There are cops on every side of this house. You’re trapped. Put down your weapon and release her.” Without shifting his gaze, he did a quick assessment of the guy. Five feet eleven, roughly one hundred and seventy-five pounds. Cameron’s physical description had been nearly spot-on. And through the slits of the mask, Jack gained one additional piece of information: the man had brown eyes.

  The masked man paused at Jack’s warning. Then he pressed t
he barrel of his gun harder against Cameron’s temple, digging into her skin.

  Jack got the message, loud and clear.

  Back off.

  He kept his eyes and gun on his target. “You shoot her and you lose your shield.” He stole a glance at Cameron. Her face was white. She blinked, and tears ran down her face.

  Jack forced himself not to show any emotion. But for the first time in his life, he felt real fear.

  The masked man backed toward the stairs, and out of the corner of his eye, Jack saw Collin laying motionless in the hallway. The man dragged Cameron with him up the stairs, nearly choking her as he forced her to keep up with him. Jack followed, his mind running through the mental floor map he’d made of Cameron’s house during his two security checks.

  “If you want out of this house, you’ll have to let her go,” Jack warned. “You can’t run with a hostage.”

  The man showed no reaction. At the third floor, the stairs ended in an open-air balcony with pitched ceilings and a skylight. To Jack’s left was an office. To the right was a large, unfurnished room. Although he couldn’t see it from his position, he knew there was a door on the north wall that led out onto the rooftop deck.

  Without hesitating, the masked man pulled Cameron into the room on Jack’s right. Jack followed, realizing that however long the man had been inside the house, waiting, it had been long enough to familiarize himself with the layout.

  The man headed to the door that led outside. There was a moment’s pause as he shifted his position, then, reaching around Cameron’s neck, he pinned her against his body with his elbow and forearm. He pointed the gun upward, bracing the muzzle right underneath her chin. He reached his free hand behind him to unlock the door.

  So precarious was Cameron’s position at that moment, Jack couldn’t contemplate taking a shot—one slip of the intruder’s arm and it would all be over.

  He needed to say something, anything to reach out to her. “Cameron—look at me.”

  “Jack,” she whispered, her eyes holding his and pleading.