The three kids produced openmouthed stares of disbelief.
“But, Mama!” Hank wailed.
“Figures,” Matt said.
“What’s for supper?” Justin asked.
“You won’t like it,” Matt assured him, rolling his eyes in disgust. “Stir-fried toe fungus again, with those alien vegetables.”
“Tofu makes me barf,” Hank said.
Joe glanced up at Charlotte with raised eyebrows and a crooked grin. “Sounds delish. Well, good afternoon, ladies.”
Charlotte watched him take the long walk across her yard, cardboard box propped on a slim hip, the kids trailing behind him chattering nonstop, and noted once again how smoothly Joe Mills moved. She recalled the way he’d slipped down from his Jeep so long ago, giving her the first glimpse of his long, strong legs. She remembered seeing him glide and sway at his punching bag his first night in Minton. And she imagined that his footfall would be silent on her bedroom carpet—he could easily sneak up on her. Like a ghost. Or a predatory cat. The first few lines of a poem floated into her head:
He comes for me in the night
To suck the marrow from my bones
And the common sense from my head…
“That man is so unbelievably hot.” LoriSue peered through the screen as she whispered. “I’m gonna get me some of that if it’s the last thing I ever do.”
Bonnie let go of Hoover, who flung himself at the doors, doubling his barking efforts. The dog meant well, but Charlotte knew that it was too late to protect her from Joe. The damage had been done.
“I’m going to tell her.” Bonnie removed the bifocals from the bridge of her nose and let them dangle on their chain against her cotton nightgown.
“Tell her what?” Ned clicked off the TV remote and the lamp. “That ole Ned Preston thinks her neighbor could be anything from a CIA agent to a retired mall security guard? What’s that going to accomplish?”
“I’m just worried about her.”
“I know. Any new developments?”
“Well, today he planted honeysuckle to replace what he hacked to pieces.”
Ned’s laughter boomed through the bedroom. “That weed? It would’ve grown back on its own. I must have scared the shit out of him.” He continued to chuckle as he made himself comfortable under the covers.
“I want you to find out who he is, Ned.”
Ned sighed, propping the pillows behind his head. “How am I going to do that? I’m just a retired county police chief. Besides, it could be nothing. Maybe he’s just who he says he is. Maybe he’s a former cop who started writing books. It happens all the time.”
“I don’t know about that.”
“You been to the bookstore lately, hon? Anybody can write a book. You don’t necessarily have to have anything earth-shattering to say or any talent to say it.”
“I guess.”
“But I could try to get his fingerprints if you want.”
Bonnie reached over her husband’s body and turned the lamp back on. “You could do that?”
“I could lift his prints off something and run them and see what comes up.”
“Are all cops fingerprinted?”
Ned frowned. “Most law enforcement officers will show up on AFIS—the FBI’s fingerprint database. I’ve heard some feds won’t, if they do national security stuff, but most everybody else will. Your average beat cop should be there—not that Joe strikes me as a particularly average kind of guy.”
Bonnie put a soft kiss on her husband’s cheek and turned over on her side. “I’ve noticed that, too,” she whispered.
Joe bolted from a deep sleep, his bare chest covered in a slick sheen of sweat, his hands shaking.
He couldn’t have been out long. His wristwatch showed it was midnight, and only an hour before, he’d been staring at the ceiling, thinking about how he could find a way to get to know Charlotte while keeping her safe at the same time. That meant he’d fallen prey to the nightmare the instant he went into REM sleep, his subconscious answering him with the vision of Charlotte and her children covered in blood, lying right next to Steve in the Denny’s parking lot.
He jumped from the bed and nearly ran into his office. At least the feel of his chair beneath him and the familiar tap of the keyboard under his fingers provided some comfort and helped to steady his breathing.
He pulled up the Tasker file, not sure what he was looking for. He’d gone over the details so many times he practically had them memorized. But he found himself reading Kurt’s obit once again, drawn to the man he saw in the photo, feeling a link to him, asking him to spill his secrets.
He supposed he wanted Kurt to tell him everything about Charlotte, everything he’d never have a chance to discover for himself. What did she wear to bed? What was her all-time favorite movie? Her favorite music group? How did she take her coffee?
Joe slumped down into the chair and let his head fall back. He wondered—did Charlotte come for her husband the way she’d come for him? Did she cry because it was so intense? Did she laugh with joy? Did she tremble at Kurt Tasker’s touch the way she had at his own?
Most of all, Joe wanted to know this: How did it feel to be the man Charlotte loved?
He straightened again, closed the file, and sat in the pitch-dark, staring absently out the windows that faced Charlotte’s house. He never did get those drapes. What was the point? He wasn’t staying, didn’t know where he was going, and didn’t really give a damn.
It felt strange to be so detached from his own future. But in his mind, each day was simply another step closer to Guzman’s trial. It remained to be seen how many twists and turns the case would take along the pipeline of the federal court system, but once the trial was over, whenever that might be, he saw nothing but a blank.
It was as if he didn’t dare plan anything that far in the future. He just needed to stay alive long enough to testify. That’s the only thing that mattered.
Sitting there in that house, in that town, so close to Charlotte, it was tempting to believe he was safe, at least temporarily. But this was a pretend life he was leading, light-years from reality, and he would be a fool to relax. He needed to remember that his biggest danger wasn’t the delivery of LoriSue gift baskets. It was Miguel Guzman. It would always be Guzman.
Joe propped his feet on the desk, still looking out the windows, and took a deep breath. The faint scent of honeysuckle hit his nostrils and he grinned to himself, recalling how he’d learned the hard way that garden centers didn’t actually sell honeysuckle. Instead, he was sent to a farmer’s place down the road, where the guy laughed when he asked to buy some, gave him a shovel, and said, “Have at it, son.”
At least he’d be leaving Minton with a clear conscience.
Joe thought he saw a figure pass by a second-story window of Charlotte’s home and wondered what she was doing up so late. He’d grown accustomed to her daily schedule and knew that she was up at 6:00 in the morning and out the door with the kids by 7:30. She should get more rest.
The figure passed again, and Joe was up out of the office chair and standing next to the window, considering the layout of the Tasker home. That was definitely Charlotte who walked by—he saw a flash of her pale legs. But what room was that? Was she in her bedroom? Or with one of the kids? Joe found himself back at the desk, pulling his binoculars out from the drawer, suddenly determined to figure out where Charlotte was and exactly what she was doing up so late.
He trained the lenses onto the three identical windows. One was covered completely by a white shade. On the other two, the shade was half-drawn, leaving the bottom portion of the window exposed. He dropped to his knees and looked straight into what he could now tell was her bedroom.
Charlotte was propped up on a mound of pillows in a big four-poster bed, wearing what looked like a pair of white silk shorts–pajama bottoms and a little white tank top. She had a book opened in her lap and was writing in it. Her diary maybe. He watched her scrunch up that pretty pink mouth in concentr
ation and absently push a slippery strand of hair behind her ear.
She suddenly stopped writing, laid her head back against the pillows, and closed her eyes—then quickly picked up the pen once more. Her hand raced over the page as her toes tapped in impatience. He was fascinated by the way she glowed in the lamplight—all pinks and peaches and oranges—against white sheets. She looked luminous. She looked beautiful.
She looked so far away.
Joe nearly staggered backward at what happened next. He watched, openmouthed, as Charlotte put the book aside and slowly raised her hands to her breasts. He watched her scootch back against the pillows, let her head fall to the side, and brush her fingers in delicate little circles around her nipples. She gazed out the window into the darkness, her eyes glassy and unfocused.
He’d never seen a woman do this before. Up until tonight, he’d been fairly certain it happened only in porno movies. He’d apparently been wrong.
Joe’s hands trembled enough that he had to steady himself against the window frame, anchoring an elbow into the molding. He took a deep breath and adjusted the focus. The image he saw was crisp, painfully erotic, and, his conscience told him, nothing he had any right to witness.
But at that moment, Charlotte arched her back and pushed her T-shirt-covered breasts into her hands. She pinched her own nipples. Then she let one hand slide down her breastbone, into the hollow between her ribs, down her belly, and into the elastic of the silk pajama bottoms.
Joe watched her mouth open in shock from the touch of her own fingers. He watched her arch further, her hips coming up off the bed, her legs falling open to accommodate the rhythm of her hand. Lust poured over him like a flood of hot lava, and Joe felt his own body moving to the sensuous tempo she set, the slight push of his hips in concert with the rock of hers.
His hips. Her hips. Her hand. His hand. It was blurring together in his mind and suddenly it was as if he were with her, right there in her bed with her, her skin and breath hot against him.
In a flurry of movement, Charlotte peeled off the pajama bottoms and flung her tank top to the floor. Joe stared—enraptured—as her lithe body twisted to the side. With one graceful arm she tilted back the base of the lamp and took something from underneath. It was a key, and she was unlocking the drawer to the nightstand, and Joe felt his pulse escalate. He felt clammy and shaky.
He needed to sit down, but there was nowhere to sit that would afford him this view, so he stayed ramrod straight on his knees, not daring to breathe, as the woman of his fantasies removed a flesh-colored vibrator from its storage sleeve and began to pleasure herself.
She first took the tip of the vibrator and ran it over the little raspberry peaks of her breasts. She licked her lips.
Joe licked his.
Then she dragged the vibrator down the center of her body, making a sudden detour around her left hip, across her upper thighs and small mound, then to her right hip. She was teasing herself, prolonging the buildup, pretending she didn’t know exactly what she had in mind.
Joe couldn’t stand the suspense.
“Do it, Charlotte.” The anguish he heard in his own whisper startled him. He sounded desperate.
He was desperate.
Then Charlotte turned a little knob at the base of the vibrator and pointed it directly at a spot Joe remembered well. She’d been so slick and swollen that day—so excited and ready for him. He recalled in detail the feel of his fingers as they danced over the hard little kernel nestled in the split of her body. He remembered in detail how her eyelids drooped, heavy with pleasure, then snapped wide open in surprise.
He laughed out loud at the absurdity! This was ludicrous! She was there and he was here and what a perfectly good waste of two consenting adults! He was going to march right across the drive and give her the real thing. He wanted it. She wanted it. Hell, she’d come right out and asked for it!
And it was impossible.
Joe groaned, helpless with longing and indecision, and watched Charlotte slowly, so slowly, spread her legs and insert the tip of the vibrator inside her body. He swallowed hard. He groaned again. And he moved his hips in concert with the cadence of her wrist.
Charlotte obviously knew what worked for her. He watched her bring her free hand back to rub that sweet spot while she continued to plunge in and out, and Joe’s heart was racing and his eyes bugged out as Charlotte brought herself to a jerking, rigid climax, her mouth wide open in what he figured was probably a soundless scream that wouldn’t wake the kids.
The scream in his own head was primal and never-ending, and he felt drained and weak as she pulled the vibrator out and flipped over on her stomach to recover. He watched her stretch luxuriously, then reach up to the bedside table for what he thought might be a drink but…
What the hell? It looked like one of those aerosol cans of snack cheese! And she was squirting the bright orange glop directly into her mouth!
Joe laughed again. He laughed at Charlotte for being such a perfect combination of sweet soccer mom and sexual dynamo. He laughed at her for eating that disgusting cheese stuff in secret while she made her kids eat tofu. He looked down at his wet boxers and laughed at himself and the ridiculousness of the whole situation.
Maybe it was time to rethink this. Maybe he’d exaggerated the risk in his head. He was in Minton, Ohio, for God’s sake! Miguel Guzman would never find him here! What was he thinking?
Maybe Roger was right. Maybe he needed to stay right where the Administration had decided he’d be safe. They’d done a risk assessment before they brought him here. They knew what they were doing. Maybe he needed to stay in Minton and disappear into life as Joe Mills, an ordinary man who was entitled to an ordinary life, albeit with an extraordinary woman.
He got another glimpse of Charlotte just as she turned off her light. Right then, he knew the choice had been made in his heart long ago. He’d walked away from this woman once and regretted it with his whole being.
He’d be damned if he’d do it again.
Chapter Thirteen
“You need to get laid, not get involved.”
“Is that right, boss?”
Joe paced along the windows near his desk, the binoculars still trained on the little group assembled in Charlotte’s backyard. Watching Ned try to put together that tent under the watchful eyes of Hank, Matt, and Justin was nearly as excruciating as the conversation he was having with Roger.
“You’re in no position to cozy up to anyone, Joe—especially somebody like her. Couldn’t you find a woman a bit more… I don’t know… disposable?”
“Disposable?”
“Yeah,” Roger said. “Your neighbor lady is like a hot home-cooked meal when you really ought to be going for drive-thru.”
Joe thanked Roger for his observation and promptly told him it was his fault. “I told you to get me out of here. This is why.”
“And I told you to stay away from the soccer moms.”
“She’s the only soccer mom in the world who could have gotten my attention.”
“Then take your attention back.”
“I can’t. I don’t want to.”
“Are you telling me you’ve changed your mind? You want to stay in Minton now?”
Joe sighed and closed his eyes and all he saw was Charlotte’s face the way it appeared that night at the Little League field, when she looked up at him and said, “I want you, Joe.” She’d looked completely vulnerable. Completely beautiful.
And now he was completely smitten.
He had to trust that there was a reason for his being there, even if he didn’t see it. He had to trust his instincts—they’d kept him alive so far—and every fiber in his body told him to get to know Charlotte. To at least give it a try.
“I do want to stay. Can we hang on to the house?”
“It’s yours for as long as you need it, but, Joe”—Roger’s voice had become quite serious—”I’m not saying you don’t have a right to some happiness, because God knows you do. Just sta
y sharp, okay? We’ve got your back, but you’ve got to do your part.”
It was solid advice, and Joe appreciated it. “Roger that.”
Two minutes later, Joe found himself standing on the property line near the shed, eavesdropping. He wasn’t exactly hiding, but he wasn’t jumping around waving his arms, either.
He watched Bonnie squint at the assembly instructions in her hand. “It says you need to insert Pole A through Sleeve A, honey.”
“Oh, yeah?” Ned peered up from his bent position and shook his balding head in disgust. “I’d like to tell the guy who designed this tent exactly where he can insert Pole A, Pole B, and all the other poles.”
“Ned, please. The kids.”
“Mom will be home in a few minutes,” Matt said, scanning the heap of aluminum poles on the grass. “She’s good at stuff like this.”
“Excellent idea.” Ned stood up and rubbed his lower back. That’s when he noticed Joe.
“Hey, everyone.” Joe walked toward the group and extended a hand toward Bonnie. “We haven’t been officially introduced. I’m Joe Mills.” He took her hand in his and watched a reluctant smile enter her pale blue eyes.
“Hello, Joe. I’m Bonnie Preston.” She nodded toward Ned. “I understand you two have met.”
“Sure have.”
Joe studied the collapsed fabric and the scattered poles. “Looks like you got a six-man tent here,” he said to Matt. “These can be a real bear to put together. Mind if I take a shot at it?”
Matt’s face lit up. “Cool!”
“Ned, you want to give me a hand?”
Within ten minutes, the tent stood erect, its sides pulled taut and even. The kids were experimenting with the zippered screen doorway as Ned and Joe secured the rain fly over the entire structure.
“The new technology threw me,” Ned said. “Looks like you’ve put up a few tents in your time.”
“Some.” Joe gave him a friendly smile. “Not for a while, though.”
Ned nodded. “Army, was it?”
“Yes, sir. You?”
“Marines.”