The Unlikely Bodyguard. Amy Fetzer J.

The Unlikely Bodyguard - Amy Fetzer J.


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had gone straight out with the used holy water. Oh, she was grateful that men didn’t think she was easy, and she supposed there were still some women who wouldn’t mind the Goody Two-shoes, picket fence, P.T.A.-domestic goddess image. But Calli loathed it. She hated how guys cleaned up the conversation when she entered a room, the jokes dying before the punch line. Or worse, clammed up altogether. She wanted people to say exactly what they were feeling.

      Even the men she’d managed to find the time to date recently were agonizingly polite, obsequious. And painfully dull. They didn’t talk to her, they chatted, as if she couldn’t handle anything remotely stressing. If they only knew her past, she thought with a flash of memory. Calh wanted more. Of what, she wasn’t sure.

      She felt extraordinarily restrained by the image she needed to project for her career and the one struggling for escape. She looked down at her clothes and smirked. This wasn’t exactly her usual style, but she felt incredibly daring and lush in leather. And beneath it all was a wild assortment of Brazilian lingerie that made her feel gloriously wicked. That was her only private justice, like snubbing the world when she wore tailored designer suits. For beneath every one of them was unchained seduction in lace and garters.

      For an instant, she wondered if Angel knew, since he’d had his hand halfway up her skirt when he’d carted her out of the bar.

      She slid over the gearshift and jammed in the key. The engine revved and she was turning to look behind her when the car door suddenly opened. Before she could speak, he reached across and turned off the car, then pulled her too easily from behind the wheel.

      Where had he come from? she wanted to know. She’d watched him walk away!

      He held her by the arms to his eye level. “Are you trying to get yourself killed?”

      His eyes were like shaved ice. Scary. “Of course not.”

      “Then what the hell were you doing?” He shook her and one of her shoes plopped to the ground.

      “That’s not your business, now is it, Angel?” Where he got that name, she couldn’t begin to wonder. He was more like Lucifer. Dark, lean, with lots of muscle beneath that jean jacket. She felt it when he’d carried her so humiliatingly from the bar. She saw it now in his hauntingly pale eyes. God, they were like crystals, sparkling with secrets. The power of them worried her.

      “Do you mind?” She brought her shoeless toe to the crotch of his jeans.

      “Don’t play there, little tigress,” he rasped, and something ignited inside Calli.

      “I hadn’t planned on it. Well-placed kicks work so much better.” She tapped him lightly and his eyes flared. “Put me down.”

      He did, abruptly, releasing her as if his hands were burned, and stepping back.

      Jamming on her loose shoe, she slid back into her car. She didn’t look at him, but she could feel him; his stance casual, his hips slanted, thumbs hooked in his belt loops. And those eyes. “I don’t know what possessed you to interfere in my life, Angel Whoever-you-are, but I can take care of myself.” Where was that car key?

      “I’ll remember that when I’m reading about your murder in tomorrow’s paper.”

      “You’re being a tad possessive toward someone you don’t know.” She found the key.

      Angel watched her search for the ignition, three times. “You’re drunk. Miss Thornton.”

      She held up her hand. “Let’s not beat around the bush, shall we? I’m smashed.”

      “And who will you kill on the road just to spite me?”

      She sighed, slowly lowering her head to the steering wheel. The horn beeped and she flinched. He was right, of course. Pride and rebellion could be taken only so far. Removing her keys, she swung her legs to the left and climbed from the BMW, closing the door. The following silence hung like a knife between them, sharp and dangerous.

      She stared up at him. His face was expressionless. She didn’t think anyone could do that, wipe every ounce of emotion from his face, but he had. She staggered a bit, then bent and took off her shoes. Angel’s eyes flared as she straightened.

      She was just a little thing.

      “Don’t let my size mislead,” she said, recognizing his surprise. “I really am tougher than I look.”

      “Same goes here.”

      She let her gaze rip and slide over him, down to the dark, snakeskin boots, then back up, smiling at the gold loop in his ear. “I can’t imagine how.” She turned and pointed her oblong key chain at the car. The lights went off, the locks snapped and the alarm set with a double beep. She leveled a side glance at him. “Bet you wish you could lock me up that well, huh, Angel?”

      Yes, he thought. He did. But what he wanted was to lock himself up with her.

      “G’night, Angel, honey.”

      She brushed past him as she headed straight to the hotel, her shoes dangling from her fingertips like dainty slippers. His gaze swept her, clinging to her behind shifting inside the leather until she slipped into the hotel room. God, she was one wild number, he thought No, he corrected, she was playing at being wild. That she hadn’t bothered to set the car alarm outside the Nail told him she’d no idea where she was sticking that pretty nose and was damn lucky that her car hadn’t been stripped when they’d come out. If she knew anything about The Rusty Nail, she wouldn’t have set one polished toe in there. He’d read her instantly when she had. Her clothes were too expensive, too tailored. They spoke of money. And her white BMW screamed it.

      He leaned against a street lamp, watching until her lights went out. Then he hitchhiked a ride back to the Nail for his bike. Go home, Calli Thornton., he thought with a ride past the hotel and a final look-see for her car. A good woman like that didn’t belong here. Ever. And certainly not near him.

      

      

      Gabriel “Angel” Griffin knew he shouldn’t get too close to her. Just her perfume drove him mad. God, everything about her drove him nuts. She was sensual energy and didn’t realize it. He’d spent the past two nights trying to reason her into a neat isolated corner of his mind. He had to, had to go back to feeling the way he had before he’d laid eyes on her.

      Like nothing.

      Feeling old and empty at thirty?

      Or keep worrying over a black-haired beauty with a sultry walk and eyes as bright as a New Mexico sky? He wished he could dismiss her from his mind, but he couldn’t. He’d made a promise.

      And as he relaxed on the seat of his bike, boots propped on the handlebars, he kept one eye peeled on the entrance to Damien’s Haven. She was really pushing it this time. Damien’s looked like the average yuppie nightclub on the outside; tasteful decor, a bouncer and a line to get in. But inside, it was a designer-draped cesspool. More drug traffic went through that place than a Colombian cartel, bringing out the wired and weird. And Calli was in the center of it.

      Last night it was the streets, conversations with people who would sell their souls—and hers—for a few bucks. He’d been there, too, she just hadn’t known it. For three days he’d watched her push the limits of her safety, a couple of fairly harmless admirers getting a little too familiar with that sweet behind, a kid trying to snatch her purse, unsuccessfully. So far nothing serious, not that every man within sight came to her rescue just because of her looks and the payback they might receive. The paybacks brought him out of hiding and under her nose tonight.

      Rooting in his pockets, he found a half-crushed cigarette and slid it between his lips. Then he hunted for a match, lit it, cupping the flame and squinting through the smoke at the entrance to Damien’s It was wide and he could scrutinize at least two-thirds of the club from here. And her. Or he would be inside right now. He drew on the smoke, exhaling in a short stream, then made a face at the stale taste and pitched it into the street. He saw her move through the club and his chest tightened unfamiliarly


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