Midnight Man (Midnight #1)(63)
John lifted one hand to hold the back of her head. He kissed her, hard, biting her lips. “I want you to remember this,” he gasped, his penis working strong and hard and fast now. “I want you to remember the taste of my mouth on yours, how I feel inside you. I want you to walk away with my come still inside you. I want you to remember…this.” He thrust upward so hard she gasped, and slid right over the edge. He kept moving inside her through her orgasm as she rocked and shook and cried. When she lay quiescent against him, wrung out, he held her tightly against him as he moved into his own orgasm. He muffled his shout against her hair, but it was still loud in the dark cab.
They sat quietly together for a long time, Suzanne’s legs still straddling his hips, sweat drying. Still connected.
He held her tightly and she rubbed her face against his neck. Tears pooled in her eyes, but she didn’t cry. She was all cried out and tears wouldn’t help now, anyway.
She was frantically trying to commit every second to memory. The feel of his penis—barely softened by the orgasm—inside her, his breath against her hair, his hand running up and down her back beneath her sweater.
Suzanne wanted to stay like this forever, but eventually John shifted and sighed. “We’d better be going.” He kissed her hair and lifted her away from him. She rummaged on the floor for her panties, found them, and then pulled on her slacks. It was easier for John. All he had to do was lift his hips to hitch his pants up, then zip up.
Suzanne knew how disheveled she looked. Knew her hair was uncombed, knew her face was covered in tear tracks, knew her lips were swollen from his biting kisses. She smelled of sex. She could feel his semen between her thighs. She knew all of that, knew she would be meeting federal agents who would take one look at her and know. She couldn’t find it in her to care.
John turned the ignition. “It’s time,” he said. His voice was low and steady. She looked at him, at his carefully expressionless face and wanted to weep.
Midnight Man was back.
They were waiting where they’d said they’d be—two unmarked cars that screamed FBI and Bud’s PD-issue Crown Victoria. John had made sure that Bud would be around to ease Suzanne’s way, at least for the first few days. Suzanne was going to be scared and lonely, kept under lock and key. It was an obscenity, the idea of a woman as lovely, as vibrant as Suzanne locked in, her life essentially over. He needed to know Bud would be there for her, at least in the beginning.
The feebs emerged from their cars before he finished braking. There were four agents. John couldn’t see the faces very clearly, but then he didn’t have to. They were essentially the same man. They were dressed in the same clothes, were more or less the same height and had all read the same operation manual.
Bud got out of his car and came to stand beside the agents, towering over them. White plumes came from everyone’s mouth. The temperature had dropped below zero.
John propelled Suzanne forward and she moved within the cone of light cast by his headlights. He could see the eyes of the agents widen with surprise at the sight of her, and then shutter down. He trusted their professionalism, knew that, technically, Suzanne would not only be safe with them, but would be safe from them.
That didn’t mean they weren’t men. They’d have to be without a pulse not to react to her.
She wasn’t as polished-looking as when he’d first met her. Her clothes were rumpled and her makeup was gone. Her hair needed combing. But she was a heart-stopper, a potent mix of class and sex. A magnet for the male eye.
The instant they got a close look at her, they’d know. It wasn’t just the bee-stung lips or love-bite he’d just given her. It was the way she walked, moved. She was a well-loved woman who’d just had sex and it showed.
Bud came forward. He put his arm around her and bent down to talk to her. She nodded at his words.
John couldn’t hear what Bud was saying but it didn’t matter. It would be some bullshit meant to reassure her that everything would be all right.
It wouldn’t.
“Okay,” one of the feebs said, “let’s go.”
Suzanne turned back to him, eyes glistening. She was ready to break and run to him for a final embrace. John could read it in her body language. He stepped back. If he took her in his arms, he’d never let her go. Suzanne stared at him, then turned when an agent touched her elbow. One last lingering glance at him, and she slid into the back seat of the lead car. The agents got in and started the cars.
Bud was left standing, looking at him. They stared at each other and John could see that Bud understood.
A minute later, John watched the taillights of the cars as they topped a hill and disappeared.
John turned back to the SUV and took off in a hurry. He knew what he had to do and he had to do it fast.
The hunter stalks his prey. The prey is alert, but the hunter is stealthy and patient. The hunter is an expert and has done this before, has stalked and killed humans before. Humans leave spoor and have habits, just as animal prey do.
The hunter has been lying here for four days and four nights, sipping frugally from a canteen, eating nothing, eyes glued to the forty-power spotting scope with night vision.
The hunter has mud and greasepaint on his face, is buried belly-down in the root pocket of a giant oak and is wearing a ghillie suit designed to meld into a wintry Pacific Northwest landscape. He smells like an animal, which is good. The other animals in the forest give him a wide berth because they recognize him for what he is—a large and dangerous predator. He is in killing mode and the other animals sense that.