The Lawman's Last Stand. Vickie Taylor
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For now though, he focused on calm. She needed his reassurance, not his rage. “Nothing will go wrong this time. I promise. I won’t let anything happen to you.”
Her head snapped up. “I don’t want you involved. You don’t know what kind of trouble you’re getting yourself into.”
A bemused grin tugged at the corners of his mouth. “Honey, I’m DEA. I live for trouble.”
Her lips pressed into a grim line. She never laughed at his jokes.
“I can take care of myself,” he reassured her.
She looked a little queasy, as if she didn’t quite believe him. “You’re doing a great job of it so far, getting yourself shot.” She eyed him narrowly. “Again.”
He feigned a mortal wound to the chest, then smiled. “I do seem to attract bullets, don’t I?”
“You think this is funny?”
“No. I don’t think it’s funny at all. But I do think we have to get out of here. So what do you say? If we hit the road now, we can be in Phoenix by dark.”
She paused, considering. “Do I have a choice?”
He absorbed the petulant look on her face, the way her toe jabbed at the dirt. If anyone was just stubborn enough to survive this, it was Gigi. “Yeah.” He stood and stepped forward until he was toe to toe with her, chest to chest. “You can go easy, or you can go hard. Which is it going to be?”
In place of an answer, she huffed and flounced around to the back of the Jeep, then rattled in her pack again. He sure hoped she didn’t have a gun in there. If she did, he figured he was dead meat. He watched her a minute, but she just fussed with bottles and medical supplies.
He turned away. “You’ve got exactly one minute to come up with your answer,” he called over his shoulder.
“You allergic to anything, Hightower?” she asked.
“No.”
“You sure? Penicillin, aspirin, nothing?”
“I’m sure, why do you as—” He quit the question, the answer in her hand as she walked toward him. “Oh, no. Don’t even think about it.”
“What’s wrong, Mr. I-live-for-trouble DEA? Afraid of a little needle?”
“A little needle, no. But that thing…”
“Sorry. I’m a horse doctor, remember? This is the smallest I have.”
He scooted backward across the seat as she got closer. “You could knit a sweater with that needle.”
“Quit whining.”
“I’m not whining.” He sulked a moment, then shrugged off his jacket not able to stand her mocking stare any longer.
“Sorry,” she said, glee ringing in her voice. “Penicillin needs to go in deep muscle.” She tapped the syringe and pushed the plunger, squirting a drop of liquid out the end of the needle. Looking down at him, she smiled evilly. “Drop ’em, Hightower.”
He scooted an inch farther back on the seat. “No way.”
“You don’t want that wound to get infected while we’re in Phoenix, do you?”
A mild infection didn’t sound too bad, compared to that needle. How much antibiotic did it take to kill a few little germs, anyway?
Suddenly he realized what she’d said. She didn’t want him to get an infection, “in Phoenix.” She’d agreed to his plan.
“Well, what’s it going to be?”
He eyed the needle again. “Do I have a choice?”
“Sure.” She tapped air bubbles to the top of the syringe again. The morning sun glistened off her rosy cheeks and mussed hair, giving her a sleepy look. Like he imagined she’d look when he rolled over in bed in the morning after a long night of lovemaking and found her looking at him.
“You can go easy, or you can go hard,” she said. “Which is it going to be?”
Fixing his stare on her seductively arched brow and wicked grin, he reached slowly for his belt buckle.
Oh, he would go hard, all right. All the way to Phoenix, if she kept looking at him like that.
Gigi woke unpleasantly, her mind full of dark images—two men whispering in a stable late at night, a faceless man in a midnight-blue sedan, and Shane, standing in a doorway, shadows and firelight dancing with the doubt and desire etched across his face.
Are you afraid of me? The memory of his words taunted her.
No, she would have told him, if she’d been honest. I’m afraid of me. Afraid she’d fall for those trust-me eyes. Afraid she’d find them looking up at her dull and lifeless one day because of it.
“Did you have a nice nap?”
Those words weren’t echoes in her mind; they were real. She opened her eyes, feeling like someone had hung ten-pound weights on her eyelids, and found the very eyes she’d been dreaming about staring at her from the driver’s seat.
She pulled herself closer to the door, wiping her face with the back of her hand. “How long have I been out?”
“An hour or so.”
“Sorry, I didn’t get much sleep last night.”
“That makes two of us.”
She wondered fleetingly what thoughts had held his sleep at bay last night, then when she felt his heavy-lidded gaze linger on her, she decided she didn’t want to know.
They drove up on an exit. Shane put on his blinker, and let the Jeep coast off the two-lane highway. His hair settled sexily over his eyes as the wind that had been whipping it around his head diminished with their speed. She really wished he’d brush that hair back, before she gave in to the impulse to do it herself.
“We need gas,” he said. His words cooled the heat of his stare, but did little to slow the clamoring beat of her heart. Lord, what was she thinking? She had to get away from him, before she did something neither one of them might live long enough to regret, like trusting him.
The convenience store with the pumps out front looked deserted. Shane handed her a twenty-dollar bill and pointed at the See Cashier Before Fueling sign. “You pay, I’ll pump.”
Gigi took the money, but didn’t move, holding her breath as he swung the door open and climbed out of the Jeep. The keys were in the ignition. This could be her best chance to escape before they got to Phoenix.
Shane pushed the door and it thunked closed behind him. Her heart lurched when he turned around and smiled at her,