The Heartless Rebel. Lynn Harris Raye
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“Because I like taking chances.” It was true enough. He got a rush out of playing stocks. Sometimes he didn’t sleep for days as he moved between the international markets. Making money was easy. It made sense, unlike everything else in his life. He could control money. He couldn’t control the things that had happened to him, or the emotional scars his family bore.
“Well, I don’t,” she said. “I liked dealing cards. There’s no risk in it for me.”
“Apparently, there is.”
Her jaw tightened. “Tonight was a first.”
“It would not have been the last, should you have complied.”
She glanced at the gauges. “We’re going to need gas soon and I don’t have any money.”
So she didn’t want to admit she’d been in over her head. Fine. “I’ll take care of it.”
She was silent for a few moments. “Were you playing for someone tonight?”
“No.”
“Then you lost a lot of money by coming to look for me. You must regret that impulse.”
“It’s only money.”
She laughed, but it wasn’t a humorous sound. “Of course. Because there’s no one depending on you for the food on their table or the roof over their head, I suppose.”
His employees would no doubt disagree with that statement. “No, because people are more important than money. You were in trouble.”
“I really didn’t need rescuing, Jack. You gave up fifteen million for nothing.”
“If you weren’t in trouble, why are we speeding out of town? “
Before she could acknowledge the truth of that statement, they hit a bump and Jack groaned. Dear God, it felt like there was an alien trying to burst out of his abdomen.
“We need to get you to a doctor,” she said worriedly.
Jack swallowed the pain. “No. Because Gold probably is looking for us, and it would take too long for my men to arrive. Keep driving.”
Bobby Gold had the fifteen mil, but he was the kind of man who couldn’t stand to be made a fool of. He’d want Cara Taylor back so he could make her pay for her disobedience. Getting as far from Nice as possible wasn’t a bad idea.
Since there were no flights this late, and his private plane was in a hangar in London, they had no choice but to drive. Even if he called his pilot, it would be several hours yet before the plane would arrive.
He’d originally planned a leisurely drive across France on his way to Nathaniel’s wedding, anyway. He could have flown, but he knew he needed the time to think. This would be the first time in nearly twenty years that all the Wolfes would be gathered under the same roof—and he wasn’t sure how he felt about that. He especially wasn’t sure how he felt about seeing Jacob again.
Jacob, who’d betrayed them all when he’d left them without any explanation. Jack had looked up to Jacob, admired him—until the night Jacob had abandoned them.
“You’re in no shape to spend the night in a car,” Cara said. “A hospital—”
“Just do it,” Jack ordered.
He expected an argument, but she flexed her hands on the steering wheel and didn’t say anything for several seconds.
“Fine. Where do you want to go?”
Not where he wanted to go. Where he had to go. “England.”
CHAPTER THREE
IT WAS nearly two in the morning when they reached the outskirts of Lyon. Cara found a hotel off the expressway and pulled the car into a parking slot. It had taken her a few minutes back in Nice to figure out how to drive Jack’s sports car, but once she had, the silver beast was a dream. She knew without asking that it was the most expensive car she’d ever been in, much less driven.
Jack dozed in the passenger seat and she took a moment to study him. Bobby’s thugs had beaten him up pretty badly, though they’d hardly touched his face. If he hadn’t groaned from time to time, she’d have thought he felt perfectly fine. As it was, she had no idea how badly he was hurt. He said he was only bruised, but she wasn’t certain. And it was that uncertainty that had kept her behind the wheel for the past four hours. The farther they got from Bobby, the better.
And then she could talk Jack into going to a hospital.
The skin under his left eye was purpling, but even bruised, he was still devastatingly handsome.
Her pulse kicked up, and she chided herself for reacting to him. Jack Wolfe might be pretty to look at, but he was arrogant and irresponsible—and she had no time for men like that in her life, no matter how his flirtation earlier had made her want to melt in his arms.
She was here because it had seemed the best course to keep driving—especially since he’d been in no shape to do so—but now that they’d arrived in Lyon, she was determined to part ways with the enigmatic Jack Wolfe. Once she got him to a doctor, of course.
The thought of leaving discomfited her, but she shoved it down deep. Why on earth should she care if she ever saw this man again?
“Jack,” she said softly.
Surprisingly, he came instantly awake. “Where are we?”
“Lyon. I’m too tired to keep driving. I thought we could get a couple of rooms for the night. If you can loan me the money, I’ll pay you back as soon as I can.”
It was disconcerting to be here without her purse or passport, but those things had been left behind in the casino when they’d fled. She simply hadn’t had time to retrieve them.
“One room,” he said.
“I said I’d pay you back.”
“It’s safer. If Bobby really is looking for us, it’s better to be together.”
As much as she wanted to, she couldn’t argue with that logic. But when she went inside to make the arrangements, she asked for a twin-bedded room. The clerk gave her a key and she returned to fetch Jack. He was taller than she was, and far heavier, but somehow they managed to make it to the room with him leaning against her for support.
The contact sizzled into her. She was conscious of his raw heat, conscious of every single inch of his body where it touched hers. He made her heart pound with his nearness.
“Sorry,” he said, his mouth against her hair as he leaned into her while she fitted the key to the door. “You smell delicious,” he added.
“Thanks, but compliments will get you nowhere.”