Conning For Keeps (An Agents of TRAIT Novella) (Entangled Flaunt) (8 page)

Read Conning For Keeps (An Agents of TRAIT Novella) (Entangled Flaunt) Online

Authors: Seleste deLaney

Tags: #happily ever after, #secret agent, #suspence, #redemption, #Entangled Publishing, #thriller, #TRAIT, #romance series, #revenge, #con artist, #romance, #hypnosis, #fake engagement, #Flaunt, #contemporary romance, #co-workers, #FBI, #Seleste deLaney, #con

BOOK: Conning For Keeps (An Agents of TRAIT Novella) (Entangled Flaunt)
13.67Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Bullshit! We’ve been working together for five years, Trevor. I don’t care how much you avoid people. You know me as well as anyone else does.” She shoved to her feet and stalked away from him, her arms crossed over her chest like she fought the urge to get physical, too. “I guess I was right all along. You don’t trust me. Never have, never will.”

“That’s not true. Not entirely. I
want
to trust you.”

She snorted a laugh. “But you don’t. Which means sex with me was nothing more than a warm body.”

“You’re being unfair, Marissa.” There was no argument he could give her, though. He did have a hard time trusting her. And sex… he’d wanted it, wanted her, more than he could iterate, but it had to end. Where they’d wind up, he didn’t know, but for now, he had to steer her back on track. “You have to admit, this isn’t what we came here for.”

“Yeah. You’re right. This sudden need to separate work and pleasure is all about the job. Too bad I’m pretty sure this morning actually made us
more
believable as a couple in a lot of eyes.”

He knew she wasn’t being deliberately obtuse. “With Leo Canalis here, we need to be more on guard, and we’re not when we’re having sex. Would you have noticed trouble this morning? We barely noticed the noises in the hall until Amy knocked on our damn door, and we sure as hell weren’t trying to get to our objective. His son might not care what we say or do, and Evangeline might miss things, but Canalis didn’t get where he is by trusting blindly.”
Or having a calm and forgiving nature.
“He’ll be watching for duplicity and pondering every slip.”

“And I slipped already, is that it?” She hopped to her feet, hands on her hips, fingers digging in like it was all she could do not to touch him, too.

And given too much time to dwell, he’d slip as well. This mess wasn’t all on her, but she already knew his issues. He was professional enough to keep a lid on his urges, including the baser ones. “I’m simply saying we need a plan. We need that more than we need sex. Because right now, we’re in trouble.”

“I covered. We’ll deal.”

“Until Amy says you filled out all the paperwork as Mari? And if someone decides to go searching the web for a Marisol Jones? That isn’t the cover that’s out there for you.” Shit. They were going to have to call this in. There was no way around it now.

Marissa went pale for a second. “Then I distract him from the name thing.”

“What?”
And why the hell do you look so scared?
This time when her hands twitched, she balled them into tight fists.

Color slowly soaked back into her cheeks, and the tension disappeared as she nodded. “Simple. I convince him that he has nothing to worry about.”

This sounded bad. Really, really bad. The nervousness was a new thing, and he wasn’t sure if he should be more worried about that or her normal cockiness. “And how do you plan on doing that?”

She sucked in a deep breath and swept her hands over her hair, smoothing it. “They might have only put me into play when I was under hypnosis, but I lived with my parents for fourteen years. I learned a few things along the way. Time to be the girl you always thought I was and put my Valjean to the test.”

A con? She had an actual back-up plan. Somehow thanking God for small miracles didn’t seem the appropriate course of action. He wanted to trust Marissa but couldn’t shake the feeling she was up to something. “What the hell’s a Valjean, and how do I help?”

“You don’t. For someone who’s never run the game or seen it, it’ll take too long to explain. Plus, it’s kind of a one-man con. The less you know, the better since it means you’re playing the same part you have since we arrived.” She blew out a breath and nodded rapidly like she was convincing herself.

He didn’t like that part. At all. Too many things had gone pear-shaped already. This was supposed to be a simple snatch and grab. A huge set-up for one, but that’s all it was. Get the painting and get out.

Now this mess and her playing solo? Every single fear he’d had regarding Marissa roared back to life. This wouldn’t fly, not if he had anything to say about it. “We’re supposed to be a team, remember? Have each other’s backs?”

When she stood, the wicked, cocksure smile he knew too well was in place. This wasn’t Marissa in love or lust or whatever she felt for him. This was the Marissa who’d clawed her way up the ranks at TRAIT when everyone, him included, said she couldn’t.

“This goes right, and neither of us will be in any danger. Government agents won’t enter Canalis’s mind. I promise. So…I’ve got your back, handsome.” She ran her hands through her hair again, fluffing it out, taking on a level of confidence he’d never seen in her—which was saying something. “See you for dinner.”

She was out the door before he’d moved from his knees. The instant it clicked shut, he rushed to the computer, determined to mine the depths of the Internet for any information on a confidence game called a Valjean. He was going to be involved whether she liked it or not.

Chapter Seven

Valjean’s Confess
ion

Marissa stood out
side the Queen’s Suite, nerves giving her pause. Hiding this from Trevor wasn’t right, but it was necessary. As much as she’d rather bury herself in him for the rest of the week and nick the painting on their way out, as soon as he’d mentioned Leo Canalis questioning her identity, she’d known what she had to do.

In a certain way, she’d known from the moment she woke up to find the mission barely begun that it would come to this. Time to be the con artist and betray the fragile trust they’d started building. Time to be the person everyone knew she was deep down.

Everyone but her.

Fate had brought
Certain Laughter
within her reach, and it wasn’t going to let her get away without facing her past. Before she changed her mind and used the sedatives on Trevor to get him out of here so they wouldn’t get caught, she raised a fist and rapped twice on the door. Maybe Canalis wasn’t here. Maybe when he arrived, he’d switched suites with Frankie and Evangeline. The pause between her knock and the door opening was just long enough for her to re-think the plan and take a single step back down the hall.

Then Leo Canalis stood before her, top two buttons of his shirt undone, sleeves rolled up, and she was stuck. As he stared at her, his lips quirked to the side in what was almost, but not quite, a smirk. She straightened under his scrutiny. No way she was letting him enjoy this more than necessary.

“Mari, this is a…surprise.”

She grinned and batted her eyelashes, letting her gaze rove over him languidly. “No it isn’t.”

“No. It isn’t. But it is a pleasure.” He stood back, holding the door with one hand and waving her into his room with the other. “Come in.”

Giving him a saucy smile, she slithered past and tried not to jump when the heavy wood shut behind her, sealing her in. Her breath hiccupped, and she fought to keep it steady. She could do this. It’s what she’d been raised for after all.

“So, Miss Jones, what can I do for you?”

She’d had less than thirty seconds to size him up since walking through the door, but what she’d felt at lunch was still there. He hadn’t looked at her as an adversary but something he’d like to eat up.

Time for a new game.

Biting her lip coyly, she walked her fingers up his chest. “A lot of things, but I’m mainly here because I’m pretty sure you want me with you.”

“Maybe I do.”

It was his turn to rake his gaze over her. Marissa fought to stay in seductress mode, but Leo Canalis was no Trevor. For starters, she was pretty sure Trevor wouldn’t kill her in cold blood. On the other hand, there wasn’t a doubt in her mind that she could convince Canalis to trust her.

“Like what you see?” Judging by the darkness of his gaze, she didn’t need to ask, but it fed so well into the next bit of her plan. “Because there’s a lot more to me than meets the eye.”

In one step, he closed the distance between them, catching her throat in his hand. “Oh. I’m well aware of that. The question is how far am I going to have to go to find out what it is?”

She could have tried to break his grip, but for the moment, he wasn’t the enemy. No matter how wrong that felt. Instead, she gave a half-hearted shrug and let him shove her backward.

She caught herself on the edge of his desk, momentum sending her upper body onto the mahogany top.
He likes it rough. Great. Stay on task—you need him to trust you. That’s it. Sex will
never
come into it. All you have to do is make him believe it will.

She could do this. Nothing but some plotting and a little seduction… Her eyes caught a glimpse at his computer screen as she pushed up, and what she saw made her blood turn to sludge.

The fake resume they’d posted online for Mari Jones was splashed on his screen. He’d already hunted for her. There was no turning back now. The only way she could get the painting and keep Trevor safe was the one she’d come here to put into play.

Blowing out a breath, she twisted and leaned back against the desk as if this was a perfectly normal occurrence. Smirking, she jerked her chin toward Canalis. “All you have to do is ask, but I kind of liked the forceful option B you were working.”

“Wonderful. I’m a busy man, Mari, so consider this my version of asking.” Canalis slid into the leather rolling chair, and Marissa hopped on the desk and swiveled around to face him.

She shrugged. Busy, busy man. Lots of people to kill and money to launder. “I’m sure Evangeline told you about my interest in your painting.”

“That she did, and I asked myself what the odds were a young woman would happen to be in this ridiculous wedding debacle of my son’s and also have a fascination with
Certain Laughter
. The piece isn’t all that well known, and it’s incredibly precious to me.” He turned his laptop and beckoned her closer. “So I did a little study of you.”

She propped her hands on the edge of the desk, settling in and feigning a calm she very much didn’t feel. Off her feet, though, the urge to run was hampered slightly. She kicked off her shoes to complete the illusion.

Here to stay for a while.

“Did you now? Let’s see how good a student you are.”

He patted her knee before turning back to the laptop. “Marisol Jones turned up about a half a dozen people living in the US. More than I expected, frankly. But when I cross-referenced that with art, there was one, and might I say you’re stunning for a sixty-three-year-old elementary school art teacher.”

He paused like he expected her to confess to everything on the spot, but she knew better. That wasn’t how games like this were played—unless you wanted to lose. She merely tilted her head to the side and smiled at him like she hadn’t a care in the world.

Canalis let out a low chuckle. Whether it meant he found her cute or he was impressed she kept her mouth shut, she couldn’t be sure. He clicked on another tab. “So I followed the corrected name you gave and searched for Mari Jones and art. And there you were. All these shiny mentions of you on the Internet, including your resume. Art history major. Spent some time working at a gallery in Springfield. There was a cross-reference to your graduation records, too. Nice and legit. Very thorough.” He paused again, and Marissa made a show of rolling her eyes.

Her heart pounded. If he dug too far, this could blow up in her face. Time to find out how much he already knew. “And very cursory of you. I’m surprised that’s as far as you went.”

“Don’t worry. I was just getting started.” Apparently, that was where he’d stopped. She let out a slow breath.

“How about I save you the trouble and point you in the exact right direction so we can get to the good stuff?” She gave him as saucy a wink as she could manage. Canalis raised a brow, but spun the laptop toward her. Heart lodged somewhere in her throat, Marissa typed and hit the search button.

Thank you, Google, for the are-you-feeling-lucky button. Because, no, I’m really not.

When the search finished, she clicked on the first article, verified it had a picture, and twisted the laptop back toward him. “This is what you want.”

“That…I remember this.” He frowned at the screen. At the picture of her, along with her parents, when they were arrested. Juvie records might be sealed, but that didn’t mean her arrest wasn’t public knowledge.

And in that instant, she’d provided him the only thing he needed to destroy the life she’d so carefully built. Because, if this went badly, if she made a mistake and had to run, there’d be no going back. And there’d be nowhere she could hide. The only thing that kept her from sheer panic was the expression on Canalis’s face.

She could do this.

It was a confidence game like any other.

“Yeah. Twelve to fourteen were horribly awkward years for me. I was all gazelle-legged and pimple-faced. Horrible hair, too. I don’t know what my parents were thinking letting me wear it like that. So…if you don’t mind, quit staring. I’m a lot hotter now.” No fear. No hiding. Time to do what Jean Valjean did: stand up and proclaim her identity, no matter what it cost.

Too bad the con itself was one she’d made up on the fly—a ghost for Trevor to chase while she did what she had to. Now that she’d reached this point, it was make it up as she went along in order to keep Trevor safe and get to the artwork.

“Let’s start fresh, shall we?” She stuck out her hand. “Hello, Mr. Canalis, it’s a pleasure to meet you. My name is Marissa Joens and, like I mentioned, I’m pretty sure you want me here. For more reasons than you imagined.”

His brows knit together, but his smirk shifted into a curious smile as he wrapped her fingers in his. “The pleasure’s mine. But it does beg the question of what you’re doing here? And why the ruse?”

“That’s easy.” Marissa uncrossed her legs, sliding one foot along his thigh. Hooking his knee with her toes, she turned his chair until they faced each other. She looked down on him and felt bolder, more certain. This was right. This was who she needed to be, not some programmed automaton. “The night my family was caught by the police, I’d wanted to steal
Certain Laughter
; my parents vetoed me. They paid the heavier price for the decision, but I was still robbed of my teen years.”

“And now that you confessed to attempting to steal my property once, you expect me to hand it over out of the goodness of my heart?” He raised a brow at her foot on his thigh, but she didn’t move.

Instead, she leaned forward, propping an elbow on her knee and her chin in her hand. Their faces were only inches apart, and she tried not to think about the last time she’d been this close to a man.

She couldn’t daydream about Trevor.

With Canalis, she needed all her wits about her. “No, silly man. I just want to hold it in my hands for a minute—banish the ghost from all those years ago.” She grinned and tweaked his nose. “And then I thought you might want to offer me a job.”

“A con artist who was caught the first day I met her?” He pushed her hand away.

But she wasn’t about to be so easily dismissed. Her fingers found his chin and turned him back toward her. “A con artist who fully planned to be caught by you. Let’s not pretend this is anything else. I know what it’s like to spend time behind bars. It’s not an experience I care to repeat but, after so many years spent trying to be ‘normal,’ I also know what I’m good at. Working for you, I get the best of everything: doing the job on a grander scale for one of the most powerful men in the country…and the protection that comes with it.”

He took her hand and stood…putting them on more equal ground. “And where does your big, bad fiancé fit into this plan? Does he come as part of the package?”

She snorted, hating herself for the lie she was about to tell. “Please. He was nothing more than a pretty body to get me in the door for this whole wedding thing. In the ways of the world, he’s dumb as a rock and not as tough as he looks. It’s kind of sad. Considering my bogus name, we won’t even really be married come Saturday night. Not so much as a paper trail to have to cover since Mari Jones doesn’t exist.” She sucked in a quick breath and straightened as if the thought had just occurred to her. “Don’t tell me I’m not appealing enough on my own.”

His gaze roved over her until she wanted to shudder from revulsion. But she played on his blatantly obvious attraction and gave him a wicked smile when he finally met her eyes. “You’re actually more appealing without him. And yes, I think we might be able to find a place for you in the organization. However, I’m going to need you to pass a test—you have to keep Evangeline fooled until after the wedding. Then you get to hold your precious painting. I’ll let you be the one to give it to Franco.”

Damn.
She really wanted out of here before the wedding. If he didn’t have
Certain Laughter
under lock and key before, he would now. Arguing would only ensure she never got close to it, though. “Sounds perfect.” She hopped off the desk and took his hand, brushing a kiss over his ring. “I look forward to doing business with you, Don Canalis.”

Shoes in hand, she managed to get out the door, through the hall, and halfway down the stairs before she sagged against the wall, her entire body shaking. She’d scoped the room while she’d been sitting there, waiting for him to get through the computer show. Two exits: a door and a seventh story window. She lost count of visible weapons at six.

And she had no doubt he would have been able to kill her before she ever laid a hand on one of them.

“So who
are you today?” Trevor growled to Marissa as they wandered into the game room.

“Same person I’ve been since you woke me from my slumber.” She pecked his cheek. “That means I’m either Sleeping Beauty or Fiona.”

“Snow White was under a magical sleeping spell, too.” His best friend’s little girls had made sure he was well versed in all the fictional princesses. But he had a hard time believing Marissa fit any princess mold—especially with how different she’d been since taking off on her Valjean quest.

“Please. The only thing snow white about me is that lace nightie.”

He choked on a laugh, but he still wanted to know what the damn con was. He hadn’t been able to find anything about it, so he tried to fall back on his knowledge of
Les Miserables
. He highly doubted the plan had anything to do with stealing bread, and Marissa was already pretending to be someone else. The lack of knowledge was driving him insane, but not nearly so much as her caginess.

He was sick and tired of
trust me
falling from her lips like it was supposed to be some sort of balm. All it did was drive home the fact there were dozens of reasons
not
to trust her.

“Quit staring at me like that.” She elbowed him gently, batting her eyelashes when he grunted. “You look like you want to beat me senseless, not like you’re in love with me.”

“From my limited experience, those two things go hand-in-hand.” Shit. Had he just said he was in love with her? Had she noticed? Because that was the last place he planned on going.

This stunt of hers only proved his initial instincts were probably the right ones—beautiful but dangerous. Once this mission was over, he planned to stay as far from Marissa Joens as possible.

Other books

Crown of Dragonfire by Daniel Arenson
Byron-4 by Kathi S Barton
Sunny's Kitchen by Sunny Anderson
Sword and Verse by Kathy MacMillan
Claiming Ecstasy by Madeline Pryce
The Other Side of Truth by Beverley Naidoo
Nothing Personal by Rosalind James