Authors: Ashley Bartlett
Tags: #Fiction, #Lesbian, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Romance, #Contemporary
my brother.”
“Yep.” That I agreed with.
“We both love my brother.”
“More than anyone in the world.” It was true. “Except my parents,
maybe.”
“Same here.”
“So?” We already knew all of this. I didn’t know why she was
reviewing. “You want to act like nothing happened to spare him or
something?” What a stupid idea. Ryan would understand. He would be
pissed, but he would understand.
“Is that what you want?”
“What do you think?” It would have been a good idea to say what
I actually felt. Those words just weren’t popping into my head at the
moment.
“I think that you don’t give a fuck. And if I’m right then we should
just pretend it never happened. I’m not willing to sacrifice my brother
for you.” Damned if she wasn’t ice through that little speech. The girl
didn’t break a sweat, shed a tear, or look anywhere except at me.
“Then fucking don’t, buttercup.” I stood.
“So that’s settled then?” I shrugged, clueless about what just
happened. “We just ignore it? It never happened? It won’t happen
again?”
It felt like getting punched. Repeatedly. In the face. “You make
the rules. I just live by them.” With that, I left her sitting on the couch.
I needed a shower. If I had to walk around all day smelling like Reese’s
sex, I would kill myself.
“We probably shouldn’t leave the room either,” Reese called
before I shut the door.
“Why not?” I was never going to get out alive.
“Uncle Vito.” She didn’t need to explain.
“Uncle Vito.” I slammed the door laughing in a scared, heartless
way.
• 136 •
Dirty Sex
By the early evening, I was bored and tired of the silence that
felt like fighting so I decided to make a stab at conversation.
It couldn’t be any worse than what we were already doing.
“So why is Ryan staying in the city another night?” I was at the
bar pouring a scotch for myself so my back was to her. Reese was on
the couch reading. The girl was still wearing only my western shirt,
which I found infuriating and totally sexy. It was those muscled thighs,
perfect for wrapping her legs around my hips.
She put her finger in her book and closed it. “He’s looking for a
place to sell some of the bars.” What the hell was she talking about?
Oh yeah. Ryan. “When we go back for the passports, he wants to sell a
couple of them.”
“That’s a good idea, actually.” I turned and propped my back
against the bar feigning indifference. “We should’ve thought of it
before.”
Reese nodded. “If we don’t get rid of some of them, we’ll be in
trouble. They’re too hard to move.”
“We should probably do the same, you know? Try and find a place
to sell them.” Gambling, drinking, and screwing were fun so it made
it easy to forget what we were supposed to be doing. That was the
plan. Sell some gold in the States; take the rest to Mexico. And then…
something.
“Ideas?”
“Do you think the phone book has a section titled Selling Gold
Bars?” That sure would make it easier. Reese smiled at my joke, a
definite improvement.
• 137 •
AShley BArtlett
“Why don’t you check on that?”
“We could look online. The hotel has wireless, right?” I set my
drink down and went to grab my laptop. When I got back, Reese was
staring at a very blank spot on the wall. “Reese?”
“You know what I was thinking?”
“Not yet.”
“We could ask around downstairs. They probably know
everything.”
“You want to go ask the concierge where to sell your gold bar?” I
asked sarcastically.
“Yep.” She looked serious.
“Knock yourself out, buttercup.” It sounded like a bad idea to me.
“I wasn’t asking for permission.” Reese sounded all irritated. She
got up and went into the bathroom. A couple minutes later, the shower
turned on.
At least I could be alone. By the time Reese got out of the shower
I’d made a list of places that bought scrap gold and jewelry.
“You solve all of our problems, yet?” she asked.
“All my problems,” I said without looking away from the
computer. “Can’t help with yours. That’ll cost you.” I looked up and
flashed a charming grin, which instantly died. Reese was naked. Damn,
she was gorgeous, smooth skin with those full breasts, slightly more
than a handful. Fucking amazing.
“I knew you were a whore.” Could she tell I was thinking about
sex? “Thanks, but I don’t need your services.”
“That’s not what you said last night.” It wasn’t nearly as fun to
say that when I meant it. What I got for my trouble was the view of her
naked ass. Not a bad trade. She came back out a few minutes later when
I was pouring another drink. I had the phone propped against my ear
and was about to dial the first number from my list.
Reese reached over and hung up the phone. “Don’t use the hotel
phone.”
“Why?” I attempted to convey as much of my displeasure as
possible.
“Because it will be easy to trace.” That sounded logical.
“Right, whatever.” No way was I going to tell her it made sense.
“I’ll be back.” She waltzed out of the room. I wished I could hate
her.
• 138 •
Dirty Sex
With Reese gone, I picked up my cell and started to dial. Damn. It
was almost out of minutes. I couldn’t exactly use a credit card to load
more time onto it. Quickly, I wrote a note to let Reese know where I
was and headed out the door. There had to be some place in Vegas that
sold pre-paid cell phones. I’d just take Reese’s car. That also had the
advantage of irritating her.
Besides, Reese was being all weirdly paranoid about this Vito guy.
So what, her uncle might call Christopher. We would be gone before he
could catch up. It was better if I just went out and let her yell about the
vague, theoretical risk later.
As I navigated the maze of the hotel’s bottom floor, I caught a
glimpse of Reese ahead of me. She looked like she was heading the
same way I was. I’d almost caught up to her by the time she was at the
valet pickup in front.
“Ms. DiGiovanni, so good to have you back,” the valet greeted
her warmly.
“Hey, Ricky. It’s been a while.” How did Reese know the valet?
“Yes, ma’am. We’ve missed you.”
I wasn’t proud, but I turned and pressed my back against one of
the big pillars in the lobby. Nonchalantly, I leaned against it and took
out my dead cell phone like I had some purpose.
“I need some help. Discreet help,” Reese clarified.
“Of course,” he said in a lower tone. After that, I couldn’t hear any
voices. They either walked away or were talking very quietly.
I turned away and went back the way I’d come.
❖
The floor was going to have track marks from me pacing in
front of the windows. Maybe when Reese came the year before she
had stayed at the same hotel. Maybe the valet was just really good at
remembering the names of beautiful women. Women who had stayed
in the hotel once over a year ago. Maybe. It was probably a totally
innocent conversation and I was making it into a sordid affair.
I couldn’t ask her though. Not without telling her I’d been
eavesdropping, and that would get me in a shitload of trouble. Ryan
wouldn’t be back until the next morning so I would just have to wait
for him. I needed a drink.
• 139 •
AShley BArtlett
Ten minutes of pacing and one forgotten drink later, Reese walked
in. I opted to stare at nothing on my computer rather than confront her.
What a loser.
“Get any hits with your calls?” Reese asked politely.
“Nope. No minutes on the phone.” That about summed it up.
Ten minutes later, the room phone rang. I jumped and almost fell
over. Smooth.
“Hello?” Reese quirked an eyebrow at me then turned away. “No
way. No, that’s perfect. Thanks. Where is that?” She started laughing
at whatever it was the person on the phone said. I was immediately
envious of them. “Yeah, I got you. All right, bye.”
“Girlfriend?”
The look Reese gave me made my insides quiver. Not in a good
way either. “There’s a place near Highway Fifteen,” she said. “The guy
who runs it buys gold by weight and is good at keeping quiet.”
“No shit.”
“Let’s go.”
“What? No.” That was a good thing that she found the place.
Really, it was. It just seemed off, a little too easy. “Right now?”
“Why not?”
I didn’t have a good reason. “Okay, fine. I need to put on shoes.”
Reluctantly, I shuffled into my room to pull on my shoes.
“Hurry up,” Reese yelled.
She’d changed into a T-shirt and thrown on a navy blue, cropped
blazer. The sleeves almost reached her wrists and it was a little tight.
Totally hot. All I had on was a hoodie and shorts. Whatever. I looked
like a heathen and she didn’t. Nothing new there.
“Should I bring something to put the cash in? Will the guy give us
cash? Are you sure this is a good idea?” Nervous? Me? No, not at all.
“Here.” Reese tossed a heavy backpack to me. She’d already put
the bar in it.
“You’re prepared.”
“I just think ahead,” she said in a way that implied that I didn’t.
We went back down to the valet pickup in silence. It wasn’t
until we were in Reese’s car that she said, “Oww, fuck, I can’t drive
with this,” and reached behind her to pull out a small, stainless steel
handgun. “Hold it, okay?”
• 140 •
Dirty Sex
“Fuck no.” There was no way I was going to take it. “Why the hell
did you bring that?”
“Because I like it better than that massive Glock my brother
swears by.” Reese leaned over and settled the small, elegant Walther
into my lap. The way she did it would have turned me on if it hadn’t
been a gun. Okay, it kind of did anyway.
“But why did you bring a damn gun in the first place?”
Reese gave me that you dumbass look.
“Don’t you have a holster or something?”
“I’m wearing it.” Reese pulled open her blazer to reveal a dark
brown shoulder holster and another Walther. “Can’t fit two in there.”
“Why do you need two?” I yelled.
“You might need one.” For such a smart girl she could be so stupid.
“What for?” She didn’t have an answer for that.
Reese drove like she knew where she was going. Soon we were
away from the chaos and decadence of the Strip driving through streets
that looked increasingly shady. Without the pervasive flashing lights,
the darkness seemed even more oppressive.
“Where the hell are we going?” I asked after we passed the fourth
very obvious dealer.
“See that cement building? The one with no sign.” She had to be
kidding.
“Yeah?” We drove past it. I didn’t get a good look inside.
“That’s it.” Reese found a spot on the side of the road and parallel
parked. We were a block and a half away.
“You’re out of your mind.” She expected me to walk? “Drive
closer.”
“There aren’t any spaces. Do you see any?” No. “You scared?”
“No. It’s just a long way.”
“Want one of my guns?” Reese started laughing at her own joke.
“I’ll be fine, thanks.” I yanked up the hood of my sweatshirt and
got out of the car.
The sidewalk was empty. Recesses in the buildings to my left
looked like the perfect place for someone to hide. I’d never see them
coming. My instinct was to grip the backpack with both hands, but I
knew that would be too obvious.
The building Reese had pointed out looked like it could survive
Armageddon. Bars covered the scratched window, and I had to ring a
• 141 •
AShley BArtlett
buzzer to get in. A camera mounted above the door adjusted to get a
good view of my face. Apparently, I was cool enough because the lock
clicked open. I took a deep breath and stepped into the cubicle. Once
the door closed behind me, the one in front of me clicked open as well.
This place was covered just a little too well for the hood we were in.
“How may I help you?” the tall, stooped man behind the counter
asked when I walked in. His heavy accent made it difficult to understand
him. My best guess was Hungarian, but I’d only known one guy with a
Hungarian accent so I wasn’t sure.
“I was told you buy gold.”
“Ricky sent you over,” he said. I nodded. “Well, let us see the bar.”
His spindly hand waved me forward.
My hands were so shaky I almost dropped the bar when I tried to
give it to him. For a second, I wondered if it was a fake and Christopher
was laughing his ass off at us right now. No, Christopher was probably
ready to kill us right now.
The man was carefully inspecting the bar, doing whatever it
was he did to verify its authenticity. I glanced around while he did
his thing. Glass cases formed a U along three walls and were filled
with various jewelry, heavy gold cuffs, tennis bracelets, diamond
encrusted Rolexes. The walls were covered in photographs of
celebrities shaking hands with the guy. In some of the photos he was
barely a man, maybe twenty-five, all the way up to his current sixty