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Authors: Linda Lael Miller

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Anthologies (Multiple Authors)

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BOOK: He's the One
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“No.” His head thunked back on the sand as his fingers tunneled into her hair, clutching
her head. “God, no.”
Chapter Six
A
fterward, they staggered through the dark, balmy night toward the small cottage like
a pair of drunks.
Drunk on lust
, James thought, grabbing Ella’s hand before she could fall over as she tripped over
her own feet yet again.
She collapsed against his chest with a muffled snort of laughter, and just like that,
with her hair up his nose and her naked, warm, damp body sliding against his, his
heart melted.
Maybe not just lust
.
She curled into him and somehow he found the strength to hoist her up.
“Mmm,” she murmured, burying her face in his throat and inhaling deeply as if she
loved the smell of him. “I love it when you do the he-man thing.”
“No, you don’t.” He looked down at her in his arms and laughed. “You hate it when
I try to protect you.”
Her eyes were clear of amusement now, gleaming in the night and full of things that
made him reel. “Maybe I’ve changed.”
He wasn’t sure how to take that as he nudged open the front door with his shoulder
and dropped her down on the couch, lit only by the slant of moonbeams coming through
the blinds. Nor was he sure what she wanted when she reached up and tugged him down
over the top of her.
Her kisses, as she rained them over whatever part of him she could reach, were greedy,
her hands demanding, and she urged him close, touching everything she could.
Not understanding how it was that they could ravish each other like they just had
and still want more, he gave into it, into her, gathering her close with a confusing
mix of heat and tenderness. He’d only been half kidding earlier when he’d said she
was going to kill him—she was. Death by broken heart.
“Love me,” she murmured, holding his head to her breast.
He kissed her there, curling his tongue around her nipple until it beaded hard for
him. “I am. I do.”
She bucked, and together they toppled to the floor, mouths and fingers frantic as
they rolled, jockeying for position. She crawled to her bag, dug through it, and came
up with a condom.
He grabbed it, and her, tucking her beneath him, kissing her, smiling when she rolled
them again. They bumped into a lamp, nearly upending it over the top of them, then
bashed into the coffee table. Beneath him, Ella laughed breathlessly and dug her fingers
into his butt. “What’s taking you so long to get inside me?”
“I have no idea.”
“Make it up to me.”
“Done.” He tore open the condom and protected them both with fingers that actually
trembled, then grabbed her bare thighs, opening her to him. They were bathed only
in the meager moonlight from the window, but it was enough to have him moaning at
the sight of her spread for him, vulnerable and fragile, pink and glistening. “Mine,”
he said in primal instinct. “All mine.” He sank into her, a movement that had them
both going still, flummoxed by pleasure.
Slow down
, he told himself but he was tense and quivering, his every muscle straining with
the need to posses and take.
Then Ella surged up and sank her teeth into his shoulder, and any good intentions
flew out the window. “Take me, James.” She soothed the bite with a lick of her tongue.
“Hard. Fast. Now.”
He opened his mouth to quip “Yes, ma’am,” but he couldn’t speak. He slid his hands
beneath her thighs and rocked his hips, going even deeper now.
Tossing back her head, she gasped his name, and just like that he was a goner in the
control department. He drove himself into her again and again. She was wet and mewling
for him, hips pistoning to meet him thrust for thrust. Hot and wild. Hard and rough.
Out of control.
Outside, the ocean crashed into the shore with the same uncivilized force of them
pounding into each other, damp flesh slapping against damp flesh, hearts thundering,
wordless murmurs and cries, breath ragged as lungs fought for air . . .
James forced his eyes open as he felt the inevitable tightening between his legs.
Ella opened hers, too, and hit him with a one-two punch of those two baby blues, drenched
and brilliant and glazed over. In them was everything he’d ever wanted, and his heart
tightened with the rest of him as he barreled toward a freight train of an orgasm
he couldn’t stop to save his life. “I’m too close—”
“You’re perfect,” she panted, and wrapped her legs around his waist. “God. Right
there
—”
“El, I can’t hold on—”
“I know, me either—oh God, James . . .” Her body constricted, then was wracked with
a shudder as she let go, milking him with each contraction, throwing him right off
the edge with her.
 
 
For those few moments being held by James, being touched and kissed, hearing his low,
husky voice murmur things in her ear that made shivers rise on her spine, Ella felt
like her old self.
Not lonely.
Not worried that her heart might never feel full again.
Not struggling just to make it through her next breath.
But happy. Full of hope.
It’d scare her if she could muster the energy for it, but at the moment she lay facedown
and sprawled across the bed, sated and exhausted in a way that completely excluded
thinking. That was good because she didn’t want to think, didn’t want anything to
pierce this lovely protective layer he’d given her, or she might have to remember
that being with him was a sheer accident of fate.
And temporary.
A warm, callused hand smoothed up the back of her thigh and her exhaustion vanished.
“Careful,” she murmured into the pillow. “My husband is home.”
The hand came down on her butt in a light smack that made her laugh. She tried to
roll over but James held her still, nipping lightly at the back of a thigh, then higher,
and a rush of excitement surged through her. “Again?” she whispered, fisting her hands
in the sheet at her sides.
He yanked her hips up so that she was on her knees. “Yeah, again. I can’t get enough.
Christ, I still can’t get enough of you.” One hand smoothed up her belly to cup her
breast, his other slid between her legs, testing the way, which was already wet enough
to make him groan. Leaning over her, he put his open mouth on her neck and drove into
her, and just like that they moved from the eye of the storm back into the frenzy.
With his fingers stroking on the outside, his erection filling her to bursting on
the inside, he began to move within her, until with a sobbing cry, she came. From
a long way away, she heard her name ripped from his throat and realized he’d had to
pull out of her to come, and that he trembled around her.
Her entire heart caved, just opened up and let him in. Stupid, she knew, but she couldn’t
help it, or hold back, not with him.
“James—”
“Shh.” He gathered her close as he took them both back down to the mattress. Stroking
the hair from her face, he pressed his lips to her temple and breathed her name. Breathed
it again as she drifted off in his arms.
 
 
James woke as Ella carefully slid out of the bed. With dawn nothing more than a purple
tinge in the far eastern sky, he propped up his head with his hand, watching as she
tried to pull the corner of the sheet from beneath him. She had the rest wrapped around
her already. “Where are you going?”
She went still, and he knew. Damn it, he knew because his heart gave one bruising
kick to his ribs. “You’re running,” he said flatly.
“Actually, no. I’m walking.” She tugged on the sheet.
He just looked at her.
She tugged again. “Let go.”
He could have let go of the sheet, if he wanted. But he found he couldn’t let go of
her. He’d been wrong to think he ever could.
“Damn it, James.”
He fisted his hand on the sheet and gave a yank, and the thing came off her entirely.
“There,” he said, deliberately misunderstanding her. “You’re free.”
Nude, she let out a sound of pure exasperation and shot him a look that said, Grow
up. Her sweet little ass sashayed across the room, where she bent for her clothing.
He could see the bite mark he’d left in the crease where her thigh met her buttocks,
and smiled grimly. He could leave all the marks on her he wanted, she still wouldn’t
be bound to him. Not by hook or heart.
His own heart suddenly aching like a son of a bitch, he plopped to his back and stared
at the ceiling. “Hell if I’ll watch you walk away.”
“I watched
you
walk away.”
At that, he swore again, more creatively. Then he got off the bed and moved to her.
She stood before him in a pair of panties, holding a camisole tank top in front of
her breasts. He took it out of her hands and tossed it over his head. “I didn’t
want
to walk away.”
“I was driving you crazy, I know.” She went back for the top, then stepped into it
and yanked it up, fussing with her straps. “I tend to do that to a person.”
He lifted her chin with a finger. “It wasn’t you, Super Girl, it was your job.”
“Really?” Her huge eyes searched his. “I think it was more than that.”
His heart caught at the look of pain on her face. “What do you mean?”
“I loved you.
You
, James. I loved every single part; your loud rock music, your silly big oaf of a
dog, the way you sneak sips out of the milk container when you think I’m not looking,
how you snore when you’re tired—”
“I do not.”
“I loved every part,” she said again in that terrifyingly soft and final voice. “But
what kills me is that you can’t say the same about me.”
And on that shocking statement, she walked out of the bedroom.
He followed her to the living room, where she was digging through her duffel bag.
She pulled out a khaki cargo skirt and shimmied into it. She was putting on her sandals
when he found his voice.
“It’s your job,” he said quietly. “It scared me. You scared me. Still do, damn it.
I want you as my wife, Ella. I want that more than I want my next breath, but I want
you alive and well and
safe
.”
She gave him a long, considering look as she zipped up her bag and prepared to walk
out of his life the way he’d once walked out of hers. “That’s funny coming from you.”
“What?
Why?

“You’re a cop.
Your
job terrifies me but I don’t tell you to change.”
“I’m not the one who’s been shot at, kidnapped, stuffed in a trunk
and
a freezer, and nearly killed at every turn!”
Slowly she shook her head. “I’m not going to do this, James, not again. I . . . can’t.”
His heart began to thud hard and fast. “You said you were thinking about making a
change. Was that just what you thought I wanted to hear?”
“No, I meant it. But I’m not a quitter. I’m going to finish this case first. They
made it personal now, and that pisses me off.”
“See, that’s exactly what makes this so dangerous,” he said, feeling desperate. “You’ve
got to get it through your head, El. With these guys, it’s not personal. It’s drugs.
It’s drug money. It’s you getting in their way—”
“They handcuffed me in my own home.”
“Because you wouldn’t stay out of their way! Christ, El, just stay out of their way.”
“And let the police handle it?”
“Yes!”
“And I just bet I know which cop wants to handle this for me.”
“You’ve got that right.”
They stared at each other, and right then, he knew. He’d blown it. She was going to
go, and he couldn’t stop her.
Sure enough, she grabbed her keys and stalked to the door.
He snagged her wrist, pulled until she looked at him. “Don’t go,” he said quietly.
Begging
.
But she tore free. “I have to. I have to do this for me.” She shut the door quietly,
with a finality that frightened him more than anything else had.
Chapter Seven
E
lla knew what she had to do, but just in case, she made a list on the long, bumpy
flight back to Los Angeles. She committed it to memory on the two-hour drive from
Los Angeles to Santa Barbara:
1.
Get onto the
Valeska
and find
something
to nail my suspects.
2.
Switch departments to a safer investigative job that doesn’t involve being stuffed
into any Dumpsters or getting handcuffed to towel racks, and as a result, live happily
ever after.
3.
Without James.
That last made her throat tight as she navigated the windy Highway 1, the summer-browned
California hills on her right, the sparkling, whitecapped, azure Pacific Ocean on
her left. She’d had months to get used to the idea of being without him, and in that
time she’d learned to spend whole minutes without dwelling on it, but her heart just
couldn’t wrap itself around the idea of this being permanent.
Angrily, she swiped at a tear and told herself it’d been caused by the sun in her
eyes. No more of this. She was her own woman, and didn’t need nor want a man who didn’t
love her for all her little pieces and neuroses. It was all or nothing, damn it.
And in any case, she didn’t have any tissues with her, so she sucked it up, parked
in the marina, and slipped her binoculars out of her purse. She checked out the long
rows of boats harbored. There were many, certainly more than a hundred, and they ran
the gamut from small dinghies that hardly seemed seaworthy to party-sized catamarans
and sailboats, to the multimillion-dollar yachts such as the ones she’d been investigating.
She sought out the
Valeska.
She sat in her car and watched the boat carefully for ten minutes, and saw nothing.
No maintenance, no guests, no movement at all. Hoping her luck had finally turned,
Ella twisted into the backseat and grabbed her disguise: a white cap with a bobbling
plastic pizza on it, and the pizza delivery box, which didn’t hold pizza but her Mace,
tape recorder, and ID, just in case. Once, she’d been arrested snooping around in
a shipping yard because she hadn’t stowed her ID and couldn’t prove who she was. James
hadn’t enjoyed bailing her out, or the crap he’d taken for it from his station, but
he’d enjoyed teasing her about it later.
Not this time.
Taking a deep breath, she shoved him out of her mind, exited the car, and made her
way down the wooden planks of the docks with purpose. As a pizza delivery girl, she’d
want a tip. As Ella, she just wanted a damn break. She was due for one. This sort
of thing used to excite the hell out of her but she felt no rush of adrenaline now,
nothing but a confusing mix of duty and dread. She had no idea what was the matter
with her. Catching bad guys had always been so thrilling.
But actually, in truth, she did know what was wrong. It wasn’t the job that amped
her life up and gave her a buzz.
It’d been having love. Having James.
Hell of a time to realize that, since she’d left him a thousand miles away, with a
finality she didn’t want to think about right now.
Couldn’t think about.
She came upon the
Valeska.
Sleek, shiny, posh, and so expensive she couldn’t imagine planning to destroy it,
insurance money or not. She shielded her eyes from the sun and called out from the
deck. “Hello? Anyone home?”
No response.
It wasn’t too difficult to get on board; she simply hopped the waiting plank and walked
on. She figured if she could just get belowdecks, she could check out the place, look
around, and . . .
And she had no idea. She just hoped to God some sort of evidence leapt out at her.
She ducked beneath the bowline and walked along the bulkhead, heading astern, marveling
at all the glass and flashy gold trim, at the lushness and sophistication.
At the back, on a vast white deck, she came across two wet suits and a pile of diving
gear.
Still wet.
Roped to the back just below the deck was a small motorboat that hadn’t been there
last week. She stared at the diving equipment at her feet and understood. The drugs
had been held on the second yacht, the one that had been purposely sunk, and they’d
just gone back to retrieve the drugs, thinking they were safe because she, with her
questions and interest, was locked up in Mexico.
Now that they had their insurance money from the first boat, and the drugs from the
second boat, they thought they had it all.
She was about to change that perception.
The brass door heading belowdecks wasn’t locked. A strange oversight with a boat as
expensive as this one.
Or, and much more likely, the divers were still on board. As she stepped over the
threshold, she heard the telltale muted voices. Heart kicking into high gear, she
flattened herself against the inside bulkhead, between two large gold-framed paintings
that she recognized as museum quality, but because she’d skipped more art history
classes than she’d actually attended at UCLA, she had no idea what they were other
than pretentious renderings of some fancy gardens.
The voices came from below. Ella kept moving and found herself in the galley, surrounded
by a luxurious crystal and china lunch spread that had been ravished. Leftover lobster,
shrimp, and fancy pasta salads lay around with three empty bottles of champagne.
Seemed someone—several someones—had been celebrating.
Ella reached into the pizza delivery box and flipped on the small tape recorder. No
one in their right mind was going to believe she really was delivering a pizza to
this ship, but it was too late to change her disguise now. And she wanted to hear
what was going on.
What would they do to her if they found her snooping?
Didn’t bear thinking about, she decided. Tiptoeing through the galley, she came out
into a stateroom with plush seating, state-of-the-art entertainment center, and—
Her husband coming in the opposite door, dressed in black jeans, black running shoes,
and a black T-shirt draped over the bulge of his gun, looking fiercely intense as
he met her gaze.
“What are you doing here?” she hissed across the thirty-foot room.
He took in the pizza delivery hat and shook his head. “You’re kidding me, right?”
“This is
my
case. Get out.”
“Can’t do that, sweetheart. You need backup. Jesus, tell me you’re at least armed
with something more than pepperoni.”
“I’m fine solo.”
“Sure you are, but wouldn’t it be nice to know someone had your back?”
She let out a soft breath and felt her stomach twist. “More than anything in the world,”
she admitted. “But it’s more than that, James. You want to change me. Dominate me.
Run my life.”

What?
” He looked around them and then hissed back, “I don’t want to change you, damn it.
I don’t want to dominate you, or tell you how to run your life.”
“So you’re saying you love all my parts?”
“Every goddamn one,” he said fervently. “And trust me, I need all those parts, El.
So let’s get out of here—”
“Even this one?” she asked, gesturing around her. “The part where this is my job?
You love that?”
“Look, all I want is for you to live long enough to love me back—” His head came up
at some sound that she didn’t hear, or maybe it was just his sharp instincts.
“What?” she whispered.
“We’re going to have to discuss this somewhere else, say far away from the three guys
downstairs divvying up their drugs, armed to the teeth.”
“There’s drugs?”
Her proof!
“Where—” But she broke off because someone was coming into the galley behind them.
She froze.
James drew his gun and jerked his head toward the door from which he came. He wanted
her to get out, and she knew he’d stand there in the open, covering her, until she
did.
But no way was he going to risk himself for her. She shook her head and dropped down
behind one of the couches.
James didn’t make a sound as he shot her a look filled with sick dread and fear,
for her
, then backed out the door from which he’d come just as someone opened the door from
the galley.
She ducked low, her heart going high. James loved her. He’d never stopped loving her.
And he needed her.
Her
. The woman she was. God, she’d been so stupid, chasing after all this adrenaline
within her job when everything she’d ever wanted had been right there in front of
her.
From her perch behind the couch she couldn’t see him, couldn’t do anything but wait
and hope and pray she hadn’t just given them both a death sentence.
A man entered the room, and another behind him, both in nothing but swim trunks, their
hair still wet. Ella recognized the voices as the men who’d been speaking belowdecks.
The divers.
“We should get a move on,” the first one said. He was in his thirties, built like
a heavyweight boxer, with tattoos covering most of his upper body. “Our flight’s in
a few hours.”
“No rush now that our resident insurance investigator slash pain in the ass is detained.”
This guy was thin and lanky, with no tattoos, just plenty of scars, and a chuckle
that gave Ella a shiver. “Lou and Raul said they handcuffed her nosy, naked ass to
her towel rack. I can’t believe they didn’t take pictures of her, man. She’s still
there, you know. Maybe we should go see her for ourselves.”
Ella fisted her hands. James had in all likelihood saved her life.
“Raul said she squirmed a lot.” Tattoo Guy let out a lecherous grin of his own. “He
kept getting handfuls. Damn, we should have been the ones to catch her.”
Fully creeped out, Ella huddled behind the couch, her finger on the Mace trigger.
“Got the shit?” Tattoo Guy asked.
“Oh, yeah, and it’s pure, baby.”
Ella felt the couch shift as both men sat on it. It was a low back, thick-cushioned
leather number, and though she flattened herself to the floor, if either one so much
as craned his head an inch to either side, he’d see her.
Her eyes searched frantically for a way out. There was an end table to her right,
a glass and chrome deal that had some fancy steel sculpture displayed. The sculpture
was about a foot high and looked like a wire cage, though she knew better and figured
it was another ridiculously priced piece of art.
The thin thug opened a baggie, and Tattoo Guy stuck his pinkie finger into it, then
brought it to his mouth to taste. He nodded and smiled. “Nice.”
“Our cut’s going to set us up for life.”
“Then let’s go get started on that life.”
No. No one was leaving. But just as Ella went to make her move, a big, hot, sweaty
hand settled on the back of her neck and hauled her up.
Bad guy number three. Heck of a time to remember the
three
bottles of champagne.
Tattoo Guy and his partner whipped around, jaws dropped. “What the—”
Ella hung from the third man’s grip, feet swinging a few inches off the ground. Bringing
her hand up, she nailed her attacker in the face with her Mace.
He screamed like a baby and let go of her. She hit the ground hard, scrambling to
crawl away, but he fell on her, all three hundred pounds of him, a full dead weight.
Tattoo Guy let out a howl and dove over the back of the couch, landing on top of both
of them.
Ella took the weight, her mouth opening and closing like a fish, her poor lungs uselessly
attempting to drag in some air. Her one last thought was that she’d screwed up again.
Then there was rapid gunfire and suddenly she was free of the weight pinning her down.
Sitting up, she saw Tattoo Guy rolling in agony, hands to the bullet hole in his thigh.
Scrawny guy and James stood face-to-face, each holding a gun on the other.
“Drop it,” James demanded, but the scrawny guy just shook his head.
Ella glanced to her right just as the third guy sat up and glowered at her.
She’d dropped her Mace. Bad.
Without thinking, she grabbed the steel sculpture, which was heavier than she thought.
She chucked it at his big, meaty head. By some miracle, it actually beaned him between
the eyes, and with a sigh he toppled back over.
“Drop the gun,” James said to the skinny thug.
He just leered and pivoted, abruptly changing from pointing his gun at James to pointing
it at Ella.
Uh-oh.
She dove to the floor as gunshots pinged and ricocheted around her, crawling beneath
the coffee table. Before she could even attempt to peek out to see James—
God, please don’t let him be hit
—she was hauled up against a warm, hard chest.
“Are you hit?” a rough voice asked as gentle hands ran over her body. “Ella, Christ,
say something
.”
She could hear Tattoo Guy squalling about his leg. There were sirens in the distance,
and she realized James must have called it in on his cell before he burst back into
the room and saved the day. Her hero, she thought dreamily, and grinned. “You still
smell good.”
He stared at her for one beat and then yanked her closer, burying his face in her
hair. His arms were banded so tightly around her she couldn’t breathe, but that was
okay because breathing was entirely overrated. She could feel his heart thundering
steadily beneath her ear, could hear his not quite steady breathing as he nuzzled
close. The feel of him warm and hard with strength surrounding her had always worked
like an aphrodisiac, and now was no exception, except it was deeper than mere physical
wanting. “You were scared for me,” she murmured.
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