Sometimes It Is Rocket Science (26 page)

BOOK: Sometimes It Is Rocket Science
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Chapter Twenty-Eight:

 

 

“We’ll present the Ramsey RadTech information to the board next Friday,” Robert said, handing a thick file back to Cedric.   He tucked his hands behind his head and tilted the chair back.  At the office he was constantly pulled into meetings and conference calls.  He’d gotten more accomplished after dinner than he had during the day.

“I’ll scan the forms regarding the changes in Brussels and send them over tonight.”  Cedric accepted a second file and tucked it with the first under his armpit. He scrolled through the messages on his tablet.  “Is there anything else for this evening?”

“Have you started on the assignment we discussed this morning?”

Cedric smiled broadly.  “You are now the proud owner of more than seventy-five percent of the shares of two of Walt Prask’s companies.”

“Only two?” Robert chuckled.  “You must have been distracted today.”

“I was a little busy.  Don’t worry, I’ll make up for it tomorrow.”

“I never doubt you, Cedric.  I made significant headway on my portion of the plan.  We should see the first results by early next week.”  Robert exhaled slowly.  Taking down Prask required careful planning and precise movements.  “I believe that is all for tonight, then.”

“There’s an invitation for a big party at a local club:  The Vargas Experience.  The music lineup is quite impressive.  The message is from a Dominic Vargas.  There is a personal note on the bottom of the email.”

“I went to high school with him.  He always threw the best parties.”

“Should I send the address to Allan so he can get one of the cars ready?”  Cedric’s finger hovered over a button on his tablet.  Since arriving in Houston, managing Robert’s social calendar had become ridiculously simple.  Part of Cedric missed the all-night parties and swanky dinners, but he enjoyed a more stable schedule. 

“No.  Send Dom my regrets.”  Robert straightened his chair and capped the open pen on his desk. 

“Are you certain, sir?  Mr. Vargas promises that several Texans cheerleaders will be in attendance.”

“I believe I’d rather see what trouble Georgiana’s found downstairs,” Robert said.  He rose from the chair, slid his hands in his pockets.  “I’ll see you in the morning, Cedric.”

Cedric couldn’t wipe the grin off his face.  “Yes, sir.”  He made it to the doorway before the sound of his name had him stopping mid-stride.

“You have mentioned wanting to find your own domicile.”

“Yes, sir.  The guesthouse is great, don’t misunderstand, but it is a little cramped for Allan and me.”  Cedric grimaced.  “And Allan’s equipment.  The truck with his workout gear arrived yesterday.”

“Would you be opposed to sharing the Collier townhouse with Ms. Ruiz?  There are three unused bedroom suites.  The house is equipped with an artificial intelligence interface similar to NORA.  The rent would be nominal, especially compared to what you were paying in New York.”

“I wouldn’t be unopposed to the idea, sir.”

Robert didn’t miss the way Cedric’s face brightened at Yvonne’s name.  “I will let Georgiana know so that you can coordinate with Ms. Ruiz.  Goodnight, Cedric.”

On his way down to the workshops, Robert stopped in the kitchen to retrieve two bottles of fruit juice and a container of washed, seedless grapes.  The door to her workshop was open.  He expected to hear lively jazz music or soulful blues.  He wasn’t prepared for ‘90s grunge. 

He rapped his knuckles on the glass window before stepping inside the workshop.  “What is with the walk down memory lane, Gigi?  I feel like I should dig out my letterman jacket and my copy of Java 1.0.”

“Tab noticed a glitch in the system when he finished uploading music to the server.  Since he and Dan are currently engrossed in a
Spirit Stalkers
marathon, I volunteered to keep an eye on the diagnostics.  I haven’t heard some of these songs in years.” 

“Was it a problem with the -,” Robert started.

Georgiana held up a hand to stop him.  “No, no, no.  You have any programming-related questions, you direct them to the kid upstairs.  I have my hands full down here.”  She wiped her grimy hands on the shop towel dangling from the pocket of her blue cargo pants.  Two of the fingers on her left hand were wrapped with oil-stained gauze.  “I don’t know if you know or not, but Dom’s having a big shindig tonight at his place off the Katy.”

“I received the invitation.”

“Oh.”  Her lips twisted in a frown.  Her eyebrows knitted together.  “It’s a pretty nice place.  Clean.  Great bartenders, good food.  Loud music.  The guest list is usually impressive, too.”

Robert lowered himself onto the stool beside the metal desk.  Georgiana’s PC was already running.  With a few mouse clicks, he opened the program that allowed him to reconstruct the Mercedes’s damaged computer.  “I would prefer to spend time with you, Gigi.”

Georgiana dropped her torque wrench.  “Okay.”  She wiped her hands again.  “Okay.  Give me time to shower and change, and we can go out.”

Robert glanced up from the computer screen.  “This is fine.  We don’t have to go anywhere.”

She waved a hand to encompass the workshop.  “C’mon, Bobby.  You can’t mean that you’d rather work on this than attend one of Dom’s parties.  His parties are legendary.”

He rolled the chair around the desk.  His glare was equal parts irritation and affection.  “Drink mid-range champagne and eat greasy food while having my eardrums assaulted and attempting to fend off drunk gold diggers, or spend a quiet evening with my gorgeous, witty fiancée solving a complex programming problem and trying to put Prask in his place?  It’s no contest, doll.”

“Are you sure?  I haven’t been to one of Dom’s parties in months, and I’m due.  Yvonne wasn’t able to reschedule any of my meetings until the day after tomorrow, so I could spend tomorrow down here working on the car to make up for tonight.”

Robert snaked an arm around her waist and yanked her down.  She landed on his lap with a high-pitched yelp.  He secured her in place with the arm around her waist and a hand on her thigh.

“I appreciate the offer, but no.  This is never going to work if you don’t give me a chance to prove that I’m not the wild child you remember,” he said.  “You’re working with obsolete data.  Face it, doll, you’re clinging to your original hypothesis and ignoring the evidence right under your pretty little nose.”

“I’m sorry.”  She started to squirm but froze at Robert’s low groan.  “Also, I’m sorry for that.”

“I’m not.”

Her tongue darted out to moisten suddenly dry lips.  His eyes darkened, narrowed on her lips.

“You
should
be sorry for that, though,” he murmured. 

With wide, unblinking eyes, she watched his head lower towards hers.  His tongue flicked across her bottom lip.  Her hands crept up, buried themselves in the soft, thick hair at the back of his skull.  He playfully nipped her lip before settling his mouth over hers. 

The kiss was different than their previous encounters.  There was heat coiling in her belly and spreading through her veins, but it wasn’t leading towards a rapid explosion. There was no risk of spontaneous combustion. 

It was a slow burn.  Smoldering.  Sustained heat like glowing embers of coal.  Robert’s hand dipped under the hem of her shirt.  He slowly, deliberately ran his fingers up her spine.  Her skin scorched; her nerve endings caught fire.  His hand stilled.  He raised his lips a fraction.  The fire banked back to a controlled burn.

She dragged his head back down.  She didn’t want the heat to ebb and flow.  She wanted to explode.  She sank her teeth into his bottom lip.  His answering growl rumbled against her lips. 

“It’s not a race, Gigi,” he panted, lips against the thundering pulse at the base of her throat.  His tongue traced patterns across her clavicle before moving back up for another kiss. 

“No.  It’s a supernova.”  She twisted, reveling in every breathy moan that fell from Robert’s lips, until her thighs were around his hips and her knees pressed into his back.  “Gamma ray burst.”

Robert’s hands curled around her ribs.  His thumbs brushed the sides of her breasts.  Even through the cotton cups of her sports bra, the touch was enough to send her head spinning.  She arched against him, broke the kiss to drag oxygen into her aching lungs.

Her frantic movements shifted the chair, banged it against the table and knocked a cup of screws to the floor.  The clatter was enough to break the spell surrounding them.  Robert’s hands hand slid out from under her t-shirt.  Georgiana raked her fingers through his hair one last time before settling her hands on his shoulders. 

“Oh god,” she breathed, willing her pulse back to normal.  No matter how much air she dragged into her lungs, none of it seemed to reach her brain.

“Yeah.”  Robert didn’t sound any steadier than she felt.  His fingers dug into her side and clenched every time she twitched.  “Don’t move.”

“O-okay.”

A feline noise of protest sounded from behind the chair.  Robert craned his neck to peer over Georgiana’s shoulder.  The Siamese was standing on her rear feet with her front paws curled around the bars of a makeshift cage.

“You didn’t tell me we had a captive audience, Gigi.”

“I had to lock her up.  She kept trying to run off with the small pieces.  I swear she’s part raven.”  A broad, impish smile curled up the corners of Georgiana’s kiss-swollen lips.  “Guess what she’s in.”

“Don’t say it,” Robert groaned.  “Please don’t say it.”

“It’s a Faraday cage.”  She giggled like a five-year-old hyped up on cotton candy.  “Get it?”

He dumped her on the cold workshop floor.  He looked as if he’d sipped sour milk.  “Now I owe your brother thirty dollars.  He told me, as soon as you named that cat, that you’d make a Faraday cage remark.  I didn’t believe him.”

“Silly Bobby,” she laughed, clambering to her feet.

“Silly Gigi,” he mocked.  He matched her smile.  He stroked a hand across her bare forearm.  “And you thought I’d rather attend a party than spend the night with you.”

“My nights aren’t always so exciting.”

“And you shouldn’t believe half the stuff they print in magazines.” 

“Truce?” She held out her hand to shake.

“I wasn’t aware we were ever at war, doll.”  He wrapped his fingers around her wrist and pulled her in for a long, lingering kiss.  He kept hold of her wrist when she swayed. 

  They settled in to their respective work areas.  They chatted about work and the possibility of a romance between their assistants.  The lulls in conversation were organic, comfortable.  The tapping of Robert’s fingers on the keyboard faded into the background like the music.  Her habit of talking aloud as she worked earned her an occasional grape to the back of the head.  Retaliation came in the form of a freed Faraday deciding that Robert’s lap was the comfiest perch in the room.

Long after the juice and grapes were gone, Georgiana slid out from underneath the Mercedes.  “Bobby,” she said softly.  The color had leached out of her face and her fingers trembled.

Robert saved his progress but left his program running.  He wheeled his chair around the desk and stopped next to her.  He ran a finger over the components in her hand but didn’t touch them.  “What are those?”

“Well, I thought they were part of the SUV’s Elektronisches Stabilitätsprogramm.  Now I’m not sure.  The sensors don’t match the specs from Mercedes.  I don’t see any markings on them, which is odd.  They don’t fit in with the truck, either.  I have all its electronics.”

He frowned, eyes flicking back to his computer screen.  “But you believe they are part of the stability program?”

“If not, then I’m missing those sensors.  The hydraulic modulator looks a bit off, too.  I’ve taken into account the possibility of damage sustained during the accident, but it doesn’t add up.  I haven’t looked at the traction control system yet, but I’m afraid I’ll find the same discrepancies.”

“Come here.”  Robert set the components on the desk and helped Georgiana off the floor.  He made room on the side of the chair for her to sit next to him.  He pointed at a block of code on the screen.  “See this here?”

“Yes.  But if you think I can translate that without a legend and a gallon of coffee, you’re out of your mind.”

He smothered his smile by pressing his lips to the side of her head.  “And I wouldn’t have a clue what a hydraulic modulator looks like, so we’re even.”  He used the mouse to highlight the code.  “This isn’t original programming.  It doesn’t match the style of the rest of the program.”

“Someone hacked my brother’s car?” she asked.

“It’s an access panel, of sorts.  It gives the user control of certain functions.”

Georgiana’s head tilted towards the parts on the corner of the desk.  “Like the ESP?”

“Amongst other things.”

A hard, burning lump formed in the back of Georgiana’s throat.  Assuming that someone sabotaged her brother’s car was easier than seeing the proof that someone had tampered with the vehicle.  Someone had wanted her brother to have an accident on the way home from Dallas.  Someone had tried to kill her brother.

“Can you track who accessed the vehicle during my brother’s accident?”

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