Read Stripper: The Fringe, Book 4 Online

Authors: Anitra Lynn McLeod

Stripper: The Fringe, Book 4 (9 page)

BOOK: Stripper: The Fringe, Book 4
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“No.” When she’d looked up and saw Duster standing wide and steady, she’d been relieved. “I knew you wouldn’t miss. You were an expert seven years ago. I imagine you’ve only gotten better.” Judging by the calluses on his hands, he still spent a lot of time practicing. She was grateful she had not stripped him of weapons when she’d had the chance. “What—who were they?”

“Probably traders.” He kept his voice low. “They got hit by Randoms and needed a quick score. Guess they thought your ship was an easy target.”

Diane realized it would have been if Duster had not been here. “You saved my life.”

“Not really. I just protected what’s mine.”

Uttering a disappointed grunt of frustration, Diane closed her eyes. “Only you, Duster. Only you could take a potentially sweet moment and make it sour.” Pushing his hand away, she sat up, holding the washcloth to her forehead. Sitting upright made the pain swell with a pounding that forced her to lie down again. Curling to her side, Diane fought back tears. “Just leave me alone.”

“What gratitude.”

“I tried to be grateful, but you just wouldn’t let me.”

Duster put his hand on her hip. So huge, his hand spanned her entire hip and part of her buttock. Caressing her with deliberate intent, he asked, “Just how grateful are you?”

“You sick fetch.” Diane shoved his hand off, even though the movement made her head throb anew. “Now you expect me to show you my gratitude by spreading my—”

Very gently, Duster rolled her over. “Don’t even say it, Diane.”

“Right. You don’t want me to speak the truth, not when it involves the darkness in you.”

Scrutinizing her with incisive eyes, Duster nodded. “Truth time, Diane.”

“You mean where you considered that other fetch’s offer?” She still felt the man’s hand at her breast. Bile rose when she remembered that ugly hand seeking lower. “Do me and split the goods on my ship?”

“You know I only considered it to distract him.” Duster looked deep into her eyes.

“Of course.” She glared at him, wishing she could literally throw daggers with her gaze. “When you lie, you have a good reason. When I lie, I’m just being a big fat liar without a conscience. Isn’t that called a double standard?”

He flashed her a tight, what’s-your-deal wink.

“Don’t you dare look at me like that. I despise that expression. You want to know what my deal is? I’ll tell you. I want you to take whatever it is you want from me, then leave.” Diane had to forcefully keep her tears at bay.

“I want my life back.” Duster tried to resettle the cloth on her forehead, but she pushed his hand away.

“I didn’t steal your life.”

“You did. You betrayed me, and I never got over it, and when I tried to get over it, you messed that up too.”

His obvious pain broke her heart. “Duster, I didn’t know you were the client. I had no idea until I saw you on my ship. That’s the truth, the whole truth and nothing but. I swear to you, I didn’t plan this.”

“I don’t believe you.”

Her compassion quickly faded in the face of his unrelenting distrust. “Fine.” She refused to yell at him even though she wanted to. Yelling would only make him accuse her of being hysterical, and she wasn’t. Frustrated, yes—hysterical, not yet but damn close. “Explain, then, what did I do this for? 7Mil? Let’s assume that’s true. Why didn’t I just kill you when you were incapacitated, since Network Thirteen already banked the money?”

“I don’t know.” He frowned. “I haven’t figured that out yet.”

“Let me know when you do.” She laughed without mirth. “I can’t wait. And, oh, I suppose this is a minor point, but they have your money, not me, so I’m still not sure what the hell I get out of this grand scheme.” Diane rolled over and peered at the far wall and the double sunset print that hung there. “It doesn’t matter what the truth is. You’re going to twist everything around to prove your point. Anything I say or do against your beliefs you will just toss off as another lie.”

“So you admit you lied to me.” Vindication rolled from his tone with victorious power.

“Yes. I did. Seven years ago.” Diane rolled to her back and glared defiantly up at him. “I wasn’t just a slave. I was there to take down the
Damn You
and anyone who ran the ship, which turned out to be you and Michael. I should have killed you both. I
could
have killed you both. But I didn’t.”

“Why?” he asked, as if he was genuinely baffled when she thought the answer was patently obvious to anyone.

“Because I fell in love with you.” Knowing she would never convince him of the sincerity of that feeling, she softly added, “I did the best I could to walk the line between you and my network. I didn’t know what else to do.”

He didn’t openly laugh or scoff or roll his eyes. He just considered her for the longest time. And for a moment, she thought that maybe, just maybe, she had a chance to start over with him.

“You seduced me to carry out their plan?”

“I did.” Diane refused to lie to him anymore about the past. “I really thought I could do that and walk away. If I seduced you, Duster, you did the same to me. In seven days, I took over the
Damn You
, but I also fell in love with you. When I swore to those vows, I meant them. Every word. But I also had no choice but to walk away.”

“Walk away?” Duster lifted her chin with a touch of his finger. “You didn’t walk away. You manipulated the hell out of me, then ran.” His curling upper lip conveyed that seven years had not healed that wound. Duster’s pain and humiliation was as raw today as it had been then.

“I did the best I could to leave you limping and get out alive myself.” She lifted her hand to touch him, to perhaps soothe away that twist in his lip, but he pulled out of her reach. Reluctantly, Diane pressed her hand to her chest, noting that Duster had folded the edges of her robe together. “I did the best I could with so much hanging over my clueless eighteen-year-old head. Did I do the right thing?” She shrugged. “Depends who you ask. But I did the best I could to keep me, you and even Michael alive.”

“You lied to your network too?” His frown perplexed her as she wasn’t sure if he was surprised by that information or not.

“I had to lie to them.” Oddly, she found confession was good for the soul. “If they knew I’d left two slavers alive, they would have killed me.”

“They had to know, eventually, that you let us go.” Duster placed the rag on her forehead, and this time, she let him.

“They didn’t know you by name. They only knew the name of the ship. When a Runner showed up using the ship, they believed me that I had killed the men who first piloted the
Damn You
.”

The glare of distrust in his eyes softened. “Did you ever wonder…?”

Without him finishing the thought, she knew what he was asking. “I knew that Michael had survived. Who hasn’t heard about Overlord? But you?” She reached out to touch his face. Duster didn’t flinch away. “I never heard anything about you. I thought you were dead. By my hand.” The guilt had been devastating. If not for Scott, she didn’t think she would have survived.

“I always wondered what happened to you.”

On the tip of her tongue hung the question of why he didn’t look for her, but she already knew. Her betrayal had so devastated him, he didn’t believe anything she’d ever said to him, not even that her name was Diane Black. Besides, how many women with that name were scattered over the IWOG, WAG and Fringe worlds?

“You said you never seduced any other men. I don’t see how you worked for Network Thirteen without doing that.” Rather than flat-out call her a liar, he was, in a roundabout way, asking her how she did her job.

“They chalked my mismanagement of the mission up to my inexperience. During that time, they found out about my stripper ability and helped me to perfect my skill. Bringing in money that way, to fuel operations, served them better.”

“What if you stripped someone and found out they were a slaver?”

“I was supposed to turn them over immediately.”

“You didn’t do that with me.”

“No. I didn’t.” Would they, in this very quiet way, bridge the gap between them? If only she could make Duster understand why she’d done what she had in the past, she could tell him everything.

After a deep breath, while looking deep into her eyes, Duster asked, “Why not?”

“Because I still love you.”

Hope flashed across his gaze for a split second before suspicion returned. “How could any woman love a man like me?”

Astounded by the question, Diane wanted to babble out a laundry list of justifications, but she knew Duster was searching for truth, not placating words. “Back then, on that ship, you looked miserable. You knew what awaited us at the end of that ride.”

“And I did it anyway.”

“It didn’t take much to sway you off that path.”

“I pulled you out of that cage intent on taking what I wanted. You kept trying to protect me by stopping the other woman from throwing things at me. And I was angry that you were sweet while they spat and swore. I thought if I hurt you, it would put the fear of God in the other women, and they’d stop fighting.”

Even now, she remembered the look of determination on his face when he yanked her out of the cage. With one big fist around her upper arm, Duster had marched her from the cell room and down a short hall to a room that had only a bare mattress on the floor.

“I pushed you down. I climbed on top of you.” Duster winced. “The exact same thing I’ve done here.”

“You stopped.”

“Because you started crying.” Duster looked down at the floor. “I only stopped here because we were attacked.”

Diane suddenly realized that a lot of Duster’s anger was at himself and the choices he’d made both in the past and with her yet again. Just as the number seven seemed to weave through their relationship, so too did echoes. Behaviors, choices, decisions—they seemed to repeat them, just like their circular arguments. Maybe the trick was breaking the cycle.

“I cried because I was afraid of what would happen to me if I failed to seduce you, not that you were going to hurt me, because I knew you wouldn’t.” Diane took his hand. “And you wrapped me up in your arms and held me, apologizing and swearing that you weren’t going to rape me, that you just wanted to scare the others.” Squeezing his hand, she added, “And when I started kissing you, you tried to stop me, but I wouldn’t quit. So if anyone did anything wrong there, it was me.”

“I outweighed you by over a hundred pounds. I could have stopped you.”

She felt a smile lift the edges of her lips. “Not when I was so determined to have you. Honestly, Duster, everything you did that day made me fall in love with you. I didn’t sleep with you because of Network Thirteen or some mission. I made love to you because I wanted to.” After a pause, she added, “I still do.”

The truth seemed to hit him like a wave that tried to pull his feet out from under him. “Even when I’m rough, and—”

“Determined, demanding,” she whispered, sitting up so that she could speak directly into his ear. “Dangerously male. Then as now, you are more bark than bite. You’ve not hurt me once.”

Holding her face in both his hands, drilling his gaze into hers with a ferocity that almost made her flinch, he demanded, “Why didn’t you kill me?”

“Because I love you. I did then, and I do now.” Lifting her hands slowly so as not to startle him, Diane pulled the chain from under her robe. Slender links of gold held a battered platinum ring. “I’ve never taken it off. Not from the day I accepted it from you.”

Letting go of her face, he dropped his gaze to the ring that matched the battered platinum band around his right-hand ring finger.

“I put it on your finger.” Duster lifted his gaze to hers.

“I couldn’t let the women of the network see it.” Diane looked down at his hand. “I see you wear yours on the right now, not left, like a widower.”

Tugging the chain firmly between his calloused hands, Duster broke the delicate links and slid the ring off the chain. Cupping the ring in his palm, he tossed the broken necklace over his shoulder.

With the ring balanced on the tip of his finger, he held the slender band out to her and asked, “What finger would you put it on now, Diane?”

Chapter Seven

Alarm bells blared.

“I still consider myself married to you.” Diane took the ring from his finger and slipped the band—a bit tight but still fitting—onto the ring finger of her left hand. “I always have.”

She leaned forward and kissed him. It was fast, but the way she smiled at him, she wanted the kiss to be much longer and intimately deeper. But they didn’t have time.

“I can tell by the tone that alarm is for low fuel.” Diane flung her robe off, grabbed a gown from the closet and settled it over her head. Dressed, she marched to the bridge.

Duster followed in her wake. “Fuel?”

“Those idiots must have hit a line. We’re leaking fuel. We’ve got to limp planetside within three hours.”

“You have a three-hour idiot alarm?” He pushed his way in front of her.

“It’s not a Runner ship, Duster. It’s a whore ship, as you’ve pointed out many times.” Diane darted in front of him as she said, “
Den of Iniquity
has sensors, but low-grade ones at best.”

BOOK: Stripper: The Fringe, Book 4
3.14Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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