And I'm the only one who can help you.”
She took a step backward. Looked at the cop, who seemed to be considering the merits of lying down.
Wrath held up his hands. “I'm not going to hurt you. I promise. If I were going to kill you, I could have done it last night in ten different ways, right?”
Her head turned back to him, and he closed his eyes as he sensed her remembering exactly what he had done to her. Her desire was a sweet saturation in his nostrils before the scent was quickly cut off.
“You were going to kill Butch just now.”
Actually, he wasn't so sure about that. A good opponent was hard to find.
“I didn't.”
“You could have.”
“Does it really matter? He's still breathing.”
“Only because I came.”
Wrath growled, playing the best card he had. “I'll take you to your father's house.”
Her eyes popped and then narrowed with suspicion.
She glanced over at the cop again. Now he was back up on his feet, one hand braced against the wall, head hanging as if it were too heavy for his neck.
“My father, huh?” Her voice was dripping with disbelief. And just enough curiosity so that he knew he had her.
“We're out of time here, Beth.”
There was a long silence.
The cop lifted his head and looked down the alley.
In another minute or two the guy was going to try to make another arrest. His determination was palpable.
“I'm leaving now,” Wrath said. “Come with me.”
Her grip tightened on her purse. “Just so we're clear, I do not trust you.”
He nodded. “Why would you?”
“And those orgasms weren't my first.”
“Then why were you so surprised to be having them?” he said softly.
“Hurry,” she muttered, turning away from the officer. “We can get a taxi out on Trade. I didn't ask the one that got me here to wait.”
Black Dagger Brotherhood 1 - Dark Lover
Chapter Sixteen
As she sped down the alley, Beth knew she was gambling with her life. There was a serious chance she was being played. By a killer.
Except how did he know all those things she was feeling?
Before she turned the corner, she looked back at Butch. He was reaching out to her, one hand extended. She couldn't see his face for the shadows, but his desperate yearning crossed the distance between them. She hesitated, losing the rhythm of her steps.
Wrath took her arm. “Beth. Come on.”
Heaven help her, she started running again.
The minute they got out to Trade, she hailed a passing cab. Thank God, it stopped on a dime. They jumped in, and Wrath gave out an address a couple blocks over from the one he'd told her on Wallace Avenue. Obviously as an evasion technique.
He must have a lot of those , she thought.
As the cab took off, she felt him look across the seat at her.
“That cop,” he said. “Does he mean something to you?”
She grabbed her cell phone from her purse and dialed the front desk down at the station.
“I asked you a question.” Wrath's tone was sharp.
“Go to hell.” When Ricky's voice came through, she took a deep breath. “Is José there?”
It didn't take more than a minute for the other detective to be found, and he was already out the door to find Butch as she ended the call. José hadn't asked many questions, but she knew they were going to come later. And just how was she going to explain to him why she'd run off with a suspect?
That made her an accomplice for aiding and abetting, didn't it?
Beth put her phone back in her purse. Her hands were shaking, and she felt light-headed. She just couldn't catch her breath either, even though the cab was air-conditioned and blissfully cool. She cracked the window. The breeze was hot and damp as it blew through her hair.
What had she done? To her body last night. To her life right now.
What was next? Setting her apartment on fire?
She hated that Wrath had dangled the one carrot she couldn't resist in front of her. That he was obviously a criminal. That he terrified her, but she still got hot thinking about how he'd kissed her.
And she despised the fact that he knew those were her first orgasms.
“Drop us off here,” Wrath told the driver ten minutes later.
Beth paid with a twenty-dollar bill, thinking they were lucky she had the cash on her. Wrath's money, that big bank roll of the stuff, was on the ground in her backyard. So it wasn't like he could cover the fare.
Was she