Part 13 (1/2)

”You want to do the two-step, we can go into my inner office where we'll have more privacy,” he said.

Louisa caught a glimpse of the bug sitting black and malevolent on the floor. No one had noticed it fall. She blinked at Maislin with big innocent eyes. ”I slipped.”

The thumb did a fast exploratory. ”Maybe you should slip more often.”

Louisa wrenched herself away. ”Maybe you should eat dirt and die.”

Maislin narrowed his eyes at her. ”What?”

”Listen, you miserable sc.u.mbag, you try that again, and I'll make sure you're in a lot of pain. You understand?”

Maislin just glared at her, and she glared back, thinking anger did wonderful things for her personality. James Bond eat your heart out.

”I'll deal with you later,” Maislin finally said. He wheeled around and stormed off to his office.

Louisa bent to retrieve the bug. She took it back to her desk and sat quietly, waiting to stop shaking, staring down at the odious piece of black plastic. Now what? Now she was going to have to find another way to insert the blasted thing in his pocket. She was going to have to crawl back into his office with her tail between her legs and ooze up next to him. Not an appealing thought.

Pete was parked half a block away in the Porsche, listening. ”d.a.m.n,” he said. ”What'd he do? What'd he do?”

He wrapped his fingers around the steering wheel and counted to ten. Then he counted to ten again. He hated this. He hated sitting in the Porsche, feeling impotent.

h.e.l.lertown might have its faults, but men grew up knowing their responsibilities. Roles were clear. Men didn't sit around, listening to their women take abuse from other men, and disputes were settled with good old-fas.h.i.+oned physical violence. Man to man.

It didn't feel right that Louisa should be in there, taking all the risks, threatening to hurt Maislin. Hurting Maislin should be his job, Pete thought. Instead, he was stuck in his car with a radio strapped to his head.

He slumped in his seat, thinking he would have been happier in the nineteenth century. This man/woman business was just too complicated now.

Louisa took a deep breath and smoothed the wrinkles from her skirt. She picked some lint from her blouse and checked to see if her nail polish was cracked. She was procrastinating. She didn't want to confront Maislin again.

”All right, already,” she said into her chest. ”Don't worry. I'll do it. I'll do it.”

Pete sat up straighter ”What? What?” he shouted.

She took the day's mail from her desk and headed for Maislin. The mail was a legitimate excuse, she told herself. Nothing demeaning or extraordinary about delivering the mail. She squared her shoulders, knocked twice, and entered the office. Maislin was on the phone, with his back to her. His jacket was slung over a chair by the door!

”Mail,” Louisa said, weak with relief at her good fortune. She flipped the bug into his suit jacket pocket on the way out and closed the door behind her. ”Mission accomplished.”

Pete lunged out of the car and strode across the street to the Hart Building. There was a limo at curbside. Maislin's limo, he thought. He stood, waiting for close to a half hour, with his fists balled in the pockets of his shearling jacket. At last, Maislin swept through the doors with several aides in tow and plunged into the plush interior of the limo.

Pete felt the rage centering in his chest, felt his fist itching to pop Maislin one in the nose. Patience, he told himself. Hold out for long-term satisfaction-go for a congressional investigation, criminal charges, a drug bust.

He watched the limo pull away and slowly move down the street. Then he watched Kurt move after it in a late-model midsize Ford. Pete had ridden in the car many times. It had a custom V-8 engine under the hood, and hidden under the dash was a CB, a flush-mounted tracker with a dropped display panel, and a very large gun. Stashed under the backseat were more tools of Kurt's trade, and it was anybody's guess what was in the trunk. His trunk could hold anything from hot watches to dead bodies to Stinger missiles.

Pete rubbernecked at the steady stream of secretaries and aides on lunch errands trickling out of the building, then he plastered a smile on his face and went after Louisa.

She was alone in the office when Pete ambled up to her desk. He had his thumbs hooked into his jeans' pockets so that his open jacket revealed a black T-s.h.i.+rt stretched across smooth chest muscles and a rock-hard washboard stomach. The washed-out jeans hugged tight hips and held the telltale contour of a man who wore bikini briefs. His full mouth was curved into a lazy smile. His eyes were shaded and filled with s.e.xual promise. And under the facade, he fairly vibrated with suppressed violence.

The quintessential male, Louisa thought. Gorgeous...but not totally evolved. ”You look as if you're about to rupture something,” she said.

He expelled a long breath and kicked Louisa's desk, hard.

”Feel better?”

He had to think about it a minute. ”No.” He opened her bottom drawer and removed her purse. ”Let's get out of here.”

”I have work to do.”

”You're done working for this creep.” He wanted to take her home and make love to her. He wanted to go to bed and stay there until he felt at peace. No pigs. No politicians. Just Louisa and him locked away from the world for a little while.

For days he'd listened to her heartbeat come through the headset. He was no longer wearing the headset, but he still felt the soft thrum of her pulse. He would always feel it, he thought, somewhere deep in his subconscious. There was a word for it...bonding. He was bonded to Louisa.

The thought hit him like a fist in the gut, and suddenly everything fell into place. He loved her. He would always love her. His love was deep and real and comforting. For the first time in his life, he didn't feel panic-stricken at the thought of marriage and commitment. He smiled at Louisa and kissed her on the nose.

She looked at him warily. ”What's that smile all about?”

”We need to talk.”

Louisa changed into jeans and a rugby s.h.i.+rt and made her way up the stairs to Pete's apartment. He was making cream of tomato soup and grilled cheese sandwiches, and Spike was prowling the area around the stove in antic.i.p.ation.

”Okay,” Louisa said, pouring two mugs of soup, and taking her place at the table. ”What do you want to talk about?”

Pete handed out the grilled cheese. ”Marriage.”

Louisa felt her stomach dip. She looked up from her soup. ”Marriage?”

”Yep. I think we should get married.”

She put her spoon down and squinted at him. ”Are you feeling all right?”

”Never felt better.”

”Marriage,” she repeated. ”To each other?”

”It came to me while I was standing at your desk.”

”I thought we'd decided we were incompatible.”

”There're all kinds of incompatibility. It seems to me our incompatibility isn't nearly so incompatible as some other kinds of incompatibility.”

”Gee, that makes me feel a lot better.”

It was too fast, he realized. She hadn't been hit by the bonding revelation the way he had. And she didn't know how short their time was together. He had a studio breathing down his neck. It wouldn't be many more days before he received an ultimatum to get his b.u.t.t out to the coast.

”I should have gotten a ring first,” he said. ”I should have done something romantic.”