“I like it.”

“Oh, me too,” Viv whispered. “Me too. Only…”

“Only?”

“I want everything all at once,” Viv said. “But I don’t want it to be fast either. I don’t want to miss a single thing.”

“Then we should have supper,” Dusty said. “I don’t want this to be over too fast, either. I don’t think I want it to be over at all.”

Viv pressed her forehead to Dusty’s. “You do realize you’re the sexiest woman in the world?”

Dusty laughed. She knew some things about herself. She was tough, she was good at her job, she wasn’t afraid to die. She also knew she didn’t stand out, didn’t impress, didn’t catch anyone’s eye. “I don’t think so. I know sexy when I see it. I’ve been looking at it since the second I saw you.”

“Where did you learn to say the things that make a woman want to surrender?” Viv’s tone was playful and just a little serious too.

“I never said anything like this to anyone.” Dusty kissed her again because her mouth looked so damn delicious. “You taste so sweet.” She wanted the soft fullness of Viv’s breast back in her hand again, in both hands, but if she did that she’d want more and Viv might let her, and then they wouldn’t have the slow. And the slow was important. “I’m going to think about you naked every second I can until it happens.”

“Will it?” Viv’s eyes were searching, her tone a little uncertain. “Happen?”

“If I have anything to do about it.”

“Then I’ll think about your hands on me, your mouth on me, every second until it does.” Viv pushed her fingers into Dusty’s hair and kissed her again, and again and again and again. So hungry, so damn hungry. When she couldn’t breathe anymore, she slumped against Dusty’s chest and pressed her face into Dusty’s neck. “God, you destroy me. I think I could come from kissing you alone.”

“That would be unbelievably awesome,” Dusty whispered. “Do you want to try?”

Viv chuckled weakly. “You’d probably have to carry me back to my cabin.”

“I could do that.”

Viv raised her head, dropped a line of kisses along Dusty’s jaw to the corner of her mouth, to her lips. “I believe you, and the thought is incredibly sexy. I’d just as soon keep you to myself for a while, though.”

“A secret?” Dusty asked, a cautious note in her voice. “You don’t want anyone to see us together?”

Viv pulled back until she could look into Dusty’s eyes. “No, not that. I don’t care who knows that we’re dating. But the special part, the private part”—she took Dusty’s hand and carried it to her breast—“this part, that’s mine. Ours.”

Dusty moved her hand down to Viv’s side again. “If you want to go slow, you can’t do that.”

“Really? Are you so weak?”

“Yes,” Dusty said instantly.

Viv laughed. “Mm. Good.”

“Are we dating?”

“We damn well better be, after this.” All the same, Viv waited breathlessly.

“Yes,” Dusty said firmly. “I might need some practice at that too.”

“If you’re as good at it as you are at kissing, you don’t need any practice.”

Dusty kept one arm around Viv’s waist, picked Viv’s wineglass up from the floor, and handed it to her. “I’ve never actually dated anyone.”

Viv sipped her wine, taking her time sorting the millions of questions she had. Dusty was like a closed flower, holding its secrets in the heart of its bloom. She didn’t want to damage the beauty of her, pushing and probing. “Why not?”

“When I was a teenager, I didn’t know how to go about it. Then later I never met anyone…any woman…who made me want to figure out how. Until you.”

“Does that make me the first?” Viv rather liked that idea, even though it wouldn’t have mattered. She’d had lovers, and she felt like a virgin in Dusty’s arms.

“Once,” Dusty said, “on an away trip—overseas—after the principal had left and the detail was waiting for transport home, I was sharing a room with another agent. Everybody tends to party pretty hard after an assignment’s over. She’d been partying a little more than usual, and when we got back to the room, she kind of…” Dusty lifted a shoulder.

“Put the make on you.”

“That’s a good word for it.”

“So, you went to bed with her.” Viv wasn’t jealous, she really wasn’t. Much.

“No. She was a little too drunk. After things kind of got a little out of hand, I left and slept with Atlas.”

Atlas’s tail thumped at the sound of his name.

Viv stared. “In his crate?”

Dusty laughed. “No, in the kennel shed next to his crate. At the airfield.”

“If you ever feel like you need to go sleep with Atlas when we’re together, just tell me.” Viv kissed her. “And I’ll go sleep with him.”

Dusty took Viv’s empty wineglass and set it aside. “That’s never going to happen.”

“How do you—”

Dusty’s mouth on hers told her everything she needed to know.

*

Sweat streamed down Franklin Russo’s face. His heart jackhammered in his ears. Nora rode him like he was a goddamn mechanical bull in some redneck barroom. She braced her hands on his chest and drove her hips up and down in a fury, pounding his dick and beating his balls into stones.

“I’m gonna come,” he groaned.

Nora bared her teeth, her hair flailing around her face as she threw her head back and glared at him. “Don’t you fucking dare.”

He grabbed her ass, tried to slow her down, but nothing would stop her now. She closed her eyes, chanting yes, yes, yes.

He gritted his teeth when the explosion churning in his balls let loose. “Oh fuck. Oh fucking Christ.”

She came with a high, keening wail, her nails scoring his chest. A hoarse cry tore from his throat.

Thank God. Franklin panted, the ache in his loins slowly easing.

She kept going, even after he grew soft and started to slip out. She reached back, tried to get him up again, but he was done. Finally she dropped beside him on the bed and let out a long sigh. “God, I needed that.”

“Yes,” he said, feeling as if he’d been run over by a steamroller. She reached for his cock, but he covered her hand and drew it to his chest. “You’re the sexiest woman I’ve ever known.”

She laughed. “You mean I’m the only woman that ever wore you out.”

“I’m not worn out yet.” He was lying and she probably knew it, but she was smart enough not to say it.

She kissed him briefly. “So, what’s the emergency?”

“Maybe I just wanted some time with you.”

“You don’t need to sweet-talk me, Franklin.” She pulled her hand free, slid it down his stomach, and wrapped her fist around him. He didn’t get hard. “I know what I want. And I know what you want.”

“I want the White House,” he said. “And I want you there with me.”

“We’re on track for that.”

“Powell is going to gain a lot of mileage with voters with this goddamn train trip of his. We need to do something to counteract it.”

“I agree. We keep working the donors behind the scenes, but we need some grassroots appearances to offset what he’s doing.”

She stroked him as she talked and goddamn, if his cock didn’t start to get hard. His heart banged against his ribs. “Such as?”

“Let me review his talking points today. We’ll start by countering some of those with infomercials. But I want you out and visible very soon. No more thousand-a-head dinners for a while.”

“Good. Wherever you need me to be.”

She straddled him and slid down onto his dick, even though he was only half hard. “Right now, this is where I need you to be.”

He stifled a groan. He was tired and a little sore, but he gripped her hips and started to thrust. “Just get me where we both want to be.”

Chapter Seventeen

Cam lay awake with Blair’s head on her shoulder, faintly aware of the rhythm of the train moving nearly soundlessly through the night, reviewing everything she knew about Jennifer Pattee’s failed attempt to infect the president with a lethal virus and the subsequent trail that led to Idaho and ended in a bloody battle where she’d killed a man whose true identity she still didn’t know. Who was Jane Doe, the fierce woman who had kidnapped her and Skylar Dunbar and tried to ransom them to free Jennifer? That one move—the attempted prisoner exchange—was the fissure in the stone façade of the case, the tiny crack she had to break open. Jane Doe’s actions, presumably sanctioned by Augustus Graves, were strategic suicide. Paramilitary groups were founded on fanatical loyalty to a cause greater than any individual. Sacrifice was expected and lauded. Jane Doe’s plan risked the entire organization for a single person. Why? Why would they do that?

The reason had to be a personal one. Jennifer Pattee was personally important to Jane Doe. Possibly even to Graves. That was the only thing that really made sense. Because otherwise, soldiers were expendable and everyone accepted that.

Cam worked the other side of the equation, playing devil’s advocate. Maybe she was wrong and Jennifer Pattee had acted alone when she’d attempted to secrete a vial of contagion into the White House. Cam’s instincts disagreed, and she couldn’t take the chance of overlooking another inside person close to the president. Jennifer was deeply embedded, and that degree of penetration into the highest echelons of the government had taken years. This was a long-range plan, one Cam believed reached far back into Jennifer’s life, and probably that of Jane Doe as well. How many other sleepers were there? How close had they gotten?

She was riding on a train filled with hundreds of people, all of whom had been thoroughly screened and were assumed to be trustworthy. Just as Jennifer had been carefully screened. And yet Jennifer had been part of the medical team that cared for the president of the United States. She could just as easily have shot him when he walked into an examining room, and she might not be alone. Jennifer, Jane, and Graves held the answers if she could just ask the right questions.

Blair stirred, stroking Cam’s abdomen. “Working?”

Cam kissed her temple. “Thinking. Am I keeping you awake?”

“You’re thinking pretty loudly.”

“Would you mind if I stepped out to make a phone call?”

“As long as you’re not gone too long. It gets chilly when you’re not next to me, remember?”

Cam had a vision of getting naked while Blair watched. A pulse of desire stirred in her depths. “I promise to return and keep you warm.”

“Go ahead. I’ll be here.”

Cam made no move to get up. She wrapped Blair closer in both arms. “You know that makes all the difference in my life.”

Blair kissed her. “Mine too. I count on you being here, understanding me, loving me. More than I ever imagined I could. It’s downright scary.”

“I know the feeling. Mostly, though, I just feel lucky.”

Blair raised herself on an elbow. “Keep it up and I’m not going to let you go anywhere.”

Cam grinned. “You know, you’re pretty easy. A little sweet talk and—”

Blair slapped her stomach. “And you are altogether too arrogant. Actually, I noticed that about you the very first day.”

“Me? As I recall, you’re the one who tried to lure me with your charms into… Come to think of it, you did lure me with your charms.”

Laughing, Blair kissed her again. “Go, so you can come back and I can lure you some more.”

Cam slid from bed, pulled on jeans and a navy blue sweatshirt with a Homeland logo on the chest, stepped into a pair of boots, and ambled out into the lounge area. Stark sat at a small dining table in the center of the right side of the car, flipping cards onto a series of rows in front of her. She’d folded her black blazer neatly over a nearby chair. Her powder-gray shirt looked fresh, the starch still evident in the sharply creased sleeves. When she saw Cam, she started to rise.

Cam waved her down. “Solitaire?”

“Evening, Commander. Yes.”

Cam craned her neck, studied the layout. “Red two on the black three in the second to last row.”

Frowning, Stark checked the cards, nodded, and moved one. “Thanks.” Setting the cards aside in a neat, squared-off pile, she went to the small kitchenette tucked into one corner and poured coffee from a pot that sat atop a hotplate next to a pile of bagels and a few tubs of cream cheese. “Get you anything?”

“Coffee would be good.”

Stark handed her a cup. “I’ve got some preliminaries on the guy from this morning. I thought you might be asleep and figured it could wait.”

Cam settled on a bench opposite the table. “Fill me in.”

“Not much to say.” Stark broke off a piece of bagel, added some cream cheese, and took a bite. “His press credentials were legit until three months ago, when he was fired from a local syndicated newspaper. Apparently he’d been acting a little oddly and had fallen behind on deadlines, turned in scattered copy, and generally underperformed.”