âI should check on the fire.â
Clayâs mouth was so close to hers she could feel the warmth of his breath on her lips.
âYesâ¦fire,â she agreed. She had felt embers glowing in her midsection even before heâd mentioned the fire. She met his lips and took them with a hunger she had never known.
He suddenly broke the kiss. âI am not making love to you here.â
âTalking to me or yourself?â Vanessa whispered, smiling her wickedest smile.
âBoth. I just want to hold you.â
âLiar.â
He pulled the blanket up around them swiftly as they lay side by side. âIf I ever make love to you, I want it to be perfect, soft lightââ
âThe fireâs pretty low,â she interrupted, snuggling closer.
âSweet musicâ¦â
âCrickets will do.â
âSatin sheetsâ¦â
âTwo out of threeâ¦I want you, Clay. More than anything Iâve ever wanted in my life. Right here. Right now.â
loves creating pictures with words. She paints, too. Her love affair with writing and art began in the third grade when she won a school-wide contest for her colorful poster for Book Week. She spent the prize money on books, one of which was Little Women.
She rewrote the ending so that Jo marries her childhood sweetheart. Thatâs because Lyn had a childhood sweetheart herself and wanted to marry him when she grew up. She did. And now she is living her âhappily ever afterâ in north Alabama with same guy. She and Allen have traveled the world, had two children, four grandchildren and have experienced some wild adventures along the way.
Whether writing romantic historicals or contemporary fiction, Lyn insists on including elements of humor, mystery and danger. Perhaps because that other book she purchased all those years ago was a Nancy Drew.
âT his oneâs mighty little. Maybe weâd better throw her back.â
Clay Senate wondered if his new colleague was serious. He glanced again at the photos and dossier of Vanessa Walker. The pictures were just in, a news photo of a smiling Walker receiving her badge and a mug shot, with height lines for a background, showing she measured sixty-three inches. She looked pretty. Young. Perky. Obviously Native American. âYou know what they say, Cate. Good things often come in small packages.â
âIâm not touching that comment,â Cate teased, laughing as she looked at Danielle Sweet, who was barely five-five. âBut okay, I say give her a shot.â
Clay nodded at the vote offered by the first hire for the new COMPASS team, an adjunct of Sextant, the Civilian Special Operations team now being organized by Homeland Security to investigate and neutralize threats at home and abroad.
Cate Olin stood six feet tall and had the strong-shouldered, small-breasted, slim-hipped body of a long-distance swimmer. He watched as she raked a lock of straight white-blond hair back behind one ear. Cate had a degree in criminal justice, was fluent in several languages and had put in six years with the National Security Agency.
Jack Mercier, the agent who would act as director for both teams, had handpicked her. Mercier had the contacts necessary to identify and appropriate personnel. He also had an infallible knack for choosing personalities that would mesh into a cohesive unit.
âWhat do you think, Dani?â Jack asked Danielle Sweet, the latest hire, a former army brat who could kick some serious butt on the mats at the gym. She was a deceptively dainty brunette with a masterâs in international relations from Georgetown. Though people generally underestimated Dani because of her looks, Sweetâs IQ was off the charts, her powers of reasoning were outstanding and she could charm her way into or out of anything.
She graced Mercier with a benign smile. âExcellent credentials. Sheâs awfully gung ho, isnât she? Who grins like that for a mug shot?â Then she grinned herself. âBut we like gung ho, donât we?â
âAbsolutely.â Jack turned then, silent for a moment as he regarded Clay. âFine, we agree Walkerâs a possible. Sheâs on a case, Clay, so if you go and give her a hand, you can see how she handles herself. Youâll be pulling double duty here. Recruiting and investigating. I only found out about Walkerâs current case because I called to see when she might be available to meet with you. When I identified myself, her Agent-in-Charge assumed I was following up on the report submitted to his superior and promptly filled me in on whatâs going on.â
âWhat kind of case?â Clay asked.
âA bomb detonated at one of the casinos on the Qualla Boundary.â
âThatâs the Cherokee reservation in North Carolina?â Cate asked.
âYes, and technically under federal jurisdiction, at least for a case such as this. Agent Walker was at the scene when it happened. Someone had called her and told her a friend of hers was in trouble at the casino and being held there by the manager. A ruse to get her there, of course. Itâs all in the report.