Death Echo
brushed her ear.
âEmma-love, you are anything but slow.â
She plucked at her sweater and let out a long breath. âGetting hot in here, Captain.â
Teeth closed gently on her earlobe. âIf the water was calm, itâd be a whole lot hotter. But I want to be in Campbell before dark, so medium warm is as good as it gets for now. Hot comes later.â
She cleared her throat. âYou keep nibbling like that, youâre going to distract me.â
âMy hands are in my pockets,â he pointed out.
She moved her head quickly, caught one of his fingertips, and sucked it into her mouth for a thorough tasting. She released it slowly, enjoying the flush of color high on his cheekbones.
âMy hands are on the wheel,â she said.
He took a long breath, then another. âPoint taken. Damn it.â
She laughed softly and moved aside so that he could get to the chart plotter while she steered. âAll yours, Captain.â
âPromises promises.â
âI keep mine,â Emma said.
âSo do I.â
She cleared her throat. âSoâ¦good. I wonât have to date myself tonight.â She shook her head hard, trying to clear the haze of lust.
âGod, Mac. Is it something you were born with, or did you take classes?â
âIn what?â
âSexual heat.â
He blinked, then smiled slowly. âIâm learning from my first mate. One hell of a teacher. Canât wait for night school to begin.â
She blew out her breath and ignored him. It was that or jump him, and Blackbird really did need a guiding hand. Two hands, actually. The waves were building with the wind. And the wind had teeth in it, forewarning of the cold autumn gales Mac had talked about.
âIs this weather as bad as it looks?â she asked after a time.
Mac didnât even glance up from the electronic chart plotter he was putting through its paces. âNot for us. If we were in a small boat, yes, Iâd already be ashore or real close to it. Out here, size matters.â
âNot touching that.â
âEver?â he asked.
âNot hearing you. La la la la. Not a single tempting word.â
Mac laughed and quit teasing herâand himselfâfor the moment. He checked the boatâs position, the tide, the currents, and the time to Campbell River. It would be an interesting ride. They were right on schedule for a beating from the steep tidal currents just south of Campbell River. The wicked water would slow them down, but they should make Campbell before dark.
Mac could hardly wait.
But he kept at work on the chart plotter, trying out various possibilities for the next day of running. The beauty of a boat like Blackbird was that speed opened up so many choices that a six-knot boat didnât have. The downside was that choices led to more opportunities to screw up.
Thatâs how you learn, Mac reminded himself. And along the learning way, you try real hard not to make the kind of mistakes that are fatal.
Not to mention praying that somebody else didnât make those mistakes for you.
49
DAY FOUR
WASHINGTON, D.C.
9:10 P.M .
T he front door closed behind Timothy Harrow with a weighty restraint that whispered of money. As he walked down the echoing marble foyer, he pulled off his suit coat, yanked his tie loose, looked at the muted gleam of bottles in the home bar, and sighed.
Heâd rather have a woman. Unfortunately, his wifeâsoon to be ex-wifeâhad discovered that sometimes any woman would do for him. It wasnât anything against her, certainly nothing personal. It was just the way he was.
He looked around the suburban home that had become a house with the divorce decree and decided all over again that his career was a relationship killer. He should have stuck with serial affairs. Or found a wife who understood the demands of his career. Marrying a beautiful, ambitious lawyer had been a head-banging mistake, one heâd be making payments on for the rest of his life. Unless the clever bitch remarried.
And speaking of clever bitchesâ¦
He picked his cell phone off the table and looked at his contacts, searching for the personal number of his FBI contact. Information or a hookup, either would be fine with him. Both would be better. Butbefore he could find the number, someone knocked at the front door.
Harrow locked and set aside the phone before he pulled out the drawer in the end table by his chair, saw that his
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