“Oh God!” Her hand slid off his shoulder, clawed back for purchase.
“Can you handle me?”
He thrust hard, deep, tore a cry from her, turned her eyes to gold glass. Those long legs chained around his waist as her breath came in tatters.
But she leveled her gaze with his. “Like I told Crusher. Bring it.”
“Get a good grip.” He nipped his teeth into her good shoulder, scraped them up her throat. “I want my hands on you.”
She grabbed hold where she could, helpless, suspended, pinned while he drove her, drove into her.
Nothing but glorious, shattering sensation while his hands took her breasts, ran rough down her body, up again, and all the while he plunged into her, wild, relentless. Everything she needed.
The heat from the pulsing jets, the rising steam from him saturated her. All the hours in the cold, all the hours with blood and death burned away.
Here was a violence of passion that purged and filled again, that scorched then soothed.
She cried out once more, the sound of release twined in surrender echoing off the tiles.
She imprisoned him with his own mad needs, enslaved him with his bottomless love. She enraptured and ensnared him – every inch of her. Her shape, her scent, her spirit.
And when she moaned his name, went limp, she simply emptied him.
They slid down, boneless, tangled together, ended up half propped against the shower wall. When he turned his head, brushed his lips at the curve of her throat, she smiled.
“Now that’s what I call a shower.”
“It’s what I call getting lucky.” He kissed her throat again. “This is what I call a shower. Temperature adjust to ninety degrees.”
He wasn’t sure how he managed to hold her down in his weakened condition, or if his ears would ever stop ringing from the screaming, but, again, it was worth it.
“No one sane considers ninety degrees cold,” he told her. “Now if I said eighty —”
“I’ll kill you dead.” She wanted to be furious, but it was hard getting there when she felt so good and was sliding around with him on the shower floor. “Prick.”
“Again? The woman’s insatiable. I’ll need about ten minutes first.”
“Don’t even think about it, ace.” She managed to half sit, then just sighed and dropped her head on his shoulder.
He stroked her back, gently now. “Computer lab?”
“Yeah. I gave myself an hour to clear my head, and I’ve taken nearly twice that.”
When she eased back, he took her hand. “We’ll get through this, Eve.”
“Yeah, we’ll get through it.”
Clearer, steadier – she preferred the mild soreness from a good fight and exceptional sex to the dragging headache and irritation – she brought the disc files to Roarke’s computer lab.
EDD couldn’t boast better, she thought – then frowned when Roarke opened a bottle of wine.
“You wanted sweat and sex,” he pointed out. “I wanted a glass of wine when I got home. You got yours.”
She couldn’t argue with that, but she’d keep her own to one glass for the same reason she’d dressed in a shirt and trousers, and strapped her weapon harness back on. If and when Dispatch contacted her, she wanted to be ready to roll.
“I’ve got correspondence – mine and Nadine’s. It’s already had a first purge, eliminating what can be eliminated. What I’m looking to do is a search and analysis using these and the two crime scene messages.”
“Looking for key words and phrases, syntax, grammar.”
“Yeah. It’s a lot, but it’s less than it would’ve been without the first eliminations.”
“We can run this a few ways,” he told her. “I’ll set it up to cross yours and Nadine’s, and that will pop out matches, even if they haven’t come from the same name or location. Pure content match. And we’ll run another on yours, a third on Nadine’s, those against the messages – names, locations.”
“Good. That’s good. It’s thorough.”
“It won’t take long to set it up. It may take considerable time for the search and analysis. I’ll put them on auto, and the comp will alert when we have – say ten potentials on each?”
“Five. The sooner I start running them, the better.”
“Five, then.”
“I’ll do one. I can do one,” she insisted, a little miffed by his amused glance. “And yeah, it’ll take me as long to do one as it does for you to do the other two, but then they’ll all be done.”
She took the discs of her own correspondence, chose a comp, got started.
He finished his assignment, enjoyed his wine while she fought her way through the last of the programming.
“Done.” Nearly as relieved as she might have been to avoid a midair collision, she shoved her hands through her hair, then hell, took a gulp of wine. “And you should check to make sure I didn’t screw it up.”
“You didn’t. I had my eye on you.” He gave her shoulder a rub. “We’ll let the machines do their work – which they won’t do faster for being scowled at. We’ll get some food, and you can tell me what progress you made today. We may hit on another angle. This one?” He nodded toward the computers. “Is a good one.”
“Okay, yeah. Okay. I had to bring my division in on it,” she said as they started out. “It was going to leak – and it did – so I wanted them up to date.”
“They’d have heard bits and pieces, along with speculation and inaccuracies. It’s good they heard it all, and from you.”
“Now they’re juggling – Jenkinson’s word – taking different angles on this along with their own caseloads.”
“As it should be,” Roarke said. “As you would have done for any of them if they needed it. It’s not just detectives and officers in the same division, Lieutenant. It’s a unit, and it’s yours.”
“They’re a little pissed off about the whole thing.”
“As it should be,” he repeated.