She ground to a halt next to her dark blue sedan. Those two didn’t seriously think the investigation of this case would be reduced to gender, did they? Suspected smuggling was serious business that had nothing to do with chromosomes.
Frankly, she’d expected better from Carr Hamilton.
He caught up to her in the parking lot, bracing his arm on the hood of her car and standing way too close. “Why did you come here tonight?”
Again, she was conscious of feeling small. As an agent, the sensation bothered her. As a woman, she couldn’t help inhaling his cologne’s spicy scent and spending a few seconds reveling in the head-spinning that followed.
She told herself it was important that she stand her ground and resist his advances. If she let him inside, she wasn’t sure how she could stay objective. Stepping back, she rolled her shoulders. “I’m here because this is where Duffy wanted to meet. He’s a complete ass, by the way.”
“I did advise you to show some leg.”
Briefly, she closed her eyes to get a better handle on her temper. Was he really just like everybody else? “You don’t honestly believe I’d resort to low-cut dresses or high heels to solve my case,” she said, her gaze boring into his.
“Sure I do.” He closed the distance she’d created between them. “If it solved your case, you’d do just about anything.”
His assured tone angered her—or so she tried to convince herself. The fact that his statement was true was irrelevant.
Hamilton cocked his head. “As far as your personal life, though, I think you’d make a man’s journey just about as difficult as you could.”
Also true. Though not out of any deliberate issue with men in general—except the chauvinistic, homophobic or idiotic ones. She simply hadn’t met many men worth giving her time to lately. And if she was lonely, she had her job to focus on. The SAC respected her. For now, that would have to be enough to keep the home fires burning.
She crossed her arms over her chest. “Did they teach you how to be an egomaniac at Yale?”
Ignoring her defensive stance, he leaned into her. “No, I think that particular quality is inborn.”
The challenge in his dark eyes hadn’t wavered once since the moment she met him.
She liked that.
Truth told, she liked him. But he was intimately involved in her case, and she knew an attraction to him wasn’t wise.
“Are you sure you didn’t come here to see me?” he asked.
“I came to interrogate a person of interest in my case.” If she figured the owner of the bar, who she’d learned spent many of his nights in that bar, showed up, well, that was simply a side benefit to a job that had sold her short on positive points so far.
His gaze roved her face. “And I’m irrelevant?”
“You’re…distracting,” she admitted, her heart racing with the crazy need that she sensed would always mark any encounter with Carr Hamilton.
“Then I’m doing my job.”
She angled her head. “Is that why you followed me out here—to do your job?”
His tongue moistened his lower lip, and she barely repressed a groan. “No.” He wrapped one arm around her waist. “I have other things on my mind right now.”
As he lowered his head, she knew she could stop him. Should stop him.
But there were times when her instincts took over, and while those interludes didn’t always end the way she’d anticipated or desired, she couldn’t deny they always made things interesting.
She doubted touching Carr Hamilton would be any different.
His hand cupped her jaw as he laid his mouth over hers. As his fingers gripped the back of her head, his tongue slid between her lips, sending sparks of desire and need shooting through her body. The lustful feelings smoldering inside exploded.
Their chests met; her nipples tightened.
Her body wanted him, even if her brain warned of the danger. With a moan of longing, she ignored her conscience. She clutched the front of his shirt as he continued to devour her mouth, seeming determined to absorb every part of her into him, and she was willing to let him.
Willing? Hell, she wanted more.
Much more.
He pressed her back against her car. “I’ve thought of nothing but you since yesterday,” he rasped in her ear.
Her pulse hammered. Her body throbbed.
Different didn’t even begin to describe the hunger pulsing through her. She’d anticipated a spark and gotten an inferno.
She pressed her lips to his throat and buried her hand in the inky locks of his hair that indeed felt like silk. “You’re part of my case. I shouldn’t—”
He silenced her with another kiss. Her protests died in the wake of the raw emotions consuming her. Her belly tightened, craving more of his touch, knowing instinctively he could drive away the loneliness and satisfy both her body and her mind.
She wanted his skin pressed against hers. She wanted to let loose the fire behind his dark eyes.
His hand slid up her stomach, and her breasts tingled in anticipation. But before he could reach his goal, his thumb brushed her shoulder holster.
She shoved him back instantly.
In the dimly lit parking lot, white sand beneath her shoes, ocean breeze brushing against her skin, she gasped for air and watched him. He looked as dazed as she felt.
“You touched—” She broke off and slid her hands into her pants pockets. Her fingers quivered with the need to brush an errant lock of his silky hair off his forehead. She cleared her throat and tried again. “Sorry. My weapon holster. It’s an instinctive thing for a cop to protect.”
Still breathing heavily, his mouth lifted on one side. “Remind me to disarm you next time.”
She shook her head. There shouldn’t be a next time.
And yet could she really imagine resisting the beautiful man standing before her for long? If he wanted her—and by the evidence presented in the past few minutes she could only assume he did—was there any way she wouldn’t be his?
She shivered at the thought.
“Cold?” he asked, stepping forward and bracing his palms beneath her elbows.
“No.” She shook her head. “That’s the last thing I am.”
His hands gripped her waist, and she noted he was careful to keep them away from her holster. “Come home with me.”
She turned away. “I can’t. I need to think.” She’d never been a coward in her life, but she wasn’t sure whether she should run toward or away from this man.
“Think about me?” he asked, his lips against her ear.