The Cutting Edge Read online



  In the dark, an unwilling grin spread over his hard face. Life with Tessa would never be boring. And she’d said that she loved him. She’d marry him without question, whenever he wanted. All in all, it was a very satisfactory plan. He relaxed, hugging Tessa closer to him, her bewitching fragrance tantalizing him as he drifted into sleep.

  Tessa woke first the next morning, made restless by the unfamiliar weight and warmth in her bed. When she opened her eyes, she found herself staring at the back of his head. During the night he’d turned over on his stomach and he was sprawled out on the bed, taking up his share of the bed and half of hers. Her breath caught at the sight of his tousled tawny hair, like a shaggy lion’s, and her heart actually skipped a beat. Love so powerful that it hurt welled up in her, and she’d reached out a trembling hand to touch him before she realized what she was doing and drew it back. Let him sleep. What should she say to him this morning, anyway? How should she act? Surprised, she realized that she was nervous about facing him the morning after. The compulsive passion they’d shared had made them intimate physically, but she was unsure of where she stood in every other way.

  Gingerly, she slid off the bed and grabbed up her robe, quietly leaving the room to take a shower. Her eyes were troubled. She’d told him how she felt about him, but not even in the most passionate moments between them had he indicated that he felt anything for her other than sexual attraction. That was powerful enough, she admitted wryly, standing under the shower head and letting the water hit her full in the face. Her body was tender and achy, reminding her of his strength, reminding her of what had happened between them the night before.

  She paused, her thoughts drifting. It had been good, so good that she’d thought she would die from the sharp pleasure of it. So that was what it was like… . She’d never imagined it would be so wanton, and so exalted. So that was what it was like to give herself to the man she loved.

  When she finished with her shower, she wrapped herself in the robe and peeked into her bedroom, but Brett was still asleep. She went into the kitchen and put on a pot of coffee and sat down at the table, folding her hands on the tabletop and staring at nothing, her thoughts absorbed by the man in her bed and the lovemaking they’d shared during the night. Despite his passion, she sensed that there was a part of him that remained aloof, untouched, some inner core that watched but didn’t become involved. Why did he want so much from her, when he refused to share that part of himself? She didn’t want to hold in her emotions; Tessa was too warmly responsive to constantly rein herself in. She wanted to give him everything that she could, but because of his reserve, she felt wary and uncertain of herself. She didn’t like the feeling. She’d never been the sort of person to be uncertain. She was generally decisive, knowing immediately what she wanted, though she was equally realistic in estimating her chances of getting it.

  She wanted Brett, wanted him with a fierce female need that she’d never before experienced. He’d become as necessary to her as the air she breathed.

  The coffee finished brewing, and as she was pouring herself a cup she heard Brett stirring. Immediately she felt warm all over, and she felt her face flush. Taking a hasty sip of coffee, she burned her tongue, and her hands trembled. She set the cup down before she spilled the coffee all over herself. Stop acting like a teenager! she scolded herself, but not all the scolding in the world could calm her racing heart.

  “Tessa.”

  His early-morning voice was a raspy grumble, and a shiver of response raced down her spine. Slowly she turned her head and looked at him standing in her kitchen doorway wearing only a pair of dark blue briefs. Fascinated by his hard, tough masculinity, her eyes drifted down his body, examining him from head to toe, and not missing an inch in between. Heat began to color her face, caused by a mixture of excitement and embarrassment.

  He’d been watching her expressive face, seeing the open admiration in the way she looked at him, and her bold innocence made him want to pick her up and take her back to bed. Then, incredibly, she blushed.

  He crossed the floor to her, putting his arms around her and easing her against his chest. “Why the blushes?” he asked gently.

  “Last night…I acted so…and the things I said…”

  “And the things we did,” he finished, smiling a little above her head. “Are you all right?” As much as he wanted to make love to her again, he’d felt the delicacy of her body with its slender, aristocratic bones, and he didn’t want to hurt her.

  “Yes,” she sighed, leaning her head against him. Her hands slid around his taut waist, then began to search over the heavy muscles of his back. “A little achy, that’s all.”

  He kissed the tumble of curls on her forehead, then brushed them back, schooling himself to patience. He could wait; not easily, but he could wait. Remembering his plans of the night before, he felt a sudden urge to begin putting them in motion. The sooner he could have her installed at the ranch, the better. “Next weekend,” he murmured, “if I can manage to get free, I’ll take you to the ranch.”

  Her head lifted from his chest, and her eyes sparkled with excitement. “The ranch! I’d like that. But why shouldn’t you be able to get free? Even executives usually get an occasional weekend off.”

  “Usually,” he agreed, smiling at her impatience. “But this isn’t the usual job—” He broke off, frowning at himself. It wasn’t like him to confide in anyone, especially about sensitive matters, but he’d nearly blurted the whole thing out to her. It was one more measure of how close she’d gotten to him, how deeply she’d embedded herself in his thoughts.

  Attuned to him as she was, Tessa felt his abrupt tension. Her smile faded. “Brett? Is something wrong here?” Alert now, she remembered snatches of gossip about Brett Rutland. His appearance usually meant trouble, not for him, but for the people who had to deal with him. He was called the Ax-Man. He found the root of any trouble, and the people causing it were fired. And after talking with Brett the day before, Perry Smitherman had been a basket case. “Perry…is something going on in the bookkeeping department? Is it Perry?”

  Instinctively he moved to cover his slip, though he was uneasy at how swiftly she’d picked up the correct thread. “No, nothing like that,” he murmured, distracting her by bending down to kiss her. He held her mouth under his, leisurely tasting her, until the growing tightness of his body warned him to slow things down.

  The ploy had worked, almost too well. She was clinging to his shoulders, her soft body pliant against him. He could have her now, he realized, and groaned aloud. The temptation was too great. Despite his concern for her, despite the fact that he needed to check in with Evan, he wrapped his arms around her and lifted her off her feet. Instantly her slender arms wound about his neck, and she began kissing him fiercely as he walked back to the bedroom with her dangling from around his neck.

  * * *

  EVAN TRIED BRETT’S hotel room again, and again there was no answer. Frowning, he dropped the receiver back into its cradle. It wasn’t like Brett to disappear when there was work to be done, or not to let someone know where to reach him. Brett was a hard man to know, but when it came to work, he was utterly dependable. This was the first time in Evan’s memory that Brett Rutland hadn’t been there when his job called for him.

  Well, there was no point in worrying about it. Brett could take care of himself, and there was work to be done. Evan began going over the computer printouts again, straining his eyes at the difficult print. The ribbon on the printer needed replacing, too, which made his job that much more difficult. He still had that nagging feeling that he was missing something, something so obvious that he should have seen it from the beginning. One of these accounts was bogus; it had to be. But he’d spent hours tracking the accounts down, and so far every one of them was legitimate; he’d been systematically checking them off his list. It should be getting easier, like the last pieces of a jigsaw puzzle, but it wasn’t working that way. Nothing seemed wrong, yet he couldn’t shake the feeling that som