ELITE Justice (Guardian ELITE Book 2), page 5
Her eyes darted between the large vehicle idling at the curb and her clothes. “You think I’m dressed okay?” she nervously asked.
He lifted her chin until her eyes met his. “You look beautiful.” He wasn’t lying. The red blouse was cut low enough to show just a hint of rounded breasts that he hoped to kiss later before he took her peaked nipples into his mouth and sucked hard.
Down boy, he warned his growing erection.
Concentrating on her bourbon-colored eyes that seemed larger in the dimming light, she looked younger than her thirty-one years. He almost felt guilty about the in-depth research Alex insisted they run on her. He knew more facts about the woman in front of him than any first date should. Her stellar military record was at complete odds with the idea that she might be planning an attack on the people of the United States. He had to play this right so that she’d invite him into her apartment, and hopefully her bed before the night ended. His intent was to satisfy her to the point she fell asleep. He needed to get his hands on her computer.
“I want so much to kiss you right now, show you how gorgeous you are, but I’m afraid we’d never make it to dinner, and we have reservations.” He forced himself to step back, sliding his hand from her face, over her shoulder, and down her arm to capture her hand. “Let’s go.” If they didn’t get into that vehicle right then, he would take her mouth with his and show her how much he wanted her.
As he helped her into the Hummer, admiring her perfect heart-shaped ass, Jonathan realized that he wanted Gwen as a woman, not just the mission. He settled himself in the soft leather seat right beside her, even though the limo could fit ten comfortably. He wanted to be close to her.
“You never did tell me where you went to college.” It was a good place to start his interrogation. He’d use his research to catch any lies.
“I got my BSN,” she clarified, “Bachelors of Science in Nursing, from University of Saint Mary in Kansas City.”
Jonathan already knew that. She’d left out that she was in the top five in her class. “Is that where you grew up?”
“Close. Leavenworth, a few miles outside the city.” She twisted in the seat. “My turn to ask a question.” She watched her hands as she refolded them in her lap. “I know you work for Guardian Security, but is there more to them than what it says on their website?” She held his stare as though his answer was important.
“I haven’t looked lately,” Jonathan confessed, “but we primarily do corporate remote surveillance, residential security, and personal protection. We’re quickly building a cyber-security team, though that’s out of our D.C. center. We don’t provide security guards, at all, but refer clients to companies we’ve deeply vetted. Our men have a specific skill set that is considerably above local law enforcement.”
Her gaze held his as she noted, “Some security businesses are fronts for private military companies. Especially corporations that employ a lot of special operations types, like it seems Guardian does. Are you involved in covert ops?”
Oh, shit! Jonathan had to tread lightly here. He’d been with Alex, and several other Guardian employees, a few months ago on a mission in Iraq. It sure felt like a military op, but he was there as a Guardian employee. His debrief focused more on maintaining the secrecy of the five women than on the overall mission.
If Gwen was part of a homegrown terrorist cell, what if he told her that Guardian did, at least once, operate in a military-style capacity outside the USA? Would it shut her down completely? Would this date be over? He’d been there and voted yes to Guardian men helping to save Nita from an Islamic State leader. And he’d do it all over again if Alex asked.
“We don’t have any government contracts as far as I know if that’s what you’re asking.” That was the truth. “We do personal protection, but I’ve never been part of any detail protecting anyone from the government. We do a lot of CEO-types.” Then he remembered one incident. “I did work security at a presidential candidate’s rally in Miami last year.” He shrugged as casually as he could. “Maybe they do more of that out of the D.C. office. I’ve only worked in Miami and now here.”
“I see.” Disappointment crossed her face.
Dodged that bullet. Then Jonathan worried that he’d let her down somehow. “Is there a problem with your security system at the diner or your apartment?” His mind shot in another direction and anger rose. “Has someone been hassling you? I can talk to the fucker for you and make him leave you alone.”
She laid a hand on his chest and reassured him. “No. No one is bothering me or harassing me.” She smiled. “But it was sweet of you to jump to my rescue.”
“I’m a lot of things, but sweet isn’t one of them.” He cupped her face and gave her an opening. “You can tell me anything. I’ll do whatever I can to fix it.” Maybe she was caught up in something huge and couldn’t figure out how to get away.
She seemed to contemplate that for a long minute. “Thank you, Jonathan,” then rolled her face to kiss his palm. Heat pumped through his body with the next heartbeat, shoving blood into his already semi-erection.
The vehicle made a sharp turn and Gwen fell into his arms as they pulled in front of the popular five-star restaurant.
She gently sat upright in the supple leather seat. “I’ll keep your offer in mind.”
Jonathan didn’t push for information during the wonderful meal. He kept the conversation light with stories of outlandish requests from people in Miami he’d been a bodyguard for and what he classified as dumb crooks. The meal seemed over too quickly.
He gave Gwen a hand up into the limo and was confronted with her heart-shaped ass once again as she ducked down for the door. It was perfect. He thought about taking her from behind and wondered if she liked it that way. He certainly did.
When he settled in beside her and shut the door, he took her hand.
“I had a wonderful time tonight.” Gwen’s smile was genuine.
“The night isn’t over…unless you want it to be.” Jonathan saw the hesitation in her gaze, then added, “I have something I want to show you.” He hoped his smile was enough encouragement.
“Show me?” she repeated.
“Yeah. I saw it while on a call last week. You’re going to be amazed.” Then he asked, “Trust me?” The question was meant on so many levels.
She nodded. “Where are we going?”
He looked out the windows to get his bearings. He was still learning the city. “It’s only a few more blocks.”
The driver pulled in front of one of the biggest banks in Texas. The high rise was its impressive corporate office. “Come on.” Jonathan took her hand and opened the door.
“I’ll just wait for you here if you need to use an ATM.” Gwen tried to pull her hand away.
He chuckled. “No, sweetheart, this is where it is…what I promised to show you.”
She peered out the door and looked across the wide, paved entrance at a twisted metal sculpture that shot water from all directions. She smiled and stepped down. As they walked toward the front doors, she slowed at the fountain. “I’ve never been one for modern art, but this is really cool.”
“Yes, it is.” He placed his hand at the small of her back to guide her on. They needed to move inside. The guard was waiting for them at the door. “Come on.”
She looked up at him in surprise.
“The fountain is interesting, but what I have to show you is fabulous.” He turned her toward the front doors.
“But they’re closed,” she insisted.
“Not to worry,” he said as they approached the door.
“Good evening, Mr. O’Neil,” the lobby guard greeted, although Jonathan was sure he’d never met the man. “Mr. Robertson has left you a gift.” He circled the security desk and set a silver bucket with a bottle of chilling champagne, two crystal flutes, and a tray of strawberries, chocolate dip, and cheese on the high countertop.
Jonathan was stunned. He’d enjoyed Mr. Robertson’s company last week—after spending hours with the gentleman as his building was cleared and it was determined there was no break-in—but he never expected anything like this when he’d called earlier today to ask permission.
One glance at Gwen confirmed he’d better explain. Not here, though. “If you’ll grab the tray, I’ll get everything else.”
Fighting a grin, the guard led them to the express elevators and unlocked the doors. He stepped in, inserted a key into the panel, and hit the top button. “Just drop the key off on your way out.” Then he stepped out, leaving Jonathan and Gwen alone in the dark-wood, executive elevator. The doors closed and they instantly started to ascend.
“I met Mr. Robertson last week when we received an internal alarm at our Operations Center. For such a high-profile client, I was required to check it out personally.” She didn’t need to know they’d brought in the Guardian version of a SWAT team and cleared each and every floor.
“Does that happen often?”
“That I have to go out on a call? No.” The elevator slowed, and the doors opened. He led the way down the hall and around to the end where he unlocked a door. He went up the stairs first so he could unlock the door at the top.
Jonathan stepped out onto the roof of the bank building and couldn’t stop himself as he breathed in the city from hundreds of feet in the air. He missed the moist breeze from the ocean that cooled Miami every night. Dallas was his new home, and he’d find nuances to cherish about it as well.
Gwen gasped and he spun around. Her eyes were wide, jaw slightly dropped in amazement as she took in the outstanding view. This is what he’d wanted. She deserved something very special, that only a few people ever got to experience.
Satisfied he’d made an excellent choice, Jonathan took the bucket and glasses over to a rusty cocktail table set between two beach chairs. Inwardly he smiled. Gwen had followed him, but her gaze was on the brightly lit skyline, not him. He took the tray from her hands without protest and set it down, filling the small table. “This is Mr. Robertson’s private place. During construction, he’d bring his wife up to each floor as it was finished. She loved the city lights. They’d have a drink, and talk about everything, except his work.”
Jonathan lowered his tall body onto the old, webbed chair and poured the bubbly.
Gwen followed his lead and sat on the edge of the other lounger, facing him. As she took the offered flute, she asked, “Do they still come up here?”
He shook his head. “No. She was diagnosed with cancer and passed away right after they topped out. He still comes up here now and then.”
Gwen looked at the battered outdoor furniture. “He must have really loved her.”
“Yes. I believe he did.” Jonathan didn’t tell her about the tears he’d seen in the older man’s eyes when he spoke of his wife. “They’d been married forty years. He showed me pictures of their three children and eight grandkids.”
He took a deep drink of the effervescent wine, preferring the good scotch he’d shared with Mr. Robertson while they’d sat in these very chairs watching the sun rise over the city.
“Do you want kids?” Gwen’s question struck him like a punch to the heart. That would require a wife, at least in his opinion, because he wouldn’t want kids any other way. He’d come from a solid family, unlike so many of his West Palm Beach friends who had multiple steps on both sides. His parents were pushing their thirty-fifth anniversary. His father ran a mid-sized construction company specializing in marine engineering and his mother had worked for an accounting firm all his life. Maybe that was why he’d struck such a chord with Mr. Robertson. He’d love to give his parents a few more grands to fuss over, although his older sister and younger brother had supplied three already.
“Yeah, someday.” He wondered if they could practice in a few hours but said nothing.
She leaned back and pulled her legs onto the lounge. “I want three, maybe four, but at my age, I’ll be lucky if I get one.”
“You’re plenty young enough to have all four.” He couldn’t stop the next question, “Why aren’t you married with four little ones already?”
She didn’t even look his way as she answered casually. “I’ve been engaged twice. It just didn’t work out.”
How could two men be so stupid as to let this wonderful woman slip through their hands? “Were they idiots?”
“No.” She sighed. “I was.” She rolled on her side to look at him now. “Gregory and I met while we were in college. He was pre-med and so we had a few pre-recs together. We dated for two years, and I was in love. We’d talked about working for Doctors Without Borders, traveling together, helping children all over the world. Graduation week he asked me to marry him…the night before I met his parents. His father announced at supper that he was retiring as soon as Gregory graduated from med school and came home to take over the practice. I overheard his father and mother discussing me later that night. He said,” Gwen lowered her voice an octave, “‘She’ll do, but you’ll have to work with her on her social skills.’” She returned her voice to normal and blasted, “I have manners. And use them.” She went on, “Then his mother berated my sorority and outright said she wished I had belonged to a social sorority rather than an academic one.”
“Tell me Gregory had the tenacity to stand up and defend you.” Somehow, Jonathan knew the other man hadn’t.
“No. By the time we moved out of the dorms a few days later, he wanted me to follow him to med school. He expected me to work, supporting him through school, then we’d move back to his hometown and he’d do just as his father expected. He didn’t give one damn about my dreams of traveling and helping kids.”
Jonathan thought he knew the answer, but asked anyway, “Is that when you joined the Army?”
“Yeah.” She downed the last of her champagne, selected a strawberry, and dipped it into the chocolate.
“And the second loser?” Jonathan refilled her glass.
“A Blackhawk pilot who flew out of—” She skipped a beat, and then said, “the base I was stationed at in Afghanistan. Geoffrey was handsome as a movie star and sweet as Chocolate Silk Pie.” She sipped, then bit the end off the chocolate-covered strawberry. “I was a fool to think he loved me. The second week together he asked me to marry him, claiming that he could be killed at any time and wanted to have someone to come back to after every mission and make the most of life in between. Gave me a ring and everything.” She shook her head and fell silent.
“Did he crash?” Jonathan finally asked.
“No, but his buddy did.” She raised her pointy little chin and took a deep breath. “I patched him up, and before we shipped him off to Germany, the guy told me Geoffrey was married and had a two-year-old back home.”
“Fucker.” The word came out before Jonathan could stop it. He couldn’t think about that deceiving bastard while lying down, so he sat up and moved to the side of his lounge to face her. “Please tell me—”
She cut him off. “He never fucked me again, but I fucked him over, big time. His wife was easy enough to find.” She swung those long shapely legs over the side and faced him. Pasting on a big, fake smile, she splayed her fingers as though posing. “I sent her a picture of him and me, naked in a hot tub, celebrating our engagement in Dubai.”
She’d been lied to and deceived by men she’d trusted. And he was going to do it to her, again. He had to.
Jonathan reached over and took her face in both his hands. He gently laid his lips on hers. She wasn’t timid, as he’d expected, after being burned by so many men. Here was the feisty woman who had grabbed a gun away from another woman as easily as she’d cleared a table. She kissed with a determination he’d never experienced before. Without encouragement, she opened for him. After exploring her mouth, she chased his tongue when he retreated and allowed her access. It had to be the most erotic kiss of his life when he thrust back into hers, slowly running his tongue over hers, like two naked bodies seeking their unique rhythm, they went back and forth.
His aching cock pushed against the zipper on his dress slacks. He needed to slow down. Caressing her breast, he swiped his thumb over her peaked nipple.
Gwen moaned into his mouth and his body needed more. But not here. This was not the place for their first time.
CHAPTER 7
As the limousine pulled in front of her apartment, Gwen didn’t want the night to end. She also didn’t want the kissing to stop. Jonathan could do wonders with his mouth. After making out for what seemed like hours on the top of the bank building, surrounded by the Dallas lights, they’d returned to the limo. And oh my God, he’d picked her up in a limousine! Texas-style, of course, because where else would anyone want a stretch Hummer? They’d continued to kiss the entire way back to their neighborhood. She wasn’t sure if it was one continuous kiss or several dozen, one right after another.
She hadn’t been on a date like this…ever. Jonathan had been such a gentleman, and she really liked him. She could invite him up and she knew they’d end up in her bed. Would that be a bad thing? Did the fact that she wanted this hunk of a man warming her sheets, and her body even more than he had already, make her a slut? Technically it was their first date, but they’d known each other for weeks. Kind of. What the hell. She was over thirty, certainly not a virgin, and knew what she wanted…multiple orgasms. Then she mentally added, from a man. She’d be happy to get even one. It had been too long since a man had made her wet, touched her clit, stroked her un—
“Let me walk you to your door.” Jonathan’s whispered words sounded loud in the silence of the cavernous back of the vehicle.
Gwen suddenly realized they’d stopped. Decision time.
“No.” She could do this. She could ask for what she really wanted. Bravely, she reached down and stroked him through the gray slacks. He’d been hard since the rooftop, but she’d ignored it, unsure what she really wanted. Feeling the length of his hard cock in her hand, she was positive about her next step. “Walk me to my bedroom.”










