Cam eyed the stir-fry concoction that Diane tossed in a large skillet. “Chinese?”
“Thai,” Blair said. She slipped both arms around Cam’s neck and kissed her hello. “Wine?”
Cam encircled Blair’s waist. “Sounds great. Let me change, and I’ll give you two a hand.”
“I’ll help,” Blair said, grinning at Diane’s snort. “I’ll be right back, Di.”
“Sure,” Diane said good-naturedly. “I won’t time you, but don’t be too long because this will be done soon.”
“Promise,” Blair said, tugging Cam by the hand across the living room and into the hallway to the bedroom.
“How was your day?” Cam asked as she followed Blair into the bedroom. She hung up her blazer and removed her weapon and holster. She secured them on the top shelf in the closet and unbuckled her belt.
“It was fun,” Blair said, sliding Cam’s belt through the belt loops and draping it over the rack on the back of the closet door. “I’d forgotten what it felt like to just have fun, even though Stark seemed to be in serious pain.”
Cam laughed. “She’s in for some more, I’m afraid. I saw Savard this afternoon, and she said something about Stark taking her shopping for work clothes.”
“You saw Renée?” Blair asked as she unzipped Cam’s trousers and pulled her shirt free, then began working on the buttons. “How come?”
“I recruited her for my team.”
“Oh.”
Cam covered Blair’s hands with one of hers and tilted Blair’s chin up with the other. “And Felicia.”
“That’s good. They’re good people.”
“But?”
Blair shook her head. “Nothing. It’s just…” She smiled a little crookedly. “Goddamn it! I’d gotten used to you and the rest of them being on my detail. Now I’m not going to know what you’re doing, and they will.”
Cam sensed Blair’s real concern that in this new position there were things they would not be able to discuss. They’d worked hard to overcome the twin obstacles to communication between them—Cam’s natural reluctance to share professional and personal information, even when it wouldn’t violate procedure or protocol, and Blair’s deep-seated need to safeguard her privacy, even from those she loved. Now, Cam’s job was reconstructing those barricades, and this time she would be taking some of the important people in Blair’s life behind those walls with her.
Cam eased away and shed her trousers, exchanging them for a pair of sweatpants. She finished unbuttoning her shirt, placed it on the pile to go to the dry cleaners, and pulled on a T-shirt. Then she drew Blair with her to the side of the bed, sat down, and guided Blair onto her lap. She clasped her loosely around the waist and kissed her throat.
“It’s going to take some getting used to, but we’ll manage.” She rubbed her cheek over the valley between Blair’s breasts, inhaling the lingering scent of her perfume on the silk T. “I promise to tell you as much as I can, but right now there really isn’t much to tell.”
Blair combed her fingers through Cam’s hair, then tilted Cam’s head back and kissed her. “Did you meet with my father today?”
“No, just with his security adviser. The president doesn’t really get involved with the specifics of these things.”
“That’s a very subtle way of saying he needs to disavow all knowledge.”
Cam lifted her shoulder. “It’s important to insulate him.”
“Insulate,” Blair mused, remembering how it always seemed as if her father had a shield between him and everyone else, even her. “Yes, that’s a civilized word for it, I guess.”
“Baby,” Cam heard the unspoken fear, “I won’t let that happen to us.”
“When did you learn to read my mind so well?” Blair lifted Cam’s T-shirt and stroked her abdomen.
“Still learning,” Cam said, her voice thickening as Blair untied the string to her sweatpants and slid her hand lower. “Blair. Don’t go there.”
Laughing softly, Blair caught Cam’s earlobe between her teeth and nipped it gently. “Since when?”
“Since Diane’s in the kitchen, and if you make me come, she’ll know just from looking at me.”
“So? She can always tell when you make me come, and you don’t seem to mind.” Blair cupped her hand between Cam’s legs and teased her with one finger.
“She’s your friend.” Cam gasped, and yanked Blair’s hand out of her sweatpants.
“Okay,” Blair murmured, sucking lightly on Cam’s neck. “But only because dinner’s almost ready, and I think Diane could use the company.”
“How is she doing?” Cam noted the fact that Blair had not asked if the issue of Valerie’s disappearance had come up during her discussions with the president’s security adviser.
“As well as can be expected, I suppose. I’ve never seen her hurting so much and so much in love at the same time.” Blair sighed. “I don’t want her to feel like she’s alone in this.”
“She’s not.”
“I know, but she’s afraid to talk to anyone about…” Blair hesitated, realizing they were venturing onto dangerous ground. She wished desperately that Diane would talk to Cam.
Cam felt Blair stiffen and leaned back to study her face. “Did something happen today that she needs to talk about?”
Blair stroked Cam’s shoulder and kissed her quickly. “Let’s go eat.”
“Blair,” Cam caught Blair’s hand as she rose and tried to move away. “What happened today?”
“We agreed we wouldn’t talk about—”
“What we agreed,” Cam said dangerously, “is that what went on between Diane and Valerie was Diane’s business unless she got into trouble.”
“Right.” Blair centered herself, dropped one leg back and rotated her arm in a quick, tight circle, breaking Cam’s grip. It was a standard self-defense move, and if Cam had been expecting it, Blair wouldn’t have been able to break her hold.
Cam’s face darkened, but she didn’t try to stop Blair as Blair started toward the bedroom door. “What we didn’t agree on,” she said to Blair’s back, “and something I didn’t think we’d have to discuss, is what would happen if Valerie involved you in any way. I didn’t think I’d have to ask you to tell me.”
“I’m not involved.”
“Then tell me nothing happened today when you were anywhere around.”
Blair hesitated with her hand on the doorknob. “Don’t, Cam. Please.”
Cam let her go, because she was so angry that anything else she said would likely drive Blair into the streets, which is where she usually went when she felt threatened or cornered. Better she left than Blair. Cam laced her running shoes, grabbed a windbreaker, and stalked through the living room and out the door. She didn’t bother with the elevator, but descended the stairs two at a time. When she shouldered through the door into the lobby, she didn’t even slow down as she passed Wozinski, who stared at her in surprise. “If Egret goes out, don’t lose her. If you do, you’ll answer to me.”
“Yes ma’am,” Wozinski said smartly.
Diane turned to Blair at the sound of the door slamming. “What happened?”
Blair drained her wine glass and refilled it. “Nothing.”
“It didn’t sound like nothing.” Diane turned off the burner and picked up her own glass. “Are you fighting about me?”
“No,” Blair snapped. “We’re fighting about what we’ve always fought about.”
“And what’s that?”
“Cam’s goddamn job and the fact that she still wants to keep me tucked away somewhere. Safe and sound like some exotic animal in a fucking gilded cage.”
“She loves you.”
“That’s not the point.”
“Of course it is.”
“I thought we were past this,” Blair said sadly.
Diane picked up the bottle and her wine glass and gestured toward the living room. “Let’s talk.”
“I don’t want to talk. Let’s drink wine instead.”
“Let’s do both.” Diane tucked the bottle under one arm and wrapped the other around Blair’s waist. “We’re too old to drown our sorrows. I always feel like crap the next morning.”
“Are we too old to pick up strange girls in bars, too?” Blair said as she walked with Diane to the sofa.
“Sadly, I think we might be.” Diane stood the bottle on the end table next to the sofa and settled into the corner. The drapes were open, the room lights off, the city aglow outside. “Is that what you want to do?”
Blair curled up next to Diane, their shoulders lightly touching. “When I’m this angry, fucking someone keeps me from punching walls.”
“Not always. I seem to remember a couple of dents in our dorm room door, way back when.”
Blair smiled thinly. “I wasn’t as accomplished at picking up girls back then.”
“If you want to go out,” Diane said calmly, “I’ll go with you. If you want to find a stranger to fuck your anger away on, I’ll watch your back.”
“I can’t,” Blair said softly. “Goddamn her. I can’t.”
Diane eased an arm around Blair’s shoulders, drew her close, and kissed her cheek. “Then let’s have some wine.”
Blair closed her eyes and tried not to think about how desolate she felt when Cam walked out the door.
Chapter Ten
Cam ran, barely registering the driving rain as she pounded south toward the lights of Union Station. Her windbreaker had no hood, but she didn’t mind the cold water whipping her face and barely registered the steady trickle down her collar, soaking her T-shirt. For the first few blocks, she ran through the nearly deserted streets without thinking, her mind hazy with anger and an undercurrent of sick fear. She hadn’t been an investigator for more than a dozen years without learning how to ask questions that left no room for evasion.
Tell me that whatever went on between Diane and Valerie didn’t happen anywhere near you.
Blair hadn’t answered, because Blair wouldn’t lie to her. And that was answer enough. It angered her that Blair would keep something like this from her, but even more it frightened her that Valerie had somehow made contact and Blair’s security team hadn’t detected it. Because if Stark had known, she would have informed Cam immediately. Cam was certain of that. The ramifications of the scenario were blood-chillingly clear—if Valerie was a target and someone tried to take her out of the picture when she was anywhere near Blair, Blair could become collateral damage. Blair had been unprotected. Blair had been vulnerable.
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