| Excerpt
Five days of sun at Club Med had
painted Ngaire pale bronze, her skin's natural inclination. And she'd
enjoyed the soft rush of cooling air as the ferry skimmed the waves
between islands.
By contrast, the bus ride sucked.
Small, packed tight, with no air-conditioning to speak of, it made her
long to be winging her way toward New Zealand in the relative luxury
of economy class.
For the first time since she'd left San
Francisco, she almost felt homesick for the cool mist that had crowded
the Golden Gate Bridge as she flew out of the good old U.S. of A.
Heaven knows, she wasn't the only one
with problems. The legs of the lanky guy behind her, stretched into
the passage. Four feet of bony knees and ankles invaded her comfort
zone, while he had the nerve to grumble in German to his lady
companion.
Then, like a snowstorm in hell, all her
complaints melted away instantly as she caught sight of the airport,
with its regulation stands of palms edging the road, for the second
time in a week.
Her skin crawled with anticipation,
tightening round her bones until she wanted nothing more than to stand
up and stretch it back into shape. In a few hours she'd be landing in
New Zealand where her grandmother had been born.
The land her grandfather had called
paradise. Though she preferred the words of American author, Zane
Grey, last, loneliest, loveliest. An evocative description that sang
like a siren's call in her ears. Though she had the blood of four
nations rushing through her veins, Ngaire felt ties to none.
Maybe in paradise she would find
herself.
The sigh of air brakes announced the
arrival of a blue bus carrying a yellow hibiscus logo, pulling up a
few yards ahead.
Kel Jellic measured its size with his
eye and did the numbers, reckoning on a twenty, twenty-two seater.
He'd expected to deal with a luxury coach, so this put him ahead of
the game. Maybe his luck had turned.
The bus door swooshed open, folding in
two. A pair of shoulders balanced above a belly like Buddha's, took
its place as the driver lumbered off in a shirt as loud as his bus.
Following him in a jumble of leis and woven palm-leaf hats, a
half-dozen colorful Tahitian women alighted, swaying and giggling as
the driver unclipped the baggage compartment, calling, "Un moment
ma'msels, si'l vous plait, un moment," over one shoulder.
Kel took a few swift puffs of his
cigarette, letting hot smoke roll over his tongue to release through
his nose in short, sharp bursts. Not a sign of anyone resembling the
image he'd built of Two Feathers McKay. "Dammit!" He spat
the word out under his breath. The curse didn't relieve his
frustration.
Tossing the half-smoked butt into a
sand bucket, he moved closer as the passengers dribbled out in slowly
and began to blend. He counted twelve islanders with a filtering of
Europeans, French extraction, going by the casual elegance of their
clothes. Behind the anonymity of his dark glasses, he eyed a tall man
in a crumpled beige suit, heard a smattering of German as the dude
snapped an order, a curse, then a demand at the driver. One more to
cross off his list.
His heart rate picked up. What if McKay
had taken a different route? From the smell of things, their info
could be a red herring. Wrapping his fist round the strap of his bag,
he clamped down on his frustration. He wanted -- no needed -- to be
the one to find the goons responsible for Gordie's death.
The last passenger left the bus,
tightening the thumbscrews on the fear of failure raging inside him.
This was a woman, medium height, with muscles lightly sculpted under
glowing skin. She flicked a long black braid behind her shoulder,
stepping into the remaining space to complete the crescent of
passengers awaiting luggage.
She dropped her small daypack between
her feet and Kel watched her reach high, stretching with all the
athletic grace of a dancer.
Every instinct shouted
"Trouble," with a capital T.
Latent sexual greed slugged him a good
one. He wanted some of that, wanted a taste of the peach-fuzz skin
making his mouth water. Wanted to feel it slide against his own in the
heat of passion, as he sank into her to ease his pain.
He'd heard it could take you this way,
but until now he'd never experienced the need to sublimate grief with
sex. To screw your ass off opposed to crying. Death substituted by
procreation. Lust mollified by this cockeyed piece of home-brewed
psychology, he swung his eyes round the passengers one more time.
Where'n all hell was McKay?
He began circling the crush, his
impatience as obscure as theirs was obvious while the driver dumped
piece after piece from the baggage compartment into a heap on the
sidewalk. Gucci took its chances with cheap blue-and-pink-striped
plastic as the owners pulled their bags from the bottom of the pile.
Lazy movements at the far side of the
crowd snagged his glance and zapped him again. Pushing his sunglasses
back to improve the view, he gazed at the growing distance between the
black crop-top and matching hipster pants, separated by lush skin.
Isolated by her unhurried attitude, she
reminded him of a cat, easing out its kinks as all hell let loose
around it. "Eyes left, Jellic, you're working."
As he scolded himself, a piece of
crimson, hard-bodied Samsonite, defaced by a Chinese good-luck symbol
and propelled by the removal of the one below it, slid from the top of
the heap onto his side of the crowd. Kel took off his shades to read
the gold words glinting on its side, The Blue Grasshopper, Chinatown
San Francisco.
"Now, that's what I call carrying
promotion to the nth degree." It didn't prevent the back of his
neck prickling as he moved in for a closer inspection. San Francisco?
McKay couldn't be that dumb, surely, or that cheap. Could he?
The urge to take a gander at the
address tag was blocked by a red floral shirt he recognized. The meaty
fingers, he'd seen lighting a cigarette, captured the handle and
pulled it away from the rest. He heard the slap of it against the
guy's bare calves as he hopped off the sidewalk toward the back of the
bus, swiping the sweat off his brow through his hair as if the
exertion was killing him.
"Hey! That's mine." The owner
was feminine, unmistakably American and anything but happy.
Simultaneously, but not in order of importance, Kel watched Ms.
Bronze-skin whip off her sunglasses, her shocked gaze, bluer than a
Tahitian lagoon, followed the red shirt, while her pink sunglasses
tumbled from her hand, catching the light.
As their glances clashed, his body
tensed, gearing itself to spring after the thief, then he remembered
who he was and why he was there. Although he hadn't moved an inch, Kel
felt like he'd hit a brick wall. A sensation, every bit as painful, as
her swift expression of disappointment coursed through him. |