Secret Service A M M Romance - Tal Bauer
Secret Service A M M Romance - Tal Bauer
Secret Service A M M Romance - Tal Bauer
A M|M Romance
Tal Bauer
This novel contains scenes of mature sexual content.
First Edition
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Edited by Alicia Z Ramos
Copyright © 2022 Tal Bauer
Cover Art by Angela Haddon Book Cover Design © Copyright 2022
Print ISBN: 9798835643240
Published in 2022 by Tal Bauer
United States of America
For Cortney.
This story would not be seeing the light of day without your
unwavering support.
Thank you.
This book is forever yours.
Contents
Foreword
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
R eese
N ow
“S ir ?”
The touch on my shoulder brings me back.
I’d sipped my coffee, set my guys on watch, and told the
team I was taking a power nap. I can be snoring minutes
after downing an espresso. Sleep is sacred to the Secret
Service. It’s practically currency.
Sheridan is there, kneeling beside me in the dimly lit back
room stuffed with bunk beds for agents pulling double shifts.
Soft snores and the rustle of bodies play in the darkness. I
check the time. It’s 1:17 a.m.
I haven’t been out long.
“What’s wrong?” I’m on my feet before the words are out
of my mouth, pulling on my shoulder holster and my suit
jacket.
“We lost contact with Cupcake,” Sheridan says. “They
went dark.”
“What do you mean they went dark?”
We can track the president’s position to within a half inch
across the surface of the planet. It’s impossible for us to lose
contact with him. Besides, in terms of surveillance,
Washington is one of the most blanketed cities in the world.
The FAA and NSA can name the insects that fly in and out of
DC airspace, that’s how controlled this postage stamp of real
estate is.
What Sheridan is saying doesn’t make sense.
Sheridan’s face is cast half in shadow and bathed in red, a
dull murmur of light thrown from the single low-watt bulb
we keep in the bunk room.
This must be a prank. Some old-guard initiation of
Sheridan. Normally I’d be in on the joke, but if they want me
to sell panic to him, they’re getting their wish. My heart is
pounding. My pulse is climbing. And that’s fear in his eyes.
“They went dark, sir.” His voice catches. “Cupcake
dropped off our entire grid. We can’t raise them on the
radio.”
“Fuck.”
The command center is chilly and dim, lit by the blue-
tinted glow of dozens of surveillance monitors, camera
feeds, and televisions mounted on the front wall. Usually it’s
filled with the mumble of voices, the click-clack of laptop
keys, and the buzz of radio chatter and static.
Now there’s a crackle in the air, like electricity sparking
off ozone, and an unnatural stillness. The silence of a room
full of people all holding their breath.
Flames fill the center screen on the front wall. It’s playing
a live feed from CNN, an aerial shot from a news chopper
circling over a section of Rock Creek Park. An inferno snakes
off the road and into the woods in an all-too-familiar crash
pattern.
“Sir.” The voice sounds faraway, as if I’m being shouted
at underwater. “The president is missing.”
Chapter Two
R eese
T hen
B rennan
T hen
R eese
T hen
B rennan
T hen
R eese
N ow
An hour later ,
the flames are finally down to a smolder.
There’s a charred crater surrounding the SUV, and the
ground is obsidian black beneath the soggy foam. Crime
scene tape loops through the trees and around the roadway a
hundred yards out in all directions. Parts of the tape
withered in the heat, falling to the ground in dabs like yellow
candle wax.
The fire burned white- and blue-hot, hot enough to
destroy the reinforced frame of the SUV. Melted ballistic
glass lies in puddles.
Whatever ignited blasted right through our millions of
dollars of safety measures that should have prevented exactly
this from happening. Everything that made that vehicle a
fortress turned on us and created this horror show.
We control the scene with an iron fist. Every alphabet
agency and law enforcement unit that isn’t us is out of the
park. DC Metropolitan police are clustered outside the gates.
Three FBI teams are cooling their heels at our checkpoint
and complaining over the radio. A company of Marines has
come to reinforce my agents holding the perimeter.
No one, not even the FBI, is daring to cross our line.
Incandescent anguish pulses from each of my agents.
Our friends are dead.
Our president is—
Brennan is—
I can’t think the word.
Instead, I watch our forensic team move over the fire-
ravaged crash in their blue coveralls. Secret Service
investigators from Uniformed Division huddle on the road,
measuring a fifty-yard skid of burned rubber leading to the
SUV’s death roll into the gully.
Searing heat still rises from the wreckage. The chemical
tang of the foam has lodged in my throat. Grit crunches
between my molars. Ash, debris, human remains, I’m not
sure.
Sheridan and I stare at the crash, backs to our vehicle,
leaning into one another.
My sanity is disassembling, and the longer I smell
charred flesh and taste bone dust on the back of my tongue,
the closer I am to coming irrevocably apart. This is a
moment that will never cauterize, a tear in my soul that will
go forever, into a black beyond that will envelop the rest of
my existence.
A calcined skeleton hangs upside down over the melted
dashboard.
Fire does strange things to a body. Muscles boil and twist.
Bones snap and fracture. I can make out what looks like an
arm pulled close to a burned rib cage.
Another body, only barely recognizable as human, lies
beside the driver’s door. Were they ejected in the crash? Or
did they try to crawl for freedom before they were overcome?
The rear passenger compartment took the brunt of the
blaze. There’s nothing left but melted steel and ash finer
than sand.
Snippets of my training fall out of my memories. Human
bones burn at 1,500 degrees Fahrenheit. It takes three hours to
burn a human body completely. Less if the temperature exceeds
2,000 degrees.
“Agent Theriot?” Detective Hudson from Uniformed
Division calls.
He’s squatting at the start of the burned-rubber skid.
“These burnout marks,” he says, pointing to the initial
darker, heavier deposit. “They were made while the vehicle
was stopped.”
Henry should have seen nothing but his headlights
gliding on the blacktop as he wound through the trees. The
park was closed. There would be no reason for Henry to stop.
Even if a deer had picked the exact wrong time to cross,
Henry would have only eased up on the gas and drifted the
wheel.
Sheridan hovers behind me. He’s breathing fast, little
puffs that sound like an animal in distress. Henry was his
best friend, his mentor, and now he’s watching a forensic
team separate fragments of blackened bones from the dirt as
they collect what are most likely Henry’s remains. “Why
would he stop?”
I shake my head. “Henry wouldn’t have stopped. Not for
anything.”
“I’m telling you, sir,” Hudson says, “these marks were
made by a stationary vehicle. The excess rubber”—he points
to the thicker layer on the asphalt—“indicates the wheels
spun out before gaining traction.”
“Our SUVs are all-wheel drive. That’s impossible.”
“It is possible if the vehicle was reversing at high speed
and then quickly shifted into drive while slamming down on
the accelerator. That’s part of our evasive driving training.
We minimize stopping time, but with that shift, there’s
milliseconds where the tires can spin out.” Hudson points to
a separate deposit twenty yards in front of us, parallel lines
of black rubber. “That’s where he slammed on the brakes.”
Hudson knows how fucked this situation is, how we need
to get everything right. The investigations into what
happened here will go on for years. Tonight will burn down
everyone and everything. Careers are ending. Mine, for sure.
Which is fine by me, because the best part of my life—my
unexpected everything—is gone.
“I can’t tell you what happened,” Hudson says carefully.
“I can only tell you what the evidence shows. Agent Ellis
braked there, reversed at a high rate of speed, and then
accelerated so fast he left a fifty-yard burnout before losing
control of his vehicle and going over the side.”
Why, Henry? What did you see?
“Thanks. Good work, Hudson.”
Hudson’s eyes skate over the smoldering wreck in the
gully. His jaw clenches. He moves off before I can say
another word.
“Sir?” the pathologist, June Ahn, calls from the passenger
side of the SUV. “I’ve got some things you need to see.”
Sheridan and I pick our way to the crash. The ground is
slick, and my shoes sink into the mud. Behind me, Sheridan
slips.
Up close, the odor is dizzying. Smell is the recognition of
particulates in the air. I’m breathing death, the burned
molecules of my friends’ bodies. My lover’s body.
The heat is unbearable. Sweat rolls down my temples and
the back of my neck as I kneel beside Ahn. She’s taking
photos of the inside front passenger door, next to the
skeleton hanging upside down in the seat. The seat belt has
burned away, but the fire melted this body to the frame,
joining tissue and bone and steel.
“What do you have?”
Ahn takes another photo before tucking the camera into
her chest pocket. She pulls out a pencil and a notepad and
shows me a full-page sketch of the open passenger door
beside us.
“Do you see the honeycomb pattern of the burn damage?”
Ahn points first to her sketch, then to the interior of the
door. “That’s the ballistic shielding. It’s stronger than
Kevlar, and it has a much higher flash point. For us to see
this extensive burn damage in the shielding, we’re looking at
an extremely high-temp fire, one that was almost certainly
caused by accelerants.”
Accelerants. Bordel de merde.
“What we don’t know is whether those accelerants were
accidentally or purposely introduced. Ammunition or
incendiaries already present could have cooked off or
detonated during an initial, smaller fire before growing into
this.”
“We keep our SUVs stocked with over three thousand
rounds of ammunition and six thermite grenades.”
“That could be the culprit. We’ll know more once we’ve
processed the vehicle in our lab. Now—” Ahn points her
pencil at the fire-cracked hip bone of the skeleton, then at
one of the ash-filled honeycombs and a dark smudge in the
middle of a hundred other smudges. “Take a look right
here.”
There’s a reason I didn’t go into forensics. I can’t see
anything, and if I stay down here much longer, I’m going to
fucking lose it. I’m hanging on to this earth by a thread, the
fastenings of my sanity fraying into tatters. My soul is
flaming out, and all I want is to crawl into a hole I’ll never
come out of. Scream myself raw, until my heart gives up and
what’s left of me can merge with what’s left of Brennan.
“What am I supposed to see?”
“There’s a bullet hole, sir. A bullet traveled through this
body and embedded in the interior panel of the passenger
door.”
Ahn found this from a single smudge and the scorched
pelvis eight inches from my face. “Is the bullet recoverable?”
“Yes, sir. I can see the base of the projectile. It looks
significantly deformed, and I won’t know until I examine it
whether that’s from being discharged or from the fire.”
“Could this be a stray round that cooked off?”
Ahn points to the melted dashboard, the windshield
frame, the destroyed center console. “I’ve found
ammunition cook-off in these locations, but none in the
door.”
Sheridan is breathing over my shoulder. Mud clings to the
knees and elbows of his suit. He peers at the smoke-hidden
bullet hole, his eyes huge. “If a shot was fired inside the
SUV…” His voice trails off.
Puzzle pieces are coming together. Burnout marks on the
roadway above us and a bullet embedded within the
president’s—my lover’s—SUV.
This is something that scares the CIA director, Brennan had
said when he asked me to put together this clandestine
excursion. No one can know about this meeting. No one at all.
I can count on my fingers the people who knew Brennan’s
movements tonight. We kept the circle small.
Not small enough, apparently.
Someone knew where Brennan was going.
And someone knew why he was going to meet the CIA
director in the middle of the night.
Someone has murdered—
I am going to hunt them to the ends of the earth, and the
last thing they see will be my face and the barrel of my gun.
“There’s one more thing.” Ahn lowers her voice. Her eyes
dart to Sheridan, then back to me, asking a question.
Whatever she wants to tell me, she’s nervous about it.
“Sheridan is on my command team. He knows everything
I know.”
Ahn’s mask sucks inward as she takes a deep breath, and
her gaze flicks to the melted passenger compartment. To
Brennan’s seat.
I’m not ready for this. I’ll never be ready for this. The
world sharpens: the still-cooling metal groaning beside me,
the squish-slick footfalls of the forensic techs. Voices
speaking softly. And the smell, God, the smell.
For a moment, I can make out Brennan’s cologne, laid on
the tender skin of his neck beneath the curve of his jaw. I
kissed him there, months ago, right over his pulse. He’d
looked at me with so much hunger, so much yearning, so
much terror—
“This is only a preliminary determination…”
Ahn is trying to brace me for the truth, though I already
know no one could have survived this inferno. How many
agents have lost the president on their watch?
How many agents loved their president the way I loved
mine?
No one. No man could ever love another like I love
Brennan.
“We need to get the vehicle in our lab, process it all the
way down to the frame to be sure, but we’re pretty confident
—”
“Ahn, I already know. The president burned to death.”
Images flash across my mind, film negatives that melt in
flames. Did Brennan try to escape? Did he call my name? Did
he hope I’d rescue him? Did he die knowing I’d failed him?
She shakes her head. “The human body is highly resilient
to fire. Even when a body is cremated, bone remnants still
need to be ground down, and that’s after three hours of
sustained heat. In a fire like this, there’s always something
left behind. You can see for yourself: there are remains in the
front of the vehicle.”
“But the fire was worse in the passenger compartment
—”
“I don’t think it was hot enough for complete
obliteration.”
“What are you saying?” Sheridan’s voice quakes.
“We haven’t found any evidence of human remains
anywhere other than the front passenger seat and outside
the driver’s door,” Ahn says carefully. “I don’t think anyone
was in the rear of the SUV when the fire destroyed the
vehicle.”
Ahn’s measured tone, her steady, precise manner. She’s
not reaching for fairy tales, not trying to create false hope.
The world tilts, the sky slides sideways, and the ground
comes up fast at my face, until I brace myself against the
still-searing frame of the SUV.
Evidence markers stick out at odd angles, yellow placards
with black numbers that swim in my vision. I reach out with
everything in me, as if my love could pull Brennan’s life out
of this destruction and re-form him into flesh and blood,
paint his smile back onto his face and reignite the light in his
eyes. If he were in front of me, even in pieces, I’d know—
damn it, I would. A love like we had doesn’t just burn away.
I feel nothing.
“If President Walker wasn’t in the SUV,” Sheridan asks,
“then where is he? Was this a murder or an abduction?”
No one says a word.
“Who else knows?” I finally ask Ahn.
“Only my team.”
I count them up quickly. Seven people, plus her. “Keep it
that way. Tell no one.”
She nods. She gets what this means and what will happen
next.
My radio chirps to life. “SAC Theriot, come in.”
“Go for Theriot.”
“Sir, the director needs you at the White House. Now.”
Fuck. Dawn is still an hour away, but the early morning
news channels are surely playing the fire on loop, along with
our blitz across DC and the Secret Service lockdown at Rock
Creek Park. The media will demand answers, but we have
nothing to give them.
Less than nothing, in fact.
We have to keep a lid on this. Brennan was targeted,
clearly, and the reason is buried somewhere in that CIA
briefing. Until we know more, nothing can get out. We need
every advantage, every angle.
Because if Brennan is out there somewhere, his life will
depend on how we respond and what we do next.
And I must bring him home.
“Roger,” I reply as I climb up the muddy embankment.
Red and blue lights turn the park into a macabre carnival.
The road is still choked with fire engines and Secret Service
vehicles. “Has the vice president been brought to the White
House?”
“He arrived an hour ago, sir. He and the director want to speak
to you, ASAP.”
“I’m on the way. ETA…” I can’t begin to figure out how to
extricate myself from this parking lot. “As soon as I get out
of here. I’m at the scene.”
“Roger, sir. I’ll let the director know.”
Sheridan is at my side, rubbing his muddy palms on his
suit pants. His eyes are ruby red as he grinds out, “I’ll
drive,” and jogs to the driver’s side of my SUV.
It takes seven minutes to clear a path out of the park.
Sheridan flips on the sirens as soon as we’re past the
perimeter, and he gets us back to the White House almost as
fast as he got us to the scene.
He takes us down to the basement, parking the soot-
stained SUV in the drop-off zone next to the No Parking
sign. I’d chide him, but the presumptive president and the
director of the Secret Service are waiting for us two floors
overhead.
Still, I take a moment before opening the door.
“Sheridan…”
“Yes, sir?”
I shouldn’t take him with me. He looks like his whole
world has collapsed, far from professional or inspiring for
our bosses.
But we’re walking into an inquisition, and I’m not strong
enough right now to face that alone. I’m unbalanced, about
to slide into a gloom so bottomless I may never find my way
out.
So I’m keeping Sheridan with me.
Selfish, yes, but I don’t give a shit.
He may be my anchor through this storm, or the last tie
I’ll sever before I follow Brennan, wherever he’s gone.
“Stay with me.”
Chapter Seven
B rennan
T hen
I ’ve kept my secret for over twenty years, but after six
weeks at the White House, I might be about to blow
everything. Tear my carefully constructed image apart and
burn it to the ground.
I’m the president, but the White House doesn’t feel like
home. The West Wing belongs to the staff who bring my
administration to life, and to the people who keep our
government churning, and to—
Reese is everywhere. He’s in the hallways checking on his
agents. He’s striding across the West Wing basement,
badging me into the Situation Room. He’s grabbing coffee
from the mess, or checking in with Matt about my schedule,
or we’re crossing through the hallways at the same time,
always frustratingly out of reach.
He’s in the Oval Office once a week. Every Wednesday, he
delivers a Secret Service brief to start off my day. Fifteen
minutes with Reese, one-on-one. Just him and me in that
huge, empty office, the ticktock of the grandfather clock
pressing in on us.
There’s a charge in the air when we’re together, a
crackling expectancy, almost an urgency. Unspoken words
clutter my mind. At the same time, there’s distance that
wasn’t there when we joked on the elevator down to the
bunker. We’d shared smiles that night, and he’d welcomed
me home. He was the first to say that to me about the White
House.
Now, something is coiling between us.
Every time Reese crosses my path, I’m a little more on
edge. My mind is a churning ocean, my thoughts the roar of
the surf, pounding on the beach that holds my buried
secrets.
Why him? Why, after all these years of discipline, is this
the man who makes me dream, and ache, and hunger again?
I barely know him. Certainly not well enough to risk
everything.
But something is pressurizing those moments where we
come together, where our worlds brush and merge and then
part. We’re like gases ready to combust, waiting for a spark.
This is the last, the absolute last thing I should be
thinking about. The desolate reality of my love life is
inconsequential, and my wonderings about the occasional
hitch in Reese’s breath, the slide of his eyes to mine when he
thinks I don’t notice, are going nowhere.
Nothing is going to happen.
My fingers tap the edge of my desk on board Air Force
One. We’re twenty minutes out of DC, a little over an hour
from landing in Ottawa. It’s my first international trip since
the inauguration. I’m strengthening a long-standing alliance
and starting down the path I promised during the election.
The fires of war are threatening to engulf the world again.
Several years ago, Russia invaded Ukraine, seizing it in a
brutal stranglehold. Their military razed entire cities, wiped
towns and villages from the earth, destroyed Ukraine’s fields
and factories. Millions of refugees poured out of the country,
and millions more continue to struggle under Russian
occupation.
We don’t have a full count of how many lives have been
lost. Famine, disease, and unending war now rock Ukraine in
a humanitarian catastrophe that’s only growing worse.
Now, Russia is making new threats. A conflagration could
break out at any moment. The world is on edge and turns to
America.
What is foreign policy if not a series of promises? We
combine hope and action and believe we can make a
difference by showing up, by being there, by holding out a
helping hand.
We don’t always get it right. My own life has been scarred
by American overreach, and there’s a hole in my existence
where a person should be but isn’t.
If America is better, though, what we can achieve in the
world will be better. Good works start close to home and
grow from there. Strength is best measured against
kindness.
What good are American principles if we abandon them?
Do democracies stand together, or do we fall separately? Can
a single dictator intimidate the world into allowing tragedy
to continue?
What is the best response, when every action ratchets this
crisis tighter and tighter?
I pace and debate myself, arguing in circles.
Between pondering a looming world war and an attraction
that is bringing my psyche to its knees, I’m stranded in a
bleak mental moonscape.
My thoughts slide back to Reese.
He’s on board. Right now.
He was part of the welcoming committee when I came up
the steps. Reese, Henry, the pilots and copilot, my chief
steward, and my chief of staff. I’d held his handshake longer
than I should have.
“Agent Theriot, always a pleasure to see you.”
He didn’t let go right away, either. And there was that
hitch to his breath again, that slight hesitation before he
answered. A little bit of his Louisiana accent slid out: some
Southern drawl, a hint of old world French. “I’ll be running
your detail on the ground in Ottawa, Mr. President, and I’ll
brief you when we’re closer to landing.”
“I’m looking forward to it.”
And that was that.
That’s where it should stay. There’s no future to the
questions my subconscious throws at me after midnight.
What would his lips taste like? What would my name sound
like, spoken with his accent?
Restlessness rides my nerves raw, and I’ve already paced
the length of this office a dozen times.
How soon is “closer to landing”? When will Reese make
his way to my office?
I want to see him. For more than a second or two in the
halls, more than fifteen minutes in a once-weekly briefing.
Presidents aren’t allowed to have crushes, especially not
on men, not when that rainbow ceiling doesn’t even have a
dent on it. My secret is a hand grenade with the pin already
pulled.
The smart choice here would be to distance myself from
Reese. Frustrate myself at night with impossible fantasies,
and never take it further than a few furtive strokes of my
hand and his name muffled into my pillow.
But is it possible we could be… friends?
Can I trust myself to try?
Or is Reese an addict’s temptation, a bottomless glass of
whiskey offered to an alcoholic?
“H ey , D anny .”
“Mr. President.” Danny, my chief steward, freezes in the
galley, eyes wide and still reaching for the coffee grounds
next to my elbow. “Sir, if there’s something you need, all
you have to do is ring.”
“I’m just stretching my legs.” I slouch against the
doorframe, hoping Danny will follow my lead. He doesn’t. In
fact, he’s embarrassed when I pass him the tin of coffee, and
he sets it down and makes a point of giving me his full
attention.
“There are a lot more interesting places than the forward
galley, Mr. President.”
“Every place is interesting to me.”
Finally, I get a tiny smile.
“Have you flown with Agent Theriot before? Do you
happen to know how he takes his coffee? I’ve got a meeting
with him in a few minutes and I’d like to bring a gesture of
goodwill.”
Danny arches an eyebrow as he fires up the coffee pot.
“Usually it’s the Secret Service trying to butter you up, Mr.
President, not the other way around. I’ve flown with Agent
Theriot for six years and served him gallons of coffee. I’m
happy to bring you both fresh cups once your meeting has
begun.”
“I’m going to grab him a bit early. Hence the peace
offering.”
“You don’t need a peace offering, Mr. President.”
But he grabs two paper travel cups. He makes mine first—
adding cream until it’s a perfect off-white—and then
Reese’s.
Reese takes his coffee straight, no cream, no sugar. Of
course.
Danny snaps lids on the cups and passes them to me.
“He’s not picky. He can drink coffee strained through an
engine block if he has to.”
“Let’s hope he never has to.”
Danny lets me make a dignified escape. I head aft. Half a
dozen flight attendants pass me, each one greeting me with
“Mr. President” and a smile.
Air Force One is a lot of things, but it is predominantly
beige. The president flies in style, yes, but that style is
solidly 1980s, as if the whole plane had been outfitted by La-
Z-Boy salesmen with one color sample. Beige leather
recliners, beige carpeting, beige paneling. The only pops of
color are the blue curtains and the presidential seal—which
is stuck on everything within eyeshot.
The portside hallway continues, and beyond a privacy
curtain, the press pool tags along in their section. On my left
is the Secret Service compartment, a huge area mostly
barricaded behind bulkheads and locked doors. I know
there’s an armory, an office, and bunk beds, as well as a
ready room that opens to the corridor. That’s where I slow—
And hear something unexpected: laughter.
That low rumble is Reese’s voice, too. It unsteadies me, as
if the plane had just dropped ten thousand feet, leaving my
stomach an altitude above.
What does Reese look like when he laughs? I’ve only seen
his professional smile, but there must be a bigger, truer one
inside him.
My steps are light, almost silent, as I round the bulkhead
and face the ready room. But my stealthy approach doesn’t
matter. Not a single person notices I’m there. They’re all
facing away from me.
Reese is sitting on the armrest of one of those beige
leather chairs, counting off with the rest of the agents
crowding the room, while a man and a woman pump out
pull-ups on the rail of the overhead luggage compartment.
They’ve both shed their suit jackets and dress shirts and are
in their undershirts with Kevlar vests strapped on top. Her
muscles ripple as she hauls herself up and lowers back down,
faster than her male counterpart.
“Twelve! Thirteen!” Reese claps as he laughs. My eyes
lock on him, on his easy, open smile.
Across the ready room, the man is slowing. At sixteen
pull-ups, he drops to the floor, hanging his head as the
woman grinds out four more before dropping to her feet. She
barely looks winded, and the whole compartment erupts,
agents clapping and whistling and slapping her on the
shoulders. She hugs the man she beat, and that’s when she
sees me.
“Mr. President!” She comes to military attention, and the
rest of the agents are practically cartoon characters leaving
light trails behind them as they snap from human beings
having fun to no-nonsense professionals. Smiles vanish, and
they’re back to the square-jawed, furrowed-brow monoliths
I see in the West Wing. Personality, gone. Fun, erased.
Disappointment weighs me down like a boulder sinking
into the ocean.
Reese stands in front of his team. “Mr. President! Did we
disturb you?”
The agents behind him have clenched so tight, I don’t
think any of them will shit for a week.
“What was that?”
Silence. Agents eye each other. Reese is out in front, and
no one is coming to help him.
The explanation comes slowly. “Agent Nuñez”—Reese
motions to the victorious woman—“is trying out for CAT,
sir. Agent Roberts challenged her to a friendly pull-up
contest.”
I meet Nuñez’s and Roberts’s gazes. Nuñez has deep
brown eyes and black hair pulled back in a tight ponytail.
Roberts is tall and muscular, but obviously she was his better
in pull-ups. Both are flushed, cheeks and ears red. They’re
standing there in their undershirts and vests, sweat beading
on their skin. “I don’t think I could get ten pull-ups out.
Much less sixteen or twenty.”
Reese flinches.
None of them has relaxed. They’re going to sprain
something if I stay any longer. “Agent Nuñez, I hope to see
you on CAT in the future.”
Nuñez cracks just enough to smile. “Thank you, Mr.
President.”
I’m still holding two cups of coffee like a delivery boy.
“Agent Theriot? Would you join me?”
The temperature in the ready room plunges. Eyes slide to
Reese, despairing, sympathizing. Like I’ve invited him to his
own execution.
“Of course, Mr. President.” He grabs his padfolio from his
seat and follows me. We leave behind what feels like a
funeral.
“I brought you coffee.” I make my first mistake when I
hold it out to Reese. My second is the smile I offer.
Reese reacts like I’ve berated him, not tried to wipe the
slate clean. In the quiet of the hallway, I hear his teeth
scrape. He doesn’t take the coffee, and I remember—too late
—my initial briefing from Secret Service Director Britton:
agents will never accept anything handed to them on duty.
Their hands must always be ready in case they need to draw.
We’re safely on Air Force One, but Reese still won’t
accept. Instead, he pushes my office door open so hard it
ricochets off the bulkhead and slams into his back as he
waits for me to pass.
I take my seat. He shuts the door and faces it, not moving.
His shoulders are clenched, hard and tight beneath his taut
suit jacket.
Four steps bring him in front of me, where he pops to
attention, hands clasped, chin straight, eyes fixed above my
head. Probably glued to the presidential seal on the wall.
The two coffees stand like statues on my desk. “Agent
Theriot—”
“I take full responsibility for what happened, Mr.
President. There’s no excuse for our behavior. I hope you
won’t let what you saw detract from your confidence in my
agents’ abilities.” The muscle in his cheek is firing. “It was a
joke that got out of hand—”
“It looked like fun.”
His eyes dart to mine, then away, lightning fast.
“Please, Agent Theriot. Sit?”
It takes him a moment. He may only comply because he
thinks it’s an order. He’s letting nothing out, not a hint of
emotion. There’s no eye contact, lingering or otherwise. He
might be burning holes in the bulkhead behind me with that
glare.
“This coffee is for you. It may be a little cold, but I can
heat it up.” There’s a microwave in the bulkhead behind me,
which makes me laugh, because who on this plane would
ever allow me to microwave anything on my own?
“Mr. President—”
“Were my predecessors complete assholes?”
He frowns.
“You’re on Air Force One, the second most secure place in
the world. My schedule has me here in my office until we
land. You were on downtime, and I surprised you and your
team. The fault is mine. I’m sorry.”
It’s my turn to glare at a bulkhead behind his ear. What
was I thinking?
All we need is a ticking clock, and it will be just like we’re
in the Oval. Except worse, because at least before there was
eye contact, and he spoke to me. I thought there was
something friendly between us. Maybe there was, but now,
he’s making it abundantly clear that he wants no part of it.
Or me.
“I was ahead of schedule.” My hand waves across my
empty desk. Everything I needed to review for this trip is
read. “I thought we could get our briefing out of the way.”
He nods, once, and busies himself with his padfolio,
flipping through papers as the cabin air recirculates.
I’ll watch him this last time, allow my eyes to linger on
the arch of his cheekbone, the angle of his jaw. The hint of
stubble he’s sporting, even though it’s barely noon. Maybe
it’s late to him. The Secret Service works on shifts. Maybe
he’s fourteen hours into his day. There’s so much I want to
know about Reese, so much I want to ask him—
Dark eyes rise and catch me. His gaze pins me to my seat.
“Sir?”
I shake my head. He’s trapped me with his stare.
“Is something wrong?”
Yes. Everything is wrong, because I can’t get you out of my
head. “No, I—”
There’s so much I wish I could say. Thoughts I’ve had for
the first time in decades, musings about what it would be
like to make another man laugh, or sigh my name, or look at
me with desire as he takes my hand. You made me dream
again, if only for six weeks.
It’s a cruel gift, because I haven’t wanted like this since I
buried my secret and made my vow, but at least I know this
part of me isn’t dead. Maybe in the future there will be
another man who steals my breath away, like Reese does
right now.
Or maybe this is a once-in-a-lifetime chance, and I’m
watching it fall away.
Not in this life, but in another one. You’re not meant to find
him—whoever he is—in this life.
I fiddle with my coffee cup, thumb flicking over the lid,
my eyes drawn down to the intricacies of plastic and
cardboard. We’ll get through this brief, and this trip, and
then I’ll close the door on my fantasies.
“How are you settling in, Mr. President?” His voice is
soft, the words rolling gently on his accent.
My gaze flicks up. My thumbs still. “You were right. It’s a
huge adjustment. I’m still tripping over things.”
“Such as?”
I arch my brows. “Well…” His cheeks flush, and he flips
pages in his padfolio again as he breaks eye contact. “I feel
insulated. Isolated, too. Your team’s pull-up contest was the
first honest-to-God joking around I’ve seen since moving
into the White House.”
“Your time is valuable, Mr. President. No one is supposed
to waste it.”
“It’s not a waste to get to know the people around me.”
His nostrils flare as he looks up. His pupils have
darkened, and the way he’s gazing at me is making my
vertebrae hum.
“Am I that different?”
Reese’s forehead bunches into a frown.
“From the presidents before?”
Different is always the adjective used to describe me. But I
thought that meant my policies, my beliefs, my background
that took me into the world’s most brutal hellscapes before
coming back to try to change things so those horrors could
never happen again. Not that I was afflicted with a human
decency that my predecessors had managed to escape from.
He takes his time answering. Shuts his padfolio, too, and
studies me. I don’t want to blink, don’t want to sever this
connection with him, but if he keeps looking at me like this,
he’s going to start unearthing things.
“You are,” he finally says. “You are very different.”
Not just my policies, then.
I break our stare, my eyes sliding away, to the window
with its open shade. Sunlight pours on the carpet beside
where Reese is sitting.
“For example—” Reese reaches for the second cup of
coffee and pulls it across the desk. “No principal, ever, in my
entire career, has brought me coffee.”
“I’ve never thought twice about doing things like this.” I
nod to the coffee. “But now, all of a sudden, I’m not
supposed to.”
“Different isn’t necessarily bad.”
His words slide through me like a blade. Different, in this
case, is bad. I’m playing with fire, with my truth and my
secrets. What I want, I can’t have. I knew that years ago, and
nothing has changed. “I appreciate your being patient with
me. New presidents must be challenging to get used to.”
His smile is slow, unfurling like a sunrise on rippling
waters. I spy the glint in his eyes before he speaks, but I have
no context for it. I don’t know what it means when they flash
like that, or when his dimple burrows into the side of his
cheek. My heart turns over, speeds up, and that’s going to
stay in my dreams for a few weeks—
“Truthfully? This new guy is not too bad.”
“Not too bad.” I’m too stunned to react. He grins, and
something else enters the office. That buzz, that hum, that
pressure building, but even as I feel it, his gaze shifts,
darkening with quicksilver shadows.
No, not yet. Whatever it is, whatever kindness he’s
granting me—hold on. I don’t want to let it go.
“I’m going to have that put on my headstone. ‘He was not
too bad.’”
His smile returns, full force. “My official report to the
director says you are compliant with Secret Service protocol
and there have been no complaints from the agents assigned
to your detail.”
“Now you make me want to run away, just to be a little
noncompliant.”
“Don’t you dare, Mr. President,” he drawls. “I’d hate to
have to arrest you.” A wink. “Or change my report.”
I’m beaming, and my cheeks are starting to ache. We’re
back to staring at each other—staring into each other—and
each inhale feels like it’s scraping me raw. Questions gallop
through me. What does it mean when you smile at me? Why are
you looking at me like this? Why haven’t you looked away?
“How’s living in the Residence?”
“It’s… big.”
His eyebrows rise. His expression turns sardonic, and, if
I’m reading this right, playful in equal measures. Is he— Is
this—
Stop overthinking. “I know how lucky I am to be there, but
it’s a lot of house for one man. I’m not used to more than
two bedrooms.”
He nods. I think he understands, which… Does that mean
he’s single as well? Used to living alone, to the space a life
for one needs?
But why would Reese be single? There must be someone
special, someone as searingly smart and intense as he is,
someone who gets to soak in so many more moments than
I’ve managed to sneak from him.
He waits until I’ve taken a sip before he says, “At least
you have the ghosts for company.”
Coffee nearly paints the bulkhead, nearly shoots out of
my nose. “The what?” I croak when I’ve recovered what I
can of my dignity.
“The Residence is haunted.”
“Bullshit. The Lincoln bedroom is just a myth.”
“That old chestnut, sure. But, sir, I’m from New Orleans,
and we take ghosts very seriously down there. I know a
haunted house when I see one.”
My lips part.
“Didn’t anyone warn you, Mr. President?”
“Anyone? You mean like the head of my detail?”
He grins. He’s absolutely shameless. “President Truman
used to say he could hear the ghosts of Presidents Lincoln
and Jackson moving through the hallways at night. He said
the floorboards creaked and the drapes moved on their
own.”
“I’ve heard creaking.”
“President Harrison was the first president to die in the
White House. He haunts the third floor. Seems like every few
months, I have to send an agent up to check out reports of
rattling and banging around.”
Now I’m catching on, my shock shifting to chagrin as I
try to give as good as he is dishing out. “Right. Harrison’s
ghost. Surely not your snipers on the roof playing a prank on
the new agents on the detail.”
His eyes hold mine. He doesn’t speak, not right away. The
air between us is vibrating. “Now that you mention it, Mr.
President, it does seem to always be the new agents who are
sent on ghost sweeps in the White House attic.” His voice is
a honey-drawl, smooth as silk, slow as summertime.
This is what I wanted. To peek beneath the outer layers,
to see the man I’ve caught glimpses of from the shadows.
See his unbridled smile, hear his playful chuckle. Listen to
him say something that isn’t procedure or a report.
I want to know him, because I haven’t known any man in
a meaningful way since I cut my heart out all those years
ago.
Too risky. Too dangerous. This is what could happen if I
let myself slide into my secrets. Wanting. Craving.
Falling.
Stop now, while you still can.
If I still can.
Reese takes a hearty sip from his coffee. Our eye contact,
finally, breaks, and I drag in a shuddering breath as
discreetly as I can. I’ve shredded the wrapper on my own
coffee cup. Paper pulp covers my lap like I’ve tried to
disassemble the cardboard into atoms.
“Would you like to go over the security procedures for
when we land, sir?”
For the next ten minutes, Reese details the timeline of our
arrival and the choreography of moving me through the
world. “After the cocktail reception, we’ll depart the prime
minister’s residence at twenty-one hundred and return to
Air Force One. Pushback is scheduled at twenty-one thirty,
with wheels down in Washington at twenty-three hundred.
Marine One will bring you to the White House at twenty-
three forty-five. Any questions, Mr. President?”
If I met you in another life, would you let me take you to
dinner?
No questions. His brief is as professional and tight as he
is. Beneath my feet, the deck begins to pitch forward. We’re
on the descent to Ottawa. Our time is almost up.
I watch Reese, and he studies me in turn. And then—
His eyes dart down to my mouth, and lower, to my chest,
then to my hand clutching my coffee in my lap. A moment
later, his gaze slides back up and locks onto mine again.
Surely not. Surely, completely not. Don’t imagine things
that aren’t there. The Secret Service agents in the West Wing
take in every person they meet, eyes scanning from head to
toe and everywhere in between. He’s not checking you out.
Heat waves build inside me. Say something. Salvage this
moment. I have to clear my throat before I can speak. “I, uh,
thought there weren’t any women on the Counter Assault
Team.”
“There aren’t yet. But anyone who meets the physical
standards can try out. Hundreds of agents do. CAT accepts
less than 1 percent of all agents who apply.”
“Is Roberts trying out?”
Another slow draw of that dimpled smile. “Not after
today, sir.”
Silence fills the office again. Questions build. Within me,
within his gaze. They carpet the floor, crawl up the walls. I
ask none of them.
“Thank you. Excellent briefing.”
My ears pop. Across from me, Reese works his jaw,
helping his own along. In a commercial flight, we’d be
stowing our tray tables and buckling seat belts, but I suppose
no one is going to tell me to sit down and turn off my cell
phone and laptop.
He stands, and so do I. “Once we’re on the ground, the
team and I will deplane first and make sure everything is
secure. When you get the signal, you’ll come down the stairs.
Get ready for the cheers.”
“I’ll have my smile and bells on.” I hold out my hand for
his coffee cup. “I’ll toss it for you?”
He hesitates before passing it over. A tiny bump of
turbulence, the first in the whole flight, brings our fingers
together.
This is the feeling I’ve been trying to convince myself was
nothing but my fantasies running wild. That it didn’t happen
when we met, that I made it up, that it was all in my head.
But here it is again: raw lightning and black honey and
midnight blues, bodies moving in harmony, quiet gasps
smothered against shoulders. The glide of a man’s back
beneath my palm, and the clench of my thighs around his
hips. Hands in my hair, my mouth falling open, stubble
scraping along my neck and jaw—
This is what has kept me up at night, this electricity and
the curve of his smile and the flicker of light in those nearly
impenetrable eyes.
He pulls away.
I toss our cups and clear my throat, trying to blink my
brain back to operational.
He stills in the open doorway and looks back at me.
The wheels touch down, burning rubber screeching on the
runway. “Mr. President,” he says. “I’ll see you on the ground
in ten minutes.”
Chapter Eight
R eese
N ow
R eese
T hen
Agent Roberts,
Better luck next time.
Best, Brennan Walker
“Mr. President.” Now I’m smiling. “Are you seriously
shit-talking someone who is supposed to take a bullet for
you?”
“Maybe a little.” He holds up his fingers, pinched
together. “But come on. Even I could see he was outmatched.
He was asking for that trouncing.”
This is the kind of thing that will live in infamy in the
Secret Service. If someone gets video of Roberts receiving
this—and I’ll make sure of that—it will be trotted out at
morning briefings and advance team stand-ups anytime
Roberts takes the lead for the next four years. It will play
behind him every time he’s promoted, and he’ll have to tell
the story again and again and again.
It’s a gesture Walker didn’t need to make, and it will
create incalculable goodwill on my team. It’s a kindness
where none was required or even expected.
“Thank you. This will mean a lot to everyone.”
“You’ll have to describe his reaction to me.”
“I’ll do better. I’ll record it for you.”
He laughs, and I get it. I get how this man captivated
millions. Right now, I want to sit back and forget the world,
spend the rest of the day laughing with him.
The thought catches me off guard.
I can smell Walker’s cologne. Cedar, bergamot, and
amber. It’s dizzying.
His laughter fades, and we stare at each other.
His pulse flutters above the starched collar of his shirt.
Morning sunlight winks through the ballistic windows,
distorted as if the rays are traveling underwater to reach
him. His breathing is even, each inhale and exhale exactly
three seconds. Too controlled, especially for a man who is
squeezing the blood from his fingers. Those brilliant bleu
clair eyes are guarded, ringed with something I can’t put my
finger on.
He hasn’t blinked or looked away. Intensity hums from
him and into me.
I dreamed about his eyes on the flight home from Ottawa.
How they shine, and burn, and how blue can be both ice and
flame.
I should not be dreaming about the president.
Words need to be said, but I don’t know what they are.
The silence lengthens, grows thin. Outside the Oval, two
women laugh as they pass by the Roosevelt Room.
“Thank you for the coffee. Yesterday.”
That’s what I went with?
Another slow inhale. “It was my pleasure.”
Exhale. His lips part. Close. Part again. “Agent Theriot… If
anything I’m doing is making you uncomfortable, please let
me know.”
There’s my out.
I am uncomfortable, but not because of him. No, because
I’m dangerously over the line, already thinking things like
good guy and thoughtful and considerate, and, worse, looking
forward to seeing him again.
Uncomfortable is the way down the list of words I’d use
here. Trouble is, I don’t know what the right one is. Wrong.
Forbidden. Dangerous.
Wild. He makes some deep-down part of me feel wild.
There’s something here, something between us, like the
oxygen we’re breathing is igniting before each inhale.
He’s the president. He’s the job. At best, I’m a distraction
to him, and at worst, he’s a distraction to me. Where we are,
right this moment, sitting so close I can count his pulse and
feel the heat of his body? This is so far off course it’s not on
the maps.
Apprehension is clawing into his eyes. His fingers tighten
around his knee again.
There’s a path I should be walking, steps I should be
taking. Closing this down, whatever it is, and clearing the
air.
“I was actually thinking, Mr. President, that it might be
beneficial to increase our morning briefings to twice a
week.”
I didn’t just say those words. Mon Dieu, I didn’t.
Justification spins in the wake of my senseless offer. “It
might be useful for you to have a closer look at our
operations and procedures. And, from our end, it would be
helpful to understand your needs more, sir.”
I don’t want to spend more time with him to teach him
policies and procedures. I want to see his smile again. I want
to hear his laugh. I want to dig and dig until I understand
why he looks at me the way he does, and what it means when
those looks flip my world upside down.
He hasn’t breathed in twelve seconds. His rhythm broke
on an inhale, and he held his breath as I rambled. He’s
staring at me, his eyes wider, his expression more open than
I’ve seen before. This isn’t President Walker in front of me.
I’m looking at Brennan.
“If you think it would be helpful,” he finally says, “I’d be
delighted.”
It’s going to be something. There’s a match set against
my heart, ready to strike.
He blinks, and the president is back. “Your guidance has
been invaluable to me. I’m very pleased you’re running my
detail. Who else could seamlessly manage my security across
two countries and countless agencies?”
“Anyone on my command team, sir. It’s our job.”
“But who could do it all and referee a pull-up contest?”
And there’s that grin again—
There goes the twist inside me. The air thickens. I can’t
look away.
He checks his watch. “Should we begin our meeting?”
We’ve blown past five minutes, ten, fifteen. Time flies out
the window whenever we’re together. I clear my throat,
straighten. “Of course. Sorry, Mr. President, I’ve gone way
over time.”
“It’s not a problem. Our conversations have been
highlights of my days.”
There’s nothing I can say to that, nothing that’s fit for
public or my career.
Outside these walls, the West Wing is waking up. It’s shift
change. People are arriving for their workday. Meetings are
beginning.
The post-travel debrief is straightforward. I recount the
trip and the SNAFUs that occurred—other than the pull-ups
on Air Force One, none—and he gives his input on what
worked and didn’t work for him. Sometimes these meetings
turn into bitch sessions, where the president rails at the cage
the Secret Service builds around him. In the past, I’ve
nodded, yes-sirred, and changed not a single thing about our
operations or procedures.
Brennan has no complaints. “Please express my gratitude
to your team for a job well done.”
“Yes, sir.”
We rise together, and it’s the first time our gazes drag
away from each other. Suddenly, he can’t look at me, and he
busies himself with buttoning his jacket and clearing his
throat as he escorts me to the Oval Office door. Everything is
backward as he pulls the door open for me. “Thank you,
again.”
“My pleasure, Mr. President.”
I’m across the hall and into the Roosevelt Room before
the door to the Oval shuts behind me, before my agent on
post can call my name. The Roosevelt Room is empty until
nine a.m., when the deputies from the cabinet are meeting. I
know this place inside and out, know every room, every
schedule, every agent on duty.
I know how to take down an armed attacker within a
three-foot kill zone, how to pull an unconscious man from a
sinking car and swim him to shore. I can sling lead
downrange into perfect bull’s-eyes every time I pick up a
weapon.
But I don’t know what the hell is going on now.
Chapter Ten
R eese
N ow
R eese
T hen
B rennan
T hen
I should be. If not with the world, then with the serious
business of getting over Reese, but… I’m taking the evening
off. From both, it seems.
Me: What’s the Secret Service training center like? I’m imagining
something impressively high-tech.
Reese: Grim
Me: Looks like some of the camps I stayed in when I first went
overseas.
Reese: Yeah?
I share more with him in one text than I have with most
people who ask me about my time working abroad.
Me: Harrowing.
Me: It was enlightening in a cruel way. I saw how far people can go
into their own hatred, and what happens when they throw their
humanity away.
It looks like I’m trying to get over you. Of course, I don’t type
that. I snap a picture of the sunset off the Truman Balcony,
capturing the end of my chaise lounge, my leggings-
wrapped calves, my bare feet. The sky is peach and
periwinkle and streaked with wisps of clouds. Cherry
blossom buds hover on the trees, and the lawns are brilliant
once again. The roses around the South Fountain are in their
first scarlet bloom.
Reese: Wow. I’m jealous. I only had traffic for a view on my drive up
tonight.
Reese: I was, but we had a threat come across the squeal sheets,
and I wanted to go check it out personally. That ate up my Saturday.
I missed check-in and the physical fitness test. I’ll do them tomorrow
morning, before the first weapons re-qual.
Me: A threat?
God, I can hear him when he types that, hear the lilt and
drawl, the slow rumble of his voice moving through those
words.
I want to know everything about him. I want to know
what sunsets look like where he’s from, what schools he
went to, how he spent his summers growing up. I want to
know where he got the freckles across his nose and how he
learned to smile so laconically, like he’s the one with the
perpetual punchline. What shaped him as a man? Why is he
crossing paths with me, right now?
Me: There’s not much going on here. The only thing I have planned
is another round of yoga.
A few things are not in my file, but that’s not the right
thing to say to Reese. He’s a man who likes to have all the
answers. Maybe I can convince him yoga is the deepest
secret I’m carrying.
Me: I did thirty minutes of asanas before coming out here. It helps
settle me.
Usually.
Reese: Wow. So are you like Madonna? Can you do all the fancy
poses?
Reese: I’ve seen a lot of powerful people do a lot of things, but not
one of em has ever done serious yoga. I don’t think most of the
people I’ve worked for could put their BlackBerrys down long enough
to focus.
Me: No BlackBerry with me right now.
Reese: You’re going to give your body man a heart attack if they
need to find you.
Reese: You’d be surprised. There’s been some pretty epic hide and
seek games we’ve played there over the years. Not all of them on
purpose.
Me: Well, I’m alone when I do my yoga, but I’ll see what I can do
about trying to get you picture proof.
Me: I’d say good luck, but you definitely don’t need it.
Reese: Handgun qual passed. I can hit a target. How’s the office?
Me: Drill?
Reese: Wow
Reese: I just tried a regular handstand and, well, I’m glad I wasn’t
being recorded. I don’t think my body has moved like that since I was
four years old.
Reese: I’m going to have to update your file. And I’m going to have
to amend that report of mine to the Director. Unknown yoga activity
must be investigated.
Me: How’d the drill go? Did you save the president?
Reese: I did. She lived to teach ethics tomorrow morning and score
the next round of our marksmanship quals.
Reese: Yeah. A good one. She taught me when I first came through
the academy. She thought I was a knucklehead, and told me so, and
still thinks it’s wild that I’m running the detail these days.
Reese: A lot of the guys do. They went out tonight, but I’m wiped. I
ate in the cafeteria with the trainees.
Reese: One of the only good things about coming out here for
training is there’s a damn good Cajun place nearby. I’ll grab dinner
there at least twice. Maybe three times.
Reese: Christa can whip up some Cajun food for you. She’s not half
bad, for someone not from the bayou.
Me: I’m cooking for myself these days. Is that something else not in
your file?
Reese: It’s not. I have to say, I’m impressed at your evasive skills.
Me: I do. And Matt is kind enough to take my leftovers for lunch.
Have lunch with me. I want to say it. We could eat on the
patio off the Oval, behind the wisteria and the climbing roses. I
could hear your laughter in the sunshine.
Reese: Very healthy. Looks better than the mystery meat and
mashed veggies I ate.
R eese
T hen
It’s almost nine p.m. Not that the Situation Room and the
West Wing aren’t all hours, but most presidents try to keep a
regular schedule. Walker has been better about it than others
have, and now that I’m seeing a few more sides of the man,
I’m starting to understand why.
Me: No yoga?
Walker goes quiet, which is unusual. But, I’m not the only
thing on his plate. A thousand things could have come up in
the past minute to drag him away, from his dinner to an
outbreak of nuclear war. If I were there, I’d know. Maybe I’d
be beside him on the way into the Situation Room. Or maybe
we’d be having this conversation in person instead of over
text. In his kitchen. In the Residence.
Leave him alone. Let him do his job. Which is being the
president, not texting me because I can’t get him out of my
mind.
Not even a minute passes before I text him.
Brennan: Yes.
I wait.
His text bubble reappears, three dots bouncing. Stopping.
Bouncing. Stopping.
Me: The Service can arrange an outing for you whenever you want
to go back to California.
Me: Hey, so. Just a thought. There’s a jogging track around the
South Lawn. Would you want to run it? It’s not like running beside
the ocean, but it’s better than a treadmill.
Me: I do.
Brennan: We can?
Me: Sure.
Me: I love the South Lawn. It’s private, and the gardens out there
are great. I’ll take any excuse to hit that track.
Me: We could run when I get back. Do you want to meet up in the
mornings?
Me: I’ll try and think up something else, too. I know we cage you in.
Brennan: Goodnight.
My heart jackhammers.
Me: Yes.
Me: Yes.
R eese
T hen
R eese
N ow
R eese
T hen
I t ’ s a hard week .
Brennan and I can’t find time to meet outside of the West
Wing. We run again Tuesday morning, then keep our
scheduled Wednesday morning briefing—and spend the
whole time hiding our held hands between us on the sofa,
even though we’re alone. We dare each other with silent
looks to be the first to risk a kiss right there, in the Oval
Office, where anyone could walk in.
But we don’t.
Thursday night, I try to make a date happen, and I sneak
into the Residence with a pizza, hoping to surprise Brennan
with a candlelight dinner in the kitchen. Rumblings from
Russia in the Arctic Circle keep him locked in the Situation
Room until almost four a.m. and I fall asleep with my head
pillowed on my arms and wake up to his kiss on the back of
my neck.
We eat cold pizza while holding hands, too tired to talk,
and I kiss him good morning and then crash in a bunk bed in
the command center until the shift change. Brennan is back
in the Oval four hours later.
Henry never says a word about our morning runs. He trots
out his crew of agents three times to stand guard and keeps
an eagle eye trained on every footfall Brennan and I share.
He has to know.
But if I ask him if he does, that will make it real, so I
don’t.
We keep each other in check with our bullshit back and
forth. He buys me a larger Dri-Fit T-shirt. I buy him a coffee
mug that says, “World’s Best FBI Agent.” He calls me an
asshole.
I move Sheridan to Henry’s shift, pairing them, and then
catch them in almost every corner of the White House as
Henry tries to pour a hundred years of history and training
into Sheridan’s young mind.
Friday night finally arrives, and with it, our illicit run.
I’m calling it a date in my head, even though it’s as far
from a date as we can get. Henry and Sheridan are here, and
even though the eyes of the world won’t be on us for the next
sixty minutes, their eyeballs will be more than enough
scrutiny.
I meet Brennan on the curve of the Grand Staircase, and
we spend thirty seconds up against the wall, kissing each
other until my bones melt and my skin burns from the
inside. I want to say fuck the run, and maybe he does too, but
we can’t.
We slip through the East Wing and escape to East
Executive Avenue. Henry’s SUV is idling in the dark spot on
the camera feed that runs back to the command center.
I pull open the rear door for Brennan and climb into the
back after him. Sheridan is in the passenger seat,
traditionally where the lead agent sits.
There’s nothing traditional about what we’re doing.
“Mr. President,” Henry says, meeting Brennan’s gaze in
the rearview mirror. “Where to tonight? Chinese takeout? E
Street theater? Flight to the Bahamas?”
“That last one sounds pretty good.”
Henry puts the SUV in drive. He eases us down East Exec,
the closed avenue between the White House and the Treasury
Building. It’s a delivery access now, with gatehouses at each
end. The uniformed officer waits for Henry to roll down the
window and checks his ID before he lowers the barricades.
“Have a good night, Agent Ellis.”
“Ah, the work never ends, Mike. Just grabbing a coffee.
I’ll be back in a bit.”
“You work too hard, sir.” Mike waves as Henry pulls out
onto E Street.
Brennan and I are pressed together, our hips, our knees,
our sides, our shoulders, all touching. Brennan’s fingers
thread through mine, hidden in the darkness.
“Drop us off on Fifteenth by the restrooms,” I tell Henry.
He nods. The air inside the SUV thrums. We turn right on
Fifteenth and glide across Constitution. At eleven p.m., the
Mall is nearly deserted.
Henry pulls into the bus turnout next to the Washington
Monument, and Sheridan and I scramble out of the SUV at
the same time. I hold Brennan in the vehicle, scanning left
and right as Sheridan takes the block position.
“Clear,” Sheridan says softly.
Brennan’s waiting, gaze glued to me. Henry’s watching
him in the rearview.
My heart lurches at the shine in Brennan’s eyes. Damn it,
I want to take his hand, pull him to me and lay one on him,
right here beneath the glow of the Washington Monument
and all these snapping red, white, and blue flags.
Brennan tugs his beanie down and slides out of the SUV.
Henry pulls away as soon as the door closes. He’s going to
loop around the Mall while we pound the pavement. I draw
his route in my mind, calculate the distance and speed he’s
driving. He’s never going to be more than thirty feet away.
We take off at an easy pace, Sheridan and me bracketing
Brennan. We keep to the lit path and pass two National Park
police on patrol, but they don’t give us a second glance.
Brennan never came to DC before moving into the White
House. This is all new to him, and I play tour guide as we
come up on the World War II Memorial, then move past Ash
Woods and the Korean War Memorial. At night, the
illuminated soldiers look like ghosts moving beneath
moonlight and mist. It’s a haunting, beautiful sculpture, and
we slow to take it in.
I clock Henry’s SUV passing on Independence as we turn
toward the Lincoln Memorial.
Brennan challenges Sheridan and me to run up the steps.
We’re all huffing and puffing at the top, and I call for a quick
break as Brennan stands in front of Lincoln. He’s having a
moment, and I watch the anxiety, the uncertainty, the fears
and the pressures of the office, tangle in his eyes.
How did I ever believe this man was unreadable? I can
sense his emotions as if they’re my own.
When we start jogging again, we head to the Vietnam
Veterans Wall.
Brennan slows, then stops.
I told Henry to expect this. He’s idling on Constitution,
waiting for my signal.
“Right here.”
Thursday, when Brennan was meeting with a
congressional group in the Roosevelt Room, I slipped out of
the White House and came to the Mall on my own to find this
name. Now, my fingers trace the carved black granite letters.
Alexander Walker.
Near the end of the war, Brennan’s father, a medic, left
on his third deployment a month after Brennan was born. He
was shot down on a medevac mission six months later.
Brennan’s mother remarried when he was five, and when he
was sixteen, she gave him the letters his father had written
to him—one every day—from the day Brennan was born
until the day Alexander died.
Brennan lays his hand over mine, over his father’s name,
and then leans into the memorial, his forehead pressed to
the summer-warm stone. His breath fogs the glossy surface
as he speaks, whispering words that belong to them alone.
He’s brought me into this moment between him and his
father.
I move without thinking and run my fingers down his
sweaty back. Brennan’s muscles are taut as a strung bow,
and his shoulder trembles beneath my touch.
When he’s done, Brennan lifts my hand to his lips,
kissing my palm where his father’s name touched my skin.
Beside us, Sheridan is as still as the Three Soldiers. The
lights curve around him, accentuating the hollows of his
face.
He turns away, giving us privacy we don’t deserve. He’s
textbook careful, though, keeping his sight angles perfect.
Damn it, he really is a good agent.
What’s Henry thinking, watching what just happened
from the SUV?
Pure adrenaline fuels me for the rest of the run. We go up
Constitution under Henry’s overwatch, turn on Fifteenth and
then again on Madison, past the Smithsonians and toward
the Capitol.
I can’t tear my gaze away from Brennan.
His eyes slide to mine. Lock. The world fades, the lights
like unfocused glitter, the sounds of traffic and our feet on
the pavement like far-off rain. There is nothing but him and
me.
Sheridan coughs. The world returns in a rush.
We turn on Third at Union Square and then on Jefferson
and head back to the Washington Monument.
Brennan starts asking Sheridan questions: where is he
from, how long has he been in the Service, what did he do
before? Sheridan is polite and professional, not the
starstruck young man he is with me and Henry. He gets
Brennan laughing quickly.
Score one for the rookie. Well done, Sheridan. Get on the
boss’s good side by making his lover laugh.
Henry waits for us back at the turnout, and we jog right to
the SUV and pile in. He’s got the air conditioning on max and
cold bottles of water ready. There are towels in Sheridan’s
seat, and he passes one to Brennan and one to me as Henry
swings up Seventeenth and glides us right back through the
E Street barricade while he waves at Mike.
He parks in the same dark spot in the East Wing parking
lot. He gives Sheridan a hard look, and then they both climb
out of the vehicle. The overhead lights stay off when the
doors open, and Brennan and I are left alone in the darkness.
Brennan drops his forehead to my shoulder. His exhale
brushes over my bicep, and his fingers trace a path up the
center of my quad. “How did you know?”
“Secret Service. We know everything.” I kiss the top of his
head. “I know you. Or, at least, I’m trying to.”
He cradles my face in his hands and looks me in the eyes.
His thumbs paint circles on my temples. His skin is cold
from the air conditioning, but he’s still hot from the run.
“I…” Whatever he’s about to say escapes on a sigh.
I close my eyes—
His touch vanishes as the SUV door opens. Henry stands
in the open door, his back to us. “I’m sorry, Mr. President.
There’s an alert over the radio. You’re needed in the
Situation Room.”
“Shit.” Brennan slides out of the back of the SUV. Our
eyes meet, and hold, hold, and it seems like he’s about to say
something—
Henry shuts the rear door, whisper quiet, and then guides
Brennan to where Sheridan waits at the entrance to the East
Wing. All three disappear into the White House.
My hands reach for the empty air left behind in Brennan’s
wake, trying to hold on to the memory of his touch.
Brennan’s warmth is a fading echo, and the leather seats
shift and settle in his absence. I can still smell him, the
clean, sharp scent of his soap and deodorant layered with the
sweat from our run.
Merde, I want to bury my face in his chest, kiss my way
up his neck, slide my fingers into his hair. Push reality away
and revel in this man and the discoveries we’re unearthing.
But he’s gone, and I’m alone.
More than alone. I’m left with a sinking realization. It fills
me, slides inside me.
Our lives do not belong to us.
And I am stealing this man, greedily snatching moments
for myself. He’s needed in so many ways, meaningful ways,
and I’m—
I’m risking the world for the taste of his kiss.
B rennan
T hen
R eese
T hen
B rennan
T hen
R eese
N ow
R eese
T hen
H enry must have gotten calls from the New York field office
bitching about how I’m running roughshod over the team up
here. Look, I don’t care that the radios were checked last
week. Check them again. Check the evacuation routes. Check
the hotel staff’s background clearances. Check the motor
pool and the garages. Check—
He puts Sheridan on an afternoon flight to JFK with
orders to glue himself to me.
I’m secretly thankful. When I’m alone, I’m spinning.
Quiet reminds me of the layers Brennan cloaks himself in.
We meet up outside the hotel, and I take Sheridan on a
walking tour of the security arrangements before he can set
down his bags. The Secret Service is taking over ten of the
fifty-five stories in one of the most exclusive hotels in the
city, one mile from United Nations headquarters, for two
weeks.
Brennan will be staying here for two nights.
The New York office has already run through the hotel
with sniffer dogs and metal detectors, electronic sweepers,
and portable X-ray machines. After Brennan’s suite was
declared clean, the entire floor was sealed, and an agent
stands guard twenty-four hours a day.
When Brennan arrives, the floor will be his alone. The
detail is divided between the floors directly above and below
Brennan. The next seven floors below all belong to the
president’s staff.
Sheridan is as wide-eyed as ever. Before this, the closest
he ever came to any presidential action was washing the
SUVs for the motorcade.
And our illicit midnight run.
We’re the first out-of-town agents to arrive, and our
rooms are right next door to each other. “Ditch your stuff
and change. I’m taking you to dinner.”
I’m going a mile a minute, trying to stay busy, trying to
keep my mind racing. Anything to not think of Brennan.
What is Brennan doing right now? Is he, like me, reliving
our stolen time? Playing each kiss we shared backward and
forward, or remembering the fog-shrouded afternoon when
we memorized the shape of each other’s lips?
Or has he realized the two of us are nothing but a bad
moon climbing in the darkness?
I talk Sheridan’s ear off at a pub on Madison, trying to fill
him with good advice. He hangs on my every word. As he
downs his third beer, the hero worship in his gaze sharpens
and shifts.
I would not have recognized the look in his eyes before.
Before—before I saw that shine in my own reflection,
before I struggled with the rising flood of my own attraction
to Brennan—I would have blown right over the way
Sheridan’s eyes drop to my lips, how his cheeks and the
hollow of his throat turn as pink as a Gulf sunset. The way he
tries to cover and conceal his feelings, shy and bold in equal
measures.
The flames of his attraction brush over me across our
table.
Realization happens in a moment and passes just as
quickly.
Sheridan heads to the bar for another round. I watch him
go, seemingly alone in a sea of people, and after he orders,
he drops his head. His shoulders slump. His eyes slide closed
for three heartbeats before the bartender returns with our
beers.
He’s back to smiles and irrepressible good humor by the
time he’s returned to the table.
If I hadn’t spent the past few months waging my own war
against my subconscious, battling my own attraction to
Brennan, I wouldn’t understand.
But I do, now.
We down another round, talking about sports and traffic
and the best places to grab a burger or a cheesesteak around
the White House. Safe topics, neutral topics.
An hour later, I pay our tab, and we head back to the
hotel. He’s tipsy and quiet, and I catch his eyes sliding
sideways toward me in the reflections of taxicab windows
and Duane Reade storefronts.
We’re back at our rooms before he speaks again. “Sir?”
Merde. “Yes, Sheridan?”
Nervousness rolls off him. “For a while now, I’ve wanted
to tell you…” He swallows. Hesitates. “Thank you,” he blurts.
“I never thought I’d be here, like this. I’d heard so much
about you before we met at RTC, and getting to work with
you now, and learn from you, is…” He laughs like he can’t
believe he’s standing here with me, saying these words. “I
have you to thank for everything. You gave me a chance. So…
thank you.”
“Don’t thank me. You got yourself noticed by being damn
good. You put in that work.”
“But—”
“Wait until we’re back in Washington before you tell me
this is your dream come true. We’ve got a year’s worth of
work and six days to do it. Sleep well tonight, because it’s the
last time you’re going to get more than three hours
horizontal until this is all over.”
There’s still heat in his eyes, and his gaze burns me as we
stand in the hallway staring at each other. His pupils are
obsidian pools.
Finally, he nods, says, “Goodnight, sir,” and slides his
keycard into his door.
“Goodnight, Sheridan.”
S ix days fly by .
Sheridan and I work our asses off. There are no more
nights out, no more shared beers, and no more ignited stares
and accidentally revealed attractions.
When Air Force One lands, I send Sheridan to join Henry
as they bring Brennan to the hotel.
Getting the president in and out of Manhattan is a
Faustian bargain with physics. It doesn’t matter how well
you control the streets and intersections, there’s always
going to be a diversion, or a crash, or a detour. Helipads have
fallen out of favor in the past three decades, and where it
used to be easy to fly the president from LaGuardia to any
place in Midtown, now we’re stuck with our mile-long
motorcade and an aneurysm whenever we move the
president around the city.
The presidential party descends in a frenzy, groups of
twenty spitting out of the hotel’s elevators on each floor,
clutching their cell phones and garment bags and arguing
about what restaurant to go to. They have the pick of the
city, but Brennan will be heading to the UN’s rooftop bar for
the welcome reception.
I’m rooted in the command center, one of the hotel rooms
we’ve taken over. All the room’s furniture is gone, and rows
of folding tables covered with laptops fill the space. Agents
monitor a hundred intercept feeds across the spectrums. The
lighting is dim, a blue glow that gives all of us a pasty hue.
Front and center on our surveillance monitors is
Brennan.
His arrival is organized chaos, a thousand moving pieces
with no room for error, but my people move Brennan from
the motorcade to the elevator and into his suite in under a
minute.
He’s usually a perfect blend of Left Coast casual and
presidential authority. Running leggings and a T-shirt. Jeans
and a Henley. Effortlessly sensual suits neatly molded
around his body. He carries the office of the presidency and
the power he holds with a serene strength that comes from a
stoic confidence built into his being. He’s as sure of his
principles as he is of breathing, and it’s so damn attractive.
That is not the man I see on the monitors.
He slumps in the elevator, leaning against the back wall
and crossing his arms as he stares at the floor. The line of his
shoulders is broken, and the steel in his spine seems to have
vanished. He sighs, scrubbing his hands over his face. Dark
circles smudge the skin beneath his eyes, and there are
hollows under his cheekbones.
I escape to the motorcade. We’ve pulled up the secondary
fleet while the primary refuels and resets after making the
airport run. Fifteen SUVs idle in front of the hotel, with
thirty NYPD motorcycle cops loitering on either end of our
vehicles to push back traffic and the flood of humanity. The
whole street is blocked off. There are supporters and
protesters beyond the barricades with signs both for and
against Brennan.
Tomorrow is the General Assembly. He’ll address the
whole body of the UN, and the day after, he’s chairing a
head-of-government-level session of the Security Council.
In the history of the UN, such a high-level meeting has only
happened a handful of times.
This is the defining moment of his presidency. This is
what will determine how his administration is remembered.
He is on the cusp of the two most important days of his life.
Stay away. You are bad for Brennan Walker, and for the world.
If he and I make a misstep and history sinks its teeth into
him, his legacy will be tainted forever.
I’m not worth that. I’m not.
Henry takes the lead slot for the motorcade to the UN, and
I ride with Nuñez in the chaser SUV.
There’s a rhythm to these gatherings. Every nation’s
security service negotiates with each other to establish their
leaders’ arrival time. Well, everyone except us. We dictate
what we’re doing. You either play ball with the Secret Service
or we’ll shove the baseball bat up your ass. We told the world
when Brennan was going to arrive for the evening reception,
and we are on time to the second.
So why the fuck is Russian president Nikita Kirilov
climbing out of his presidential limo at the UN exactly when
we were supposed to arrive?
The damn Russian security contingent has filled the
entire UN plaza with its motorcade, leaving us dangling out
on First Avenue, completely exposed.
And they seem to be in no hurry to move.
Within two seconds, six of our SUVs form a phalanx
around Brennan’s vehicle, creating an immediate protective
blockade, and I jump out of the chaser car and run toward
the UN plaza. Sheridan and Nuñez appear on either side of
me as the CAT team surrounds Brennan’s vehicle and those
six flanking SUVs with their weapons drawn.
President Kirilov loiters at the entrance, and until he’s
safely delivered inside the UN proper, everyone in his
motorcade appears to be under orders to remain where they
are. Never mind my agents losing their shit or the NYPD
screaming at the Russian drivers to move their asses. They
are as immovable as ice.
Russia’s version of the Secret Service is just better-armed
FSB agents. As we near their motorcade, the rear guard, a
team of five dressed in head-to-toe black and carrying
MP5s, shift their fingers to their triggers.
“Get me Anatoly,” I bark at the nearest Russian. “Now!”
Anatoly Anisimov, the FSB chief in Washington and my
Russian counterpart, saunters toward me down the flank of
the motorcade. He’s a large, stocky man, and it’s easy to
underestimate him as just another middle-aged Russian.
Three years ago, in London, I watched him deck one of his
own team, lay the bear of a man out cold with one punch. He
stepped over the unconscious body, and, at a flick of his
wrist, three of his agents dragged their former coworker
away.
He’s dressed in a black-on-black suit and has grown a
beard since I last saw him—close-cropped and shot with
silver—but instead of looking older, he looks more sinister.
“Anatoly, what the fuck? Move your motorcade.”
“President Kirilov has not entered the UN yet.”
“Your president isn’t supposed to be here. You know
President Walker is arriving.”
“President Kirilov insisted.” He shrugs as if to say
everything is out of his control. It’s the Russian way: nothing
is ever their own fault. “My president is interested in
speaking with your president.”
Warnings go off like a five-alarm fire inside my skull.
That sounds like a fucking disaster. “No. Absolutely not.”
“President Kirilov insists.”
“I don’t give a shit. Move your fucking motorcade now.”
“It’s a good day, no? President Kirilov might enjoy the
sunshine for a while.” Anatoly turns away.
Putain de merde. I radio Henry on a private channel and
relay Kirilov’s demand. “It’s up to Ranger. I can throw down
out here, or he can come out and say hello. I’m up for option
number one, but Ranger has to make the call.”
“Roger. Hold one.” I wait. Henry’s talking to Brennan in
their SUV. Is Brennan as furious as I am? Is he furious with
me for letting this happen?
“He’ll come out.”
“Merde. Roger that.” I call Anatoly back and give him the
word.
“See how easy this is to resolve?”
“Tu me fais chier, Anatoly. We’re not fucking done here.”
He gives me a two-finger salute and a smirk as he walks
back up his motorcade to speak with President Kirilov. I
watch them talk. Watch Kirilov smile, as warm as a viper.
There’s another man listening at Kirilov’s side.
Recognition hits me like a sledgehammer. Just what we need,
another FSB heavyweight within spitting distance of
Brennan.
The Russian drivers start to crawl forward. “Prepare to
move.” I’m speaking into my wrist mic, radioing the detail.
“Give me a double wedge around Ranger as soon as he’s out
of the limo. There are a lot of ’em out here, and I’ve got eyes
on at least three BOLOs. Do not let yourselves get
surrounded.”
The Russian motorcade inches clear, but all the other
Russians stay, surrounding their president and cluttering up
the drive. Nuñez, Sheridan, and the CAT team start bellowing
for the Russians to “Back the fuck up.”
They shuffle in place and don’t move.
To make it even worse, the media is here. There’s at least
twenty cameras and three live video feeds. They’ve got a
directional mic to capture what happens between Brennan
and President Kirilov, too. Fucking vultures.
I order Sheridan and Nuñez to set up by the doors to the
UN. If we need to, we’ll drag Brennan out of there and get
him in the building, then bar the Russians out. Two of my
advance teams are already inside. The lobby team is keyed up
and ready to go, and I can see their silhouettes through the
glass. Hands on their weapons, ready to draw.
We park the motorcade back twenty feet and fill the gap
between us and the Russians with the CAT team. CAT is
armed to the teeth, each man carrying six weapons and
enough bullets to shoot out every window of the UN. I don’t
want today to be the day the Secret Service gets into a
firefight with the FSB, but if it happens, our guys will come
out on top.
But this isn’t academic. It isn’t a thought exercise. It isn’t
training. I’m not at fucking Rowley, and there isn’t an
instructor in that SUV. This is Brennan’s life the Russians are
fucking with. Fury blazes inside me. My vision narrows to a
pinpoint.
Henry is on Brennan’s right as soon as he’s out of the
limo. I’m on his left, taking the lead slot, my body placed
squarely in front of Brennan’s heart.
The rest of the detail fall into a double wedge formation,
building a wall between Brennan and the armed FSB agents,
who seem equally protective of their president.
Kirilov moves first, striding through his agents like he’s
parting the Red Sea. “President Walker,” Kirilov says.
Anatoly is on his right, and I’m eyeball-fucking the man on
Anatoly’s right.
Konstantin Petrov is at the very top of multiple Secret
Service watch lists, and now he’s less than ten feet away
from Brennan. Not good, not fucking good.
“President Kirilov.” Brennan sounds pissed. He doesn’t
smile. “This is rather dramatic, don’t you think?”
Kirilov reaches the outer edge of his agents. There are
only two layers of my people between him and Brennan.
Brennan beckons silently for more room. Henry is stone-
faced as he shifts his body between Konstantin and Brennan
and lays his hand on the grip of his weapon.
The Russians are starting to spread to the wings, like
they’re trying to pin us down.
“I wanted to make sure the whole world could hear what
we have to say to each other.” Kirilov holds out his hand.
Brennan doesn’t reciprocate.
“Everything has already been said. My position is firm.
Your country’s actions cannot be allowed to continue.
Innocent men, women, and children are being slaughtered,
and we will step in.”
“I find it amusing that the United States is suddenly so
committed to preventing atrocities and saving lives when for
years you were in the business of committing atrocities and
taking lives. How many are dead today who would be alive
were it not for the United States?”
The vein in Brennan’s temple throbs.
“Russia has brought stability to the places you abandoned
and left for the dogs. Now you want to come back to the
world with that famous American doctrine of ‘Kill others to
save lives.’ But this time, you’re coming to kill Russians.
This will not be allowed. If you murder one Russian life, Mr.
President, we will respond. Are you ready to be America’s
last president?”
This is worse than I ever imagined. The media is gobbling
it up. Cameras flash nonstop. I’m seeing stars as I keep my
eyes locked on Brennan. He’s furious. I can see it in every
tense line of his face, every clenched muscle.
And my people are starting to lose their cool. The tension
isn’t ratcheting, it’s jackhammering, and they’re eyeballing
the Russians as they try to outflank us. CAT has held back the
right, but the left is pushing closer. The FSB is trying to
encircle Brennan and cut off his route into the building.
Is this purely political posturing, or is there a darker
design to their bullshit?
I’m not going to wait around to find out.
“Neither I nor the United States will be lectured by you,
and I will not entertain your political charades. You,
President Kirilov,” Brennan says, “are responsible for the
destruction and slaughter of countless lives. You are
drowning in blood, and I will not rest until I personally drag
you into the International Criminal Court and hold you
accountable for each of your crimes.”
This ends now.
“Crash, crash!” I holler into the radio. It’s the signal to
evac, to scramble, to get the president out of there. I’m not
letting the Russians move another micron on us. I spin to
Brennan and grab his elbow, roll him into my arms, bend
him double and shelter him beneath me—
I don’t know who throws the first punch.
In less than a second, it’s an all-out brawl. My agents
unload on the Russians, fists and elbows flying. The Russians
fight dirty, and two of my people go down as their knees are
kicked in.
I whip out my collapsible baton and swing, beating a path
for Brennan and me toward the UN doors. Fists slam into my
ribs, my back. Sheridan and Nuñez are rushing toward me.
“Cover us!” I shout.
Sheridan hurls himself through the brawl, and in a
moment, he’s at my side, throwing himself in front of me
and Brennan.
Konstantin appears out of thin air. How did he get
through the bare-knuckle fight? I scan him for a weapon and
spot him reaching for a pistol in a holster beneath his jacket.
“Gun!”
Sheridan launches at Konstantin. It’s a textbook last-
ditch covering move, a choice made when there are no other
options. If Konstantin fires, he’ll be shooting point-blank
into Sheridan’s heart.
But there’s a corollary: inside ten feet, a shooter likely
can’t get the shot off before you’re on them, and it’s best to
rush with violence and bring them down fast and hard.
Sheridan’s fist slams into the side of Konstantin’s skull
before Konstantin wraps him in a bear hug and takes him to
the ground. Konstantin’s gun clatters across the concrete,
where it’s scooped up by one of my agents.
Konstantin lands three hard punches as Sheridan lies
dazed. His head cracks against the concrete before his arm
darts up and he closes his hand around Konstantin’s throat.
Sheridan has bought me the seconds I need to get
Brennan clear, and I seize them. He headbutts Konstantin,
and they go rolling in a flurry of punches and grapples as I
barrel into the UN lobby. Once we’re inside, a perimeter
forms behind us as we race to the elevators.
Tires squeal. I shield Brennan with my body, bracing for
the inevitable car crashing through the glass.
Nothing happens. More tires squeal as sirens rise. The
Russian motorcade is roaring away, probably with Anatoly,
Konstantin, and Kirilov. They’ve left the riot and half their
FSB agents behind, and the fists are still flying.
My people aren’t fighting to protect Brennan anymore.
They’re fighting to fight.
The NYPD arrives and jumps into the free-for-all. Now
cops are throwing Russians and Secret Service agents left
and right as they try to break things up.
I haul Brennan inside the waiting elevator at the end of
the lobby. The Secret Service has the fire control key
engaged, and I shut the doors and hit the button for the roof
before I stop to breathe.
“Are you all right?” I collapse my baton and shove it back
into its holster. Two steps bring me to Brennan as I check
him for injuries. God help Anatoly and his Russians if
Brennan has even one mark on him.
All the fury has drained from Brennan. He takes my hands
in his. “I’m fine. Are you okay?”
“Yeah, of course. I’m good.” I have no idea how I am.
“You’re shaking.” He studies me with that intense,
world-stopping gaze. “Hold the elevator.”
It’s not a request, it’s an order, and it’s coming from the
president. I twist the key to Stop, and the elevator brakes
squeal and bring us to a jerking halt just above the twentieth
floor.
Adrenaline is still pumping through me, and I’m still
obsessively checking Brennan for injuries. “I’m sorry. Putain
de bordel de merde—”
“It’s not your fault, Reese.”
“Your security is my responsibility. All that out there is
absolutely my fault.”
I don’t realize how close we’re standing until he brings
his hand up and brushes back a strand of my hair that’s
fallen over my forehead. “It’s not your fault President Kirilov
wanted to play political theater.”
My eyes flutter closed. My breath rattles.
“Are your agents okay?”
My radio is sputtering with reports from the motorcade
and the lobby. Two of my guys are being seen by the medical
team and the presidential physician. The rest of the injuries
seem to be bruised knuckles, split lips, and black eyes. “It
sounds like the Russians got the worst of it. They’ve cleared
out, and all new arrivals are being routed to the garage.”
My people aren’t moving from the front of this building.
“Keep me updated. I want to know how everyone is.”
I nod. He takes my other hand in his. “I’m okay,” he says
softly. “You got me out of there. And, despite what the Secret
Service believes, you really can’t control everything in the
world.”
“I can try.” He smiles. I’m not joking. “You did a good job
down there.”
“There will be sound bites, I’m sure.”
“You turned Kirilov’s theater around on him. Whatever he
wanted, he didn’t get, Brennan.”
His eyes flare as I say his name. Stay away, Reese. I can’t
move.
Our gazes lock. “I’ve missed you.” Brennan’s hand
squeezes mine.
You are bad for him.
Protect him from everything.
Especially yourself.
All week, I’ve been trying to starve this conflagration
between us of oxygen before it blows up in our faces, but
here I am.
I rest my forehead against his and breathe him in. “I’ve
missed you, too, mon cher.”
My radio squawks. “Rooftop to Quarterback. What’s the
holdup?”
I key my mic. Brennan is so close the agents on the other
end can probably hear his breathing. “Ranger needed a
minute. We’re on the way.”
Brennan steps back, straightens his shirt and tie, and
adjusts his jacket.
“You look perfect, mon cher. You always do.”
He clears his throat as a flush climbs his neck and spreads
over his cheeks. He doesn’t look at me, and I don’t look at
him. Suddenly there’s too much tension between us, like
we’re two magnets that don’t know how to interact if we’re
not fusing together.
He spends the next four hours at the reception. The brawl
is the talk of the UN, and Brennan downplays its intensity
while playing up the heroics of the Secret Service. By the end
of the night, Sheridan practically fought every Russian
single-handed, while I’m his bayou knight in shining armor.
The NYPD doesn’t even try to arrest the Russian agents.
Not on UN territory, and not while the fight raged in the
space between the US and Russian motorcades. There’s
enough of a question of what laws apply to whom and whose
jurisdiction everyone’s feet were in that no one wants to
touch that legal ulcer.
Instead, the UN and the United States file official protests
against Russia before the sun sets. President Kirilov is in the
air on his way back to Moscow two hours later, a scathing
press release in his wake.
I don’t stay for the reception. I can’t be at Brennan’s side
that long, fighting to keep what’s twisting and tangling
inside of me from showing. Everything is too close, too hot,
too ready to burst.
I take an SUV to the hospital where two of my agents are
getting their knees scanned. Both have torn ligaments, and I
send them back to Washington.
Sheridan is there, too, being evaluated for a concussion,
and I wait with him until the scans come back. He’s ragged,
his suit torn, his shirt blood-spattered, and one of his eyes is
swollen shut. But his cheeks are peach-pink when I sit at his
bedside, and he and I talk softly about nothing until he’s
cleared. No concussion, and other than being battered and
bruised, he’s going to be fine.
He’s quiet on the drive back to the hotel.
“What you did was very brave, Sheridan,” I tell him as the
lights of Midtown shine on us. Fluorescent melts him until
he’s neon and darkness. “You probably saved the president’s
life. And mine.” My blinker clicks. Pedestrians crossing the
sidewalk in front of us laugh, sounding faraway from inside
the up-armored SUV. “Do you want to take some time? Go
back to Washington—”
“No,” he says quickly. Maybe too quickly. “No, I want to
stay. What I did…” He shrugs. “It wasn’t anything special. It
was just the right thing to do.”
“You’re a good man, Sheridan.”
He gazes out the passenger window and watches Midtown
drift away.
I help him to his room, help him out of his ruined suit,
and give him the muscle relaxer the ER prescribed him. Our
hands brush as I pass him a bottle of water. His eyes flare.
“I want you to drive POTUS tomorrow morning.” I’ve just
put him in one of the highest-level positions on the detail.
Henry’s slot. My right hand position.
His lips part as he stares up at me. “Really?”
“You’ve earned it. For tomorrow, at least.” I tousle his
hair. “Get some sleep.”
His eyelids are falling fast, and he’s asleep before I’ve
shut his hotel room door on my way out. He’s smiling,
though.
Henry and I are up until after midnight on a conference
call with Director Britton, going over the brawl. The UN
turned over the security footage to the Secret Service, and
there’s a clear image of one of the FSB agents throwing the
first punch. It’s a fucking miracle no one was shot or killed.
Half of my people are sore in the morning, and I let the
brawlers sit it out in the command center and rotate fresh
agents in. The last thing we need today is for the global
media to be focusing on stiff, limping Secret Service agents.
Sheridan shows up in the command center with a black
eye, a split lip, and a grin.
Brennan eats breakfast in his room, running through a
flurry of quick meetings with his staff. Then he sends
everyone out, and Matt calls me in. He wants to phone my
guys who were sent home. One doesn’t answer his cell, so
Brennan gives him a little shit on his voicemail for missing
the president’s call before thanking him for his actions and
wishing him well. The other is woozy from pain meds, and
there are a lot of slurred Yes, sirs before Brennan also wishes
him well and hangs up.
“That will mean a lot to everyone.” Both of my guys were
shit-scared when I found them at the hospital. I promised I
would stand up for them against any disciplinary action, but
they were more concerned about letting Brennan down than
their own personnel files. We’re a world away from when my
people were planning their funerals after that pull-up
competition on Air Force One.
“It’s the least I could do.” We can’t say anything else,
because Matt is in the room, but we share a smile until Matt
announces it’s time to head out.
“Ranger coming down the elevator in two,” I say to my
wrist mic.
When we hit the street, I have Sheridan waiting outside
the SUV to load Brennan. As I expected, Brennan beams,
pumps his hand, and thanks him for taking down Konstantin
and giving us a path to escape.
Sheridan is electric with elation as he climbs back behind
the wheel. Only he would get his ass kicked by an FSB agent
and still think the General Assembly is his dream come true.
The day is long and dull, with pockets of frenetic activity
as we negotiate moving Brennan through a building stuffed
with world leaders. There’s an extra edge to our attitude
today, and no one tries to play fuck-fuck games with the
Secret Service.
The president of the UN opens the session, and by
tradition, Brazil’s leader speaks first. After that, it’s the
United States’ turn, and Brennan takes the podium to a more
energetic round of applause than usual. The UN normally has
all the excitement of a golf game.
Brennan searches the crowd and finds me. I’m against the
wall with fifty other detail leads from other nations.
Sheridan is next to me, sporting his black eye with pride.
Our eyes meet, and in front of 193 nations and the world’s
media, Brennan smiles at me.
I can’t help it. I smile back. Black lightning between us
strikes again. The world—literally, the world that surrounds
us that moment—fades, until it’s just him and me.
Dangerous.
Brennan stays at the UN for the rest of the day, and in the
evening, the second shift picks him up and delivers him to a
restaurant uptown for a dinner with his advisors while I head
back to the hotel with Henry and Sheridan. We order pizza
and kick up our feet in the command center. Sheridan falls
asleep while we wait, and he doesn’t stir when Henry starts
throwing Skittles at him. When he finally opens his eyes, he
hurls the Skittles he’s secretly collected at Henry in one
massive fling.
I let them both go for the rest of the night. Day one has
been a success, and there’s usually a pretty good gathering
of security personnel filling up the Midtown bars. As they
head out, I hear Henry say, “You can get any chick you want
tonight with that black eye and your story of kicking Russian
ass. Hell, you can probably get a handful of ’em.”
Sheridan’s eyes shift to me before the elevator doors glide
shut.
By eleven p.m., Brennan is back from dinner and alone in
his suite. His staff have wandered down to the hotel bar or
are tucked in their beds. All is calm and quiet, at least on the
surface.
I’m watching traffic from the window in my room.
Is Brennan getting ready for tomorrow? Trying to
unwind? Does he do yoga on the road, or only when he’s sure
to be alone? I’ve never heard a whisper of him doing yoga
before he told me, and most presidents and politicians live
with their staff inside their private lives. Staff gossip is
where half of the Secret Service’s files are built from.
Is he thinking of me as much as I am of him?
Dangerous.
Stay away.
Vibrating buzzes from beneath my pillow. My eyes close,
and my forehead hits the glass. If I were serious about
walking away from Brennan, I would have destroyed that
burner. But I kept it, and more than that, I kept it close. I
kept my connection to Brennan in my hands.
Stay away.
But I’m fighting myself, my mind at war with heart, both
shredding between my duty and my longing.
It’s not about me. It’s not about what I want or what I
crave. It’s not about how I’ve lost control or how this man
has turned my life upside down. It’s about him. It’s about
protecting him—not just physically, but protecting
everything he’s trying to accomplish. All the good he can do.
Am I selfish enough to rip him from the world? Tear apart
the dreams and good deeds he has inside himself?
Stay away.
Don’t text back, Reese.
B rennan
T hen
I tried to fall into my routine, but I can’t get past the first
asana. My breath work is shot. My focus is ruined. My
mind flies from thought to thought. President Kirilov and his
threats. The UN. My Security Council speech tomorrow.
Reese.
Always Reese.
Was our goodbye on the Truman Balcony goodbye
forever? Was that it?
We came together like the wind, sliding into each other’s
lives. He was already my addiction before we crossed the line
—crossed a dozen lines—but now I know what his lips taste
like and what his body feels like.
The control I’ve built up for two decades has slipped
away. Discipline, gone. Inhibitions, gone. I can’t clear my
mind for even one minute. Reese is always there, and my
heart goes wild, my lungs stutter, my palms itch, and the
hunger within me explodes.
I want Reese’s kisses and his touch. I want him over me,
beneath me, surrounding me. Arms encircling me so there is
nothing but him.
And I want him beside me. On the sofa while our fingers
tangle and we talk for hours, or in the kitchen as I cook for
us both. Watching the rain, or running together, or sitting in
the fog. I feel whole when he’s near, as if he’s carrying a
piece of me. Before we met, there was an emptiness in my
life, but now—
Knocking at my door breaks my reverie. I texted Reese
four minutes ago. It could be him. It could also be any one of
my staff. Valerie Shannon, with another message from the
Brits or the Germans, the French or the Finns. My
speechwriter, here to fine-tune another half dozen words in
tomorrow’s address. Dean McClintock, with news of an
unfolding nightmare in Ukraine or deep within Russia.
They’ve launched. We have twenty minutes, Mr. President.
Deep breath. I told my staff to take the night. We’ve been
running hard for months, and never more so than the past
few weeks, trying to build this alliance through the state
dinner, and now here at the UN. Take the night and rest.
I tried to follow my own advice, but—
Reese hovers in the doorway, eyes bright, grin small and
subdued, one hand squeezing the doorjamb and the other
buried in his suit pants pocket. “Hey.”
I bring him into my suite. My bedroom is to the left, and
to the right, Shannon and Matt have set up a temporary work
table. Empty spaces reveal where their laptops drop into the
messy piles of folders, speech drafts, handwritten notes, and
rescribbled schedules.
Reese stands behind the love seat in the center of the
suite’s sitting room. His eyes dart from wall to wall as his
fingers play over the seam where the fabric meets polished
wood. “I thought you might be relaxing. Doing yoga.”
“I tried. I couldn’t focus.”
“I don’t remember a yoga mat ever being on your packing
sheet.”
Everything I bring, everywhere I go, is checked and
rechecked by the Secret Service. A yoga mat would have been
noticed. Commented on.
My yoga is mine alone, something I’ve never had to share
with the media. I shake my head. “No mat. I’ve trained
myself to practice in any space I’m in.” Or I’ve tried to. “My
concentration is gone tonight.”
“Nervous about tomorrow?”
“Tomorrow, and other things.”
Silence descends like a knife.
His eyes flick to mine. I’m beside him at the back of the
sofa, and if I reach out the slightest bit, my fingertips could
brush the flat planes of his stomach. He’s here, and he’s so
close. This is the worst kind of bliss, having him here and
not being able to reach out. It’s torturous to have wanted and
craved and then had a taste of everything, only to be stuck in
this uncertain morass.
“Is there anything I can do?” His voice is like deep water,
like veins of gold in blackened earth.
Kiss me. Take me in your arms. Tell me you didn’t mean it
when you said you had to go.
He clears his throat. “Would it help if you had someone to
do it with? Your yoga, I mean.”
I blink back to reality, to this moment and to Reese. Yoga.
Right. He’s chewing on the inside of his lip, hesitant in a way
I’ve never seen before. Keeping distance between us, even
though we’re inches apart, close enough to feel the heat of
each other.
“I’ve never shared it with anyone. Well, except for the
video I sent you.”
He smiles.
“I’ll show you some asanas. You’ll probably need to take
your jacket off. You’ll need to move a little easier.”
He nods and sheds his jacket, then starts removing the
arsenal on his belt. A pair of handcuffs, his collapsible baton,
three spare magazines of ammunition, his radio and
earpiece. He leaves his weapon holstered on his hip, but
undoes the top few buttons on his dress shirt and pulls it
over his head. “Should I take off my shoes, too?”
I’m barefoot, and my toes are curling into the carpet. “It
will be easier for you if you are.”
Shoes and socks come off, and then he’s standing in front
of me in just his suit pants, undershirt, and holstered
weapon.
We start with the adho mukha svanasana. I show him how
to place his hands and how to press against the floor with
both his fingertips and his heels to ease the weight from his
wrists and ankles.
“Press your hips to the ceiling. Try to lengthen your
spine.”
We raise our hips together, side by side behind the sofa.
His legs are long and straight, and the knurls of his spine
rise through his T-shirt.
I want to run my hand down his back. Run my lips down
his back. Press my cheek to his shoulder as I wrap my arms
around his waist.
His eyes meet mine.
“Breathe deeply for five seconds.”
The pose requires ten seconds of steady breath work, but
if I can manage five seconds with him beside me, I’ll claim
victory.
From there, I guide him into the ardha kapotasana. “Lift
your left knee to your chest, then bring it down to the floor
like you’re about to sit cross-legged.”
I demonstrate. His lips part as I move, his eyes glued to
my flexing thigh.
His movement is shaky, and he wobbles, almost falls, but
gets his leg down, folded and lying flat in front of him.
“Now slowly lower yourself as much as you can.” I end up
in the splits, one leg straight behind me, the other folded
forward, my back straight with my hands resting on my
ankle.
“Wow.” He’s frozen, half-down, half-up, like a crumpled
piece of paper about to blow over in the wind. “Merde,
you’re flexible.”
I smile. “How low can you go?”
“Not anywhere close to that.”
“Try to lie forward. Bend your back leg if you need to, like
a windmill.”
He nods and, carefully, gets himself down. Both knees are
bent, but his hips are flat, and he’s belly down and lying over
his knee. “God, I can feel things stretching I never knew
could stretch.” His voice is almost a groan.
“It really opens up the glutes and the lower back.”
His eyes flash and, again, drift over me, lingering on my
hips, my legs, my ass. He closes his eyes and rolls his face to
the mat. “How many breaths?”
“Ten.”
We breathe together, inhaling and exhaling in the same
cadence. His hair falls forward, obscuring his eyes. I should
focus on my breath work and the grounding of my body, but
I don’t. Instead, my gaze wanders over Reese. Over the tight
cotton across his shoulder blades and the way his undershirt
rides up in the back, revealing the soft, hidden skin there.
His suit pants are straining, clenched around his thighs and
his round, firm ass, and—
I clench my teeth and shut my eyes. “Okay, let’s stretch
that out.”
Into the utthita ashwa sanchalanasana, a forward lunge
with your arms extended over your head. Lengthening after
curling tight can be a rush, and I always feel like my legs are
longer, my back straighter. I reach, chin up, eyes closed—
Reese stumbles. His legs are shaking, and his center of
gravity is off. His arms wave, almost pinwheel, and then he
falls into me.
My arms wrap around him and bring him in as we go
down, softly hitting the carpet in a tangle of limbs. He’s half
beneath me, one arm around me in an instinctive protective
hold, one thigh slipped through mine like we’re about to
grapple. When we land, he rolls, pushing me down to the
carpet and looming over me. Chests together, his arm under
me, my thigh pressed against his hip.
Time stills.
My fingers glide through his hair. Strands sweep across
my palm and then fall away, drifting back down in front of
his forehead. I hesitate, then cradle his cheek in my hand.
I don’t want to fight this. I want to surrender. I want to
live outside time, where Reese and I can fall in love, and the
kiss I so desperately want from him isn’t fraught with
consequence. I want to be someone I’m not, someone who
can love the man I need.
He’s staring into me, pupils blown wide, lips parted,
breath coming hard and fast. His hand rises, stills, then
grabs my wrist. Is he going to push me away?
He turns with a sigh and grazes his lips over my inner
arm, sliding his hand up until his fingers tangle with mine.
“Brennan.”
There is nothing else but this moment. The pound of my
heart and his pulse. The depth of his gaze, so deep and dark I
feel like I’m falling into him. I am. I’m already falling for
Reese.
I am falling in love with you.
We move at the same time, like we’re thinking the same
thoughts at the same moment. He leans down, and I raise my
head. We keep our eyes open, staring, staring, until our lips
meet and merge.
Reese groans. His eyes close, and he cages me to the floor.
His knees land on the outside of my hips. My arms snake
around his neck, and my hands lose themselves in his hair.
Our noses brush. He lays his body on mine, presses his hips
against my own. Drags his hard cock, encased in his suit
pants, across mine, trapped in my leggings.
I gasp, and he takes it inside him in another kiss. He
surrounds me, inside and out, consuming me. He pushes his
forehead against mine, one hand cradling my jaw.
The muscle in his cheek is firing. His walls have dropped,
and I see everything. The desire I tasted on him. The
electricity binding us together that sparked the first moment
we laid eyes on each other. An almost debilitating caution.
And hope, that dangerous inferno, rising from him even as
he tries to smother it.
“What are you thinking?” My voice is thick and heavy.
“Things I shouldn’t be, mon cher.”
Surrender with me. Surrender to our connection and the love
we can build between us. We’re at a crossroads, and one choice
leads to a life together while the other is only suffocating
loneliness.
“Brennan, I need to be stronger than this. It’s my job to
protect you—”
“You are not a danger to me. There is nothing to protect
me from. We can make this work, Reese. I know we can.”
His eyes slam shut. I drag my hands down to his neck, his
face. Hold him to me. “This is exactly where I belong. Here,
with you.”
His eyes open, and he kisses me.
He kisses me like the sun kisses the earth when it rises.
Slow, an unfolding of warmth, of playful light and hints of
heat. And then, all at once, bright and hot and burning away
all doubt. We come together like this is fate, like I was always
meant to kiss him and he was always meant to kiss me.
We’re beyond reason now. He grasps my shirt, tugging it
upward, hands exploring my stomach and chest. My lips
travel down his jaw, his neck. I bury my face in the hollow of
his throat.
This is going to happen. There’s no stopping us, not this
time.
We’re rolling, kissing, stripping each other. He’s on top,
and I’m tugging his undershirt over his head, then burying
my face in his chest, kissing my way from nipple to nipple.
Biting down on the curve of his pec and drinking in his
groan. He holds me to him, gasping my name. My leg wraps
around his waist, and I grind up into him, my cock so hard
it’s—
We roll again, and I’m on top, and he’s frantic. Yanking
my shirt off, his hands following the fabric, touching me
everywhere. My head falls back, and I stop breathing when
his lips close around my own nipple. When he bites down.
When he kisses the pain away and then buries his face in the
fur of my chest.
Somehow, we rise from the floor and kiss our way to my
bedroom. Our hands never leave each other, and neither do
our lips.
The backs of my legs hit the edge of my mattress, and I
fall to the bed while dragging myself down Reese’s body. His
cock is hard against his suit fly, straining at his buckle.
I push my face against his bulge, breathing over the head
of his fabric-covered cock. He gasps my name as his
fingernails dig into my shoulders.
In moments, I have his belt undone, his fly unzipped. I
lock my gaze to his as I hook my thumbs into the waistband
of his underwear.
His lips part, and he nods.
I tug.
His cock bounces free.
Right in front of my face.
My mouth is on him, sucking, swallowing. I’m moaning,
my eyes closing, hands grasping his thighs and his ass as I
devour him. I love his taste, the heat of him, the heaviness in
my mouth. I want him like this every day. I can’t get enough,
I’ll never get enough.
He’s cursing, fingernails digging into my shoulders and
biceps hard enough I know I’ll have marks tomorrow. Half-
moon divots, bruises to remind me of Reese.
“Stop,” he gasps. “Stop, Brennan. Merde, too much.”
I pull back. Lick my lips. He curses again.
I crawl back on the mattress, my fingers hooking into the
waistband of my running leggings. They’re already low on
my hips, cut scandalously close to revealing the end of my
happy trail. His eyes fix on my hands, on what I’m about to
do. His cock is glistening. Wet from me, my lips, my mouth.
Maybe a little tease. I drag my hand from my waistband to
my chest, playing over my skin. Drawing little circles over
my abs and my ribs, then thumbing my nipple as he watches.
He stops breathing.
I moan his name. “Reese—”
He flies onto the mattress and takes my leggings in both
hands, as if he’s about to tear them from me. He’s over me,
surrounding me again, his presence flattening me and
stealing my breath. I grab his shoulders, cling to his arms.
He waits.
It’s my turn to nod.
Reese peels my leggings down slowly. Lifting my foot and
stripping each leg away, then spreading me, laying me open.
We’re naked. We’re both naked, in my bed. Reese takes in
every part of me, from my toes to my calves to my quivering
thighs. My aching cock, already leaking a trail of precome.
My chest and my arms. His eyes drag to mine.
I wrap my leg around his waist and press my heel against
the small of Reese’s back. Pull him to me.
Reese glides over me. Chest to chest, belly to belly, thigh
to thigh. His hair tickles me. His muscles caress me. He
kisses me sweetly, once, twice.
And then drops his hips and grinds his cock against mine.
He groans, buries his face in the side of my neck. I arch,
senseless sounds exploding from me. I can come like this.
Just like this.
His hands are everywhere, touching me like he can’t get
enough of my body. He threads our fingers together, then
kisses my jaw and throat and collarbone before starting a
path down my chest. Wet, slow kisses land on each of my
pecs, then wind down to my belly button. Move lower.
He looks up, into my eyes, right as he wraps his lips
around my cock and takes me into his mouth.
I can tell it’s his first time. He’s nervous, but also
enthusiastic. He sucks me as deep as he can, cheeks
hollowing as his tongue glides up the underside. I can’t
breathe.
I want more, though, and I drag him back into my arms.
He nuzzles my temple, breathes my name into my ear. I want
everything. I want all of this man, and I want to give all of
myself to him.
Our lips meet like we’re making promises to each other
we can’t say aloud. Our hands tangle again, holding on. Hold
on to me forever.
I shift, maneuvering Reese’s hips against mine, getting a
thigh around his waist. Our cocks slide together, and I
stutter, stumble, my mind blanking as our kiss deepens. No,
more. I want more. I shift again, until—
Reese’s cock slides behind my balls and between my ass
cheeks, pumping into the tight heat over my hole.
I moan, and he stiffens. Goes still, his eyes flying to mine
as he breaks our kiss. “Are you sure?”
“God, yes. I want you.” I hesitate. “Only if you—"
Lips on mine, stealing the air from my lungs. “I want
you,” he breathes into me. “But I don’t want to hurt you.”
“You won’t.”
“How long has it been?”
Years. Decades. But it doesn’t matter. I don’t answer, just
kiss him again. He groans. “Brennan…”
“Please.” I’m yours. I’m yours forever. Take me, please.
Our eyes hold as he presses two of his fingers to my lips. I
suck them in, swirling my tongue all over both, soaking
them and covering them in my spit.
He slides his fingers down to my ass. They circle my hole
before one pushes in.
My mouth drops open on a silent cry.
He kisses me hard, and then vanishes, drawing away so
fast I’m left clutching empty air. I gasp and lurch toward the
place where he used to be, watching him as he darts into my
bathroom—
Clattering on the counter. Bottles knocking over.
Realization hits me. He’s done this before. Not with a
man, but he knows, at least, the mechanics of what we’re
about to do.
He’s back a moment later, clutching the closest thing I
have here to lube: a hotel bottle of lotion. He tosses it to the
mattress and takes me into his arms as if he’s been gone for
years and not a handful of seconds. We roll, arms around
each other, my legs tight around his waist, until I’m on top.
Straddling his belly, with his cock leaking precome against
my ass cheek.
He takes my hand in his and kisses my fingers. The top of
the lotion pops open behind me, loud as a gunshot. I fall
forward, my arms caging Reese this time. We kiss, oh-so-
slowly, as he presses a slick finger to my hole again.
“Is this okay?”
I nod. My lips drag over his.
One finger, circling inside me.
I moan. Arch my back. Rock into his touch.
Two fingers, opening me.
I fuck myself onto him. Feel his thumb play on the edge of
my hole.
He spreads my cheeks as I kiss him like a wild animal.
Liquid fire rolls through me. Lightning crackles across my
nerves.
Three fingers.
I throw my head back and cry out. I’ll come, I’ll come
exactly like this. I grab my cock and squeeze, desperate to
hold off.
He slathers us in lotion, so much that the wet, slick
sounds are obscene as he works his fingers in and out of me
and over himself.
“Are you ready?” His voice is darkness and flame. A spark
at midnight, igniting a wildfire. Hungry.
I can’t speak. I nod.
He spreads me. My arms are shaking as I hold myself up,
both hands on Reese’s chest, pushing my hips back until—
Reese’s cock, hot, hard, and thick, presses against my
hole.
He’s panting. He’s staring up at me. He’s staring into me
again, like he can read my soul.
I stare back.
White-hot pleasure. Pressure. Pain, of course, because
he’s big. I cry out, and Reese stills, his hands grasping my
hips so tightly I can feel his fingerprints embedding in my
bones.
“Don’t stop.”
“Are you—”
“Don’t stop, Reese.”
He doesn’t. My body takes him in, inch by inch. My
fingers clench in the muscles of his chest. Reese is gasping,
his legs are shaking, and one hand flies to the sheet, fisting
the fabric as he groans my name.
Then he’s inside me. All the way inside me.
I can’t breathe, and neither can he. My thighs clench
around his hips. He tears the sheet from the corner of the
bed. His cock twitches. I feel him everywhere.
I grind down. Rock my hips. Reese growls, and then he
starts to move. Agonizingly slowly, so slowly I think I’ll die.
He’s gentle, more than I want him to be. I want to feel him—
now, tomorrow, and the day after. I want to feel his
lovemaking for days. I want him to carve a permanent place
for himself inside my body. I want him to make love to me
forever.
I kiss him, and feel something inside him snap.
Gentleness gives way, turns to harder, deeper thrusts. Each
punches a gasp from me.
More. I need more. I need everything. I ride him thrust for
thrust, speeding up, chasing this moment, chasing the fire
he’s stoking inside me. His hands slide up my thighs and
over my ribs and my pecs and down to my hands, where he
threads our fingers together and squeezes. He folds my arms
around my own back, wrapping me up as he rises, until he’s
sitting and holding me in his lap. He buries his face in my
chest, gasping a mixture of my name and curses and
desperate noises—
He takes my face in his hands and kisses me before he
rolls and brings me down to my back, his cock still buried.
He takes my legs in his hands and hefts them to his
shoulders, then grasps the edge of the mattress above my
head. I’m folded in half, my back off the bed. Suspended on
him.
And like this, he’s going even deeper.
I’m shameless, pleading for more. More of him. Every
press of our bodies is blurring the boundaries between us,
until part of him seems to slide into me and stay.
He’s kissing me like he’s collecting each gasp and moan. I
cling to him, to his biceps and his shoulders, my grip so
fierce I’m leaving bruises. Our sweat-soaked skin is slapping
together. He’s hammering into me, harder, faster, driving
into me, an almost terrified look in his eyes—
Reese roars, bellowing my name, thrusting as his cock
swells and liquid heat pulses inside me and around my hole.
My back arches, and I grind down on him, on his come, on
his cock, and stroke myself as I kiss him and taste the way
his lips form my name and then “Mon cher” and “Je
t’aime”—
I shatter.
We keep going, like we can make love forever without
stopping. Aftershocks quake for several minutes. I shiver on
his cock. Reese keeps thrusting, slowly, softly, trying to
extend my pleasure.
Eventually, we crash, Reese tipping sideways and pulling
me with him. We’re on our sides, facing each other, touching
from collarbones to toes.
Our kisses slow and turn to smiles as exhaustion creeps
over us. His fingers travel the length of my arms, twirl
circles on my ribs and my hip bones.
“I love your legs,” he whispers. “Do you have any idea
how sexy you are?”
I sigh into his neck. “Why don’t you tell me?”
He laughs. “I’m going to worship your legs with my
mouth. Kiss every inch.”
“Only my legs?”
“That’s where I’ll start.” He grins, and I melt into him
again.
Our eyelids droop, and the blinks become longer. We’re
still kissing, caressing, entangled in each other. I hear him
whisper “Mon amour” and feel his lips against my hair, and
then—
Sleep claims me.
Chapter Twenty-Three
R eese
T hen
Boss,
I’ll take your suit in with mine to the dry cleaners. Borrow
these for today. I’m riding the Metro in, so take the SUV
whenever you head out. There’s coffee, milk, cereal, and
tequila in the kitchen. Pick your poison.
R eese
N ow
R eese
T hen
S ix weeks.
One thousand hours.
Sixty thousand minutes.
A long time to saw myself apart.
I’m drained dry. Worn flat. Exhausted, too, because even
at night, I’m not really sleeping. My hands slide through my
sheets to the empty space beside me. Fitful dreams claw at
me, and after a few hours, I wake curled on my side,
drowning in the memory of Brennan’s eyes and his touch.
Brennan Walker took hold of me, and now that I’ve torn
him out of my life, it’s like the rest of my existence has
collapsed. Like the fires that fueled me have gone out, and
the reasons I had for pushing through these days no longer
mean what they once did.
I did this to myself. I kicked open these doors to my
private hell.
Shame rubs me raw from the inside out.
I watch the White House when I can’t sleep. It’s a
meditation at this point, or maybe a compulsion. More than
a habit.
I play out the days and nights I could have been at
Brennan’s side. Evenings we could have spent together,
moving from the kitchen to the West Sitting Hall. Would he
teach me more yoga? Would we have watched the rain from
the windows of his bedroom? Made love at midnight? Danced
on the balcony to aching blues again while we watched the
roses wilt?
I imagine the life we could have lived while I haunt my
memories of Brennan.
True to his word, Brennan hasn’t spoken to me again. He
is nothing if not a man of honor and integrity.
Of course, the burner phone is gone. It’s nothing but
smashed fragments at the bottom of the Potomac now. Not
even the Service could reconstruct those shards.
I’m a ghost at the White House. I’ve given Henry the
presidential-facing duties, and I’m running the command
center and training the junior agents. They’re a good bunch.
Sheridan, thanks to Henry’s shepherding, is leagues above
the rest. He’ll be a team lead soon.
Sheridan is one of my only bright spots in these days of
desolation. After New York, he took three days off and came
back a new man. He said, “Good morning, sir,” and grinned
at me, and every day since, he seems like he’s on a personal
mission to make me smile. His unstoppable good humor
buoys me, keeps me going.
There are days when he alone is the reason I am not
overcome.
Sometimes he reminds me of Brennan, or a younger
version of him. I watch him when he doesn’t realize it, and I
see a deeper side to him. More serious. Fewer goofy smiles. I
can’t tell if the darkness that wreathes him in those
moments is something fleeting or if there’s something to
excavate. If I had more bandwidth, I’d dig. Spend more time
understanding Sheridan. I want to understand him.
It’s all I can do to put one foot in front of the other. Grief
alone is all-consuming, and when grief drowns in shame,
every thought, every memory, every moment, becomes a
shard that slices at your ravaged and flickering soul.
I have committed myself to this dark pit of my own
making, and it’s a world that seems to shrink each day. Or
maybe I’m the one that’s shrinking. One day I may open my
eyes and discover there’s nothing left.
I should transfer. During my first years in the Service, I
made a name for myself in the cyber squads. I should go back
there. I should do whatever I can to get away from Brennan.
I’m extra maudlin tonight. Brennan has left Washington
for the weekend and gone to Camp David. If-onlys scratch
like spiders moving across my brain.
I could be there with him. We could steal these days and
wrap ourselves around each other, ignore the world and just
be. Be in love, be together. We could—
My hands scrub over my weary face. Trying to escape my
own mind is like trying to run from the devil. He’s always
right in front of you.
Autumn is on its last gasp, and the world runs riot with
the change of seasons. The sunset was a like a dying fire on
the horizon, rouge red and lines of orange streaking the
dome of the sky. Now the stars are hot in a windless night.
The monuments at the Mall look like they’ve been painted
on velvet.
I’m walking the track around the South Lawn. Reliving
moments and replaying memories like they won’t exist if I
don’t bring them back to life each day.
Slap, slap. Footsteps shuffling. Another series of quick
slaps, rubber on pavement. The lonely sounds of a solitary
dribbler alone on a half-court.
Halfway down the track, when you’re heading toward E
Street beyond the south end of the Eisenhower Building,
there’s a winding little piece of pavement that leads into a
cluster of towering trees. At first, it seems to go nowhere,
but take that path and the pavement spits you out at the
White House basketball half-court.
It’s not much: the court was laid on the same ground
where the old horseshoe rings were once installed, and like
everything in the White House, it’s smaller than you expect.
The paint is faded, and the pavement blurs into dirt inches
from the lines.
Some presidents love to play. It’s a private space, and you
can pretend you’re somewhere other than the White House
while you’re dribbling a ball on a run toward the basket. At
least one president held his daily debriefs there. Most of the
time, those debriefs turned into pickup games, and the
president would haul anyone who was nearby onto the court
to round out the teams. Try and ask a Secret Service agent to
press the president. He can charge all day long.
Brennan isn’t a basketball player, which means the court
is up for grabs for the West Wing staff and the Secret Service.
Henry isn’t, either, but Nuñez and Sheridan are, and they
organize three-on-three half-court games almost every
night of the week.
After New York, I stayed away. I am a whirlpool who sucks
the life and joy out of anyone around.
But Sheridan kept inviting me, and eventually, I relented.
Nothing was magically cured, but for an hour, at least, there
was something beyond my private misery and clawing
despair.
I’ve kept going to the games. Even subbed in once or
twice. Sheridan is a relentless player, always driving, never
stopping for a break or a breath. He’s good, especially at the
line, where he can lob a fadeaway jumper through the center
of the basket. He seems to both lose and find himself when
he plays.
So I know who I’m going to find on the half-court.
Sure enough, there he is. Sheridan is backlit by the
sodium lamp overlooking the court, the long lines of his
body stretched full out as he jumps at the top of the key and
bounces the ball off the center of the backboard and through
the hoop. I hear the swish of the net like a whisper.
“Nice shot.”
He spins. His shock makes him miss the rebound, and he
has to jog for the ball. His cheeks are pink, and he alternates
dribbles with lingering looks my way as I loiter on the edge
of the court.
“One-on-one?” He bounce-passes to me. I catch the ball
and dribble slowly, hand to hand. He must have come out
here right after his shift ended. He’s still in his suit, though
he shed his jacket. His tie is tugged loose, and the top
buttons of his shirt are undone. He’s rolled up his sleeves,
too. He’s been out here for hours.
“Sure.” I bounce the ball back and then shed my own
jacket and tie and drop both on the edge of the court. He lets
me start, and I charge, fighting around his hard press and
his ferocious close game. He crowds me, forces me to roll.
Still, I manage a jump shot, finger-rolling the ball into the
basket.
Sheridan takes the rebound and darts to the line, then
starts his own charge. He dribbles fast, moves even faster. I
hard press him. His eyes are embers as they flick between
the hoop and me. He wiggles left. I lunge. He leaps, and I
jump with him—
We collide in midair, and the ball goes wide, twanging off
the backboard and looping out of bounds. We come down
tangled together, Sheridan’s arms around me, his face in my
neck as he steadies me and keeps me on my feet. I grasp his
forearms. Lean in.
I’m not ready for this. I’m not ready for another person—
another man—to want me or cherish me. I’m not ready to
face the truth in Sheridan’s eyes.
I’m also not ready to think about why I can smile with
him when nothing makes me smile these days.
Sheridan’s breath is hot, puffs of both exertion and shock.
His arms tighten, and his hands slip around my back as if
he’s holding me, cradling—
He spins away, flinging himself free as he chases the ball
toward the line of trees and the shadows outside the puddle
of the court light.
I’m frozen at the three-point line.
Brennan held me like that. He laid his face against my
neck and breathed me in. He cherished me, and he held me
like he cherished me, and the memory of his arms around
me is fracturing me again.
Sheridan’s back. He’s two-handing the ball in front of his
chest, elbows wide, and staring at the court like he’s trying
to melt the pavement and disappear into the earth. He’s a
shade of burgundy I haven’t seen before. Is this
embarrassment or anger? Frustration or fury?
“I’m sorry,” he starts.
“Sheridan—”
He cuts me off, which is a first. “You know, right? How I
feel about you?” He still won’t look at me.
“I do.”
He nods and looks away. His fingers play over the surface
of the basketball like he’s trying to find its eyeballs and
gouge them out. His jaw is firing, the muscle in his cheek
snapping. “It sucks falling in love with someone you can’t be
with.”
His voice is quiet, but it cuts me to my marrow.
I want to commiserate with him, lean into him, tell him
of my agonies and anguished nights, about how I can’t
breathe because of the pain and how every time I close my
eyes I see bleu clair eyes and the shape of Brennan’s smile.
That I wake up on my side every day, staring at an empty
pillow and imagining that Brennan is there, denting the
cotton and watching me sleep as his fingers play in my hair
—
But Sheridan is looking at me the way I look at Brennan.
I’m watching a heart shatter in real time.
“I know—” he whispers, and for a moment, my blood
turns to ice. He knows, he knows—
He’s fighting through something, though, and his lips
thin before he speaks again. “I know nothing will ever
happen. I’ve been trying to deal with it. Put it away. But I’ve
been gone for you since we met in the boxing ring at RTC. It
was almost impossible to spar. I couldn’t fucking breathe,
but I also couldn’t let you down. I just…”
He paces away, the ball squealing in his iron grip.
He’s still going. “I’ve been thinking about telling you. Not
to ask you out or anything, but because it’s hard to get
through the day with these feelings blowing up inside me. I
don’t want to mess up or make a mistake. Or worse, make
you feel—” Finally, his voice breaks.
“Sheridan… I’m honored.”
I can see it, a picture just out of focus: Sheridan and me
spending our lives together. He’d love me forever, always
there for me with his smile and his open heart. We could find
happiness, if I let myself feel it. But—
Different time, different place, different reality.
He bounces the ball. Catches it one-handed. Bounces it
again.
“I’m not ready,” I say. “I just broke someone’s heart, and
I broke myself doing it. I’m not ready.”
Maybe there’ll be a day in the far-flung future when I can
consider opening the remnants of myself again, but that day
is nowhere near.
“I know,” he says again, and damn it, what the hell does
he mean? What does he know? “I’ve been watching you.” He
flinches. “That sounds fucking creepy. I’m sorry. I don’t
mean it like that. I mean… I’ve noticed. You were happy, and
then you weren’t. Something happened after New York. I’ve
been trying to cheer you up, or distract you, or make you
laugh.”
“You have. You make me smile every day.” Now my
throat is closing. Now I’m the one choking on my words.
“You make me smile when nothing else can, Sheridan.”
He’s back to mangling the ball, the muscles in his
forearm flexing.
“I didn’t know you months ago, but now—” I inhale,
blinking. My words are a rushing river, roaring out of me. “I
can’t imagine my days without you. I think there’s a part of
me that needs you.”
“There’s a part of me that needs you, too.” His voice is
quiet steel. “You’re everything to me.”
Like Brennan is everything to me.
The basketball pounds the pavement, furious dribbling as
he stares at the ground. “Do you want me off the detail?
Should I request a transfer?”
“No. You’re a fantastic agent.” His eyes dart to mine.
They’re full of questions, bunched like thunderheads.
“Sheridan, I want you to stay, but if you need space, I
understand.”
Finally, a tiny smile appears, made more of sadness than
delight. “I want to stay.”
“Then you stay.”
Silence descends over the court. He stares at me, and I
stare at him. Would Sheridan have been able to unlock my
heart like Brennan had? If I met these men in reverse, would
Sheridan be the man in my bed and Brennan just another
president, just another job, on the periphery of my life?
You fall in love with people for different reasons. Sheridan
is warm and wonderful and has earned a place in my life
through his kindness and his steadfastness, his quick mind
and his quicker smile. He’s the man who will cherish me for
a lifetime, who will wake me with a kiss every morning and
hold my hand in the sunlight.
Brennan is black lightning and blues, neon-soaked rain
squalls, bayou midnights and creeping Spanish moss. He’s
unknowable depths, flame-hot touches and bleu clair eyes.
He’s the mystery, the moon rising in the west, the secrets
written on bones and cast under dark stars.
Some part of me may need Sheridan, like the earth needs
the rays of the sun.
But I was made to love Brennan Walker.
And then I was set down in this life, where that love is an
impossibility.
Despair wraps around me again. The moment on the court
has passed, and the warm glow of the light, the welcoming
shelter of the trees, has shifted. Now the night is
obliterating, a weight that is pressing me into the ground.
Sheridan senses the changes in me, and he shoots me a
tight smile as he backs away, moving to the free throw line
and setting up for a shot. I watch him sling another basket
before I grab my jacket and tie set off down the track. He
watches me go, and the only thing he says is, “I’ll see you
Monday.”
I could set my watch to Sheridan’s quiet care and endless
affection. He’s as reliable as the sunrise. What the hell does
he see in me?
Less than five minutes later, my BlackBerry buzzes.
Boss. Emergency meeting. Old Ebbitt.
R eese
T hen
R eese
N ow
R eese
T hen
R eese
N ow
B rennan
T hen
R eese
N ow
B rennan
L ast N ight
R eese
N ow
R eese
N ow
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About the Author
Who is Tal?
Tal Bauer writes breathtaking, heartfelt, and often action-packed gay romance
novels. His characters are head over heels for each other, and fight against all
odds for their happy ending. Nothing stands in the way of love. Tal is best known
for his romantic suspense novels, including the Executive Office series, The Night
Of, and the Noah & Cole thrillers, including The Murder Between Us and The Grave
Between Us. He has also written You & Me, The Jock and The Quarterback, along with
the Big Bend Texas Rangers series.
Also by Tal Bauer
Contemporary MM Romance
You & Me