On the first day of a big trial, some lawyers want their sole focus to be on the case. They think about it while shoveling oatmeal into their mouths. They rehearse their opening statement while sipping their coffee, and tape their notes to the mirror while they shave and straighten their tie.
But not Kennedy. Because this morning, in our Nevada hotel room, her focus is wholly on my cock.
Sheâs on her knees in front of me where I stand by the bed, teasing the sensitive indentation on the underside of my hot, hard rod as she sucks me off. And it feels so fucking good I practically decapitate myself when my head rolls toward the ceiling. I dig my hand into her hair and fist it tight, holding her still, so I can pump into her mouth.
Goddamn.
Itâs the roughest Iâve let myself be with her the last two weeksâand she loves it. She hums around me, sending ripples of decadent pleasure through every nerve in my body. My chin touches my chest as I look down, watching my dick slide smoothly between Kennedyâs rosy lips.
âThatâs it. Take it just like that,â I rasp. âCause Iâm feeling fucking dirty.
Her responding moan is almost my undoing. With a swiftness born of desperation, I lift her up, toss her onto the bed, and grab her anklesâdragging her to the edge. Then I bend my knees and drive into her.
âOh god . . . Brent . . . Oh yeah . . .â
She watches me, those golden brown eyes burning like a bonfire of fall leaves.
The angriest of her bruises have faded to mere discoloration, and a smattering of tiny scabs remain from the abrasion on her cheek. But the split lip and swelling around her eye are fully healed.
I rotate my hips, pushing in deep, then changing to smooth and steady thrusts. I slide my palms up her calves, grasping beneath her knees and spreading her wide open. Giving me a perfect view of her glistening dark pink flesh.
Itâs times like this I wish my mother had mated with Dr. Octavius.
Words scrape up my throat. âPlay with your tits. Pinch those pretty nipples like itâs your fucking job.â
Kennedy closes her eyes with a moan. And itâs only a second before she does my biddingâher small hands squeeze her supple mounds, then her fingers tug at the mauve peaks.
Hard.
Oh yeahâthatâs my girl.
Her needy cunt tightens around me, trying to hold me inside. And she begs, and Christâthere is no sweeter sound on earth than Kennedy Randolph begging.
For more.
For faster.
Harder, Brent. Deeper.
Then itâs a sonata of breathy gasps, ragged groans, and the sound of slapping skin. The tendons in my back lengthen and strain, like the string of a bow stretched to its snapping point. Kennedyâs toes curl and her tiny feet flex, searching for purchase in the air. With a series of grunts that grate my voice box raw, I come, fingers digging into her hips, holding her stillâmaking her take everything I have to give.
Her hands ravage the sheets and Kennedy climaxes right after. Her contracting muscles clamp down, wringing every last drop from my still-pulsing cock. My head goes light, my vision hazy. Itâs possible Iâm about to pass the hell out.
And I collapse on top of her, my bones turned to Jell-O.
When the aftershocks eventually ebb, she laughs. That twinkling, magical laugh that sings of contentment and tugs up my own lips in a responding smile.
Now thatâthat is how you start a fucking trial.
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Once Iâm actually able to stand again, we hit the shower. With Kennedyâs cast wrapped in a plastic bag, washing her hairâand all her nooks and cranniesâis a challenge. Naturally, Iâve been helping her out. Itâs the only decent thing to do.
And just a little while later, Iâm in my suitâthe navy one with my lucky cuff linksâassisting Kennedy with her first layer of clothing.
âKevlarâs a hot look for you.â I secure the Velcro seam. âWe are definitely taking this home with us.â
Her golden hair slides off her shoulder when she turns my way. âYouâre kind of a kinky bastard, arenât you?â
âYou have no idea. But donât worryâyou will.â I seal the promise with a kiss on her cheek. Then I hold her blouse while she slides her arms in.
âHow are you feeling, champ?â I ask.
Iâve seen firsthand over the last weeks that Kennedy is stellar at compartmentalizing. Burying any pesky emotions like fear or doubt way down deep during the day. But at night, when weâre alone, thatâs when the demons creep from their crypt and tell her that sheâs bound to failâor worse. And Iâm grateful to be hereâto be the man who gets to hold her when she trembles, the one she whispers those worries to, the one who helps her shoulder that burden.
Sheâll never have to do it alone again.
âIâm good.â She grins back, and the gleam in her eye tells me thatâs true.
I drop a peck on her nose and button her blouse, because the cast makes that difficult too. But as I look at the remnants of her injuriesâstill visible through her light makeupâit hits me. I turn her head, checking out the yellowish bruising in different lights.
âWhatâs wrong?â
âThe defense is going to ask the judge to recuse you because of the bruises, the cast. Theyâll say youâll prejudice the jury.â
She frowns. âYou think so?â
âItâs what Iâd do.â I shrug.
Kennedy nods her head slowly, gazing at the carpetâseeing the potential exchange play out behind her eyes. âOkay. Then Iâll be ready to argue that motion.â
âYeah,â I kiss her forehead now. âYou will be.â
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Kennedy walks into court like a general. The way I imagine Joan of Arc walked onto the battlefieldâjust daring the English to bring it on. I sit in the front row of the gallery, right behind her. Next to me is Connor Roth, the green-eyed, stone-faced marshal who took me up to her hospital room. Heâs been by her side ever since.
While she speaks in hushed tones to the other prosecutors at the table, I check out Moriotti, on the opposite side of the courtroom, next to his own team of attorneys. Heâs in his forties, short but stockyâpowerfulâwith black, slicked hair thatâs just starting to gray at the temples. He looks like a typical scumbag, even dressed up in an Italian suit, which I know at a glance cost him the average personâs mortgage payment. He follows Kennedy with his eyes, and when he notices the cast on her armâthe fucker laughs.
Rage shoots through my bloodstream like a speeding bullet, making me carelessâthoughtless. I start to rise from my seat, intent on walking over there and ripping the motherfuckerâs head off with my bare hands. And I pity the bailiff who gets in my way.
A strong grip on my shoulder holds me back.
âDonât do it, Batman,â Roth murmurs. âGetting thrown out of court and locked up before the trial even starts wonât do your girl any favors.â
His words pull me from my gory fantasies, because heâs right. It sucksâbut heâs right.
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Three days later, I tell Kennedy I wonât be in court that afternoon. When worry shadows her face, Iâm quick to explain I have some of my own work to catch up on. Itâs a lieâJake is awesome at holding down the fort, and even on maternity leave, Stanton has been picking up my slack from home. But itâs just a little lieâthe good kind.
Because if she knew where I was really going, that shadow of concern would turn into a full-blown eclipse.
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The modern-day Mafioso is very different from the olden days of Al Capone, fedora hats, and Tommy guns hidden in violin cases. The Sopranos got it pretty right. If you didnât already know it, youâd never suspect that Carmine Biancoâthe seventy-year-old, dark-haired, leather-faced guy in the back corner table of this neighborhood deliâis the supreme leader of a ruthless, multimillion-dollar criminal organization that the feds have been trying for two decades to pin a RICO charge on. He looks like somebodyâs grandpa, or an old benevolent uncle.
Except for the two massive bastards standing behind himâwith gun belts strapped beneath their jackets.
Weâre the only customers in the deli, so when one of the big guys steps up to me a few feet short of the table, I automatically hold out my arms and he pats me downâchecking for weapons or a wire. My whole life, people have commented on my youthful face, my boyish good looks, and have underestimated me because of them. I press that advantage now, and give Carmine an affable smile as I sit down across from him.
âMr. Bianco, Iâm Brent Mason. Thank you for agreeing to meet with me.â
He puts his overflowing sandwich down and chews his mouthful, swiping a napkin across his lips with thick fingers. âYou want a sandwich?â
I shake my head. âIâm good, thanks.â
His eyes are sharp, gleaming like a switchblade as he takes me inâmy gray suit, loosened tie, Rolex watch. âI donât know you. I donât know how you know meâbut my money guy said I should meet with you, so here we are. What can you do for me, kid?â
His business advisor is an associate of an associate of one of my familyâs longtime brokers. So I made a few callsâbecause it doesnât matter if youâre a mobster or a prince: money always talks.
âI guess you could say I have a . . . business proposition for you.â My voice gives me away. Itâs hardâtight. I donât know if he ordered the hit on Kennedy, or if his boys clean up their own messes. And I canât ask; he wouldnât tell me either way. All I can do is deal with him, because when you want to get rid of a snake, you aim straight for the head.
He leans back in his seat. âIâm listening.â
âGino Moriotti. He works for you.â
The old manâs mouth quirks. âAllegedly.â
âOf course, allegedly.â I chuckle.
âWhat about him?â
Then Iâm not chuckling anymore. âHow much is he worth to you? How much money do you stand to lose when he gets put awayâand I have no doubt whatsoever that he will be put away.â
That gets his attention. He stares at me the way you stare at someone you think youâve met before, but canât quite remember. Like heâs trying to place me. Figure me out.
I give him a hand and lay my cards bare on the table.
âThe lead prosecutor on his caseââ
âThe blonde.â He points at me, nodding with understanding.
âThe blonde,â I confirm.
âSheâs cute.â
âYes, she is. Sheâs also very important to me. When this case is finished, Iâm going to take her back to DC. Iâm going to marry her, have beautiful babies with her, and grow old with her. And Iâm not gonna do that looking over her shoulder all the time, worrying that someone from your organization is going to try and settle a score.â I let him absorb that.
Then I tell him, âI have money. I have properties I didnât buy, cars and carpets, antiques and jewelsâand none of them means a damn to me if I donât have her. Soâgive me a number.â
We stare each other down.
When he remains quiet, I add in a low voiceâjust shy of menacing. âThink of this as my big, fat carrot. You catch more flies with honey, yâknow? But rest assured that my stick is pretty fucking lethalâand Iâm not afraid to use it.â
Laughter shakes his whole body, vibrating the table. âAye, ohâlisten to you. Somebodyâs got balls to spare, huh? Sounds like a threat.â He turns to one of the ogres behind him. âYou believe this kid, Tony?â
Tony doesnât believe it. âI donât believe it, Mr. Bianco.â
âI musta misheard you. Right . . . Brent?â
And as quick as a snake strike, lethal energy radiates from him, like steam from a boiling pot.
And I donât give a shitâbecause Iâve done my homework.
I lean forward, looking straight into his eyes. âYouâre married, right, Carmine? To the same woman for over fifty years. Thereâs just something about the girl next doorâyour childhood sweetheart. The prosecutor? Sheâs mine. So . . . ask yourself if thereâs anything you wouldnât do to keep your wife safe. Any horror you wouldnât commit, any law you wouldnât break. Then . . . you tell me if Iâm threatening you.â
Thick, heavy silence blankets the room.
Then Bianco reaches down and takes another bite of his sandwich. As he chews, he tells me, âI like you, kid.â
I shrug. âMost people do.â
He takes another bite. âYou gamble?â
âSometimes.â
He nods, swallowing his bite. âThe way I gamble . . . you gotta try and tip the odds in your favor. Load the dice, weight the wheel, count the cards. But after you play your handâif you lose, itâs over. You cut your losses, walk away from the table. Turning around to take out the dealer only pisses off the casino. Brings unneeded attention, you know what Iâm sayinâ?â
And Iâm pretty sure I do.
Bianco leans back in his chair, regarding me. âSo . . . after Ginoâs hand plays out, you marry your cute girl, have lots of blue-eyed lawyer babiesâand donât bother looking over her shoulder. Weâre not gonna be there.â
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Three weeks later, the verdict is in. Iâm right behind Kennedy when the foreman reads it aloud. And Iâm the first person she hugs after Gino Moriotti is found guilty on all counts.
Kennedy and I go out and celebrate with the prosecutors and agents who worked the case with her. She drinks vodka. A lot of it. Itâs a great fucking night.
And then I pack up my warrior princess and take her home to my castle.