Rocks (3 page)

Read Rocks Online

Authors: M. J. Lawless

BOOK: Rocks
7.73Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“I’m so sorry I’m late,” she said, bending to kiss him on the head and moving to the other side of the table, sitting down across from him. He could smell the cloud of her perfume, stronger than usual, and longed to reach up before she took her place, to pull her closer to him and press his mouth hard against her lips
—but he never dared. One day, though. One day soon.

She made no attempt to explain where she had been or why she was late and Maarten made no attempt to question her, watching her intently as she lifted up the menu.

“Have you ordered yet? No? Well, in that case, shall I order for us both?”

He nodded dumbly and waited for an opportunity to tell her about what was in the case. Then he noticed her hand holding the menu, and the ring on it.

He had seen her pendant before, a particularly fine piece if a little old-fashioned, a well-cut marquis diamond with very few inclusions and none that would have been visible to an untrained eye. This, however, was different: expensive enough, but not really fitting with the rest of her elegant style.

She did not catch his eyes as the waiter came across to take their order until, letting the menu be taken from her, she turned her face towards him and gave him a warm smile. Maarten felt uncomfortable: he was anxious in any case, but that ring disturbed him for some reason.

“I understand you have something to show me,” she said, her eyes widening a little as though in anticipation of some exotic secret about to be revealed.

He opened his mouth to speak, but his throat was dry. Nothing came out except a rattling gasp and he reached forward to grab a glass of water, almost dropping his briefcase in the process which made him spill some of the water onto his lap. Karla frowned at this and reached her hand across the table towards him.

“Maarten—what’s wrong?”

He managed to swallow a mouthful of water and placed it back on the table. As he did so, she brushed her hand along his, holding it there which caused him to blush. No woman had ever been intimate, even in such a small way, with him before Karla and the touch of this beautiful goddess still made him tremble.

“Your ring,” he said. “It’s new.”

“Oh, do you like it?” she asked innocently, lifting it up to her face and admiring how the light sparkled across its facets. “It was my aunt’s.”

“May I see?”

With another smile she held out her hand, a demure gesture with her graceful fingers bent slightly, allowing him to hold the tips as he stared at the diamond.

“Your aunt’s?”

“Yes. It was an heirloom left to me. That was why I was late today. I was collecting it.”

“It doesn’t look very old.”

A more experienced man, watching Karla rather than scrutinizing her ring, would have perhaps seen a slight blush appear on her neck and cheeks, how she blinked once, twice.

“It’s not,” she answered firmly. “It was bought for her just before she died, and she left it to me. That was sweet of her, don’t you think?”

Maarten dropped her hand. “I’m so sorry,” he mumbled, feeling awkward and mistaking the slight redness in her face for his own embarrassment. “I didn’t realise your aunt had died.”

“Yes, Aunt Elsie.” Karla reached into her purse to retrieve a handkerchief with which she dabbed one eye. “It was very sudden and very sad.”

“I’m so sorry,” he mumbled, unable to look her in the face now, ashamed of himself. He frowned, still staring down at the space before him as they waited to be served. “Won’t there need to be a funeral?”

“Oh, it all happened so quickly that the funeral’s already taken place. She was cremated, just outside Copenhagen.” He could see her arm moving as she dabbed away more tears.

“I’m sure Aunt Elsie would want me to live my life to the full,” Karla said after a while. “It’s
sad, of course, but we only have one, as she used to say. Though whether she was referring to life or her recipe for veal and pork meatballs was never entirely clear.” Maarten lifted his head at this in confusion and saw that she was smiling softly at him. “I was teasing,” she told him in a low voice, then her smile dropped. “I’m sorry, that was very bad of me.” Now it was her turn to look at the table rather than meet his gaze.

“No, no, not at all!” In his discomfiture, Maarten had completely forgotten about the ring, and instead he tentatively reached across the table to comfort her with a slightly awkward touch. At this, Karla immediately lifted her head and stared at him, a pained expression in her eyes as she lifted her own hand and grasped his tightly as he held her arm. Her grip was surprisingly strong for such a small woman, and as she pinned him there Maarten realised that he wouldn’t have been able to move if he’d wanted to
—which he most definitely did not.

“You’re such a good man,” she told him quietly. “I’m so lucky to have met you.”

He was lost for a few moments, swimming in the green pools of her eyes, and it took him a few seconds to realise what she had said. He shrugged, feeling even more awkward now, and when she finally released his hand he pulled it away and looked down at his briefcase once more, though his heart sang with happiness.

She too was looking at his case. “And do you have something for me?” she asked.

Looking up, a sly smile across his face now, he nodded. He was about to speak when the waiter returned with their first course. Thanking him sweetly, Karla began to tuck in, displaying her usual hearty appetite which never seemed to interfere with her trim and perfect figure.

For his part, Maarten fumbled with the case until the waiter left and then pushed his plate aside. He was never as keen on this fancy food as his companion anyway, and today he was too nervous to eat. Looking around conspiratorially to ensure they were alone, only the faint hum of other clients eating in the front of the restaurant to disturb them, he placed the case and flicked open its latches.

When she saw what he drew out of his black case, it was Karla’s turn to lose her appetite. Her fork slowly lowered to the table and she stared in astonishment at his hand, her eyes glittering with a fierce fire as he unfolded a black, velvet cloth in his hands.

It would have been the largest diamond she had ever seen, of that he was sure. Indeed, it was only the second time he had seen a gemstone of this size, and that was because he was responsible for the cut of both of them. It lay in its cloth, sparkling as vividly as the pendant around her neck and the ring on her finger, but of a purer colour than both, crystalline and
bright. A square-cut stone, with a diameter almost three centimetres across, its multifaceted surface caught and scattered the light in a way that entranced even Maarten, for all that he knew the provenance of this particular stone.

“Beautiful,” he heard Karla whisper.

He nodded, saying nothing.

“Can I hold it?”

This made him snap his eyes up. She was staring at the rock in his hand, her mouth open slightly and her eyes agog at the sight of it. God! He so wanted to fuck her—there and then, on the table!

The sudden eruption of that thought, and the swelling in his trousers, made Maarten embarrassed once more. “Best not,” he replied, closing up the velvet wrap around it. “The last thing I want is fingerprints on this.”

“What is it?” she asked. “It’s perfect.”

That made him smile. “It is. You won’t find a better replica of the Wallenstein
—and I know, because I cut both of them.” Sensing movement behind them, he hurriedly replaced the stone in his case, patting it down carefully and snapping the clasps shut. As the waiter came for their plates, on an impulse he ordered a bottle of wine.

“Time to celebrate, don’t you think?”

Karla nodded, smiling archly at him now. He could see her pride in him shining through her eyes and his heart swelled up once more. After their wine had been brought to the table, he poured a liberal glass for each of them.

“To answer your question, silicon carbide,” he told her, lifting his glass in a salute and knocking back a mouthful of the dry, redolent wine.

She joined him in the gesture. “Moissanite,” she said with a smile. “How clever.”

“Well, not exactly.” He wanted to show off now, for her to know exactly how clever he really was. “Moissanite’s even rarer than diamond. This was created in a laboratory and then I cut it to precisely the right dimensions.” He smiled, his slightly yellowing teeth exposed in a big grin.

“You are so smart!” she yelped, placing her glass on the table and reaching across the table, dragging him forward so that some of his wine spilled before she landed a big kiss on his lips. “I can’t believe that we’re going to do this!”

That made Maarten’s heart quail for a second and he gulped another mouthful of wine.

“No,” he squeaked. “Me neither.”

“It’s perfect.
Absolutely perfect. No one will be able to tell the difference.”

“Not unless they test it, and there’s no reason for anyone to do that. Not now. The Wallenstein is ready, and
soon it will be set for this Papa Bo-Diddly, or whatever his name is.” His lips curled in disdain as he said the name.

“Papa Dee,” Karla absent-mindedly corrected him as she leaned back in her chair, cradling her wine in her fine fingers. Her eyes flicked across to Maarten’s face. “When is it to be set?”

“Tomorrow,” he replied.

“Then you have to make the exchange today.”

That made him spit out a mouthful of wine across the table and he shamefacedly picked up a napkin to mop it up.

“Today?”

“Of course. Unless you want to try and fashion a necklace to match the one that’s being made for it.”

Maarten began to sweat again, while his heart beat more rapidly. Crafting a perfect replica of the Wallenstein diamond had been a challenge, but now the reality of what he would have to do to complete this pact filled him with terror.

Seeing the expression on his face, Karla leaned across the table and, after prising the glass from his fingers to place it beside her own wine, gently took his hands in hers.

“You can do this, Maarten.
For me. For us. Just think, when we have it, we can be together forever.”

He nodded, barely hearing her now. A rushing sound filled his ears and the room seemed to have suddenly become unbearably hot.

“Just think, the timing’s perfect. You have holidays arranged—everyone knows how hard you’ve been working, how much you deserve a rest. You go away, as we planned, and I’ll follow you.”

That was part of the plan that had always confused him. “I don’t understand,” he mumbled. “Why can’t we go together?”

For a second, a look of annoyance flashed across Karla’s face. “We’ve discussed this. You go to Heathrow and I’ll meet you there—with the diamond. Look at you, Maarten, you’ll fall apart before you cross through customs. Trust me on this. I can get the diamond through and then we can go wherever you want.”

“South America,” he said. They had discussed it. He had always wanted to visit Argentina, Brazil.

She smiled. “Yes, South America. Think about it, Maarten. They’ve never appreciated you at Boeckman’s, never valued your talents. But now you’re never going to need them ever again. Trust me. Do this, and we’ll be together forever.”

He pulled one of his hands from hers and picked up his glass, draining the remains of his wine before nodding. “Yes, together forever,” he gasped.

 

Chapter Three: Hayden

 

Hayden stood up from the panel where he was working and gave a brief, apologetic smile to the strange, pasty-faced man who was scurrying from Boeckman’s clutching a suitcase to his chest. Hayden tried to hunch himself up a little, not drawing himself to his full height, but even so he was a good six inches taller than the other man who he recognised as one of the employees he’d seen from time to time.

The man scowled in irritation, eager to make his way to the street outside and not looking directly at Hayden, who dipped his head so that the cap he wore would obscure his features. The fact that the man didn’t want to make conversation suited Hayden just fine. As well as the immediate task in hand he was trying hard to make himself as inconspicuous as possible.

One good point about dressing in overalls and carrying a toolbox was that people rarely paid you much attention. It was a trick that Hayden had tried out before and one that he was sure
he would employ again. Had anyone really looked at him, they might have been a little surprised at just how meticulously clean and tidy he was as he replaced a number of wires into the panel on the inside of the doorway. No stray hairs poked from beneath his cap and he worked with gloves that left no marks on the metal panel.

When Boeckman’s had been updating its security systems, one employee had suddenly and mysteriously been taken ill with a rather severe case of food poisoning. That had taken some wiles on Hayden’s part to arrange, but he’d not been entirely surprised at how he’d been able to take up the missing engineer’s position. After all, he’d been planning this job for some time and, in this age of
casualisation and consultancy, he’d planted enough seeds to make him a very convenient choice for such a specialised task. He’d also passed any security checks the contractor required—which was somewhat ironic considering Hayden’s background. But then, he’d always been meticulous in covering over his tracks.

As he clicked the panel shut and inserted the final screws, everything was falling into place. There was
only one more task to complete but that would have to wait until tonight: though the chances were very small, he didn’t want to risk anyone finding
that
little toy before he had chance to complete his real work.

Time was crucial now. Tomorrow
—the next day at the very latest—the company he’d conned his way into would send one of its regular engineers and before long one of them would find the modifications he’d made. That meant the job had to be completed tonight.

He looked across to the security guard who was sitting by the doorway, plainly bored. That was good as well. You could employ all the guards you wanted in the world, but by screwing down their pay and treating the job as a dead end it guaranteed they were always less alert than Hayden.

Not that Boeckman’s was stupid. The company had installed state of the art technology to protect their property. Unfortunately for them, it was now completely compromised. It would take days to unravel what Hayden had done—and by that time he intended to be long gone.

“It’s done,” he called out in slightly stiff Dutch. The guard looked at him and nodded, not listening. Now, according to procedure he was meant to go through aspects of the security
system with this guard, but he could see that the man was too bored to care. That suited Hayden just fine. “If you have a problem, you know who to call.”

Without waiting for a reply, he exited through the door and made his way along the street that led towards the old part of Amsterdam. He’d been in that building every day for the past week, working assiduously and ensuring that he had visited
as many rooms as possible, every nook and cranny. He’d not actually seen inside the safe where the Wallenstein was held, but he’d seen enough on the cameras to know that it was the diamond he wanted.

Now he had a few hours to kill. Even when he wasn’t working inside Boeckman’s he had staked out the building
at night. After the first night he didn’t need to be there physically: he could hack into the camera feeds anytime he wanted, and was very pleased to see that the security staff Boeckman’s employed were hardly of the highest calibre. It wasn’t that they were especially bad or not conscientious—more that they followed a routine, and that was disastrous if they wanted to keep out a crook like Hayden Carter.

He should have gone back to the safe house he’d set up and tried to sleep, but the fatigue that had affected
him only a few hours before had now been replaced by a vibrant buzz throughout his body. He was always this way just before an important job. He needed a bed, but not one to sleep in.

He’d even foreseen this contingency, and so instead of heading to his hideout followed the streets to the address of the hotel he’d also arranged, not far from the historic Walloon church. While he’d been busy with Boeckman’s, that hadn’t stopped him from seeing an opportunity that was too good to pass up. The woman was American, on holiday with her husband, and she’d be heading back to Tennessee tomorrow. The Wallenstein wasn’t going anywhere, and Hayden knew he’d kick himself if he didn’t at least meet her once.

Ignoring the receptionist, who frowned at him as he entered the lobby, evidently wondering what work needed doing in their hotel, he waited for the lift to descend and felt inside his overalls for the electronic key. He smiled as he’d considered his options: hacking a key like that would have been fifteen minutes work for him, but in the end he’d decided to book the suite to a large Dutch multinational. It would take them months to find out what he’d done—if they ever decided even to look—and in the meantime he had bought himself an afternoon of extravagant luxury.

And, he told himself as he opened the door to the suite, this was definitely
very
luxurious. Dark walnut and mahogany furniture was laid out beside the soft, cream rugs, and beyond the first open doorway he could see the bedroom. A coat and bag was thrown onto the bed. Good. She was already here.

Closing the door quietly, Hayden placed his toolbox on the table and removed his gloves. There was a place and time to be prissy and meticulous, but during sex sure as hell wasn’t it.

Standing to his full height now, well over six foot tall, Hayden took on a different aspect. His hair, covered by the cap which he now removed, was very dark-brown, almost black, and now that he was not attempting to make himself inconspicuous there could be no doubt that his fine, firm features and broad shoulders and back were a sight that pretty much any woman would want to stare at.

Though h
e had been as quiet as possible he must have made some noise (which made him frown, purely out of professional concern) as a woman came to stand by the door. She was perhaps five-foot seven, five-eight in her heels, and she wore a pretty, flower-printed dress that reached to her knees. The top of it low enough to expose enough bosom to indicate that a day seeing tulip-bulbs in Dutch fields wasn’t top of her agenda. Her blonde hair was tied back and her face and trim, healthy figure were already making Hayden stir down below.

She was perhaps in her early thirties, near enough to Hayden’s own age, and he could imagine her as an eighteen year-old cheerleader, utterly stunning and driving the boys crazy. It wasn’t that she was no longer beautiful
—far from it: she would have turned the heads of plenty of men. No, it was that she was starting to enter that realisation that life was slowly passing her by.

Though she didn’t wear a wedding ring, Hayden only had to look at her to know she was married. It was one of the reasons he’d picked her. Though she probably wasn’t fully conscious of it herself, this was a woman who was desperate to be taken. It was that repressed hunger that attracted him as much as her looks.

One of her eyebrows was raised as she regarded him with amusement.

“I didn’t hav
e you down for the workman type.” Her soft, southern accent was arousing him even more. He smiled.

“It’s not a problem, is it?”

She shrugged. “No. It’s just not what I was expecting.”

“A bit too rough for you?” As he said the word ‘rough’ he saw her shiver slightly. Her hunger wasn’t so repressed anymore. “I didn’t have you yanks down for the type to hold class prejudices.”

She frowned at this. “Haven’t you heard the phrase ‘trailer trash’ before? And please don’t ever call me a yank again.”

Her spikiness incited him and he came forward, his face calm as he began to unbutton the top of his overalls. She watched him, leaning against the doorway. Behind her, the bed looked large and inviting.

“I didn’t have much intention discussing American history,” he said, “but if you want to dress in a confederate flag, that’s fine by me.” He was now only a foot away from her and, as he looked down at her, she lifted her face, staring at him with trepidation in her soft, blue eyes. “How long have you got?” he asked.

“A couple of hours,” she said, quietly. “Maybe more. He... he’s gone to indulge himself at that Heineken place, wherever that is. I said I had a headache and needed a walk.” Her eyes flicked away in irritation. “No doubt he’ll stop by the red light district.”

“And that bothers you?” Hayden reached out and touched the top of her dress, slowly sliding his fingers along the strap across her shoulders, enjoying the sensation of warmth beneath his fingertips.

“You’re joking, right?” Her eyes flashed with anger but almost immediately they dimmed again. “He’ll be lucky if he keeps it up for a blowjob.”

Without speaking, Hayden lowered his face, breathing on her neck as his mouth came closer to her flesh. Unconsciously, she shifted her head slightly, so that his lips could touch her skin. She took two steps back towards the bed and then seemed to recover a sense of ill-placed propriety.

“This is a mistake,” she told him nervously. “I should go.”

“You’re not going anywhere,” he growled and gently shoved against her shoulders with his hands so that she stumbled and fell, her legs kicking outwards as she landed on the bed. For a second, her face blazed with that same anger she had shown only moments before.

“How dare you!” she snapped. Hayden laughed.

“I didn’t push that hard,” he told her, continuing to unbutton his overalls and now exposing a strongly muscled shoulder and pecs. Her eyes flashed with a very different emotion when she caught sight of him. “I never met a woman so ready to fall.”

She half-grimaced, half-smiled at this. “Yeah,” she said quietly, averting her gaze from his. Smiling, he pulled down the top of his overalls, revealing the V-shape of his torso and well-built arms. That attracted her attention.

“Like I said,” she almost purred, “I didn’t have you down for the rough type.”

“Oh, I’m not rough
—not unless you want me to be,” he replied. “I was born with a silver spoon in my mouth.”

She giggled when he said this. “You English types are so quaint. I know what I’d like to put in my mouth, and it isn’t your spoon.”

Good, thought Hayden, she’s relaxing. His hands moved down to the bottoms of his clothes, unbuttoning them further.

“What did you do with it?” she asked. Her eyes were fixed on his crotch, unwavering.

“With what?”

“The spoon.

“I sold it and bought a Lexus.”

She gave a mock frown at this. “Is that all?”

“I wanted a Bentley, but it wasn’t that big a spoon.” His hands continued to undo buttons and then he let the trousers drop to the floor. “But then I guess I was blessed in other ways.”

“Oh, sweet Jesus!” the woman groaned. “Where have you been all my life?”

With a grin, Hayden moved forward, enjoying the half-erect weight as it swung between his legs and kicking off shoes and trousers as he moved closer. With a swift motion, he stripped off everything and stood before the woman completely in the buff. She was still dressed, but he enjoyed this moment of exhibiting himself. Reaching out, he touched her hair, moving his fingers to pull off the band that held it tied back.

Despite the look of raw, naked lust on her face, still she didn’t move. The size of him had raised some primeval fear in her, torn as she was between lust and shame. “I shouldn’t,” she whispered.

“Go on,” he said softly. “Treat yourself.” The thought of her confusion was actually turning him on more than it should and he bent forward, bringing his mouth close to her ears. “All your life, there have been guys buying you flowers, taking you to dinner, bringing you all those little
trinkets. And all that time what you’ve wanted is to be fucked, to be taken so deeply, to cum so hard that you’ll never forget the experience, never forget what it is to be a woman.”

Her eyes lifted, looking up at him with such longing that he immediately grew stiffer, making her gasp.

“Yes,” she murmured.

“Get on your knees,” he told her, standing back up to his full height and towering over her.

She did not need instructing twice. Sliding from the bed, she lowered herself onto the floor in front of him, her lips were trembling as she reached out with one hand, her brightly coloured nails flashing in the sunlight, the emerald at her neck refracting bright rays. When she touched him, she almost flinched, but then her fingers began to curl immediately, taking the thick shaft between them.

Other books

The Verruca Bazooka by Jonny Moon
Love Condemned: Beginnings by Stephanie Brown
Retribution (Drakenfeld 2) by Newton, Mark Charan
The Fool by Morgan Gallagher
Artemis the Brave by Williams, Suzanne, Holub, Joan
Empire Falls by Richard Russo
Savages of Gor by John Norman
The Eyes of the Dead by Yeates, G.R.