columnist at The Times , Sally Faiers was at the top of her game but she would never earn a fortune. No one went into investigative journalism for the money. But Sally owned her own place, paid her own mortgage and even, when the situation demanded, bought her own vodka.
At last, the key went in, so suddenly that Sally lurched forward, bumping her head painfully against the door.
âArse,â she grumbled under her breath.
The four flights of stairs were a killer. She really must go to a gym sometime this century. Staggering, breathless, into her flat, she locked the door behind her and kicked off her heels.
What a night! Sally had filed her latest story, an exposé of one of the top Catholic clerics in England colluding in a pedophile ring, at six oâclock and had gone straight to the nearest pub to celebrate. She was in between boyfriends at the moment, but had made do with snogging John Wheeler from the sports desk in the cab on her way home. She contemplated asking him in for a nightcapâword on the desk was John had the biggest dick in Wappingâbut then she remembered what had happened the last time she had a one-night stand with someone at work. Will, the sexy intern on news. Poor Will had mooned over Sally for weeks afterwards, continually âdropping byâ her desk for coffee when she was trying to write. In the end sheâd had to have a word with the editor and get him transferred to obituaries. She still felt bad about it.
Padding into the bathroom, Sally peeled off her dress and tights and turned on the shower, glancing at her reflection in the mirror before she stepped inside. At thirty-two Sally Faiers still had a good figure, despite her gym phobia, borderline alcoholism and generally dissolute lifestyle. Her waist was small, her boobs big and remarkably perky, and her long legs just the right amount of toned. She had a small, snub nose that she hated but that men inexplicably found sexy, pale gray eyes like morning mist, and a very wide mouth, that had been known to produce an astonishing number of swear words, curses and profanities, especially when its owner was under a deadline. She wore her blond hair in a blunt bob, and almost always dirty due to a chronic lack of both time and being arsed.
The moment she opened the shower door, her phone rang.
Sally groaned. Two in the fucking morning! It wasnât unusual for her to receive calls at odd hours. But once a story was filed, there was usually a lull until her research began again. On this last story, some of the calls had been harrowing. Broken men, sobbing down the line to her as they recalled childhood abuse. Detachment was the one part of the journalistâs job that Sally had never been able to master. That, and an ability to ignore a ringing phone.
Wrapping a towel around herselfâ Why? Nobodyâs here? âshe staggered back into the hallway and picked up.
âSally Faiers.â
âHello, gorgeous.â
Sallyâs heart dropped to the pit of her stomach. It was a bad line, but sheâd know that voice anywhere, the deep, masculine, American voice that was part drawl, part growl.
âHunter.â Just saying his name was painful. âYouâre alive, then.â
âNo need to sound so happy about it.â
âIâm not happy about it. Youâre a fucking arsehole.â
âNow, thatâs not kind. You know the only way I got through the last year was by imagining you naked, with those perfect legs of yours wrapped around my waist. Remember Stockholm?â
âNo,â said Sally. âThe only way I got through the last year was by imagining you chained to a wall in some godforsaken Group 99 hideout with a pair of electrodes glued to your bollocks.â
Hunter laughed. âI missed you.â
âThey let you go, then?â
âActually I escaped.â
Now it was Sallyâs turn to laugh. âBullshit! You have about as many survival skills as