Las Vegas My eyes strayed to her ass as she folded herself into the dark black sedan that waited for us outside the Bellagio. I prided myself on not being a misogynistic asshole, but it was right there, all perfectly round and grabbable, encased in those jeans that looked like theyâd been stitched with only her body in mind.
âYou coming?â she asked from inside the car, slipping into a leather jacket.
Well, this was either the beginning of an epic story or a horror movie. Either way, I was committed.
I slid onto the leather seat, and we were off before I had even clicked my seat belt. A large, bald man glanced back from behind the wheel before turning onto the strip.
âYouâre not Patrick.â
âI am not Patrick,â I confirmed as the guyâs eyes widened. Was he her driver? Her bodyguard? Please donât be a jealous boyfriend.
âLetâs go,â Penelope said, looking out the window. âPatrick was drunk, so I had to lose him.â
âAre you kidding me?â the guy roared.
âNope. There was zero chance I was putting him in a rig like that.â
The guyâs fingers tapped on the wheel while we waited for a light to turn. âShit. Okay, well, who is this guy?â
âLittle John, this is Cruz. Cruz, this is Little John. Heâs our stunt manager and a really close friend,â Penelope explained.
Little John. Like Robin Hood?
âOkay,â I said, trying to go with the flow. Stunt managerâ¦damn, who was this girl?
âAnd what qualifies him to pull this off? Or did you grab the first good-looking guy from the lobby?â
âIt was the bar, actually,â I corrected him as we began driving again, turning down a side street.
âFuck my life, Penna. What the hell are you thinking? You canât just throw some stranger into a rig and expect shit to go right. Pax and Landon are going to freak out.â
âThey are not my problem,â Penelope answered, but her hand flexed on her thigh.
Maybe those are the jealous boyfriends.
âRight. Theyâre mine. And so is this guyââhe thumbed in my direction with his free handââwhen you get him killed.â
âHe said he can jump,â she argued.
âOh really?â Little John snapped as we pulled up outside the back of the Linq Casino and Hotel. âLike what? A few tandem jumps with his buddy to cross off his bucket list? You can get him seriously hurt, Penna.â
Okay, thatâs enough.
âLook, I have no clue what weâre doing, or who you are, but I have nearly a hundred jumps with the 82nd Airborne. Iâm not exactly a rookie here.â
That earned me a surprised look from both of them, but I far more enjoyed seeing Penelopeâs blue eyes widen. She struck me as the kind of girl who was hard to impress.
âYouâre in the military?â Little John asked.
âI did my three years and got out,â I answered.
âThank you for your service,â Penelope said in a soft voice. âNow I feel bad for giving you shit about jumping.â Her nose crinkled in the cutest way.
âDonât worry about it. Now are we just going to sit here all night? Because I remember a beautiful girl promising me something dangerous and a touch illegal.â
âA touch?â Little John snapped at Penelope. âDid you tell him anything?â
âLook, it was kind of an impetuous decision.â
âYou? Impetuous? Never,â he said sarcastically.
âQuit being an ass. Are we cleared to go?â
He muttered something that sounded like, âtheyâre going to fucking kill me,â and then opened his door. We followed suit, meeting at the trunk, where Little John handed us two packs, harnesses and helmets attached. Apparently we were jumping off something, and given that there wasnât an airport in sight, we had to be BASE jumpingâ¦which was illegal as shit.
âStill want to do this?â Penelope asked, slinging her rig over one shoulder and threading her nearly waist-long blond hair through the back of a baseball cap. For being so slight, she handled that pack like it weighed absolutely nothing.
âSince I donât know exactly what weâre doing, thatâs kind of an unfair question.â I took the black cap she offered and slipped it on.
She pointed up, and I followed the direction of her finger to see the High Roller, the tallest Ferris wheel in the world. âAre you kidding? That thingâ¦â
âItâs five hundred and fifty feet at the top,â she supplied, already following Little John toward the back of the building. We passed under the giant metal platform where passengers boarded the ride, and my mind spun a hell of a lot faster than that Ferris wheel. âYou donât have to do it if youâre scared,â she tossed over her shoulder.
Like I was scared? The jump itself didnât bother me. The repercussions of being caught? That could fuck up everything Iâd been working for the last eight years. As gorgeous, enchanting, and utterly intoxicating as this girl was, I couldnât throw away everything over an illegal jump.
She turned, holding the door open for me. âIf we get caught, which we wonât, the biggest penalty weâll face will probably be trespassing, which is a slap-on-the-wrist misdemeanor. Look, you donât even have to do it. You can leave now, or you can ride up with me and ride back down, or you can jump.â
She stared up at me, every inch of her body language screaming that she didnât care what I did. She was going to do whatever she wanted. But her eyes told a different story. There was something damaged there, a desperate plea that tapped into my soul in a way Iâd thought I was immune to.
Man, was I wrong.
She wasnât a damsel. She was in distress, but she wasnât going to say a word about it, and that set off every alarm bell in my brain and engaged that sense of chivalry Grandma had busted her ass to instill in me.
Shit. Double shit. Fuck.
I wasnât reckless by natureâfar from it. I played life like the chess game it was, more than aware of the consequences of my actions seven moves from now. Maybe it was knowing that I was leaving tomorrow for the next few months, or I could have lied and told myself it was for the thrill. It wasnât. It was for herâthis phenom of a woman Iâd met barely an hour ago.
A misdemeanor would be a pain in the ass but wouldnât shred my plans like a felony. Holy shit, youâre seriously debating the seriousness of different charges?
âIâll ride with you,â I told her.
The relief in her smile sent a wave of warmth through me. Good decision for her. Bad decision for you.
I told the devil on my shoulder to shut the hell up and followed them into the darkened hallway. We entered at the head of the ticket line, where no one waited, as if the line had momentarily paused.
âI took care of everything,â Little John told Penna. âWeâre already past the bag check, so they wonât see the chutes. These are your tickets. Make sure yours is on top. The attendant marked it. Heâll bypass the security on your pod, and the rest is up to you. Iâll be parked right out back. When you land, ditch the chutesâyouâre worth more than they are.â
âGot it,â Penelope said, taking the tickets.
âAre you sure about this?â Little John asked her.
âNo,â she answered, and my gaze snapped to where she shook her head at him. âBut if I want to be me again, this is what I have to do. Thereâs no toe-dipping, no easing my way back in for the documentary. Either I pull this off, or I donât deserve to be a Renegade.â
âThatâs bullshit.â
âThatâs the truth.â She leaned up and kissed his cheek. âThank you. I know what this cost you with them. Iâll see you at the bottom.â
âJust be safe, and you knowâ¦donât get him killed, either.â He pivoted and left us standing inside the doors that led out to the platform.
Noise coming up the hallway told me that the line was reforming and heading our way. âLetâs go,â I said, placing my hand lightly on her lower back to guide her through the door. It wasnât anything I hadnât done on a date, but simply touching the small of her back sent a wake-up message to my dick.
Down boy. Thereâs no time for that. I promptly removed my hand.
What the hell am I doing? I asked myself that the entire time we approached the attendant, watching him load the pod directly ahead of ours with at least ten people.
Penelope handed our ticket to the attendant, whose eyes widened slightly at the mark in the corner. He nodded, guiding us into the transparent pod that would easily fit twenty or more people. âYouâll note that the exit door is on the opposite side,â he told us. âItâs about a half-hour ride total, so enjoy. Welcome to the High Roller.â
We stepped over the six-inch gap that separated the platform from the pod, and the attendant closed the door, ensconcing us in a darkened, purple-lit sphere. Rocking was nonexistent as we started our ascent.
The television monitors immediately started babbling about the stats of the Ferris wheel. A few quick button-pushes and they were silenced. I put the pack on the floor as Penelope did the same, and then we both stood at the windows, watching the lights of Vegas above us. Soon theyâd be beneath us.
âI owe you an explanation,â she said softly, catching me off guard.
âIâd like one, but I made my choice. You donât owe me anything.â Our shoulders brushed, and that same electricity Iâd felt earlier hit me. I didnât even know who this girl was, but we had some insane chemistry.
âIâve never done this before.â
âWhich part? The BASE jump? The illegal factor? Or asking a random stranger if heâd like to break the law with you?â My lips turned up at the utter absurdity of the situation.
She laughed softly, a gorgeous, light sound that made me instantly want to hear it again. âIâve never picked up a guy. Let alone a guy in a bar. Add to it that I then asked if you wanted to risk your life with a stranger, and itâs been an evening of firsts.â
âReally? Man, this just happened to me last week in Seattle,â I joked.
That earned me a breathtaking smile and another light laugh. God, the girl was truly a masterpiece. Her face had classic, almost Grecian, features with high cheekbones, a pert nose, and a mouth that begged to be sampled. Those eyes, thoughâlight blue with darker flecks that had me staring way longer than necessary.
âHow old are you, anyway?â she asked.
âTwenty-seven. Worried Iâm underage?â
âNawh, just making sure you couldnât join AARP.â
âOuch,â I laughed.
Her eyes focused on the buildings as we passed floors, slowly rising into the Vegas skyline. âI canât believe I did this.â Her phone dinged and then dinged again before she could get it out of her pocket. âShit,â she muttered, scanning over the text messages.
âIssues?â
She thumbed over the messages as another one came in. âPax. Leah. Pax. Landon. Rachel. Nick. Shit. They know Iâm here.â
Panic crept into her eyes, and her teeth worried her lower lip.
I checked my watch. âOkay, we have about ten minutes until we hit the peak.â
âRight,â she said, still reading the messages.
âAnd chances are Iâm never going to see you again once we land.â
She looked up at me. âWe land?â
âIf I jump with you,â I clarified. âPoint is, youâre up here with someone you just met in a bar an hour ago, when you clearly have people who care about you. Itâs none of my business, but thereâs something missing in this equation.â
She glanced at me and then to the skyline, turning off her phone and slipping it into her back pocket. âYou donât know the first thing about me.â
âAnd maybe thatâs why I can say that to you.â Was I really going to have to jump with this girl to get her to open up? Something was eating away at her, and it was obvious she wasnât going to reach out to anyone from those mysterious text messages. I looked back toward the pack on the floor. âHow did you stow the lines?â If I was even going to consider jumping off this Ferris wheel, I needed to know there was an actual parachute in there.
âClassic figure-eight pattern.â
âNo primary stow?â
âAnd no slider.â She shrugged.
âWait. No slider, and no primary stow?â
âTaking off the slider gives us a faster open time, and with five hundred and fifty feetââ
âWe need those seconds,â I deduced. Weâd be falling for only a few seconds as it was. If Little John was there at the landing, if we could lose the chutes, if the hats had helped us avoid the camerasâ¦we might not get caught.
âAnd the stow would just add another unnecessary step in deployment,â Penelope finished.
âYouâre really good at this, arenât you?â
A corner of her mouth lifted. âIâm a very well-paid extreme athlete. Orâ¦I used to be, anyway.â She ended on a near whisper.
âAnd youâre not now?â She shot me a look, and I raised my hands. âHey, I have one night, just a few minutes in this eternity of ours, to try to understand you.â To try to help you.
âDo you have to understand everyone?â
âYes. I have a slight control issue.â And a hero complex, according to my grandmother.
I felt her gaze on me but kept mine on the skyline, which we were slowly, finally rising above.
âI got hurt a few months ago,â she said, crossing her arms under her breasts.
With supreme effort, I kept my mouth shut. She needed someone to listen, not talk. My effort was rewarded when she sighed and continued.
âMy groupâthe other athletesâweâre more like family than friends. One of my really good friends, Nick, was paralyzed working on a new trick, and my sisterâ¦she loved him, and when he shut everyone out, she broke. Weâve been shooting this documentary, mostly to get Nick a name in stunt design, and things went wrong from the start. Equipment was tampered with, people got hurt, Leah almost died,â she whispered. Shaking it off, she sucked in a breath. âBrookeâmy sisterâshe was trying to hurt Pax, but I was the one she got instead, thank God. Crushed my leg.â She rolled her ankle. âIâve been cleared for a month now to get back in the saddle, but instead of being excited, I asked for an air cast. I asked to be sidelined.â
âIs that why youâre not with your friends?â
âTheyâre in Aspen for the X Games. I wanted to get on the plane with them, but I just couldnât watch and wonder if Iâd ever have the balls to do it again. I had to find out, and if Iâd let them know, they would have coddled me, told me to ease my way back in.â
âYouâre not an ease-in kind of girl?â
She rolled her eyes at the double meaning I hadnât intended, and I laughed. Apparently my subconscious had ideas of its own, which was understandable, seeing as how her entire body screamed hot, keep-you-coming-until-dawn sex. But it wasnât the curves of her body that got me on this Ferris wheel in what was potentially the most reckless choice of my lifeâit was the broken look in her eyes that peeked out when she let her guard down.
âIâm a jump-in-with-both-feet-and-then-measure-the-depth-later kind of girl,â she said. âEver since I sat on Paxâs first motocross bike and then demanded my own, Iâve never feared flying, or the fall. If I can do this, then maybe that girl is still in here.â She tapped her chest. âIf I can do this, Iâm one step closer to looking at my bike without my stomach turning over.â
I already knew that if that girl wasnât still there, she wouldnât be standing here with me. Sheâd still be on the ground. But I wasnât the one who needed to be convincedâshe was.
I nodded to myself and took a deep breath. Looks like youâre jumping.
âYouâve got some good lawyers to get us out of this, right, extreme-athlete girl?â I asked, reaching for the pack.
âThe best,â she promised. âBesides, like I said, itâs a misdemeanor, and theyâre not going to catch us anyway.â
âHow sure of that are you?â I asked, examining my pack. I wish Iâd had room to roll it out and repack it for my peace of mind. Leap or donât, but no easing-in, remember? Trust her or donât. Help her or sit the fuck down.
âA nice bottle of champagne certain,â she said with a smile that stole the air from my lungs.
âIâll hold you to that.â A few snaps later and I was in the harness, tightening the straps and adjusting the helmet. I rolled down my sleeves to protect my arms the best I could.
The pod rose above most of the casinos around us. âItâs gorgeous,â she said reverently. Her gaze swept the skyline, her lips parted as she braced her hands lightly against the glass.
âYeah. Beautiful view.â I never once took my eyes from her.
She noticed, glancing my way and blushing.
âItâs about time.â She pointed to the television monitor that showed we were only a minute from the zenith of the rotation.
She headed for the opposite side of the pod, opening the door with a lot less effort than Iâd imagined it would take. I quickly wiped her fingerprints off the glass with my sleeve.
The breeze swept in, the January air clearing my head as I stepped to the open doorway next to Penelope to look down over the nearly empty parking lot.
âYou have to clear that tree,â she said, pointing.
âYou need to watch that lamppost.â
âGod, I love this feeling,â she whispered, as if she hadnât meant to say the thought aloud.
âThe rush?â I guessed.
âThe anticipation. The war that silently rages in my body between what I want it to do and what it knows isnât safe. The way my stomach tightens and my heart starts to race. The moment the decision is still mine.â
I knew the exact moment she was describing because Iâd lived itâI was in it now. It was the moment you stood on the edge of epic and decided to topple over.
She looked up, snapping her static line hook to the steel rod above the doorframe. I did the same and then stood back, checking the monitor for our location. âItâs time.â
She moved her toes to the very edge of the pod, her black Vans standing out against the metal plate. Then she closed her eyes and lifted her face to the sky, pure joy washing over her features.
Enchanting. That girl she was seeking was closer to her surface than she realized.
âSee you at the bottom,â she said over her shoulder with a thousand-megawatt smile and jumped.
She was fucking fearless, and even if I hadnât been wearing a parachute, I might have jumped just to stay close to herâshe was that magnetic.
âGo to Vegas, they said. It will be fun, they said,â I muttered.
I counted two full seconds, watching her chute deploy, then stepped out into nothing.