âGod . . . yessss.â
Kennedyâs hips jerk as she rides meâthe smooth strokes turning rough and desperate. I palm one tit, pinching the pointed nipple, while I suckle the other enthusiastically.
âOh . . . oh!â
Her chin falls to the top of my head as she comes, her muscles milking my cock mercilesslyâand I explode inside her with an unrestrained shout.
A few minutes later we lie tangled upâher head on my chest, our slick limbs and sweaty torsos clinging to each other in a soothing way. My fingers slide up and down her arm.
And I think.
Kennedy rested her case against Justin Longhorn a few days ago. I put my new computer expert on the stand the following day, to at least suggest some form of reasonable doubt. Now, all thatâs left is Justin. Heâll testify in his own defense . . . and then itâll be done.
And I wonder if this is how Serena Williams or Peyton Manning feel when they compete against their siblings. So fucking conflicted. I want to win the caseâfor Justin, for my own throbbing sense of competition. Yet I donât want Kennedy to lose.
I blow out a breath and start with, âSo listen . . . I know you think youâre winning the case . . .â
Kennedyâs voice is velvet to my ears, the way she always sounds after I give her three orgasms. âI donât think. I know I am.â
I squeeze her arm gently. âRight. But, the thing is, tomorrowâyour case is gonna implode. Iâm going to put Justin on the stand, and thereâs no way a jury will send him away for twenty years after they hear him testify. You havenât given them the option of a lesser charge, so itâs going to be twenty years, or an acquittal. You need to make a plea deal with me, Kennedy.â
She sits up and stares at me like she doesnât recognize me.
âYou rotten bastard!â
And you know how the rest of that conversation went. She takes a swing at me, I toss her clothes out the window, etc., etc.
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âNow listen up, buttercup.â
I look down at her beautiful, infuriated face, locking my eyes with hers.
âIâm falling in love with you.â
Kennedy goes completely still beneath me.
And I shake my head. âNo, I am in love with you. When I look at you, think about you, I canât decide if I want to fuck you, strangle you, or just hold you in my arms. Usually all three. And if thatâs not love, I donât know what is.â
She opens her mouth to argue, but I donât give her the chance. âYouâre everything Iâve been searching for, before I even knew I was looking. I pushed the plea deal because itâs the right thing to do for the caseâand because Iâm terrified if I win youâll hold it against me. And I already have so much to make up for.â
Her chest heaves, like sheâs sprintingâand in her head, she probably is.
âLet me up, Brent. Let me up right now.â
I release her wrists and climb off, sitting next to her, my leg hanging over the bed. Kennedy sits up, but doesnât move from the space beside me. I can practically see the wheels spinning in her head.
I tuck her hair behind her ear. âYou donât have to say anything back.â
Itâd be fucking nice if she didâbut she doesnât have to yet.
When she speaks, she focuses on her folded hands in her lap. âThis is all happening so fast.â
âI know. Itâs fast, but itâs real, Kennedy.â I take her hand. âWe are real.â
She stares at our hands, but doesnât hold mine back. It lies like a weight in my palm.
âI care about you, Brentâyou must already know that. I donât . . . I donât know if I have it in me to love you. Iâm not sure Iâm capable of it. I dreamed about being with you for so long . . . and then, after school, I let that dream die. Cremated it. Buried it. Sunk it to the bottomââ
âYeah, thanksâI get the picture.â
Her eyes tighten. âI think . . . I like it buried, Brent. It makes everything easier. My relationship with David and the relationships I had before were easy. I could enjoy them and then move on when they were over, because they didnât affect me. They didnât alter my life or who I am.â
I think about Waldo and frozen ponds.
âYou like skating the surface.â
Her forehead wrinkles, not understanding. So I clarify.
âIf you never dive in the deep end, you never have to worry about drowning.â
She nods slowly. âYeah. Itâs like that.â
Kennedy withdraws her hand and stands up. She rubs her eyes and sighs. âIâm going to go home and think, okay?â
Am I disappointed? As fuck.
Beaten? Not a chance in hell.
I know where sheâs coming fromâmore than sheâll probably ever understand. And like I said before, Iâm patient. Iâm relentless.
I donât believe for a second that sheâs incapable of loving me. Thereâs too much passion between usâso much feeling. I think she might even love me already.
I just have to help her see it.
Kennedy faces me, her posture taking on a more professional airâeven though sheâs still gorgeously bare.
âAnd thereâs not going to be a plea deal. Iâm sticking to the plan I have. If I change that now, Iâll always wonder if it was because it was the best choice for the case, or because I let my feelings for you sway me.â
I nod, resigned but not really surprised.
âOkay.â
She picks up my shirt from the bed, starts to slide her arms in, but I hold up my finger, stopping her. Then I open my bedroom door and there, in a neatly folded pile outside of it, are Kennedyâs clothes. Like I knew they would be.
Kennedy chuckles a little when I pick them up and hand them to her. Then she calls out into the hallway, âThank you, Harrison.â
I should really pay him more.
Weâre both quiet as she gets dressedâminus her bra. Just canât bring myself to feel bad about that.
Then she approaches me, reaches up on tiptoes, and kisses me softly. âIâll see you tomorrow.â
She will. Itâs our final matchup. Our Battle Royale. And when itâs done, only one of us will be left standing.
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âI call Justin Longhorn to the stand, Your Honor.â
Justin adjusts his navy tie, smooths his hands nervously down his tan slacks, and takes the stand. After heâs sworn in, he looks at me and I give him an encouraging nod.
âHow are you doing, Justin?â
He swallows hard. âNot so good.â
I gesture around the courtroom. âItâs kind of crazy, isnât it? How quickly the legal system can move . . . swallow you up in its cold, hard machinery?â
Kennedy rises. âDoes Mr. Mason have a relevant question for the witness, Your Honor?â
I glance back at herâeyeing her sweet legs beneath her dark blue skirt. âI have several.â
âLetâs get to them, then,â the judge nudges.
âYes, sir.â I look back to Justin. âHow old are you, Justin?â
His voice is small and squeaky with youth. âSeventeen.â
âDo you have any interests? Hobbies?â
âPretty much just computers.â
I walk him through his childhood. How his interest began with Xbox games and Game Boys, then escalated into online gaming and coding. How he became friends with anonymous posters on message boards, which led him to secret chat rooms where hackers gather. And there he developed his hacking skills. How they would brag about their accomplishments, always trying to impress and outdo each other.
âTell me about First Security Bank,â I say.
Heâs more comfortable now. More animated.
âFirst Securityâs firewall was like legendary. The gold medal. Everyone wanted to crack it, but anyone who tried crashed and burned. Peeps started saying it really was impenetrable.â
âSo you gave it a shot? You attempted to hack into their online banking system.â
His eyes jump to the jury, but then he admits, âWell . . . yeah. It was a challenge. Like the final boss level in a game.â
He explains how he went at it for three sleepless days, fueled by Monster drinks and Hostess Twinkies.
âAnd then?â I ask.
And he canât keep the smile off his young face. âI was in. I couldnât believe it at first, but it was right in front of me. The accounts were all there.â
âWhat did you do then? Hop on the message boards to tell the boys the big news?â
Justinâs brows draw together. âNo. I didnât tell anybody. For a while I just wandered around, checked things out. I kept expecting to get booted out when they realized I was there.â His voice goes soft. Almost sad. âBut no one . . . no one saw me.â
âWhat happened next?â
âI set up my own account. A dummy account.â
I lean back against the defense table. âWhy?â
âTo see if anyone would notice.â
âAnd did they, Justin? Did anyone notice you?â
His head shakes infinitesimally. âNo.â
Softly, I ask, âWhat did you do next?â
And hereâs the gamble. The risk. Justinâs and mine, because heâs essentially confessing his guilt.
âIt was a mistake. I didnât mean to . . .â
âWhat didnât you mean to do, Justin?â
He takes a deep breath. âI took a penny from an account.â
The corner of my mouth quirks. âA penny?â
He nods. âYes. And then I waited twenty-four hours. To see . . .â
âTo see if anyone would notice you?â
âYes.â
âDid they?â
He answers so quietly, the court reporter has him repeat his response.
âNo.â
âThen what happened, Justin?â
He stares at the microphone in front of him. âI took a hundred pennies. One each from a hundred different accounts.â
I peek at the jury. Eight women, all mothers; six men, four fathers, two uncles. Twelve of them will decide Justinâs fate, the remaining two are alternates. And every single one of them has their full attention focused on Justin. Watching his every move, hearing his every word. Noticing every nuance, just like I hoped they would. Not one of them looks pissed; their expressions range from curiosity to interest . . . to sympathy.
Perfect.
I choose my words deliberately. âAnd did anyone see you then, Justin?â
âNo.â
âSo what did you do?â
He pauses, looks at me for guidance. And I nod.
âItâs fuzzy . . . I donât remember the order exactly, but . . . I went back in. And I took more money from the accounts.â
âDid you have plans to spend the money? A weekend in Aspen? A party at a swanky hotel?â
He flinches. âNo. I wasnât going to do anything with the money.â
âThen why did you take it?â
He shakes his head, looking truly bewildered. Lostâlike the young boy he still is.
âI . . . I donât know. It was just . . . an accident. I didnât want any of this to happen.â
I let the words hang for several moments. A meaningful pause. Then I walk back behind the defense table. âNo more questions for the moment, Your Honor.â I look to Kennedy. âHeâs all yours, Miss Randolph.â
She doesnât spare me a glance; her razor-sharp gaze is fully centered on Justin. Like a predator with a wounded gazelle just steps away.
âMiss Randolph,â the judge directs. âProceed.â
And Kennedy canât charge forward fast enough. Her voice is almost unrecognizable. Sharp and clippedâslicing the air.
âIt was an accident? Did I hear that correctly? You stole $2.3 million from the retirement accounts of a dozen innocent, hardworking victims, by accident?â
Kennedyâs choosing her words carefully too. Both of us trying to paint the picture for the jury we want them to see.
Justin blinks. âYes.â
Kennedy paces in front of him, looking aggressive, dangerous. If this wasnât such a pivotal moment, Iâd definitely have a boner.
âHow long did this âaccidentâ take you?â She asks.
âI . . . I donât remember.â
âLonger than five minutes?â
âYes.â
âLonger than ten?â
âUh . . . yeah.â
âAn hour?â
Justin fidgets. âAn hour sounds right. It probably took that long.â
She nods. âAn accident, Mr. Longhorn, is an unfortunate, unforeseen event. Like when someone trips and falls on the sidewalk. Do you know the difference between your actions and falling on the sidewalk?â
Justinâs panicked eyes dart to me. âWhat?â
âIt doesnât take an hour to fall. That amount of time requires thoughtâdeliberate, purposeful action.â
She crosses her arms and changes tactics, like a boxer switching from a left hook to an uppercut. âTwo point three million dollars is a lot of money, Mr. Longhorn.â
His head nods hesitantly. âI guess.â
âWhat could one do with $2.3 million?â
âI . . . I donât know. Almost anything, I guess.â
Kennedyâs finger jabs at Justin. âThatâs right. Almost anything. That kind of money buys freedom. Power. And you wanted that power, didnât you?â
âNo. Thatâs not whyââ
âYou thought you were better than your victims, didnât you? You didnât have to work for that money. Or save it. You could just go in and take it, anytime you wanted, isnât that correct?â
âI . . .â
Sheâs badgering him. I could object, but I donât. I just sit back and let her do exactly what I knew she would.
âHow did it feel when you breached First Securityâs firewall, Mr. Longhorn?â
Justinâs brow wrinkles. âI donât know.â
âSure you do. Did it make you feel good?â
âI guess.â
âI guess isnât an answer. Yes or no?â
âYes. It felt good.â
âAnd how did it feel to take all that money? To know your plan was successful?â
âIt wasnât . . . I didnâtââ
âDid you think about the people you were stealing from?â
âNot really.â
âOf course you did. No oneâs buying your stuttering charade, Mr. Longhorn. Because we know the truth. Cracking First Securityâs system made you feel smarter than the other hackers, didnât it?â
âYeah, in a way . . .â
âAnd taking that money made you feel powerful. Those werenât just accountsâthey were people. People who you knew would be terrified to see their life savings drained away. And that made you feel good too, didnât it?â
âNo, I never meantââ
âYou wanted to show them you were better. Smarter. You wanted to scare them. To hurt them. Innocent, helpless people like Mrs. Potter.â She points to the little old lady, whoâs frowning in the front row. âAnd you succeeded. Because when itâs all said and done, youâre a bully with a computer. A cyberterrorist.â
Justinâs cheeks go bright pink, his eyes shiny with threatening tears.
âIâm sorry!â
âYes, Mr. Longhorn, you certainly are. They neverââ
âI just wanted someone to see me!â Justin yells. Kennedyâs mouth snaps closed. âI just wanted someone to know I was there!â
And he bursts into tears.
He sobs into one hand, his words muffled but heartbreakingly clear.
âNo one sees me! I donât have any friends. I walk down the halls at school, and Iâm like a ghost. Like I donât even exist.â
He gestures to the empty seats behind me, where his parents should be. âMy own parents arenât even here! They donât care. No one cares.â Another sob breaks through and the entire courtroom watches with stunned eyes.
Including Kennedy.
âI . . . thatâs . . .â she stutters, trying to regain her composure, but Justinâs words roll right over her.
âI could go to jail for twenty years, or die tomorrow, and it wouldnât make any difference to anyone.â He looks at Mrs. Potter. âIâm so sorry. I didnât mean to scare you. I just wanted someone, anyone, to know Iâm here.â
The courtroom is silent except for the sound of Justin crying.
Kennedy stares at him, a thousand emotions playing out behind her eyes. And probably a thousand memories.
I hold up my hand. âRecess, Judge?â
âGranted.â He bangs his gavel and the jury is ushered from the room.
I walk past Kennedy, whoâs standing stock-still, and meet Justin just outside the jury box. He wipes at his eyes and I tap his back.
âItâs all right, buddy.â
As we head back toward the defense table, Mrs. Potter glares at Kennedy. âYou should be ashamed of yourself! Berating this poor sweet boy like that!â
âI . . . I didnât . . .â
Mrs. Potter pushes forward to hug Justin, patting his back gently. âThere, there. Come on now, I have some cookies in my pocketbook. Harold, get this boy a cookie!â
Since Justin looks like heâs in good hands, I take Kennedyâs unresisting arm and pull her out the door.
âConference?â
I walk her down the hall to one of the small, empty conference rooms. There I gently guide her onto the folding chair at the table.
âOh my god,â she says, still stunned.
âBreathe, Kennedy.â
âI . . . holy shit . . .â
âKennedy.â I say it stronger, gaining her attention. âBreathe.â
Her eyes go to my face. âHe completely fell apart in there.â
âYeah.â
âHeâs . . . heâs not a criminal . . . heâs just a lonely little boy.â
âI know.â
She rubs her forehead. âOh my godâand I broke him down.â
I nod. âYep. You sure did.â
âBecause it felt good, Brent.â She pats her chest. âIt made me feel good. Strong.â
âYeah . . . I got that.â
Her breath comes out quick and shocked. âI didnât want to ever feel weak again. So I went out of my way to rip into him. Because it made me feel powerful to make him feel bad.â
âI know,â I tell her softly.
And her voice rises, with horrible realization. âBrentâIâm the bully!â
Tears are imminent, and I put my hand on her shoulder. âKennedy, itâs okay.â
Her forehead drops to the table, banging it.
âHey!â I put my hand on the table so she canât do it again. âEasy there. I happen to like whatâs in that head of yours, so letâs not damage it, okay?â
Guilty, wet eyes gaze up at me.
I sit down across from her. âOkayâlookâJustinâs a good kid. A lonely kid, yes, but you didnât break him. Heâll recover, believe me.â I hesitate, gauging just how freaked out she is. âI realize epiphanies are fucking exhaustingâIâve been there myself. But since weâre kind of under the gun, time-wise, how do you feel about discussing a plea deal now?â
It only takes a moment for Kennedyâs back to straighten and her chin to lift. And Federal Prosecutor K. S. Randolph stares back at me.
âWhat are you offering?â
âA guilty plea that stays on his juvenile record and wonât follow him to adulthood. And a sentence of two years of probation, to be served under the computer tech division of the FBI or Homeland Security. With an agent who recognizes Justinâs talents and wants him to use them for good.â
She leans back. âThatâs a . . . unique arrangement.â
I shrug. âA friend of mine had a similar setup when he was a young delinquent. It worked out really well for him. This way, Justin wonât grow up into an evil cybergenius who hacks the nuclear codes because Mommy didnât love him. Heâll have someone keeping an eye on him. Heâll matter, Kennedyâand I think thatâs what all this was about in the first place.â
She taps her fingernail on the table, thinking it over. âFour years. I want him supervised until heâs twenty-one. And no more banking âaccidents.â He pulls anything like this again, he goes to prison.â
I grin. âThat vengeful streak is definitely sexy.â
She smirks at me, then holds out her hand.
And I shake it. âYouâve got yourself a deal, Counselor.â
Kennedy moves to stand, but I hold on to her handââcause Iâm not done yet.
âI had something delivered to your house today. Itâll be there when you get home. I want you to wear it tonight, when you come to my place at seven sharp.â
I squeeze her hand. âPlease say yes.â
She does me one better. She leans over the table and kisses me.
Then she says yes.
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After all the formalities are taken care of, I walk Justin out of the courthouse into the warm, sunny day. Heâs got Mrs. Potterâs number in his pocket and a bocce date at the park with Harold this weekend. Since he needs a ride home, we head down the steps toward the corner where Harrison will pick us up.
Halfway down, Kennedy walks out of the courthouse to head back to her office for the afternoon. Two federal marshals in civilian clothes trail a few feet behind her when sheâs approached by a reporter in a yellow pantsuit with a notepad in her hand.
âMiss Randolph, what are your thoughts on the upcoming retrial of Gino Moriotti?â
Kennedyâs tone is confident. Cocky.
Itâs pretty hot.
âOur case is every bit as solid as it was the first time around. I see no reason why the outcome wonât be identical. Conviction on all counts.â
âAnd how do you feel about the rumored contract that Mr. Moriotti has put on you? Are you concerned about your safety as the case moves forward?â
âGino Moriotti has made a lifelong career of intimidating people, of getting his way through violence and fear. In this case, he should prepare for disappointment.â
And as I watch the tiny blond badass practically strut away, I think proudly, thatâs my girlfriend.