Bruce was helping his best friend, Alec, move the rest of his things into his fiancée’s house. Until he was married, Alec and his German Shepard, Lucky, were going to stay at Bruce’s apartment.
Alec and Bruce had just finished carrying in the last four boxes, an elliptical trainer, and free weights. They were resting on the couch.
Alec’s four-year-old daughter, Keisha, walked in. Lucky followed behind her. She was carrying a stuffed bear. “Are you finished?” She had dark brown hair that was up in a ponytail.
“For now, honey,” Alec answered.
“Good. So you’ll live with us now?” Keisha asked.
“Just a few more days, sweetie. It won’t be long,” Alec answered. “It’ll go by before you know it.”
“Okay, Daddy. Mommy said lunch will be ready in a few minutes,” Keisha said. “Uncle Bruce, are you staying for lunch?”
“I wouldn’t miss it,” Bruce replied.
“Good. I like it when you’re here, too,” she said and padded out the room. She was heading to the den.
Lucky stayed behind to sniff Alec’s leg.
Bruce smirked. “I see she doesn’t call you ‘New Daddy’ anymore.”
“Yeah,” Alec replied with a grin. “She dropped it all on her own a week ago.”
“That’s great. I noticed her eyes have turned more bluish. There’s no question. She’s definitely yours.”
Alec chuckled. “Blue eyes are a strong Peterson trait. None of us have escaped it.” Alec had brown hair, short around the sides and back, and thick up top.
Lucky sat down on the floor next to Alec.
“The ladies go crazy over a man with blue eyes.”
“Not necessarily. You’ve got dark brown eyes, and you have more concubines than King Solomon.”
Bruce laughed. “I won’t deny it.”
“You should start thinking about settling down, too.”
Bruce’s nose wrinkled upward at the suggestion. “Why? I love how I live. I love being single.”
“I know, but you can’t be a player forever. Plus, one of these days, your ways might catch up to you.”
“What ways?”
“Bruce, the way you string some women along isn’t right. You promise them the world, take what you want, and disappear.”
“I don’t hurt anyone. It’s not like they don’t enjoy my company,” he said with a smirk.
“All right, but don’t say I didn’t warn you.”
“Lunch is–” Lana began and stopped as she entered the room. She stilled as she looked at the things they had placed in the living room. “No one is eating until that filthy glider thing and those huge dumbbells are off my carpet.” Lana was a light-skinned, urban beauty who had been Alec’s college sweetheart. They had just reunited a few months ago. Not wanting to waste any more time, Alec had proposed to her on New Year’s Eve.
“Oh, honey, we’ve been working all morning. We’ll move them after lunch,” Alec said sweetly.
“Alec, those things are probably dirty, and they look so heavy that they’ll probably leave a dent. We’re having our rehearsal dinner here in thirty-six hours,” Lana said with a pout.
“Oh, come on, honey,” Bruce charmed. “Give us a break.”
Her brown eyes zeroed in on him. “That tone might work on those poor women you con, but not me.” Then she turned to look at her fiancé. “Alec, these things need to be moved before the carpet cleaners come this afternoon.”
“You’ve got a shampooer. Why did you hire carpet cleaners?” Alec asked.
“Because it’s a special occasion, and I want the carpet professionally cleaned,” she answered with syrup in her tone.
“When are they coming?” Alec asked.
“They said between noon and five.”
“Hell, that’s not a time of arrival,” Alec said with disgust.
“That’s how these guys operate, honey. I’ll hold lunch so you and Bruce can move these
items.”
“Okay, Bruce, let’s move this stuff upstairs.”
“The boxes can go upstairs. Your work out equipment needs to go in the basement.”
“The basement? Why is the majority of my stuff getting banned to the basement?”
Alec and Lana went back and forth for fifteen minutes. In the end, Alec and Bruce got up and moved everything where Lana wanted it. Bruce didn’t mind because he had gotten his wind back during the time they were talking.
****
Margo St. John was a bridesmaid in Lana and Alec’s wedding. Lacey Smith was the matron of honor. The ceremony was held at a nondenominational church. The reception was at the Tampa Palms Country Club.
Alec’s co-workers stood for him. A guy named Tommy was a groomsman, and Bruce Styles was the best man. Margo had met Tommy for the first time at the rehearsal, but she was familiar with Bruce. She had gone out on a blind double date as a favor to her friend and business partner, Bobbi. Bruce was pursuing Bobbi at the time, and she didn’t want to go out with him alone for the first date.
Now, that Margo’s bridesmaid’s duties were complete, she could mingle with the guests and hang out with her plus one, Bobbi. She figured Lana paid for the shindig from the money she got from her late husband’s death, since Alex was just an FBI agent and Lana didn’t work. Before Margo could search Bobbi out, Bruce approached her.
“Hey, beautiful, how about a dance?” he asked with a big smile. Margo had to admit he was a good-looking man. He had dark, thick hair and brown eyes. The tux fitted his large and strong frame like a glove.
Oh God, please. The last thing I need is this jerk sniffing around me. And the nerve of him asking me to dance after he ghosted Bobbi.
“No, thanks,” she replied. She was about to walk away, but he gently took her wrist and got into her personal space.
“Come on. I won’t bite. Not unless you want me to,” he flirted.
“No, thank you,” she repeated.
“Why? You got a date here?”
“Whether I do or not, I am not interested in dancing with you.”
Before he could say anything else, someone behind him tapped his shoulder. Bruce turned around, and Margo saw Bobbi.
“Hey, remember me?” Bobbi asked calmly.
“Sure I do, honey. How ya been?”
Bobbi punched Bruce in the nose so hard his head flung to the side.
Margo’s mouth dropped open. So much for mingling with the guests. She grabbed Bobbi’s shoulders and started ushering her out the ballroom. Half the room was looking at them as they rushed out. They strode through the lobby and out the front door of the club.
“Are you crazy, Bobbi?” Margo asked, awestruck.
“He deserved it, and you know it,” Bobbi said calmly.
“Yeah, but did you have to do it here? This is a wedding, plus you assaulted a federal agent in a room full of people,” Margo hissed in a loud whisper.
“I admit — I forgot about the federal agent part.”
“The last thing we want or need is the FBI focusing on us,” she whispered.
“It was an isolated incident. They probably know what kind of man Bruce is. I’m sure they know he has been slapped by lots of women.”
“You didn’t slap him; you hauled back and tried to punch his lights out.”
“Potato, tomato,” Bobbi commented nonchalantly.
Margo willed her nerves to calm down. “Okay, he ghosted you after you slept with him that one time, but don’t you think that you not telling him your . . . background before the act was revenge enough?”
Bobbi thought for a moment. A sly grin spread across her lips. “You know, I never thought about it that way. A macho man like him would probably be bothered about it.”
Margo smiled. “Yes, a lot. Now, don’t waste any more energy on Bruce Styles. He’s a womanizer, and he’s not worth it. Besides, you’re gorgeous. Men fall all over themselves to approach you.” Bobbi was a tall Elizabeth Taylor in the flesh. Even Margo was jealous of her looks at times.
“You know, you’re right,” Bobbi said with a big smile, showing off her perfect pearly whites.
Margo chuckled. “Good, now, get out here before one of his special agent friends decide to come out here and ask for your identification.”
Bobbi laughed as she pulled her cell phone out to call a cab. She had a valid driver’s license, but she didn’t like to drive unless he had to. When Bobbi went out to a function, she liked to drink – heavily.
****
Bruce and Alec were in the men’s room of the country club. Bruce shook his head, trying to clear his vision. All the action did was give him a slight headache.
“I’ve been hit by a woman before, but . . . not like this,” Bruce stated with awe.
“She hit you on the side of the nose. Getting hit in that spot would ring anybody’s bell,” Alec remarked.
Bruce looked in the mirror. A small pink bruise was starting to form on his face next to his nose. “Man, shit! I’m going to have a bruise all night.”
“At least we got the pictures out of the way. Lana would have been pissed if you messed those up.”
“I’m sure she’s mad about a scene being caused at her wedding in front of her rich and snooty friends.”
“She was a little put out, but not as upset as I thought she would be,” Alec smirked. “Matter of fact, she believes that woman had her reasons.”
Bruce remained silent as he examined his face. How am I going to rustle up pussy at this event looking like this?
“I remember her. She’s Margo’s friend . . . Brenda, I think. You were so desperate to go out with her that you dragged me on a double date because she wouldn’t go out with you by herself. What did you do to her, Bruce?”
“Nothing. And her name is Bobbi.”
“A woman doesn’t sock someone in the face over nothing.”
“Look, we had a good time, and . . . I moved on,” Bruce said and turned away from the mirror to face his friend.
Alec exhaled with exasperation. “I know you, Bruce. Sounds like you pulled your hit-it-and-quit-it act on her. Margo told me a while back that woman really liked you, and she couldn’t bring herself to tell her that you weren’t . . . who you pretended to be. And why did you drop her? Bobbi is the prettiest woman you have ever dated. That’s how she got your attention.”
“Look, we had a good time. It’s not like she didn’t enjoy herself in the end. It was just okay for me; nothing that special, so I moved on. No reason to keep her on my visiting list. So, just drop it, okay? Go check on your bride,” Bruce grouched. He wasn’t in the mood to talk about this. Weddings were the perfect place to pick up on pretty and lonely women, and now he had a snowball’s chance in hell with them because his face looked like it had a rash on it.
“All right, all right. I see you’re having a moment. See you back out there,” Alec said and left the bathroom.
Three weeks after the wedding . . . Margo and Bobbi walked up the plank to the forty-foot yacht docked at the Tampa Bay Marina. A meeting with all four partners had been called by Aaron, their scout and master planner. The sun was shining, and it was about ninety degrees. The scent of the ocean filled the air. They walked to the patio area on the back deck. Anthony was already there. “Hey, girls,” Aaron greeted. At thirty-six years of age, he had dark blond, slightly curly hair that was a little long in the back like a beach bum. He lived and operated from the yacht, Christina. “I got mimosas already poured. I figured we could have a light brunch. The casserole will be ready in twenty minutes, and we’re having croissants too.” “Marvelous,” Bobbi said as she sat down next to Anthony on the green upholstered, cushioned booth. “I haven’t eaten all day.” She picked up a mimosa-filled champagne glass off the table. Mar
Two days later . . . Aaron had given the members of BAAM a week to give him a decision on the FRB heist. Margo had a few friends in Tampa, but no family. It wouldn’t be that big of a hardship for her to leave the state. But never seeing or talking to Bobbi again pained her. They had shared a lot of good times. She had also shared some good times with Anthony and Aaron, but not like she did with Bobbi. They had girl talked about men and the latest fashions. Being friends with Bobbi had made Margo’s life less lonely. If they did the job and pulled it off, she would have all the money she would ever need, but she’d be alone. Her father had left her and her mother when she was six, never to be seen nor heard from again. Her mother was a drug addict who had contracted HIV from sharing needles and died from complications of the disease. Plus, Margo was an only child. She had been married twice, but neither one of those relationships had worked out.
The decision had been made. BAAM was going to hit the Federal Reserve. They had ironed out the first few steps they needed to take. They were going to meet again in a week to give Aaron cashier checks for two hundred and fifty thousand dollars. He was in charge of allocating the funds where it was needed. Margo had just arrived at Tampa’s premier nightclub, Club Prana, with Anthony and his cousin, Morris, who was the same age as Anthony. They went to the sky bar, which was located on the roof of the club. They had just dropped Bobbi off at the airport. She had gotten a job interview under an alias Anthony created for her. She had worn a red-haired wig and contacts that made her eyes look blue. Bobbi was the master of disguise with makeup and was able to angle her cheekbones to looks slimmer than they really were. The interview was at the reserve location in Dallas. Atlanta didn’t have any openings that she had experience doing. They sat
Margo had made a list of things to do and get in order before and after BAAM hit the Federal Reserve Bank. She also had to work on creating the virus. Then she would have to put the virus through several trials to make sure it worked.BAAM sat inside an office in an old factory located in the industrial district of Tampa. It used to be a sewing factory until the crash in 2008. The recession after the crash doomed the factory for good. No one had been in it since. According to Aaron, the owner of the building was a motivated seller, and he got the place dirt cheap. He had used a dummy corporation to get a loan from the bank and put down fifty grand as a deposit. “Well, this is it. What do y’all think?” Aaron asked. “It’s big and dusty,” Bobbi answered with her noise turned up. “I’ll be sure to hire a cleaning service,” he said sarcastically. “We haven’t had a chance to really look around,” Anthony stated. “As long as it has po
Bruce and Margo met in the parking lot of Jimbo’s Steakhouse. The place looked like a huge log cabin on the outside. The parking lot was full of cars, trucks, and SUVs. As Bruce bragged about the food at Jimbo’s, Margo was thinking that she would have to wash her car tomorrow because the parking lot was more dirt than gravel. She was thankful that she took Bruce’s advice and dressed down for the occasion. This place wouldn’t appreciate Blahniks, diamond earrings, and a designer dress. She wore blue jeans and tennis shoes. Her white blouse was open and tied in a knot at the bottom. Her light blue tank top hugged her double- D breasts. They walked through the door. She refrained from frowning at the loud country music that blasted from the ceiling speakers. Not only was there sawdust on the floor but nut shells as well. Well, I’ll be damned, she thought with wide eyes. Barmaids with tight, white T-shirts walked around with tray
Bruce put her down on her feet. They came together in a kiss. This kiss was more aggressive, hungrier. Margo could feel his hands loosening the knot at the bottom of her blouse. Bruce smoothed the shirt off her shoulders and down her arms. She shook her wrist to be rid of the top. He started pulling the end of her tank top out of her jeans as she grabbed the bottom of his black polo shirt. Bruce raised his arms to let her pull it over his head. Tossing it quickly to the side, he pulled her tank top off, exposing her breasts to the night air. He got on his knees and then unzipped her jeans. Then he pulled them and her panties down to her knees. Bruce dipped his middle finger into her folds as he took a pink nipple into his mouth. Margo moaned as his finger rubbed her clit. His tongue swirled around her areola. He pulled back and blew on it. She quivered and moaned as it budded and tingled. Bruce attacked her other breast with hunger. It hardened in his mouth. His tongue flicked it, ma
Bruce was sound asleep until his cell phone chimed. He blindly reached for it on the nightstand. He was surprised when he grasped a piece of paper instead. Letting the phone ring, he groggily opened his eyes to look at the note. “Thanks for an exceptional evening. I truly enjoyed myself. See you around, M.” He frowned and looked over to the other side of the king-sized bed. She was really gone. No woman left his bed after he got done with them. The phone finally stopped ringing. Whipping the yellow sheet off his naked form, he slowly stood and stretched. See you around? What the fuck does that mean? See you around? His phone rang again. “Maybe it’s her. We exchanged numbers yesterday afternoon just in case she got lost getting to Jimbo’s.” Bruce picked up the phone and frowned when he saw it was Alec. Normally, he would be happy to hear from his buddy, but he wanted to talk to someone else right now. “Hello,” he a
Margo pulled up to the old sewing factory. She was supposed to meet Aaron at eight and she was over an hour and a half late. She popped the trunk. Thankfully, Aaron was outside posting “Private Property” signs on the gates and the building. “Good, I’ll have help getting this stuff in here,” she mumbled. “Hey, I see you finally showed up,” he joked as he walked toward her. “Yeah, sorry I’m late. I . . . had a late night,” she said. “Can you help me carry this desktop equipment and programming books inside?” “Sure. I got the perfect little office for you.” Aaron helped Margo get her things into an office. The floor was white and lime tile. The desk was big enough for two monitors, and the chair looked pretty comfortable. It was obvious that Aaron decided to spend a little money on cleaners for the warehouse. Margo didn’t think he had the entire building cleaned; that would have been a small fortune within itself.Sh
It was Saturday. William Blanchette and Neil Rolls were at Margo’s condo instead of spending time with their families. They really wanted her to work for the bureau. During the week, she had filled out several job applications. She wasn’t sure if anything would come of it or not. Margo had to admit that the job at the FBI sounded intriguing and challenging, but she really didn’t want to be put in a position to interact with Bruce on a regular basis. Plus, she wasn’t sure how she would be received by any co-workers she would have to interact with. After all, she was a former bank robber, and Bruce’s co-workers could see her as a manipulative skank. She expressed that to the gentlemen as they enjoyed sweet tea and pepperoni and cheese snacks. “Perhaps we can make it where you can work from home,” Neil Rolls said. “We can set up a secure server here and communicate through email.” “It could work,” Blanchette mused and sipped his tea.
One week later . . . Bruce was lounging on Alec’s sofa at his house. Bruce was sipping on a beer, and Alec was nursing a rum and Coke. Lana was upstairs lying down. She was further along in her pregnancy, so she got tired easily. They had learned last month that she was having a boy. Ever since then, Alec had been bragging about how he was going to teach the kid how to play football and basketball. Alec had already bought him a football, and the kid hadn’t even been born yet. “Bruce, I know you said you are fine, but you’re not,” Alec said flatly. “It’s like working and hanging out with a completely different person.” “Ah, shit. I don’t want to talk about this,” Bruce groaned and sipped his beer. “I know you felt like the lowest specimen on the food chain after you . . . saw Margo at the safe house that last time. You know she’s mad at you . . . probably thinks you’re the biggest asshole in the world. The only wa
Three months later . . . Two weeks after Margo’s plea deal, the feds tracked Earl Churchill in the Bahamas. From what Bruce heard, US Marshalls barged into his little bungalow as he was screwing a twenty-three-year old. He was arrested for accessory to a federal crime. His trial was scheduled for early fall.Bobbi Bennett had been caught a month ago. She used one of her aliases to request a cashier’s check for seven million dollars for a yacht. She had abandoned Aaron’s because she knew the authorities were looking for it. Her plan had been to live on the new yacht in the Caribbean for at least a year, then she was going overseas. She had told the US attorney that the last time she saw Anthony was in South America in exchange for the Justice Department lowering her sentence to fifteen years with a chance of parole in ten.Anthony Mandel was discovered in Belize when the authorities there busted a brothel a month after Bobbi had given them the lead. Trent Michaels was able
During Alec and Bruce’s stay, Bruce sat in the car. He couldn’t even stay in the same house as Margo. Even Alec barely talked to her. There was no reason to linger downstairs, so Margo went back to her bedroom. In hindsight, she should have gotten out of the crew at the very least. Perhaps Bruce was right. She had gotten greedy – and full of herself. Bruce wasn’t perfect, but it had appeared he had changed – for her, to be with her. Margo should have taken a chance and told him everything about her past and BAAM. In the end, it wasn’t worth keeping the secret because BAAM had broken up in the worse way possible, she was broke, and worst of all, she had hurt Bruce, a man she loved more than anything.Margo fell back on the bed as tears started streaming down her face. “Oh, God,” she whimpered. She would take it all back if she could. If she had made different choices, she and Bruce would be together and happy right now. Turning her face, she sobbed into the pillow, crying herself to sl
A feeling washed over Margo when she was done. It was relief. Not just because she had avoided prosecution, but it felt like the weight of the world had been lifted off her shoulders. Margo hadn’t realized how keeping her criminal life under wraps had weighed her down until now.She had laid out her secrets for the federal government to examine and mull over. But she was no fool. She had left out the Largo Jewelry store heist BAAM had pulled during the early days. Of course, she told Deidre about it, but she had advised Margo to leave it out and not to tell her any details about it. Robbing a jewelry store was not a federal offense. The store was in California, and the owner could still press charges against her for the theft.With the exception of that one thing, Margo had revealed all, including Bobbi’s two alternate aliases. Margo had learned them when she transferred Aaron’s cut of the money out of his account and Aaron’s aliases that they were under. As soon as Bobbi
Two days later, Margo had been allowed to shower and change into the clothes Deidre had brought for her. She had also brought Margo some makeup. They were meeting with Trent Michaels at the FBI offices to work out a deal. US Marshalls handcuffed her wrists for transport. When they had arrived, Deidre’s paralegal, Owen Jessup, was already there waiting on them. Deidre had wanted a witness that was on their side present during the meeting. They walked the hall to a room that had a large table and seven chairs. There was a large glass window in the room. Margo knew that people were on the other side of it, watching her. Deidre, Margo, and Owen waited for five minutes in silence before Trent Michaels walked in with FBI agents she was familiar with — Vic, Tommy, Troy, friends of Bruce and Alec’s. Vic was carrying a large recording device. “Good afternoon,” Trent greeted as he placed his black briefcase on the table. He sat down in a chair acr
US attorney for Middle District of Florida Trent Michaels and US attorney for Northern District of Texas Lawrence Osborne had gone back and forth about who had rights to the case. Margo’s attorney, Deidre Underwood, had gotten into the fray and argued that Margo should be taken back to Tampa. In the end, Deidre had petitioned the court to let a federal judge decide. Since the Federal Reserve was a federal institution with locations all over the country, the judge stated that the crime was committed against the bank as a whole. Plus, the judge had noted that Margo had been in Tampa when she hacked the Federal Reserve, so it was Tampa’s case to deal with.On day four, US Marshalls had escorted Margo back to Florida. A bail hearing had been held the same day. Bail was denied because the judge saw her as a flight risk. That was just as well for Margo because she had nowhere to go if she had been let out on bail. Plus, the FBI had confiscated her bag of money, so she couldn’t pay it withou
The last thing she remembered was coughing and Bruce’s wet face before everything went black. Now she was staring at white walls and lying in a hospital bed with one of her wrists handcuffed to the rails. She looked over to see a nurse who was looking at a machine that beeped every now and again. Then the nurse looked at her. “Oh good, you’re awake. You were out for a while. How do you feel?” she asked with a Mexican accent. She had dark hair that was in a ponytail, and she wore blue scrubs. “Like crap,” Margo answered bluntly and hoarsely. The side of the nurse’s mouth kicked up. “I’m not surprised. You still have a little water in your lungs. You won’t be able to leave until we get that cleared up. I’ll let them know that you’re awake.” “When you say them, I take it you mean the authorities?” “Si,” she said solemnly. “But I overheard a few of them talking. Maybe it will make you feel better to know that you did
The doorman at the Sunset Marina Resort & Yacht Club remembered Margo. He had told the agents that she took a cab yesterday and he hadn’t seen her since. He had also told them the cab company she used to leave. After questioning and showing eight cab drivers her picture, they had finally found the one that had driven her to Playa del Carmen. The break got better when he told them the name of the motel he had dropped her off at. They were only half a day behind her. Chances were that she was still there. The Mexican National Guard had let the US Marshalls and the FBI borrow a couple of their vehicles to drive to Playa del Carmen. Four Dallas field agents and two US Marshalls had stayed behind to talk to passing tourists and show them pictures of the other suspects. FBI agents and US Marshalls spread out at the small, humble-looking motel like ants. They showed her picture to people in the area. The desk clerk was so scared when he saw the