So she’d work those muscles, remind them they had a job to do.
She changed into a sports bra and workout shorts, and after a very short debate left the neatly folded and not ragged T-shirts in the drawer.
Inspired, she took the disc of the theater’s layout, considering it as she rode the elevator down to the gym.
It took her some time—electronics always took her some time—but she managed to program three scenarios using the layout. She’d get in a good, hard run, she thought, and familiarize herself with the area.
She set a brisk pace. If she had to run, there wouldn’t be time to warm up. Through the lobby, up stairs, down stairs, into the maintenance level, behind the screen, through the main audience area, up again, down again.
He was fast, she thought. She’d be faster.
He was strong. She’d be smart.
When Roarke came in she’d worked up a sweat.
He studied her view screen, raised his brows. “Did you program that yourself?”
“Yeah.” She panted it out, not ready to quit. “I can do e-stuff.”
“How long did it take you?”
“Shut up.”
“Let’s see if I can catch up.”
“I’ve got . . . twenty-six minutes on you, and I’m taking it out to the street. You never know.”
“You don’t, no.” He got on the machine beside hers, and in seconds had his synched with hers.
She wanted to ask him what he’d found at Milo’s, what he knew, but realized she needed her breath to run.
She avoided people and street traffic, both of which she’d programmed the machine to throw in at random. By the time she’d circled around to run through the theater one last time she hadn’t worked up a sweat. She was dripping with it.
“Okay. Okay.” She slowed to a walk, sucked in air, guzzled down water. “Okay.”
“Interesting scenarios,” Roarke commented. “More so, I think, if you were in pursuit or being pursued. Mix it up, make a bit of a game out of it.”
“Yeah, you do that.”
She walked over, lay flat on her back, and told herself she’d stretch it out in just a second. For now she’d just lie there and watch him sweat.
God, he had the most excellent ass. She wouldn’t mind taking just a little bite. Maybe a big one. And maybe she could stretch that hour into, oh, say, ninety minutes.
What better way to tune up?
She watched him while she stretched her hamstrings, her quads, so tight from the long run they all but pinged. And found another inspiration.
“I think I pulled something.” She sat, head down, rubbing at her calf.
“What?”
“It’s nothing. I just . . .” She let out a little hiss.
“Let me see.” He shut off the machine, came over to kneel beside her. “What did you pull?”
“Your strings,” she said, and yanked him down on top of her.
“Think you’re clever, don’t you?”