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“Oh pardon me. I’m just a bit out of sorts because I killed someone.”

Chuckling, Lucias carried the highball glasses across the room. “It doesn’t matter. If it did, I’d be very angry with you. After all, I was very clear on the dosage, and the choice. You weren’t to mix the two solutions, Kevin.”

“I know it.” Irritable, Kevin took the glass, frowned into it. “I got carried away with the whole thing. I’ve never had a woman so completely under my spell. I didn’t know it could be that way.”

“That was the point of the game, wasn’t it?” Smiling, Lucias lifted his glass in toast, drank. “Women have never been what we wanted them to be for us. Christ, look at our mothers. Mine’s spineless and yours is bloodless.”

“At least yours shows an interest in you.”

“You don’t know how lucky you are.” Lucias gestured with his glass. “The bitch would hang around my neck like a pendant if I didn’t keep away from her. Small wonder dear old Dad spends the majority of his time out of town.”

Lucias stretched out his legs. “In any case, back to the point. Women. If they were interested in either of us, they were usually dull intellectuals or brainless money-grubbers. We deserve better, Kevin. We deserve exactly the women we want, as many as we want, and in precisely the way we want them.”

“We do. Of course we do. But God, Lucias, when I realized she was dead—”

“Yes, yes.” Lucias sat in the matching chair, leaned forward eagerly. “Tell me again.”

“She was so sexy. Beautiful, exotic, confident. The kind of woman I’ve always wanted. And she couldn’t keep her hands off me. I could’ve had her in the cab, in the elevator. I scored a hell of a lot of points even before we were in her apartment.”

“We’ll tally them up shortly.” Lucias gave an impatient wave. “Go on.”

“I had to keep slowing her down. I didn’t want it to be over too quickly. I wanted the romance of it, for both of us. The slow steps of seduction. And of course . . .” The first hints of amusement crossed his face. “To continue to rack up as many points as possible during the allotted time period.”

“Naturally,” Lucias agreed, and toasted.

“It was working. She let me do whatever I wanted. She enjoyed it.”

“Yes. Yes. Then?”

“I told her to wait so I could set the scene in the bedroom. Just as I’d planned. It was perfect. It was all perfect. The lighting, the music, the scent of the air.”

“And she surrendered to you.”

“Yes.” Kevin sighed, letting it come flooding back. “I carried her into the bedroom. I undressed her, so slowly, while she trembled for me. She whimpered for me. But then, she became lethargic.”

Lucias rattled the ice in his glass. “You’d given her too much.”

“I know it, but I wanted more, damn it.” His mouth turned down, his voice was edged with temper. “It wasn’t enough for her to lie there like a droid. I wanted her hot, out of control. I deserved that after all I’d done.”

“Of course you did. So you gave her the Rabbit.”

“I should have diluted it. I know. But I was careful, just a few drops on her tongue. Lucias . . .” He wet his lips. “She went wild. Hot and screaming. Begging me to take her. She begged me, Lucias. We coupled like animals. Romance to seduction to the primitive. I’ve never felt like that. When I came it was like being born.”

He shuddered, sipped. “When it was over I lay there, spent, drifting with her under me. I kissed her, caressed her so she’d know she’d pleased me. Then I looked down at her. She stared up at me. Just stared and stared. I didn’t understand at first, but then . . . I knew she was dead.”

“You were born,” Lucias said, “and she died. The ultimate in experiences.” He sipped and considered. “Think of it, Kevin. She died much the same way as we were conceived. From a frantic coupling induced by chemicals. One an experiment with superior results. If we do say so ourselves.”

“And we do,” Kevin agreed with a laugh.

“The other a game. A game well played, for the first round. Now it’s my turn.”

“What are you talking about?” Kevin leaped to his feet as Lucias rose. “You can’t be serious. You can’t go through with it.”

“Of course I can. Why should you have all the fun?”

“Lucias, for God’s sake—”

“It was stupid of you to throw her out the window. If you’d just left her there, walked out, it would have taken more time for them to find her. Deduction in points for poor strategy. I won’t make that mistake.”


Tags: J.D. Robb In Death Mystery