New York.
Three Years Ago.
Liberation was a few steps away. Today they’d finally be free. Sharon watched the shoppers spill out from jammed escalators. Long wait times fueled the oppressive atmosphere in the mall. Black Friday posters scattered throughout the pandemonium added to the frenzy.
Arisha tugged at Sharon’s jacket, staring up with solemn eyes. “We need to find a seat, Mamma.”
She ran a hand through her daughter’s thick black hair. Sharon despised her own wispy blonde hair and always kept it trimmed in a neat bob. Reaching down, she picked up their two small suitcases, nudging Arisha forward. “Then find us one.”
The packed food court gave them few options. A man and woman situated nearest the terrace railing cleared their table and Arisha ran up and waited. The lady smiled. Her little girl captivated people, with her mother’s delicate features and her father’s Iranian ancestry. Sharon stepped up, and the woman’s smile faltered. Her gaze skimmed over Sharon’s abaya with censure. Sharon was used to a daily dose of anti-Islamic sentiment and mentally shrugged it off. The world was at war, and the Americans knew it. The couple moved on, and Sharon scanned the bustling mall below.
It was an unusually balmy day for November, and the heating in the crowded mall ran high. The man’s broad girth resulted in a warm bucket seat, and Sharon hid her disdain. First-world greed was leading to more obesity. The smell of charred burger hung in the air, making her stomach roil. It was nerves, and she had every right to feel rattled. Today was a big day. The men were coming to take them away.
“I’m thirsty, Mamma,” Arisha said.
Sharon shoved her purse into her daughter’s hand. “Quickly get a drink and please, my love, don’t go far.”
Arisha dashed through the crowd.
Sharon yelled at her disappearing back, “Please do not run!”
Ignoring the noisy kaleidoscope of screaming children, yelling parents and people dashing about, Sharon wiped at the sweat clinging to her brow. This is what it had come to. The feverish air rippled with fresh energy as he stepped up from behind.
Sully had come. Her savior. Her rescuer. Her destruction. Was Sully’s team with him, led by the capable soldier with the icy eyes? She couldn’t let that man see her. It felt like he’d seen into her soul the one time they had met and if he looked at her now, he’d know.
***
The slight stiffening of her delicate neck and the rise of her head were a good indication that Sharon knew he’d arrived. Simon “Sully” Cook squeezed her shoulder as he assessed the environment. Arisha made her way back to the table while gulping down a drink. He glanced down at their packed bags and slid into the seat opposite Sharon Nasari, of New Zealand descent, the current third wife of Abdul-Habsid Nasari.
Abdul Nasari was a suspected terrorist and a wife beater. Sharon was ready to blow the extremist whistle on her husband’s sleeper cell. Cook had approached her twelve weeks ago. Winning over her trust had taken perseverance.
After a particularly harsh beating ten days ago, she’d finally reached out, promising to testify against Abdul. They were preparing the warrant, but Abdul wasn’t the primary target. They were chasing a significant player known as the Sandpiper, who held no allegiances to any extremist group. A businessman who sold arsenals of terror to private organizations and collapsing regimes in East Africa—An arsenal that included training camps, suicide bombers, and weaponry.
Her hollowed-out cheekbones looked harsher than when he’d seen her three weeks ago. Sharon was young enough to be his kid. Anger surged when he thought of one of his daughters trapped in a marriage with a sadistic monster.
Abdul had spotted Sharon in Istanbul when at the tender age of seventeen she’d traveled through Europe on a student holiday. He’d pursued the kid aggressively and hadn’t stopped until she was an indoctrinated wife. They’d climbed up the terrorist watch list after moving from South Sudan to the States three years ago.
Sharon had a tough road ahead. They required intel but first needed to relocate the mother and child. She was terrified and had asked to meet him on Black Friday—the busiest day of the year—feeling safer in the massive crowds where she could easily get lost, terrified that Abdul might suspect something and find her. They’d all get lost together. The priority was getting her to the South Side entrance where they could hustle them away.
Sully had brought along another agent, Mike “Stone” Stretton. Sully and Stone arrived ahead of the rest of the team. Sharon had changed the meeting point at the last minute. Sully knew he’d broken protocol, racing ahead, but the urgency in his gut outweighed the risks. Besides, the rest of his men were just a few minutes behind.
Stone stepped up and leaned in. “I’m sorry, Sharon, but I’ll need to check that you’re clean.”
“After all we’ve been through, you still do not trust me.” Her smile was wooden. “Go ahead.”
“It’s just a formality,” Sully reassured her. Sharon raised her arms and Stone felt around her waist before turning to the luggage.
“Where’s the rest of your team?” she asked.
Sully smiled into her eyes. “Not far off. Relax, we’ve got this. You’ll soon be free of Nasari.”
Sharon glanced down at her clenched hands and spread them out on the cold plastic surface. “Of that, I have no doubt.”
Sully glanced around uneasily. There was no intel indicating they were compromised, but something felt off. Hot little hands closed around his left biceps, causing him to whip around.
Little Arisha looked up shyly. “Hello, Mr. Sully.”
His heart warmed. “Angel, are you ready for a great adventure?” He forced himself to smile into her sweet face.
Something flickered in her eyes that unnerved him. She knew more than a little girl her age should know. A child that young shouldn’t have such sober eyes. What had Arisha seen in her young life?
Sharon pulled Arisha into a chair. “Habibti, sit quietly and play your Candy Game.”
Pulling out her phone, Arisha smiled lovingly at her mother. Through his earpiece, he heard the teams checking in, approaching from the wrong level. That was his fault for rushing the meet.
Sully spoke into his comms. “We’re on level two. At the food court.” He turned to Stone. “They’re approaching from entrance five, but they’re still on level one. Intercept them.”
Stone disappeared into the throng of shoppers as Sully leaned forward. “You’ll be starting your new life and I’ll be here for you. Do what I say, and we’ll get through this just fine.”
Sharon glanced over the balustrade at Sully’s team moving towards the escalators.
“Time to go.” Sully bent over to retrieve the bags.
Sharon grabbed his sleeve, the look on her face stopping him momentarily. “You are family to me, you’ve been there for me in the darkness, and you will always have my heart.”
Sully glanced across as the team moved onto the escalator. They’d spotted him and looked pissed. Stone waited at the top. “Not now Sharon, later we can—”
Sharon continued talking, “But you can never have what’s in my head.”
What did she just say? Her manic smile revealed the fanaticism. Instantly Sully knew. Sharon Nasari had played him for a fool. Everything slowed as adrenaline kicked in. He looked at Arisha playing her game and realization dawned. Hot hands. The kid wore a bulky jacket, too thick for that crowded day in the mall. She wore a fucking suicide vest. The phone lay flat as her tiny finger hovered above a flashing dot on a black screen, before descending. The small cubicle impeded his scrambling lunge.
Through the roaring in his ears, Sully heard Sharon’s last words, “Sandpiper sends his regards.”
White heat flashed, then came the blackness.
***
London.
Heading back to Dubai as the first-class galley slave suited her just fine. The galley was where Joey could avoid passengers on the busier flights. She threw herself into the set routine as soon as she stepped onboard. Safety checks, loading ovens, pouring champagne, prepping hot towels, checking the ovens—the list was long. It was always a rush.
Joey had spent the past three years working a first-class cabin. Aircrafts and airline companies might have changed over her brief career, but the job was primarily the same and being organized was key. Her two colleagues manned the deluxe cabin with grace.
Ahlam Airlines handpicked the girls from thousands of applicants to serve the UAE royal families. They had to possess beauty and, more importantly, intelligence to sustain polite conversations with privileged passengers. Aside from royal personnel, cabin attendants looked after foreign diplomats, prime ministers, politicians, and celebrities. Joey could serve passengers along with the best of them, but lately preferred the quiet routine of the galley.
She stepped into the cockpit and gave the Captain and First Officer their morning coffee before racing back to kitchen duties.
Sarah glided past to hang a jacket. “Joey, when you get a second, Three Alpha wants to say hello, he says he knows you.”
Joey stuck her head out of the curtains and caught an exotic whiff of expensive perfume. A group of local women dressed in designer robes blocked her view as they gathered in the cabin, chattering loudly in Arabic. Joey greeted them warmly and helped to stow their carry-ons. The aisles were crowded, and she couldn’t see past the first row.
There was too much to do before push back. “I’ll check later, thanks Sarah.”
The first few hours were always busy. Joey sent out all six courses for lunch with precision, ensuring the food was hot and the service impeccable. After clearing the last round of Arabic coffee, Joey breathed a sigh of relief, removed her apron and squeezed into a compact lavatory. She stared at her reflection, barely recognizing the sleek mannequin looking back. Another flight, another dollar. She enjoyed her job but lately felt a little worn down and well, just a little lonely. Throwing herself into work wasn’t working. Raking up a few escaping tendrils and with a quick lipstick swipe, she was back in the cabin.
Three Alpha’s seat was empty; instead, Joey came face to face with a peregrine falcon perched on a small wooden stand. Falconry was one of the oldest traditions in the United Arab Emirates, dating back at least two thousand years to when tribesmen used falcons to hunt and capture their food. It was now one of the favorite pastimes of the wealthy. Arabic airlines allowed the birds onboard, as long as they wore hoods and were tethered to a glove or a pole perch.
“Not to worry, Habibti, she is friendly.” Joey swung around as the passenger stepped through the business class curtain. His spicy scent enveloped her immediately.
“As salam alaikum.” The Arabic greeting rolled off her tongue belying the fact that her insides quaked.
“Wa alaikum salam.”
The falcon wasn’t the source of her nerves; she’d seen enough of them on board in her five-year career of Middle Eastern flying. Instead, it was the man cloaked in a white robe, standing in the passage, his hands clasped in front of him.
Khalid Al Juhani.
Her roommate had introduced Khalid to Joey, and now she ran into him everywhere. They hung out in the same circle of friends—which seemed odd, given that he was a wealthy Saudi, in comparison to her humble self.
Khalid bowed. “My apologies, I was stretching my legs while talking with my friend in business class.” He quirked a smile. “I needed to walk off that delightful but long lunch.”
The meal had been a lengthy affair; it was a first-class perk. Joey tried to relax; she never understood why he made her uncomfortable. Khalid had impeccable manners along with a handsome and kind face, in fact, he came off as being a wonderfully groomed vision of perfection.
“I’m glad you enjoyed it.”
He bowed again, this time playfully, and gave her a small wink. “Compliments to the chef.”
Joey smiled. “I’m not the chef, I just warm up the food.”
“I think a little more goes into it than that. I know how hard you ladies work.”
Wow. Nothing like complimenting a girl’s work ethic to get her all warm and fuzzy inside.
Joey studied the beautiful bird perched beside her as Khalid stroked a wing.
“I just bought her in London for sixty-five thousand pounds. She’ll be an excellent candidate for falcon racing.”
Joey gaped at the kestrel. “That’s one expensive bird.”
Khalid laughed. “Hopefully she’s fast enough to be worth it. Besides that, she’s really pretty. What can I say, I have a weakness for a pretty face.”
Khalid was good at flirting. Joey was not and smiled politely.
“Good luck with her and have a lovely flight. I’ll make sure that Sarah looks after you.”
“Wait! Habibti—Josephine—I would like to ask you something.”
Joey turned back.
“I’m having a get-together at my home in Sharjah on Saturday and I’d be honored if you would attend.”
A get-together. Joey had been around Dubai long enough to know that when a man like Khalid mentioned a “get-together,” it was probably a formal party hitting the five-hundred-guests mark.
Her stomach rebelled. “Khalid, I am honored but I—”
“Please say yes. You would not have to stay long, and some of your friends will be there.”
Joey hesitated. She wasn’t the wild partying type and preferred curling up with a good book. Khalid’s eyes glowed with warmth. What the hell. She lived in one of the most exciting cities in the world, and she was acting like a bloody recluse. With a renewed determination to break out of self-imposed hermitude, she graciously accepted.
“Thank you, Khalid. I cannot refuse such a gracious invitation.”
“Habibti, I promise you an unforgettable night.”
Johannesburg. South Africa.Present day.Abby lowered herself into the water, welcoming the fluid embrace. Adjusting her goggles and tugging the back of her swimming cap down, she pushed off. God, she loved this, therapy for the soul. Soon she’d be warmed up enough to slide into an effortless rhythm and then the meditation would begin. The distant noises of the gym were drowned out by even breathing and the water sliding smoothly over her skin.Lap one. The tension rippling through Abby’s body craved release, and she pushed harder, cutting through the water with efficient strokes. Laps flew by as muscles burned. Quiet was how she liked it, and even though the rest of the lanes were empty, it was one of those days where it was impossible to unplug.Abby avoided peak times at the gym—early mornings or late evenings—especially during the week with screaming kids or swimmers jostling for la
Johnny and Donnie left to trail Evans to her rendezvous with Muller. Once Abigail Evans stepped out, Max snapped up the opportunity to switch out a microphone in her bedroom that had fuzzy sound quality. Max slipped through Evans’s gate into the immaculate garden. Delicate paving ran along the neat flower beds. Rose bushes lined the wall. He’d watched her many times fussing around among her plants. The result was charming. Her dark porch made breaking in easier. It was late, and he was also glad she’d drawn the curtains before she left. Nothing like a nosy neighbor spotting him through the windows once he was inside. South Africa posed more challenges when it came to breaking and entering, so Donnie had acquired a copy of her keys from her bag in the gym locker. In Johannesburg, windows as an entry point were ruled out due to the hefty security bars crisscrossing them. Max clicked open the door mechanism before opening her sliding security gate. The smell of
The following afternoon, Abby pulled into the strip mall and chose to park on the periphery of the frantic lot. Although there was a spring chill in the air, the late afternoon was pleasant. Due to the warmer weather, people spilled out of crowded cafés onto the pavements, La Coraggio was the busiest of the bunch. The Italian community loved the place, and the result was a boisterous, laid-back atmosphere with incredible cuisine. Honestly, she loved it too. Abby had an Italian grandmother, vague memories of a warm, loud lady enveloping her in happy hugs. Although her grandmother passed away when Abby was four, she felt a sharp pull towards her Italian roots. Abby was told growing up that she was the spitting image of Granny Lucy.Lucy had been married to Grandpa Noah for twenty-four years when she’d died suddenly of a heart attack. Abby’s father, Jimmy—their only child—turned in an extreme way to religion. A couple of years later, frustrated wit
Where the hell had she parked? Max made his way through two rows of vehicles before shoving in his comms.“Where’s Evans?”Donnie’s voice barked in his ear. “It’s a clusterfuck, someone’s just jumped her.”Max stilled. “Where?”“Back of the lot. North side. Should I break cover?”Max took off. “Negative. I’m closer. Be ready in case I need you!”He moved soundlessly, spotting the distant figures. Was the son of a bitch her contact?“Are they having a meeting?” Max barked.“Not unless the agenda includes sexual assault and bashing her head in.”Anger gushed. The asshole was dead. Could she have parked any farther away?The bastard dragged Evans up by the hair, and all hell broke loose. Max choked on impotent rage, pushing his limits in a full-out sprint. They were gonna watch Evans die. Her attacker ram
The noon sun filtering through the shades caused Abby to stir. Bruised muscles made rolling out of bed an ordeal; the head wound was tight and sore. Carefully covering it with a shower cap, Abby jumped into the hot spray. The steaming water helped a little, but it still took time to pull on a loose black T-shirt and a pair of grey leggings.One brewed cup of coffee later, and Abby was sitting on the front patio, warming herself in the pale sunlight. The soft breeze and chirping birds calmed her rolling anxiety. She wasn’t ready to analyze what happened, who the masked man was. All she could handle at that moment was the creamy cup of caffeine and the simple sounds of nature.She ignored the desperate need to phone the one person that mattered most, just to hear his beautiful voice. Her brain kept poking her—just use a burner phone—it’ll be a quick phone call, a minute tops. There’s no danger; no one will know. Abby knew better; sh
A battered taxi blared its horn as it forced its way in front of them, ignoring the rules of the road and veering over the pavement in the process. Anton Vorster slammed on the brakes.“Shee-it!” Johnny white-knuckled the door handle in protest. TIA, buddy, this is Africa. Hell, this wasn’t just Africa. They were heading into Hillbrow, an inner-city neighborhood of Johannesburg riddled with gang activity. Hillbrow was known for high levels of population density, unemployment, poverty, and crime. Max glanced out the back window of the Jetta. It was a Saturday afternoon, and activity littered the streets. Gangs of men huddled on street corners, arrogantly watching over the scurrying locals. Anton pulled up at a light. Street vendors and beggars tapped at the windows, jostling for their attention. “Fok off!” Anton yelled, waving an aggressive window washer away. Anton was a neutral contact who would get them in Mandla Nkosi’s d
It was a casual date, and casual was the keyword. Abby messaged Max, telling him that she only had time to grab a quick bite. Grocery shopping was on her list for the day, aside from the design work needing her attention.Abby refused to do the candles and roses thing with Max or any other man for that matter. Casual was her new favorite word. Casual dates, casual necking on the sofa, casual sex, especially when it came to a man as intense as Max. Hell, one more glance from those laser eyes and she’d climb all over that rock-hard body.Casual dating had never been Abby’s thing, and that was why she was staring at the third outfit she’d tried on in the space of five minutes. Her new neon-orange-and-white Nike sneakers were paired with dark blue jeans and a white Taylor Swift 1989 T-Shirt. The soft, worn T-shirt was one of her favorites, her lacy white bra subtly peeked through the thin white material, giving a hint of girl-next-door n
It didn’t bother Max that she’d raised her walls up at his last question; that fitted with her profile. What didn’t fit was Abby opening up about her relationship with her family. The file they had on Abigail Evans never included details of abuse. From the intel they’d gathered, Max profiled a teenage Abby as a rebellious pastor’s daughter, leaving the restrictive nest and thumbing her nose at her small-town missionary parents. When questioning the Idaho community, they’d called her parents “saints.” Saying what do-gooders they were. How sad they were when Abby had left the protection of their church and the light of God. Some of the intel hinted that The Unity of Light had worrying cultish quirks, but overall the followers kept to themselves and stayed out of trouble.
Make sure to pick up “Stain on the Earth,” the next installment of the Mobile Intelligence Series. Find out what happens in Johnny and Lizzy’s story! Peshawar, Pakistan Lizette Steyn disengaged the slide, pulled up the door handle and swung the aircraft door outward. Frigid air swept in and she barely repressed a shiver. “Freezing fudge buckets,” she muttered before greeting the ground agent at the top of the stairs. The miserable structure that was Bacha Khan International Airport looked archaic—with all the developing nations Lizzy had visited in the past five months—that was saying a lot. Peshawar, the wild west town of Pakistan, felt as cold as a dead man’s nose. “Well isn’t that just grand,” Brianna muttered, stepping out of the wind. “All I bloody packed was a vest and a T-shirt.” Lizzy refrained from rolling her eyes. The other two Cabin Attendants had as much sense as two rolling hamsters. Brianna, a hardy Irish g
Utah.Four months later.Max pulled into the drive. It was good to be home. He’d sold a generous acreage of his land in Colorado and decided to purchase the luxury log cabin in the mountains near the Snowbasin Ski Resort in Salt Lake City. Utah was a safe place to raise kids where they could comfortably live off the grid. Close enough to the city yet tucked away in their own slice of paradise. Abby loved the snow, trying out snowboarding and then skiing. As spring weather set in, she’d taken Gabriel on a couple of hikes in the Wasatch Mountains. Max couldn’t wait to join in.The recent three-month deployment he’d just flown in from, meant that he’d spent little time with them since settling down to family life. Max thought back on their journey after leaving the clinic in Namibia all those months ago. After arriving in Djibouti, a bunch of suits met them on the tarmac. Max refused to be separated, s
Johannesburg. Four weeks later. That damn dog wouldn’t be able to fight its way out of a paper packet, never mind protect his Lizzy. Johnny watched her mom’s little rat dog take a shit on the sidewalk, before his blonde beauty bent over with a poop bag to sweep up the steaming parcel. Johnny paused to take in the spectacular view that was Lizzy’s incredible ass. Perky butt cheeks shaped beautifully by faded skinny jeans. Her retro outfit included a Michael Jackson “Thriller” T-shirt, silver sneakers, fire-engine lipstick and a bandana holding back curls. Where was she taking the ankle biter? There were no parks nearby plus she carried a bright red handbag. Not the wisest choice on the streets of Jo’burg, yet she wandered down the street like she was strolling through Central Park. Granted, it was a suburban area, but it wasn’t safe. Lizzy dropped the bag of rat droppings into a neighbor’s garbage can, then wiped her hands with a wet wipe. Her p
Abby woke to two very different male snores. One loud and raspy and the other sounding like a squeaky puppy. Max lay stretched out on the chair, balancing a snoring Gabe like a football in his lap. The comical pair had her giggling, a sound she promptly regretted as a pain lanced through her chest.Max was by her side in a flash, tucking Gabe under his arm and stroking her hair. “Easy now, baby. Shallow breaths, you’ll be okay.”Abby breathed through the pain before grasping his strong hand in hers. Max laid a sleeping Gabe by her side.
Windhoek, Namibia.By American standards, the German-run health facility was up to code. By African standards it was the Ritz Carlton. The floors were clean, walls freshly painted, it was well stocked and seemed organized. None of that alleviated the tension running through Max. They were still situated in fucking Africa, where he was relying on foreign medical staff he knew jack shit about to perform surgery on Abigail. Two hours had gone by and still no word. The nursing staff were giving Max a wide berth after he’d hounded them for the past hour.
The only makeshift weapon in the austere room was a clay bowl situated on the bedside table. Abby lunged for it, as Roman pounced onto the mattress. Grabbing the lip of the bowl, Abby smashed it into the side of his head, causing him to collapse as the ornament exploded.Roman moaned as Abby scrambled off the bed. Due to her injuries, she moved far slower than she’d have liked, as though she were wading through quicksand. She crawled to the door, the swaying room and the hammering music added to the disorientation. She had to get to Gabe.“You fucking bitch.”
The landing was rough. Fourteen miles per hour winds rocked the aircraft. A Cape windstorm descended on the city, and fifty mph gusts were predicted within the hour. Thanks to Mandla’s contacts, they’d secured a private landing strip on a wine farm near Sir Lowry’s Pass—thirteen clicks out. With lights and speed on their side, they were looking at a nine-minute drive. Khalid’s jet had landed at Stellenbosch Airfield twenty-eight minutes before them but had a longer commute of twenty-one kilometers. Praying that Khalid hit traffic, Max’s team raced for Somerset West.Mandla gave Max the stink eye. “N
The helicopter landed just north of Johannesburg at Lanseria Airport. Max leapt onto the runway, followed by Donnie, Slater, and Anton. Go-bags were provided as they raced to a private aircraft, fueled and ready for takeoff. Mandla Nkosi and Johnny greeted Max at the bottom of the stairs. Johnny dude-hugged him before breaking the news. “Khalid hired additional help. We didn’t get there in time. Our drone saw five men entering Noleen’s safe house. They’re holding them hostage until Khalid arrives.”Mandla grabbed Max’s bag. “My six-man team got there as quickly as they could but we were too late.”
Fifteen minutes after takeoff, Abby had to delay Khalid and his four guerrillas. There were too many of them to take on herself, especially with a limited knowledge of self-defense. If she guessed correctly, the flight was only eighty to a hundred minutes of flying time. You can do this, girl. Take what you know about aircrafts and formulate a plan. A history of extensive flight safety training might just give her an edge. Two of the four guards were buckled in their seats. One man in the lavatory while Roman stood near the cockpit. Khalid tapped away on his laptop, seated towards the front of the aircraft on the plush seats facing the cabin. The cold bastard behaved like an ordinary businessman on a work trip. The guard seated opposite Khalid was buck