Cold seeped up from the rough cement floor, and Lizzy wiggled her toes, trying to warm up the ice blocks that were now her feet. She shivered like a tuning fork, and her body thrummed as a cold breeze shifted the air. The sun had set hours ago, and the shouts outside the barred window had finally fallen silent.
The women were placed in separate rooms. Lizzy hadn’t seen anyone since the phone call to John. That seemed like hours ago. Lizzy ignored the scuffling in a dark corner of the room—not wanting to know which critters crept in the shadows. Instead she focused on the grimy wall in front of her. Aside from smaller scrapes, her thigh throbbed in time with her racing heart. A well-placed kick from one of the attackers would result in a bruise the size of a plate.
She’d allowed them to call him, and if he came, he’d see her like this—weak and dirty. That was not how she’d imagined their next meeting. Instead, she’d imagined running into John in a market in Kenya. With a handsome stranger on her arm as she strolled in the bright sunlight looking tanned and happy.
In her nonsensical fantasy, John would pull her into his arms and beg for forgiveness. He’d drag her mouth to his; her legs would wrap around his strong waist as his large hands gripped her ass and settled her… Okay, that was so not what she should be focusing on, while huddled on a broken stool at the mercy of angry strangers in piss-ant Pakistan.
Lizzy gingerly adjusted the metal cuff that chained her sore wrist to the table. Her mind wandered back to Johannesburg—to the last time she’d seen John. The day she’d sent him away.
“Lizzy, I’m so goddamn sorry that I lied, that I didn’t tell you sooner. If I could take it all back—”
“This isn’t about us. I was in trouble long before you came along. I need space, maybe I’m running away, but it’s what I need to do.”
John pressed his business card into her hand. “That’s my international number. If you ever need anything…”
Lizzy nodded as angry tears ran.
He led her to his car. Too soon they pulled up to her drive and Lizzy tamped down the heartbreak. She chose her last words carefully. “You’re a good guy. You deserve someone great in your life. I hope you find peace.”
He stared straight ahead as she studied his handsome profile. This gruff Samson was supposed to be her first. John should have been her first and last. Instead he’d fallen between deceitful cracks and all that was left were bittersweet memories. Lizzy kissed him on the cheek. “For what it’s worth, I loved you too.”
In a haze, she climbed out, shut the door and walked out of his life.
The willpower to fully exorcise him from her world failed her at the first turn when later that same night, she’d dug out his business card, stroked his name and memorized the number.
Now her willpower failed her again—months later—when she gave John’s number to Javid Ibrahim the man who had rescued the women and had crouched in front of her and asked who else she wanted to call. Apparently, Ethan Matthews, the CEO of JetHaven and the man she worked for, wasn’t answering his cell, and the JetHaven office phone went straight to voicemail. Captain Stuart and the first officer weren’t answering the phones in their rooms. Her father could never know. He worried enough about his daughter living so far from home.
The only man who could get her safely back to Kenya was John Calaway. All she knew about John was that he worked for an American covert team stationed in East Africa. Lizzy was betting on his spook connections. John was probably out in the field. If he didn’t come, perhaps he could send a rescue team of sorts.
If help didn’t arrive soon, the women would be transported to a holding facility, and Lizzy had a feeling that the prison system would suck them in like quicksand.
Javid entered the room, placing an open bottle of water in front of her. Lizzy drank while studying his white Punjabi suit—traditional Pakistani clothing that looked like a pajama set. Spotless and clean compared to her now torn and sullied outfit.
“Have you heard anything?”
“Not yet. We are running out of time.” Javid adjusted the pakol perched on his head. “Once the news reaches Inter-Services Intelligence headquarters, they’ll send police officers to pick you up. My fear is that the men who come will be corrupt.” Tension in the room ratcheted up.
The two drunk girls wandering into the local mosque’s gardens had gotten Lizzy into this mess. It was considered sacrilege for female non-Muslims to trespass on holy property. Brianna’s satchel full of alcohol ramped up the charges.
The mob of men that attacked Lizzy, Suzie and Brianna intended to stone the girls to death. Thankfully, they had been shoved aside by Javid and his class of moderate scholars. Javid taught at the Dar al-nur Masjid Madrasa, an Islamic school for religious instruction, which sat next door to the mosque.
Javid and his men had raced the women to an older abandoned seminary three blocks away, before the growing crowd of protesters could catch up.
Two officials from the local town council insisted on detaining the females until law enforcement placed them under arrest. Now it was a waiting game. If the mob had their way, Lizzy and her partners in crime could be jailed or put to death, and those morbid possibilities had her shaking in her chair.
“Why can’t I see my friends?”
“It is not up to me. I am trying to help as much as possible, but you are considered to be detainees. Risking that phone call to your man friend earlier may get me arrested.”
Loud voices in the passage had Javid on his feet.
“Mr. Ibrahim,” Lizzy called. “Regardless of what happens, thank you for your help.”
Javid nodded once before stepping out the door.
Straining her ears, Lizzy made out an American accent. The voices switched between English and Arabic. Lizzy’s stomach somersaulted, and her palms grew damp. Was John on the other side of that door? A part of her prayed he was, another part screamed no. Lizzy wasn’t ready to see him again.
Time dragged as negotiations rose and fell. Finally, the door opened and a man stepped through, carrying a bottle of water.
She registered cargo pants, a black T-shirt and gray hoodie. The large build seemed fleetingly familiar until the man stepped into the light. Not John, but a soldier with the same hardened look, like he owned the small space and any other territory his alpha boots stepped on.
Inky eyes assessed her, seeming almost black in the dim light.
“Are you injured?”
Lizzy swallowed back the relief at his American accent and he repeated his question.
“Are you hurt?”
“No.”
He spoke over his shoulder. “They cuffed her, and they’ve used a Darby 121. He won’t be happy about that.”
A second man stepped through the doorway. His white-blond hair glowed in the dim light and contrasted with the sooty-haired giant standing before her.
“Yeah, well, there’s one of him and four of us. We’ll calm him. Is that table nailed to the floor?”
“Yip. We’ll retrieve the bolt cutters from the truck if this shit isn’t resolved.”
“What’s a Darby 121?” Lizzy asked.
“Discontinued handcuffs only used in a sprinkling of third world countries,” the brute said, twisting off a cap and handing her an open water bottle. “You need to keep hydrated.”
“Are you with John? Are the other girls okay?”
He ignored the questions as he examined her wrist, before speaking again to his teammate. “It’s interfering with circulation—fastened way too tight.”
Lizzy tried again to get his attention. “What’s your name?”
“Ryker.”
“And your angelic friend standing in the doorway, looking like he’s gonna sprout wings?”
“What the—?” Choir Boy stepped forward.
Ryker snorted. “That’s Phoenix. Under all that angel dust, he’s one tough mother. We’ve both got your back…even though you and your tipsy fucking friends got yourselves into this.”
“I didn’t know they had alcohol on them.”
Ryker stood up. “Yeah? You should’ve just stayed at the hotel.”
Her eyes burned with unshed tears.
“Don’t get your pink panties in a knot. Be patient. We’re on the other side of the door if you need us. I need to make a few calls to smooth the way. Phoenix will check on your two cabin mates and find the official with the key to that.” He pointed to the cuff.
“What time is it?” Lizzy asked, shifting her numbing ass.
“2100 hours.”
She’d been locked in this room for six hours. Trust didn’t come easily, but the two big warriors were all she had. Lizzy reached out with her free arm and grabbed Ryker’s hand. “Thank you. I’m darn terrified. If I get out of this, I’ll hunt you down and buy your team a lunch. Complete with Heineken beers and double malted milkshakes, and whatever dessert you want. I can bake. I’ll make a Malva Pudding. It’s a South African recipe that’s all syrupy and—”
“Enough.” Ryker released her hand, smiling. “It’s a deal. Regardless of pudding, we’re not going anywhere.” He paused at the door. “Do you want us to call your family?”
“No. They’ll just worry.”
Ryker stepped out. Phoenix winked at Lizzy as he closed the door. “Later, Puddin’.”
Ten minutes later, Phoenix looked on as a surly local pulled out a key and loosened the cuff. After they left, Lizzy waited and waited. Despite the cold permeating stiff joints, she dozed off, waking suddenly to a warm hand on her knee. Oh, God. John was there. So solid and male as he filled her vision. His hand cradled her cheek as his rich brown eyes blazed with savage fire.
“You feel like ice. Where’s your damn scarf?”
First words in six months and that’s what he says.
“I—I don’t know. I guess at some point it was yanked off?”
“Max, she’s shaking like a leaf. Find an asshole with a blanket, robe, jacket. I don’t care, find something, she’s a mess. My jacket is in the car.”
A shadow moved. Max was here? And apparently Lizzy looked like a “mess.” Just the impression she was going for.
“I’m fine,” she said as she drank in the man before her, almost wanting to run hands through his thick brown hair.
“You’re fine?” John’s voice raised an octave, as he yanked up her thin sleeve. “You’re littered in bruises; your clothes are all torn up. Look at your wrist, look at it!”
Lizzy spoke carefully. “I’m aware of what I look like—feel like—believe me. Considering the circumstances, I’m just peachy.”
“Peachy, Peachy!” He stood and towered over her.
“You don’t have to yell.”
“Do you know where they wanna take you? The next stop is an ISI interrogation room. You don’t have a clue what that is. It’s like a medieval torturing facility in the middle of bum-fuck nowhere! One of the town idiots out there thinks you’re an American spy.”
“I know this is bad—”
“That doesn’t begin to cover it. You’ve literally caused an international incident.” John pointed at the closed door. “I have four agencies and the Pakistani Police Force involved. I’ve dragged fellow task members into this mess, men who were trailing a high-value target in Afghanistan and instead had to race here to rescue a spoiled only child. A little girl who’s up for a Darwin Award for staggering around Peshawar in a drunk haze!”
“That’s a rotten thing to say!”
“Oh, I’m sorry, princess, when I get a phone call from some random guy telling me that you’ve been attacked by an angry mob, and then I sit on a goddamn plane for six hours wondering if you’ll still be in one piece by the time I get here, I kind of lose my shit!”
“I wasn’t the one drinking! I didn’t even know they had the bottles. I tried to get us back to the hotel.” Lizzy kicked him in his perfect shin.
He swore, turned and paced the room. “I know, Ryker told me.”
“Then why did you say—”
“Because if we can’t extract you tonight, then I might as well toss my life away. I’ll infiltrate every facility I can to find you.”
“It won’t get to that.” Max entered the room, rounded the table, and gently placed a large jacket over Lizzy’s chilled arms. “I* Kashmir is in the other room.”
“Thank God.” John ran frustrated hands through his hair.
“What’s an I* Kashmir?” Lizzy asked.
“Here, drink.” Max jammed a straw into a juice box. “I* stands for Inspector General—Inspector General of Police. Faisal Kashmir heads up the KP Police. He’s an ally.”
Lizzy took a long sip of the mango-flavored juice. John stared through rusted bars onto the street below.
“Johnny, a word?” Max said.
“I’m not leaving her.”
“In the hall, now. This isn’t our jurisdiction. We’ll need to cooperate.”
John stepped out. Lizzy finished the juice. Played with the straw as time dragged by.
Max walked in followed by John, Ryker, Javid and a man she didn’t recognize who wore a navy jacket and matching beret decorated with ranks and insignia. Crossed silver swords decorated his shoulder. He gave her a gruff look before tossing a file on the table and taking a chair opposite. This must be the I* Kashmir guy. Lizzy remembered his name because it sounded like the word cashmere.
He opened the file and threw her passport on the table. They’d removed it from her person earlier. A photocopy version lay in the file along with a thin pile of paperwork. He grumbled as he sorted through documents.
“Lizette Steyn. You’ve caused a great headache for me, this night. What do you have to say for yourself?”
Lizzy looked at him blankly. “That I’m sorry?”
He raised a thick brow.
“No, I really am. It has to be like one in the morning, and I’m sure you have a family waiting for you at home. Please apologize to your lovely wife. If you’re not married, well then, I apologize for saying that you are. In any case, I’m sorry for keeping you—”
“Lizzy, enough.” John growled.
I* Kashmir raised the other brow before bursting into laughter. “I’m married with three children, so I take no offense. You’re a funny little thing, aren’t you?”
Great, of course her diminutive size was mentioned. Lizzy flashed a polite smile as he extracted a form and handed it over.
“You will need to sign this statement.”
Lizzy looked to John for confirmation and he nodded. Arms crossed, he looked formidable standing in the shadows.
“What does it say?”
“Firstly, that you were unaware of the mini bottles of whisky, or that the other two cabin attendants were consuming the alcohol. Secondly that you did not intentionally wander onto holy ground.” Kashmir handed her a pen and showed her where to initial.
Both statements were true enough, but Lizzy paused before signing her name.
“Lizbug…” John warned.
“What happens to my friends?”
“They are not your concern.” Kashmir nudged the paper.
“Sign the damn thing,” John snapped.
“What will happen to them?”
“They are in measurably more trouble than you. Intoxication in public, trespassing on mosque grounds while inebriated, comes with serious charges.”
The pen trembled. “I can’t leave them.”
“I swear to God—” John erupted and Max stepped into the foray, touching her shaking wrist. His pale gray eyes pinned her with a magnetic stare.
“We’ve contacted their respective embassies in Pakistan. Your boss—Ethan Matthews—is flying into Pakistan tomorrow. His legal team is landing in Karachi tonight. Refusing to sign this statement will not make one ounce of difference to their situation. In fact, it will make it more difficult. The legal counsel needs to focus on just two of them.”
Lizzy held back hiccupping tears as she placed the pen down, needing time to think. “This was Suzie’s third flight.” Lizzy grasped the I*’s wrist and he looked up. “She’s sheltered and naive, and so young. Don’t let them lock her away for one stupid decision.”
“People make stupid decisions every day. My overflowing prisons are evidence of that.” Kashmir pulled his hand back and picked up the pen. “Don’t let me add your name to that list, Lizette Steyn.”
“Promise me you’ll protect them best you can.”
“I have a town full of angry citizens demanding justice, but I will try my best.”
Lizzy signed her name in a blur, and Kashmir gathered the papers. “I don’t want to see you in my city again, Miss Steyn. I suggest you bid for other flights in future. You’ve been flagged by Inter-Services Intelligence.”
John stepped in the I*’s way. “Get that cuff off her. Now.”
Kashmir nodded. “I’ll send someone in.”
The men left. John sat down in the chair opposite. She ignored him. Frustration at the girls’ predicament had her simmering.
“Once we’ve transported you to a safe facility, we’ll get you checked out. Aside from feeling a little battered, are you okay to walk?”
“Look at you, sweeping in to rescue me—again—even when I don’t want you anywhere near.” Lizzy regretted the words the second they spilled from her acidic mouth. That was a mean thing to say and she flinched at the sudden hurt in his eyes. “I’m sorry I sa—”
He spoke carefully over her apology.
“We’re never going to get past Johannesburg, are we?”
“Don’t bring up South Africa. This isn’t the place.”
He studied the table. “I can’t do this anymore.”
“Do what?”
“Care. Worry about your life, worry about your soul. This is too hard.”
“What are you talking about? We haven’t seen each other in over six months.”
He rubbed a thumb over a knuckle. “Your last flight was to Rwanda. Before that you flew to Iraq. I have your damn roster memorized. You took a vacation two months ago in Mauritius, with your parents.” He looked grim.
“John—”
“I know it seems stalkerish, but the reality is that I want you safe. Your job isn’t anywhere near safe, and it kills me not knowing where you are.” His mouth turned further down at the corners as he shrugged. “I can’t be your guardian and move on with my life—or meet someone else. I need to let go of us.”
He stood, and panic took hold. Her eyes welled. He refused to look up.
“You’re leaving me here.”
“Never. I trust my task-force brothers to look after you. We’ll get you home, and then it’s all up to you.”
“What I said just now, that was unfair, and it was a lie.” Lizzy tried to stand. The handcuff stopped her, her thigh locked up and she cried out from pain.
“Fuck!” He clenched a fist, raising it to punch the wall, instead he lowered his arm and paced the room. His muscles quivered with tempered rage.
Lizzy wasn’t scared. The realization had her sitting back down. She’d never been afraid of this man, only of the hidden possibilities of their unknown future. The past six months were a hiatus, where she slowly found her way back to forgiving him. Ironically, he’d used the time to find an escape from her.
She’d pushed away this beautiful warrior, with good reason, and now it was too late. She’d never see him again. That hurt more than anything Ivan or any other human could ever do to her.
John slid down and crouched against the wall. She searched for the right words, her mind still stumbling for rationality after struggling through the past eight hours.
John stood. “Be safe, Lizbug.”
“Please don’t go.”
He walked away, and she lost it.
Lizzy shouted his name to a closing door. Her shout turned into a wail and Lizzy wept, shame ripping her heart from its foolish position, her sobs ringing through the lonely space.
She despised herself in that moment. John was right; she was a sniveling and selfish princess who’d learned nothing since moving to Kenya. Still demanding of others—still pathetically lost.
Ryker came in and unlocked the biting cuff before shuffling her out. Her thigh muscle spasmed from sitting for so long, and her leg collapsed. Phoenix swept her up, carrying her to the vehicle as Lizzy gritted her teeth from the pain.
Not much got to Johnny. He liked to think he was a balanced soldier who’d seen a lot in his military career. Any challenging experiences in the field usually got resolved by physical work when Johnny returned home to his Wyoming cabin. The empty solitude had a way of flushing away the blackness of war from one’s soul.Looking into those troubled blue eyes and the sound of Lizzy’s sobs echoing in that dingy room had him wanting to put a fist through the wall. Johnny paced the hallway, waiting for the local men to liberate her from their obsolete confinement.Javid Ibrahim watched him carefully from down the hall. Johnny paused, then approached him. “Thank you for rescuing them.” He swallowed before continuing. “Without your help, they would’ve been stoned or beaten to death.”Javid nodded once. Johnny reached into his back pocket. “If you ever need any—”“I need you to look after Miss
Standing awkwardly, Lizzy tried to ignore the larger-than-life operator and concentrated on drying her hair. That steamy water had felt like heaven—she’d never felt so grateful for a warm shower. She considered herself the luckiest person in Pakistan that night. Which made her think of Brianna and Suzie. They were the unluckiest. She should’ve stayed with them, but Max was right. She’d have just gotten in the way. Worry for their safety sat heavy on her heart.“Do you want me to leave?”Lizzy shook her head. “I’ll probably be asleep in five.” She pulled damp locks over her shoulder and dried them with a towel.“I’ll bring you some food. It’s all local—”“I like local. Thanks.”John turned to leave.“I knew you were watching me,” she said.He paused, and she climbed on the bed and continued.“You were at a market in
At six in the morning the streets were quiet. Two vehicles pulled out; Lizzy sat in the back of the truck next to Johnny, and Max sat up front as Ryker drove. The rest of the MIT3 team trailed behind in a black SUV. Their plans had shifted. Lizzy would be flying back on the MIT2 transport with Johnny and Max.They’d take off from a private airstrip, land in Mogadishu to drop Max off to meet up with the rest of the team and, once refueled, Johnny would head on to Nairobi with Lizzy.She’d snuggled up beside him, and dainty snores filled the subdued space as her head lolled against his arm. Itching to wrap that arm around the tiny blonde, Johnny turned instead to stare into the dawning light.Peshawar and its neighboring war zone wasn’t Johnny’s favorite place. Too many violent memories, losing team members over his earlier years in Afghanistan. He hated that Lizzy was here. He wanted them gone.“Thanks for the escort.” M
NairobiTwo days laterLizzy loved the view from her balcony. The small apartment on the second floor of the complex looked out onto manicured gardens and a field. City buildings and treetops spanned the horizon beyond the perimeter wall. Kids played soccer below. She took a sip of coffee and yelled out a greeting, feeling once more like a functional human. A human with a date—with a significantly larger human. It wasn’t technically a date, just two friends going for lunch and treading carefully around the minefield of their past.The trip back to Nairobi had been an awkward one. After takeoff, as Lizzy internally celebrated her successful release from the Peshawar nightmare and John snoozed in the corner, Max had slipped into the seat opposite.“As far as Johannesburg goes, I’m sorry you were caught in the middle, but I wouldn’t have done anything differently. We removed a dangerous terrorist,
The flame tree was in bloom and Lizzy couldn’t resist walking out of the front gates of her apartment complex and plopping down beneath the scarlet tree. She crossed her legs and picked up a bright flower as she waited for John.Lizzy loved people-watching, and this was the perfect spot for it. Locals ran for the bus stop, mopeds sped by, and cars negotiated through the morning bustle.The previous day had been a pleasant surprise. After a quick walk around the children’s home, Lizzy excused herself, helping in the kitchen by chopping up vegetables for the evening meal as John thoroughly walked the property, listing potential improvements.It shouldn’t surprise her; John took everything in stride, and his easy adaptability was one of the star qualities that attracted her to the man.By the end of the day, he’d accrued a workforce of teenage boys as a gang of wide-eyed little girls trailed his every move, peppering him with question
The next day, Lizzy decided to swing by the hospital to see Valentino. She waited until John was free, and they headed to Nairobi’s central hospital.Kenya had some of the most advanced medical facilities in Africa—private hospitals that rivaled those in the West. This selection of impressive hospitals was available only to those who can afford it, with fees beyond the means of most Kenyans.In contrast to the millions who relied on severely overcrowded and under-resourced government facilities, the central hospital tried its best to cater to the hundreds of patients who sat in the waiting rooms every day, under tremendous pressure to meet the needs of the Kenyan people.John seemed as saddened by the overcrowded wards as Lizzy was.It was times like these when Lizzy regretted not finishing her nursing degree. Every bit helped. Standing on the periphery didn’t feel natural or very helpful.Little Valentino sat in a sea of chaos on
A surprised Lizzy opened the door. “What are you doing here?”“A guy can’t see his girl for four days in a row?”“I’m not your girl.”Johnny pushed past. The strappy dress she wore revealed tanned limbs, and he ached to kiss the couple of freckles dotting her right shoulder. Instead, he laid a pizza on the counter. “Want some?”“It’s nine in the morning.”“I’ve been up since five, sorting out the team’s week. They’re rolling in late tomorrow, and then we’ll be heading out the following day.”“How long will you be gone?”“I’m not sure.”MIT2 were heading to the Kenyan territory bordering Somalia. They planned a joint training exercise for Kenyan first responders and law enforcement professionals to support efforts concerning extremist activity. MIT worked closely with PREACT—Partne
In a flash he was on her, fondling her breasts as he kicked off his underwear. Lizzy smiled as she kissed the top of his head. She had the brawny operator wrapped around her finger. It was him, and only him who she wanted in her bed.She couldn’t imagine being with anyone as solid, as sheltering as James Cane. His strength chased away her cowardice, and when he looked at her with those hound-dog eyes, she felt like she could climb Everest.A future with this handsome soldier still fell somewhere off her radar, but she could enjoy the moment, and what a moment it was. She sensed his thrill of arousal. His expert tongue swirled along her entrance, and her lady parts clenched at the electric touch. She came. Then he made her come again with explosive pleasure. After what seemed like hours of torturous bliss, John pulled back.He ran a finger up her swollen folds and sat back to sheath himself. “Are you ready, Lizbug?”She nodded as he raise
Make sure to check out “Fire in the Knight,” book three of the Mobile Intelligence Series. Find out what happens to Charlotte Quinn and Donnie Wilson!Saint Julian’s, MaltaWith no sign of potential witnesses in the hall, the man pulled the apartment door shut with a soft click. He adjusted his hoodie and ran down the steps before stepping onto the damp pavement. The sun had set and on a wet November night in Malta, the streets surrounding Spinola Bay were practically deserted.It was time to settle in and wait. The mark—Joseph da Silva—had only just sat down for dinner at one of the nearby restaurants. It would be at least an hour before he returned to his rental villa facing the water.With quick and efficient movements, the assassin made his way to the docked speedboat. Villas and hotels pressed together around the inlet, stacked like LEGOs around the small cove. He ignore
WyomingThree weeks laterRay huffed out a snore as she rolled over to her side on the wooden porch. Scratching her velvety neck with his foot, Johnny took a swig of beer. The setting sun provided the perfect backdrop to Lizzy’s sweet profile as she strummed softly on her guitar.She paused, then swore. “Gosh, dang it.”“The finger again?”“Or lack thereof.”“Don’t push it. Give it time.”Lizzy stuck out her tongue, and Johnny grinned. She made a pretty picture, sitting cross-legged on the rocking chair with her hair twisted in a cute bun at the nape of her neck. Not quite long enough, tendrils fell around her face, dancing in the autumn breeze. Back to her normal weight with flushed cheeks—an outside observer would never guess at the trauma she’d experienced just a couple of months before. Dragging his chair closer, Johnny leaned i
John kept to his word. Two days later and he was ready to be checked out of the hospital. Lizzy giggled as he waddled over to the bathroom. The back of his gown left little to her imagination.“Don’t laugh. It’s not funny. You’d think they’d have a larger gown for taller patients.”“I don’t think it’s your height, baby.” Lizzy laughed. “You look like the incredible hulk, hulking out of teeny human clothes.”Donnie walked in, grinning at John’s bare ass. “And the beard gives him a yeti vibe.”“I need clean clothes.”Lizzy spent a day in the ward, under observation. Charlie was kind enough to bring Lizzy a change of clothes the day before, but she’d mistakenly packed an old pair of John’s pants that no longer fitted around his muscled waist.“Relax, big man. I have your lumberjack clothing ready and waiting.”&ld
Swiping at her mud-caked vision, Lizzy stumbled through the fence towards Charlie’s barn. When she’d flown off the porch steps, her immediate relief at seeing the deputy running towards her turned to horror when Muller’s bullet sliced through the man’s neck.Lizzy veered, then stumbled as a second one zipped past her cheek.Instead of heading for the road, she zigzagged across the field towards farm outbuildings that could provide cover. Her feet slipped, and she went down in the sloppy mud. Scrambling for purchase, she staggered towards the tree line before spotting the wooden barn. This time, tree bark shattered to the left of her, and she swung right, not daring to glance back.The farm was a ghost town. Charlie and her foreman were up at the hospital for her father’s third heart surgery. The rest of the staff had left early to set up a food stall at the Sunday farmer’s market in town. Still, a farm hand popped out from beh
“The storm could’ve damaged the phone lines,” Donnie yelled over the thrumming blades. Max ignored the logic, knowing in his gut that his family was in trouble and Johnny was either disabled or dead.His teammate should’ve made mincemeat out of Muller’s slimy ass and contacted Max by now. None of the mobile phones were being answered, and the landlines were dead.The colonel’s orders were to allow local law enforcement and the FBI to run the mission. But if Max was the first to arrive, he’d ignore that directive, just as he’d ignored the orders to stay on base until SOCOM briefed a fully manned black ops team.Defying orders, Donnie and Max threw on battle rattle and relied on a friend and chopper pilot to give them a ride. Now MIT scrambled to cover their men’s asses. They’d departed on a mission on American soil that was not fully authorized. Max didn’t give a shit. His pregnant wife and child w
Max hung up the call to his wife and strode into the meeting room. Abby wasn’t resting or eating as well as she should. Screw trying ever again for a third kid. This pregnancy was the most stressful shit Max had ever experienced, and that included going head-to-head with suicidal extremist bastards.Those worrying thoughts screeched to a halt as soon as Max saw his boss standing in the far corner. Max and Donnie had been pulled out of morning training and asked to meet one of their analysts—Jace Martin—on base. Jace was in the room but so was Colonel Jack Hearst. Was it to do with Slater’s replacement? Max doubted it, as he stood at attention. Donnie fell in beside him. The look on the distinguished MIT mogul’s face had Max’s skin itching.“Sir. It’s good to see you. What brings you to Utah?”“Erik, we’ve fucked up. Not just MIT but every agency in the northern hemisphere. Close the door and sit.&
The mattress creaked, waking Lizzy. She didn’t move, preferring to savor the safe moment. Cocooned in John’s bed and his love, she’d slept through the night and woken feeling at peace. It wasn’t quite morning, the hint of dawn scrubbed over by the sound of a storm sweeping in. Lizzy reached behind and felt the empty warmth as she heard John slam the window shut.Ray shifted next to her chest, and Lizzy snuggled deeper. “What time is it?”“Four thirty. I might as well get up; I need to check on the animals. This storm looks nasty,” he said before brushing his teeth at the sink.Lizzy dozed until the bed dipped, and he pulled his boots on.“Do you need help?”“I’m all good, Lizbug. If you feel like getting up though, I hear Abby banging around in the kitchen. I think Gabe woke her.”The wind howled as rain pelted against the window. “Five more minutes,” s
Two days later, Max and Donnie rolled out, headed for training at Camp Williams with the newest team member, Dylan Jenkins. A local Utahan sniper from the 19th Special Forces Group. Johnny admired the laid-back soldier. Aside from his Army career, the operator embodied a reckless, surfer-like attitude as a well-known snowboarder in Utah. It would be interesting to see how their uptight team leader handled the Owen Wilson wannabe. Dylan’s long-range marksmanship and excellent skills in the field would make him a valuable MIT member—aside from the additional training lined up for him at MIT headquarters later in the month. At Max’s insistence, Johnny stayed behind with Lizzy. As they were still evaluating Jenkins’ skills, it wasn’t essential for Johnny to be at Camp Williams. If they needed him, they’d call.***“I forget how hot the summers can get in some parts of the States, is late May supposed to be this warm?” Abby gr
Balancing tentatively on the ball of her foot, Lizzy poked her head through the canopy of leaves. Wyoming was truly breathtaking. Silence surrounded her. Not true silence as she could still hear insects buzzing, the leaves rustling in the afternoon breeze and a bleating sheep answered by three more. The distant hills looked so clear in the waning light, the golden rays contrasting with shadowed crevices in the craggy mountainside. She missed climbing trees; she still loved it.Her head sank back below the branches, and Lizzy looked down. The branch she balanced on bent under her weight, and she transferred her foot to a sturdier limb. The new branch instantly disintegrated, almost melting into thin air. Before she could comprehend her predicament, she fell to the earth, bouncing through and over battering limbs. Just before she slammed into the ground, strong arms caught her and they fell, rolling down a steep hill at a dizzying pace.A scarlet blur filled her vision a