Military Men

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Military Men Page 7

by Shelley Munro


  He kept the lie slick, as smooth as her soft skin, told it in an even tone and looked her in the eye the whole time. When she nodded, he felt like a pile of dog turd. Eventually, she’d discover his lie and would never look at him in the same way again.

  The idea should’ve made him happy.

  Summer stood on tiptoe and brushed a kiss across his cheek. “Thanks.”

  “Hey, Summer!” Natasha bounced up and down as she hailed them. Nikolai noticed his friends’ sly amusement as they stood at the girl’s side.

  “Mum confirmed Dare’s not coming back. Feel like going to the movies? Nikolai, you’ll come with us? Jake and Louie said they’d like to go.”

  Nikolai waited for Summer to decide.

  “Sure,” she said. “Nikolai?”

  “Sounds good, as long as we don’t have to go to some weepy chick-flick.”

  * * * * *

  After the movie, Nikolai gave her a ride home. In the dark, intimate confines of his car, she took the coward’s route and pretended to sleep. It wasn’t that the evening hadn’t gone well. It had. No, she was in full-out panic because during the movie, she’d discovered—admitted—she’d fallen for the man.

  She huffed silently. Talk about a bolt from the heavens.

  A clone of her brothers—a bossy take-charge male who liked to tell her what to do. And true to type, Nikolai had tried to veto her friendship with Dare, making him out to be second cousin to an axe murderer. Her fortitude strengthened as she recalled the past. She needed to use two hands to count the number of boyfriends her brothers had sent fleeing for cover.

  The question was—what did she do now?

  So far, independence meant fun, and she wasn’t remotely tempted to give it up for something that might or might not be permanent. Maybe if she ignored the attraction and searched for another male—one who’d let her express her opinions and listen instead of reducing every word to clipped orders, someone other than Dare.

  “Summer, are you awake?”

  “Huh?”

  “We’re home.”

  She opened her eyes and straightened. So they were. Deep in thought she hadn’t noted their progress. “Thanks for the ride home.”

  “I’ll walk you to the door.”

  Despite her instinct to decline, she sucked in a deep breath and let it ease free. Pick your fights. “Thanks.”

  She scrambled from the car with her straw basket and rummaged for her house keys. They were right at the bottom, of course. Feeling the weight of his stare, she fumbled, and the keys dropped to the ground with a metallic rattle.

  “Let me.” He retrieved them and shoved the right key in the lock. “Hell, Summer. You didn’t lock the door.”

  “Yes, I did. Don’t you remember? You were spying.”

  “Stay there. Don’t move.” Then he slid through the open door into the darkness.

  She ignored the order and followed cautiously.

  “Don’t you ever listen to what I say?” he demanded, materializing from the dark shadows on her right.

  “When you ask instead of ordering, I might consider.”

  “There wasn’t time to pretty it up.”

  “But—”

  “Quiet.” Nikolai shoved her behind him.

  Summer heard a noise too. She snapped her mouth shut, freezing like the marble statue of Peter Pan in Uncle Henry’s garden. The tenseness left him, and he dragged her close enough to whisper in her ear.

  “Sounds as if they’ve gone out the window. You can come with me, but for God’s sake, if I tell you to run, make sure you do. Can you do that?”

  Astonishment made her blink, but she didn’t let it show in her voice. “Yes. I understand.” Her heart thudded as adrenaline morphed to higher levels, pressing against her instinct to run and hide.

  “Come on then.” Nikolai edged through the darkness, moving with stealth and confidence.

  She attempted to emulate him, but even though she was familiar with the surroundings, the lack of light threw off her judgment of distances. Not Nikolai. He never faltered.

  In her uncle’s den, he stopped abruptly. “They’ve gone. Turn on the light.”

  She flicked the switch and winced at the bright glare. The cords of the wooden Venetian blinds rattled against the sill, disturbed by the stiff southerly blowing in from the estuary. On closer observation, she noticed the muddy footprint on the sill.

  She sighed. “Should I phone the police or check to see if anything is missing first?”

  “I wouldn’t worry too much about missing items.”

  The strange note in his voice made her jerk to attention. “Why not?”

  He indicated the packets of white powder sitting on the top of her uncle’s desk.

  “Are they what—?”

  Sirens sounded in the distance, loud and insistent.

  “Yep, I’d take that bet,” he said, leaning against the wall. “Those packages aren’t yours?”

  Summer inched toward the desk, eyeing the items as if they might pounce. Curious, she reached out to touch.

  “Don’t.” Nikolai moved so quickly she flinched. “You don’t want to leave your fingerprints.”

  Her head thudded in sync with the advancing sirens. She stared wordlessly at Nikolai as a vehicle pulled up outside. The siren ceased and blessed quietness fell, not a sound except the drubbing of her heart and Nikolai’s slow, controlled breathing.

  A fist hammered on the door.

  Nikolai dropped the arm from her shoulder. “I’ll get it.”

  “No. Let me. You’re not going to do anything stupid?”

  “No point. The cops know it’s here.”

  “How? I don’t understand. This is a bad movie.”

  A bark of laughter sounded seconds before a fist pounded the door again. “Somehow, sweetheart, I think it’s gonna get worse.”

  How? Her mother would have a cow if she heard, and the news would reach her family by bush telegraph. It always did. Masculine voices discussed forcing an entrance. “I’m coming.” She yanked the door open before they took further action. “Yes?”

  Blue and red lights flashed on top of the unmarked police vehicle. Two plain clothes cops stood on the doorstep, their identifications held aloft for her to inspect. She should’ve felt intimidated, but Nikolai’s presence boosted her confidence. “Can I help you?”

  “Police,” one said unnecessarily.

  “Can I do something to help you?” she repeated, standing in the middle of the doorway. “It is rather late.”

  “We’ve had a tip-off about one of our investigations. Can we come in?”

  She scowled as the older of the two policemen advanced. She stood her ground. “Don’t you need a warrant or something?”

  Nikolai appeared behind her. “Let them in, Summer.”

  Wordlessly, she stepped back to allow the officers to enter.

  “I think you’ll find what you’re looking for in the study,” Nikolai said.

  “Who are you?” the younger policeman asked.

  “Nikolai Tarei.” As he spoke, he moved closer and curved his arm around her waist, drawing her against his side. When she opened her mouth to speak, he tightened his grip, and she slammed her mouth shut. Inwardly, she fumed. Once again, he was taking charge.

  “We have a few questions.”

  “Come through to the kitchen,” Nikolai said.

  Summer wanted to protest his highhandedness. She glared her annoyance, but he merely shook his head and propelled her into the kitchen. One of the policemen followed while the other stepped into her uncle’s study.

  “Can you tell us what this is about please?” she asked after subsiding into a chair. Her voice held clear impatience.

  The policeman ignored her prompting. “Your name?”

  “Summer Williams.”

  “Do you own this house, Mr. Tarei?”

  “My uncle owns this house. Nikolai lives next door.”

  The second policeman entered the kitchen. He held the packets
of white powder in his right hand. He wore gloves and held the packets by the corners.

  “Do these belong to you, Miss Williams?”

  “No.”

  “Do you have any idea how they came to be on the desk then?”

  She glanced at Nikolai, and at his imperceptible nod, she answered the question. “Nikolai and I have been out all day. We returned fifteen minutes ago. The front door was unlocked, and when we came inside we both heard noises. By the time we investigated whoever was inside had left via the study window. If you look, you’ll see a footprint on the windowsill.”

  “Hmm.” The older policeman scratched the stubble on his chin. “I’d like you to accompany us to the station.”

  * * * * *

  “I didn’t expect them to keep us there all night,” Summer muttered. “For a while there, I thought they were going to lock us up.”

  Nikolai shrugged as an unmarked blue sedan pulled up beside them. “This looks like our ride home.”

  He spoke to the driver and opened the back door for Summer. Nikolai slid in beside her and the car pulled away. On the short drive home, neither of them spoke.

  “Looks like you have company, Summer.”

  Summer jerked upright, flushing at the realization she’d gone to sleep and used Nikolai as a pillow. Good grief. Had she dribbled on his shirt? She wiped her eyes with the back of her hands and surreptitiously checked her mouth and chin for dampness. “Sorry?”

  “Martin’s here.”

  Summer’s head jerked up. She gasped, then turned back to stare at Nikolai. “What do I tell him?”

  “I’d stick to the truth,” Nikolai said in an undertone.

  “At least I’ll be able to prove he has nothing to do with crime.”

  “Maybe.”

  The car pulled up alongside Dare’s convertible. After thanking the driver, they climbed out.

  “Hi, Dare.” Summer smiled. “Have you been waiting long?”

  Dare’s look held antagonism as he glared at Nikolai. She needed to get rid of Nikolai before things turned ugly.

  “Thanks for the help, Nikolai. I’ll see you later.” She backed up her words with a wave, took Dare’s arm and dragged him toward the front door. For once, Nikolai seemed to trust her to deal with the situation on her own.

  “Where have you been?” Dare demanded in a low, furious voice.

  Summer unlocked the door and stood back for him to enter. She refused to argue in front of Nikolai. She sensed his gaze even with her back to him. A tingle sprang to life inside her, and it had nothing to do with Dare’s arrival.

  She rubbed her gritty eyes and forced another smile. “I could do with a cup of coffee. Come through to the kitchen, and I’ll explain everything. It’s been a rough night.”

  Five minutes later, the scent of freshly ground coffee beans filled the air and coffee dripped into the carafe.

  “You know Natasha and I went to the movies last night?”

  “Yes.”

  “When Nikolai dropped me off here, someone was inside the house. Whoever it was left several packets of cocaine and called the cops to alert them.”

  “Cocaine?” Dare stared at her in astonishment.

  The reaction was genuine. Summer would swear to it. “It wasn’t good quality, but definitely cocaine. Lucky for me, the culprit left a boot print on the windowsill and none of the packets had my fingerprints on them, either inside or out. But the police still took me in for questioning. I’ve been there all night.”

  “The police don’t have any idea who called them?” This time his voice held an edge, something off that made her wish she could read his mind. Men were so unpredictable.

  She frowned at the coffeemaker and wished it would hurry. “No. They think the call was made on a cell phone—one of those prepaid ones that are difficult to trace.”

  “What was your next-door neighbor doing with you? Why didn’t you call me?”

  There had been a time, not long ago, when she would’ve felt thrilled to have two men pay attention to her. “I didn’t call you because I thought you were busy.”

  “But you called him.”

  He sounded sulky. Male egos. She could do without them. “The police took him in for questioning too because he was still here.”

  “I don’t like the way he hangs around or the way he looks at you. He probably called the cops.”

  Summer suppressed a snappish comeback. “He’s my uncle’s friend. I suspect my uncle asked him to watch out for me. I can’t be rude. The coffee’s ready. Black, isn’t it?”

  “Yeah.” Dare paced the length of the kitchen. “Thanks,” he added as an afterthought.

  She plonked the mug on the wooden table and muttered under her breath when her undue force splashed coffee over the maroon tablecloth. She grabbed a rag to wipe up the spill and sat to savor her morning beverage.

  Dare paused mid-pace and whirled to face her. His intense frown made her stare. As she watched, he strode past the table, past his waiting coffee. He was leaving? Or was he merely doing an extra large lap?

  She swiveled in her chair. Her mouth dropped open when he kept going through the open door. “Dare, what about your coffee? Dare!”

  “Something’s come up. I have to go.”

  “Right now? Without drinking your coffee?”

  “Sorry.”

  The apology lacked in sincerity, and she leapt to her feet. “What’s come up?”

  A flash of irritation flickered in him. His full mouth firmed as he checked his phone. “I need to go to work. A problem with a business competitor. I’ll ring you later.”

  Talk about a pat on the head. She sank onto her chair. What had happened to make him run off that way? She replayed the last quarter of an hour in her mind and came up blank. One moment he’d been acting the jealous boyfriend, then the next he was in full business mode. Then, another thought occurred.

  What if Nikolai was right about Dare? Did Dare know more than he was letting on about the drugs they’d found in Uncle Henry’s study?

  Chapter Eight

  Dare’s abrupt defection niggled at her for the rest of the morning, so much so that she had difficulty concentrating on the Sunday paper. She half expected him to call yet heard nothing.

  By two o’clock, she gave up waiting and grabbed the keys for her Mazda and her exercise gear. If she hurried, she could make the Tae Kwon Do class and shop for groceries on the way home. If Dare rang while she was out, too bad.

  Her car started with the usual bad-tempered splutters, and she muttered and cursed before she and the car came to terms and traveled sedately toward Papakura. The traffic became heavier once she neared the motorway turnoff. People heading home after the weekend away. A flicker of loneliness brought a flash of homesickness for friends and family. She slowed at the intersection and indicated a right turn onto a quiet road that would get her to her class and avoid most of the traffic.

  While she drove down the hedge-lined road, she puzzled over Dare’s weird behavior. A screech of tires made her glance in her rear-vision mirror. Another vehicle was rapidly closing the distance between them.

  She gulped when it kept coming, faster and faster.

  Fear dried her mouth.

  The reflection of a four-wheel drive vehicle filled her mirror—black with shiny silver chrome in the front. She pressed the accelerator. Tires shrieked and her aging car shuddered, protesting the demand for speed. The black monster continued to stalk her.

  Every two seconds, like a magnet seeking metal, her gaze was drawn to her rear-vision mirror. A maniac. The driver was deranged.

  She gripped the steering wheel, her heart galloping. If anything, he’d sped up.

  “Idiot.” Strong, colorful curses danced through her head. Her hands tightened on the wheel, while sweat broke out on her forehead, her palms—all over her body.

  A witness. She needed a witness.

  She prayed for a car to come from the other direction. It didn’t happen. Instead, the roaring behind gre
w louder, more frightening. More threatening. She glanced in the mirror again and caught a glimpse of white teeth, lips curled in a wolfish smile.

  A crash jolted her vehicle. Her car shot forward. Her body snapped toward the windscreen and jerked to a halt at the jam of the seat belt. Air exploded from her lungs, and she wheezed for replacement oxygen.

  The four-wheel drive slammed into her bumper a second time. Metal ground against metal in a horrible, expensive grating.

  Summer’s car shunted off the road, flying over a low bank into a ditch. The branches of the roadside hedge scraped the window and the paintwork. Fingernails on a blackboard.

  Her car plowed to a halt in the hedge, the branches blocking the sun. Her engine cut, and she heard the roar of the four-wheel drive as it slowed, the spray of gravel as it departed. Somewhere close, an animal bleated in fright, then all was quiet.

  With trembling hands, she attempted tried to release her seat belt. A shaft of pain shot across her chest. A soft moan escaped. She had to get out of the car. What if it caught on fire? Or what if that idiot returned?

  He’d rammed her car on purpose.

  He’d wanted to frighten her.

  To injure.

  She reached for the seat belt release again and on her third try the button lowered, freeing the pressure on her breathing. A splash of blood dropped to her hand. She needed to… What did she need to do? It was nighttime, wasn’t it? She’d go to sleep.

  The plaintive moo of a cow jerked open her eyes. Somewhere in the distance, a dog barked. Summer blinked and realized she was in her car. That was right. She needed to get outside. She struggled with the door. It opened a fraction then slammed to a stop against something solid. The hedge shook, scraping against the car.

  Jammed.

  Try the passenger door. She reached for the handle, and an arrow of pain darted through her upper body while inside her head, someone played a drum solo. She gritted her teeth and kept pushing the door. Without warning, it dropped open. A blast of fresh air blew inside, caressing her hot cheeks.

  Summer sucked in a painful breath and crawled from the driver’s seat to the passenger side. The gear stick jabbed her thigh while the drum soloist worked into a crashing finale. She winced, and wiped a hand across her cheek. It came away covered with blood.

 

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