by Rachel Lee
Bugle found his rawhide bone, ignored the squirrels and settled down to a happy chew. Kelly was the only one who couldn’t seem to settle. She changed from her uniform into a set of flannel pajamas, a royal blue fuzzy robe and slippers and looked comfortable.
But nothing about her felt comfortable.
He made coffee, pulled out the leftover pizza and a Danish he’d bought a couple of days ago, and motioned her to eat something.
“I’ve got cereal and soup, too,” he offered.
“This is fine.” She took a mug of steaming coffee, then sat and ate two whole pieces of cold pizza. The weather and stress had made her hungry.
Heck, everything was making him hungry, too. Without apology to himself or the world, he pulled out a package of chocolate chip cookies and opened it, dumping them in a bowl. Then he sliced himself a huge piece of Danish and dug in.
Sitting beside her on the couch, he said, “I can think of no one else on this planet I would rather be snowbound with.”
That snapped her into the present. A smile began to play over her lips. “Truly?”
“Truly.” He just hoped he could trust himself now, but the last few weeks had made him believe in his ability to control himself around Kelly. No out-of-control rages, no desires to smash something other than that kidnapping creep. Being around her made him feel centered.
* * *
KELLY FELT HER heart skip a few beats, then begin to rise as it hadn’t risen much since the disappearance of those girls. Their kidnapping had drained most of the joy from her life, except last night in Al’s arms. She wanted to know that feeling again.
Just past him she could see out the windows. He hadn’t drawn the heavy curtains yet, and the blizzard was now concealing the whole world. They were locked away together for at least the next day if not longer. Her gaze trailed back to him, and she saw something new in his expression, something she hadn’t seen before: hope.
“I know what I told you about me and relationships,” he continued. “It might still be true, but there’s only one way to find out. I’ve enjoyed all the time I’ve spent with you over the last few weeks, and I didn’t get triggered, at least not much. So it’s possible...if you’re willing to try. Kelly, will you date me? Formally. Like movies, and dinners, and maybe...some cohabitation while we try it on?”
As if her face had been frozen for three weeks, she felt a smile crack her cheeks, almost painful in its intensity. “Yes,” she said simply.
“Yes to what?”
“To dating, to cohabiting...at least if you think your squirrels can live with my dog.”
His face brightened as if the sun was rising on it. Outside a storm raged, but inside peace had settled.
“I think we can all get along. Besides, Regis has his own drey if he doesn’t like it here.”
She glanced toward the Christmas tree, where about four squirrels seemed to be sleeping. “I think they like it here. I know I do.”
Then, throwing the stress of weeks, along with all doubts and fears, out into the storm, she wound her arms around him and looked deeply into his eyes. “You won’t escape easily, Carstairs.”
“I don’t want to, Noveno.”
Then they dissolved into laughter and fell on the floor, rolling together and hanging on tightly. The animals left them alone.
It was happy time for people.
* * *
Don’t forget previous titles in Rachel Lee’s
Conard County: The Next Generation series:
Conard County Watch
Conard County Revenge
Undercover in Conard County
Conard County Marine
Conard County Spy
Available now from
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Keep reading for an excerpt from Delta Force Die Hard by Carol Ericson.
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Delta Force Die Hard
by Carol Ericson
Prologue
The boy, who’d introduced himself as Massoud, prodded his back with the old rifle as they made their way over the last of the rocks down the mountain.
The Afghan kid didn’t seem to know much English beyond the words he’d used to threaten his life, or maybe his elders had ordered him to keep his mouth shut in front of strangers—especially American soldiers.
He didn’t have any intention of harming the boy and hadn’t taken the kid’s earlier threat of bodily harm seriously. If that old Russian rifle could even shoot, Massoud barely looked big enough to hoist it and take aim. It worked well as a prop, though, giving his captor a false sense of courage.
He’d rather wind up wherever Massoud was leading him than lay waste to the kid in the mountains and be stuck making his way down by himself. He didn’t lay waste to children anyway, despite what the US military believed about him.
Massoud had actually helped him navigate the terrain, which would’ve been difficult to do with his bum leg. Probably saved his life. Of course, he could’ve been saving it just to have someone else take it later.
He drew up and tripped to a stop, the boy’s rifle jabbing him in the hip. He pointed to the huts with smoke rising from the center and a few goats tied up outside. He asked in Pashto, “Is this your village?”
The boy answered in English with the only words he seemed to know. “You die now, American soldier.”
“Okay, okay.” He held up his hands. “But you can call me Denver. I told you that. Denver.”
The boy patted his own chest. “Massoud.”
“I know, Massoud. Thank you for taking me down the mountain.”
A flush seeped through the dirt on Massoud’s grimy face as he pushed past him and greeted one of the goats with a scuff beneath its chin, his prisoner momentarily forgotten. “My home.”
“Food?” Denver straightened his shoulders. He could eat one of those goats by himself—if Massoud’s family didn’t kill him first.
Nodding, Massoud pushed through the flap that functioned as a front door and waved him inside with the rifle.
Denver blew out a breath and shrugged his own weapon off his back. He leaned it against the side of the hut, leaving his sidearm strapped to his thigh. Massoud’s family had to realize that if he hadn’t used his weapons to kill their son, he didn’t plan to use them against the other family members, either.
He ducked inside the dark, smoky room, and his eyes watered. A pot of something savory hung over a fire, bubbl
ing with a thick concoction that made his stomach growl.
A small woman hunched over the fire, stirring the contents of the cauldron without looking up from her task.
Massoud rattled off something in Pashto, too fast for Denver to catch all the words except American, but whatever he said had an instantaneous effect on the woman cooking.
She whirled around, the spoon in her hand dripping hot liquid onto the dirt floor. She swung the spoon at Massoud, the words tumbling from her lips and droplets flying from the utensil. When she stopped to take a breath, she scuttled into another room—probably the only other room in the structure.
Massoud pushed Denver in the direction of the flap at the front, and he stepped outside again, breathing deeply of the fresh air. The woman didn’t seem too happy to see him, but at least nobody had shot him between the eyes...yet.
Massoud put two fingers in his mouth and whistled. Less than a minute later, a middle-aged man appeared at the door of another hut. He squinted at Massoud and his...guest and then jerked back. He said something over his shoulder and strode forward.
When he was halfway to Massoud, the boy ran to him, waving his arms and pointing back to Denver.
The man put his hand on Massoud’s shoulder and walked him slowly back to Denver. He dipped his head in Denver’s direction and spoke in slow, careful English. “I am Massoud’s father, Rafi.”
“Major Rex Denver, United States Army.”
The man nodded. “I know who you are. The American traitor...and I know why you’re here.”
Chapter One
The chill bit into Hailey’s cheeks as she slid from the taxi. She hunched into her coat, crushing her ticket to Alcatraz in her pocket. Even on a chilly January evening, you needed to get a ticket in advance for the ferry to Alcatraz.
If Marten wanted to hit the tourist spots of the city, she would’ve been happy to oblige and they could’ve had this meeting over lunch instead of trying to talk on a crowded, windblown ferry. But Marten never made anything easy.
He’d even insisted that she board the ferry without him and wait for him on the boat—as if he didn’t want to be seen with her. She could never tell if Marten’s penchant for secrecy stemmed from reality or a yearning to play spy.
As Hailey lined up for the day’s last ferry to Alcatraz, she pressed a hand against her midsection—and it had nothing to do with seasickness.
Marten had been secretive. Had asked her not to mention their meeting to anyone. Had refused to come to her place in Pacific Heights, and now he didn’t even want to be seen boarding the ferry with her.
His fear couldn’t have anything to do with what happened in Syria, could it? The CIA and the Department of Defense had already debriefed them about the incident and released them—told them to go home. Ordered them to go home.
She checked her phone cupped in her palm. Marten hadn’t responded to her previous text letting him know she was on her way. She zipped off another one giving him her current status.
The line of people started shuffling forward, and Hailey moved with them. She handed over her ticket and walked onto the ferry, cranking her head back to see if she could catch a glimpse of Marten’s black porkpie hat—his signature fashion accessory. He’d even worn it in Syria at the refugee camp, to the delight of all the children there.
Hailey gulped back the lump of tears lodged in her throat.
The faces of the people in the crowd merged behind her and she stumbled, grabbing on to a handrail. Once on the ferry, she walked up two flights of steps to the third level to get a better view of the rest of the tourists pouring onto the boat.
When she reached the top level, she rested her back against the railing and scanned the San Francisco skyline, which stood in stark relief against the dark blue sky. Winter in the city could be crisp and clear and achingly beautiful—too bad she had to waste this moment on Marten and one of his silly games.
The ferry captain made a few announcements as the boat chugged away from the dock. Had Marten even boarded? She glanced at her phone again. Was he going to give her a meeting place or make her wander around the boat looking for him?
The ferry plowed forward, carving its way through the choppy water of the bay. Hailey spotted a man in a black hat like Marten’s on the second level.
Leaning over, she waved to get his attention, but he seemed to be focused on something in front of him. Wasn’t Marten even looking for her? Why didn’t he just respond to her texts? Typical Marten.
“Excuse me.” She squeezed past a bunch of people near the stairs and headed down to the deck below, the heels of her boots clanging on the metal steps. Not the most practical boating shoes, but she didn’t plan to hoist a sail or anything.
She followed the path she had seen Marten taking to the front of the ferry as it nosed its way to Alcatraz. Standing on her tiptoes, she gazed at the people milling around the deck, phones out, taking pictures of the shore, Coit Tower gleaming in the distance, and then swinging around and taking pictures of Angel Island and the fast-approaching prison on Alcatraz.
She huffed out a breath of annoyance through her nose. No sight of Marten. What kind of game was he playing with her? There had always been whispers about Marten posing as a relief worker to spy—rumors he’d done nothing to squelch. She’d always brushed them off before, but his actions today sure hinted at covert activity.
Up ahead, a commotion broke out along the railing of the boat. A few people screamed, and a man yelled.
As Hailey drew closer, her heart picking up speed, she heard a man shout, “Man overboard. Man overboard.”
A sickening dread punched her in the gut. She pushed her way toward the crowd of people hanging over the side of the ferry, staring at the rough water churning beneath the boat.
As Hailey drew closer to the mayhem, she spotted a black hat on the deck. Her heart stuttered and she lunged forward to retrieve the hat, only to be blocked by a crew member.
With his arm barring her progress, the crew member shouted, “Back up. Everyone back away from this area of the ferry.”
The boat cut its speed and started making a wide turn. The people on the upper deck and those inside who didn’t know what had happened mumbled in unison, creating a howl that rolled across the bay.
More crew members fanned out on the deck and began herding people to the other side of the boat.
An announcement boomed on the loudspeaker. “Anyone who witnessed the man going over or who has any information about him or the incident, gather inside at the bar.”
So, someone had gone into the water. Hailey secured the scarf tighter around her neck. Did she have any information? Was that Marten’s hat?
She pulled out her phone and texted him again.
A coast guard boat joined them within minutes, and the ferry began to head back to the pier, but they weren’t going to let anyone off the boat just yet. A deadly calm and order fell over the ferry as people began to form knots, discussing the incident and complaining about their interrupted trip.
Hailey decided to join the group by the bar. Marten hadn’t texted her back yet. Listening to snatches of conversations, it seemed as if nobody had actually witnessed the man falling overboard. A few claimed to have seen a man in the water, but no groups were missing anyone from their party—nobody but her.
She shuffled up to a crew member behind the bar, who raised his eyebrows. “Did you see something?”
“No, but...” Hailey bit her lip. How stupid did her story sound?
The crew member tapped his pen on the pad of paper beneath his arm. “Yes?”
“I—I was supposed to meet someone on board, and I thought I saw him wearing that black hat. He did wear a hat like that.”
“What hat?”
“There was a black hat on the deck where the man went over.”
He drew his brows together. “I don’t k
now anything about a hat. Go on. You were meeting him on the ferry?”
Hailey flipped one end of her scarf over her shoulder. “He indicated that he was going to be running late and might miss the ferry, so he told me to go ahead and board without him.”
“The man’s name?”
“Marten de Becker.”
He scribbled Marten’s name beneath several other notes he’d already taken. “I’m going to radio his name back to the office on the pier so we can check out his ticket and if he boarded the ferry.”
Hailey nodded and stepped to the side, folding her hands around the cup of coffee that the crew members had handed out earlier. It couldn’t be Marten. Why would Marten jump off a ferry when they had a meeting planned?
Several minutes later, the man turned back toward her. “There was no Marten de Becker who bought a ticket or boarded the ferry. Sounds like you and your friend got your dates or times mixed up.”
Hailey’s shoulders slumped, warm relief flooding her body. “Nobody is missing yet?”
“The office is narrowing down the names, but we won’t release anything until the next of kin is notified.”
“It’s horrible. Do you have cameras on that area of the ferry?”
“No cameras on the boat, but we do have them back at the loading area.”
After several more minutes, people began disembarking, and the captain announced that another ferry would be there to meet them if any passengers wanted to return to Alcatraz and continue their trip.
Hailey didn’t have any reason to return to Alcatraz. She’d been there a hundred times. How could people carry on with their plans with the lights from the coast guard boats still illuminating the bay searching for someone?
As her boots clattered over the gangplank, Hailey checked her phone for a text response from Marten, but he hadn’t replied. He’d be sorry he missed all the excitement. Marten loved excitement. Her gaze tracked back to the bay and the coast guard boats now in the distance. A chill touched her spine, as if she were out there struggling in the cold water.