by Joss Wood
His Toughest Call
A Pytheon Security Romance
Joss Wood
His Toughest Call
Copyright © 2016 Joss Wood
Smashwords Edition
The Tule Publishing Group, LLC
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
ISBN: 978-1-944925-92-5
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Epilogue
The Pytheon Security Series
About the Author
Chapter One
Seth Halcott lifted a glass of whiskey to his mouth and, out of the corner of his eye, saw the whisk of a wedding dress, the hint of dark fingers clamped around an ultra-feminine wrist. He leaned backwards on his barstool to look through the frosted glass of doors of the hotel bar to the lobby beyond and, yep, that definitely looked like a bride being hustled out of the hotel by a bulky policeman.
Seth released a low curse, tossed his whisky back, and picked up his tuxedo jacket, which he’d hung on the half-back of the bar stool. Intrigued, he quickly crossed the black and white tiles of the lobby floor, his exit blocked by a white haired couple who’d stopped just inside the lobby to watch the activity outside.
“Dammit,” Seth muttered.
At six-foot-two he was able to look over the heads to see Leah Hamilton—married just six hours ago—arguing with a uniformed policeman. The cop wasn’t paying her any attention; he just calmly opened the back door to the police van and offered her a hand to help her climb up into the dark interior.
Skimming past the old people, who had no intention of moving from their prime vantage point, Seth slapped his hand onto the outside door and pushed it open. It was supposed to be autumn in Cape Town but summer was still having too much fun and warm and fragrant air caressed his face as he stepped outside. It was a beautiful night...
...to be arrested.
Seth called out to Leah but the sound of a motorbike backfiring drowned his words. The police van was parked down the road from the entrance of the old hotel and his view of Leah was momentarily obscured when a small tourist bus pulled up next to him. Doors slid open and happy, and sun-broiled, tourists stumbled out, very cheerful after an evening of wine tasting.
Seth pushed his way through the throng and when he emerged, he saw the policeman slamming the back door shut and movement behind the grilled window suggested that Leah had lost the argument.
She was well and truly busted.
What the hell happened, Seth wondered as he broke into a jog. How did she go from looking utterly gorgeous, ridiculously happy, and legally married to being arrested?
The policeman turned at Seth’s shout and watched his approach with cynical eyes. Seth noticed his hand hovering over his weapon so he lifted his own hands to show he wasn’t a threat. Dark brown eyes met his in a challenging stare and he didn’t drop his hand.
Dammit, suspicious and experienced. Seth might not be able to talk his way into getting them to release Leah.
“What did she do?’ Seth asked, after greeting the cop with a polite good evening.
“And you are?” Cynical cop asked.
“A friend.”
The cop’s expression told him he’d had a long and annoying evening and he wasn’t in the mood for small talk.
Seth, who believed in going to the heart of the matter, nodded to the locked door on the van. “Okay, arrest her. But let me go with her.”
“You her husband?”
“No and I think you know that I’m not. Where is he and why are you arresting her?” Seth demanded, his voice sharpening and taking on a commanding officer note. He noticed the annoyed expression and the snap of the cop’s spine. Dammit. Foreign cops did not appreciate Yanks ordering them around.
“She’ll be charged at the Bellville Station, you can go there.”
Hell, no. He wasn’t leaving her alone, not for one damned minute. Seth opened his mouth to try another tactic and silently cursed when a female cop left the passenger seat of the van and joined her colleague. She looked even more exhausted than her partner and he could tell the delay was dancing on her last remaining nerve. He was keeping her from hot food or a hot shower or hot sex and she wasn’t in the mood to listen to anything he had to say.
In thirty seconds he could disarm both and spring Leah but there were witnesses. The two old ducks were still standing just inside the door of the hotel, watching him and a few of the not-so-drunk revelers were also watching his futile argument. And he’d noticed three cameras covering the entrance of the hotel; everything he did was being recorded for prosperity.
Tiresome.
The easiest, and quickest, way to his objective was to give them a reason to arrest his ass. Without further thought, Seth clenched his fist and plowed it into the doughy flesh of the policeman’s gut, pulling his punch at the last minute so he didn’t cause much pain or do any damage. As he intended, they had his face plastered against the pavement a minute later—their reaction times were seriously slow—and then the business end of a nine millimeter was pushed under his chin.
Seth relaxed his body and allowed them to manhandle them, a little concerned about a shaky finger on the trigger of that semi-automatic. He slowed his breathing and resisted the urge to slap the weapon away, to retaliate. His default reaction was to fight his way out of a situation and it took a lot of willpower to allow the male cop to place a knee in his kidney, to grind his cheek into the filthy sidewalk.
Leah Hamilton, you owe me one.
He grimaced when they yanked his arms back, secured him with a pair of old cuffs, and yanked him to his feet. The fat cop screamed at him and the female cop waved her pistol around. Seth kept his eyes on her finger against the trigger, hoping like hell the safety was on.
When they finally calmed the hell down without, thank God, a weapon being discharged or a fist flying, they tossed him into the back of the police van. He stayed on the floor and scooted to the side panel and leaned back, stretching out his long legs. Damn, he had a tear on the cuff of his dress pants.
He looked up at Leah who was staring down at him, eyes and mouth perfectly round with surprise. “Seth? What the hell?”
Seth’s mouth tipped upwards. “So, congratulations on your wedding, Leah.”
“That being said,” he added, “I’m no expert on weddings and marriage but even I can tell that yours isn’t off to the best start.”
Leah Hamilton lifted the heavy skirt of her elaborate wedding gown and hiked it up to reveal shapely calves and a pair of ridiculously high stilettos covered in what looked like crystals and pearls. Stomping over to the cement bench at the back of the jail, she sat and reached down and pulled her right shoe off and wiggled her siren red, sexy-as-hell tipped toes.
Seth leaned back and rested his head on the cool but grimy wall. His cellmate had, along with her pretty feet, a tiny waist, porcelain skin, and eyes the color of a stunning African day. Her long, dark hair fell out of her elaborate wedding-day hairstyle and her eye makeup was ruined, making
her look like a horror movie bride. Yet Leah, with her red-rimmed eyes, her grubby wedding dress, and her bare feet, looked stunning. She was, by a galaxy or two, the sexiest cellmate he’d ever had.
Seth stretched out his long legs and shoved his hands into the pockets of his tuxedo pants and tuned out the drunken snores of the guest in the cell next door. Looking around, he decided this holding cell wasn’t so bad. He’d been in a lot worse. And, for a change, his companion wasn’t a gangbanger, a drunken wife beater, or a trainee serial killer but the utterly gorgeous and stupidly sexy younger sister of his best friend.
Oh, yeah, he’d definitely had worse experiences in jail.
“Why are you here?” Leah demanded and he heard the wobble in her voice.
Seth rolled his head to look at her. She was trying to sound brave but he could see the fear in her eyes.
“You’re my best friend’s sister. When I saw you being led out through the lobby of the hotel, in handcuffs, towards a police van, I thought that you could do with some company,” Seth replied, on a careless shrug. “Jed would do the same thing for my sister.”
He didn’t bother to tell her that seeing that cop’s thick fingers around her wrist made his teeth slam together so hard his jaw still ached.
“You saw me in the lobby? Why were you there after midnight?” Leah demanded.
“Drinking in the hotel bar.”
“But there was free alcohol at the reception.”
Seth looked at her, knowing his expression was inscrutable. He’d ducked out of the reception shortly after the speeches, ten minutes after Jed and McKenna left. Making small talk wasn’t something he did well and he was over watching Leah fawn over the douche she’d married. Despite only meeting the groom earlier that evening and not exchanging more than ten words with him, Seth could tell he was an asshat by his fishy handshake and his refusal to make eye contact.
Seth also noticed Heath-the-Asshat looked anything but happy to be married. Leah glowed and looked as radiant as a bride should while Heath just looked like he’d sold his soul to the devil.
Leah put her shoe back on, wincing as she lowered her foot to the floor. She rested her forearms on her knees and Seth stared at her profile, wondering if the creamy skin of her elegant neck felt as soft as it looked.
“So you just jumped into that police van with me?”
“Yep.”
Leah frowned at him, her expression disbelieving. “And they just let you?”
Well, no. There was no point in explaining how he got himself arrested, that it was the most efficient means to achieve his objective, which was to accompany Leah to jail so he could protect her for as long as she was inside, whether that was two hours or two days. He wasn’t worried about the charges; Pytheon would make those go away.
There were perks to being the COO of a kick-ass international security company with high-level connections to many governments all around the world. Because of his position and because Leah was Jed’s sister—Jed had recently retired after many years as a Pytheon operative—Stone, their el presidente, would exert pressure on high-level government officials to get Leah’s charges dropped as well. Depending, of course, on why she was arrested.
Drunk and disorderly they could work with; murder would be a lot trickier. Not impossible but trickier.
Seth’s eyes traveled over the beaded bodice of her torso, lingered on the hint of a cleavage, and wandered down and over the full skirt of her cream gown. Her perfect nails suggested she hadn’t been in a fight and there was no trace of blood on her gown. Leah hadn’t shot or stabbed her groom.
Seth relaxed; they’d be out before dawn.
“Aren’t you going to ask me what happened?”
“Did you kill, badly hurt, or maim your asshat groom?”
Leah’s extraordinary eyes widened in shock. “No!” she retorted.
“Pity.”
Leah stared at him in shock and then the starch went out of her spine. She released a snort that was part laugh and part sob.
“I wish I had,” she admitted, lifting up her hand to her head.
Seth watched, fascinated, as she started to pull tiny pins from her hair, the moisture in his mouth disappearing as sable colored curls fell to her shoulders and down her back. He made the mistake of dropping his eyes from her hair to her chest and noticed her breasts were higher, the fabric of her gown lower and, shit, he could just see a hint of a berry red nipple.
His erection sprang from half-mast to full and he casually sat up, leaning forward to disguise the party in his pants. He was thirty-five years old, and he was reacting like a teenager seeing his first centerfold. God, he needed to get laid.
Leah placed the final pin on the pile between them and pushed both her hands into her hair, shaking out the curls. “That’s better,” she murmured.
For who? Not for him, that was damn sure. He was painfully hard, fighting the urge to grab her, lay her on the concrete bench, and to pull up that heavy skirt and find out whether she was as wet and warm and spicy as he imagined her to be.
Wanting Leah wasn’t anything new to Seth. She’d been the star of his action filled dreams—the only action he’d had lately—from the first minute he laid eyes on her six months ago.
Thinking about an unavailable woman was like waiting for a boat at an airport, constantly disappointing. He’d run through the endless list of why he should stop his thoughts wandering to her—she was about to be married, they lived on different continents, he was based in New York city, she lived here in Cape Town. He wasn’t looking for a relationship; his idea of commitment was a one-night stand and Leah, according to Jed, didn’t sleep around. Also, Leah was Jed’s baby sister. Seth’s junk didn’t care.
He wanted Leah when she was engaged, wanted her as she walked down the aisle, wanted her now. He’d love to strip her out of that gown, peel the fancy, crystal-beaded bodice off her torso and touch his tongue to her nipple, to run his hands up the inside of her thighs...
“Are you going to ask me what happened?”
Seth blinked and it took a couple of seconds for him to refocus, for her words to make sense. He ran a hand across his jaw, his hand scraping across his three day stubble.
“What happened?” he asked, thinking a little conversation might distract him from imagining her naked.
“I trashed the honeymoon suite.” Leah stated. “Ripped the curtains, broke vases, tossed a champagne bottle at the TV set.”
Since he dealt with scumbags of the earth, who routinely did a lot worse, a trashed hotel room didn’t even blip on his bad deeds radar. “Okay. Why?”
Leah stared at the iron bars in front of her as a tear tracked mascara down her cheek. “Heath said he was going to go up, that I should stay and talk to my friends. I thought his suggestion was odd and told him that we could go up together.”
“He insisted that I stay, said this wasn’t our first time together, that it was just like any other party.” Leah shook her head. “I was hurt by that comment and a little pissed off but I didn’t want to start an argument on our wedding night. So, I stayed downstairs and after an hour I headed on up.”
Judging by her wobbling chin Seth knew he wasn’t going to like the next part of the story.
“I was supposed to call him, tell him when I was coming up, wake him up in case he’d fallen asleep. I didn’t call, I just went up.”
Seth didn’t need a degree in quantum physics to know what she was about to say next. “And when you got up there, you caught him with someone else.”
“Not just anyone else, I caught him with his best man, or best woman...with the woman who’d stood up for him at the altar. The one in the red gown.” Leah ran her fingers over her forehead. “They’ve been friends since they were kids. I thought they were just friends. Anyway, I found them on the bed and Sara was kissing the hell out of him. And Heath was kissing her back, with a lot more enthusiasm than he’d ever kissed me.”
“Oh, shit,” Seth said.
Her deep
blue eyes filled with tears and her luscious bottom lip trembled. Unable to keep his distance, he scooted up the bench and put his arm around her slim shoulders, pulling her into his side. He dropped his lips onto her hair and closed his eyes.
Leah turned herface into his shoulder and her hand slid inside his jacket and her hand fisted the fabric of his shirt. “I never once suspected, I thought they were just good friends.”
Leah shuddered. He pulled back, shrugged out of his jacket, and draped it around her shoulders. Leah looked up at him, her eyes darker with pain and despair. “Why did he want to marry me if I wasn’t what he wanted?”
Money probably had something to do with it. Her father, General Hamilton, was wealthy and, as Jed had once told him, their mother’s parents were loaded. Leah was, as he’d also heard, one of the most successful property developers in the city. Apparently, for someone just shy of thirty, Leah played with the big boys and frequently won the game. That took stones and cash.
Heath didn’t have the first but obviously wanted the last.
Leah dropped her forehead onto his shoulder and her tears dampened the fabric of his dress shirt. Seth lifted his hand up to hold the back of her head, wishing he could massage her pain away.
“I always wondered why he wasn’t keen on sex, why he never seemed to want me. I’d wear naughty lingerie, greet him at the door naked, I sent him super sexy texts.” Leah snapped her head back and her eyebrows pulled together. “It’s not like we didn’t have sex, we did. And it was great, well, good. Sort of. Maybe he’s just confused and Sara caught him at a weak moment.”
Oh, hell, no.
Seth grabbed her chin and tipped it up so he was looking into her eyes. “Heath is a dickhead. You caught him making out with someone else, on your wedding night! His behavior is inexcusable so don’t you dare try and rationalize it.” Seth made an effort to sound soothing. “Trust me, this isn’t about you but about the fact that Heath wanted to live off you, wanted his cream-cake and to eat it, too.”
“But maybe if I was sexier, hotter...”
“Honey, if you were any hotter you’d melt the sun.” Seth growled and placed his thumb on her bottom lip. His lips quirked. “You’re the sexiest, hottest, most beautiful bride I’ve ever seen.”