Big Bad Wolf (COS Commando Book 1)

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Big Bad Wolf (COS Commando Book 1) Page 19

by Low, Gennita


  Nick smothered another laugh. It was her talent, this ability to make him relax his guard. He growled when her teeth nipped a sensitive spot on his neck. He relented. “It’s CCC,” he murmured, “short for Covert-Subversive Command Center. They call us COS Commandos when they’re being nice.”

  “Oooh, macho,” Jaymee whispered into his ear, then blew into it. He nipped up her neck till he found her ear and returned the favor. She shivered at the sensual flicks of his tongue. “I gather Jed is also one of these commandos? Or am I forbidden to ask?”

  “He showed himself to you. It means he likes you, Jaymee.” Nick nuzzled deeper into her neck. “Yes, he is one of my unit.”

  “Unit?”

  “Yes. There are different units trained for different jobs, just like any company.”

  “And Grace is being trained for a job in this company? She mentioned being in training.”

  Nick sighed again. “Sometimes I wish you’d miss or forget something, sweetheart.”

  He could only admire her skill, even as he saw right through her. She was attempting to get more information about him by changing the subject and focusing on his cousin and Grace. Like he’d known from the beginning, Jaymee was a worthy opponent.

  “If he didn’t want me to know, Grace wouldn’t have mentioned it,” Jaymee pointed out with cheeky logic. “Maybe they were both testing me, to see whether I would remember.”

  She was reminding him of what he’d said earlier, that his cousins liked to put people through some kind of test. Nick chuckled, reluctantly easing off her so he could sit up. He had better weigh his words carefully. At the rate her mind was working, he’d be telling her everything while she seduced him with that delightful body.

  “You’re an incorrigible imp,” he accused, becoming more somber. “OK. He’s training her because of what happened to certain members in our unit. My…boat was rigged with an explosive.”

  Jaymee jerked up. “What?” She hadn’t expected that.

  “You wanted the truth,” Nick gently reminded her.

  She swallowed. “I do.” She repeated the words firmly. “I do. I want to know what you do, so when you leave me, I’ll understand.”

  That was why he couldn’t resist her. She never beat around the bush. He could waste time diverting her again and again, and each time, she’d find a way to get her answers. That was how she was, and he wouldn’t have her any other way.

  “I was on assignment, and I escaped.” He kept it as simple as he could. “They still think they got to me, and now they are after the others who were on the same assignment. Because we’re evasive experts, Jed thinks their easiest targets are our families. My friend’s wife was recently killed, and that’s why you see Jed training Grace, so she can take care of herself in case something happens to him.”

  “Evasive expert,” Jaymee muttered. “That’s really a job description, like construction worker?”

  “Nothing I can state on a resume,” said Nick, a grin forming. “We have lots of fancy names like that.” Like trackers, he silently added. Mind probes. Assimilators. All living in darkness and shadow.

  “It isn’t so bad,” she consoled, a trace of mockery creeping into her voice. “I’ve to explain what a leak expert is.” She moved restlessly against him. “All right, Nick, you don’t need to tell me any more. Your truth is as close to my idea of it as it can ever be. I just wanted you to tell me without fudging around.”

  Nick realized that had always been all she’d ever asked of him—to tell her the truth, not of what he did, but of what he was. And having gotten that from him, she was content not to need further details.

  “I’m sorry I couldn’t tell you before,” he told her.

  “I can only imagine the kind of life it must be, to always be afraid of people betraying you.” Jaymee touched his face. She wanted him to know she understood and accepted what he was. “To have to be careful all the time.”

  Visions of an exploding boat filled her mind, and she shivered. That was a close call. She might have never met him, if he hadn’t been able to….

  Nick felt her shiver and understood her fear. What was second nature to him was unfathomable to normal people, and he sought to comfort Jaymee. “It isn’t so bad. I get to play with lots of neat toys.” He kept his voice light, soothing her with slow caresses. After all, the Programmer did have fun dismantling some of the world’s most sophisticated satellite systems. “Besides, it isn’t that different from your job.”

  Jaymee laughed in astonishment. “Right. I have relatives zinging weapons at me while I nail shingles.”

  “You have your back stabbers, Chuck and Rich,” he pointed out, “and you have to be careful all the time while you’re on the job. One misstep, and you might fall and break your neck. A careless backward step, and you might fall through a skylight hole.”

  “Nicholas Killian Langley, you aren’t seriously trying to convince me what we both do is equal?” She didn’t know whether to laugh or get angry with him. Here she was, worried about his safety, fearing for his life, and he mocked her with comparisons of the dangerous aspects of roofing.

  Nick was only too happy to get her to laugh again. “You even have a gun,” he pointed out, “and the bad guys all know you as Jay the Boss. Pretty dandy nickname.”

  They both laughed.

  “I don’t know what to do with you,” Jaymee chided in between chuckles. “You’re never serious when you’re supposed to be.”

  Nick shrugged, smiling. Getting up from the couch, he pulled her up with him. He slipped her hand into his unzipped jeans. “I can show you what you can do with me in your bed,” he invited naughtily.

  “I’m going to have to deduct room and board from your pay,” she teased.

  “What?”

  “Yup. Also, the torn shirt and pants. The hairpins you keep throwing away. And…two dirty tee-shirts. At least. Let’s see, that leaves…why, you owe me money on your next paycheck!”

  “Oh, yeah?”

  She should have heeded the tone of his voice, but she was busy putting her pants back on. As soon as she straightened up, she found herself lifted over his shoulder. As he made his way out of the study and to her room with unerring ease, he told her softly, “I’m going to pay you back my way, sweetheart, with compound interest for any extra charges, of course.”

  When Nick finally allowed her to curl up and fall asleep on top of him, she’d tallied up an exorbitant account of extra charges.

  Chapter Eleven

  Saturday. Jaymee mentally ticked off each day, hoping it wouldn’t be the last day Nick—it took too much effort to call him Killian in private and Nick when they were around the others—spent with her. It wasn’t difficult to conclude, with the appearance of his cousin, part of his “unit,” Nick needn’t stay with her much longer. They would be gone soon, off to straighten out whatever they were straightening out. A heavy feeling settled in her stomach whenever she imagined Nick dying in that explosion about which he’d told her. He led such a different life from hers. He’d seen so much, done so much, and all she’d ever done was dreamed. She wondered what he saw in her that made him want her so.

  Not because of this mop, that was for certain, she grimaced wryly, as she pulled the wide-toothed pick through her hair. Securing it into one thick braid, she considered whether to put any make-up on, then frowned. Why bother? She would sweat it all off in an hour, and Nick would still see her the way she always was—sweaty and untidy. Not this evening, she vowed. This evening, she would show him Jaymee Barrows cleaned up good.

  “Got a tee-shirt?” His crooked smile was bland, his eyes innocent.

  Jaymee met his gaze in the mirror. She still couldn’t get over him walking around her half-naked, in her room. She watched him sauntered toward her dressing table, still wet from the shower, a towel wrapped casually around his waist. “I thought you brought a change of clothes in that little bag,” she said to the moving image.

  “That’s for later. I need something t
o work in.”

  “I think you’re just sleeping with me for my tee-shirts,” she said, wrinkling her nose at his reflection.

  Nick played with her thick braid of hair. The urge to mess up her work and just watch the strands curl out rebelliously tempted him, as it always did. He was fascinated by its softness and rebellious nature; in fact, he was fascinated with the whole package standing in front of him.

  “No, sweetheart, I prefer you without them on,” he teased.

  Color warmed her cheeks as she recalled the night before. She flicked at his outreaching fingers. “Don’t mess up my braid up,” she warned lightly.

  “I don’t know why you always tie it up. I’m just going to loosen it later.” He bent down to kiss her exposed neck, nibbling lightly. “Well, there’s at least something I like when you do it.”

  Jaymee shrugged her shoulder to nudge him off. “Nick, didn’t you tell me you were a good carpenter?”

  “Besides being so good in bed, you mean?” He was in a great mood today, having gotten his planned night after all.

  “Big head,” she said good-naturedly.

  “Big appetite,” he came back, a sexy smile on his lips. “You were insatiable.”

  She stuck her tongue out at him. “You’re a big liar too,” she accused.

  “Oh, are you telling me you we didn’t finish up a whole box of…”

  Jaymee felt the heat on her cheeks again. “About the carpenter skills…” she hastily cut in. “Are you really going to help me out?”

  Nick pulled her up and turned her to face him. “Still shy?” She looked adorable when she blushed and he enjoyed teasing her so. He could always tell when she was thinking about their intimate moments. The green flecks in her eyes heated up to an intense glow that made him hot all over. Like now. He sighed. “OK, I’ll earn my keep. Give me a shirt, some breakfast, and I’ll get to work…boss.”

  He was really as good a carpenter as he’d boasted to be, Jaymee thought later, as she admired the muscles playing on Nick’s bare back. He was leaning over the saw while cutting the two-by-fours to be used to repair the rotten back porch. She had been working inside the house, and decided to take a break at half-past ten, to see what he was up to.

  Jed and Grace showed up at that moment, coming up the overgrown unpaved driveway. Jaymee wondered how they managed to get there. Jed had taken time to shave and Grace looked less like a wild child, even with that green hair.

  She studied Nick’s cousin. The man’s likeness to Nick was even more pronounced without the heavy stubble he had. He had a leaner face, with a stubborn looking cleft under his generous lower lip. His hair had the same unruly lock, like Nick, except it was a dark polished bronze color. His mouth was harder-looking too, unlike Nick’s lazy quirk, some might even described it cruel-looking, with lines bracketing both sides, emphasizing the deep indentation below. Same thickly lashed eyes, except that they were so cold. He was a good-looking man in a rugged sort of way, if he would just smile more. And if his strange, light eyes wouldn’t stare with such deadly intensity at their target. There was something very ruthless about Nick’s cousin, and she still wasn't certain how to talk to him whenever they were together. She had a feeling those odd little pauses between them were somehow deliberate. They sure made her feel awkward and uncomfortable.

  Grace’s personality, on the other hand, was like Nick’s. She was warm and funny, and obviously adored her father and older cousin, paying rapt attention to everything they said. Jaymee pursed her lips, her usual cynicism questioning the wisdom of that. The teenager definitely needed some female advice regarding men. She wondered how a little girl grew up without a mother, to whom Grace turned when she needed guidance. Perhaps that was why she had this strange adult attitude, even calling her own father by his name. Jaymee couldn’t imagine calling her father “Bob.” She gazed at Jed again, watching him with a touch of disapproval. He didn’t treat his daughter like one at all, asking her opinions about things her own father would never dream of discussing with her at that age. She shook her head—what a strange twosome.

  The two men talked quietly in between measuring and sawing and hammering. Jaymee couldn’t quite make out their conversation over the din, as she showed Grace how to pry the trim boards from the walls. “You don’t need to be too careful,” she said, as she gathered the pieces into a pile. “I’m replacing them with new trim.”

  Grace proved surprisingly proficient with a hammer. “This is cool, Jay,” she said, as she used the catspaw to pull the nails out. “Are you going to put some fancy moldings? Perhaps up around the ceiling too? That would look like those antique mansions I see on TV.”

  Jaymee smiled. “Good suggestion. Maybe you ought to study architecture or designing when you go to college.”

  “I’m going to do something that lets me travel all over the world,” the teenager declared, as she pounded down the protruding nails. “There’s so much out there to see, you know?”

  Jaymee’s smile turned wistful. The excitement of youth. She’d forgotten how grand the feeling was. “Yes, so much to see and do,” she murmured in agreement. Just don’t get eaten up by bad wolves, little girl. “So, architecture is an option, then? You get to travel and study all the wonderful ancient buildings.”

  “I don’t know anything about building. Actually, I like what you do better.”

  Jaymee laughed, startled. “You like roofing better? And how’s that going to be part of your world travels plan?”

  Grace wiped her face with a dirty hand, smudging her nose and cheek with dust and dirt. Jaymee grinned. She was looking scruffy again. “What use is staring at those structures if I don’t understand the work and sweat put into its making? I don’t want to admire just the building. That’s boring. I want to look at it and see in my mind how they did it, what the builder did to create it, what the laborers worked with. You know how to appreciate that—you know what it takes to build a house. Foundation and structure. Way cool.”

  She stared at the younger girl in astonishment. She’d underestimated her. Grace wasn’t as innocent and wild as she looked. “Well, maybe I’ll hire you as a roofer,” she told her.

  “It won’t be way cool when you’re dying up on the roof in the heat, Trouble, especially when General Jay is working your butt off,” drawled Nick from the doorway. He’d peeked in to ask for a drink and overheard the last part of the conversation. “Believe me, it’s way hot.”

  Grace grinned. “I know. Jed and I had a good time watching you sweat on the roof while we were resting comfortably in the shadows.”

  Jaymee frowned at that revelation. “How long have you been watching Nick?”

  “At least three days,” replied Nick, strolling in and grabbing a clean plastic cup from a bin.

  “You knew?” Jaymee was perplexed. If he had known, how come he didn’t say anything?

  He filled his cup with ice water from the five-gallon cooler. “I had a feeling,” he explained.

  “Like I pointed out earlier, you’re obviously out of practice, if you just had a feeling.” Jed said softly. He was lounging against the doorjamb. His shirt, like Nick’s, was off. He was, Jaymee nodded, tanned all over. “We could have cancelled you.”

  Nick savored the cold water in his mouth, then swallowed. His blue-gray gaze was steady. “Think so?”

  Jed just cocked his head, his own gaze unwavering. “I have the element of surprise on my side. And...you were distracted.”

  Jaymee dropped her hammer, deliberately obtaining the two men’s attention. She straightened up to her full height of five feet two inches. “I’m a little tired of being out of the loop,” she said, keeping her voice level, “and I am not a distraction to anybody.”

  Nick tossed a cup at Jed’s direction, which his cousin caught without even looking, since his strange light eyes were studying Jaymee. “Is she always so blind about herself?” he asked Nick as he headed for the cooler.

  “Only about herself,” Nick answered with a grin. “
And, she gets you to give her answers, believe me.”

  Jed finished his drink and looked back at Nick. “In that case, you’d better think of a way to keep her. If you don’t, I might go for her myself.”

  Nick’s eyes narrowed a fraction. “It isn’t like you to poach, cousin,” he said silkily.

  Jed headed towards the door. Jaymee, her mouth hanging open at the exchange, noticed flesh-colored scars criss-crossing his back. Walking back out into the back porch, he said over his shoulder, “I’ll do what it takes to keep you on your toes, cousin. I want your switch to be on all the time.” He disappeared outside.

  Nick gave a succinct curse, and strode after Jed. “Dammit, Jed, this isn’t a game…”

  The sound of Jed’s saw cut through the rest of Nick’s angry words. Jaymee stared at the open door, then looked at Grace, who had a big, amused grin on her lips.

  What was all that about?” she asked. Surely, Jed didn’t say what she thought he said.

  Grace arched an eyebrow. “That was testosterone talking.”

  Jaymee looked incredulous for a moment, then burst out laughing. “I think it’s dangerous!”

  “Quite potent,” agreed Grace. “I don’t think I’ve seen Jed and Kill at each other like that in a long time.”

  Somehow, that didn’t sound very comforting. Better change the subject. “Tell me, Grace, why do you call your father by his name, but Nick is sometimes Cousin Kill? It’s strange.”

  “Jed--Dad--wants me to,” explained Grace, twirling a pigtail. “Safer, if less people know how we’re related. Kill’s just a cool nickname. His buddies call him that sometimes and I picked it up. He calls me Gracie.”

  Jaymee frowned. “This is really serious, isn’t it, this thing with your training and the relationship between your dad and you?"

  Grace met her troubled gaze with mocking brown eyes. “Your relationship with Nick is just as serious, you know, Jay.”

  “How so?” Jaymee bent and picked up the hammer she’d dropped.

  “Why do you think Jed is testing Killian? He wants to see how far he can push him.”

 

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