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KICK ASS: Page 12

by LETO, JULIE


  “Sharing a meal with the people who will rescue my child is my privilege, Ms. Morales,” she answered tactfully.

  “Please, call her Marisela,” Ian insisted, topping off Elise’s glass with a golden Chardonnay and leveling a warning glance at Marisela to behave. “We’re all friends here.”

  Frankie made a noise not unlike a snort, but with more subtlety. A sniff—with attitude.

  “You don’t agree, Frank?” he said, his gaze narrowing, but only for a split second. “Forgive me, Elise. This is Francisco Vega, the man who will accompany Marisela on this mission. He’s a more experienced operative than Marisela, though we value them both, of course.”

  Elise’s smile transformed, and Marisela, for one, was impressed. Elise’s grin instantly morphed from feigned politeness to pure feminine huntress. She reached out with her finely boned hand and for a moment, Marisela thought she saw claws instead of French manicured nails.

  Marisela finished the rest of her drink, then fiddled with the shoot of sugarcane used as garnish, crushing the mint and leftover ice into a cool, fragrant mash. She watched Frankie accept Elise’s hand, smiling when he instantly released her, as if Elise’s skin was too cold for prolonged touch. Too bad Frankie wasn’t interested. This woman could use a real man to warm her up.

  Marisela glanced up to catch Ian Blake staring at her with a keen focus that transformed the look into something nearly tangible, like the tip of an electrode activated against her skin, causing a resonant tingling to echo through her. She couldn’t identify the sensation as either positive or negative—just… there. Strong and significant, and yet, completely abstract.

  She started when Frankie’s hand again slipped around the back of her waist. He moved her toward the table, under the guise of helping her politely into her chair.

  “Don’t fall for it, vidita,” he whispered, his breath warm against her ear as he tucked in her chair. Where’d he learn such politeness anyway?

  “Fall for what?”

  His gaze flashed toward Ian. “He’s not what he appears to be.”

  “Funny, all he appears to be is my boss.” She snapped her napkin flat, then laid it across her lap. She leaned in close so only he could hear her. “Aren’t you curious about why we’re really all here? I’m betting Ian’s guest has never shared a meal with people like you and me—except when the people like you and me were doing the serving.”

  Frankie grinned. “Do you know which fork to use?”

  She winked and toyed with the edge of the appetizer fork, showing off her newfound knowledge. Max had taken the time to review table manners as part of their training. Apparently, the identities they would soon take belonged to people who moved flawlessly in and out of an upper crust world. Maybe dinner tonight was a simple test of her table manners and not something more nefarious.

  Uh-huh.

  Marisela might not know a lot about finger bowls and napkin rings, but she had a strong sense that there was more to this impromptu dinner than met the naked eye.

  Ian helped Elise into her chair, and then slid into his own with a grace she’d never seen in a man before. She’d already pegged him as smooth as silk, but no matter how impressive an educated, cosmopolitan man like him should appear to an urban girl like her, she couldn’t shake the persistent mistrust of him fueled by Frankie’s warnings. Just what did her ex know about their boss that he hadn’t shared?

  Ian gestured for the server. A moment later, three white-jacketed crewmen popped into the room, carrying trays and refilling drinks. Ian approved the wine selection, and then turned his grin back to Marisela.

  “I’m told you and Frank had quite the workout this afternoon. How gauche of me to delay our meal. You must have worked up quite the appetite.”

  Marisela raised one brow. “You should join us in the gym sometime,” she said, determined not to let him unnerve her. “Might be interesting to spar with the boss.”

  Ian’s grin was as intense as Frankie’s steely glare.

  “An interesting idea,” Ian replied, “but I think I’ll pass. I wouldn’t want to intrude when your training is progressing just as Frankie assured me it would.”

  Marisela didn’t know a damned thing about fishing, but she recognized bait when she saw it. She threw Frankie an intimate smile before meeting Ian’s superior gaze directly. “Frankie certainly does know his stuff.”

  Ian cleared his throat. “So I’ve heard.” With a snap of his napkin, Ian ended the conversation.

  Marisela watched a silent battle ensue while the server placed small silver trays laden with individual servings of soft cheese, fruit, and warm, nutty bread in front of them. Ian attempting to look nonchalant and unaffected; Frankie doing his damnedest to keep from punching Blake in the face. She had to give Frankie credit for controlling his temper. In the old days, he would have called the guy out by now. Of course, maybe they’d already tangled sometime earlier, before Marisela was around. Maybe that was the animosity Marisela was picking up on.

  “So, Marisela,” Elise said, toying mindlessly with a gold chain that dipped into her cleavage. “What do you know about my Jessica?”

  “What do I need to know? You have custody and her father took her.”

  Elise looped her finger in the gold links, drawing Marisela’s attention to a small locket peeking out from her neckline. “That’s a rather simplistic assessment.”

  Marisela eyed the woman carefully. “Am I missing some complexity I should know about?”

  Blake smeared cheese over his bread and Frankie, who’d pushed his plate away, concentrated on making quick work of his wine. Why did she have the feeling the men knew infinitely more than she did? Or that Elise wanted to say something she couldn’t quite get out?

  Elise took a brief sip of Chardonnay and then answered Marisela’s question in a surprisingly straightforward tone. “My former lover is a cruel man who runs a dangerous empire. There is no telling how he’s poisoned my daughter’s mind against me.”

  Finally, Elise extracted the locket that she wore, unhooked the clasp and handed it across the table to Marisela.

  “Open it,” Elise ordered, her voice cool, but quavering.

  Curious, Marisela complied. The minute she spied the angelic face she’d suspected she’d find inside, she clicked the tiny hinge shut and thrust the necklace back to its owner. “I’ve seen your daughter.”

  Elise sat up straighter, clearly offended, and made no move to retrieve her locket. “That’s a picture. An old picture, faded by time. And it’s all I’ve had for fifteen years.”

  Hot anger burbled in Marisela’s chest. Did she look like some bleeding-heart sap? Why was Elise pushing so hard, forcing her to feel some profound sadness for a cute little baby who was now all grown up? “That’s not my concern.”

  “It should be.”

  “Why?”

  As if on cue, a tear sprang from the corner of Elise’s eye, which she quickly dabbed away with her napkin. “I’m terrified that Jessica will fight you if she knows who you really are. She’ll run to her father and Javier will kill you both. Don’t I have enough on my conscience already?”

  She tore away from the table and Ian, after leveling an admonishing glance at Marisela, quickly followed his guest. In a dark corner by the window, they talked in hushed tones, leaving Frankie and Marisela alone while the waiters delivered the soup.

  Marisela set the locket beside her bowl and eyed the pinkish cream concoction with a guilty appetite. She loved lobster bisque, but she’d just reduced their client to tears—something she was fairly certain Ian didn’t appreciate. She hadn’t meant to make the woman cry, but she was trying to stick to the facts. Of course the girl would resist if she knew the truth.

  Frankie picked up his spoon and made short work of the lobster and caviar garnish. “You always did have a way with people, vidita, especially rich gringas who spend more on their shoes than you make in a year.”

  Marisela ignored the growl in her stomach, finished her wine, then
waved at the waiter to bring more. “Than I used to make in a year, maybe. You don’t believe those waterworks, do you? She should use some of her trust fund on acting lessons.”

  Frankie chuckled, grabbed a roll, and dunked a torn hunk into his soup. “You don’t think she’s sincere?”

  With clenched teeth beneath tight lips, Marisela glanced over her shoulder. Ian had his arm draped over Elise’s shoulder and their quiet conversation now included soft laughter.

  “Not anymore than you think Ian can be trusted,” she replied.

  Frankie paused, then shrugged and dug into his soup with gusto. “Then we’re both in a hell of a lot of trouble, aren’t we?”

  Suddenly, Marisela had lost her appetite.

  Eleven

  Frankie watched across the table, noting how Marisela played with the gleaming gold locket Elise had given her. She’d ignored the trinket throughout the tense dinner, even tried to return it before Elise retired to her stateroom, but the woman insisted Marisela keep the charm. Now, she couldn’t seem to stop touching it.

  Frankie wouldn’t care about what this Elise Something-or-Another did or didn’t do to solidify Marisela’s loyalty, except for one thing—Marisela’s loyalty had to be to him. Or more accurately, to the team. He’d known her for a long time. If someone pushed Marisela’s buttons, her temper could overcome her good sense. They’d all be a lot safer if Marisela’s emotions stayed out of the mix. And nothing could stir Marisela up like an injustice to a child.

  During their workout, she’d told him about how she’d lost her gig in the bond enforcement biz. Beat up a perp and used excessive force, all because the guy had been an asshole to his wife and kids. She’d had no stake in the jerk’s crime or punishment, but she’d let the unfairness push her over the edge. If she pulled such a stupid stunt on this mission, they could both end up dead.

  Frankie’s gaze darted to Blake, who accepted a brandy from Max and thankfully had toned down his annoying charm. Blake was quiet and concentrated as he typed a series of codes into a cordless keyboard, which activated the flat screen on the wall across from them. A photograph of a man and woman boarding a charter plane flashed into view. Frankie pushed his concerns about Marisela aside. For now he’d concentrate on making this mission work and keeping them alive.

  “This is Dolores and Rogelio Tosca, exiled Cuban nationals who immigrated to Canada from Havana in 1987. They settled just outside of Toronto, though they spend most of their time traveling the world as high-paid assassins. Exactly three months ago, Javier Perez instructed one of his top lieutenants to contact the Toscas in order to eliminate a rival who’s persisted in invading Perez’s North American territory.”

  “Why didn’t Perez do the dirty work himself?” Frankie asked. He’d crossed the paths of quite a few arms dealers during his stint in prison. They weren’t the types to delegate deadly force outside their own organization.

  Blake grinned wryly. “We’re guessing he doesn’t want to turn his problem into a turf war. He’s not interested in sending a message to his rivals, he just wants to eradicate the immediate problem.”

  Made sense. If Perez did the hit himself, the rival’s men would feel compelled to reciprocate with more violence. If the competitor was taken out by independent contractors, the source of the hit wouldn’t be immediately clear. In the arms dealing business, deadly enemies were a dime a dozen.

  “Where are the Toscas now?”

  Frankie guessed the couple would provide the cover Blake had chosen for him and Marisela in order to infiltrate Perez’s inner circle. Though Dolores and Rogelio appeared a bit older than he and Marisela were, assassins weren’t generally high-profile people. Likely, the only thing known about them was that they were rich, Hispanic, and traveled in a pair.

  But diverting paid assassins once money had exchanged hands would prove near to impossible unless they eliminated the real couple. Permanently.

  “Already dead,” Ian replied coolly. “Or at least, presumed so, thanks to a very reliable source.”

  Marisela’s face blanched. “You had them killed?”

  Ian quirked an eyebrow. “Nothing so dastardly, I assure you. Their specialty was execution by explosion. They particularly enjoyed blowing up boats. Last month, they were working for a drug kingpin in Brazil, eliminating a dealer who was skimming too much off the top. Apparently, something went wrong. They went down with the ship, so to speak. Had they lived, we simply would have detained them until our operation was complete.”

  Frankie glanced at Marisela. The locket, while still in her hand, seemed to no longer be a concern, though her thumb rubbed lightly over the smooth gold finish.

  “Are you certain Perez doesn’t know they died?” Frankie asked.

  Ian grinned. “Oddly enough, yes. We had the good fortune to intercept the Toscas’ moneyman shortly after the accident. They’d only received half their payment from the Brazilian and since they had completed their task, their accountant pretended they were alive in order to collect the rest. In the interest of earning some easy money, the accountant kept the fact that his bosses blew themselves up to himself.”

  Frankie chuckled at the guy’s ingenuity and greed. Couldn’t blame him for going for the big bucks since his meal tickets had just blasted themselves into a million fleshy pieces. “He took the money and ran.”

  “And then some,” Ian verified. “But we discovered his secret. Since he’s a great lover of cash, he’s now on our payroll. During our initial surveillance of Perez, we’d intercepted the messages between the Toscas and Perez’s men. We knew about his interest in hiring the assassins even before the Toscas died. We’ve promised the accountant one hundred percent of his boss’s normal fee on the job for Javier Perez if he helped us orchestrate the hit in their stead.”

  Marisela leaned forward, her eyes wide, not so much out of surprise, but disgust. “So we’re going to kill some dude just to get into Perez’s good graces?”

  “This ‘dude’ is a first-class killer, if it makes any difference to you.” Ian tapped a few more keys, bringing another photograph onto the screen. “Ricky Ochoa. Razor Ricky, as he’s called, for his practice of cutting the throats of anyone who displeases him, from hotel housekeepers to unruly dogs. He used to be the main enforcer for a drug dealer out of southern Venezuela. His brother, the head of the crime family, met with a rather gruesome death two years ago. Slashed across the neck, not surprisingly, by his younger sibling who then took over the operation himself. He’s a ruthless, cold-blooded murderer with a long résumé of deaths at his hands.”

  Marisela shook her head, her eyes wide. “I didn’t sign on with you to play avenging angel for a bunch of assholes who can’t take care of their own nasty business.”

  Frankie leaned back into his chair, wondering how bad he’d screwed up by bringing Marisela to Titan. He finally recognized what had changed the most about her in the past decade. She was angry. Angrier than he’d ever seen her, even compared to when she’d signed on with the las Reinas years ago. But why? Marisela had family, friends. In his experience, only people who were alone held tight to their anger because rage was all they had.

  Ian leaned slightly toward Marisela, and as Frankie expected, spoke in a keen whisper. Frankie rolled his eyes. He didn’t really think she’d fall for such transparent seduction, did he?

  “I don’t ask my operatives to kill, Marisela.”

  “But they often have to, or we wouldn’t be so well trained,” she countered.

  She put up a valiant fight, Frankie thought, observing how smoothly Marisela kept Blake on topic, ignoring his tempered voice and smooth gestures. But Frankie didn’t fool himself. No woman could fight a guy like Blake forever once Blake determined that he wanted her. He’d seen this before with Tasha, code name Eris. Frankie had been new to the operation then and just like every male agent in Titan, he’d wanted a shot at the sleek, sexy operative. But after a cursory game of hard to get, she’d ended up with Ian. If Marisela wanted her boss in her be
d as well, who the hell was Frankie to get in the way? He didn’t own her. He didn’t have the right to ask her to remain faithful to him, not when he had no promises to make in return.

  But he didn’t have to make Ian’s inevitable seduction of Marisela easy.

  “She’s got a point,” Frankie agreed. “You’ve made sure our workouts include all the skills the Toscas had, right down to the bang.”

  Ian’s sneer only showed in his eyes, but it was there, causing Frankie to grin.

  “I do not intend to sully Titan’s reputation by taking on a murder for hire, not even to advance an important and lucrative case. You and Frankie will pose as the Toscas and we’ll stage the assassination of Ochoa and then spirit the man away for a few weeks of rest and relaxation until the case is complete. The Toscas moneyman has indicated to Perez that the Toscas are interested in taking on more work for him if he’s satisfied with the outcome in Miami. That will facilitate a meeting after the hit is complete. Since Perez will be leaving soon for Puerto Rico, the meeting will likely occur at his private compound. If we’re lucky, you’ll then be in place to recover the girl.”

  He switched the screen again, this time displaying a map of the island of Puerto Rico, with a smaller remote island off the northwest coast highlighted with arrows and coordinates. “Once you are on Isla de Piratas, you’ll find the girl and pick an exit strategy.

  Blake’s subtle flirting with Marisela was over. Back to business. Good.

  “How will we contact you?” Marisela asked.

  “Our agents have another yacht, which will cruise just out of range of Perez’s security zone, which we’re told includes radar. We’ll move in at pre-set times to intercept communications from you. We’ve also devised a satellite phone jamming system that will keep Perez from picking up our exchanges so long as we keep them short. Max will provide you with a schedule. When the time for extraction comes, one of your assignments will include knocking out radar capabilities entirely so we can sweep in undetected on a smaller vessel, one built for stealth and speed. But we’re a long way out from that. First, we’ve got to get you in.”

 

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