He gave her one of his concerned looks, but she shrugged it off and then patted his hand. He gave his head a slight shake, and she knew she was being chastised for sleeping with Dane. She deserved it considering how often she’d sworn to him that Dane had been a jerk.
Matt walked to the front of the room and started to speak. “We’ve had some intel that indicates Bad Medicine is going out today, but not for the usual fishing run. They aren’t taking on passengers, and the crew is made up of the men we have in our dossiers. They’re either making a practice run, or they’ve made contact with our sub.”
“We need to be out there.” It was Dane who’d spoken.
“Yes, we do. We’ve arranged to rent some fishing boats. We’re going sailing today like a bunch of tourists.”
“They can’t possibly be planning to offload a missile in broad daylight,” Chase Daniels said.
Fiddler, they called him. She wondered why. Did he play a fiddle? Or was it just a joke of some sort? She knew that call signs often were jokes or plays on the obvious. Dexter “Double Dee” Davidson—now that was obvious, though why they didn’t just call him DeeDee and be done with it she didn’t know. She understood Flash Gordon and Billy the Kid. Knight Rider for McKnight, Big Mac for MacDonald, Brandy for Brandon—wow, these guys weren’t all that original, were they? Iceman was one of those dudes who seemed cool under pressure, so maybe that’s where they’d gotten his name.
And she had no idea what Matt’s name was, come to think of it. Dane was Viking, which made sense considering his real name was so Norse sounding.
“No, probably not,” Matt said. “But they could be planning to get into position and troll the area all day. The sub will probably surface sometime after nightfall.” His gaze slewed over to Ivy and Ace. “You two will have to sit this one out. You aren’t trained for this kind of op.”
Cold anger fizzed inside Ivy’s veins. “We damn sure are. Who do you think confiscates drugs coming into the US? The Junior League of Key West? We’ve worked with the Coast Guard to apprehend smugglers. This isn’t our first dance, you know.”
“It’s dangerous out there,” Dane said.
Ivy swung around to glare at him. “You think I don’t know that? What part of ‘we’ve done this before’ don’t you get?”
She could see Ace grinning beside her, and she wanted to smack him. He was enjoying this far too much when he should be as incensed as she was.
“They can play tourists,” Big Mac said, shrugging. “Put them on a cabin cruiser and put Ivy in a bikini. It’s not like we haven’t infiltrated a secure compound before by using a woman in a bikini as a distraction.”
“And what a fine distraction your wife was,” Chase said. “Especially when she took off her top.”
“Watch it, asshole,” Big Mac growled. “Lucky’s not here to save your ass if I decide to kick it for you.”
Chase kept on grinning. “I’ll tell Lucky. You know she hates it when you get all macho about her role on the team.”
“Son of a bitch,” Big Mac muttered, but he didn’t take a swing at Chase.
Ivy thought she might like to meet this Lucky. She sounded like a hell of a woman if she could make that big man back down with only the threat of her learning he’d kicked someone’s ass on her behalf.
“It’s not a bad idea,” Matt said. “Worked the last time, didn’t it? Fine, Ivy and Ace can go on the cabin cruiser.”
“She’s not wearing a bikini,” Dane said to the room.
Ivy stood and popped her hands on her hips as she faced her ex-husband. “Stay out of this, Dane. I’ll wear my fucking birthday suit if it helps get those assholes before they can deploy their weapon.”
Dane looked militant. “You don’t need to be out there. Stay here and monitor the marina with Ace—”
“Fuck you,” Ivy shot back. She was aware the gazes of the men were bouncing between her and Dane like a Ping-Pong ball. No doubt they were highly entertained, but she was furious that Dane would try to shove her to the sidelines.
“Enough,” Matt barked. “Ivy and Ace can help. Tourists on the cabin cruiser, observation only. We can always use extra eyes on the perimeter. Wear a bikini or not, I don’t really fucking care. Now, can we get back to business, or do you two want to discuss wardrobe issues some more?”
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
It was a glorious day in the Keys, sunny and breezy, not too hot yet, with a sky so blue it hurt the eyes and a sparkling ocean spreading as far as a person could see. In the end, Ivy and Ace wound up on the cabin cruiser alone while the team split themselves between fishing boats. They were in the area, but not always visible. Occasionally she lifted the binoculars and spotted one of them, but she didn’t know which one.
Bad Medicine had left the dock on Emerald Key earlier, but there was no sign of her out here. Ivy adjusted her bikini top—she’d worn the bikini, but she’d knotted a floor-length wrap over the bottoms—and lifted the binoculars again.
She thought of that moment when she’d walked onto the dock and Dane had seen her. His eyes ate her up, but then his jaw hardened and he turned away, pretending not to care. She knew it was pretense because she knew Dane. He cared—and she’d been both gratified that he did and angry with herself at the same time. Angry because she couldn’t stop reacting to him, angry because last night had felt so damn good. Angry because she’d told him no more.
She loved the possessive look in his eyes even when she pushed him away. And that was wrong of her. She shouldn’t regret doing the right thing for them both, and yet there was a pit in her stomach that hadn’t stopped aching.
She scanned the horizon again. The radio had been silent for over an hour. They had a secure channel, but there was no chatter at the moment. Ace kicked back on the deck, cell phone in one hand, icy cold drink in the other. The scent of sun-warmed coconut wafted from him.
“Man, this is the life, Ivy. Think we could get stationed down here permanently?”
Ivy lowered the binoculars and looked at him. He was naked except for a tiny Speedo. He was also gleaming with oil. She couldn’t help but smile.
“I doubt that. Besides, what would you do about Maximo?”
Ace’s face grew dreamy. “I’d ask him to move down here with me.”
“Isn’t that a little fast? You’ve only been dating for a couple of months.”
Ace gave her a look. “Seriously? You’re going to give me advice when you fucked your ex-husband last night after swearing you never wanted to lay eyes on the bastard again?”
Ivy’s cheeks burned. “You have no idea what happened, so stop trying to pry it out of me. Besides, we’re talking about you.”
Ace snorted, ignoring the second part of that statement and attacking the first. “Honey, that man is a walking orgasm waiting to happen—and he was naked and you were wearing his shirt this morning. You fucked him—and I really don’t blame you, by the way. I’d fuck him too if he’d have me.”
Ivy flopped down on the bench seat cushion. The boat rocked gently in the water and the radio played Top 40 hits. What was the point in denying it? Ace was her partner and probably her best friend.
“Fine, I had a lapse in judgment. I haven’t had sex in too long to remember, and I know how amazing it can be with Dane. So yes, when he kissed me, I lost all my good intentions. And the orgasms were completely worth it. I don’t regret it at all.”
Which wasn’t completely true, but Ace didn’t need to know that.
Ace’s brow wrinkled. “So what happens when this is over? You seeing him again?”
Ivy lowered her head until her hair fell over her cheek, curtaining her face from his view. “I don’t think it’s a good idea… so no.”
“Probably right then. The heart knows.” Ace’s phone dinged and he lifted it to peer at the text. Then he laughed. “Max sent me a dick pic. Want to see?”
Ivy held up a hand. “God no. What makes men think women want to see dicks on their phones?”
“I don�
�t know about women, but I want to see as many as possible.” His fingers flew over his screen.
Ivy pushed her hair behind her ear and turned her head to look at the water. It was peaceful out here, but she wasn’t feeling very peaceful inside. No, she was feeling jumpy and achy. She was a bit sore, and that only made her think of Dane and what he’d done to her last night.
And what she’d done to him. No, she didn’t want a dick pic—but she wouldn’t mind seeing his dick again up close and personal.
Which was precisely why she couldn’t. Ivy frowned. Dammit, one night of bliss was going to cost her heavily when she couldn’t stop thinking about Dane for the next few weeks. Months.
Years.
No, not years. No way.
Except, dammit, from the first moment she’d met Dane, she hadn’t known how to shake him from her system. She hadn’t wanted to in the early days, and then when she had, it just wasn’t happening. She’d eventually gotten to the point where whole days would pass and she wouldn’t think about him, but that had taken time.
That had been busted all to hell the minute she walked into HOT HQ and saw him standing there, staring back at her like a forgotten wet dream.
Something bounced on the horizon, and Ivy looked through the binoculars again. It was a speedboat, but not one she recognized. The boat hopped over the waves toward them. It was a big ocean, and they’d seen boat traffic on and off for the past couple of hours—but something about the purposeful way this one moved toward them felt different from the other boats they’d seen.
Ace swore softly. Then he sat up to watch the approaching craft. “Is that one of ours?”
“Doesn’t look like it. Besides, wouldn’t they hail us on the radio?”
“Maybe they needed to go silent.”
Even as he said it, Ivy’s neck prickled in warning. The boat was growing bigger now, and it wasn’t changing course. It was probably nothing… but her blood iced over and her belly flipped. She reached into the beach bag where she’d packed her weapon and withdrew it.
“I don’t like this,” she said. “Something’s wrong.”
Ace glanced at his phone one last time. His face went white for a second before he swore and tossed it aside. “Agreed. Let’s get the fuck out of here.”
He grabbed his weapon from the floor where he’d laid it and jumped up to start the boat.
“Pull the anchor,” he told her, and Ivy rocketed into gear.
The windlass had a hand crank, and she began to turn it as quickly as she could manage. Maybe they were overreacting, but it was easier to dial back their response after they’d put distance between themselves and the approaching boat than to ramp it up too late.
Ivy’s muscles screamed as she turned the crank and the anchor came slowly up from the bottom. At least it wasn’t deep here, so the anchor wasn’t out too far, but it still took time.
When the anchor was in and the engine purred, Ace rolled the stick back and the boat slid forward.
“We’ll take it nice and slow,” he said. “Make it look like we’re out for a casual sail.”
Ivy picked up the radio and called in. “Shark Three on the move. Unwanted guests headed our way.”
The radio crackled and Dane’s voice snapped back at her. “Friendlies?”
“Not sure. They’re coming fast and not deviating.”
The speedboat shot through the water, heading straight for them now. It could be joyriders, sure. Kids out for a good time. But every instinct she had told her it wasn’t. The approach was too purposeful, too swift.
She scanned the boat again with the binoculars. Three men stood in the bow, bouncing with the waves. They wore sunglasses, and their hair whipped in the wind. One of them drove. The other pointed toward them.
And the third held a rifle, which he brought to his shoulder in one smooth move.
“Go,” she screamed.
Ace gunned their boat and she fell to her knees. Ivy never heard a sound—but a moment later Ace slumped over the console and slid sideways in slow motion, a jagged red stain following him down to the floor.
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
Shark Two rocketed toward Ivy and Ace’s position. Dane scanned the horizon with binoculars, looking for something—anything.
“We’ll get there,” Chase called over the rush of wind.
Dane merely nodded. When they spotted the cabin cruiser, Knight Rider gave the fishing boat more gas and they leapt forward in the water. He throttled back in order to glide into the cruiser’s space without ramming into her or sending her rocking too hard. There was no one at the helm, and Dane toed a hold on the side of the fishing boat, rope in hand, waiting until the moment he could leap onto the other craft.
When they were close enough, he jumped. There was no sign of Ivy up top, but Ace lay on the floor in a pool of blood and Dane rushed to him. The man’s eyes fluttered open as Dane pressed his fingers against the belly wound to stop the blood flow.
Garrett “Iceman” Spencer was beside him in two seconds, ripping into a med kit and taking out field dressings and strong painkillers.
“No one below,” he said as he started to tend to Ace. He cleaned the wound as best as he could, dropped a clotting agent on it, and packed it with gauze while Dane shot morphine into Ace’s veins.
Dane could hear Chase calling in and informing mission control what they’d found. Ace, but no Ivy. Goddamn, where was she?
They had no choice but to get Ace back to shore as fast as possible, and that was going to entail calling a helicopter.
“Ivy,” Ace choked out, his voice thin. “They took Ivy.”
“Easy,” Dane said, his heart thundering. Because he’d been considering the possibility they’d shot her. That maybe she’d fallen overboard and drowned, or died from a gunshot wound. That they’d be trolling for her lifeless body and he’d be wondering how he’d hold it together when they found her.
Ace gripped his arm with surprisingly strong fingers for a man who’d been shot. “Afraid… My fault.”
“What? What do you mean it’s your fault?”
“Dude,” Iceman said, wrapping a hand around Dane’s wrist. “Careful.”
Dane realized he was squeezing Ace’s arm and let go. But he wanted to shake the man and make him spill. His fault what?
“Phone.”
Dane wasn’t sure what the man was talking about, but he looked around the deck for a phone, found it lying on a cushion. It was wet, but not submerged in water. Dane dried it off and slid the bar.
“Code,” he barked.
“Four, five… nine, eight.”
Dane punched it in and Ace’s phone opened to him. “What am I looking for?”
“Max…,” he wheezed. “Messages.”
Dane brought up the messages and clicked on Max. There was a dick pic, which he did not appreciate in the least, but it was the conversation that chilled him. Mostly it was normal, flirtatious. But the last comment was the one that changed the tone.
I’m sorry. I had no choice.
Shit. “We need to get someone to pick this guy up.”
Ice settled in Dane’s gut. He found Max’s contact information in the phone and gave it to Chase, who radioed it in.
“Chopper’s on the way,” Chase said. “Team heading out to collect Max.”
Dane wanted to snarl. “What about the boat these bastards were in? It can’t be gone. It’s only been a few minutes.”
“Shark Four is in pursuit of a craft, but it’s too fast.”
“We’ll lose her,” Dane said, frustration and fear bubbling inside him.
“We won’t let that happen,” Iceman replied. “No fucking way. We’ll get her back.”
Dane looked up at the sky as if he could make the chopper come faster. But the sky was silent… and time was running out.
*
“Where is my submarine, Miss McGill?”
Ivy’s head pounded and her mouth was dry. She heard the voice, but she couldn’t seem to open her ey
es to look at whoever was speaking. She tried to shift her body from its cramped position, realized she was lying on a hard surface. Her cheek was cool where it touched wood.
And then water splashed down over her head and she sputtered. She accidentally breathed some in and she coughed violently. Her lungs ached and her throat burned. Somehow she managed to push herself up against the wall until she was half sitting, half lying.
She cracked an eye open and peered into the room. It was dark other than a beam of light coming from a point in front of her. The light shone on her, and she blinked to stop the stab of pain in her eyes.
Where was she? And—oh my God, Ace! She scrambled up a little higher, her chest aching as she dragged in air. The last thing she remembered was Ace slumping on the console—she’d scrambled to her feet from where she’d been knocked down, but the boat had hit another wave before she could get to the console and she’d fallen against something and hit her head.
Now she was here.
“My submarine, Miss McGill. Where is it?”
Ivy licked her lips and tried to focus on the man who’d spoken. The room she was in was big and bare, with only a chair and a table and a light. A warehouse of some kind, confirmed by the smell of oil and fish.
And then her gaze landed on the man. A slick man in an expensive suit. Tall, black hair, slightly balding. She recognized that face…
Miguel Ruiz. Oh holy shit.
“Where is my partner?”
“Do you mean Mr. Martin? Unfortunately, I do not know. He is not the one I’m interested in at the moment.” He bent down and grasped her chin. His grip was not kind. “You cost me a lot of money, Miss McGill. I am not a happy man. If you give me back my submarine, I may let you live.”
His fingers softened a bit—and then they trailed down her bare flesh, between the exposed rounds of her breasts in the bikini top, and her skin crawled. Her gag reflex was strong at the moment, but she wouldn’t let him see it. It would only anger him.
“I don’t have your submarine, Señor. The men you tried to negotiate with have it.”
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