by Lora Leigh
She pulled her Jeep alongside the six-story skeletal frame of the office building where her brother Scotty had all but ordered her to meet him.
Why her youngest brother couldn’t manage to keep his own ride running she hadn’t figured out yet. He was always tinkering with this, tinkering with that, and it never failed that he called her when he managed to tinker it into complete auto failure.
One of these days she was going to do as she threatened and get the family together for a mechanical intervention where her brother was concerned. He was going to have to learn to keep his hands off his vehicle’s guts. If something wasn’t truly broken, then there was no need to fix it, right?
Pulling into the muddy mess at the front of the unfinished building, Mikayla blew out a hard breath.
Mr. Unreliable had struck again. As usual, he wasn’t where he was supposed to be or doing what he was supposed to be doing.
In this case, waiting for her to pick him up.
So where was he? Where was anyone? The place was utterly deserted.
Turning down the lush, wild strains of Barry White on the CD player, Mikayla tapped her fingers on the steering wheel. Pursing her lips, she stared around the muddy mess of the job site, eyes narrowed against the dim light as she searched for her brother.
Her lips thinned as she mentally counted to ten.
She wouldn’t get upset, she told herself. Her day had been too good to let this ruin it. She’d just finished two of the most gorgeous wedding gowns she had ever created and the last bridesmaid’s dress. Rows upon rows of seed pearls, yards of satin, silk, and lace, and miles of tucks to go along with the hefty payment she had received.
Two months of sewing delicate rows of tiny pearls and witnessing the tearful smiles of two brides who would treasure those dresses for the rest of their lives.
She sent up a little prayer that those dresses would be treasured through a lifetime of wedded bliss.
Now, where was her brother?
She wanted to get home, pour a glass of wine, and relax in her new hot tub just long enough to ease the tension that still hadn’t worked its way out of her body. She had meetings tomorrow with several brides, a groom, and four society princesses looking for the perfect dress to wear to the perfect party.
She grinned at the thought. The women scheduled to go through the dozens of books filled with ball gowns, slinky satiny gowns, and silky clouds of perfect creations tailored to bring a gasp to the most jaded lips would bring a much-needed boon to the shop.
The financial crisis hitting the world at the moment hadn’t seemed to affect the sale of dresses, gowns, and various accessories that were “must-haves” for the well-put-together society princess.
Mikayla checked her watch, tapped her fingers on the steering wheel again, and blew out an irritated breath.
Scotty better hope he didn’t need her to ever pick him up again. This was it. She had been sitting here for ten minutes already. Where was he?
Turning the CD off, she opened the door to the Jeep and stepped out of the vehicle.
Her nose wrinkled at the smell of oil, mud, and what she swore was sweaty men. What was it about construction sites? Every time she had been forced to come out after her brother she swore the place smelled like guy BO.
This was the last time she would allow herself to be guilted into this. Scotty was going to have to get himself a girlfriend or something. Someone willing to make this drive and go searching for him, again, because he needed a ride.
The last time he had needed a ride Mikayla had ended up waiting an hour for him to finish what he swore was an important project before he left. She’d learned later he’d been playing poker in one of the toolsheds.
The rat.
Gritting her teeth, she pulled her cell phone from the holder at her hip and hit his number.
It rang.
“This is Scotty; leave a message.” Voice mail. She hated it. She hung up without leaving a message. She would end up saying something she was certain she would regret.
Dammit, the least he could do was answer his phone.
“Listen, I told you I was taking care of it.”
The sound of an angry voice above had Mikayla stepping back to stare up at the building, searching for the source of it. Perhaps Scotty was up there.
She was going to kill him.
A quiet murmur of another voice had her straining to hear what was said.
“Look, you owe me already. It’s time to fucking pay up, you ignorant bastard. I told you, I need the fuckin’ money. I did my part; now you do yours.”
Mikayla’s nose wrinkled as she searched for bodies to go with the vulgar words.
There was a low, quiet murmur in response.
“Look, I’ve had about enough of this. Pay the fuck up before I let him know exactly what’s going on here.”
The voice belonged to Scotty’s boss. Eddie was his name. The foreman, Eddie Foreman. All three of her brothers snickered over the name.
Her lips parted to speak, to let the foreman know she was there and, she hoped, to find out where her brother was.
“What the hell are you doing? Put that gun the hell away. Have you fucking lost your mind?”
Mikayla stared up in horror as the pair came into view.
“You’re costing me too much, Eddie.” The voice was low, a harsh, angry growl that sent a shard of fear racing up Mikayla’s spine, but what met her eyes had terror streaking through her. The gun in his hand, even from five stories up, drew her gaze, the dull black reflecting the last rays of the sun with a wicked, vicious light.
She jerked her gaze from the gun to the man holding it, her mouth going dry at the shadowed face she recognized despite the steadily dimming sunlight. It was Maddix Nelson, the owner of the construction company her brother worked for, and Maddix was holding a gun on his foreman.
She could see Eddie Foreman’s face clearly. His heavy features were twisted into lines of disbelief and fear. Maddix Nelson’s face, on the other hand, was cold. Colder than Mikayla could ever remember seeing it. And she had seen him many times over the past several years. All three of her brothers worked for him. The oldest brother, only two years younger than Mikayla, had worked for Nelson Building and Construction for over four years now.
Her father worked with Maddix through the plumbing business he owned.
She could feel her hands shaking, her stomach clenching in horror, as she watched Maddix lift the gun until it was pointed directly at Eddie Foreman’s chest.
“You’re crazy!” Eddie wheezed. “Put that fucker down, man. All I want is my friggin’ money. You owe it to me.”
“You owed me results, Eddie,” Maddix snarled, his lips pulling back from Eddie’s lips in anger.
Mikayla watched in suspended disbelief as Eddie stepped back, though there was no way to escape. A thick steel beam met his back. There was only one way to go, and Maddix Nelson had that way blocked.
She had to do something. What could she do?
Mikayla could feel her chest tightening in fear, in total and complete disbelief, as Maddix took a step closer.
Mikayla backed to the Jeep, gripped the door, and scrambled inside. She had to give Eddie a chance. There was no one else around.
She had to do something.
“Don’t do this, man!” Eddie cried out.
Mikayla laid on the horn, praying… .
She screamed at the sharp retort of gunfire. Throwing the Jeep into gear, she screamed again, hysteria threatening to overtake her as Eddie fell five stories to the rough ground below, obviously dead.
He fell faceup, his eyes wide, staring blankly as Mikayla hit the gas. She heard the bullets hit the driver’s side door. One tore through, cracking the hard plastic of the gearbox, sending shards of sharp plastic flying.
Ducking over the steering wheel, she raced from the job site. Mikayla’s hands shook as she tore at the cell phone at her side. Pulling it free, she hurriedly hit the programmed speed dial as sobs tore from
her chest.
“Hey, Miki, Scotty called—” Her father’s voice came over the line.
“Oh, my God! Oh, my God! Daddy, he killed him! He killed him! I saw it. I saw it all!”
Heavy sobs shook her body as she raced off the rough dirt road onto the interstate and raced for home, for her parents.
“Miki, settle down.” Her father’s voice tightened, firmed, and became commanding. “Are you driving, Miki?”
“Oh, God, Dad, he shot at me,” she cried out as she checked the rearview mirror, her body shuddering so hard she was surprised she could keep the Jeep on the road. “It was Maddix Nelson, Dad. I saw him.”
“Miki, where are you?”
“I was supposed to pick up Scotty.” Then a horrible thought pierced her mind. “Where’s Scotty, Dad? Where is he?”
“Miki, settle down,” he snapped then.
The sound of his voice, commanding, reminding her of her childhood years, when she knew when her father was at his most serious. He was at his most serious now.
“Now, listen to me. I’m getting in the truck, honey. Me and Mom are coming. Tell me where you are right now. We’ll meet you.”
She hurriedly gave him her location.
“Keep heading toward us, honey,” he ordered. “Keep talking to me. We’re on our way.”
“Where’s Scotty?” she sobbed. “Was he there?”
Oh, God, her brother couldn’t be dead. She couldn’t bear the thought of it.
“Scott called me earlier, Miki,” her father promised her. “He got a ride. His phone died while he was talking to me and he couldn’t reach you. Scotty’s fine. Now concentrate on driving. I’m almost there. When you see me, just pull over.”
She could hear her mother in the background, her tone calm but the concern in it heavy.
She was safe. She would be safe. Her father wouldn’t let anyone hurt her.
She was amazed that she wasn’t pulled over. They would surely think she was intoxicated if they had. Panic was pulling at the edges of her mind, and Mikayla never panicked. She had been raised with three younger brothers. Three younger brothers would make a girl crazy if they had half a chance. Mikayla had never given her brothers a chance.
But her chest was so tight she could barely breathe. Tears filled her eyes and blurred her vision. She felt as though she were in a nightmare she couldn’t wake up from.
“He killed him,” she whispered again.
“Keep it in your mind, Mikayla Ann. Remember it until we get to you and get you to the police.” Her father’s voice firmed again, the use of her first and middle names snapping her out of the hysteria threatening to overtake her again. “Where are you, honey?”
She quickly gave him her location once again.
“Pull over at the gas station just ahead of you,” he told her. “We’re coming up on it now.”
“I see it. I see it.” She was crying harder.
She couldn’t believe it. Eddie Foreman’s face kept flashing before her eyes, his eyes unseeing, the blood soaking his chest, his body bent and broken.
“Mikayla, pull over!” her father snapped.
Mikayla shook her head, blinked, and with a hard twist of the steering wheel whipped into the gas station. The Jeep tilted at the hard turn, rocked, then righted itself before she pushed it into park and threw the door open.
She fell out of the Jeep as her father and two of her brothers raced from the two pickups they had arrived in. Behind them were two state police officers she hadn’t expected—officers her father or brothers had obviously called. Mikayla ran to her father’s arms, desperate; she felt his arms close around her.
She was safe, she told herself. Her father and the police would take care of everything.
Maddix Nelson wouldn’t kill anyone else.
CHAPTER 1
Four weeks later
Nikolai Steele pulled the wicked black Harley into a vacant parking spot on Washington Street, let the engine throb for several seconds, then turned the bike off slowly, ignoring the curious looks of several women walking past him on the sidewalk as he stared across the street at the office front of Nelson Building and Construction.
Sometimes, past favors sucked. This was one of them. He owed Nelson for some rather important information the man had provided several months prior. Nik almost shook his head. That IOU was now about to become a pain in the ass.
“I’m here.” He spoke quietly into the comm link built into his helmet.
“Carry the helmet in with you, Renegade. Leave the comm on so I can pick up the conversation and see what he wants.” Tehya Talamosi, the red-haired sprite working communications, spoke quietly into the link.
He nearly rolled his eyes at the new code name. Unlike the others, his code name had changed several times over the years to reflect the differing areas of the missions assigned. For this more personal job “Renegade” reflected the fact that this time, he was working alone.
His initial meeting with Nelson would be overseen by his commander, Jordan Malone, until it was ascertained whether or not this was indeed a personal contact or if it was something more. Something that could possibly risk the Elite Ops unit or Nik’s cover.
Pulling the key from the ignition, Nik swung from the bike and slowly pulled the helmet from his head, careful to leave the sensitive electronics inside active.
He had no idea what Nelson wanted; all he knew was that he had contacted Nik in a manner in which he shouldn’t have been able to contact him. It’s what had put Jordan on alert, and it left a hell of a lot of questions for the man to answer.
Holding on to the helmet, Nik waited for a break in traffic before strolling across the street. At six and a half feet it was impossible not to draw attention to himself. Add that to his well-conditioned body, long white blond hair, and what he knew were his unusually strong Nordic features and Nik was impossible to hide in plain sight.
This was why he preferred the shadows. Nik had the ability to blend into those shadows, to watch, to wait, and to garner the least amount of attention possible.
The shadows were safer. There he wasn’t forced to interact with others. He didn’t have to risk friendships, loyalties, or possibly the drive to fill the unnamed hunger that plagued his soul.
Stepping onto the sidewalk, he was aware of the pedestrians who cleared a path around him. They watched him with wary curiosity, sensing instinctively that this was a dangerous man.
Nik stepped inside the offices of Nelson Building and Construction and walked up to the receptionist’s desk.
“Maddix Nelson.” Nik’s voice, normally dark and rough, sounded more dangerous as he stood over the petite young receptionist.
She swallowed tightly as her brown eyes widened, youth still fresh enough that she felt no fascination for the monster staring down at her. She felt only that inherent fear, that need to run.
“M-m-may I ask—”
“Steele.” He gave only his last name. The name and identity he had been given eight years before.
She jerked the phone from its cradle, punched in a number with a jerky movement, and stuttered his name into the phone.
“Mr. Steele, Mr. Nelson’s assistant will be right here.” She laid the phone on the cradle as she glanced desperately at the small seating area off to the right. “It will be just a moment.”
Nik had mercy on her. He stepped back from the receptionist’s station, but he didn’t sit. He moved to the edge of the lobby, placed his back against the wall, and waited.
He didn’t have to wait long.
Maddix Nelson’s assistant, Alison Chenkins, moved down the staircase that led to the upper floors rather than using the elevator. Dressed in slim black slacks and a white tailored blouse, with low heels, she gave the impression, a correct one, of quiet efficiency and confidence.
“Mr. Steele.” She moved right to him, a slender hand reaching out in greeting. “Thank you for coming so promptly.”
Nik’s brow arched sarcastically as he accepted th
e handshake, careful not to pinch her hand in his much larger one.
“We can use the elevator or the stairs,” she offered. “Mr. Nelson is in his office.”
“Stairs are fine with me.”
“Excellent.” A friendly smile tugged at her lips as she turned and moved for the staircase. “If you’ll follow me.”
He followed, keeping a careful distance between himself and the assistant, his gaze constantly searching his surroundings.
Nik hadn’t expected Nelson’s favor to be called so quickly. Nor had Nik expected the message to come through a contact whom only a few people were aware of.
“I always take the stairs whenever possible.” Alison Chenkins grinned back at Nik as they moved past the second floor. “The elevator is quicker, but the stairs are better for my hips.”
“And give Maddix Nelson time to prepare himself,” Nik stated quietly.
She almost paused on the steps before her smile turned cooler and the chatter stopped. She turned, and her pace quickened until they were pushing through the fourth-floor door and moving into the plush assistant’s office outside Maddix Nelson’s office.
Maddix didn’t make Nik wait. He was standing in the door to his office, his dark hair brushed back, but not as neatly as Nik remembered it being before. There were added lines on Maddix’s face, his brow creased with worry. Six weeks had wrought an almost devastating change to the man’s face.
“Nik, thank you for coming.” Maddix invited Nik into his office with a wave of his hand.
Nik glanced into the office, then to Maddix in a signal that the other man was to go first.
The other man gave a mirthless smile before stepping into the office.
Nik stepped inside as he tucked the motorcycle helmet under his arm to provide Tehya with clearer audio and visual coverage of the room.
“You contacted me through an unusual source, Mr. Nelson,” Nik stated as he moved to the side of the room, putting the wall at his back. “Care to tell me why?”
Maddix ran his fingers through his hair, and it was obviously not the first time.
“I tried to reach you through Lilly Harrington and her fiancé, Travis Caine, but they were out of the country and unavailable,” Maddix stated quietly. “That only left the few contacts that I could find of Caine’s to get a message to you.”