Seducing the Colonel's Daughter: Seducing the Colonel's DaughterThe Secret Soldier
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Passion in paradise
Raeleen Randall dumps her boyfriend after discovering he’s married. Then she’s kidnapped and taken to a remote lighthouse on the island of Anguilla. With a hurricane fast approaching, Raeleen needs a miracle to save her. And that miracle shows up in the strapping form of Travis Todd—the irresistibly handsome stranger who rescues her.
When operative Travis Todd first sees Raeleen, he wants her. But getting involved with a powerful colonel’s daughter is bad news. With someone out to harm her, he can’t walk away. In this tropical paradise with its sultry nights, it’s nearly impossible to ignore his desire.
“How many relationships have you been in?” she asked.
“Depends on what you consider a relationship.”
“Have you ever been with someone you thought would go the distance?” Like Deet.
Travis’s long silence revealed there must have been.
She moved her head to see his profile. He had long blond lashes and his blue-gold eyes glowed in the dim light.
“Have you?” he countered.
He didn’t want to talk about the woman who’d surely meant enough for him to go the distance, but for some reason hadn’t worked out.
“I’ve had a few relationships,” she said. “None where I fell madly in love, though.”
His gaze moved from her eyes to her mouth and back again. She let her head relax a little more against him, bringing her mouth closer to his. A few seconds later, he closed the distance between them and kissed her. Her heart surged with excitement and responding desire. Heat erupted out of nowhere.
A loud ripping noise broke them apart. The freight train was in the cottage. The roof above them broke apart with a sickening sound and sailed away. Rain and debris poured down upon them. Raeleen screamed.
Books by Jennifer Morey
Harlequin Romantic Suspense
*Special Ops Affair #1653
*Seducing the Accomplice #1657
Lawman’s Perfect Surrender #1700
*Seducing the Colonel’s Daughter #1718
Silhouette Romantic Suspense
*The Secret Soldier #1526
*Heiress Under Fire #1578
Blackout at Christmas #1583: “Kiss Me on Christmas”
*Unmasking the Mercenary #1606
The Librarian’s Secret Scandal#1624
*All McQueen’s Men
Other titles by this author available in ebook format.
JENNIFER MOREY
Two-time 2009 RITA® Award nominee and a Golden Quill winner for Best First Book for The Secret Soldier, Jennifer Morey writes contemporary romance and romance suspense. Project manager du jour, she works for the space systems segment of a satellite imagery and information company. She lives in sunny Denver, Colorado. She can be reached through her website, www.jennifermorey.com, and on Facebook.
Jennifer Morey
Seducing the Colonel’s Daughter
Dear Reader,
It’s been a while since Travis Todd has been on a mission. He’s overdue, don’t you think? He was shot protecting Haley Engen in Unmasking the Mercenary, but now he’s back and fully recovered—just in time to rescue popular food-network show host Raeleen Randall.
Big, intimidating and looking for the right woman, Travis has met his match in Raeleen...if he can seduce her into forgetting her rule about men who work for her father, the secret colonel who backs Tactical Executive Security—the infamous counterterror organization that is All McQueen’s Men. Will Travis be able to convince her there’s more to him than being one of TES’s most daring secret solders? Read on and find out!
Thank you, dear readers, for requesting Travis’s story. Here it is! Get cozy and enjoy.
Jennie
Seducing the
Colonel’s Daughter
For my mother, Joan Morey.
February 11, 1937–July 8, 1997.
Contents
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 1
One of the heavy wooden double doors slid shut as Raeleen Randall stepped out of the restaurant in a daze. Incredulous. Humiliated. Appalled. Mad as hell. All did a good job of summing up how she felt right now. Strangely missing from that mix was...hurt. Grappling with why had her in a tailspin. Why wasn’t her heart breaking into pieces? Numbly, she started toward her rental car, vaguely aware of the scattering of clouds gathering amidst a mid-
September Caribbean day.
Dietrich Artz was married. Deet. The man she’d been traveling to Anguilla to see every month for the past year had seemed perfect for her. Never crowding her. Never bossing her around. He didn’t remind her of her father. He was a nice guy. Accommodating...or so she’d thought. Oh, he’d been accommodating, all right—to meet his own selfish needs. The man she’d thought might work out enough to actually marry was...already married.
Why wasn’t her chest constricting with the emotional wreckage of pain that surely ought to accompany such a betrayal? Was it her busy schedule? As the host of a popular Dining Network show, she was very busy. The long-distance relationship suited her hectic life. Or had it? Deet had been undemanding, a quality that had drawn her to him and kept her coming back. Had her preoccupation with Pop’s Place dulled the intensity of her emotional investment? After finding out he was married, she wasn’t going to miss him. Was that because he’d lied to her, or was it just that she didn’t feel enough for him to care?
Seeing that she’d passed her car and was almost to the end of the empty parking lot now, Raeleen stopped and turned around, a slight breeze ruffling her shoulder-length blond hair. The restaurant was closed, but Deet was going to make her breakfast before her flight home. Instead, she’d met his wife.
Where had she gone wrong? When had she lost sight of her needs? When had her needs taken a backseat to her fun, fast-paced career with Pop’s Place? And above all, why did she think she had to settle for undemanding? Her show was demanding. Why shouldn’t her needs from a man be equally demanding?
She could argue that maintaining a long-distance relationship with someone who lived on an island was demanding enough, but it was his distance that she’d liked. And that’s what bothered her. Was she afraid of commitment? Her? Dining Network star. Cheeseburger addict. Daughter of the almighty Colonel Roth. It baffled her to consider the possibility.
Walking between her car and the minivan parked one space over, she dug into her purse for the keys.
If there were any lesson to be learned here, it was that things had to change. She had to change. No more men until she knew what she wanted. Really knew. Because clearly she didn’t.
Where were those blasted keys!
Digging harder, she finally pulled them from her purse, just as the side door of the minivan slid open. Who would be at Artz Eatery on a day that it was closed?
Too distracted to ponder that for long, she fumbled for the key fob and pressed the button to unlock the door. Just as she did that, a man appeared next to her. The person who’d just gotten out of the minivan. He was average in height, with light brown hair and brown eyes that seemed full of crazed energy.
Alarm made her pay more attention. Was he a fan?
Just when she was going to ask him what he wanted, he lifted his hand and stabbed her arm with a needle. A needle?
Raeleen screamed and dropped her purse as she twisted away. He let go of the needle and reached for her. She threw the keys at his face and yanked the half-empty needle out of her arm. Staring down at it, her vision blurred and she began to feel woozy.
Oh, my God! What had he injected into her, and why?
Horrified, she threw the needle over the top of the rental car. Catching her off guard, the man grabbed her other arm and roughly pivoted her, bringing her back against him. He wrapped his arms around her then, trapping her as he forced her toward the open door of the minivan. Screaming her fear, weaker this time—like in a bad dream—she fought him, dug her feet in resistance and tried to wiggle free of his arms, but whatever drug he’d given her made her too sluggish. Everything her father had taught her was useless now. Releasing her arms, he pushed her hard. She tripped over the edge of the open doorframe, falling into the minivan. As she tried to regain her balance, he lifted her by the waist and propelled her all the way inside. She fell onto the backseat. Kicking her legs, she was only able to graze him a couple of times before he slid the door shut.
She propped herself up, her head spinning madly. Fighting all-out panic, she saw the man come around to the driver’s side and get in. What the hell was going on? Who was he, and why was he kidnapping her? Was he a rapist? An unstable fan? More frightened than ever, she fought to sit up. Her arms felt like Jell-O. What had he given her? Was she dying?
The minivan began to move. Raeleen thought she’d lose consciousness but didn’t. The man probably had intended for that to happen. Luckily, she’d stopped him from administering the entire dose. She didn’t know how much time had passed before the minivan stopped, but she didn’t think it was long. Anguilla wasn’t a big island. Maybe it had been long enough. The drug’s intensity didn’t seem quite as strong.
The door slid open.
Raeleen let the man pull her to a sitting position and then wrap his arm around her waist to help her outside.
“Who are you?” she asked.
When he didn’t reply, she wondered if he hadn’t understood her. She thought she’d spoken clearly but couldn’t be sure. He leaned her against the minivan to close the door. She moved toward the rear, hip and hands on the vehicle to keep herself upright. The drug still lingered.
He took hold of her arm and steered her forward.
“Why are you doing this?”
He remained focused on the direction in which he guided her.
She took in her topsy-turvy surroundings. There was a house and a lighthouse, the sea whitecapping beyond. There were no other buildings visible from here. She looked toward the angry sea again and recalled the weather forecast. A hurricane was headed this way. She was supposed to be off the island before it hit.
“Why are you doing this?” she repeated more urgently, her head clearing a little more.
“Nothing will happen to you if your lover does what we ask.”
“Deet?” What did Dietrich have to do with this?
She had to get away.
Yanking free of his grasp, she did her best to pivot and run. The ground bounced wildly. She stumbled and fell, landing hard on her knees and forearms.
“Ouch!” Rolling onto her back, she slapped his reaching hands.
He grabbed her and hauled her to her feet. She drove her knee into his stomach.
Grunting, he took hold of both her wrists. She kicked his leg. Kicked again, and that time he dodged her. Finally, he whirled her around and wrenched both hands up behind her back until her arms hurt.
“Hey!” she yelled indignantly, wiggling her shoulders and trying to loosen the strain.
Ignoring her, he forced her toward the lighthouse, shoving her when she resisted.
“What are you doing?” She wished her head wasn’t so fuzzy.
Another shove hurt her arms.
“Watch it!” she yelled.
“Keep moving.”
She had to make him listen to her. “Whatever you’re planning to do, you’re going to regret it. My father will send men for me. If you hurt me at all, they’ll track you down and kill you.” She slurred a little, but at least she could talk now. The effect of the drug might be wearing off. He hadn’t been able to give her the full dose. Maybe that would work in her favor.
When that didn’t elicit a response from him, she persisted. “You don’t know my father. He’s a colonel. And not just any colonel. He runs a secret military operation.” She twisted her neck to see him. “No one knows it exists, but it’s very powerful. My father is a very powerful man. You’re in a lot of trouble if you don’t listen to me.”
He looked straight ahead and didn’t acknowledge her.
“The men he hires are special-forces types. SEAL. Delta. CIA. Some of them are even ex-mercenaries.”
Now his gaze lowered to meet hers.
“Yeah. That’s right. Mercenaries. I’d think twice about whatever you’re planning to do. Let me go now and I’ll make sure nothing happens to you.”
“Shut up.” Shoving her toward the door of the lighthouse, he made her trip and sent pain shooting through her still-bound arms as she righted herself.
Panic welled up in her. He didn’t believe her. Who would? Sometimes even she thought her father was a figment of her imagination.
Holding both her wrists with one of his hands, he opened the lighthouse door.
“My cameraman is expecting me at the airport.” She tried to tug her wrists from his hand. “What do you think he’s going to do when I don’t show up?” When she’d hired him she’d given him explicit instructions if anything happened to her. “He’s going to call my father. And then my father is going to call someone very dangerous. Someone with the resources to come get me...and take care of you.”
“I said shut up!”
He forced her through the door and up the first flight of winding stairs. If it weren’t for the pain in her arms, she’d fight harder.
“Let me go and we can forget about this. I’ll tell my father that I’m okay.” While she detested Tactical Executive Services for stealing him from her, she never disputed that what he did stood for a good cause. And TES was very powerful. Best if this man understood he’d be better off if one of its secret men weren’t unleashed.
She tripped on the stairs and he held her upright. “If you don’t believe me, do an internet search on the name Cullen McQueen.” He’d read about Cullen rescuing Sabine, now his wife, and nothing more, but it would be enough. “That’s who’s going to send men here after my father hears that I’m missing.” She was probably revealing too much, but she was really scared. She had to make him understand what he was in for if he continued down whatever path he’d laid for himself.
“If you don’t shut up now, I’ll kill you.”
And then there’d be no point in sending anyone to rescue her, would there? “You’re a dead man, either way.” Her father would definitely have him killed if he murdered her. There would be nowhere he could hide.
They reached another door, this one open.
“I’m a dead man if I don’t do this.”
Releasing her wrists, he pushed her hard. She stumbled through the doorway and fell, sprawling onto the wood floor as she heard the door close behind her.
Raeleen scrambled to her feet and went to the door, gripping the handle. Locked from the outside.
“You better listen to me, you stinking pig! My father will hunt you down like the hog you are and kill you! You think I’m making this up? You wait and see!”
All she heard were his fading footsteps as he descended the stairs.
“Let me go!” she screamed.
Only silence followed.
* * *
Travis Todd stepped out of the jet near Roaring Creek, Colorado. Cullen McQueen had called and asked to meet there. The short notice and Cullen’s urgency told him this would be a special mission. He’d worked for Cullen ever since the agency’s inception. He was accustomed to calls like that, the ones that had him dropping what he was doing and flying to this private airstrip. The woman he was going to take out to lunch hadn’t been all that happy when he’d called to cancel. He wouldn’t be surprised if she told him she was no longer interested after he finished this assignment, whatever it was.
All he knew was some woman had disappeared in Anguilla and he had to find her. It wouldn’t be the first time he’d been asked to extract someone. That was the reason Cullen had called him. He was experienced and more than ready for action.
Seeing Cullen get out of a big, black SUV with dark tinted windows, Travis walked over to him and shook his hand. “Got yourself a new SUV, huh?”
“Yeah, my daughter is getting popular in town. I need the room to cart all the kids around.”
Picturing a man like Cullen carting kids to birthday parties was as amusing as it was awe-inspiring. If he could do it, so could Travis. The right woman hadn’t come along yet, that’s all.
“How is Sabine?” he asked.
Cullen’s daring rescue of his wife from Afghanistan was legendary among TES operatives.
“Good. Bookstore is staying afloat, and she’s talking about having another kid.”
“You’re a lucky man.” The women Travis encountered either shied away from his towering frame or needed more time from him. He was a big man like Cullen, but Cullen had the advantage of working right here in Roaring Creek, across the street from his wife’s bookstore. Travis couldn’t see himself staying so stationary all the time. He needed a woman who felt the same. Someone strong and independent, but no one he met on assignment. A mission had to be just that. A mission. Nothing drove that home for him more than his last one.