Mika finished and spun me around. I looked a little more like myself, except fancier. I met his eyes and smiled. He’d done far more for me today than just managing a few split ends. “Thank you so much.”
“You’re so very welcome. Don’t be such a stranger next time.” He flipped the ends of my hair forward, drawing my attention back to my own image. My dark hair fell in waves past my shoulders and before I’d left the house, I’d swiped a bit of mascara so I had lashes to frame my blue eyes, and gloss for a hint of pink across my lips. It hadn’t been much, but enough of an improvement that I looked less like a hired assassin cum relic hunter.
I pushed up out of the chair and grabbed my purse, but when I looked up to follow Mika he was frozen in place.
And not because I’d stunned him into silence with my good looks. The entire salon was frozen in time, one of Metatron’s fun tricks that he used when he showed up.
With a flair worthy of the high-priced salon, the archangel strode through the front doors, looking elegant and striking in his black suit, blond hair perfectly in place, and impeccably groomed. He grinned and held out both hands to me like we were fast friends. “Good morning, darling. This look becomes you.”
I arched an eyebrow and took a step back, dodging his grip. “Metatron. I’ve been expecting you.”
He looked me up and down but I did not fidget beneath his scrutiny. “You appear prepared for the next level of your journey.”
That wasn’t exactly true. For the last three weeks I’d sat on my couch, staring at my blank TV trying to decide if I should watch the recording he’d given me. One I’d watched a single time, coming away overwhelmed and distraught at the imagery that had catalogued my mother’s gruesome death at the hands of my new enemy, Harrold, a man taught and trained by the Angel of Death himself. The problem wasn’t watching the horrific act, it was the lies Harrold had fed me right before Metatron had agreed to give me the recording, and there was just enough of a hint of truth in them that I was deeply troubled by how much I could trust Metatron. I rarely put my trust in anyone, but I’d eagerly—and blindly—swallowed up every detail Metatron had given, wanting—needing—the information about my Mom and what had happened to her after she’d made me flee to safety that dark, awful night so many years ago.
I knew better than to let fear keep me from the truth… but knowing it and doing something about it was keeping me paralyzed. Considering that the archangel was an integral part of my success as well as a huge source of information, even a hint of distrust in him compromised my mission.
For now though, I needed to pretend so that he would give me the intel I needed to keep this going and moving forward. I swallowed and nodded, gripping my purse tightly. “We’re ready. Ralph says we have to find the sword, and you say we have to go to Greece. Tell me what to do.”
Two
With the world restarted and my mission tucked under my arm like my purse, I headed out the salon to find Clay—the thief, and travel with him to London to see Ralph—the scholar. I turned the corner at 56th and halted.
Two storefronts down, Clay was already at our meeting place, but he had one hand pressed into the stone wall above the head of a too-young-for-him blonde. She had her red fingernails curled into the front of his tight T-shirt and I huffed. Then I made myself take a deep breath. What did I care if he was dating a college co-ed, as long as he could stay focused on the upcoming task?
I leaned my shoulder into the wall and waited, hoping he’d finish up and send her on her way. While the afternoon sun heated the top of my head, I watched him, troubled that I had any sort of reaction to the way his lips moved while he talked to her. For a thief, he was well-built, with a trim physique that probably suited him well as he descended ropes and climbed through windows. He still hadn’t bothered to get a haircut, so now his light curls edged over the tops of his ears, and flared out at his nape. Today, his navy T-shirt stopped just above the curve of his bicep, which he’d matched with a pair of dark washed jeans that nicely accented the curve of his ass—if I cared, which I didn’t.
He kissed the blonde slowly and leisurely, then turned her and squeezed her butt as she walked to the waiting cab. When he glanced up at me, the cocky grin was enough to yank me away from any attraction I felt for him—which I didn’t.
“Hey,” he said, opening the door to the small deli where we’d agreed to meet.
“Hi yourself.”
“Oh good, I was hoping you’d be your normal friendly self.”
I ignored his barb and smiled at the hostess, holding up two fingers. “Two please.”
She led us to a table in the far corner and I rearranged the chairs, sitting with my back to the wall and facing both exits.
He shook his head and plopped into the chair opposite me, lanky and relaxed. “Doesn’t that get old, thinking someone is always after you?”
“No. And after the attempt on your life in London, I’d think maybe you’d start. Have you eaten?” I lifted my menu, hiding the burn in my cheeks that was seriously frustrating me. He’d been so cute and jovial with that girl, but he poked and prodded me incessantly, always trying to aggravate me. He was like a sliver I couldn’t dig out from under my skin. I shouldn’t care, but I did. I liked being around him too much for my own good, especially since this entire mission surrounded my barely-dead fiancé’s soul.
“Hey.” He put his index finger on the top of my menu and pulled it down. I tried to push it back up, but he held it. “You look pretty today.”
I glanced up, then back down at the day’s specials. “Thanks.”
He took the menu away and tucked it beneath his folded arms on the table. “What’s eating you?”
I cleared my throat and looked at him. “Metatron just came to see me.”
He frowned. “Damn. I wanted to be there again.” His gaze skimmed my lips and the soft curls in my hair. “You really do look pretty. But something else is bothering you, what’s up?”
I shook my head. No way was I going to even hint that I cared about the kiss he’d shared with that girl. “Nothing. Let’s eat and then we need to head out to Ralph’s.” I glanced around the mostly deserted deli, still wary about being overheard, though we had a lot to discuss. I credited that loose end for my unease. “I’ll fill you in on the plane.”
He narrowed his eyes. “You sure that’s all that’s bugging you?”
Luckily, the waitress showed up and I concealed the hint of heat warming up my face with a long drink of water and ordered my meal. Clay and I had been through a fair share of crazy over the last few months, including attempts on both our lives, and I was sure it was that shared experience that was affecting me, not any sort of attraction. But either way, I needed to get that under control and focus on our upcoming mission. Metatron had promised it would be much more difficult than the last and I had to be at my best.
Clay handed the waitress our menus, then turned to me and winked. “If I’m good will you let me get a piece of pie for the road?”
I rolled my eyes, relieved to be back on joking terms—at least for the moment. I agreed, because there was no chance he could behave himself for an entire meal.
Three
We ate quickly, eager to get started. Outside the deli, he pointed toward a beefed-up silver Hummer. “I’m parked over here.”
“Great. My bags are already at the jet.” I’d sent them with Malcolm when he’d left this morning for another mission, knowing they’d be safe and ready instead of having to drag them around.
He held my door for me and I climbed into the beast. “Nice ride.” The interior was dark grey and spotless. Clay was so flippant and carefree, the rough manliness of the vehicle caught me off guard. He climbed in and I inhaled the leather and his tropical air freshener, then relaxed into the seat, finally focused on the multiple tasks in front of us.
He pulled into traffic and I launched into our most pressing issue—the double-cross and deception from his buyer. “Who is this guy, anyway?”
Clay checked his rearview mirror and changed lanes, speeding past the slower traffic on the right. “I’ve never met him. That’s how I work with all my clients. He sent me a secure message through my system about five years back and I’ve stolen a dozen pieces for him.”
“Like what?” I pulled a notepad from my purse and clicked my pen. There was a connection in the details, I just had to find it and use the clues to track us back to the man who’d hired the hit.
He shrugged and turned on the radio, keeping the pop station low in the background. The bass thrummed through the floorboards, trembling through my feet. “Relics, mostly. The first one was an alabaster jar, then a trio of medallions, a single painting—tiny though—I palmed it and walked out without a single person blinking.”
I shook my head. Seriously, his cockiness new no bounds. He was good though, I couldn’t deny it. And I’d stuffed our last piece in my bra, so I couldn’t exactly chide him for being discreet. The only thing that ever mattered was completing the mission and staying alive.
“What else?”
“More of the same. You don’t really think you’re going to be able to find him through those are you? He had me fence half of them and he had private buyers for the rest.”
“How sure are you of that? Maybe he just told you that and used some of these pieces to misdirect you.” I grunted. “He obviously has no problem lying to you.”
We’d nearly been killed on Clay’s last mission. He’d called me in to help him and we’d been attacked in the middle of boosting what was supposed to be a fifteen million dollar painting.
“Yeah, but that’s why I think you’re wasting time on this. If he’d have wanted me dead, I wouldn’t be sitting here now.”
“You’re a fool to dismiss the hit.”
He glanced over at me, a wide sure grin showing his teeth. “I’m not you, babe. I don’t live and die at the end of a gun. If he kills me, who’s going to get him his next bauble?”
“There are plenty of thieves out there.” I closed my notebook and leaned back in the seat. “I realize you think you’re the best, but there are more than a few people who are nearly as good as you.” I turned toward the window. “And probably half the pain.”
“I heard that.” He turned up the radio and we moved through traffic to the turnoff to the airport, passing the public entry for the private one that I always flew out of. For a guy who’d been rattled by my unlimited access to lear jets, he’d come around fast.
Security waved us through and he parked along the tall chain link fence reserved for the few vehicles that stayed on the property. Most of the fliers out of here used private cars and I could have done that today, but he’d wanted to drive. Maybe he was more worried than he wanted to let on and was worried about someone tampering with his car. No chance of that happening in here with the level of security surrounding this airstrip and the guests using it.
We got out and walked to the jet, door open on the tarmac and waiting for us. Inside, I bugged him about it again. “Before we do anything, we need to eliminate that threat.”
Clay made a face. “I’m sure he was just sending a message.”
I blinked. Hits were the world I came from, people didn’t hire assassins as messages, they did it to take care of a problem. In all my years in the business, I’d never heard of someone going to all the trouble of hiring a kill just to pull it at the last minute in favor for a glancing blow.
Clay’d been lucky to survive the hit on him, and wouldn’t have if I hadn’t been there to save him by killing the shooter before he could finish the job. I had a hard time believing that was the end of it.
“Humor me. Tell me about every interaction you’ve had with this buyer so I can figure out who this is and identify the real threat. I think this is bigger than you screwing up the heist. Has there ever been anything out of the ordinary on any of your deals?”
He reclined the leather seat and propped his hands behind his head. “You mean other than the time that guy pulled a gun and shot me?”
I took the seat next to him. “Was there anything else about that heist that stood out?”
He was silent long enough that I thought he’d fallen asleep on me, then one eyelid popped open, blue eye staring intently at me. “He called me.”
I leaned closer. “Okay. That’s something. Do you remember anything about the call? Had he ever done that before?”
He sat up and shook his head, then ran a hand through his blond curls. “No. Like I said, we always dealt through the secure site. I didn’t even know how he got my number.”
“And you seriously didn’t see anything wrong with that?” An anomaly like that would have sent up no less than a dozen red flags for me. But Clay had already proved that I was a lot more suspicious and cautious than he’d ever be. Where I saw nothing but issues and problems, Clay only saw opportunities and challenges. In this, as in everything else, we were day and night.
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Clay
And said unto them, What will you give me, and I will deliver him unto you? And they covenanted with him for thirty pieces of silver. — Matthew 26:15
Easiest fence this month. Clay Wellers clicked the briefcase closed and nodded curtly to the jeweler, Mr. Gordon Schmaltz. They’d traded millions in jewels and cash together over the years, but Clay still didn’t like him. Schmaltz was a crotchety old bastard, but the heavy weight of the cash made up for it. So Clay kept coming back.
Outside, the frigid Manhattan winter air slapped Clay’s face. He tugged his collar up around his jaw and tightened his hold on the handle of the briefcase. He had to admit to himself that his heart was heavy. This was par for the course for him at this time of year. It couldn’t be helped. No matter how much cash he had, no matter how much he enjoyed what he did, the pain inside couldn’t be rectified. In less than a week, the anniversary of his little brother’s death promised to mar Christmas Eve.
Clay hailed a taxi and took it to Fifth, near Museum Mile. He paid the driver and walked straight into the lobby of the best assisted-living care facility the city had to offer. It was where his mother had called home for the past three years when he had to move her out the home she’d lived in for over fifty years. He’d thought moving her from upstate into the city to be closer to him would help facilitate more visits on his end, but he was ashamed to admit that he knew it wasn’t enough. She deserved more.
The head nurse smiled up at him as he passed the nursing station and he smiled widely at her, making her blush. “She had a good day today. She’ll be happy to see you,” she said.
Clay nodded. “Hope so, Susie. Hope so. I brought her a little present.” He held up a small box that the jeweler had wrapped for him. In it contained a pearl-and-diamond necklace that he knew was far from practical for his mom, but he wanted her to have it anyway. Alzheimer’s or not, he believed his mom still deserved the finest that money could buy. He paused at the door, not expecting much.
She smiled politely. “Hello there.”
“Hi, Mom.” He moved cautiously toward the edge of the bed.
“Oh!” Her eyes widened and she reached out both hands for him. “Oh, Clay. Come here, darling.”
He set the briefcase down and leaned in, kissing her cheek. “You look great, Mom.” He loved it when she remembered who he was. Just that moment would be the best gift he could receive for Christmas.
“Thank you, sweetie. How are you?”
“I’m good. I’ve been busy with work.”
She nodded. “What do you do?”
They went through this every time and she always had the same response. “I’m a thief, Mom. I get paid a lot of money by crazy wealthy people to steal expensive artifacts, jewels, artwork … you name it. I’m their man.”
“You are so funny
,” she said. “Did you graduate from high school yet? Where do you go to school?”
He patted her knee. “I graduated fifteen years ago.”
“Hmmm. Now, what do you do…”
And, that’s how it went. It was like a never-ending cycle reminiscent of the movie Groundhog Day, but Clay knew she enjoyed the company, so he would repeat himself as much as need be. He handed her the gift. “This is for you, Mom. Merry Christmas.”
She looked at him with wide eyes. “Oh, it’s Christmas. Where’s your dad? Where’s Jeremy?” she asked, referring to Clay’s brother.
He swallowed hard and took her hands, not able to remind her of the grim truth—that his father and brother had been dead and buried for many years. His hands shook slightly as he started to unwrap the gift and opened the box.
“This is for you.” He held up the necklace and she smiled.
“That’s so nice, Jeremy. Thank you.”
He nodded and stood, giving her a kiss on the cheek. “I love you, Mom.”
She looked up and smiled at him. “I love you, too.”
Clay knew he’d fudged Christmas by a week to his mom, but the thing about Alzheimer’s was that she’d never remember. Just like she couldn’t remember he was a professional thief, or that his brother and father were dead. If Clay agreed to the newest heist offer that had arrived in his email this morning, he’d likely be in the UK over the holidays.
Thing was, Clay knew he’d need help with this one, and he always worked alone—until recently.
As he left his mom and walked outside of the building, snowflakes swirled across the sidewalk where he hailed a cab. Clay slid into the backseat just as his phone buzzed. Pulling it out, he recognized Lina’s number and read her text.
Hoping for new details. Going to L to see R.
Interesting. He’d just been thinking about her.
Clay and Lina had first crossed paths during a heist when they’d been after the same religious relic—for completely different reasons. Clay had been after a large payday, but she’d wanted the relic known as Solomon’s ring—which was a ring with a unique stone in it—to open one of the back gates to Hell (apparently there are a few entrances into the devil’s den) and retrieve her fiancé’s soul in order to ascend him to where he was supposed to be living out a blissful eternity.
The Archangel Agenda (Evangeline Heart Book 1) Page 15