Known Threat

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by Kara A. McLeod




  Known Threat

  Special Agent Ryan O’Connor is starting to get her life back together in the aftermath of a shooting and her boss’s arrest. Despite scheduling incompatibilities preventing them from seeing one another, she and Allison are doing great; she’s preparing to return to full duty; and she’s trying to block out the voices of those who’ve been doubting she still has what it takes to do her job.

  Ryan should’ve known things were never that simple. When a ghost from her past reappears without warning, blindsiding her in a way she never could have expected, Ryan’s entire existence is badly shaken. She’d always believed that the best protection any woman could ever have—aside from a gun—was courage, but now she finds herself asking a question she never thought she’d need to answer: Who protects the Secret Service?

  Known Threat

  Brought to you by

  eBooks from Bold Strokes Books, Inc.

  http://www.boldstrokesbooks.com

  eBooks are not transferable. They cannot be sold, shared or given away as it is an infringement on the copyright of this work.

  Please respect the rights of the author and do not file share.

  Known Threat

  © 2018 By Kara A. McLeod. All Rights Reserved.

  ISBN 13:978-1-63555-133-4

  This Electronic Book is published by

  Bold Strokes Books, Inc.

  P.O. Box 249

  Valley Falls, NY 12185

  First Edition: January 2018

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  This book, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced in any form without permission.

  Credits

  Editor: Shelley Thrasher

  Production Design: Stacia Seaman

  Cover Design by Melody Pond

  By the Author

  Actual Stop

  Worthy of Trust and Confidence

  Known Threat

  Acknowledgments

  Since I was out of the country when I was supposed to be writing the acknowledgements for the last book, Worthy of Trust and Confidence, and clearly couldn’t tear myself away from what I was doing long enough to remember that I had responsibilities to attend to, please accept my sincerest apologies and consider the following as intended to include my thoughts and appreciation on that time as well.

  In the awards show currently taking place in my head as I type, I would like to award the not-so-coveted Golden Guns and accompanying bulletproof vests to the following superstars, all of whom still have not given in to what I’m sure are nearly insurmountable urges to strangle me…or at least tell me to shut the hell up:

  The Golden Gun for Best Publisher: Radclyffe—Sincerest gratitude for everything you’ve done for me over the years. If I can ever get my hands on an actual Kevlar vest without getting myself arrested, consider it yours.

  The Golden Gun for Best Editor and Nicest “What the hell are you doing?” Email: Shelley—You haven’t stabbed me with a pen or smacked me with a computer yet, and while I wouldn’t blame you for assuming a new identity to avoid future volumes, I hope you stick with me until the end. I can’t promise it’ll get better, or that you’ll want to roll your eyes at me less, but I’d appreciate it all the same.

  The Golden Gun for Best Hetero-Soul-Mate: SASD—Congratulations on you-know-what! In celebration, I’ve included even more derivatives of your favorite words! Yes, this was a good enough reason. Love you to bits!

  The Golden Gun for Best UNGA Survivor: Thing One—May this past UNGA truly have been your last. Best of luck in the next chapter of your life.

  The Golden Gun for Best Dad: Mine!—What else can I say besides “Thank you”?

  The Golden Gun for Most Gracious Alligator: Glocamorra—I apologize that you haven’t appeared in the past two books. I’ll try to squeeze you in someplace else in future tomes, I promise. Thank you once again for not eating me.

  For Riley.

  The most amazing champion, fan, and partner

  a girl could ever hope for.

  Neither words, nor drawings, nor interpretive dances

  could ever adequately express what your support truly means to me.

  Thank you from the bottom of my overflowing heart!

  Chapter One

  Bang-bang-bang-bang!

  The insistent pounding on my hotel room door was loud enough that it easily broke through the din of the hairdryer, which I turned off with a frown. A glance at my watch confirmed it was way too early for someone to be looking for me. I sighed and set the hairdryer on the bathroom counter as I moved to answer the summons.

  “Coming,” my sister Rory called and flashed me a gleeful grin as she breezed by the bathroom and reached for the door. She was already decked out in her running gear, a dark-blue United States Secret Service baseball cap on her head, her perfectly coiffed mane of blond hair tamed into a ponytail sticking out the back. It was a good thing at least one of us was a morning person. My answer to that beckoning would definitely have been less chipper.

  Rory opened the door and turned the full force of her cheerful—if not slightly bewildered—smile on the man lurking in the hallway.

  Marcus Cressap, tall and lanky with jet-black hair and big, brown eyes, blinked at my sister from behind his rimless glasses and flinched. He fidgeted a bit, fiddling with the zipper on his lightweight windbreaker, and chewed on his lower lip. He appeared wan in the unflattering light of the hotel hallway, and that was saying something, considering he was probably the palest person I’d ever met. And if I’m the one throwing that term around, you know it’s true. I’m not exactly infused with color myself.

  “Hey, Ryan,” Marcus said, almost shyly. He ducked his head and peered at Rory from underneath his thick, dark eyelashes.

  “It’s Rory, actually.” My sister stuck out a hand in greeting.

  Marcus blinked at her, obviously lost. I debated leaving him to puzzle the situation out on his own, but that might take a while, which’d prolong his presence in my doorway. Best to help him along, so I could get back to my morning routine. I did have places to be and things to do.

  I stepped out of the bathroom and into the cramped little hotel-room hallway behind my sister and watched, thoroughly amused, as Marcus’s eyes darted back and forth between the two of us. I could see him mentally connecting the dots.

  “Hey, Marcus.”

  “Ryan?”

  “Yup. I see you’ve met my sister, Rory.”

  “Uh. Yeah.” He blinked again, his eyes continuing to flicker back and forth. “I didn’t know you had a twin.”

  “I try to keep that quiet. Black sheep of the family and all that.”

  Rory’s only reply was a sharp elbow to my ribs.

  “So, what can we do for you, Marcus?”

  His cheeks flushed, and he dropped his eyes. His body language screamed that he wasn’t looking forward to answering my question.

  I barely managed to rein in my eye roll and sigh of exasperation. He didn’t need to say anything. In that moment, as I took in how uncomfortable he was, I knew why he was there. The rest of the group—an interesting conglomeration of agents out of the New York Field Office—was ready to go and wanted me to hurry the hell up. They’d sent poor Marcus because he had a huge crush on me—a fact everyone in the entire office knew about—and they were banking that I wouldn’t tear his head off when he came to rush me along. They were right about one thing at least. If any of the rest of them had been on the other side of that door, my reaction would’ve been considerably more caustic than the “Tell them I’ll be right down” I mum
bled at Marcus just now.

  Marcus nodded once and smiled, that faint blush still coloring his cheeks as he shoved his hands into his pockets and ambled away. I shut the door to my suite with deliberate gentleness and allowed my eyes free rein to express their frustration as soon as my sister and I were alone. Rory chuckled and moved back into the heart of the room to fetch her iPod. I wrinkled my nose in disgust and went back to the bathroom to pull my still-damp hair into a ponytail and brush my teeth. What a way to start a morning.

  When we finally appeared downstairs, all of the guys were standing in the parking lot next to their cars, practically vibrating with barely contained energy. It didn’t appear to be your garden-variety anxiety over being late—which we weren’t. Nor was it as simple as the desire to get on the road. No, they were up to something. The question was what?

  “Hey, guys,” I called to the group as we approached, taking in their postures and their facial expressions as I tried to divine what was going on. Some of them appeared uneasy, others secretive, still others almost smug. What the hell?

  A chorus of hellos from everyone greeted us as people immediately started breaking into smaller groups and getting into nearby vehicles. I gaped at them before latching onto Rico Corazon’s arm as he tried to scoot by me. Another quick glance at him confirmed he was one of the uneasy ones.

  “Where’s the rest of the girls’ team?” I asked him.

  “Uh…I think they left already. They said they’d see you there.”

  “They left without me?”

  “Yeah. I guess.”

  “What’s going on, Rico?” This wasn’t like him. Normally, he was one of my favorite people to bicker with, and he lunged into that activity with an enthusiasm most people usually reserved for roller coasters or the Super Bowl. Today, however, it was a colossal effort to get him to utter a word.

  As if in response to my silent accusation, Rico averted his dark eyes and dug into the pocket of his pullover sweatshirt for the keys to his Volvo. He didn’t reply.

  “Rico.” As I continued to glare at him, something struck me, and I whirled back to where the rest of the guys were mounting up to take off to confirm my suspicions.

  The guys all wore identical black running shorts underneath non-matching long-sleeved sweatshirts, windbreakers, or jackets. But what I could see of their shirts underneath their cover-ups indicated they might be wearing matching gray T-shirts as well.

  I glanced down at my own outfit of navy-blue lightweight capri pants and a short-sleeved white tee and frowned. It was chilly, sure, but I didn’t think it was that cold out. Why were the guys all dressed like it was freezing? And had there been some sort of discussion regarding a team uniform I hadn’t been privy to?

  I hopped into the front passenger seat of Rico’s car and turned the radio off, twisting myself so I was facing him head-on. Rory, who’d jumped into the backseat just behind Rico, wisely busied herself with some mysterious task on her phone.

  “Just tell me,” I said, feeling a flutter in the pit of my stomach at his facial expression.

  Rico Corazon was an old friend. We’d known each other for years and had been partners on countless undercover operations during which our agency had been attempting to take down a nightclub owner who’d been running a counterfeit-currency plant. Rico and I apparently looked good together, so we’d posed as a couple lots of times and had ended up becoming pretty good buddies. It’s hard to spend that much time pretending to like someone without it actually happening on some level.

  And Rico was a great guy. Typically, I enjoyed his sparkling wit, easy smile, and razor-sharp sense of humor. Rare were the days I’d seen Rico that he didn’t have a grin on his handsome face. The fact that today was one of those struck discordant pangs of unease deep inside me.

  My heart whizzed inside my chest like a cartoon Tasmanian Devil, and I clamped my hand down on my thigh. “Oh, my God. Is it Paige?” I wanted to know. Paige was Rico’s wife. I knew her almost as well as I knew him, and the idea of something happening to her was making me sick to my stomach. “Is she okay?”

  Something flickered in Rico’s eyes as he finally dared to look at me. Guilt? Regret? It was difficult for me to decipher.

  “Paige is fine,” he said, letting slip a small sigh and redirecting his attention back out the windshield.

  The wave of relief that crashed over me at his words quickly ebbed, replaced by a flood of annoyance and a drop of something not unlike fear. “Rico, what the hell is going on?” He refused to answer me, and I growled in frustration. “I swear to God, if you don’t tell me why everyone’s acting so weird, I’ll get out of this car and scour the side of the road for a stick to beat it out of you with.”

  Ignoring my sister’s guffaw, I folded my arms across my chest and glared at him, rigid with tension. An eternity passed before Rico finally spoke, and when he did, his words made less than no sense to me.

  “The backseat,” he said, jerking his head in indication.

  I glanced over my shoulder and then back at him. “Yup. There it is.”

  Rico rolled his eyes, and the corners of his mouth twitched. “The bag on the backseat.”

  I twisted around to look at Rory, who located the parcel he was talking about and handed it up to me. When he didn’t say anything further, I opened it and reached inside. It contained a gray tank top and a pair of black running shorts.

  “Are these for me?” I asked, unfolding the shirt to reveal the New York Field Office logo screen-printed in black letters on the left breast.

  Rico nodded, but his eyes were cloudy, and his grip on the steering wheel was tight enough to make his knuckles white. His jaw was clenched as well, if the subtle cord of muscle standing out on it was any clue.

  “Thanks,” I said. “That was really nice.”

  “Turn it around,” Rico all but hissed. I’d picked up that he was conflicted about something. This obvious anger was new.

  Slowly, I flipped the garment over and held it up so I could get the full effect of the logo on the back. I was struck dumb.

  In bold, black script painted low across the shoulder blades were the words, “Faster than a speeding…” Under the words in two spots, one about a hand’s width to the right of center and one slightly lower, were what appeared to be realistic-looking ragged, black bullet holes. I stared at the tank top for a moment longer as it suddenly occurred to me my shoulders would be bare if I donned it. The implications of that realization hit me with all the subtlety of a softball to the back of the head.

  Dumbly, I glanced at Rico for an explanation, but none appeared to be forthcoming. With a mounting sense of dread, I removed the shorts from the bag and inspected them. Sure enough, on the back right side, approximately two inches below the elastic waistband was a silver “bullet hole.”

  I heard Rory gasp as I shifted my gaze back and forth from the shorts to the shirt for a second. Then I threw my head back and laughed. Whether I was laughing because I truly found it funny or because the exact opposite was true, I wasn’t sure. But laughter seemed like a much more preferable reaction to breaking something, so I went with it.

  Confusion colored Rico’s eyes and warred with something like relief. “You’re not mad?” he asked, his voice small.

  “You thought I’d be mad?” I was still chuckling. That explained a lot. No wonder all the guys were acting odd this morning.

  “It’s a little inappropriate, don’t you think?”

  I considered that possibility. “Well, it certainly isn’t something I’d have thought to do myself.”

  Rico rushed to defend his friends. “The guys didn’t mean anything by it. It’s just, you know, everyone kind of thinks of you as a hero—”

  My snort of derision interrupted his words, and I clenched the shirt between my fists.

  “They’re all really proud of you,” Rico went on. “They thought you’d like them.”

  It made sense, in a strange sort of way. Folks in law enforcement tended to have twi
sted senses of humor and a firm belief that what didn’t kill us made us stronger and was therefore fair game for any sort of sick joke that came to mind. Which didn’t necessarily mean I was thrilled, but it did make it forgivable. Sort of.

  I took a deep breath and let out a slow sigh, keeping my eyes riveted to the outfit in my hands but not really seeing it. “You’re all wearing them, aren’t you? That’s why the sweatshirts? You didn’t want me to see.”

  Rico nodded. “We have T-shirts.”

  I mulled that over. “And why’d you all feel the need to rush me out this morning and sideswipe me with this while we were in the car on the way to the race? Couldn’t you have brought the outfit to my room this morning or even last night?”

  Rico cleared his throat and appeared a little embarrassed. “Well, we talked about that, but the consensus was if you had the clothes beforehand, you wouldn’t put them on.”

  “And you all figured I’d be more inclined to wear them if you surprised me with them the day of.”

  Rico shrugged. “It seemed logical while we were discussing it.”

  “You were all drunk, weren’t you?”

  “No! Well, maybe a little.” Rico inhaled deeply and then took a moment to really look at me as we waited for the cars to pass, so we could make the turn into the training center. “Are you sure it’s okay?”

  Was it? Really? No. I’d much rather have tossed the clothes out the window as we cruised down the Baltimore-Washington Parkway than put them on. But the rest of my team was under the impression they’d done something thoughtful, and they were all wearing them, so they’d be seen regardless of what I chose to do. It’d probably be petulant of me to refuse. Check and mate.

 

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