by Beth Rhodes
Table of Contents
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Epilogue
Book Four releases in September!!
Strike Zone
A Hawk Elite Security Novel
Beth Rhodes
Copyright © 2017 Beth Rhodes
All rights reserved.
All rights reserved. This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the author except for the use of brief quotations in critical articles or reviews.
This is a work of fiction. Names, places, businesses, characters and incidents are either the product of the author's imagination or are used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, actual events or locales is purely coincidental.
This book is dedicated to all you crazy, celibate people. I know you’re out there. I know the struggle to remain so in the face of love, passion, and all that good stuff is real.
Contents
Acknowledgments
Brussels
Qatar
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Epilogue
The End
About the Author
Other books by Beth Rhodes
Book Four releases in September!!
Acknowledgments
This is the last book in this series that I can claim was written ‘a long time ago’ and the proof is in the pudding! Edits, rewrites, critiques…it took a village to make this book happen. So I send a thank you out, first, to my writing group at Passionate Critters. You all make this journey worth taking! Your support and encouragement mean the world to me. My writing partners in crime, Cindy Skaggs and Jennie Marts, who help me toe the line and get stuff done.
To all the editors: especially Jessa Slade at Red Circle Ink. You’ve become an invaluable asset to my writing process. You don’t just comment carelessly, but you a teach me how to see the story differently and make it better. Arran McNicol at Editing 720 has an amazing eye for detail and polish this manuscript—almost to perfection. *All mistakes are my own!
As with all my books, thanks go out to Elaina Lee at For the Muse Design for the cover. Your work is amazing! Marissa Dobson, you are a treasure I didn’t know I needed. May I never format a manuscript ever again and live a long happy life! *grin*
Last, but not least, I must acknowledge my husband, family, and God. Matt loves me and all my great ideas! He knows when I need to get out and get work done. He understands what it means to put this book together better than any other “normal” person. He’s adjusted his life to my needs and helps wrangle the kids when the deadline approaches. He’s a morale booster, my moral support, and my biggest fan—even though he hasn’t read a single book I wrote.
Thank God for Matt. And thank God for all the good ideas.
Brussels
When the security conference in Belgium ended, Emily Rogers couldn’t wait to get out of her heeled boots. She was a sharpshooter, damn it, not some stupid-ass public relations puppet. But her boss had insisted that her being there would be good for the agency.
Fine. She would bat her eyelashes and make nice with the other agencies convening.
And then she would return to her real world, one that included guns and assignments. The sight of her only friend coming toward her reminded her she wasn’t being completely honest, and she smiled. College hadn’t been great for Emily except for one thing.
Sandra French. She’d clung to the friendship, insisting Emily had what it took to be her best friend—forever. So, after avoiding the dark-haired crazy for three months, Emily had been caught in the science lab with Sandra during a tornado. After-hours terror.
The flighty BFF type had shown she was made of sterner stuff. She’d taken charge and saved their lives when Emily had been paralyzed by the terror of those loud winds, the train wreck screaming toward them.
“There you are!” Sandra rushed forward, her hands loaded down with shopping bags. “You missed the best time this afternoon. Tim and I went to that little antique shop across town, and guess what I found?”
“A teapot?”
Sandra hugged her and looped her arm through Emily’s as they continued toward the hotel. “Yes,” she sang, and lifted her bag. “And two cups and a saucer. Shopkeeper said one of the saucers broke. I snatched up the set anyway.”
“Well, I’m glad you had fun, but I am ready for dinner and bed.”
“Oh, no. You can’t. Tim and I want to take you out. You’ve been working so hard.” Sandra pouted a little. “Please. Our last night in Belgium and then we have to go back to the consulate in Paris. And who knows when we will see you again.”
Emily rolled her eyes. “Fine, but I have to get to bed early. My flight is at five a.m.”
There wouldn’t have been a better chance to meet, not with Emily’s schedule like it was, busy and treacherous. Lately it seemed like there was always a conflict, always someone to rescue or someone to stop.
She never questioned her orders…
She knew if that ever happened it would be time to retire.
Questioning orders put lives at stake, including her own.
“Hey.” Sandra gently shook her arm, smiling up into her face. “I’ll meet you in the lobby in twenty minutes, okay?”
Emily nodded. “Sounds good.”
“Don’t lie down,” her friend insisted with a laugh.
“I won’t. Promise.” Emily walked backward and, with a small wave, turned to her hallway on the north side of the building while Sandra headed south to meet Tim. Emily stifled a yawn as she pulled her key card from her pocket and pressed the button to the second floor.
Two doors down, in a room that overlooked the pool, Emily finally kicked off her shoes, muttering to herself about ridiculous impressions. She’d made impressions, all right. On every male body at the conference who’d had to looked her up and down, as if she were part of the hors d'oeuvres.
“Prick minister of security from Bangla-Douche,” she said as she dropped her purse to the table inside the door. After stripping down to her panties, she put on her jeans and the black blouse. She’d never been the girly type, like Sandra. She had her favorites and her
staples, and everything was usually black or neutral. In the mirror, she scowled. “You could try a little for your best friend, Emily.”
She opened her compact jewelry box and pulled out a long strand of black pearls as well as the studs for her ears. Turning her hair up into a French twist to show off the earrings and her neck, she checked the mirror again. She knew how to look good, which was usually enough for her, but perhaps tonight, she could actually apply that knowledge to her face. “There. That’s better.”
Her cell rang on the table by the door, and she went to pick it up, grabbing her flats first.
A tremor slowed her, and she frowned. “What the hell?”
An explosion rocked the building, shook the walls, and dropped her to her knees. A second later, the lights shut down and silence filled her room…except for the ring of her phone before her voicemail picked up and the phone went silent.
Even the incessant hum of the heaters was quiet.
She slipped her shoes on, got up, and opened her door to a glowing dark, the only light coming through the window at the end of the hallway. Curiosity had people coming into the halls and making their way to the lobby. Down two flights of stairs, her heart pounded as the bad feeling in her gut tightened and stuck. The sound of screaming echoed through the stairwell, floating up from the open door at the bottom of the stairs.
She tripped as she hit the landing and then pushed her way out and toward the south wing.
Security had the corridor blocked off. Someone grabbed her arm, stopping her, and anger burst through her. She tugged free, slamming a fist into someone’s face. “Damn it, lady—” She hurried away.
But the lobby was quickly filling with smoke and dust…
And injured people. She struggled around them, working to get by, to get to Sandra.
“Help me, please.” Someone grabbed her shirt as she walked by. Looking down, Emily saw a young Asian woman with blood running down her face. She hesitated, hated herself for it, then stopped. First responders came through the front entrance, masked and carrying big black bags.
She guided the woman who had stumbled into her. Emily was forced to put an arm around the woman’s shoulders. “Help,” she called out as the woman collapsed against her.
The smoke was so thick now, it burned the back of her throat and made her eyes water.
“Over here,” she said, urging the woman to stay strong and keep going until finally a man in a large fireman’s trench took over, calling out orders and directing people to the doors.
As soon as she was free of the woman, she turned to go back, her thoughts still on Sandra…and Tim.
She waved the smoke from her face and lifted her shirt to her mouth and nose.
This time, she kept going, going, going…into the hall.
The depths of ground zero.
Where the walls crumpled. The floors above and the ceiling were gone, and the late afternoon sun cut through the dark, billowing smoke. Here, the sounds of traffic and helicopters covered the moans of the dying.
“Sandra!” she called out when she’d gone about the distance she thought it would be to her friend’s room on the first floor. “Tim.”
Firemen and military swarmed the area, pushing people out of the destroyed part of the hotel.
“Fräulein. Komm her.”
Someone called to her, but she couldn’t stop, not until she found Sandra. A hand on her shoulder jerked her back, and a split second later, a wall fell in front of her. Dust billowed, cutting off her air, and she breathed into the crook of her elbow. “Sandra!”
But her way was blocked. “Tim!”
Strong, thick arms encircled her, lifting her from the floor, and she kicked back. “Stop. Please, let me go. I have to—”
“Nein,” the man growled.
When her feet met the ground next, she was outside. She inhaled fresh air—fresher air—and coughed debris from her lungs. Her eyes watered, tears coming down her face, as reality settled in. So many people dead.
How could there be survivors? The south wing of the hotel was a devastated heap of rubble, a hole at least ten feet deep. She blinked…and another explosion rocked the ground beneath her. The man who’d pulled her from the hotel grabbed her and lunged behind a taxi ten feet away.
The wind was knocked from her lungs, and shrapnel fell to the ground around them, beating against her nameless rescuer, whose lifeless body pressed her to the cement.
Panic set in and she hoisted him up and rolled him off her. She ripped the helmet off his face. “Sir!” Blood pooled beneath him. A piece of glass—a shard, a fucking twelve-inch blade of glass—jutted from his back. “Help,” she called out as another ambulance stopped mere feet from her. She lifted the guy by his jacket and dragged him.
He’d saved her life.
A stranger.
“Emily.” At the sound of her boss, she almost lost it.
“Richard, help me.”
Richard came at her through the dust and smoke. “Thank God you’re all right.”
“Help me,” she begged as she pulled on the deadweight.
Richard took one arm, hooked his hand under a armpit, and helped bring the man the rest of the way to the ambulance. Injured people were everywhere, pouring from the building, coming off the street.
“They’ve set up a first-aid tent. This way.” Another voice. Another stranger. People blindly following, trusting. Emily stopped to look around. Foreign country. Different standards. Could she trust? Did she have a choice?
The medic in front of her waved a hand in her face. “Are you okay?” He spoke in German, as one of his people took her rescuer and loaded him onto a gurney. She couldn’t take her eyes from the man who had saved her.
She turned to her boss. “He saved my life, Richard.”
He put an arm around her shoulder. “Can you come with me? Are you hurt?”
She shook her head. “I can’t leave.”
Her boss frowned. “Why not?”
“I have to find Sandra.”
“Your doctor friend?”
Emily nodded, watching each face that came by. “She came here to see me. She’s a pediatrician. She’s going to be married in two months. I can’t make the wedding, so she came to see me. We’re going to dinner now. I need to find her.”
Richard sent his concerned gaze to the first responder.
Emily knew that look. She’d seen that look before in her work.
“You should get checked out, miss.”
“I can’t leave until I know.”
“Come with me, Emily,” Richard said. “You’ll be safe. We’ll find out together.”
She looked at him. He was right. Even staying here, she wouldn’t be able to watch everything going on, keep track of every person coming and going.
“Come on, honey,” he said in that fatherly tone. “It’s going to be hours before they get through this mess. The list of survivors…” He stopped. “Let’s go wait for news.”
Maybe Sandra made it out. She’d been ready to go. Hardly needed to stop in her room at all. She could have been there and back out front waiting for Emily within minutes.
With a nod, she followed Richard away from the crowds and stepped into the back of a black sedan. Richard talked on his phone the entire time. Press releases. Intelligence gathering. But the main question still to be answered: who would claim this act of terrorism?
Who was the most pissed off this time?
Who had a score to settle—with Belgium? With the peace talks going on?
Emily touched the thin pouch around her neck that carried her passport and identification.
Squeezing her eyes closed, she pressed her fingers into her sockets.
Don’t think.
Richard placed a hand on her shoulder. “I’m sorry, Emily.”
“She might be alive,” she replied halfheartedly.
But her practical mind was having a hard time holding on to hope.
Three days seemed like an eternity.
&nb
sp; On the morning after, she’d snuck out of the embassy and made her way down to the hospital. She’d gone back a half-dozen times, looking and helping wherever she could. She needed to be close.
Still no sign of Sandra or Tim…
And her hero had died, and it was like all the color from her life had gone with him.
He’d given his life for her, a complete stranger.
Emily wiped the tear that trailed down her cheek. “Damn it,” she whispered.
She knew she should be grateful to be alive. Her life had been spared.
Why? The more she thought about it, the less she understood. She should be dead. That was part of her job.
Nodding to the attending doctor as she made her way into the trauma unit, she began her usual stroll between the beds. But there was no one new.
When her phone rang in her pocket, she pulled it out. Richard, looking for her again. She had a flight out in the morning. She had an assignment waiting for her at home. “Hello,” she answered.
“You watching the news?”
She shook her head then said, “No. What’s going on?”
“A small radical group out of Syria posted a message, claiming responsibility.”
Emily perked up at that. “Is there a name?” She moved out of the ward and down the hall. “I need a name, Richard.” His silence tripped her up, and she slowed. “What?”
“So you can what?”
“Have a name, damn it. I need a name, something to label the devastation that is Brussels and the mess that used to be my hotel.” She needed to make sense of the loss. “Damn it, Richard.”