UnLoved Forever (Unlucky Series, #3)

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UnLoved Forever (Unlucky Series, #3) Page 2

by Lexy Timms


  “I want to make love to you in every room in the house,” she whispered in his ear, nipping at the lobe, sending shockwaves through his system.

  “Am I going to have to play hide and seek?” He smiled against her neck, leaving a trail of tiny kisses that left her breathless.

  Dani laughed and pushed him away, palms flat against his chest. “Do you know how silly you looked with that thing pointing straight out ahead of you like a bobbing divining rod?”

  “It seeks out beautiful naked women,” he said, and grabbed her cheeks to pull her to him.

  “Does it work?”

  “So far, so good,” Luke chuckled. “Just the rooms in the house? How about the tennis court and the swimming pool and, let’s see...”

  “Oh, a real outdoorsman, are you?” Dani teased, giving him a playful squeeze. She pulled away from him and spun, dancing across the floor to the front door. “Why not? Let’s start in the front yard and...” She opened the door.

  Luke wasn’t sure who was more surprised: Dani or the Atlanta police force who had arrived en masse complete with SWAT team. Maybe it was the state police or the FBI, who were currently arguing over jurisdiction while their naked suspects chose that moment to flash them.

  “SHIT!” It might have been Luke who said it, it might have Dani. Certainly, the young policeman in the riot gear was too tongue-tied at Dani’s nakedness to have completed an entire thought. His eyes never left her...assets.

  Dani slammed the door and locked it. She turned to Luke, hands out in a ‘what the hell are we going to do’ sort of gesture.

  “Clothes!” he yelled, and they pelted up the stairs to the rooms they’d been held in for weeks.

  I am not getting stuck in this damn house again! I’m not getting stuck in this damn...

  “This is the police!” A bullhorn broke through his thoughts as he skidded through the bedroom doorway, landing half against the dresser. Thankfully it was already broken, and therefore finding clothes was a matter of merely reaching in and grabbing what was there. He found underwear, hopping on one foot frantically, trying to get it on.

  “This is the FBI!” called a new voice. “Come out with your hands in the air!”

  Luke could hear a helicopter getting closer. Great, maybe that was Benny’s men coming to get revenge. It would complete the day. He pulled on a shirt and leapt into a pair of jeans. Wait, hadn’t he seen his wallet in the master bedroom? He hadn’t seen it in weeks.

  The helicopter seemed to want to land on the roof, it was so close. He grabbed some socks and pushed them in a pocket. Holding his tennis shoes, he ran to get his wallet just as the pounding began anew on the front door.

  He nearly ran into Dani coming out of the bedroom. She had his wallet and watch. How she’d known to grab them he had no idea, but never had he wanted to kiss her more than in that moment. He noticed she’d managed to pull on a t-shirt, bra and shorts; like him, she carried her boots with her.

  She grabbed his arm. “Now what? I thought your friend fixed this!”

  “I guess he’s not much of a friend!”

  “What the hell is his problem?” Dani yelled. “He was invited to the wedding!”

  A door broke open. Luke rushed to the top of the stairs, but the front door was holding under the pressure of the pounding.

  “DADDY?”

  Edwin Rineheart stood at the end of the hallway, the light streaming in behind him. He’d broken through a door that apparently led to the roof, where Luke could hear the whine of rotors.

  “Come with me if you want to live,” he said in a bad accent. Then he laughed. “I always wanted to say that!”

  Dani looked at Luke, her eyes wide. Panicked. He shook his head no. “You can’t trust him!”

  The front door shattered open and the SWAT team broke through.

  “On the other hand—” Luke grabbed Dani’s hand and bolted after the retreating back of the man who had started this whole mess.

  Chapter Two

  “What the hell do they want?” Dani turned to Luke. The mic on her headset was connected to the headsets everyone in the helicopter wore, so private conversations were out. Luke decided to concentrate on putting on his shoes and socks, not exactly keen on having a discussion everyone could hear.

  “They want the USB!” Edwin shouted into the mic. Marcus turned the little craft east and laid on the speed.

  Luke’s head shot up. “West! Head west” he shouted, casting an uneasy glance behind them. The mansion was already lost in the trees.

  Marcus looked at Edwin and raised an eyebrow. “Airport’s east.” He shook his head, shooting a glance at Luke that said he clearly thought his passenger was crazy.

  “Yeah, and if the cops saw a helicopter, they’ll figure out we went to the airport. There’s police helicopters there, too. We need to go west.”

  Edwin turned to Marcus, and after a long moment the older man nodded. Marcus spun the copter in a lazy arc and headed into the sunset. “What’s west?”

  “Katie melted the stick,” Luke said, tying his shoe and straightening. Dani was still lacing her left boot. “If you had tennis shoes you’d be done by now.”

  She shot him a look, her eyes half hidden by a curtain of long blond hair, still wet from the shower. “You in a hurry?”

  He looked at the helicopter and the two men in the front seat. “Yes!”

  She paused for a moment and shrugged, conceding the point.

  “Wait, what?” Edwin spun around in his seat. “What do you mean ‘melted’?”

  “She put it in the microwave,” Dani said, finishing her laces and sitting back. “Is that why you came back? For that?” Edwin said nothing, and Dani barked a laugh. “I should have known. You didn’t care about me. You don’t care about anyone. You’re just trying to save your own skin.”

  Luke reached for her hand. Her fingers were cold.

  “I tried to save you from the wedding,” Edwin shot back. “Marcus killed Katie to save you. We tried to pull you to freedom. You refused!”

  “I wasn’t going to leave without Luke!”

  “What?” Luke looked between them. “You came back for me?”

  “Where am I going?” Marcus jerked a finger at the city skyline. “There’s a lot of empty that way.”

  “You mean you could have left without me? You risked your life?”

  “I told you he showed up at the wedding!” Dani said over the thrum of the engines, “And that one shot Katie!” She jerked a thumb at Marcus, who wiggled his fingers in a half wave.

  “Destination?”

  “May I remind you he saved your life!” Edwin shouted, apparently forgetting that they were all wearing headphones and could hear him just fine. Three people simultaneously winced.

  “Where. Are. We. Going?”

  “And what the hell did you mean about my mother? She’s dead!” Dani screamed as the helicopter dropped and rose again, slamming them into their seats.

  “I said,” Marcus answered calmly when everyone turned to look at him, everyone except Dani white-knuckling the armrests. “Where am I going?”

  The other three looked at each other, then as one Edwin and Dani turned to face Luke.

  “Have enough gas to Orlando?”

  “No,” Marcus said, “but there’s a truck stop on the south side of town.”

  Dani blinked. “You planning on getting gas at a truck stop?”

  Marcus turned the machine south and kept it low. Luke noted he was trying to stay under the horizon; police helicopters and small aircraft would have a harder time seeing him if the light wasn’t behind him. It was a smart move, and Luke’s estimation of the man rose a notch. Dani stared outside, her gaze never leaving the ever-changing scenery as the world zipped past the open the door.

  Edwin, on the other hand, was nearly hysterical.

  “What the hell are you doing? Are you trying to get us all killed?”

  Dani sighed and turned to stare at her father, arms crossing. “Dad! It’s okay,
just relax.”

  Edwin turned to her slowly, staring at her in a sort of dazed wonder. “You haven’t called me that in years.”

  Dani shifted in her seat, and stared at the ceiling as if it were the most fascinating thing in the world suddenly. “Yeah, well... it worked, didn’t it? Now shut up and let the man fly.”

  The sun was nearly below the trees by the time they got to the place Marcus had chosen. A huge neon sign split the darkness, advertising an All-You-Can-Eat Buffet and Diesel Fried Chicken. They also seemed inordinately proud of their public scale and their showers.

  Just past the truck stop, as the last of the sunset leached away into the darkness, Marcus set the bird down in the shallow courtyard of a U-shaped building. Luke had a momentary loss of breath when he saw the narrow area Marcus had chosen, but he set it down with almost surgical precision.

  “Air Force?” he asked through the head set when he could breathe again.

  “Navy,” Marcus corrected, drawing himself up with a certain pride.

  “Where the hell are we?” Edwin demanded, leaning forward, trying to see the building in the semi-darkness.

  “It’s an old motel,” Marcus said as he shut down the engines. The loud copter had strangely gone unnoticed. No police cars tore up to block off the open end of the courtyard. No curious onlookers rushed over from the truck stop. The building around it was deserted. Luke wasn’t sure where this was in relation to the city, but it had to be rather remote; all the windows in the old motel were still intact. A miracle in this day and age. “We should be able to get something at the truck stop,” he said, shutting down.

  “How did you know about this place?” Dani asked him while climbing out.

  “None of your business,” Marcus replied shortly, and Luke looked at her.

  He mouthed the words ‘No-Tell-Motel’ and Dani’s eyes grew larger and she covered her mouth, not quite successful in her attempts to stifle a sudden attack of the giggles. “Him?” she whispered. Her face crumpled up in a mixture of merriment and disgust.

  “Yeah, whatever,” Marcus said, stepping down onto the cracked pavement with as much dignity as a man could muster when trying to exit a helicopter. “I was young once, you know?”

  “Sorry,” Dani mumbled, and to Luke’s complete shock she really did sound humbled.

  “Someone care to tell me what’s going on?” Edwin shot out from behind. The three of them hadn’t realized he’d fallen back. Although Marcus was close in age to his employer, he had obviously kept the physique that he’d gotten in the military, or at least had maintained a semblance of it. Edwin, whose FBI record reflected a brush with a little football in junior high, had no particular shape to maintain.

  They stopped to let him catch up.

  “What was on that stick anyway?” Luke asked.

  “Does it matter?” Edwin said, his expression lost in the darkness. “If it’s destroyed, then it’s all over and there’s not much point anymore.” He bent at the waist, and held himself upright by bracing his hands on his knees while he struggled to catch his breath. “We should probably just split up now. Call it a loss.”

  “Running away again?” Dani sniped at him, hands on hips, not looking like she was going to forgive him anytime soon. For anything.

  “Yes, dear.” Edwin took on the tone of a man patiently explaining to a small child the thing that should have been obvious. “That is what we have been doing for a half hour now, running away.”

  “No! No, you don’t get to bring up my dead mother like she’s waiting for me and then split again! All this,” she waved her arms, indicating the darkness, the motel, the truck stop, and everything she’d been through, “ALL of this is because you ran away!”

  “HEY!” Luke yelled over her, before Edwin could scream back, “Might I just say ONE WORD please?”

  “WHAT?” Dani yelled.

  “BUFFET!” Luke yelled back at her, pointing to the monstrous orange sign flickering in the darkness just over an entire fleet of parked semis. “I’m starving.” He turned and headed to the truck stop.

  Marcus stopped and stared at the sign as though it were something holy, and turned to Edwin. “I’ll be taking my lunch break now, sir,” he said.

  Luke smiled without looking around. He could hear Marcus running to catch up to him and then, after a moment, Dani’s light steps as she jogged to catch them both.

  They crossed the street and waited there for Edwin to catch up again.

  “Damn, please let them have beer,” he huffed as soon as he joined them. The three of them looked at each other and left him there to catch up on his own time.

  The buffet had the standard truck stop four food groups: Starch, Salt, Grease, Sugar. Edwin piled his plate high, Dani poked at some wilted iceberg lettuce, and Luke and Marcus both risked the fried chicken.

  “What’s on the USB?” Luke asked Edwin again as they sat around a table that wobbled dangerously to one side, and had enough food stains on the tablecloth so as to render the menu unnecessary.

  “Is?”

  Luke said nothing.

  Edwin sighed. “The destruction of kings,” he said quietly after a long minute, his gaze distant as though seeing something magical a long, long way away. “Several secretaries, ministers...”

  “Priests and admin assistants?” the waitress snapped as she came to get their drinks orders. “I heard that one. Didja hear about the goat and the barmaid?” She laughed, revealing bright yellow teeth. She picked up the tray of assorted jellies and jams, assortment in this case meaning Grape or Raspberry, and pried off something with her thumbnail before setting it back, her attempts at organizing clearly finished for the night. “Whatcha gonna have?”

  “Gastric distress, I think,” Dani said, trying to find the piece that had flown off the jelly holder and into the table of food, landing somewhere in among their plates.

  “Water,” Luke said with a hard glare at Edwin, who opened his mouth and closed it again. “For all of us.”

  “I’ll try the coffee,” Marcus said, his expression rapturous as he bit into a chicken leg.

  “Navy,” Luke mumbled, shaking his head.

  “Bravest of the bunch,” Marcus agreed.

  DESPITE THE DIRE PREDICTIONS, Dani was pleasantly surprised to find that her constitution could manage a truck stop buffet. But then, she’d had several meals in her lifetime of having to eat what she could kill, or sometimes scrounge—and not always cook—so she had to have a tough stomach. But it was still a close call.

  Marcus was just showing off with the coffee. He even added cream to it. Small flecks of undissolved white chunks floated lazily on the film on the top of the mug. He put in a spoon and pulled the skin off the coffee, and then drank the rest.

  Her father went hungry. He’d piled his plate; the allure of comfort food called him and he responded, only to be betrayed by the consistency of lumpy potatoes and creamed corn with little specks of cob to add flavor. Dani supposed she should be happy when he made a mad dash to the restroom. It was fitting that the betrayer should feel the sting himself. But after eating a hearty serving of grease and salt with a side order of betrayal, all she could feel was queasy.

  Edwin returned, looking slightly pale, his hands shaking a little as he sat and pushed his plate aside, and looked speculatively at the glass of water. “It took a very long time...” He was answering Luke, but he was taking his own sweet time about it.

  For his part, Luke was wolfing down the fried chicken and sucking down his water like he hadn’t eaten in a month. Knowing Benny, chances were he hadn’t.

  “Navy?” Marcus asked when Luke went back for seconds.

  “Marine.”

  “Figures.”

  “Do you mind?” Edwin gave his hired man a hard look. “It took a long time to gather all of the info. I have... video, names, dates, financial transactions... everything. I have a minister of finance, South American government, I have American and European governments, hired killings, tax evasion, c
onspiracy, treason by high- ranking officials.”

  “How did you get all that?” Dani asked, startled, wondering at the sheer number of hours it must have taken to compile. “How—?”

  “Why?” Luke interrupted.

  Edwin chose to answer him first. “Dani’s mother.” He turned to his daughter, meeting her gaze squarely. “When you were very young, your mother... she left me. You thought she was dead, and for many years I thought she was, too.” Edwin held up his hands to forestall her protests. “Look, it was just easier that way. How do you explain such things to a child? And you were a child at the time, Dani. I don’t care how grown you thought you were. I made that decision, and I’ve always stood by it.”

  Dani looked down at her plate. For the first time in her life she felt uncertain. She, who had always been so ready to blame her father for everything. But what should I feel? If he’s telling the truth... then who should I be mad at?

  And that was the problem. Why should she accept her father was telling the truth? She glanced up at him with narrowed eyes, watching him closely as he continued his story.

  “Benny was just one cog in the wheel. He was a player, but most of this was above his level. But, Dani, your mother, she was... she was recruited. She knew things about Benny that led to others, and in order to keep her safe her death was faked. She was given a new life, new name, everything.”

  Arranged? By whom? She shifted, glancing now at Luke. Government agencies did things like that, didn’t they? At least they always did in movies or books. But if that was the case, how would her father know where she was?

  So, someone else had done the arranging perhaps.

  Dani’s father took a sip of water and reached in to pull something off his tongue. He spat once, looked at the water, and sighed. “Damn, I’m hungry.”

  “Go on,” Luke said around a mouthful of chicken. Dani stared, and seriously debated if she still wanted to kiss him or not.

  “Anyway, she only left because...because they were coming after you, Dani. She was afraid for you. That was why your ‘Uncle’ Benny came around so much; that was why he seemed to prefer you to David. He was watching you, making sure that no one else could get you before he could. I don’t know if he ever believed your mother was dead or not, but he started working on me, getting me deeper and deeper. Markland was started with your mother’s money. I had a good company, we were just getting into the black from a rough startup, but we were making it, and then Benny came in and took over.”

 

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