Bullseye

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by Jessica Andersen




  “It’ll be dark soon.”

  Isabella cast her eyes upward, where the first hints of fiery gold touched the horizon, and set flame to her auburn hair.

  “All the more reason to put some miles between us and our new friend,” Jacob replied.

  She glanced back toward the cavern and the swept-bare sand between them. The black helicopter could return at any moment.

  Jacob turned to assess the back exit of the cavern, toward the low, rocky escarpment. He tried to picture the land as he’d seen it in those last few minutes before the crash. His mental map, along with what he remembered from the flight charts, said that if they headed west and slightly north, a stiff three-day hike would bring them to civilization.

  And between the crash site and civilization?

  He would deal with the hit man as best he could. Capture him if lucky. Kill him if necessary.

  Whatever it took to keep Isabella safe.

  JESSICA ANDERSEN

  BULLSEYE

  For Kim Nadelson,

  an editor who knows how to make a story sing.

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Though she’s tried out professions ranging from cleaning sea lion cages to cloning glaucoma genes, from patent law to training horses, Jessica is happiest when she’s combining all these interests with her first love: writing romances. These days she’s delighted to be writing full-time on a farm in rural Connecticut that she shares with a small menagerie and a hero named Brian. She hopes you’ll visit her at www.JessicaAndersen.com for info on upcoming books, contests and to say “hi”!

  Books by Jessica Andersen

  HARLEQUIN INTRIGUE

  734—DR. BODYGUARD

  762—SECRET WITNESS

  793—INTENSIVE CARE

  817—BODY SEARCH

  833—COVERT M.D.

  850—THE SHERIFF’S DAUGHTER

  868—BULLSEYE

  CAST OF CHARACTERS

  Jacob (Bullseye) Powell—The sexy ex-Special Forces airstrike pilot is now a Big Sky bounty hunter and a confirmed bachelor. But does an old college flame have the power to change that when she finds herself in danger?

  Isabella Gray—The no-nonsense Secret Service agent is all about her duty…until her protectees are abducted and she is forced to turn to the one man she’d hoped never to see again.

  Louis Cooper—The U.S. Secretary of Defense will not negotiate with hostage takers. Or will he?

  Boone Fowler—The head of the Montana Militia for a Free America has no problem with kidnapping Cooper’s family…or killing an interfering Secret Service agent.

  Hope Cooper—When she and her twin daughters are abducted, Louis’s wife has only survival on her mind.

  King Aleksandr of Lunkinburg—The despotic ruler of a small former Soviet bloc country has no apparent ties to Boone Fowler and his men.

  Prince Nikolai—Denounced by his father for his patriotic ideals, the prince finds an ally in Louis Cooper, until the Secretary abruptly reverses his position on sending troops into Lunkinburg.

  Lyle Nelson—After Isabella shoots him in the leg, Lyle wants revenge—the more painful, the better.

  Contents

  Prologue

  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

  Prologue

  Early September in Montana was chill and damp, like fear.

  Derek Horton paused at the dark, rocky opening and a shiver crawled down his back. It’s just the drizzle, he told himself, but it was more than that.

  The mouth of the abandoned mine beckoned with the promise of safety, of supplies and a place where the eight fugitives could light a small fire undetected. But the darkness beyond seemed to shift with something else.

  A tall man with slashing scars on his face, a scruffy beard and his hair drawn into a warrior’s ponytail paused at Derek’s side. “Problem?”

  Derek shook his head quickly, lest Boone Fowler think him weak or disloyal to The Cause, both of which could be fatal. “No problem. Just taking a quick breather.”

  “Well, take it inside.” The leader of the Montana Militia for a Free America—MMFAFA—jerked his head at the six men strung out in a quiet line behind him. “We need to get out of sight. Those bounty hunter bastards might not be looking in the right places yet, but you can bet they’re looking.”

  Boone’s command overrode Derek’s dislike of the cavern they had hidden in since their escape from The Fortress—the Montana State Penitentiary. He stepped through the gaping rock maw, into the strange warmth the cave seemed to ooze like sweat.

  Rough hands grabbed him the moment he crossed into darkness.

  Derek shouted and struck out, but missed. His brain shouted, Bounty hunters!

  “Get in here, all of you!” a man shouted. “Now!”

  His accent was clipped and foreign. Not the bounty hunters, Derek realized as dark-clothed men swarmed around Boone and the others.

  Something far worse.

  “Let me go!” Panicked, Derek thrashed, then gargled when his captor tightened the arm across his throat, cutting off his breath. His vision grayed, but not before he saw that the others had been similarly subdued.

  Boone stood in the center of the small cavern, hands held away from his sides. Two black-clad figures held automatic weapons on him, according him the respect of a leader. Six other ninja types surrounded the remaining MMFAFA members. Derek saw Lyle, Boone’s second-in-command and the hothead of the group, spit at one of the gunmen.

  The bastard rammed the muzzle of his weapon into Lyle’s stomach, sending him to his knees.

  Another dark figure stepped into Derek’s view, this one unarmed, though he radiated power and grace. Leadership.

  Derek held still, heart pounding. This had to be the man Boone had made a deal with, the man who had helped break them out of The Fortress in exchange for…favors.

  “I know what you’re thinking,” Boone said, staring the cloaked figure in the eye and speaking leader to leader, even though he was being held at gunpoint. “We were unable to complete our first mission. But I have an idea about—”

  “Your ideas don’t interest me,” the black-cloaked man interrupted with a vicious hiss. “I am here to tell you what you will do next. This time it will be done correctly, do you understand?”

  After a cold, frozen moment, Boone nodded. “I understand. Tell me what you want us to do.”

  “Not yet. First, I believe a lesson is in order.” The figure nodded toward the man behind Derek.

  “No. Don’t…please don’t!” Icy fear splashed in Derek’s veins when the dark man’s cold gaze fixed on him. He struggled, but to no avail. His captor remained immovable, like the stone surrounding them. Derek reached toward the other militiamen, toward his leader. “Boone, don’t let them! Don’t!”

  But the leader of the MMFAFA said nothing.

  The dark figure gestured for Derek’s captor to take him deeper into the cavern and said, “You and your men have failed once. That cannot and will not happen again. Understood? If it does, you will face a fate similar to the one your friend is about to meet.”

  “No-oo!” Derek thrashed madly as he was dragged backward, deeper into the shadows. His heels gouged the soft soil on the cavern floor, sending up a rotten, coppery smell.

  “Quiet.” Derek’s captor tightened the arm across his throat. The lack of oxygen quickly brought dizziness, then the gray of tunnel vision.

  Through his narrowe
d cone of focus, he saw the dark leader step into view, calmly screwing a silencer onto the barrel of a semiautomatic pistol. The man barked a few syllables in a harsh, unfamiliar tongue and tossed Derek against the rock wall with bruising force.

  The gunman shrugged and answered in heavily accented English. “I do not wish to bring this whole godforsaken place down around our ears. I simply wish to teach these idiots a lesson.”

  With that, he lifted the weapon and fired.

  Derek heard the puff of a silenced bullet.

  Then nothing.

  Chapter One

  “Bull!” Jacob Powell grinned and reclaimed his seat near the built-in fridge.

  “Big surprise,” grumbled fellow bounty hunter Anthony Lombardi. He pulled Jacob’s dart from the center of the dartboard and took his place behind the tape mark on the floor. “We don’t call you Bullseye for nothing.”

  The dark-haired hunter threw and hit the inner ring one step out from the center, eliciting howls of derision from the half dozen men gathered in the rec room of the Big Sky Bounty Hunters’ headquarters in Ponderosa, Montana.

  The rules for Bull were simple. You had five shots. You hit five bullseyes or you lost. And Jacob never lost.

  Though he’d earned his nickname in the Special Forces, where he’d been a fighter pilot with an airstrike hit record second to none, the moniker had stuck when he and the rest of the unit had followed their leader, Cameron Murphy, into the bounty hunting business. In his five years as a bounty hunter, as in his Special Forces career, Jacob almost never missed his target.

  Failure wasn’t an option for Bullseye.

  But at that moment, he wasn’t thinking about the past, or even about darts. His mind was focused, as it usually was these days, on the job. Though he’d instituted the game of Bull to give his ever-active hands and body something to do, his brain crunched the data he’d assembled on their current bounty.

  Too damned little information as far as he was concerned. A few weeks earlier, eight prisoners had done the unthinkable and escaped The Fortress, the nearby maximum-security prison. Big Sky hadn’t recaptured them, and worse, the escapees had wreaked havoc, executing a German diplomat and engineering a train crash that had killed the corrupt governor of Montana. The incidents had almost upset months of delicate United Nations’ negotiations regarding the despotic king of a former Soviet Bloc country called Lunkinburg.

  Almost.

  “Your turn, Powell.” Tony clapped him on the shoulder. “And Bull.”

  Meaning that Tony had gotten his five center hits. It was up to Jacob to finish the game with five of his own.

  No sweat.

  Jacob stood and stepped up to the masking tape line. A television babbled in the background, perpetually tuned to a twenty-four-hour news station. The Secretary of Defense’s familiar hangdog, bespectacled face filled the screen as Jacob took aim and buried his first dart in the bullseye.

  “Turn up the volume,” one of the other bounty hunters ordered. “He’s talking about Lunkinburg.” Secretary Cooper, the President’s primary adviser on foreign affairs, was strongly in favor of sending troops into the small country.

  Jacob sent his second dart whistling into the bull, but focused part of his attention on the secretary’s words. The Big Sky Bounty Hunters rarely worked internationally, but the Lunkinburg issue had become their problem the moment their bounty had started targeting diplomats.

  Which itself was a puzzle, as Boone Fowler and his followers were strictly domestic hell-raisers. Their agenda was to overthrow the U.S. government in the name of The Cause, which was pretty much defined by Fowler himself and included a dizzying mix of xenophobia and anarchy. This was the first time the MMFAFA had dabbled in international politics, which begged the central question.

  Why now? Why had they broken out of The Fortress and immediately changed their MO?

  Secretary Louis Cooper’s televised voice said, “The United States military is not the world’s police force. However, there is a time and a place for us to say enough.” Cooper rested his hands on the wheeled podium in front of him. His faded blond hair was washed out by the lighting, his blue eyes emphasized by the subtle gleam of a navy tie. As Jacob watched, the camera panned out far enough to show brilliant fall colors and a familiar logo.

  A quiver of interest ran through him at the sight. The Golf Resort. The Washington, D.C.–based Secretary of Defense was at a Montana vacation spot, not twenty miles away from the log cabin that held the bounty hunters’ offices on the main floors and a host of specialized, high-security rooms belowground.

  In one of the aboveground rooms, Jacob threw. Bull. Three down, two to go.

  Cooper’s televised voice continued. “The President, myself and the members of the United Nations have had enough. The atrocities perpetrated by King Aleksandr have gone on too long with no hope of change in sight. We must commit to overthrowing Aleksandr’s tyrannical rule—a goal that is strengthened by the support we have found within his family.”

  Jacob focused. Threw. Bull.

  On screen, Secretary Cooper gestured toward a mid-thirties, dark-haired man in a custom-tailored suit. “Please welcome Lunkinburg’s premiere freedom fighter. Disowned by his father for his politics, he only wants what is best for his people.” Cooper waved the man forward. “I give you Prince Nikolai of Lunkinburg.”

  Jacob imagined teenage girls swooning all across America at the sight of the crown prince, whose camera appeal was second only to his patriotic fervor.

  There was scattered applause from those assembled at the Golf Resort, and the cameras panned to track the prince as he made his way to the portable podium. The image swept over several navy-suited figures in the background. Secret Service most likely, Jacob thought, and ignored the quiver in his gut and the sudden desire to stare at the screen.

  He focused instead on the dartboard, where he was one bull away from his usual perfect score. He lifted the missile and felt the click as he visually connected with his target. Measured. Pulled back.

  A flicker of navy suit on the screen caught his peripheral view and yanked his attention to the TV in an instant. Images jammed his brain. An hourglass shape. A chin-length swing of auburn hair too vivid to be strawberry-blond, too rich to be brassy red. Flashing green eyes and mobile lips made for kissing.

  Jacob’s stomach knotted.

  He threw.

  He missed.

  The room stilled with a collective hiss of indrawn breath as the six other bounty hunters stared at the dart quivering in the outer ring of the board. A half an inch farther out and he would have missed the board entirely. In the game of Bull, that entitled the other player to a future claim.

  In five years, Jacob had never given up a future claim. Shoot, he’d only missed the bull one other time—and then he’d had a bullet wound in his arm and a temperature well over a hundred and two.

  But hell and damn, he’d missed this time. Missed big.

  On the television screen, Prince Nikolai spoke of patriotism and human rights, and of how his pain at working against his father was offset by the knowledge that the people of Lunkinburg needed his help. But Jacob heard the words as background noise—his whole attention was locked on the woman standing behind Secretary Cooper with a clever communications device in her ear and an I’m-all-about-the-job look on her face.

  His body flashed hot then blazed to nuclear temperatures as he took a second look and realized that, yeah, it was her, all right, a heart-stopping face and mind-blowing body straight out of his past.

  Isabella Gray.

  HER DAY HAD STARTED well before dawn and didn’t look as though it was going to be over anytime soon.

  Special Agent Isabella Gray unobtrusively shifted on her aching feet, one level of her consciousness wishing for a shower and a couple of aspirin while another, deeper level scanned the crowd and monitored the low-level chatter on the airwaves. As the single Secret Service agent overseeing the Secretary of Defense’s vacation, she’d liaised
with the Montana locals for backup and security when Cooper had announced he was holding an impromptu press conference at the resort.

  So far, everything seemed under control.

  It had better be, she thought with a frown. She’d been up at 3:00 a.m. overseeing the last of the details. It was her event, her security, and her reputation on the line.

  They didn’t call her a cojone-busting nitpicker for nothing. She didn’t tolerate screwups, either above or below her position.

  And certainly not from herself.

  “And so,” Prince Nikolai said into the microphone from his position between two of his personal bodyguard/advisers, “It is with both sadness and joy that I proclaim my support of the UN resolution to send troops into Lunkinburg and remove my father, King Aleksandr, from his dissolute throne.” Nikolai glanced at Secretary Cooper. “It is my fondest hope that these actions will bring to my country the great peace and prosperity enjoyed by the people of the U.S., such as Secretary Cooper and his lovely family.”

  At that, the two men shared a handshake while reporters shouted easily ignored questions.

  Secretary Cooper shook his head. “I’m sorry, folks. No questions today. The prince has a prior commitment and I promised to have an early dinner with Hope and the girls.”

  At the mention of his family, Cooper’s normally fierce expression softened so slightly that Isabella might have missed it if she hadn’t known to look. But in the past couple of weeks, ever since Cooper had received graphic death threats from King Aleksandr’s supporters and been assigned Secret Service protection, she had gotten to know her protectee and his family. For all that he was a political barracuda, Louis Cooper was soft as mush when it came to his young wife, Hope, and his twin, eighteen-month-old daughters, Becky and Tiffany.

  Isabella motioned for the locals to flank her, guarding the secretary and Prince Nikolai while they walked from the front of the Golf Resort to the rear, where Cooper’s secure chalet was set back against the edge of the dense forest. While she scanned the crowd and the manicured lawns beyond, a small, not-so-easily ignored part of her felt a wistful tug at Cooper’s devotion to Hope and the girls.

 

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