by Dana Marton
“I couldn’t see well enough to tell.”
She thought for a second. “I caught a glimpse of the don a couple of times, before they locked themselves up in the main house. He was definitely keeping a close eye on Cristobal.”
“All the more reason for us to get moving and get the hell out of here.”
She couldn’t agree more. She shoved her picks into the lock and worked the tumblers, then pushed the door in.
They found themselves in small private quarters. There was a bed, a table and some shelves.
Mitch checked under the bed. He pulled out a dusty duffel bag. He claimed that, fingering something on the bottom, hesitating before tossing in some dry food, plus a box of matches. “Something for the trek out of the jungle.”
Good thinking. Neither of them had their backpacks. She’d figured walking around camp with her gear would draw attention. She’d written it off as a loss. Once she found and grabbed her brother, they would be out of here. There’d be no time to go back for anything then. Mitch must have thought the same.
He looked at the last locked door left before them. “Zak and Billy are either here or at the main house.”
Hope expanded in her heart. Her fingers were trembling, so this time she held the match and Mitch saw to the lock. Her hands never shook. Ever. At least, not until now. But this time was personal.
She understood, at last, why the agency didn’t let its operatives get involved in missions where they had a personal stake. Everything was different. At least she had Mitch with her.
He opened the lock in no time. No surprise there. He seemed to be good at everything.
“Put the match out,” he said as soon as he stepped inside.
She blew out the flame, frustrated that he knew what was in the small room but she hadn’t seen anything. “What is it?” Was somebody coming? She listened for footsteps.
“Explosives storage.”
Given a choice, she would have preferred not to go in there. But something scraped at the front door of the building. Then they heard voices.
Mitch yanked her into the dark room and closed the door behind them.
They flattened themselves against the wall, one on each side, and waited. She had her knife drawn, plus her gun handy, in case everything went to hell. Please, God, don’t let it end here. Let me find Billy.
Three men came in, judging by the voices. They complained about the food in a mixture of Spanish and some local language. There hadn’t been quite enough to eat; the soup was watered down.
“We’ll go hunting in the morning,” one of them offered. “We’ll make a fire right in the forest and have a full meal. To hell with the visitors.”
“The don said nobody leaves while the visitors are here,” another responded.
This was followed by some long and colorful swearing.
She heard a familiar beep a few seconds later. Someone had powered on a computer out there. Anything was possible with a generator, she supposed. The main section of this building must be some sort of office. Long minutes passed by. The men talked now and then, but they weren’t leaving. At least they weren’t coming into the storage room, either.
Once their door rattled, setting Megan’s nerves on edge. In a few minutes, the sound of snoring reached her. Someone must have hunkered down right in front of the door for a nap.
After a few tense seconds, Mitch pulled away and sat on the floor. She sat next to him, careful not to bump into any boxes in the dark.
“Are we stuck?” She kept her voice low, although the man snored loud enough outside to drown out her words.
“I’ll figure something out. Give me a second.”
Someone turned a radio on outside. Salsa music filled the air, which meant they could talk a little without being heard.
“Billy will be mad that I came. I might be older, but he always thinks women should be protected. When I was fourteen, I got home from my first date with a guy and he got fresh with me in the driveway. Billy dropped out of our tree house like a ninja and attacked him. He was ten.”
“You don’t have to do that anymore.”
“Do what?”
“Tell stories about your brother to make him into a real person in my mind so I’ll go along with your plans and help.”
He didn’t miss much. At least, he no longer seemed to be mad at her.
“Looks like they’re in the main house,” she whispered after a moment. “Billy and Zak. That’s the only place left. We could bust them out together.” She went for the logical solution. The two of them together would make a pretty good team. Not that she would ever acknowledge that she was asking for Mitch’s help.
“That’s the plan.”
His announcement gave her pause. “It is?” Since when?
Then something occurred to her, certain events of the past day making a little more sense. “Is that why you didn’t take off with Zak in the woods when you set up the great snake distraction?”
“You’ve vouched for me with Juarez,” he said with some reluctance.
“But keeping me alive isn’t your mission. Taking Zak home is.” She winced. That sure sounded like she was arguing against herself. Better shut up while she was ahead.
“We’ll do this together.”
His voice was steady, like the man himself. Her heart turned over in her chest. She’d set out to do this alone. She’d thought she preferred it that way. The fewer people involved, the fewer chances for mistakes.
But Mitch was... The truth was she was lucky to have Mitch by her side for this, and she knew it.
“The night before last, in your hammock, wasn’t a ploy on my part. I had no intention... I went there to tell you about the change of plans.”
Silence stretched between them.
“All right,” he said after a minute.
Some of the tightness relaxed in her shoulders.
He shifted toward her. “I need you to answer a question for me. Honestly.”
Considering who she worked for, she couldn’t promise that. “Ask, and I’ll see what I can do.”
“How do you know Colonel Wilson?”
She hesitated for a second. “I met him a year and a half ago.”
“Where?”
“At my mother’s house. He came to visit my brother.”
“Billy?”
“Jamie.”
Another moment of silence. Then Mitch swore softly under his breath. “You’re Jamie Cassidy’s sister?”
“Didn’t I just say that?”
“So this Billy is Jamie’s little brother?”
She grinned in the dark. “We’re all siblings. Do you want me to draw you a map?”
“Why didn’t you tell me sooner?”
“Do you know Jamie?”
A full minute ticked by before he answered. “By name only. We’re connected through...um...”
“You both work for Colonel Wilson.” It annoyed her to death that she knew so little about her brother’s work. If Jamie didn’t want to talk about something, you couldn’t get a word out of him with bloody torture. He’d been like that even when they’d been kids.
“I’m sorry, ma’am, but I can neither confirm nor deny that,” Mitch mocked her, acting just like her infuriating brother.
“The colonel came to visit Jamie after he got out of the hospital.” He’d lost both legs on a mission he wasn’t allowed to talk about, and she hadn’t been able to uncover anything despite all her CIA connections.
“I heard he’s had a rough time of it.”
She couldn’t talk about that. The way Jamie had been the last time she’d seen him... It had broken her heart. And the worst part was there was nothing she could do to help. But she could help Billy. Nothing was going to happen to Billy. Not as long as she was alive and her heart was beating in her chest.
“We should get moving.”
For a second, Mitch said nothing, and she was afraid he was going to push her about Jamie, but when he did speak, he said, “Let’s giv
e the guys out there a little time. It’d be better if they cleared out on their own. I’d rather get out of here quietly than draw attention to ourselves.”
“How long do you want to wait?” Impatience pushed her forward.
“Half an hour. If they don’t move on by then, we’ll find a way to take care of them.”
“And until then?”
“We could both use some rest.” He brushed against her back as he lay down. “Once we bust Billy and Zak out, we’ll have to get moving fast. It’ll be a while before we can stop to take a break.”
She lay down next to him. “So what do you know about my brother?” She needed another picture of Jamie, different from the last time she’d seen him in that wheelchair with the light gone from his eyes.
“Jamie Cassidy is a living legend. He’s saved the lives of hundreds. If the mission he’d been on could be acknowledged in any way, he’d be receiving the Congressional Medal of Honor.”
She swallowed hard, thinking of Jamie, struggling to accept the loss of his legs, the loss of his spirit. If Jamie were well, he would be here. If Jamie were well, he would have already gotten Billy back. But now she was here to do that. And she’d get it done no matter what.
“Thanks,” she told Mitch. “Thank you for telling me. It helps.”
Colonel Wilson hadn’t been able to tell her family anything when he’d visited, just that they should be proud of Jamie. The man had talked with her brother for two hours behind closed doors before he’d left their house. Man, she’d been steamed. Tears pricked her eyes now. She missed Jamie. Not knowing how he was doing had been the most difficult part of the past year. She missed all her brothers.
She didn’t even think of resisting when Mitch pulled her into his arms. She felt a new connection form between them as she relaxed against him.
He ran his fingers down her hair. He must have read her subdued mood, because he said, “We’re almost there now. It’s almost over. We’ll do this as a team.”
“Good,” she said with sincere relief. “You were a pain as an enemy.”
He gave a low chuckle. “Right back at you, darling.”
“I’ve been waiting for so long to be this close. It seems surreal. Until now, all I worried about was making it this far. Now that I’m here...” Suddenly she thought of a million brand-new things to worry about.
“There’s nothing we can’t handle together.”
His voice held warmth and comfort and strength, so she asked the question she hadn’t dared ask even herself until now. “You think Billy is still alive?”
“If he’s anything like you or Jamie, they couldn’t take him out with a bazooka.”
That put a smile on her face. And then, all of a sudden, those stupid tears spilled over and ran down her cheeks. She rubbed them away with the heel of her hand, but more came. Great. Just great. So much for her tough-chick image.
She didn’t cry. Ever. She’d lost that annoying habit growing up. Having to duke it out with eight brothers on a daily basis had taught her to never show weakness. They teased her mercilessly if she so much as slowed down because of a scraped knee or busted finger.
Mitch brushed the pad of his thumb along her face, right through the streaks of moisture.
Wonderful. Now he knew that she was a complete mess.
But he didn’t tease her or laugh at her. He kissed her.
Chapter Ten
Another man might have told himself he was only kissing Megan to distract her from their troubles, but Mitch had always employed brutal honesty when it came to women. They confused him enough without game playing, so he never lied to them, or to himself.
He wasn’t tasting Megan’s lips like he was a starving man to comfort her. He was doing it because he wanted to. Because he wanted her.
“We’ll get them out. Don’t worry about it. I don’t leave men behind. Not ever,” he whispered against her mouth.
She burrowed against him and he folded his arms around her, wanting to protect her even though he knew she hated that, that she didn’t need protection. She was the most self-sufficient woman he’d ever met. She’d survived a year in a jungle camp with dozens of hardened criminals. That said something about her. She was nobody’s damsel in distress.
He went back for another taste of her soft lips.
He wouldn’t have minded if she needed him a little. He didn’t have much to offer a woman beyond his protection. He couldn’t offer a fancy house or a steady relationship or pretty words. He’d always been awkward around women, and he wasn’t exactly the playboy type.
She tasted like mango. She tended to go for fruit during meals, and he couldn’t blame her. Cantina fare wasn’t exactly haute cuisine. Every meal that came out of those blackened pots was a raffle ticket to dysentery or food poisoning.
The sweet mango taste of her was intoxicating. He’d never thought that a taste could go straight to a man’s head, but it did. For the rest of his life, mango would be his favorite food, he was pretty sure.
He drank her in, holding on to control. He didn’t want to go too far. Or too fast. She wasn’t like the other women he had run into over the years, not that there were many. He’d been working special ops at the beginning, in military units where women weren’t allowed. Even now, in the SDDU, they were the exception to the rule. And since most missions were lone-wolf ops, it wasn’t as if he got to hang out with them all that often.
He didn’t have many opportunities to hone his seduction skills. For most of his adult life, he’d been busy fighting for his country. So being here now with Megan, trying to negotiate the rules of their cooperation while trying to negotiate the rules of their attraction, was new to him.
They broke apart for air. She shifted slightly away. Now she would tell him that this was a big mistake, he thought, a protest all ready on his lips. But instead she whispered a question.
“Did you once leave someone important to you behind? Is that why you make sure it won’t ever happen again? Was it a woman?”
She’d been thinking about that? He was definitely clueless about women. Did their brains never stop?
He let her go and rubbed his hand over his face. The one he’d left behind...
He didn’t want to go there. Not ever. But maybe because of the darkness—or more likely because of Megan—the words poured out from a cold, locked-away part of him.
“My mother is an alcoholic, the mean kind. My father is a drug addict. I had a sister, Cindy. She was much younger than me.” Fifteen years, to be exact. “When Cindy was about a year old, my father sold her for drugs.” A vast emptiness opened up inside his chest, a cold place where only his nightmares lived.
She moved closer and leaned her head on his shoulder.
“My father was too out of it to remember where he took her or who he gave her to. I ran away from home to look for her. But I never found her. The police never had a clue, either.” He put his arms around her and held her tight. “I’ve never given up, but...God, it’s been twenty years.”
She pressed her lips to the side of his stubbled cheek and he drank in the comfort. Inside his heart, a couple of barricades crumbled.
“So this is why getting Zak home is a religion to you, no matter what a twit the kid is, no matter how I begged. I get it.” She moved her head and lined up her lips with his. Didn’t kiss him. Just left their mouths touching like that.
The gesture was sweet and erotic at the same time, just like the woman. And the thing was, he really did believe that she understood him.
He pressed closer and deepened the kiss. She gave him everything.
Long minutes passed as their passion heated to a fever pitch. He ran his hands over her back and arms, not sure what to do next. This was the time when women wanted to hear something romantic. He wished he were better at this. Go with the truth. “I don’t want to stop.”
She stilled.
Great. Why couldn’t he have thought up something sweet?
But the next second she pressed closer
to him, making his body harder in an instant. “I don’t want you to stop, either.”
The thrill of that simple sentence shot right through him. He cupped her breasts as arousal, gratitude and other, more complicated, emotions swirled inside him.
This was dangerous, he thought. He knew this woman. Wouldn’t easily forget her. He cared about her. When did that happen? Didn’t matter, he supposed. It was the bare truth.
So don’t mess it up. He didn’t intend to. He planned on stopping way before the point of no return. He just wanted another feel of her amazing breasts. Just one more second to soak up the sensation as they pressed into his palms.
Her hand slipped under his shirt and rested against his abdomen. Her slim fingers drove him to distraction. She moved up to his chest, and as she ran her palm over his nipple, he sucked in a sharp breath.
When she began unbuttoning his shirt, he did nothing to stop her. He’d been shirtless with her before. They weren’t going too far. Yet.
His hands moved reluctantly to give her room to maneuver and ended up at the hem of her tank top. He hesitated. She moved back a little and arched her back to help him. He pulled up the stretchy material inch by slow inch, taking her unbuttoned shirt with it, pulling it all over her head.
His eyes were used to the dark enough now to see the outline of her perfect breasts. The thin line of light coming in under the door helped, too, and he was more grateful for that little light than he’d been for anything in a long time. Her nipples were swollen and ready, and drew his lips like magnets.
He didn’t even try to resist. He could have been happy like this, alternating between her breasts and mouth, for the rest of his life, he thought. Then her head dropped back, her back arched and her hand slipped down between his pants and his skin.
All of a sudden, he didn’t have enough air to breathe.
His body flexed against hers. Those slim fingers wrapped around him.
This would be a good time to stop.
He was glad to know that a few of his brain cells were still working. Part of his brain remained alert to their surroundings and the danger around them, listening for the men outside, making sure the one in front of the door kept snoring. The rest of his brain had drowned in testosterone and need.