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The Mind Thief

Page 14

by Vicki Hinze


  Maggie grimaced, just about sick of this. Her fellow operative, Darcy Clark, had trashed a set of shocks on Wilderness Trail, as they’d come to call the overgrown path, just a few days ago. What was it going to take for the commander, Colonel Sally Drake, to insist someone fix the sorry excuse for a road?

  Irritated, Maggie smoothed at a soaked spot on her pale-blue uniform shirt and cranked up the radio, sifting through the lyrics to catch up to the tune. Tapping the gas, she moved through the woods, down the narrow ruts lined with hurricane-twisted pines and thick, spiky underbrush.

  “In a one horse open sleigh. Hey!” She sang along and slid a glance to the Christmas ornament on the passenger’s seat beside her. Everyone in the S.A.S.S.—Secret Assignment Security Specialists—unit celebrated Christmas and had to put an ornament on the tree no later than today. Colonel Drake’s orders. She’d checked and none of the unit’s operatives had taken time out from work to put up a tree at home this year. Some hadn’t even made it home in the better part of a week. The tree was the colonel’s attempt at keeping everyone grounded in life as well as in work. Not likely to happen, in Maggie’s humble opinion, but an endearing goal regardless.

  The sparkling silver star was coffee-soaked but unbroken. Soaked would dry and unbroken was a good thing, because Maggie was not going back to Santa Bella Mall again for anything until after New Year’s. It’d taken fifteen minutes to find a parking spot, ten to get inside and pick out the ornament and yet another fifteen minutes to pay for the thing and get out again. She figured that, before leaving the store’s parking lot, she had more time invested in the freaking ornament than she’d spent with her ex-husband Jack in the last week of their marriage.

  And wasn’t that a shameful truth to have to admit?

  Letting go of the steering wheel, she checked her hand.

  The imprint of the spiky star and her wedding band were still there. She’d divorced Jack’s sorry hide three years ago, but she still wore the wedding band most of the time. It kept rodents at a distance—and it reminded her that she hadn’t been blameless in the destruction and demise of her marriage. Equally important, seeing the ring on her finger reminded her why, as long as she remained an operative, having a relationship was about as smart as Jack’s recent intermittent attempts to drink himself to death.

  Tapping the remote clipped to her visor, she blew past the first gate, glimpsing signs posted on the fence every eight feet: Use Of Deadly Force Authorized.

  She and the other S.A.S.S. operatives stationed here were the deadly force.

  A mile in, Maggie came to the second wire fence. This one was topped with razor wire so sharp it’d cut soda cans tossed at it. A speaker was attached to the gatepost. Inside was an artillery battery; dormant but maintained and ready to be used if needed.

  She tapped the remote and the brakes, stopped and waited for the gate to swing open. The remote didn’t have the range here that it had at the first gate, and the gate itself was slower to open. There was a specific purpose for that. Whoever was manning the monitors inside the S.A.S.S. bunker could take a look at who was coming in and have sufficient time to react.

  Maggie waved at the surveillance camera and then drove on inside, whipping down the weedy trail to the shack. She parked in her normal spot, next to Kate’s yellow Hummer.

  Colonel Drake and the Providence Air Force Base commander, Colonel Donald Gray, were still neck-deep in a battle of wills over authority, and he assigned everyone their offices. So Gray had strutted his stuff and dumped the S.A.S.S. unit out in the middle of an abandoned bombing range twenty miles north of the Florida base. For an office, they had a shack. For water, a well. For electricity... There was no electricity.

  It had been impossible to handle S.A.S.S. operations out of the shack, which had more holes than roof and walls. And it would’ve been murder for the unit to actually function out of the trailer parked out back, which was where Colonel Gray believed the unit had set up operations.

  Gleeful at their primitive conditions, he had been generous and given them a generator. Not one that actually had the capacity to run their equipment, of course. He wanted Colonel Drake—and anyone who worked for her—to suffer because she’d beat him out in a head-to-head competition for the S.A.S.S. command job. But neither Colonel Drake nor the unit operatives complained to the honchos higher up in the chain of command to intercede. The operatives took on this challenge just as they did any other and focused on a solution.

  Captain Mark Cross had been instrumental in the entire process. He’d used his money—rumor was he had a lot of it and he must, considering the palace he’d provided them—and his talent to build the S.A.S.S. unit an underground bunker. A top-notch, technologically advanced, freaking fabulous bunker with impressive offices twice as nice as any of those assigned to the Pentagon honchos, Maggie thought.

  Maggie slid out of the Jeep into the brisk air and stepped over to the shack. A hand-carved wooden sign hung above the door and read Regret. Mark had carved it as a reminder to all who entered. If Gray thought he’d won by sticking the unit in a primitive rattrap, he’d regret it.

  Across the board, everyone with access to the bunker conceded that Colonel Gray had seriously lost the office-space battle in the Gray/Drake battle of wills.

  Gray thought he’d won—luckily he didn’t inspect very often.

  Inside the falling-down shack, thin rays of sunlight filtered through the cracks and spilled onto the dirt floor. Maggie stepped to the right and pressed a board that looked more gray and aged than those around it. A split door slid open, exposing an elevator that led down a floor to the bunker’s vault.

  She stepped in and pushed the button to take her down. Of course, if Gray ever found out about the offices S.A.S.S. actually had, he’d commandeer them for himself and toss the unit into some other rat’s nest or swamp without power or water. To avoid that, S.A.S.S. operatives had created an early warning system signaling outsiders’ arrival, practiced scrambling regularly and kept their secret to themselves. So far, Colonel Gray remained in the dark. He’d never seen anyone in the S.A.S.S. unit anywhere other than in the trailer parked out behind the shack.

  When the elevator door opened, Maggie stepped out into the crisp white hallway. Private offices lined the walls. At the east end, broad doors led to the Operations Center, and beyond them was Darcy’s private domain.

  Captain Darcy Clark had been an operative until a mission had gone south and she’d received a serious head injury. It’d taken a while and a lot of determination on Darcy’s part, but she’d recovered—with a kick. Total recall. The injury had taken her out of the field, but her new gift made her a serious asset for assimilating Intel reports from around the globe.

  Yet no gift comes without costs, and Darcy’s were high. Around others, she suffered serious sensory-input overload. A trip to the mall was an utter nightmare. More often than not, she required total isolation to function normally, which meant even within the unit, she needed a place to retreat. Mark made sure she had it in her isolated office.

  The good news on Darcy was that, since she had spent some time on a mission down at the Texas/Mexico border with Customs Agent Ben Kelly, she hadn’t needed as much private time as she had before. Maggie was glad for that, and hoped the trend continued. Life in isolation had been hard on Darcy.

  Maggie walked past the broad screens covering the common walls, past the photos of the FBI’s Most Wanted, Homeland Security’s suspected terrorists and the S.A.S.S.’s watch lists. She checked the hot-spots board and was relieved to see things were relatively calm worldwide, with the exception of Iraq, which was never calm these days. Soon, she prayed.

  She dumped her purse on her desk then headed to the kitchen, located just this side of the Operations Center.

  Captain Amanda West, an S.A.S.S. senior operative, was in the adjoining common room, throwing darts at a picture of Thomas Kunz tacked to the center of the dartboard.

  By presidential decree, the S.A.S.S. unit�
�s primary assignment was to intercede, interrupt and intercept Kunz.

  So far, the world’s most successful black marketer of top-secret, cutting-edge technology and weapons-systems/arms sales had three darts stuck right between his eyes.

  Seeing his photo raised Maggie’s hackles. Kunz was German, hated America and wanted to destroy it, preferably through the destruction of its economy. Unfortunately he’d had some success and he’d been as elusive as Bin Laden. Worse for the S.A.S.S. operatives pursuing him, Kunz and GRID—Group Resources for Individual Development—his raunchy band of greedy mercenaries, would use any tactics to succeed. Their loyalty was to money at any costs, which often made the work for Maggie and the others opposing them disheartening and sickening. When fighting an enemy dedicated to a different ideology—even if it’s twisted—it’s easy to respect the dedication. But there is no respect in greed. There is only fear and destruction.

  Another dart whizzed through the air and stuck in Kunz’s forehead, well within Amanda’s one-inch group. “Thinking this morning, huh?” Maggie asked. Amanda always threw darts at Kunz when pondering something.

  “Yeah.” Amanda sighed and nailed him again.

  Maggie paused. “Is he up to no good on something new?”

  “Kunz is always up to no good. You can take that to the bank. But we haven’t heard any new Intel on a specific operation yet today.” Amanda hiked a shoulder. “Of course, the day is young.”

  It was about eight o’clock in the morning. “Then, what’s on your mind?”

  Amanda frowned, wrinkling the skin between her brows. “It’s Mark,” she confessed, talking about Captain Mark Cross, with whom she’d had a serious thing going for nearly a year.

  “What’s wrong with him?” Maggie liked Mark, and these days she didn’t like many men, which was just one of the many undesirable emotional stages of divorce: a merciless roller coaster that included far too many downsides and even more sadness. She repeated her mantra: one bump at a time.

  Everyone else liked Mark, too, including Kate. The Queen Grouch hated almost everyone, but she loved Mark like a brother. Both alone, a couple years ago they had become surrogate family.

  “Nothing’s wrong with him.” Amanda stopped, her arm midair, and just stared at Maggie. “Not one single thing. Not one.”

  So nothing was wrong with him and apparently that was a problem. “Okay, then.” Maggie couldn’t begin to figure this one out. She shrugged, walked across the wide room to the kitchen counter, snatched her butterfly cup from the cabinet and poured herself some coffee. The rich, heavy steam rising from the cup smelled like roasted heaven.

  Amanda followed her. “It’s not natural, Maggie. There should be something wrong with him, right? I mean, all men have something wrong with them.”

  Amanda still hadn’t adjusted to being in love. Considering the abuse her father had heaped on her in her early years, Maggie expected it’d take her a good long while to learn to trust. Men who beat the crap out of you in drunken stupors then locked you in wooden boxes and forgot you there for days don’t do much to inspire warm fuzzy feelings, much less a desire for taking on the risks of love.

  How horrible that must have been. Shuddering, Maggie sipped from her cup then turned around. Loving Mark had kind of sneaked up on Amanda and bitten her on the backside when she hadn’t been looking. With her protective shields, that’s the only way it could have happened.

  “You don’t want to ask me that question,” Maggie said. “I’m not what you’d call objective about men right now.” Not bad, Maggie. Downright diplomatic. That too familiar knot of sadness swelled in her stomach.

  “No, I do want to ask you,” Amanda insisted. “You were married. You know how the relationship changed before and after. Mark and me, we’re good. I—I don’t want to mess it up.” Her fear of doing just that pounded off her in waves. “Don’t all men have something wrong with them, Maggie?”

  Great. She really didn’t want to go there, but Amanda was nothing if not persistent, and she looked so worried.

  “Here’s my best advice, okay? You want a man with something wrong? My ex-husband will absolutely thrill you. It’ll take years to count all his faults and flaws, and you’ll never understand him.” All true, and yet Maggie had been in love with him—until he’d stomped on her heart.

  With a little sigh, she added cream to her coffee and stirred. “But if you’ve got any sense, you’ll forget about looking for something wrong, and just be glad that every time you look Mark’s way, the glare of his faults and flaws isn’t blinding you.”

  “I am glad. Really. I just— Oh, God. I don’t know.” Amanda poured herself a glass of juice and then shut the fridge door.

  “You don’t trust what you see or think or feel,” Maggie said.

  “Yeah.” Amanda warmed to this.

  “And you don’t trust him.” Again the swollen knot expanded, too familiar for comfort.

  She looked poleaxed. “I should. But. I just don’t know. I do, but it’s absolutely not normal to be perfect, Maggie.”

  “Oh, puhleeeze.” Captain Katherine Kane sauntered in, tall and thin, her short blond curls bouncing. “You can’t be serious. Mark Cross, perfect?” Kate snagged her Mickey Mouse cup then sloshed coffee into it. “Get a grip, woman, and ditch the rose-colored glasses. He’s a man. I love him, but believe me, he is not perfect.”

  Amanda frowned, fingered the feather on her dart. “I’m not saying he isn’t human, Kate. I’m saying—”

  “Wow! You’re totally freaked out.” Kate leaned a hip against the kitchen counter. “Did he propose to you or something?” She took a swig of coffee.

  Amanda flushed. “No.”

  “But you think it’s coming.” Kate bristled at having to fish. “Maybe.” Amanda looked up, panic riddling her eyes. “I’m thinking he might. Christmas, maybe.”

  “Ho, ho, ho.” Maggie grinned. Just because her marriage had sucked didn’t mean Amanda’s and Mark’s would. Truly, they were the strongest, most connected couple she’d seen in her life. If they couldn’t make it, no one could.

  “Maggie?” Darcy Clark, the unit’s intelligence expert, called. “Telephone.”

  Cup in hand, Maggie slipped back to her desk, before grabbing the phone and she asked, “Who is it?”

  “Karen.” Darcy peeked around the wall and cringed.

  “She’s calling about Christmas. She and Jack want to invite you for dinner.”

  Karen. Maggie’s former best friend.

  Stiffening, she ignored the phone and hung the mostly dry star ornament on the tree next to an angel. That angel was the only thing that kept Maggie from cutting loose with a stream of curses. “Tell her thanks, but no. I’d rather be alone.”

  “Alone on Christmas?” Darcy blanched. “Are you serious?”

  “Do I look serious?” Maggie glanced back over her shoulder. “Would you like to spend Christmas with your ex and the new woman in his life?”

  “Well, no. But I don’t know, being alone on Christmas really sucks, Maggie.”

  “I know.” She’d been alone the past two years and hated it. “And I’ll still take being alone over being with them.”

  Darcy lifted the receiver to her mouth. “Karen, Maggie can’t come to the phone right now. She said to tell you she appreciates the invitation but she won’t be able to make it.” Darcy paused, then relayed. “Um, no, Karen. She’ll be alone.” Another pause and then, “Um, no, I didn’t know you cried all day last year because she was by herself, but...”

  Humiliated, Maggie grabbed the phone. “Karen, thanks for asking. Really. But I don’t need your pity. I’m just not interested in being with you or Jack.”

  “But, Maggie, I just—”

  “I know. You just want to ease your guilty conscience and Jack’s, too. Well, sorry. I’m dealing with my own guilty conscience, and you guys just have to deal with yours on your own.” Maggie put the phone down on the table and threw one of Amanda’s darts. It just missed Kunz’s righ
t eye. Jerk Jack was probably drunk again, insisting Karen invite Maggie over. Anger poured acid, burning in her stomach. Karen wanted him, she got him.

  “Jeez, Maggie.” Amanda gave her shoulders a shake. “That’s a little cold. Karen just didn’t want you sad and alone on Christmas.”

  “Uh, no.” Maggie turned to face Amanda. “Cold is me pulling a seventy-two-hour stint, working the anthrax issue after 9/11, finally hauling my exhausted tail home, and finding my beloved husband in my bed having sex with my most trusted, best friend. That’s cold.”

  “I still can’t believe that.” Amanda set down her cup, picked up her darts. “What did you do?”

  “What do you think I did?” Maggie asked, reliving the shock, the betrayal, the disbelief, the guilt and the incredible, overwhelming sadness she’d felt then and since.

  “I’d have shot him right in the—”

  “We know what you’d have done, Kate,” Amanda quickly cut in.

  “Neuter his faithless backside with a .38,” Kate said anyway. “Hollow point, so it’d explode on impact.”

  “Of course,” Amanda said calmly. “And we’d expect no less from you, Kate. But this is about Maggie, not you.” Amanda looked back at Maggie. “So what did you do?”

  “Booted them both out—naked, like I found them. Then I dragged the mattress and all Jack’s clothes into the backyard and burned them. The next morning, I filed for divorce and took half of everything else he had.”

  Amanda grunted, her arms folded over her chest. “You should’ve gone for all of it.”

  “Especially since you didn’t shoot him,” Kate interjected, snagging a powdered-sugar doughnut from a box someone had brought in.

  “You did have to buy a new bed.” That, from Darcy. Maggie had. “And a new privacy fence and a new storage shed. I didn’t replace the boat.”

 

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