Authors: Rachel Grant
He itched for another splash. Another burn. The bottle called to him. But the small taste was all he could have.
Story of his life.
He could view, and at times even sample, the pleasures other men took for granted, but the comforts of American life weren’t for him. He’d given his life over to his country, and lived—and deep down believed he’d someday die—for that service. When he finished a job, he moved to the next one, never pausing to enjoy the very liberty he sacrificed for.
He replaced the stopper and turned to face the balcony, avoiding Zack’s interested gaze for the moment. Ian had known Zack was listening to every moment of his “date” with Cressida. It was necessary and expedient that his backup on this op be fully informed. But that didn’t mean he liked it. The idea of Cressida’s vulnerable flirtation being witnessed, even mocked, by another agent left a bitter taste in his mouth that even the scotch couldn’t burn away.
Lake Van glistened in the darkness beyond the window. Something about this sleepy, underdeveloped part of Turkey called to him, but was another pleasure he could sample but never fully enjoy.
As was the woman he would tail for the next few days.
If he were Hindu, he’d wonder who he’d pissed off in a previous life to find himself in this situation. But he wasn’t Hindu. He wasn’t Muslim. He was a secular warrior in the midst of a holy war, and his primary goal was to protect his country from being targeted or drawn into the battle.
“So, what’s the deal? You think she’s part of Hejan’s cell, or is she being used?”
Ian kept his back toward Zack. “I think she’s being used.” But his opinion changed nothing. Not when there was no way to be certain.
A soft buzz sounded. He turned to see Zack’s feet hit the floor with a thump as he pulled out his cell phone. The screen flashed. “Looks like it’s time to find out. Cressida is on the move.”
“Where is Sabal?”
“On the street, ready to follow her on foot or in a car,” Zack said.
“Good. I’ll lag behind him. Finish searching her room while she’s out.”
“I should follow and let you conduct the search. She’s never seen me. If she spots you, she’ll spook.”
While Zack’s argument was logical, there was no way in hell Ian would let him take over. It was Ian’s job to follow the microchip and identify the courier. No one else’s.
T
he man at the front desk only spoke a few words of English. Cressida smiled and pulled out the digital recorder Hejan had given her. Folder one held all the basic phrases. She looked up the file number on the crib sheet and played words that translated to “how do I get to,” then said “ferry dock” in English. She added, “boat” in Turkish, because that word—thanks to weeks of living on an island and riding a water taxi into Antalya on a regular basis—she knew.
The man’s face lit up. He pulled out a street map and circled the hotel location and pointed to the long spit, then inked in a thick line for the route she should follow. It wasn’t far from the hotel at all, just in the opposite direction from the restaurant she’d walked to with John.
She said thank you in Turkish and stepped outside. The night had cooled somewhat, and she took a deep breath of the fresh air that wafted from the vast lake. A brisk walk was definitely better than stewing in her hotel room.
She walked along the water, finally reaching the spit. The area was wide and open, making her feel safe in spite of being a stranger in a strange land.
Her mother’s crap taste in men had resulted in a childhood of feeling unsafe in her own home. At the age of thirteen, Cressida had gone to her local community center and taken every self-defense course they offered. Over the years, she’d taken classes in a half-dozen different martial arts—she and her mother had never lived in one neighborhood long enough for her to move up in belts—but she’d achieved enough proficiency to kick a guy in the balls without hesitation. Well, kicking in the balls was the one thing her various sensei and sifus had discouraged, but she’d never been interested in winning tournaments.
Those years of lessons gave her the courage to walk boldly down the pier in spite of the gathering darkness and her unfamiliarity with the area, but deep down she wondered if she’d used poor judgment in walking alone at night. But surely Berzan wouldn’t have asked her to meet him if it were a problem?
A few men loitered on the long pier, but they paid no attention to her as she passed. There wasn’t a ferry at the end, but the boat was probably running late, meaning she was in no hurry to reach the dock.
Two-thirds of the distance down the brick walkway, she stopped at an empty bench and sat. A glance at her watch said it was one minute after nine. If the boat didn’t turn up soon, she’d ask one of the men she’d passed about the schedule, but for now she was content to sit and enjoy the quiet night in a part of the world she’d dreamed of visiting ever since she deciphered the map key.
Water lapped against the lakeshore, a soft rippling sound that soothed nerves still raw from rejection. How stupid was she to go out on a date with a stranger when she should have been working?
Nothing good ever came from getting involved. It only brought heartache. And sometimes felony charges.
I
an followed Cressida at a distance, cursing the quiet night that forced him to hang back so far. The hound, Sabal, was in front of him, keeping a closer tab on her. He was local and blended better than Ian could, especially now that Ian had lost the beard.
Cressida parked herself on a bench as Ian’s phone vibrated. He took the call from Zack.
“She brought a lot of papers,” Zack said. “Photocopies, mostly, but some are maps and scholarly looking reports. A few satellite photos—really nice definition—with different lines drawn on the image. As expected, the reports are all about shipping and land routes from the Middle East into Asia.”
“Photograph the maps and satellite pictures,” Ian said as he watched her rise from the bench and move closer to the train platform at the end of the pier.
“Doing what I can. But there are a lot. It’d be easier to just take them.”
“No. We aren’t done with her, and that would tip her off. Leave no trace.”
“Shit! Someone’s at the door.”
Alarm shot through him. “Get the hell out. The balcony. Now.” The call cut off. Ian cursed. What the fuck was going on?
Behind him, the ground rumbled. A moment later, a whistle sounded. The train from Iran was arriving.
Shit
.
The courier had to be on the train. How the fuck did he not realize that when he saw where Cressida was headed?
Because she’d asked the clerk about the ferry, not the train.
The ferry was just visible in the distance on the lake. Between the noise and hubbub of passengers transferring from train to ferry, there would be plenty of opportunity for chaos.
Cressida walked along the edge of the grassy median that separated the brick walkway from the train tracks until she reached the break in the fence where the train passengers would disembark. She leaned a hip against the back of the last bench on the spit, her gaze fixed on the incoming train.
After the abrupt end to his call with Zack, he had a bad feeling about this drop. It didn’t matter that the port was well lit with vapor lamps glowing brightly every few hundred feet. It didn’t matter that she was in a public place that would soon be filled with people.
In his line of work, crowds could be more dangerous than deserted alleys.
He reminded himself Cressida Porter was a means to an end. He’d been working toward this moment for months, and nothing less than capturing a terrorist leader hung in the balance.
He nodded to the hound, signaling that he should move in, and Ian wished he had a dozen more hounds on this rabbit, but for this op, he only had Sabal, who would follow Cressida after she made the drop.
Ian would follow the microchip.
A man approached her from behind, blocking Ian’s view. He stiffened, until it was clear the man was just curious about the out-of-place Western woman.
Ian met Sabal’s gaze. He rubbed a hand across his beard, the signal a brush drop had not occurred.
Slowly, the smelly diesel train rolled down the long spit and came to a halt with a piercing squeal, capturing Cressida’s attention as she cringed and covered her ears.
Masked by the noise of the train, a man darted out from the tracks in front of the train and made a beeline for Cressida. He yanked her purse from her hip, but she wore it over her shoulder and across her chest, and her neck caught in the strap. The wail of the brakes ended after Cressida’s shrieks began.
Pulled from the bench she’d been leaning against, she grabbed her bag, caught in a tug-of-war with the would-be mugger. He moved behind her, so the strap would dig into her throat and yanked harder, breaking her grip. Her head snapped back.
Ian darted toward her, but disembarking passengers spilled from the train, blocking him.
Her scream cut off, and from the glimpse he saw between the press of bodies, the strap was choking her. Ten people deep behind her, Ian was stuck, moving against the flow of traffic. The solitary hound was closer.
The mugger dragged her backward until she tripped and hit the ground. She landed on her back, and the purse slipped free of her neck. Her screams resumed. The people who’d just disembarked and witnessed the violent mugging now backed away, giving her assailant room to flee.
The mugger darted across the tracks in front of the train, heading toward the terminal building. He disappeared behind the train. Cressida shot to her feet, and the foolish woman
chased
her mugger—a man who had nearly strangled her. Sabal was on the other side of the shocked crowd, not close enough to stop Cressida or the fleeing assailant.
Ian dived through onlookers, breaking a path through the disembarked passengers. He followed Cressida across the tracks. She turned right and ran up the spit parallel to the train.
He chased her, while she chased the mugger, who darted into an open passenger car.
Shit.
Ian prayed Sabal was ready to intercept if the mugger exited on the other side of the train. He dug in for more speed, closing the distance between him and Cressida. But he wasn’t fast enough.
She turned and followed her mugger onto the train, then let out a horrific scream.
Chapter Eight
A
scream erupted from Cressida’s throat as pain ripped along her scalp. With a hard yank on her hair, the man she’d slammed into when she swung full bore into the open passenger car pulled her across the aisle, then tossed her down the steps on the other side. She tumbled out the door, landing on the sharp gravel.
The man exited the train car by leaping over her, then ran full bore down the empty tracks that paralleled the train. She staggered to her feet. She couldn’t let him get away with her passport.
An arm gripped her from behind and spun her around. She shoved at whoever had grabbed her, determined to chase down her mugger and reclaim her purse, but the man’s grip tightened, and he flashed a vicious-looking knife in front of her nose. Her gaze traveled from knife to the man’s face, and she met the predatory eyes of a complete stranger.