DONOVAN: A Standalone Romance (Gray Wolf Security) (2 page)

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Authors: Glenna Sinclair

Tags: #Romance, #Anthologies, #Military, #New Adult & College, #Romantic Comedy, #Romantic Suspense, #Collections & Anthologies, #Mystery & Suspense, #Suspense

Chapter 2

 

Donovan

“It’s your lucky day,” Ash said when he came to my desk and told me he had a case for me. However, he wouldn’t say a damn thing about it on the long ride from the office to the UCLA Medical Center.

“Are you going to tell me what this is about?” I finally asked, as we boarded an elevator.

“A new case.”

“I got that. What’s the case?”

Ash handed me a piece of paper that was a computer printout of a news story that was on the
Daily News
website that morning. I’d glanced at it but didn’t really read it.

Bank Security Guard Gunned Down,
the headline read.

“This isn’t really our thing, is it? I mean, there wasn’t some executive involved was there?”

“No. But there was a witness, and her father has hired us to stay with her until the police get everything figured out.”

“A witness?”

“A young loan officer who works at the bank. Apparently, she was on her way out when the attack occurred.”

That caught my interest. I actually knew—or once knew—a woman who currently worked at a bank downtown. I’d caught sight of her a few times…Kate Thompson. We had history that was complicated. But again, life is often complicated, especially when you leave your hometown for eight years in the military and then come home again with no intention of rekindling old friendships. Needless to say, I kept to myself when I wasn’t on the job.

I scanned the article, but it didn’t say anything about a witness. Just that the security guard appeared to have been blindsided while doing a walk around, shot in the chest during a possible attempt to get inside the bank. However, a passerby reported the shots and police arrived within minutes. No one, as far as they could tell, made it inside the bank.

“This seems pretty open and shut for the cops,” I said, as the elevator doors opened and Ash strode into the hallway.

“Then it should be an easy one for you. Just a couple of days.”

That sounded good. I had a trip planned to Vegas. Nothing fancy. A hotel room, some cash for the blackjack tables. Maybe drag Kirkland along, see if standing next to the Louisiana charmer might rub off on me a little. It’d been a while. Not a lot of time to date when I was following around wealthy execs who’d pissed off the wrong employee or the wrong ex one too many times.

“You said that the father requested me specifically?”

Ash nodded, not even pausing as he moved quickly down the long maze of corridors. “Didn’t say why.”

“What’s the name?”

“Thompson. Daniel Thompson.”

I stopped dead in my tracks, feeling like I’d walked into an ambush. It took Ash a second to realize I wasn’t with him anymore. He turned around, impatience on his face.

“What is it, soldier?”

I shook my head, not at his term of address, but at my disbelief that this was actually happening.

“Are you sure about the name?”

“Of course.”

I shook my head again, all these memories flying through my head. Ash grabbed my arm, shook me a little.

“What is it?” he asked again, his tone a little kinder this time.

“Joshua.”

Understanding washed over Ash’s face. He knew me. We’d spent far too many nights in the desert together to not know everything there was to know about each other. So he knew why this was not an ideal situation for me.

“Can you put Joss on it?” I asked, hating that I could even consider backing out of an assignment. But this was the only assignment that I knew I simply could not do.

“No,” Ash said, glancing over his shoulder as if he was afraid someone would catch us loitering here, in this public corridor. “Joss is on a plane headed to Washington with her target.” He chewed his bottom lip for a second. “I could call Kirkland. Put him on this.”

“No. She’d tear him to shreds.”

Ash’s eyebrows rose because we both knew what a charmer he was with women. But he had no idea what Kate Thompson was like. I did.

“It
has
to be Joss.”

“There’s not enough time to bring her back. The target gets released from the hospital in an hour.”

Ash pushed me back a little, out of the center of the corridor, laying both hands heavily on my shoulders. “If you tell me you honestly cannot take this case, I will handle it myself.”

And I knew he would. Ash would do whatever it took to protect his people. It was that military mentality, that inability to leave a single man behind. A part of me was willing to let him do it, but the idea of going back to the office—like a child afraid of the dark—didn’t sit well with me.

“No, sir. I can do it.”

“Are you sure?”

“Positive.”

Ash studied my face a moment longer, then he slapped my shoulder and nodded. “Okay, then. Let’s do this.”

He pushed past me and led the way down the corridor again. I hesitated only a second before I rushed to catch up.

Daniel was waiting out in the corridor when we turned the corner. He stepped forward immediately and held out his hand to Ash.

“Mr. Grayson,” he said.

“Mr. Thompson.”

And then he turned his eyes on me, and I saw nothing but pleasure in them.

“Donny,” he said with something like a sigh. “It’s so great to see you again.”

He offered me a hug, and I accepted it, closing my eyes briefly as I remembered the last time I saw him. He’d hugged me then, too, but then he was sobbing like a child on my shoulder.

He pushed me back and looked at me, assessing the entire length of me. Then he shook his head with something like disbelief.

“You’re so grown up. The last time I saw you…” And then he choked a little, swallowing tears he didn’t want to shed. “I often wonder what Joshua would look like now.”

“If we could focus on the case,” Ash broke in, much to my relief.

Daniel stepped back, clearing his throat as he did.

“We’re not real clear on what’s going on. All I know is that Kate was at the bank late. She does that a lot on Monday nights, clearing out the loan applications that come in on their website over the weekends. And then we get this call that there had been a shooting, and she was found unconscious at the site.”

He glanced at me, and I could see what he was thinking. It was too much like the phone call he’d gotten ten years ago—on graduation night. The night Joshua was killed. The phone call I made.

“Everyone assumed she’d been shot, but the doctors could only find a lump on the back of her head. They think someone hit her, or she fell. She has a concussion, but it’s fairly minor. Physically, they say she’ll be alright.”

“But…?” Ash asked.

“She has no memory of the last twenty-four hours. The doctors think it could either be a temporary side effect of the bump on her head, or it could be from the trauma of watching the security guard get shot.”

“She doesn’t remember what happened?” I asked.

“Not a thing. Her last memory is of getting out of the car at the bank yesterday morning.”

“What about security cameras?”

Daniel shrugged. “There are a couple at the front of the bank and a few along the side, but whatever happened, it happened down the block, in front of a closed storefront.” He shook his head. “The cops are confused, too. They really would like for her to remember what happened.”

I glanced at Ash, but he already had his cell phone out.

I touched Daniel’s arm. “I’m sure Rose or Ash has already explained to you what we do. We don’t investigate, we simply protect the client.”

Daniel nodded. “I know.”

“But we do have a relationship with a detective with the Los Angeles Police Department. And she has close contact with the Santa Monica Police Department, so we can be kept appraised of the investigation and let you know when a suspect has been identified and arrested.” Relief filled Daniel’s eyes. “I’m sure you can imagine how concerned I am. After losing my Louise and then Joshua…if anything happened to Kate…”

“I know.”

“That’s why I asked for you specifically. I remember how close you and Joshua were. And you and Kate.”

I nodded again as Ash joined us. He held up his phone so that I could see the screen.

No surveillance footage. But working on several leads.

It was from Detective Emily Warren.

“If you gentlemen will excuse me,” Ash said, “I’ll go in and explain the process to Kate. And I have some paperwork I’ll need her to sign.”

“Of course,” Daniel said. “Thank you, Mr. Grayson.”

Ash glanced at me even as he was nodding to Daniel. His concern was typical. And appreciated.

I nodded to assure him I was okay.

I pulled Daniel across the corridor to a bench that was conveniently sitting there. Once we were settled, I found myself filled with more questions that I should not have had. It was none of my business to know how Kate was, how she’d been since the death of her brother. Her twin brother. I left because I didn’t want to know. I joined the Army the day they buried my best friend. I had no right to even be here.

But there were things I needed to know.

“You said this happened at her place of business?”

“Kate is a loan officer at First Premiere Bank downtown.”

“In order to protect her, I need to know her normal routine, the people she often spends time with, where she lives…that sort of thing.”

Daniel nodded. “I made a list of her friends,” he said, reaching into his pants pocket for a slip of paper he handed me. “The cops wanted to know as well.”

I glanced at it, recognizing a few of the names on a list that was about fifteen long. And experience told me that the target would par the list down and add a few names Mom and Dad didn’t know about. I even had one who struck every name off the list her father gave me and added a half dozen her father knew nothing about.

“And her daily routine?”

“Monday through Friday, she’s usually at the bank until five or six. Later sometimes, especially Mondays. And her evenings are either spent at home, at the house with me, or out with friends.”

“The weekends?”

Daniel shrugged. “Usually out with friends, I think.” He glanced at the closed door of Kate’s hospital room. “We go to the cemetery together some Sundays.”

I nodded, looking down at the list again so I didn’t have to look this man in the eye.

“She doesn’t have a boyfriend,” Daniel said. “They told me you would need to know that, too.”

“Okay. That makes things simpler.”

“Oh? How?”

“A boyfriend would want to be involved. He’d want to have a role in protecting her.”

Daniel snorted. “Her last boyfriend wouldn’t have. Guy was such a loser; he probably wouldn’t even be here now even if she called and begged him to come.”

“Yeah?”

“He was some hotshot with the bank. Didn’t like to pay for meals out, didn’t like to hang out at her place. Always wanted the opposite of what she wanted.” Daniel leaned close to me as if Kate could hear us. “Tell you the truth? I was glad to see the bastard go.”

I smiled because I couldn’t help myself. But I also wondered how much of the ex-boyfriend’s behavior was based on Kate’s behavior. At eighteen, the girl had been a handful. Tortured the boys who liked her and pined after the ones who didn’t. Treated everyone like they were her subordinates and she their queen. Drove Joshua crazy. But again, I’d never seen a brother who gets along with his sister as well as Joshua did with Kate. I always put it down to the whole twin thing. He would laugh when I said that though. He thought I didn’t see the real Kate, the person she kept locked down deep inside. The one he adored unconditionally.

If he only knew how hard I’d tried to find that Kate.

“So I think that’s all I need,” I said, slapping my hands against my denim-covered legs. “Ash said they’re going to release her soon?”

“Yeah, pretty soon.”

Daniel grabbed my arm as I tried to stand.

“Sit and talk a minute, Donovan,” he said with a sad smile. “It’s been so long.”

I nodded, suddenly unable to look him in the eye.

Daniel put his hand on my shoulder. “It was hard on everyone. But you especially, I think.”

“He was your son.”

“But he was your best friend. Had been since preschool.” Daniel laughed softly. “I think you spent more time at our place than you ever did your own.”

And that was for good reason. My parents…let’s just say, they were more interested in their careers than they’d ever been in having a child. I often thought I was just an experiment that had gone horribly wrong. I think they were relieved when I went to school and found other things to fill my time rather than making demands on theirs.

“I was sad when I heard you’d joined the Army. But I was also quite proud. And I think Joshua would have been, too.”

That was the first time anyone had said they were proud of me for my choices. I stared at my hands where they were still resting on the tops of my thighs. My fingers were spread, and they looked so powerful. So capable. But it was these hands that weren’t able to stop what happened to Joshua that night. And it was these hands that stood in the corridor of this same hospital and waited to find out just how badly I’d let my friend down.

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