Authors: Paige Tyler
USSR was going to launch nuclear missiles at the United States. Since then, it’s gone through several hands
and is currently owned by a software company out of Seattle that uses it as a private retreat for its board
members. We found some brochures from the last time the place was used as a ski resort, but that was back
in the eighties.” He opened the folder and slid two brochures across the table. “They only show enough to
tell you it’s a big stone structure with a lot of rooms, built into the side of a mountain ridge. The satellite
imagery we have of the area doesn’t show much either. It’s heavily wooded and the mountain peaks keep it
shrouded in cloud cover during most of the year.”
Landon looked up from the brochure. “You’re kidding? I can get detailed satellite pictures of any mud
hut in Afghanistan I want, but getting a clean shot of a place right here in the good old US of A is asking
too much?”
“Take it up with the intel branch.”
“What about the company that owns it?” Landon asked. “Any connection to Stutmeir?”
“None that we found. He’s most likely using the lodge without their knowledge.”
Ivy flipped the brochure over to read the back. Two ski bunnies with eighties big hair stood in front of
the ski lodge, smiling brilliantly for the camera. “Have we considered the possibility Stutmeir chose the
place because he knows we’re closing in on him?”
“We thought of that, yes, and I don’t think so. The timeline suggests Stutmeir already moved to the
lodge before anyone in the U.S. was even aware of his presence. The guy we interrogated said Stutmeir
never stayed in one place more than a month or so until he got to the lodge. Whatever weapon he’s making,
he’s almost certainly making it there.”
“So you need us to get in there and snoop around?” Landon asked.
“Yes. And fast. We have the preliminary report back from the CDC on those bodies you found in
Atlanta, and they’re completely stumped. They have no idea what killed those people. Or more precisely,
what killed them first. Every one of the victims shows signs of massive heart failure, severe brain damage,
organ failure, tearing of all the major muscle groups, even broken bones. We have to find out what Stutmeir
is brewing up there. The last thing we need is this getting into al-Qaeda hands.”
Ivy didn’t even want to imagine something like that happening. “Were we able to identify any of the
victims?”
John frowned. “Most of them were homeless veterans. We were able to ID them by DOD dental
records. We’re still working on the others.”
Damn, she didn’t know what bothered her more—that Stutmeir had experimented on homeless veterans
or that there were homeless veterans in the U.S. in the first place. “Please tell me we’re going in as part of a
larger team,” Ivy said.
John gave her an apologetic look. “As much as I wish I could give you backup, right now I can’t. We
have about fifteen scientists we’re still covering just in case Stutmeir tries to grab someone to replace
Bosch.”
Landon shrugged. “So put the FBI on the protective details.”
“If I wasn’t confident you two could handle the recon on your own, I’d consider it.” John exhaled
loudly. “Look, I know it’s not the answer you want to hear, but until we can confirm Stutmeir is in that
lodge, I can’t pull any of the other teams. The people up on the Hill can’t make a decision until the threat is
ready to smack them in the face.”
The muscle in Landon’s jaw worked, but he didn’t say anything. Ivy knew what he was thinking. She
was thinking it, too. She didn’t like the idea of going in there without backup.
“Isn’t Tate’s team in that area?” she asked.
“At last contact, two weeks ago, they were more than a hundred miles south of there.”
“Two weeks ago?” Alarm bells went off in Ivy’s head. “They haven’t checked in since then?”
“No, but there’s nothing to be worried about. They confirmed the person who killed those hikers is a
shifter, and they’re tracking him. He’s turned out to be more difficult to apprehend than they thought. Tate
said they were going to be deep in the mountains and that contact would be sporadic. I’m sure they’re fine.”
Then why did John look so concerned?
“Okay.” John’s favorite word when he wanted to end a conversation and move on. “Once you two get
to the lodge and confirm Stutmeir is there, I’ll be free to pull the other teams and send them in to back you
up. Whatever you do, don’t take any unnecessary risks. Understood?”
“Hooah.” Landon’s favorite word for most everything. Ivy was pretty sure he’d even said it after she’d
given him a blow job during their marathon sack session. Though it had come out much raspier. “When do
we leave?”
“Right after you pack,” John said. “Kendra already has you on an afternoon flight to Seattle. You’ll have
everything you need to outfit an entire attack team, including weapons, ammo, and explosives. It’s already
been prepositioned in a storage unit outside of Seattle. You’ll be ready to hit the ground running as soon as
you get there.”
Ivy groaned. So much for talking some sense into Clayne before they left.
***
short stop at the self-storage facility to pick up weapons and any other equipment they thought they’d need.
John hadn’t been kidding. There’d been enough stuff in the unit to start a war. Hopefully, they wouldn’t
have to use all of it.
As Landon drove, Ivy looked up at the snow-capped mountains surrounding them. They were
absolutely breathtaking. “I had no idea it was so beautiful out here.”
“You’ve never been here?”
“No. Have you?”
“The team came out to Fort Lewis for training a few times. We got lucky enough to have some
downtime to go hiking and mountain climbing.”
“You shouldn’t have mentioned that part about the hiking. Now I’m officially jealous.”
Landon chuckled. “After this op, we should come back.” He gave her a sidelong glance. “Do some
hiking. Check out Seattle. Go whale watching and stuff.”
She smiled. “I’d like that.”
The thought of coming back here—or going anywhere with Landon—made her heart backflip. She’d
shied away from relationships for so long, she almost forgot what it was like to do the things normal people
did. Being with a man who knew what she was and accepted her—claws and all—was something she’d
given up on. Until now.
“Which trail is closest to the lodge on that map we bought?” Landon asked.
Ivy spread out the map on her lap so she could read it easier. “It looks like Cutthroat Pass is going to be
our best bet. We can head off the trail about ten miles in, which’ll probably put us at the lodge by nightfall.”
When they got to the trailhead, Landon double-checked their packs to make sure they had everything
they’d need while she stowed their wallets, IDs, and cell phones under the seats. They left a note on the
dash saying which trail they’d taken and when they’d be back. There were similar notes on the other
vehicles, only in their case, the info was bogus. It’d keep the park service from getting curious if they
noticed the Jeep sitting unattended for a day or two.
Despite the other cars around, she and Landon didn’t run into any other hikers on the trail. Ivy inhaled
deeply, letting the scent of pine fill her nose. When she’d been at the FBI field office in Anchorage, she
spent almost all of her free time hiking. That was harder to do now that she lived in DC, but as the fir and
spruce trees closed in around them, she remembered what she’d loved about it.
Ten miles in, she and Landon left the trail and headed cross-country. The landscape was rougher, which
slowed them down, but since they couldn’t do any recon until after dark anyway, that wasn’t a problem.
Ivy glanced over her shoulder at Landon. “I’m going to check in with Kendra.”
Unfortunately, the mountains were playing havoc with the signal of the satellite phone, so it was fifteen
minutes before she finally got through.
“That happened with Tate, too,” Kendra said when Ivy mentioned it.
“So John said. If we lose contact, don’t freak out. It probably means we don’t have a signal.”
“Just be careful. I saw the photos of what Stutmeir did to those bodies in Atlanta. I’m going to have
nightmares for a week.”
“We’ll be careful.” Ivy chewed on her lower lip. “Have you talked to Clayne yet?”
Kendra sighed into the phone. “Not yet. But I’ve left a message on his cell every hour on the hour to call
me. When he does, I’ll talk him down. Don’t worry about it.”
Easy for her to say. Kendra’s life wasn’t about to blow up in her face. Ivy sighed as she put the phone in
her pack.
Landon handed her an energy bar. “Problem?”
“Clayne is still MIA.”
“Good. That means he can’t rat us out.”
She tore open the paper and bit into the energy bar savagely. “Just because he hasn’t said anything to
John yet doesn’t mean he won’t.”
“It’s his word against ours, Ivy.”
She chewed slowly. “This isn’t a court of law. The allegations will be enough. If the DCO splits us up,
I’m handing in my resignation. I won’t work with another partner who doesn’t trust or respect me. Been
there, done that, and I won’t do it again.”
He didn’t say anything.
“What about you? Will you go back to Special Forces?”
“Unless you don’t want me to.”
She hadn’t thought about him going back to the army because she didn’t have any reason to. Now that
getting fired from the DCO was a real possibility, it made sense he’d go back to his former career. The idea
of him putting himself in harm’s way on a daily basis over in Afghanistan terrified her so much she could
barely breathe. But how could she ask him to give up something he loved?
“I don’t know how to answer that, Landon.” This was so not the time—or the place—to be having this
conversation. “I know how important the army is to you.”
He reached out to gently push back the hair that had come loose from her braid. “You’re important to
me, Ivy. If I went back into Special Forces, I’d be gone more than I’d be home. That kind of life is hard on
a relationship. Trust me, I know.”
Hearing him say how much she meant to him did funny things to her heart. If they weren’t in the middle
of a mission, she would have jumped into his arms and kissed him until neither one of them could see
straight. But they were talking about his career here.
“It’s not fair of me to ask that of you, Landon.”
“You’re not asking. I’m offering.” He cupped her cheek. “Being partners outside the DCO works the
same as it does on the inside. We don’t do things or make decisions without talking to the other person first.
If you don’t want me going back into Special Forces, I won’t. As long as we’re together, you come first.
We’ll just figure out where we go from the DCO.”
Her breath caught as she finally figured out what the funny feeling in her heart meant. She was crazy in
love with Landon. She’d started falling for him that first day when he’d saved her from falling on the
confidence course and hadn’t stopped since, no matter how hard she’d tried to fight it.
Was it a shifter thing? Did her animal side somehow recognize him as her perfect mate? What other
explanation did she have for falling in love with a man she’d known less than a month?
Unless this wasn’t love at all. What if it were simply another side effect of being in heat? The idea that
the things she felt for Landon might be purely the result of feline hormones made her want to cry.
She might have given in to tears if Landon’s mouth hadn’t closed over hers. The kiss was thorough and
possessive, claiming her mind, body, and soul, and when he lifted his head, it took her a minute to
remember where she was, much less what she’d been going to say.
“We’d better get moving.” Landon’s voice was low and rough. “It’ll be dark soon.”
Ivy reached for him when he pulled away, then stopped herself. She needed to know the things she felt
for him were real before she said anything.
***
give it up in a heartbeat if Ivy asked him to.
Because
she would never ask him to. He’d had exactly four
girlfriends since joining the army (not counting Erica) and every one of them had tried to get him to quit the
military. He’d told all of them the same thing—hell no. As expected, they’d walked out. It had hurt, sure,
but he’d gotten over it. If Ivy walked out of his life, it would leave a hole not even his career in Special
Forces could fill. Which was why he was going to do everything he could not to let that happen.
But he’d worry about that after taking down Stutmeir.
Landon swore as he took in the massive stone structure. As evil lairs went, the lodge was intimidating.
Eight stories high and built into the side of the mountain, it looked like a fortress. The perfect place to film