Heroes In Uniform (56 page)

Read Heroes In Uniform Online

Authors: Sharon Hamilton,Cristin Harber,Kaylea Cross,Gennita Low,Caridad Pineiro,Patricia McLinn,Karen Fenech,Dana Marton,Toni Anderson,Lori Ryan,Nina Bruhns

Tags: #Sexy Hot Contemporary Alpha Heroes from NY Times and USA Today bestselling authors

They resumed watching the movie. Partway through she lost interest and started to fade. It’d been a long couple of days and she was smoked. Only the corner of the couch wasn’t very comfortable to rest her head in. She shifted around to find a better spot and closed her eyes. Sometime later she felt her head droop and she stirred, still half asleep. A moment later a gentle hand curved around her shoulder. Her eyes snapped open to find Wade right beside her, drawing her up and toward him.

She went willingly, a little shocked when he actually drew her head down to rest against his hard shoulder and draped an arm across her shoulders. She stayed very still for a few seconds, but when he didn’t move and didn’t seem tense, she sighed in contentment and shut her eyes. His clean, soapy scent wrapped around her and his body heat soothed her. She was affectionate by nature and loved to cuddle, and he made her feel so safe. But feeling all that hot, hard strength up against her… Arousal bloomed inside her, a slow, heavy throb warring with exhaustion, but exhaustion won out.

She surfaced briefly sometime later when he shifted her again. Blinking in the darkness, she realized sleepily that the TV was off. He eased her onto her side to curl up lengthwise on the couch, and drew the throw blanket over her. Already sliding off to sleep as he stood up, she felt the gentle stroke of his hand over her hair before his hushed footsteps moved away.

Danger Close: Chapter Nine

 

 

Rahim pulled the hem of his T-shirt over the weapon tucked into his waistband and pushed his sunglasses up on the bridge of his nose as he exited the rental SUV. He had a backup strapped to his ankle, hidden by his jeans. The heat hit him the moment he stepped out onto the gravel parking lot. Central Mexico had a different sort of heat than he was used to, more humid, but still a shock after being in the air-conditioned vehicle. That kind of luxury had been a shock on its own, and not an unwelcome one.

He ran a hand over his closely shaved beard and tugged the brim of his ball cap down lower on his forehead as he walked to the concrete building. He’d dyed his hair, eyebrows and facial hair dark, but it wouldn’t be enough to fool facial recognition software if any intelligence agency got a good shot of him. Three other vehicles were parked out front. He rapped on the steel door and pushed it open, one hand on the butt of his weapon at the small of his back.

“In here,” a familiar voice called from the back room.

Rahim stepped into the darkened interior of the warehouse and shut the door behind him, the thud echoing in the cavernous space. Male voices speaking Spanish floated out to him as he crossed the concrete floor, alert but relaxed enough. The doorway led to an auto shop they’d converted for their purposes. Two Mexican men looked up from the blueprints they were going over when he entered. He nodded at them and shifted his attention to the tall man emerging from behind a pallet of crates.

“Paul, how are you?” Rahim asked him in English.

The twenty-six year old American shrugged his bony shoulders and ran a hand through the jaw-length brown hair he’d grown out in a half-assed attempt to disguise his identity. “Fine. How was your flight?”

“Smooth as silk.” The private luxury jet had landed at an air strip an hour outside of Mexico City. No one had even checked his passport. He was paying for everything in cash, and so far not even the Mexican authorities knew he was in the country. “What’ve you got for me?”

Paul motioned into the small office behind him. “There are two designs I wanted to show you.”

Rahim placed his hands on the small desk and bent over the schematics. Both compact devices, both good designs as far as he could tell. He looked up at Paul. “Which one do you think’s our best shot?” It still rankled that he’d been unable to secure the Strontium-90 he’d originally planned to use, but a less potent material would have to suffice now that the timeline for the attack had been moved up by several weeks.

“This one,” the younger man said, tapping the second design. “The configuration’s better, simpler and will decrease the chance of glitches.”

“Let’s go with it then.” He straightened, nodded toward the two other men beyond the office door. “They speak English?”

“Not really, no. I thought you’d prefer it that way.”

“I do. Good thinking.”

Paul smiled, seeming pleased with the praise. “I’ve got pretty much everything I need, except for the…material.”

“I’ve taken care of it. It’s in transit.” He asked a few more questions about the design for the device and the crew in place, and right on cue, his burner phone rang. Checking the number first, he answered. “You got it?”



, just left Mexico City,” the man answered in a thick Spanish accent. “Where do you want us to bring it?”

“I’ll let you know. Transfer the load and disguise it, then find a place to wait overnight. I’ll call you tomorrow with the details.” He ended the call and smiled at Paul. “Got it. I can have it here by tomorrow afternoon.”

“Okay.” Paul ran a hand through his hair again, a nervous gesture. “What kind of timeline are we looking at? It’ll take me a day or two to assemble everything and—”

“I want it on the ship two days from now.”

Paul gaped at him. “But that’s…”

Rahim raised an eyebrow. “What?”

The other man pushed out a breath. “I’ll do my best.”

“I know you will.” He smiled a little, clapped Paul on the back, and Rahim was pleased to see the other man wasn’t relieved by the gesture. The engineer knew how closely Rahim would be watching this whole process. He also knew how easily Rahim could do away with Paul so that no one would ever find his body should he fail to complete the bomb or do anything to jeopardize the operation. He was being paid well for this, maybe too well, but then, nuclear physicists willing to work on this kind of project weren’t easy to come by.

“Better get started,” Paul muttered and brushed past Rahim to talk to the other men waiting outside the office.

Rahim kept an eye on them as they began to assemble the parts, and did a thorough inspection of the warehouse. He looked for cameras and checked for wires, even though the likelihood of anyone knowing what they were up to was minimal. Another call came in, this one from Safir, who was back in Karachi.

“Is everything in place?” Safir asked him in Pashto.

“So far. We’re still on schedule.”

Safir let out a relieved sigh. “I also have some good news.”

Rahim’s attention sharpened. “What?”

“I got a call from someone in our network. Apparently they found some interesting information that was leaked into the chatter stream, and when he checked it seems it’s from that American informant who contacted us before.”

Rahim kept his voice low, watching the men as they worked. “Go on.”

“The informant gave a possible location for Sandberg. And the woman.”

Something stilled inside him and his heart picked up speed. “Where?”

“In a small town in rural Virginia. They’re staying together in a house.”

Rahim frowned. Had Sandberg really been married all this time? Or was Erin Kelly merely a fellow agent? “How reliable is this source?”

“Ours? He’s reliable. And the American contact was accurate the last time. It’s worth checking out.”

Yes, it was. “Give me what you have and I’ll look into it.” Safir detailed everything, including the farmhouse in the country. “If it’s true, they’ll have security on them.”

“Of course. Shall I gather a team together and get them to Virginia?”

“No. I’ll check everything and take care of this myself.” Because it was personal. So personal Rahim was tempted to be part of the assassination himself, if the location was real. “The equipment will be on the ship in two days’ time and I’m accompanying it.”

“I wish you’d reconsider. I’d be honored to go with it instead—”

“No. It has to be me.” He didn’t trust anyone else to oversee this first, most critical move in shifting the war to American soil. Carried out correctly, it would cause mass panic. The stock market would flounder. Fear and chaos and panic would rule. Everyone would be afraid to stay in the city. Local medical facilities would be overwhelmed. The cleanup alone would be insanely expensive. Infrastructure would grind to a halt, at least temporarily. Tourism would decline sharply as well in the days and weeks after the attack, having profound impact on the economy that would last for years.

He couldn’t wait to watch the dominoes begin to fall.

“I’ll take care of everything and get back to you once I know more,” he said to Safir, anticipation and excitement running hot in his veins. Ending the call, he stood off to the side and formulated a plan as he watched the men assemble the metal frame of the device. A slow smile spread across his face at the thought of what was coming and the revenge he would exact on Sandberg.

I’m coming for you, Wade
.

 

* * *

 

Waiting in a lounge area just down the hall from the director’s office, Wade paused in reading a file and glanced up at the TV mounted on the wall. The news anchor was reporting on some breaking news about a missing truck carrying nuclear material from a lab in California to Mexico City.

Instantly he tossed the file aside and grabbed the remote to turn it up. The truck was transporting material from a medical facility in San Diego and had been stolen sometime within the last six hours after crossing the border at Tijuana. Officials were scrambling to locate the truck and security agencies were concerned about what could happen if the material fell into the wrong hands.

Wade had a sinking feeling that he knew exactly whose hands were involved.

He shoved to his feet and strode down the hall to the director’s office. The secretary looked up at him but waved him on back when she saw the look on his face. The door was shut. He knocked briskly. Robert always kept it locked. A few moments later it opened and Robert let him in. Three other men Wade recognized sat around the desk, including his handler, Bill.

Wade shut the door behind him. “A shipment of nuclear material just went missing south of Tijuana.”

Robert nodded as he crossed to his desk. “I just heard twenty minutes ago.” He lowered himself into his chair and studied Wade. “How likely is it that it could be Rahim?”

“Pretty damn likely. He’d been looking into getting a shipment of radioactive material out of a reactor in the Ukraine, and some Strontium-90 from Russia but he would’ve scrapped that plan the moment he found out about me and moved up the timeline. You know his end game is to attack here in a big city, probably on the eastern seaboard to garner the most attention and maximize collateral damage. Could be he’s got a hand in this. Helluva lot easier and faster to move it across the border from Mexico than get it here from the Ukraine, especially once he’s hidden it.” And they all knew there’d been increased chatter amongst people in Rahim’s network. Something big was in the works, they just didn’t know when or where. This missing nuclear shit had Wade’s internal radar going crazy.

Robert was in his late fifties and had been a four star general before coming to work for The Company, rising through the ranks before being appointed. It wasn’t easy to rattle him. But the tension around his mouth now and the way his eyebrows drew together spoke loudly of just how scary a threat this might be. “Let’s get our teams on this,” he said to them all. “I want you to pull whoever you need and get them searching for that shipment. Wade, Bill and I will get people hunting for Rahim south of the border. Everybody report back to me when you find anything.”

The moment he finished everyone stood up and got moving. With the threat potential they were looking at, the sense of urgency was clear. They had to find Rahim and locate that shipment immediately, and Wade would do whatever he could to help in the hunt.

He was in another office with someone from the taskforce when his cell beeped with a text alert. When he pulled it out, he was a bit startled to see it was from Erin.

Will you be home for dinner?

He blinked at the message, but didn’t have time to respond before another came in.

Ha! I sound like a wife
. I was just curious. Was going to make something.

Smiling, he typed a response.
Not sure when I’ll be back. You go ahead.

A few seconds later, she answered.
Okay. See you later.

He put the phone into his pocket, aware of a curious warmth spreading inside him. It felt strange to have someone check in on him about something as simple as whether or not he’d be home for dinner, but he liked it, because it was Erin. He also liked knowing she thought about him when he was away, and that she cared. Even with everything that was going on, he’d been thinking about her too.

As he glanced back up at the middle-aged woman across the desk from him, he realized she was staring at him, a little grin playing around her mouth. “What?”

She shrugged. “That’s the first time I’ve seen you smile. It looks good on you.”

He looked away, muttered something in reply and got back down to business. But that lingering warmth remained throughout the afternoon, easing the worst of the dread and anxiety about Rahim and the missing shipment. They were doing everything they could to stop the unthinkable from happening, and hell, he’d be going home to Erin at the end of the day.

Other books

Top of the Class by Kelly Green
Dark Angel by Sally Beauman
The Program by Hurwitz, Gregg
Rasputin's Shadow by Raymond Khoury
No Going Back by Matt Hilton
The Marriage Contract by Lisa Mondello
Cut to the Chase by Elle Keating