Authors: Debra Webb
Tags: #mobi, #Romantic Suspense, #Colby Agency: Secrets, #Fiction, #epub, #Colby Agency, #Contemporary Romance
“Come on, come on,” she muttered.
Hold on just a little longer.
The bush gave a little. Casey’s eyes snapped open. “Hurry, Stark!”
She couldn’t hold out much longer. He had to make it fast. She dug her heels into the dirt for more leverage.
His head, then his shoulders appeared. Then his upper body was up and out.
Casey resisted the urge to relax. Not until he was all the way out.
One long, bare leg—save for the fancy boot—swung up onto the ground. Then the other. He rolled away from the hole but didn’t get up.
Casey uncoiled herself from the bush and got to her feet. A frown wrinkled her forehead. Was he hurt?
She walked closer. “You okay, Stark?” He wore paisley boxers. She laughed. Hadn’t meant to, but once she started she couldn’t stop.
He stared at her until she stopped. When she did, he said in a very pointed tone, “I’m fine. But I’d rather not get up until I have my pants.”
Casey burst into laughter again. She couldn’t help it. Maybe she was giddy with relief or just plain hysterical. Either way Stark wasn’t amused.
Stark rolled onto his side and pushed up in a move smooth enough to impress even her. He wrenched off one boot, then the other and tossed them aside. He stalked up to her, sporting socked feet and those unexpected paisley boxers, bent down and claimed his jeans. He shook the dust off and pulled them on, all without taking his eyes off hers. If she hadn’t been so busy staring at him she might have had the presence of mind to hand him the jeans.
When he’d fastened the fly, she gestured toward the hole. “I think your belt’s over there somewhere.”
Casey gave him time to get his boots and belt in order before confessing, “You can head straight back to town if you want but I’m planning on paying Fernandez a little visit.” Maybe get the info he’d promised. “His place is on the way.”
Stark held up the tire iron. “You think you’ll need more than this?”
This part was going to be complicated. “I came here to do a job. I’m not leaving until it’s done.” She folded her arms over her chest, more from the cold than as a display of determination. But she was determined. This was her plan. She didn’t need his approval or his cooperation. Be that as it may, some clue as to what he had in mind could prove useful.
“Well.” He dropped the tire iron to his side. “I have the same dilemma.” He braced his hands on his hips. “I suppose it would be a conflict of interest to work together toward that common goal. Never mind that I’ve proven my reliability and trustworthiness under considerably dicey conditions.”
Was he proposing they help each other? Or was this a trick of some sort? What if their employers were mortal enemies? This could get complicated fast. “I’d have to know who you’re working for first.”
He held out his hands, palms up. “That’s one thing I can’t give you.”
Casey’s jaw dropped. That was ridiculous. “You want to work together but you can’t tell me who sent you?” Totally unacceptable.
“All right.” He put his hands on his lean hips. “Tell me who you’re working for and I’ll do the same.”
Her shoulders tensed. Classified, Lucas had said. “Sorry.” They were at an impasse. “I can’t do that. But,” she added quickly, “only because I’m under strict orders from my employer. Not because the information is relevant to you.” All true. Not that she owed him an explanation.
Stark glanced over his shoulder and considered the lay of the land in the direction of the road then settled his attention back on her. He shrugged. “Well, we’re headed the same way.”
“We are.” An entirely exaggerated awareness of him had her pulse speeding up again.
“No reason we can’t walk together,” he suggested.
“No reason at all,” she allowed.
He gestured in the direction they’d come in a dead run from the bad guy. “Ladies first.”
Shoulders squared, she stalked past him. He caught up with her and draped his jacket over her shoulders, all without missing a step.
“You look cold.”
She stopped and glared at him. “I’m fine.” She offered his jacket back to him.
Instead of grabbing it, he took his time rolling down the sleeves of his shirt, first one, then the other. “It’s a long walk back to Fernandez’s place. It’s pretty cold out here.”
Casey exhaled a lungful of frustration. “Fine. Fine. Fine.” She dragged on the jacket, sliding her arms into the too-long sleeves. His scent immediately invaded her nostrils… His body heat still warmed the inside of the jacket.
Dear God! What was wrong with her?
She marched forward, ignoring the man and the assault on her senses.
He fell into step beside her. “Thanks for rescuing me back there.”
“Not a problem.”
“Nice panties, by the way.”
She kept walking. He was lucky. Really lucky she didn’t have a gun in her hand.
If he survived until daylight he would be even luckier.
Outside, Paulo Fernandez’s home and landscape remained as rustic as when he’d purchased the abandoned mining hacienda. But inside, he’d clearly spent extravagantly to create a retreat suitable for a royal. Too bad he was anything but royal.
The two goofballs who had been charged with disposing of Casey and Stark were evidently groveling for forgiveness. Casey watched through a window near the front of the house as the two cowered in the center of the great room while Fernandez paced back and forth across the stone floor ranting and waving his arms like a dictator. There seemed to be little pleasure in paradise. If those two thought Fernandez was giving them a hard time, just wait until Casey got her turn. She hadn’t looked forward to getting even this much since her last field assignment for the Agency.
Irritation rumbled in her belly at the idea that she’d been assigned to a desk for the last six months. Yeah, she’d almost taken a bullet a few times—three to be exact—in her two years of field service prior to that. The last time didn’t count in her opinion since the bullet had scarcely grazed its target. But the powers that be had labeled her reckless.
Was it her fault the hostage had gotten injured during retrieval? Not at all. The guy had been a spoiled brat of a prince who hadn’t grown up in twenty-five years. He should have followed her orders. Then there wouldn’t have been an
almost
international incident. And he wouldn’t have needed a Band-Aid for the scrape he’d suffered.
Casey kicked the frustrating thoughts aside. Maybe this vacation—that was what her superiors at the Agency thought she was doing—would demonstrate that she was more than capable of showing restraint and caution. She hadn’t killed or even injured anyone yet.
“When he’s finished chewing them out,” Stark whispered, the sound so close to her ear she nearly jumped out of her skin, “maybe he’ll throw them out and the odds will be more in our favor.”
Casey eased back from the window, needing to put some space between her and Stark since, for some reason, she seemed to have an issue controlling her physical reaction to his voice. There was no landscape lighting, so no fear of them being seen outside the restored soaring windows. Fernandez hadn’t bothered with window coverings anywhere on the first floor. She imagined that he assumed the dirty build-up on the glass would do the trick.
“Especially after we disable them and take their weapons,” she said in response to Stark’s suggestion.
Stark raised an eyebrow at her strategy, drawing her attention to his unusual green eyes for the hundredth time. She disliked immensely that she was so taken with the color.
“Subduing Fernandez would likely garner their compliance,” he argued. “In light of their less than stellar performance so far I’d recommend something less than an excessive show of force. Get in, get out with the least amount of resistance.”
“They have guns, Stark.” Did he have to argue with her every approach? If this was his idea of teamwork, she was out.
“That would be my point.” He shifted his attention back to the drama inside. “We’re not armed and Fernandez appears not to carry a weapon, making for a more level playing field.”
He probably viewed busting in as a bad idea, too.
“Waiting until Fernandez calls it a night will provide the optimum opportunity,” he went on. “His underlings will retire to their quarters and we’ll have the least interference.”
Casey knew it. Stark would take the most conservative approach. Every step they had made together so far had teemed with caution. They hadn’t gotten twenty yards in this direction before he’d stopped and insisted on going back to search the area around the hole they’d fallen in for the weapon he’d taken from the bad guy. It hadn’t mattered that she explained repeatedly that she had not seen the weapon while trying to figure out a way to get him out of said hole. That proved, without a doubt, that he did not trust her. How were they supposed to work together if he didn’t trust her?
When they had finally reached Fernandez’s place, they had searched the small outbuilding before advancing to the main house. The outbuilding seemed deserted and no weapons had been lying around, but it was obvious that the building served as a bunkhouse for Fernandez’s pals. A man like him would never share a roof with the help.
“Waiting,” Casey countered. “That’s your plan?”
“You’re suggesting that yours is better?” He waved the tire iron in her face, the rusty weapon made significantly less threatening by the dim glow from the window. “Since we’re so well prepared and all.”
“We compromise.” Casey turned the notion over in her head. “We lay in wait in the bunkhouse and surprise his men. Put them out of commission, then we’ll have the advantage of no distractions and we’ll be armed. Convincing Fernandez to talk will be a breeze.” Made perfect sense to her, but then she was a highly trained agent.
Stark deliberated for long enough to make her want to shake him. She wasn’t going to like his response. Exasperation roiled in her gut. This was exactly why she preferred working without a partner. Far too much energy was expended on talk rather than action.
“Must the last word always belong to you?”
She’d expected a flat-out no or maybe a counter plan. Definitely not such a personal question. No, not a question. He’d made a statement disguised as a question. An outright accusation. “Is that a yes?” They were wasting time. Since Fernandez was no longer pacing she had to assume the discussion inside was winding down.
“Why not?” Stark directed his attention back to the scene inside the house.
Would it have been so difficult to respond with a simple yes? She checked the status of those inside one last time before moving away from the window. When she was clear, she pushed upright and hustled to the outbuilding they had decided was a bunkhouse. Stark followed close behind her.
Casey had never worked with a P.I. before. If they were all this conservative she didn’t see how they ever completed a mission successfully.
The bunkhouse was unlocked. In fact, there wasn’t a lock at all. Casey supposed Fernandez’s security or cleanup detail, whatever those two called themselves, weren’t concerned with their own personal safety. Made Casey’s job a whole lot easier. The door’s hinges creaked with age and neglect, making her cringe though she knew the noise was coming. The smell of overloaded ashtrays and sweaty socks wasn’t any more aromatic now than it had been the first time she’d entered.
Like the landscape, the interior of the one-room structure was rustic and desolate. Light beyond that of the moon filtering in the windows was not required to survey the sparsely furnished space. Wood floors and walls that had been around several decades. Windows with no glass, just small rectangles cut out of the walls. A couple beat-up iron beds with shabby blankets covering the mattresses. The chest of drawers loaded with unwashed clothes had been searched and there was nothing on the wobbly table other than a couple empty beer bottles. A single bare bulb dangled over the table and its accompanying woven bottom chairs. A rusty fridge held more beer. The place was a real dump.
Casey took a position at one of the windows facing the back of the main house. Stark stayed near the door. She needed a weapon. They’d checked under the scrawny mattresses already as well as every other nook and cranny in the joint. There was no place else to look.
The beer bottles. She smiled and moved as soundlessly as possible to the table. One in each hand, she resumed her position at the window just in time to watch the two
hombres
swagger from the back of the main house. She drew back but there was no worry. The men were too busy arguing about who screwed up to look, even if they had been able to see her in the dark.
She glanced toward Stark; he had faded into the shadows on the other side of the door. Doing the same, she flattened against the wall, putting the chest of drawers between her and the door.
The hinges whined as the back door opened. Their booted footsteps echoed loudly as the two men stamped into the room, still growling at each other.
Casey held her breath.
The man in the gray sweatshirt dragged out a chair, the legs scraping across the wood floor, and collapsed into it. She braced for him to yank at the chain, turning on the overhead light but he didn’t. Anger lit beneath her breastbone. This was the idiot who’d chased them through a literal mine field.
Guy Two ranted in Spanish, basically reenacting the scene with their boss, as he slammed the door. He blamed his partner for not putting a bullet in Casey’s and Stark’s heads sooner. He opened the fridge door. A dim burst of light pooled around him. Casey held absolutely still, the blood roaring in her ears. The faint glow didn’t reach her or Stark’s position.
The big-mouthed goon slammed the fridge door, still blustering as if he were the
jefe
around here. According to him, now there was no way to say for sure until daylight if Casey and Stark had fallen into a mine shaft or one of the
de basura
holes.
She had thought as much. The hole hadn’t been a mine shaft. It had been a hole for illegally disposing of garbage.
In her peripheral vision she saw Stark make his move. The smug guy standing crumpled to the floor when hit with the tire iron. His sweatshirt-sporting friend shot up, his chair toppling over. Casey bolted forward and whacked him on the head with the beer bottle in her right hand. Glass shattered on the floor. When he turned and made a dive at her, his gun already palmed, she gave him another smack with the one in her left. He crashed the same way his
amigo
had.
Casey tugged the 9mm from the guy closest to her and tucked it into the waistband of her skirt at the small of her back. Her mind already two steps ahead, she shuffled through the drawers of the chest until she had four shirts to use in securing the buttwads on the floor. She pitched two Stark’s way.
Working swiftly, they didn’t speak until they tied the goons’ hands behind their backs, then secured the makeshift tether to their bound ankles. Getting loose wouldn’t be so easy. Socks stuffed in their mouths would ensure they didn’t sound an alarm for their boss.
Stark placed his hand on her shoulder. She looked up at him, hoping he didn’t notice the quiver his touch had evoked. Why the heck did she keep doing that? “Slow and quiet,” he warned. “We want him alive and talking.”
Maybe it shouldn’t have, but his cautionary advice ticked her off. She hadn’t planned to go in guns-a-blazing. He sounded like her superiors at the Agency. “Got it.”
She shrugged off his touch and moved to the door. She wasn’t reckless; she was bold…brave…unflinching. If she gave off that vibe, what of it? She was glad. She wasn’t weak, so why pretend?
The wind had picked up outside. Raising her hand to her face, Casey protected her eyes from the sand that might be flying around. She and Stark reached the main house without incident. Hopefully that meant Fernandez had either retired for the evening or wasn’t near any of the windows that faced the back of his property.
At the same window where they’d been before, Casey carefully peeked inside. Fernandez had slumped into a large wing chair with a tall glass. Judging by the small amount of golden liquid that remained, he was on his way to exceedingly relaxed.
Tequila could steal the roar from a lion. It had helped many find the floor.
Casey considered their options and decided that the straightforward approach would be the most efficient method of achieving their goal. She crouched down below the window and waited for Stark to join her.
“I’m guessing the back door was left unlocked.”
Stark nodded, to her surprise. “If he hears us, he’ll think it’s one of them.” He jerked his head toward the bunkhouse.
True. “He certainly won’t be expecting us.” The sweetest kind of revenge. She was going to enjoy this, as long as Stark didn’t get in her way.
Casey stayed down until she was clear of the window. A few seconds were required to reach the back of the house. She flattened against the wall and listened. The silence bugged her a little. Too bad Fernandez wasn’t watching a favorite movie or playing a few tunes. Going for a quiet entrance could backfire if the floor creaked or she bumped into something. The rooms at the back of the house were dark. The smarter move would be to go in loud, like the
locos
out in the bunkhouse.
Stark faced her from the opposite side of the rear entrance. Casey held up one finger, then two. He was braced to move on three. She didn’t bother with three. She barged through the door, too fast for Stark to snatch her back.
The back door led straight into the kitchen. She stamped into the wide entry hall that appeared to connect the kitchen to the front rooms. She took a position next to a towering cabinet with glass doors. Behind the glass were all manner of exquisite art pieces. At least the lying scumbag had decent taste.
The hall was wide and dimly lit by the light valiantly stretching across the floor from the front room where Fernandez had been lounging.
“What the hell do you want now?” Fernandez howled. “I told you to get out!”
Stoneware crashed on the floor of the kitchen. Stark. Casey grinned. He got it. Her new partner was luring the prey from his safety zone.
“If you broke anything important,” Fernandez promised, the sound of his voice growing nearer, “I will make you eat it and laugh as you bleed to death.” Obviously he saw using English with his thugs at moments like this as a way to prove his superiority.
One step…two… He passed right in front of her position and she stepped out to press the muzzle of the borrowed 9mm to his temple. “Maybe you’ll be the one bleeding to death.” She sighed with all the drama she could muster. “Afraid I couldn’t lose my tracker.”
Stark flipped on the overhead light, the 9mm he’d snagged zeroed in on Fernandez’s head.
“I guess you’ll just have to deal with it,” Casey said with a nudge of the muzzle.
Fernandez said nothing for a moment, his lips twisted in anger. “My order was to tell you nothing.”