Risky Temptation (18 page)

Read Risky Temptation Online

Authors: Gemma Hart

BOOK: Risky Temptation
6.15Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

This work is not bound by DRM, which allows you as a reader to enjoy this story on any digital platform you choose to use. But please respect the work of this author. No part of this book may be reproduced or copied without permission.

 

This book is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to persons living or dead is purely coincidental. Any similarities to events or situations is also coincidental.

 

 

© 2016 Gemma Hart

All Rights Reserved

Dedication

To the best readers out there!

You’re support made this book happen.

If you enjoy this title,

sign up for Gemma Hart’s mailing list and be the first to be notified about new titles while also enjoying chances at free previews, stories, and giveaways!

 

Gemma Hart Mailing List

 

 

 

 

You can also follow her on Facebook:

www.facebook.com/GemmaHartReaders

Table of Content

 

 

 

Chapter
One
Halle

 

              “So, Agent Margot, do you understand what we’re expecting?” Agent Hadfield crossed his arms as he raised a brow at me, waiting for my answer.

 

              I took in a slow breath.

 

              In front of me were several open files spread across the large conference desk. Each one held photos of high ranking members of the notorious Desmond Mafia.

 

              And right in the center was the photo of Roy Desmond, the head of the Desmond Family. His face was a broad square shape with hooded eyes and a grizzly gray beard. He looked like the kind of man who could kick a dying dog if it was in his way.

 

              Next to Roy’s file was another photo.

 

              Marco Desmond.

 

              Roy’s son and heir apparent to the Desmond Mafia. I only let my gaze briefly flick over the photo.

 

              Even through the still photo, Marco Desmond seemed to burn like a glowing ember. His chiseled face and dark, penetrating eyes heated up the room in an instant. In the photo, his eyes carried a bored expression of a jaguar at rest. He might look bored and at repose but that didn’t mean he couldn’t leap on you in an instant, his jaws at your throat.

 

              The idea of Marco Desmond’s jaws anywhere near my throat made my cheeks immediately burn. I coughed, hoping no one had noticed.

 

              Agent Hadfield and Agent Truman, the lead agents for this case, only looked at me with an impatient glance.

 

              “I understand,” I said.

 

              Agent Truman, who had been leaning against the wall, pushed forward and pulled Marco Desmond’s file and slid it closer to me.

 

              “This is a high priority case with a lot of things at stake here. We close this and the country will have a field day. The Bureau will be considered heroes,” he said.

 

              I saw a glimmer of satisfaction in his eyes at the word ‘heroes.’ It seemed odd that an FBI agent would be so eager to be recognized for his work. The whole idea behind the Bureau was covert operations. No one here worked with the expectation of becoming a hero. They did the work because they knew it was the right thing to do.

 

              At least, that's what I had thought when I had joined Bureau.

 

              My father had been an FBI agent for twenty-two years and I knew from the age of five that that was what I wanted to do with my life as well. I wanted to become just like my dad—a person who understood justice and fought to preserve it.

 

              After dad died, I had joined the Bureau. It broke my heart to know that he hadn’t lived to see me become an agent. But after a few weeks, I realized, maybe that was for the best.

 

              I had always heard about the FBI through my father’s eyes. He had painted it as a place where all things good and just were protected. He had made it sound like a beacon of morality and justice.

 

              But after just a few weeks within the Bureau, I realized this wasn’t necessarily true. Although we were well past the 1950s, sexism was still very much active within the FBI.

 

              Wanting to emulate my dad, I immediately tried to test to become a field operative. I wanted to be an agent who got her hands dirty. It made my heart race thinking about how proud I would make my dad if I could become a field agent like him.

 

              But almost immediately, I was hit with the first of many roadblocks. The agent in charge of training field operatives had immediately dismissed me before I could even apply.

 

              “What department are you in now?” he had asked.

 

              “Fraudulent accounting,” I replied. “But that was just because my recruiter had seen my degree in mathematics and had pushed me to test for the accounting exam. He told me once I was in the Bureau, I could apply to another department if I wanted.”

 

              The agent shook his head, snickering. “Stay in accounting then, sweetheart,” he said, giving me a smarmy look from head to toe. Although I was wearing a blazer over my buttoned up blouse, I suddenly felt naked under his leering gaze. “Field op is too messy for a numbers gal like you.”

 

              If I had been offended then, the offense quickly dissipated as I realized that agent’s attitude was the prevailing attitude amongst most of the department heads who also happened to all be men.

 

              I knew they weren’t just dismissing me because I was a woman. I knew there were female field agents. I had seen some.

 

              They were dismissing me because of how I looked.

 

              Of the very few female field agents that existed, I noticed a trend. They were all quite tall with closely cropped or bobbed hair. They had larger physiques that leaned towards the more muscular side. And they all had a very serious, almost grim, quality to their personalities. I had yet to meet one female field agent who smiled.

 

              This was very different from the various male field agents that abounded. There were short, tall, fat, thin agents all around. There were men with full heads of hair and others who were shiny and bald. They called it, advantageous covert operatives. That meant it was good having people of different physical looks out on the field because it meant it would be harder to identify them as agents.

 

              Yet this standard did not extend towards women.

 

              I was not as tall as the female agents. And I was curvier than them as well. Most of my blouses were tailored so the buttons wouldn’t strain across my breasts. And with my blonde hair that I kept long but always professionally tied back or up in a bun, I looked too different.

 

              I snorted. Not different.

 

              Weak.

 

              They wouldn’t say it to my face but I knew that’s what they were thinking. I looked too weak to be a field agent.

 

              So after weeks of trying to speak with every department head in the field operative sector, I gave up and relegated myself to following up on criminal fraudulent accounting of big businesses or money laundering cases.

 

              So it was more than a little surprising when a few days ago Agent Hadfield had called me into his office, asking me if I was still interested in field operative work.

 

              I had stared in shock. “Yes,” I finally managed to say. My tongue finally unstuck and I said quickly, “Yes, I’m
very
interested, sir.”

 

              Agent Hadfield nodded. He didn’t look particularly thrilled about my interest nor did he look completely disinterested. He nodded as if just confirming a detail.

 

              “Fine then,” he said. “Meet me in conference room B Monday morning at ten.”

 

              And now here I was, being presented with a highly classified operation that was so insanely risky, I could never have fathomed it in my wildest dreams.

 

              “You want me to go undercover into the Desmond Mafia,” I said slowly as the agents pushed the open files towards me.

 

              Agent Hadfield nodded.

 

              “There’s intel that they’ve recently been in contact with the Juarez Family from Mexico. They seem to be in talks in trading weapons and drugs, expanding their territories exponentially. If they’re talks are successful, they could possibly become the largest crime syndicate in the world,” Agent Truman explained.

 

              “But this also means it’s a large opportunity for us,” Agent Hadfield said, his eyes sparked with the heat of the chase. His lips twisted up in a smile as if he was a cat playing with a mouse.

 

              I slowly nodded, seeing the picture coming together. “If you can get information on where and when the families will meet to finalize, you can bust both of them together, potentially wiping out both families,” I said, looking over the files.

 

              There was a beat of silence.

 

              I looked up and saw Agent Hadfield and Agent Truman staring at me in dumbfounded silence. With a little irritation, I realized they had never expected a blonde like me to put the pieces together. Having been robbed of their big punchline, Agent Truman tapped irritably on Marco Desmond’s photo.

 

              “This is your target,” he said. “Marco Desmond is heir apparent to the Desmond Family and yet hardly anyone has any information on this fucker.” Agent Truman brushed a finger against his salt and pepper mustache, clearly annoyed at the elusiveness of Marco. “But he’s Roy’s right hand man—that much we know. You’d never get close enough to Roy Desmond to find out any information. But Marco,” Agent Truman nodded, as if pleased with his plan. “Marco is your shot.”

 

              I looked at the photo again, feeling a swift flutter of butterflies against my stomach as I looked into those dark, hooded eyes.

 

              “And how will I get close enough to Marco to find any information?” I asked. I could hardly just walk up to the man. The Desmond Family was notoriously careful in covering up their tracks. That was how they had remained so successful in the criminal world.

 

              Agent Hadfield and Agent Truman exchanged covert looks. I could see the look of satisfied humor that passed between them. My spine stiffened. I could tell whatever they were about to say, I was not going to like it.  

 

              “We’ve got you an in for the Desmond Family,” Agent Hadfield said smoothly while his eyes hinted at something more. “But obviously, since Marco is our target, we need you to use your…
instincts
in finding a way to talk with him.”

 

              “Instincts?” I echoed.

 

              Agent Truman nodded, giving a suggestive shrug. “You know, womanly instincts,” he said, barely being able to hold back a snicker. “Marco is a notorious womanizer. I assume it wouldn’t be too out of reach for you to catch his eye.”

 

              So that was why they wanted me on the case. They didn't want me for my skills, experience, or even eagerness to train as a field operative.

 

              They wanted me for my looks. For my body.

 

              I stared at the two men. “You want me to seduce the son of the most powerful crime family in possibly all of the Western world,” I said, staring at them.

 

              Agent Hadfield and Truman didn’t even hesitate.

 

              “Yes,” they answered in unison.

 

              “Will you do it?” Agent Truman asked, looking over his mustache at me.

 

              I stared at the photo of the jaguar personified.

 

              This was my first chance at a field mission. Sure, they didn't pick me because of my qualifications or potential as a field agent but that didn’t mean that I couldn’t show them all of those things while working this case.

 

              Sexism might’ve gotten me the case but I’ll show them that my brains and skills are what will accomplish it.

 

              I nodded. “Yes,” I said, breathing out slowly. “I will.”

Other books

Avenger by Chris Allen
Home for Christmas by Annie Groves
The Mayne Inheritance by Rosamond Siemon
The Time Stone by Jeffrey Estrella
One for Sorrow by Chloe Rhodes
Hot Stuff by C. J. Fosdick
The Wayfinders by Wade Davis
When the Heart Heals by Ann Shorey