Romancing the Alpha: An Action-Adventure Romance Boxed Set (76 page)

Read Romancing the Alpha: An Action-Adventure Romance Boxed Set Online

Authors: Zoe York,Ruby Lionsdrake,Zara Keane,Anna Hackett,Ember Casey,Anna Lowe,Sadie Haller,Lyn Brittan,Lydia Rowan,Leigh James

Tags: #romance, #contemporary romance, #Erotic Romance, #Romantic Comedy, #Romantic Suspense, #Science Fiction Romance, #Action-Adventure Romance

BOOK: Romancing the Alpha: An Action-Adventure Romance Boxed Set
10.28Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Chasing Julie? Jesus, what had she done?

The dog out back started barking, and Seth pictured Julie staring desperately up that too-high wall.

“Watch it, man!” one of the backpackers yelped.

The first cop dodged the man’s chair then ducked under a fluttering red-and-blue blur — the café’s pet toucan, perched on a trapeze. A second man was right on his heels, holding a hand to the bulge in his jacket as if cushioning something inside. A gun?

“Hey! Stop!” The waitress protested the intrusion in the same high-pitched squawks as the wildly flapping toucan, but the men shoved right past her, sending a tray of pink-hued smoothies in tall glasses with green-and-yellow striped straws sailing through the air in a moment that played out in a weird slow-motion way in Seth’s mind.

Julie. Running.

Men. Chasing. Men with guns.

The smoothie glasses shattered on the hard floor, and something primal inside him roared. If he could have ripped out of his skin and turned into a grizzly, he would have, there and then.

Stop them! Save her!

But Julie’s words were still front and center in his mind.
Get the bike!

Only she could say those words on the way to running full tilt into a dead end.

If he did as she said, he’d probably arrive just in time to see a handcuffed Julie being wrestled into a jeep, kicking and biting and cussing the men out all the way to some awful fate.

If he didn’t do as she said…she’d still be wrestled into a jeep, kicking and biting and cussing
him
out on her way to some awful fate.

He jumped to his feet, pushing his chair into the aisle to trip up the first man.

“Oi!” the man cried, going down hard.

Seth’s rising shoulder met the second man’s chin. There was a distinct “Ooof!” as the man reeled away.

“Hey, man!” Seth said, putting his hands up in feigned surprise. “Watch out!”

The man growled and clawed past.
Bump
— Seth detoured into the third guy and,
whoops
— tripped up a fourth. Apart from cursing, they all scurried onward, intent on their prey.

There was an explosion of growls and cries as the men ran out of sight and encountered the snarling dog. Cerberus — that’s what Julie called him. She used to butter the mutt up with food scraps and that special doggie-magic voice she used on animals, little kids, and slow-thinking bartenders. So she might just have a moment’s reprieve.

Still, there was that wall topped with a jagged row of broken glass — the third-world version of barbed wire. How would she get over that?

But if there was one thing Seth had learned about Julie in the week they’d spent in each other’s arms — other than she had silky skin and a sweet smile and legs that could play tricks on a man’s mind — was that the impossible was possible. That, and the fact that Julie hated being second-guessed. So he dashed through the pandemonium of the café and wheeled right, sprinting down the block. He spotted the bike behind a half-collapsed wall, pushed it onto the street, and hopped on. When he fired it up, his calf squeezed against something cool and smooth — the steel of a machete she kept strapped to the old leather saddlebag on the right side of the bike.

He roared around the corner, turned again to square the block, and came up parallel with the back of the café. And damned if Julie wasn’t already there, running toward him at full steam. Before he came to a stop, she swung up behind him like a cowgirl and thumped him on the arm.

“Go! Go!” she yelled, grabbing his waist.

— FIVE —

Seth twisted the throttle so hard, the front tire nearly came off the ground. They raced down the alley, scattering the two cops who’d made it over the wall. A third was half-falling, half-jumping off the top, and the fourth was perched awkwardly atop it, holding his hand and screaming in pain.

Julie’s hands squeezed his ribs. “Hit it! Go!”

“Jesus, Julie, what did you do?” he shouted over his shoulder.

“I didn’t do anything!”

Something cracked in the alley and whizzed past his ear, and he ducked on instinct. “Holy shit!” Were the men really shooting? At them?

Julie leaned in and shouted. “Faster!” She’d hollered quite a few instructions in his ear, once upon a time, and he’d always been more than willing to oblige. But this was life-or-death, and he was one step ahead of her, accelerating toward the next corner to get out of the line of fire.

A second bullet whistled past his ear the exact instant that Julie blurted a curse and lurched, throwing the bike off-balance. She clutched his shirt. He stuck out his right foot and scraped the sole of his shoe along the dirt road, trying not to wipe out.

“Julie?”

She righted herself and tightened her grip around his waist.

“Are you okay?” He threw the words over his shoulder.

“I’m fine,” she said, but her voice was unnaturally tight. “Go!”

He shifted his weight and took the corner at high speed. As soon as he did, his ears exploded with noise.

Beeeep!

For a split second, there was just that godawful noise and the sight of a metal grill barreling down on him — the front of a bus. A bus about to wipe him and his cowgirl into oblivion before he had a chance to say everything he needed to say to her. One of those wildly decorated Central American buses airbrushed in blazing colors, with red flames and a set of shark teeth painted around the hood.

He swerved at the last second, screaming inside. The bus shot past so close, he could feel the suck of air on his skin. A twist of the throttle took them through a cloud of blue exhaust and then into the clear.

The screech of bus brakes was still echoing in his mind as he gunned down the main street, heart hammering in his chest. He took the next left and rocketed down the coastal road with no clue where he was going, as long as it was away. Far away.

Julie’s hand bumped his arm and pointed left. He saw blood first, because her hand was smeared with it, but she was pointing so insistently that he had to look up to a winding dirt lane that disappeared into a strip of jungle.

“There! Go that way!”

There was just enough space to cut in front of a lumbering truck in the oncoming lane. He flew up the lane, around a tight corner where thick vines hung low over the road, and stopped, killing the engine. Julie was stiff against his back, listening for any sound of pursuit. Her chest heaved with panting breaths, just like his. Like they’d been sprinting for their lives instead of riding her vintage Kawasaki.

Vintage. Part of him chuckled inside. He’d called the bike old once, and she’d taken it as a personal affront.

“Lucy is not old!”

“Lucy?”

“The bike. And the word is vintage, not old.”

That was Julie; she had her pride. Bucketloads of it. That and a personality big enough to fill any inanimate objects around her with life.

Behind the curtain of trees, traffic rumbled by on the coastal highway. The noise rose as racing tires and a series of commanding beeps sped by. Every muscle in his body tensed until the jeeps swept past, and the pitch changed then faded as the space around him filled with the calls of aggravated forest birds.

Seth closed his eyes. They were safe. For the moment, at least.

Without thinking, he crossed an arm over his chest to grasp Julie’s hand, still clutched at his shoulder. Something warm and sticky leaked onto his fingers. Julie’s body was rock hard. He twisted in his seat.

“Hey, are you all right?”

“I’m fine,” she said between gritted teeth. “Let’s get out of here.”

His eyes traced the blood to her shoulder.

“Christ, Julie!”

“It’s not so bad.”

“Man, what did you do?”

She thumped his ribs. “I didn’t do anything! And why did you take so long?”

Only Julie would come up with a line like that at a time like this. If he wasn’t still shaking, he might have laughed out loud.

“Okay, let’s get out of here.” Easy to say, but what to do? The jeeps wouldn’t go far before they turned around and came back. Where could he take Julie to keep her safe?

His eyes swept right, and though he couldn’t see through the strip of jungle, he could smell the salt of the sea that lay beyond. Could picture the vibrant stripes of blues and greens, the silvery horizon.

He turned back to Julie, who was still panting and wild-eyed. She was so close, his heart stuttered and thunked, and he couldn’t help but cup her cheek. They were eye to eye, body to body.

He’d tried so hard to forget this — this pull that set in every time Julie got close. But it felt so right to have her there, even if the circumstances were all wrong.

He dragged his eyes away and straightened to kick the engine back to life.

“Where to?” Her voice wavered just the way her gaze had when he’d touched her.

“We’ll head back to town and hide the bike,” he said, twisting once more on the seat.

“They’ll find it. They’ll find us.”

Us. He liked the sound of that.

“Not if we hide it well.” He risked a cocky grin. “And not if we head where they won’t expect us to go.”

She looked at him, her green eyes questioning.

“The boat. We get on the boat and sail away.”

She stared at him like he’d just offered her a ride on a magic carpet. “The boat?” she murmured. “Your boat?
Serendipity
?”

His chest went all warm. “Yeah,
Serendipity
. Let’s go.”

— SIX —

“Julie?”

She blinked three or four times until the world came back into focus. There was a hand reaching out from overhead, a voice calling her name. The curved stern of a sailboat filled her vision, and the sea rocked beneath her. The voice came from somewhere higher up, past the metal piping that formed a rail at the back of the boat and above the curved letters that spelled the sailboat’s name:
SERENDIPITY
.

“You okay?” Seth asked from behind.

She blinked again, trying to break through the fog that had taken over her thoughts.

“Come on, Tobin, help her up,” Seth said.

Seth’s strong, steady presence must have let her slip into a daze, because she was still sitting in the dinghy, trying to process everything that happened. Being chased. Escaping on the motorcycle. Being grazed by a bullet, if not directly hit. Ditching the bike then hurrying to the dinghy to get to Seth’s boat, where his brother waited.

Tobin. That was Seth’s brother’s name. The funny one with the thousand-watt smile and cheeky grin. The kind who would fit right into a Chippendales lineup or the pages of a magazine. She’d met the brother about thirty seconds before meeting Seth, because Tobin was the one who’d immediately come on to her in a bar all those weeks ago. She’d brushed Tobin right off, uninterested, and Seth came over to apologize for his brother. She was going to dismiss Seth just as quickly, but somehow, she got stuck on those eyes, that quiet voice.

She winced as Tobin hauled her up by her bad arm.

“Jesus, what happened?”

She was wondering the same thing.

Seth left her in the cockpit, wrapped in a beach towel like a lost kitten while he and Tobin scurried around the boat, hurrying to weigh anchor. Funny how he’d always talked about inviting her aboard but this was her first time. He’d always had one excuse or another, most of them involving his brother. And anyway, they’d been having too good a time burning up the sheets in her beach bungalow to budge far. God, it hadn’t taken much for her to fall for him. Seth, the New York business consultant turned sea adventurer. What had she been thinking?

Warmth seeped into her body as she remembered the way he’d tilt his head to listen to her — really listen. The way he’d slowly stroke the length of her arm with one finger. The way his gaze would go all intent like nothing on earth was more important to him than her.

Yeah, a girl could be forgiven for falling for a guy like that. But falling that hard and that fast… That part was hard to forgive. She was supposed to be tough. Independent. Strong.

“Secure the dinghy. I’ll get the sail,” Seth called to his brother.

Julie looked around, trying to get oriented. Until now, she’d only seen the boat from a distance, but even that was enough to impress her. Not so much by its fanciness, because it was a smallish, older sailboat, but in what it promised. Adventure. New horizons. Just thinking about it made her lungs expand. That sense of possibility.

But she’d let her imagination get ahead of itself. By day three of their week together, she’d been silently hoping that she could keep seeing Seth. Thinking she might be able to hook up with him somewhere along the coast when she wrapped up her research. Together, they could sail from island to island and—

Silly girl.

She dropped her chin to her chest and closed her eyes as Seth came through the cockpit once again. His hand touched her arm and she found those honey-brown eyes studying hers.

“You okay?” His voice was scratchy, like there was too much sea salt in it.

A nod was all she managed, because having the warmth of him that close did all kinds of things to her heart, her mind, her tongue.

He wore a polo shirt she remembered. The one embroidered with the logo of the company he’d told her about quitting right after he decided to sail off into the sunset. The kind of shirt she imagined him wearing with crisp chinos on casual days at the office. Except now, it was weather-beaten and worn: a workingman’s shirt with tiny tears, oil stains, and a crumpled collar. Details that said this man was on the run, a little like her. A man going deliciously feral, one tropical day at a time.

He patted her knee and ducked below, and a minute later the engine was on. Julie forced herself to concentrate on what was going on. She’d never been one to follow a man blindly, damn it, and wouldn’t start now.

The boat seemed big and small at the same time. Big because all she’d ever been in were little racing hulls, and
Serendipity
was easily three times that size. Thirty-two feet, she remembered Seth saying, plus more for the bowsprit — the spar sticking out from the bow like an old-fashioned whaling ship had. The other boats in the anchorage were patched-up local fishing vessels or fiberglass showpieces that looked like they’d sailed straight out of a glossy magazine.
Serendipity
looked like something out of
Treasure Island
, albeit in miniature. It had dark wood rails and burnished copper-framed portholes. Brass winches and thick wooden pulleys. A spaghetti bowl of lines, running every which way. She could recognize some — the jib sheet, the furling line, the halyard — but had no clue about the others.

Other books

My Lady Quicksilver by Bec McMaster
Episode VI: Beta Test by Ben Winston
Singer from the Sea by Sheri S. Tepper
Lair of Killers by Will Molinar
The Sirens - 02 by William Meikle
Against All Odds (Arabesque) by Forster, Gwynne
Haunted Honeymoon by Marta Acosta
We Five by Mark Dunn