The Manhattan Encounter. Addison Fox

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу The Manhattan Encounter - Addison Fox страница 13

The Manhattan Encounter - Addison  Fox Mills & Boon Romantic Suspense

Скачать книгу

lingering feel of Liam’s lips on hers was a haunting reminder of things she hadn’t felt in far too long.

      Or ever, her conscience taunted.

      Pushing it down, she walked past him into his apartment.

      He was protecting her and obviously thought a kiss was the most expedient way to keep her hidden from a threat. That thought was only punctuated when he began barking out orders from his cell phone.

      “Henri? Where were you?”

      Isabella only caught Liam’s side of the conversation but it wasn’t hard to piece together what had happened. The man had obviously been summoned by a call and felt he could take it at such an early hour. No one had been in the lobby when he left his post, nor had anyone been there when he returned.

      “Damn it.” Liam muttered the curse and looked up from his phone. “Henri didn’t see him.”

      “What did he look like?”

      “Someone who didn’t belong.” Liam’s words were swift before his fingers flew once more over his phone. He was equally direct with whomever answered. “It’s me. What did you find?”

      Isabella walked toward the windows that rimmed the far side of the room. Once again, Liam snarled out a series of orders and questions, varying them up based on whatever response he received.

      As she stared out over the London skyline, Isabella knew she was in capable hands. Liam Steele had taken on full responsibility for her safety and security.

      So why did that thought leave her feeling so bleak?

      * * *

      Liam allowed his gaze to travel over Isabella’s taut form, silhouetted against the light from the window, before forcing himself to focus on his brother’s words.

      “I can say it again and I can say it louder, but it’s not going to change the results, Liam. I found nothing on the hotel video feed that suggested someone went in or out of her room yesterday.”

      “And you don’t think it was tampered with?”

      “Not that I could tell.”

      “Check again.”

      “Damn it. I checked it twice and so did T-Bone. There’s nothing there.” Campbell spit out a few more expletives and Liam knew his pushing was only exacerbating an already tense situation.

      “Do you believe she’s right about this?” Campbell softened his words. “I get she’s a scientist and precise and all that, but we’re talking about a few millimeters of space on a suitcase. Hell, she could have kicked it with her foot and moved it. Or the curtain could have been bunched up and it fell down.”

      “That’s not it.”

      He believed Isabella. Recognized something in her prescriptive attention to details.

      And just when had he gotten so fanciful?

      Liam knew his brother had a point. He also knew Campbell and the computer expert he kept on his team, T-Bone, knew what they were doing.

      “Fine. We’ll keep digging. What has you upset now? You said something about a problem this morning.”

      “I need you to check the video feed in my lobby. My doorman left his post and never saw a man come in and out of the lobby, but the guy was there when Isabella and I got off the elevator. I don’t like it.”

      Campbell made quick work of the request, the cameras in all of their buildings already connected to his security feeds. Liam knew it wasn’t a common luxury afforded to all residents of his building, but when he’d demanded the additional access—and sweetened the deal with an incremental payment—the building’s ownership had been surprisingly willing to negotiate.

      Add on the reduced surveillance services the House of Steele had readily negotiated for said building owners and they had a rather nice arrangement going.

      “Nothing on the feed.”

      “No one in the lobby at all?”

      “I see the doorman take a call and leave his post. I see the lobby sit empty for a while and then I see him come back.”

      “And no one’s there? Nor did you see me get out of the elevator.”

      “Nope.”

      “Then we have an even bigger problem than I thought.”

      Another string of expletives echoed through the phone. “Bugger got through my security. I’ve got that feed programmed to alert me to any tampering.”

      “And nothing popped?”

      “No.”

      Liam heard the frustration more clearly in his brother’s voice on that single word than all the ranting and cursing that had come before. “I’m calling for an escort to the airport and delaying our flight until tomorrow morning. Brief Kenzi and Jack on what’s going on and we’ll game-plan when I get in.”

      “Be careful, Liam. Whoever’s behind this? This guy knows way more than he should.”

      “Got it.”

      He disconnected with his brother and for the first time had to question what was really going on. He’d faced tough jobs before—they all had—but this was on a different level.

      And he couldn’t shake the fact that whoever was after Isabella knew the House of Steele was going to help her.

      “I’m sorry about before.”

      She turned away from the window, her hands still fluttering in the silky material of her blouse where it hung around her waist. He wasn’t sure why that constant worrying of her fingers had him intrigued, but it did. The subtle proof she was human touched him way more than it probably should.

      “I take it your brother didn’t find anything.”

      “Not yet.”

      “And I take it he also doesn’t believe me when I say someone was in my room last night.”

      Liam cycled through the conversation in his mind. He’d been more than careful to keep any indication from his side of the conversation that Isabella might have been wrong yet she’d sensed it anyway. “Campbell just likes to be sure. Especially when he can’t find a technological answer to the problem.”

      “And I take it the lobby visitor wasn’t visible on your building’s cameras?”

      “Right again.”

      Her face fell at the news, whatever lingering hope that had shimmered in the depths of her green gaze fading. He could still taste her on his lips, the subtle flavor of her coffee a shocking aphrodisiac. The urge to give comfort had him crossing to her, determined to offer reassurance.

      “Then I shouldn’t be putting you in danger. Or taking up even more of your time with a full day of delay.” Her subtle feint to the left ensured

Скачать книгу