Night Rescuer. Cindy Dees

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and unlocked it, holding it open for her. She brushed by him, and was startled to catch a whiff of something masculine and expensive. He worked in a ramshackle hut in the Caribbean and wore a designer after-shave? Who was he?

      The door closed behind her as she stared in dismay at the single, king-size bed dominating the room.

      “Don’t worry about that. I’ll sleep on the floor,” he said from behind her. “But it helps us blend in if we appear to be a married couple.”

      She snorted. Like who she slept with was going to matter for squat in a few weeks. “I don’t care if you sleep in the bed. You strike me as the kind of man who’d be a gentleman.”

      “You consider yourself a good judge of character, do you?” he replied.

      She turned to face him. “I’ve had a couple of colossal misses in my day, but my instincts are usually right.”

      “What are your instincts saying about me?”

      He asked the question casually enough, but all of a sudden thick anticipation hung in the air between them. She studied him closely. No two ways about it. The man was gorgeous. But there was more to him than that. There was the whole competence thing she’d already noticed, but the way he held himself…ramrod straight, dignified…

      “My instincts say you are a formidable man, John Hollister.”

      He cocked an eyebrow and said nothing.

      “You’re honest. Maybe to a fault. You’re—” she searched for a word “—demanding of the people around you.”

      That made him start a bit. She must have hit a nerve.

      “But you’re more demanding of yourself. How am I doing so far?”

      A shrug. But his eyes had gone nearly black.

      “I think you don’t laugh nearly enough. You’re goal-oriented. Probably don’t know how to relax.”

      “I can relax,” he disagreed.

      She wagged a finger at him. “Ahh, but do you choose to? I think not.”

      “How do you come to all these fascinating conclusions about me?”

      “Your jaw. It’s all there in your jaw.”

      “My—I thought the window to the soul is the eyes.”

      “Not in your case. You don’t show anything of yourself in your eyes.”

      “That, I can believe,” he muttered. “Thank God.”

      “Okay. Your turn. What do your instincts tell you about me?” she challenged.

      “You don’t want to know.” And with that, he whirled and headed for the door. “I’ve got to go out for a little while. There are a few supplies I still need to get for our trip.”

      Things he couldn’t get past the Peruvian Customs officials? Like weapons, maybe? She didn’t say anything aloud. Her evasive escort wouldn’t have told her anyway, if she didn’t miss her guess.

      “Stay here,” he ordered. “Don’t answer the phone and don’t let anyone into the room. I’ll be back soon.”

      He slipped out of the room quietly, the door closing silently behind him.

      

      John leaned against the wall of the elevator, breathing hard. Damn, that woman had pegged him cold. How in the world had she done that? For some reason it scared the hell out of him that she could see through him so easily. He was supposed to be a rock. Never show any emotion. Be in complete control at all times. Had he lost his edge completely for a civilian to read him like an open book?

      What in the hell was he doing out here? He was in no shape to go on any sort of field operation. But then, this wasn’t an actual mission. It was a simple delivery job. Just take the woman to see her family wherever they were tucked away up in the mountains.

      Nonetheless, his instincts told him to treat this like a full-blown op. To arm himself and go to ground as if he and Melina were both in mortal danger. And like Melina, his instincts were usually spot-on. Usually. He’d been dead wrong in a cold Afghani mountain pass a few months ago. And his entire team had paid the price. The ultimate price. And here he was, in a swanky hotel with a beautiful woman, alive and kicking, while eight good men—his men—were turning to dust.

      He swore and stepped out of the elevator.

      

      Melina stepped out of the shower, having steamed herself to approximately the doneness of a cooked lobster. Out of her original suitcase—the one she’d packed at home, not the backpack Hollister had filled for her on the island—she pulled out a purple lace lingerie ensemble and donned it. Over that she pulled a stretchy black dress that hugged her curves like a fine race car on a fast track. She’d worked off a whole lot of frustrations over her research in the gym over the years, and she might as well show off the results in this, her last hurrah.

      She slipped on a strappy pair of black stilettos. She hadn’t the slightest idea why she’d packed them, but they were the sexiest shoes she owned, and she’d wanted to have them with her. For confidence. How pathetic was that? She had to turn to clothing for moral support. Where had the brash, smart, ballsy young woman that she’d once been gone? When had she allowed life to turn her into a meek, uninteresting doormat?

      A man like John Hollister would never settle for a doormat. Of that she was sure. And maybe that was why she’d donned her little black dress and these shoes. She turned off all the lights before she opened the drapes and sat down in a chair by the window. She’d gotten the impression from the false names at the front desk that Hollister didn’t want to advertise their presence in Lima just yet. And frankly, that was fine with her. The longer she delayed making herself known to Huayar’s men, the better. They’d close in on her like circling sharks, and then the jig would be up.

      How long she sat there in the dark, gazing out at the lights of Lima and the distant, unearthly glow of the moon preparing to rise over the mountains, she didn’t know. It was peaceful. It had been a long time since she’d been truly alone like this. She spent almost every waking hour at the lab, surrounded by government officials and guards and the pharmaceutical firm’s eager executives, all of them hovering over her work while they waited for her to invent the next designer drug to replace methamphetamine, and in so doing, win a huge government contract to create its antidote.

      She started violently when the hotel room door opened behind her. She felt the dark shadow of John Hollister glide into the room on high alert.

      “Everything’s all right. I was just enjoying the moonrise,” she murmured.

      A shadow on the far side of the bed straightened into the outline of a man and detached itself from the wall. He moved over behind her chair to look out the window. A golden, glowing ball broke free of the Andes mountains and lifted majestically into the night sky, rapidly growing smaller and whiter as it went.

      “Beautiful, isn’t it?” she said.

      “Yes. It is.”

      “You sound surprised.”

      He

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