Taken By the Spy. Cindy Dees

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not to call the police. She hadn’t said anything about not contacting the Coast Guard. She set course for St. John. Now all she had to do was keep this guy calm until she got there.

      She glanced over at him. He slouched in the passenger seat, far too sexy for his own good. She almost missed having not been born in the good old days before AIDS and other nasty STDs, when a girl could casually jump a guy’s bones without any thought to consequences. This guy just begged to be bedded.

      He leaned his head back against the leather headrest. His eyes drifted closed. For an instant, he looked utterly exhausted. She shifted weight the slightest bit, and his eyes snapped open, alert and intelligent. His gaze traveled briefly up and down the length of her. “Are you done panicking yet?”

      She blinked. Retorted with light sarcasm, “Why, yes, I’m perfectly fine. Thank you for asking. Lovely weather we’re having, aren’t we?”

      A rusty sound escaped him. It took her a moment to identify it. That was a laugh—from a man who apparently didn’t do it very often.

      “Jeez, that was close,” he mumbled.

      Keep him talking. Make a human connection with him. So he wouldn’t view her as an object to be kidnapped or killed at will. “And just what was that?

      “A hit. Or rather an attempted hit, since I’m still alive.”

      “Why were they trying to kill you?”

      He shrugged. “The list of people who’d like to see me dead is long and distinguished.”

      “Were those old enemies or new ones?”

      He shot her a speculative look. “A perceptive question. And one to which I don’t know the answer.”

      Why would someone hire assassins to take this man out? What line of work was he in? “You’re not a drug dealer, are you? Because I don’t mess with drugs, regardless of what the tabloids say. And I certainly won’t run them on this boat.”

      He made a wry face at her. “Trust me. My life would be a helluva lot simpler if I were a drug runner.”

      “So how do you know my father?”

      “I don’t.”

      “And he let you borrow his boat because…”

      “Because my boss asked him for a favor. And no, I’m not going to tell you who my boss is.”

      “Did my father know you were running from hit men when he agreed to this favor?”

      Mitch’s lips twitched. “He probably surmised as much.”

      “Why?” She didn’t waste her breath asking again what he did, but the question hung heavy in the air between them. Silence stretched out while she waited for an explanation, but none was forthcoming. She probed a little more. “Surely you’re exaggerating the threat to me. I vaguely saw two men from a distance and one of them has a giant hole in his chest now. I certainly wasn’t close enough to make out their faces.”

      “You saw more than you know.”

      “Like what?”

      “You can accurately estimate their height and weight. Identify hair color. Skin color. Give a rough description of their clothing. Of how they ran. Their shooting stances. Tell that they used handguns and a shotgun. And if you know anything about firearms, you might be able to tell the police they used large caliber, hollow-point slugs from the sounds of the shots.”

      She was tempted to swear under her breath. He was right. Darn it. She’d just wanted some peace and quiet. To be left alone. Was that too much to ask for? She fiddled with the GPS navigation system, checked the coordinates for St. John, and made a course correction to point more directly at the island and its Coast Guard contingent. They’d remove this guy from her boat and her life, and then, if she was lucky, paradise would settle back down to its dull, safe and monotonous routine.

      If she was lucky.

      Mitch’s cell phone vibrated insistently against his hip. Again. Yeah, he bet they wanted to talk to him. In a big way. They’d probably picked up a report of a dead man in the water from Coast Guard radio scanners in Tortola. Thank God Kinsey had already been on the Baby Doll and had the boat untied and engines running. Otherwise, he’d be shark bait now instead of the Cuban killer.

      Interesting female, Kinsey Hollingsworth. Very East Coast upper crust. The whole package screamed old money. Her attractiveness went way beyond good grooming and expensive packaging. She was genuinely beautiful. Her blue eyes, long blond hair and aristocratic bones were very easy on the eye. She ran to the tall side, maybe five foot eight. In good shape. Just enough curves in the right places to give a man hot sweats. Which set his teeth thoroughly on edge. He probably shouldn’t despise every leggy, gorgeous blonde he met, but damned if he could stop the reaction. Even after all these years, the gall of betrayal tasted bitter in his mouth.

      At least the princess hadn’t panicked when the chips were down.

      Nobody should’ve known about tonight’s meeting between him and Zaragosa. How in the hell had the Cubans found out about it? Worse, how had they found out about the meeting early enough to position assassins to disrupt it?

      He didn’t like it. Not one bit. This was the sort of wrinkle that got a mission scrubbed. But he wasn’t so sure the boys upstairs would call this one off. Too much rode on it. And like it or not, he was the best man for the job. Hell, the only man for the job.

      He pushed wearily to his feet. He probably ought to see to his shoulder now.

      “I need somewhere dry to stow my bag,” he announced.

      Kinsey replied, “Inside the cabin. There’s storage under the sofa cushions.”

      She turned away to have a look at the propellers, and he took the opportunity to surreptitiously unplug the microphone from the boat’s radio. He pocketed it quickly, grabbed his bag, and headed inside.

      Sure enough, the bullet had grazed the meaty part of his upper arm just below the shoulder joint. After awkwardly cleaning and bandaging the shallow wound, he fished out his cell phone. He needed to let the boys in the Bat Cave know he was alive and find out if the mission was still green-lighted after this fiasco.

      The Baby Doll’s cabin was low and compact. A flat-screen TV, tufted leather upholstery, and lots of brushed chrome oozed money. Nearly as sexy and expensive as the woman up top. A tiny porthole let in a wash of red light as he dialed. The phone barely finished a single ring before it was picked up.

      “White Horse, here. Go.”

      Usually, Mitch worked on the civilian side of the house for Jennifer Blackfoot, the civilian agent-in-charge of the Hunter Operation Team. Casually dubbed the H.O.T. Watch. But for this mission, he’d been put under the control of her equivalent on the military side of the operation, Commander Hathaway.

      Mitch replied, “Lancer here. Thought you’d like an update.”

      “It’s good to hear your voice.”

      Mitch snorted. “It’s good

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