Untamed Wolf. Linda O. Johnston

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Untamed Wolf - Linda O. Johnston Mills & Boon Nocturne

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plenty of people of higher rank than him.

      Like that gorgeous, sexy lieutenant. He hadn’t wanted to think about her now, but she had insinuated herself into his mind, anyway.

      And that stirred some of his most sensitive body parts. Bad time to allow her into his thoughts.

      No, right now he ached to dig into the mess and figure out exactly what had happened. And not just because the senior commanding officer of his very special military unit had been in the vehicle when it caught fire.

      No, it was even more because he gave a damn.

      But Drew wanted a completely unbiased review, by non-Alpha Force investigators, of what was left, in case it contained evidence that pointed to someone’s having caused the damage.

      Someone like one of the members of that other major unit at Ft. Lukman, whose members had decided to look down their snooty human noses at their rival team here that they didn’t understand at all, except to believe it inferior.

      Little did they know.

      But would they have tried to kill the superior officer of that unit? If so, why? And how had they set that fire?

      Jason had changed into a well-worn T-shirt and jeans so he wouldn’t appear to be doing anything official. Plus, he didn’t want to mess up his uniform.

      As he’d intended all along, he now approached the charred mass from the rear.

      That was where the smoke had first appeared, or at least that was what it had looked like while watching the general drive through the gate.

      He studied it first, then drew closer, knowing he’d better not touch it or move anything around. He wasn’t an expert in finding evidence, and he might ruin any that happened to be there.

      But he knew cars, damn it. And he particularly wanted—

      “Hello, Sergeant Connell.”

      He forced himself not to jump out of his skin—his human skin—despite being startled by the familiar, strong female voice from behind him.

      Instead, he pivoted to see Sara McLinder walk through the only door to this area that he had left accessible.

      “Lieutenant.” He nodded in acknowledgment but didn’t want her here. Did he? The sight of her slim body, sexy even in her unisex camo uniform, made him want to approach her and do a lot more than salute.

      He stayed where he was.

      Especially because he anticipated that she was there to give him orders—like, get away from the damn wreck. Go somewhere else. Obey what she said, just because she could tell him what to do.

      “Sergeant—Jason,” she said. “Do you have a camera with you?”

      He nodded. “I took a lot of photos before having this thing moved here, like my cuz said.” He’d have done it, anyway.

      He’d wanted the reminder of how this poor vehicle had ended up immediately after its destruction.

      “Good. Let’s take some more right here before we start.”

      “Start what?” He didn’t even attempt to hide the suspicion from his tone.

      But that only brought a smile to her lovely, smooth features. A smile that emphasized the natural pinkness of her lips that wasn’t enhanced by any lipstick.

      Lord, how he’d love to taste them...right now.

      “Drew knows a lot better than I do about your skill in working with cars, but I’ve been impressed with what I’ve seen and heard. You should pretty much only look, and touch only what you have to—and take a lot more photos so that, when any experts are brought in, they won’t say that any evidence has become so tainted that they can’t draw any logical conclusions. But even unbiased investigators might miss something a car expert wouldn’t. So I’ve gotten your cousin’s approval to ask you to conduct an initial investigation.”

      * * *

      “You did that for me?” Jason’s look was smug and sexy as he aimed a smile at her. “I didn’t know you cared.”

      Sara shouldn’t have told him she’d been the one to convince Drew. The guy obviously assumed that she’d done it because she was attracted to him.

      Not that she’d admit it to him...but she was.

      She raised her chin as she shook her head in a slowly skeptical denial, staring him straight in those gorgeous golden eyes. “I don’t—not about you. But I do care about General Yarrow, and I want to make sure we get all the answers in case this wasn’t simply a terrible accident.”

      “So you think his car was sabotaged.” Jason’s words sounded more like a statement than a question, even as his expression grew serious.

      “I believe it’s a real possibility, so I want to know the truth.” She pulled her own camera and some rubber gloves from the tote bag she had carried, then set the bag on the concrete beside her. “Besides, I’m here to observe...and help.”

      His turn to look skeptical. She didn’t like that at all. “Just how do you plan to help?”

      She wasn’t about to tell him she was under orders to supervise him—not unless that became necessary because he looked about to screw things up. With his apparent ego, it would be better to let him think he was in control. Think being the operative word.

      “Observation is the main thing. And taking pictures, too. In fact, since you’ve already taken some, I can be in charge of the rest, at least for now. Plus—well, if you need assistance I’ll see what I can do. I can at least hold things out of the way, act as a second pair of eyes, whatever.”

      He nodded. “That sounds doable.”

      “Fine. Let’s get started. Put these on first.” She handed him one pair of the rubber gloves, keeping a second for herself. Then, drawing her gaze abruptly away from Jason, she strode toward the pile of metal remains, aiming her camera and snapping initial pictures.

      This was the same camera she’d used to take pictures of his shift. She had already downloaded them onto her laptop computer and made a backup copy, password protected both files, then erased them from the camera.

      Alpha Force’s cover would not be blown by her.

      Taking closer pictures of the Jeep now would be better, though. “Why don’t you do this in a narrative?” she suggested. “I have a lot of memory left on the card in this camera and can take videos.”

      “Good idea.”

      Great. They seemed to be in agreement. For the moment, at least. And the division of labor seemed reasonable.

      Sara considered herself fairly competent with a camera, but less so with a car.

      Even so, she wanted to do a damned good job of supervising Jason as he conducted his preliminary analysis of what had happened to the Jeep to cause it to catch on fire.

      Maybe even help with it herself.

      Assuming,

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