Tall, Dark and Lethal. Dana Marton
Чтение книги онлайн.
Читать онлайн книгу Tall, Dark and Lethal - Dana Marton страница 4
Could be they had a backup plan and he would be walking straight into it.
He pulled the phone from his pocket and checked his missed call. The Colonel, head of the Special Designation Defense Unit. Just the man he needed to talk to. He hit the dial button.
“Sir, I have a small problem. I need to come in,” he said as soon as the Colonel picked up. “I’m not alone.” He could have dropped Miss Scream-and-Holler off at her nearest friend’s house, but she needed to be read the riot act about the confidentiality of what had gone down this morning. As far as her neighbors would be concerned, the explosion had been a damn gas leak.
Someone would take care of Bailey to ensure that she was fully aware of the gravity of the situation as well as run a background check on her before they released her. Not that they would find much of interest. He had run a check himself before he had moved into their duplex.
He would go underground for a while. The SDDU, from which he had recently retired, had safe rooms available on various army bases around the country, as well as safe houses in the civilian world. He’d be directed to one where he could recoup and rearm so he could start figuring out what was going on.
“I’ve been trying to reach you,” the Colonel said, his tone grimmer than hell in a heat wave. And he hadn’t even heard all the bad news for the morning yet.
“Somebody just blew up my house.” Straight to the point always worked best with the Colonel. “Any chance of getting a list of everyone I’ve done business with who has entered the country in the past six months?”
He could hear the man draw a slow breath. “You bet. Not that I can think of any off the top of my head.”
That didn’t bode well. The Colonel kept a close eye on the comings and goings of anyone on their tagged list.
“Could be they came through the southern border without us knowing, or through one of the ports,” Cade said, thinking out loud.
“It’s a possibility,” he acknowledged. A moment of silence passed. “A month out of the action and you’re looking for trouble already? I thought you said you were going for the quiet life.”
Cade shifted in his seat. “I was, sir. But it looks like the past isn’t finished with me yet.” The Colonel didn’t need to know that he’d been staging his very last—private—op for weeks. He didn’t want to drag anyone into that with him.
“How could anyone find you? I don’t even know where you are.”
An exaggeration. The Colonel knew everything. Or could find out in a hurry. “No idea yet, sir, but I’ll figure it out.”
When his cover had been blown in Southeast Asia a little over four months ago, and his life further complicated by shrapnel in his lungs, he’d been retired from undercover commando work at the age of forty. A retirement his enemies seemed unwilling to honor. He couldn’t blame them. He’d done some damage in his day.
But he hadn’t thought he would be found, not this fast. He had counted on having enough time to take care of his unfinished business with that bastard Smith before he would have to disappear again.
He hadn’t even known about the uncle who had left him half of a duplex in Pennsylvania. His grandmother had had an older son out of wedlock that she had never told her husband and daughter about. A son who, apparently, had died not long ago with no children of his own, so Cade ended up with the house. And he’d received his payoff from the SDDU in cash. He hadn’t been to a bank since he’d been shipped back stateside from the military hospital in Germany. Hadn’t used credit cards, hadn’t returned to his old home or any of his properties to retrieve as much as a coffee cup, hadn’t gotten his car out of storage. He might as well have died on that last mission and never returned to the U.S. No one knew where he was.
Except the tangos who had just blown up his house.
“Where can I go, sir? What’s open?” The sooner he got off the road, the sooner he could start investigating, the sooner he could take care of the men in the van and get back to the op he’d been planning. Which would now be delayed, dammit. Didn’t look like he would be catching up with Smith today after all.
Bailey pulled her legs up to hug her knees. She needed to put some decent clothes on. He tried not to look at her toned legs. She was barefoot, her toenails done in pink.
He wasn’t sure he could take any more pink this morning. Fortunately, she quickly released her knees and set her feet down.
“Do not come in.” The Colonel enunciated each word.
That snapped him back to business. “Sir?”
“The FBI is looking for you. There was an Agent Rubliczky here at the crack of dawn. He’s not happy. That’s why I called earlier.”
“What do they want now?” He had left the FBI for the SDDU under less than amicable circumstances that included an inside, undercover job to find a leak. His work had ruffled a lot of feathers at the Bureau. He knew Rubliczky by reputation. The man worked domestic terrorism. His blood ran cold at the implications. Son of a bitch.
“I’m being set up?” It seemed impossible for someone there to carry a grudge this long. He’d left the Bureau nearly a decade ago.
“They think you’re involved in something. It’s pretty bad, Cade. They are out for blood. They are also talking about a Bailey Preston. Who is she to you?”
A distraction the magnitude of which could barely be expressed. “We shared the same duplex. She has nothing to do with this.” He stole a glance at her from the corner of his eye and couldn’t help noticing her nipples nearly pushing through the thin silk top. He liked to think he was a pretty disciplined guy, but still, he was only a man.
“You’re sure? She could be into…whatever. Could even be a foreign asset.”
Against his better judgment, he looked at Bailey full on. He’d been in this business long enough to be a fair judge of character. “Not possible.”
“She is on their list, too. Could be dangerous.”
He watched as she twisted an arm around, looking straight ahead and trying to keep him from noticing that she was working on pulling up the door lock, yanking it hard enough to nearly break it off. Her jerky movements were giving her full breasts a soft bounce. And he knew exactly what they would feel like moving against his palms.
“It would be better if you stayed put for a while until I figure out what’s going on,” the Colonel was saying.
Stay put where? All he had was the Escalade, which could be reported stolen any minute. He couldn’t go back to the duplex—or to any of his other properties. He couldn’t go to the law, and he couldn’t stay on the road. There were some badass terrorists looking for him, along with the FBI. And if that wasn’t crazy enough, he had his ill-tempered neighbor in the silk pajamas to worry about.
He’d run for his life many times before, but never with a half-naked woman in tow. Most guys he knew would say the addition of a half-naked woman would improve just about any situation a man could get into.
She flashed him a look sharp enough to peel skin,