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Thresh: Alpha One Security: Book 2 Page 5


  Then something happened in the blink of an eye. I honestly couldn’t comprehend how a seven-foot-tall, three-hundred-pound mountain of muscle could move that fast, so swiftly I didn’t even register his movement until I was in his embrace, his arm wrapped around my waist, lifting me clear off the ground, spinning me around, and pinning me back against the wall. One second I was three feet from the doorway, the next I was flat against the wall beside the door, his knee between my thighs, his huge paw gently cupping my cheek, thumb brushing over my lips. I stopped breathing. My heart stopped beating. My stomach fell away.

  “Just one kiss, Doc.” His voice was a whisper, his breath on my lips.

  I couldn’t speak. Couldn’t think.

  He was everything, overwhelming all my senses, engulfing every aspect of my universe. I felt him, a mammoth wall in front of me, flesh and bone and muscle and heat and spices and so, so male, so powerful, making me feel tiny, fragile, delicate…

  Safe.

  I felt safe, here, his impossibly broad shoulders erasing the whole world, his hand on my cheek, his lips millimeters from mine.

  Damn it.

  My face tilted up, my lips parted: silent permission.

  He kissed me then, and I utterly melted.

  He kissed me with skill and passion; he kissed me as if I was the only thing that existed, as if to kiss me was…

  A moment of desperation.

  His tongue slid across my lips, tasting me, and then I was lost to it, because I tasted him, his breath. He tasted clean, like mint toothpaste and mouthwash and spearmint gum. He smelled like heaven and felt like raw rugged male perfection. I kissed him back, damn me, I did. I couldn’t help it.

  You don’t get kissed like Thresh kissed me and not kiss him back. It’s just impossible.

  How long did that kiss last? I have no clue. A minute? An hour? Long enough to make me dizzy, to make me delirious, to send a pang of deep, throbbing desire pounding through me, a sensation so foreign to me I didn’t know what it was at first, other than a need, a hunger I couldn’t sate.

  Only I did know how to sate it:

  Keep kissing Thresh—

  But he pulled away, stepping backward away from me. Hand outstretched, as if losing that final contact with my skin was physically painful.

  Fuck, I wanted more.

  And so did he. I could see it in his eyes. The bulge behind his zipper told the story clearly enough, if nothing else did.

  He was true to his word, though. One kiss. He was gone before I could regain my bearings, ducking to fit under the lintel, gone before I could recalibrate.

  He was gone, and I felt empty.

  My head spun, my lips trembled, and I felt myself doubting everything I thought I knew.

  Dammit, Thresh.

  5: GOING DARK

  If I didn’t leave her then, I wouldn’t leave her at all. That one kiss, man…it straight fucked me up. She just tasted so damn sweet, and she was so damn responsive, once she gave over and started kissing me back, man…I was done in. I’ve never been much of a kisser, I usually just used kissing as a tool for getting a girl worked up and turned on so we could get to the fun stuff, but that kiss with Lola…

  It was its own entity. It was beautiful by itself, made me dizzy, made me want to run back up those three flights of stairs and break down that flimsy-ass door of hers and kiss her until neither of us could breathe, until our clothes came off and—

  Fuckfuckfuck—I stopped at the bottom of the stairs, trying to get my raging libido under control.

  When I was sure I wasn’t going to either bust the zipper of my jeans or charge back up to Lola’s condo and ravage her senseless, I left her building, moving on foot back toward my hotel.

  The thing about being a soldier your whole life is it hones your senses. Even distracted, my mind and body are attuned to my surroundings. Which means when I felt that nebulous sense of unease in the pit of my stomach, I shook all thoughts of Lola out of my head and started paying attention. Something was up. Someone was either watching me or following me, or something was about to happen.

  I kept moving, didn’t slow my pace or give off any signal that I suspected anything. Took two or three blocks before I spotted him: he was good, keeping twenty or so feet behind me, nondescript, talking on a cell phone, or pretending to. Average height, average build, black hair, jeans and a T-shirt. But the way he walked, the way he held himself…a hunter can always recognize his peers. He was discreet, staying at a distance, stopping here and there so he didn’t get too close or seem to be too obviously following me. But what he had no way of knowing is that Anselm taught all of us who work for Harris how to spot a tail, and how to lose them.

  I hauled out my cell phone and dialed Anselm See, our resident spook. We weren’t exactly sure where Anselm had got his skills, except in the employ of some European government or another. He was a ghost, in every way. I don’t think he existed in any official capacity, and oh yeah…he could put a bullet dead center in a target at a thousand yards with laughable ease.

  He answered on the first ring. “Ja? Was geht ab, Bruder?”

  “I’ve picked up a tail.”

  “If there is one you see, there is certainly at least one more you do not see. Keep walking, and do nothing yet.”

  “I shouldn’t take him out?”

  “Nein. That would tip them off that you have made them, as my American counterparts like to say.”

  “I was just visiting a…friend. You think it’s possible they’ve got someone on her?”

  “That is your doctor friend, Lola Reed?”

  “Yeah. Lear tell you about her?”

  “Naturally. But, back to your question, it seems likely they would have her covered.”

  “Fuck. I can’t let her get pulled into whatever this is.”

  I worked for a company called Alpha One Security, and our last operation had gone distinctly sideways. We’d been hired to rescue a little girl who’d been kidnapped for ransom. We’d done so, but in the process had managed to seriously piss off an eastern European crime boss who went by the code name “Cain”. He was a ruthless, merciless, well-connected kingpin with a veritable army of thugs, most of whom were of the unskilled variety. A few, however, seemed to be significantly well-trained. Word was Cain was after every last of one of us who worked for Harris at A1S, and was willing to use any tactics necessary to get to us. Which meant Lola, having met me—however briefly—was probably in danger.

  “I think that ship has set sail.” Anselm was quiet for a moment. “I will contact Harris.”

  “I’ve got a bad feeling about this, Chewie.”

  “What? I do not understand your meaning.”

  “Star Wars? Whatever. I don’t like this. I just left Lola’s condo. I’m circling back. I have to make sure they don’t bring her into this.”

  “If you go back, you will lead them to her, and there is still a chance she is not on their radar.”

  “Who do you think this is? Cain’s guys?”

  “Ja, Cain is the most likely option.”

  “I need Duke.”

  “As I said, I will contact Harris. Keep calm, and do nothing rash.”

  I snorted. “Have you met me?”

  Anselm sighed. “You don’t know their plan. You don’t even know for sure this is Cain’s doing. It could be a coincidence. There are many potential scenarios, my friend.”

  “You taught me to tag a shadow yourself, Anselm. He’s fucking following me. He’s good, but this is no mistake.”

  “I believe you, ja? But if you go off the rails halfway cocked, you could make things worse.”

  I laughed. “You just mixed your metaphors, man.”

  “Your American sayings are stupid, and I cannot ever seem to get them right.”

  I’d gone another couple blocks in the time I’d been on the phone with Anselm, and the guy was still back there, despite the fact that I’d taken several turns at random.

  I felt the stirrings of something vi
cious inside me, and it all centered around Lola, around the thought of Cain’s fucking goons getting their hands on her. Even if nothing ever happened between us, I couldn’t let her get pulled into my fucked-up world. Not like this, unaware and innocent.

  “If they’re tailing me, they’re probably looking for the rest of you, too.”

  He must have heard the coldness entering my voice. “Thresh, please, think through every step, every action.”

  “I’m going dark, Anselm. Get shit moving.” I ended the call, and then turned off the phone.

  I kept walking, and started mentally planning. I was low on cash, and only had my holdout pistol, a Sig Sauer P238. It was holstered at the small of my back, hidden under the tail of my shirt. One clip. No wheels. No backup for several hours at best. And oh yeah, my left arm was out of commission.

  But even one-handed, I’m more than a match for most.

  I didn’t think much of my tail’s chances, now that I was committed to going on the offensive. But…as Anselm had pointed out, if you see one tail, there’s probably another you don’t see, plus their backup, and whoever they’re reporting to.

  I needed more gear.

  In a moment of sheer luck, I found myself passing an army/navy surplus store. I ducked in, started browsing, keeping an eye on the door. I chose a rucksack, a roll of para cord, a four-inch folding knife, and a KA-BAR tactical blade with a sheath, some MREs, a flashlight, a pair of tactical shooting gloves, and a lightweight sleeping bag. Paid for it all with cash, which nearly depleted my limited liquid funds. I strapped the KA-BAR to my belt, stuffed the folding blade into my pocket, and left the store.

  My tail was across the street, leaning beside a doorway, pretending to be absorbed in his cell phone. As soon as I started moving, so did he.

  Time to lose him.

  I reached an intersection, slowly increasing my pace until I was moving at a fairly brisk walk. I spotted a bus stop around the corner, with a bus approaching. I took off at a sprint, darting between cars, earning honked horns and middle fingers, and barely made the bus. I caught a surreptitious glimpse of my shadow, jogging across the street, running his hands through his hair in consternation. I had to force myself to sit down and not look at him, not make eye contact. I was just a guy catching a bus.

  I rode the bus for two stops, got off, walked two more blocks up and took a bus going a different direction, along a different route, transferred twice more at random, keeping my eyes peeled for the tail. Once I was sure I’d lost him, I walked until I found a bank with an ATM inside the lobby and used it to withdraw as much cash as I could, then walked until I found another ATM and did the same, repeating until I’d hit my daily withdrawal limit, but at least I had a few thousand dollars in my pockets and in my backpack. Next, I found a convenience store and bought a burner phone, a few liter bottles of water, some protein bars, a few packages of beef jerky, and a box of condoms, just in case things went my way with hot as fuck Dr. Reed.

  The next part was something I regretted having to do, but my choices were limited; I needed wheels, and badly, but I couldn’t risk renting, didn’t have the time or liquid resources to buy. Which meant I had to…liberate…something. Call it a borrow.

  I ambled slowly along the street—I wasn’t sure which one, but it didn’t really matter. Once I had a ride, I’d use GPS to find Lola’s place again.

  There, across the street, was the perfect target—a faux-hipster douche, wearing tight pale red pants with the hems rolled up to his ankles, stupid pre-scuffed leather boots, a tight plaid button-down with the sleeves rolled up to mid-bicep, long stringy curly hair left long on top and undercut to the skin on the sides. He was in the process of loading a few bags of groceries into the trunk of a sweet-looking Jeep Grand Cherokee SRT, deep crimson with huge black rims and red calipers…a quick, rugged, powerful vehicle, but not so flashy as to attract attention, or be super noticeable.

  I sidled up behind him, drew the KA-BAR—seven inches of black carbon steel, razor sharp, vicious looking, intimidating, and eminently valuable as a tool for the deletion of human life. I love me a good KA-BAR, man.

  I touched the point to the hipster-douche’s spine, blocking anyone’s view with my body. “Don’t shout, don’t flinch, and don’t fight. I got no plans to do you any harm, if I can help it. I just need to borrow your ride for a while.”

  “Fuck, man. Not my car!”

  “Yes, my man. Your car. It’s a sweet ride, so I’ll take nice care of it.” I dug the point a little deeper into his spine, just enough to make it hurt a little. “If I had another choice, believe me, I’d go for it. Now, give me the key—don’t turn around.”

  “Fuck.” He reached into his pocket—very slowly—and brought up a set of keys, unhooked the key fob for his Cherokee and extended it behind his back. “Just…try not to wreck it, okay? I’m still making payments on it.”

  “I’ll do my best to make sure you get it back in one piece. Like I said, I just need to borrow it.” I took the key fob, but kept the blade against his spine. “You wanna keep your groceries?”

  Hipster-douche snorted a laugh. “Seriously? This is the weirdest carjacking ever, man.”

  “Don’t I know it. Get your groceries, set them on the ground. No sudden movements.”

  He set the paper bags on the ground, and then turned his head to look at me.

  I jabbed the point into his skin. “Don’t look at me, man. You want plausible deniability. You never saw me—you don’t know what I look like. Don’t report this stolen, and it’ll go better for you, yeah?”

  “Meaning what?”

  “I’m trying to stay under the radar. Give me a couple days, and I’ll make sure you’re taken care of, okay? I’m serious, I don’t mean you any trouble, I just…I need wheels, and fast. This is easiest, and honestly, I picked you ’cause you’ve got a sick ride and you dress like a douchebag.”

  “Wow, that was a little harsh.” He grinned though. “It is a sweet ride, isn’t it?”

  “Yeah. Now take your groceries back into the store, and don’t look back at me.”

  He did as he was told, albeit a little stiffly. There may or may not have been a wet, red spot on his shirt where I’d pricked him with my knife. As soon as he was inside, I closed the trunk hatch, hopped into the driver’s seat, tossing the backpack onto the passenger seat. I had to move the seat back as far as it would go, and lean it back, and even then, I didn’t really fit. But then, at my size, I don’t fit in many vehicles.

  Damn, this was a slick-ass set of wheels. Silky black leather, GPS, upper end stereo…when I hit the ignition, the engine burst into a snarling purr, the sound of a powerful, well-tuned engine. I set out, punching Lola’s address in as I drove.

  Ten minutes later, I was parking my temporary SUV a block and a half away from Lola’s place. I left the backpack on the floor in front of the passenger seat, donned the tactical glove on my right hand. Circled the block on foot twice, scanning rooftops and passers-by, looking for someone sitting in a car, seemingly idle.

  There he was—across the street from Lola’s condo building, sitting in an older model Mercedes, ostensibly occupying himself with an e-reader, but I noticed his attention tended to drift constantly back to the doorway of Lola’s building. He had the window open, one arm hanging out, the other propped up to hold the e-reader in front of his face.

  Fifty yards away, with a clear profile of his head…he would be an easy shot if I had both hands. One-handed, my accuracy drops enough that I didn’t like the chances of getting him in one. Plus, a gunshot attracts attention, which was something I wanted to avoid and minimize as much as possible.

  Since his attention was on Lola’s building, though, maybe I could use this opportunity to…elicit, shall we say…information?

  I crossed the street, hugging the building on my left, approaching the Mercedes at a casual stroll. Reached behind my back, drew my P238, and kept it low against my right thigh, so it wasn’t readily visible. This could be tric
ky, one-handed—damn this useless fucking arm.

  I slowed down as I reached the front passenger door, tucked the gun into my hip pocket, jerked open the door, sat down in the passenger seat, closed the door, and drew the pistol again, all in one swift movement. He never even saw me coming, the stupid bastard.

  I aimed the Sig Sauer across my torso, steadying it in the crook of my sling-bound left arm. “Hands on the wheel, asshole.”

  He moved slowly, setting down the e-reader—which was turned off—and put both hands on the steering wheel. “Can I help you? My car is not so new, not very useful to you, I don’t think. But you may have it, if you wish.” He had a thick accent, Eastern European. Czech, Ukrainian, something like that.

  “Cut the shit. You’re watching that condo.” I thumbed back the hammer with a click.

  “Ah.” He eyed me, and I saw recognition dawn. “You are him. The mark.”

  “Guess so. You work for Cain?”

  He shrugged. “He pays me, yes.”

  “What’s the job with the girl? Watch her? Snatch her?”

  “Watch. If I can grab her without trouble—” Another shrug to finish the thought.

  “How many others are here in Miami? The dumbass trying to tail me, you, who else?”

  That shrug again. “That is it, only. Two, no more.” His eyes cut away, though, as he said it.

  I sighed. Holstered the pistol behind my back…

  And drew the KA-BAR, lightning-fast, gripping the handle so the blade faced down. Slammed it into his right thigh, burying the blade to the hilt. He gritted his teeth and screamed through them. I left the blade in his leg and re-drew the pistol.

  “Now—let’s have the truth. How many?”

  He sucked in a ragged breath, swearing under his breath in his native tongue, whatever it was. “Three more. One more to watch this girl, I don’t know where he is, and the others are in a car, a few blocks away, in case—hovno, it hurts—in case something like this should happen. A few more on call if they should be needed.”