Authors: Meli Raine
Tags: #military, #BBW Romance, #coming of age, #contemporary, #Contemporary Fiction, #Contemporary Women, #Fiction, #General, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction, #Mystery & Suspense, #new adult, #New Adult & College, #romance, #romantic suspense, #suspense, #women's fiction
Mark reaches for my phone, takes it from my frozen hand, and presses “End.”
He looks at me. Looks outside at the chief and all the officers examining the crime scene. Looks back at my phone.
“
We’ve both been set up,” he declares.
Then he grabs my purse and stomps outside to his car. He yanks open the front driver’s side door, throws my stuff in back, and looks at me.
I
grab my backpack,
race to him, climb in the passenger side, and rest my head against the seat, eyes closed.
Terminated.
I’m
terminated
.
I’m really, truly done.
“Where are we going?” I can tell how tired I am by my tone of voice. It sounds like each word has to be lifted with great effort, like stacking blocks of concrete.
“Somewhere where people don’t
try to
kill dogs and hang them on your doorknob.”
I shudder. Mark’s hand is on my knee as we drive and he looks at me sharply as he feels me tremor.
“You okay?”
“
N
o.”
My blunt answer makes him scowl. “Stupid question. I shou
l
d know better,” he says in a clipped voice.
“So where are we going?”
“The coast.
We need to get the fuck away from here. The chief said he’d give us one day.
”
“Half of California is ‘the coast’.”
“Not half. Not technically.”
“
M
ark,” I say, my voice low and menacing.
“We’re going north of Los Angeles.”
“To....?” I draw out the word, making it a question.
“To visit my brother.”
I look down at my unkempt self. “I’m not exactly dressed to be taken somewhere for a big
occasion
to meet your family.”
“Not my entire family. Just my brother.”
“Why?”
He tenses. I can tell he almost lied to me again. His hand moves from my knee to the steering wheel. I instantly miss it.
“Because we can stay with Chase and Allie and lay low for a day or two. Catch our breath.” He puts th
e
car on cruise control, then turns to me.
I see my reflection in his mirrored sunglasses.
Yep. I look as bad as I feel.
“Besides, everything we know back in Yates is over.”
He’s right. I know he’s right, and yet his words send a shot through me like someone injected Red Bull directly into my heart.
“What have I done?” I moan. Home for less than two weeks and my best friend gets kidnapped, I lose my virginity, I start my new job, I get accused of killing a dog and lose my new job, and I manage to
get set up by my worst enemy for a crime I didn’t commit
.
I’ve had better weeks.
“You didn’t do anything.
T
hat’s the problem, Carrie. Everythi
n
g bad that is happening is happening to you. You’re not causing any of it.”
H
e reaches ov
e
r and pats my knee.
We’re both pulsing with adrenaline.
“Yet I’m a trouble magnet.
I
t finds me.”
“Landau
is
trouble. He’s at the center of everything, but the guy is like Teflon. No matter how hard I try, I can’t find anything on him.
The meeting in D.C. was nothing but logistics and underground maps. All we found was the source of the strange tunnels Effie found.
”
I reach down on the floor between my legs and pat my backpack. “We have the emails from Effie.
Plus the blueprints.
”
He nods, clearly in a contemplative state of mind. “Right. I made copies of those and sent them in to be analyzed. Assuming the
y’re
not forgeries or fakes, they may contain enough information to get Landau.” He sounds skeptical.
“
What about the tunnels?”
“Years ago, they set up irrigation systems. The tunnels are narrow, about three and a half feet in diame
t
er, and were designed to improve water flow from the town water treatment center to the science division on campus. Something about lab work and experiments. The town, though, refused to take federal grant money to make the pipes fully operational.”
“Wh
y
?”
He snorts. “
B
ecause they would have needed to build low-income housing apartments to qualify for the federal funds. The town selectmen didn’t want that.”
“So they built the tunnels but never did anything with them?”
“Yep.”
“Where
d
o the tun
n
els end?”
He shakes his head, eyes on the road. “That’s what we couldn’t figure out. Effie’s blueprints only show the tunnel location on campus property. Anyt
h
ing off campus isn’t marked. We don’t want to sniff around town records and tip El Brujo or anyone else off. I came back to try to figure out where those tunnels end.”
“Presumably, the water treatment plant.”
He shrugs. “I just care about nailing Landau.”
“But Landau’s smart,” I say. “He wiggled out of the mess he set my dad up for. He’s that kind of guy. No one can touch him.”
“No one’s perfect. And the bigger the ego, the more likely they are to get overcon
f
ident.”
“Like a guy the morning after sex.”
Mark makes a strange sputtering sound. “Am I overconfident the morning after sex?”
Oh, so now we’ve changed topics, haven’t we?
“I don’t know. I’ll let you k
n
ow tomorrow morning.” I’m feeling buzzed and jaunty, a bundle of raw nerves, and make the teasing comment before I realize what I’m saying.
Mark crooks one eyebrow and gives me a look. It’s like he’s seeing me in a new light.
“I sure do ho
p
e Chase has a tent,” he mutters under his breath.
“
T
ent? We’re
camping
? My idea of camping is no HBO,”
I gasp.
He laughs.
Oh, no. He’s
serious
.
So am I.
“No, really, Mark. I mean it. I went camping with my dad when I was nine and a bat flew into my hair and got caught,” I say, babbling like a terrified idiot. Which I am. “And ever since then, I have a strict rule. If it doesn’t have a hard ceiling, I don’t sleep in it.”
His deep chuckle is not reassuring.
I purse my lips and set my jaw. “
I am n
ot sleeping outside. I am not an animal.”
“Rawr,” he jokes.
I whack him. “I mean it!”
“Maybe I’m the animal, Carrie.” He squeezes my knee, then slides his palm up my inner thigh. I shiver.
We’re both filled with nervous energy. What the hell just happened back in Yates?
“Maybe I’m the one who wants to make love to you on the beach, under the stars, with the ocean a
ir
tickling your breasts,
making those perfect, rosy nipples turn to hot buds that need my mouth,
”
he adds.
Major
topic change.
I
make a sound from the back of my throat that is somewhere between a moan and a plea
. I can’t help it.
“
You’re not playing fair,” I say in a pleading voice, trying to scoot back, away from that maddening hand.
“I never play fair when it comes to getting what I want,” he answers.
My mouth goes dry.
My blood whips through me, spreading desire like an untamed wildfire. Mark makes me feel so many emotions in such a short span of time. I look at him. He’s charged, wild and yet restrained.
And that hand. Oh, that hand...
A throaty chuckle that makes me fill with an urgent need is his only answer.
“We’re spending the night under the stars, on the beach, Carrie. And by morning, I hope you understand, fully, how much you mean to me.”
My body buzzes with a mixture of love and passion. It’s as if I’m covered in glitter and mist, a fine dusting of emotion in tangible form.
I
t’s like I can touch my own feelings.
A
nd
Mark’s spread them over me.
With his words.
The horror of the past two weeks fades as the road takes us north. Nothing has changed back home. I’m still being set up for the dog’s death. Mark’s still in trouble with the police chief for the way he treated Eric. Dean Landau is still diabolical, and I may be set up just like my dad was.
Accused of a crime I didn’t commit.
But right now, driving
along on the 605
, I don’t care. For a brief, shining moment I just let it all go. What matters right now is Mark.
T
hat hand. The jaunty grin that kisses his lips. The strong, round curve of his forearm against my thigh. The play of his fingers against the steering wheel, tapping in beat to a song that he must carry in his head.
That’s what matters.
The rest of the world can go to hell.
Mark’s phone rings. It’s the spare one, the phone I hardly ever see him talk on.
“Paulson,” he snaps.
The person on the other end is screaming at Mark at the top of her lungs. She sounds like an older woman. Cultured. The F-bombs are flying.
Mark’s face remains impassive.
Ten minutes of screaming. It goes on and on as we drive up
SR1
. Finally, the person on the other line pauses.
Mark says, “Yes, ma’am” and hangs up.
H
e doesn’t say a word. J
u
st stares straight ahead and drives.
I wait politely.
Nothing.
I wait longer.
T
he tension builds.
“Who was that?”
“My boss.”
“
T
he chief?”
“No.
M
y director.
DEA.
”
“
O
h.”
Silence.
“Are you in trouble?”
“You could say that.”
“What did she say?
O
ther than the word ‘fuck’?”
T
hat makes his nostrils twitch. “I’m jeopardizing the entire operation.”
“You’re
what
?”
“You asked.”
“But...but...you’re saving it! You’re figuring it out! How can she—”
“And she’s about to take me off the case.”
“No!”
H
e just blinks and tightens his mouth. His hands grip the steering wheel extra har
d
. His arm muscles bulge with stress.
His phone rings again.
“More f-bombs?” I ask.
H
e looks at the number and his head recoils back in surprise. “Ah, Christ. Last guy I thought I’d ever hear from again.” He answers and says, “Paulson.”
It occurs to me, suddenly, that Mark’s last name isn’t really Paulson if he’s deep undercover.
I’m rendered mute.
A man’s deep voice talks for a few seconds,
booming from the tiny little phone speaker
.
“How the fuck are you, Drew? Haven’t heard from you in four goddamned years, you piece of shit.” Mark’s smiling as he says this.
Mark gives me a quick look. “Old friend,” he mouths.
If this is how he talks to the people he
likes
....
The next ten minutes is a series of Mark saying “Uh huh,” and Drew talking for two minutes.
I
t gets boring after a while, so I find a radio station and listen to quiet jazz until Mark says:
“I might need you to help out here. I have a client for you.”
I can hear Drew exclaim,
“Who?”
Mark answers, “Me.”
A low whistle comes through the phone. More talking from Drew. Mark ends the call and tosses his phone in the console, smiling.
“Holy shit.
T
hat was an old buddy from Afghanistan.
H
e served under me. New West Point grad back then.
Total green soldier but a fast learner. I think he came in shell shocked and went home with his head on straight. Started a special ops firm. Private security.”
“Like Blackwater? You mean, soldiers for hire?”
Mark’s face goes dark. “Something like that.”
“Why’s he calling you now?”
“He said he heard I might need a friend right now.”
“
H
uh? Why would....
oh
.”
“Yeah. The meeting in D.C. didn’t go well.
I
t was already shaky before all this bullshit with the chief about Eric Horner. You and I are being set up, and people in very high places in the government are believing it.”
Hysteria floats inside me. “What can we do?”
H
e frowns. “I don’t know, but having Drew on our side can never hurt.”
“
What’s your real name?” I blurt out. I can’t help it.
His mouth opens with surprise and he just blinks. “Uh....”
“It’s okay. It’s fine. I get it. You don’t have to
—”
“
It’s Mark. But the rest is going to take time before I can tell you more.”
His face closes like a Venus Flytrap after being touched.
For the rest of the ride, we sit in an uneasy silence. We’re okay, though I know Mark’s upset I went to see
D
ean Landau alone.
We pull into a small parking area that over
look
s the ocean. About a hundred RVs are parked in a long line along the beach, on a paved parking lot.
“Is this a rest area?” I ask, stretching, pressing my palms against the top o
f
the car. “Because I could use a break.”
“No. This is our destination. We’re here.”
“
H
ere?”
“Told yo
u
we were camping.”
“
B
ut here? You said we were meeting your brother.”
H
e gets out of the car and points to a little pop-up camper.
“We are.”
A woman a little younger than me comes flying out of the
tiny
camper and gives Mark a huge hug.