Название: Reckoning
Автор: Jo Leigh
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Контркультура
Серия: Mills & Boon Blaze
isbn: 9781408959169
isbn:
He finally reached the building, the one they’d chosen as a fail-safe. She was behind that wall or she wasn’t, and he’d have to deal with it. That’s all. He could do this.
One step, then another. The darkness here was total and there was no choice but to reach into his back pocket and take out his penlight. He looked away, turned on the thing, then followed the beam of light around the corner.
It was Tam. Bloody, shaking so hard her weapon was all over the map and filthy, but it was Tam and she was alive.
“Stop or I’ll shoot,” she said, her voice quavering, her eyes shut tight against the light.
“It’s me,” Nate said, and he had to repeat it because his voice broke. “Tam, it’s me.”
She stilled for a moment, then opened her eyes. “Nate?”
She sounded like a child. A frightened, desperate child.
He holstered his gun and crossed the distance between them. Gently pushing aside her weapon, he took her in his arms. “It’s okay,” he said, his words muffled on her hair. “I’m here.”
She dropped her gun on the floor and clutched his back. He felt her sob before he heard it, her whole chest heaving against him.
“Shh,” he said, rocking her. “Are you hurt?”
She shook her head.
“Can you walk?”
A nod.
“Okay, baby, let’s take it slowly. I want to make sure there’s no one out there.”
She sniffed, then drew her head back. “I killed him,” she said.
“That was good. You did great.”
“He pointed his gun at me, but I shot first. There was no time.”
“You did the right thing,” he said. She was freaked, and he got that. Ordinary people freaked about death. About killing. They weren’t trained for anything else. “He was a bad guy, so don’t sweat it. Right now, we have to get out of here. They could come back.”
She hung on to him as he bent for her gun. He could feel her body tremble as he led her on a circuitous route through what was left of the building. It took a lot longer to get back to his truck than it had to get to her. They kept the light out for most of the journey, and toward the end she had slowed to a crawl, but finally they were in the truck and on their way.
He’d decided where to take her as they’d walked through buildings, so he knew to get on the freeway toward the San Fernando Valley. She sat close, resting her head on his shoulder.
He would have put his arm around her if he hadn’t been so worried about the rest of the team. Although it hurt him to bother her, he had her shift so he could get his cell, a new one that couldn’t be traced, and dialed Kate and Vince.
“Hello?” Kate murmured sleepily.
He had no idea what time it was, just that it was late. “Tam’s been compromised,” he said.
There was silence on the phone and when Kate said, “Where do you want us?” she didn’t sound in the least bit sleepy now.
“Meet up with Seth and Boone. We’ll follow.”
Kate hung up, but Nate knew two things. One, that she and Vince were alive, and two, that they would be out of their rented house in an hour, on their way to Nevada.
He dialed Cade’s phone. Being the soldier he was, he knew the drill, too. Only he’d have to pack Nate’s stuff as well as his own, and since Nate had the truck, he’d have to find some other transportation.
As Nate drove onto the 101 Freeway, he dialed his sister’s cell. As he’d expected, Boone and Seth were out on recon, but Christie assured him that no one had been snooping around. She promised to be vigilant and discuss the situation with the guys as soon as they returned. Harper, a doctor who’d also been in Kosovo and joined their cause, was out pulling double duty on her waitressing job.
The four of them were staying in a ratty motel in a tiny town just outside of Nellis Air Force Base. They’d wired the place like Fort Knox, so if anyone had been asking about them, they’d most likely know it. If they had the least bit of doubt, they’d pack and leave.
He got onto Ventura Boulevard then glanced at Tamara. She was sleeping, her lips slightly parted, her face smudged with dirt. Probably blood, too, but it was dark, so he didn’t have to think about that. Somehow, she still managed to look innocent.
He put the phone on the dash so he could shift her into a more comfortable position, but he picked it up again as he remembered one more call that couldn’t wait, even if it meant waking Tam.
He dialed Eli Lieberman. He was just a kid, a junior reporter for the L.A. Times, but he’d taken up their cause and was willing to run with it. Nate wasn’t sure if he was braver than hell or just nuts. The last reporter who’d tried to help them had been buried several weeks ago.
But Eli had insisted, and Nate had taken him into the fold. The kid didn’t answer right away, and after the phone switched to voice mail, Nate hung up and dialed again. He did that two more times, then heard Eli’s groggy voice.
“You okay?”
“What? Who the hell is this?”
“It’s Nate.”
“Oh, shit. Why?”
“One of the team was compromised. I wanted to make sure they hadn’t found you.”
“Oh, shit,” he repeated, more fully awake.
“You have your weapon?”
“Yeah, but I can’t hit the side of a barn door.”
“You don’t have to. You stick the gun in your assailant’s stomach and pull the trigger. Easy as pie.”
“I don’t know how to bake, either.”
“I think you’re in the clear.” Nate turned on Sycamore, then on Vanowen. “If they were going to go after you, they’d have been there by now. Just keep an eye out.”
“As if I’ll ever sleep again.”
“We’re changing our base of operations. I’ll call you in a day or two.”
“Are you leaving the city?”
“More than that. I have to go. Stay safe.” Just as Nate was hanging up, he heard Eli’s, “Oh, shit,” one last time.
There was the hotel. It wasn’t one he’d usually choose. This place had an elevator and room service. It also had a great big bathtub and beds soft as a cloud. His only problem was going to be getting Tam up to the room. He’d use the service elevator, but he hadn’t checked out the place and he wasn’t sure where it was.
He turned the truck into the underground СКАЧАТЬ