Authors: Tracy Cooper-Posey
Tags: #Military romantic suspense, #military romantic suspense series, #romantic suspense action thriller, #romantic suspense with sex, #military heros romantic suspense, #war romantic suspense, #military romantic thriller
Nick was the first to recover. He lowered his glass of wine. “Your company is insisting you return, Josh?”
Josh pushed his thick fingers through his hair and for the first time Calli had noticed just how gray her uncle’s hair had grown over the last year. Josh shook his head. “Nope,” he said shortly, pushing out his breath. “They actually like it that I’m down here, keeping an eye on the mines from this close. The board is expecting that any day now Serrano is going to declare the mines to be property of the
insurrectos
and all income streams the right of the people of Vistaria. So my managers and the President are just as happy to have me here with your people, Nick. That’s not it.”
Duardo picked up Minnie’s hand. “You are lost here now,” he said. “You have no one anymore.”
Josh grimaced. “Yeah, that’s a huge part of it, big guy. Beryl just can’t stand the heat down here, so….” He shrugged.
“And the other part?” Nick coaxed.
Josh sighed. “I need closure, Nick, and I’m not getting it. I need to get on with my life. I’m not young like all of you. I need to get on with the life I had, not the life you want to build. The life you want to build is so far out of reach right now, I may not be around when you start building it. I can’t wait for that. I have a wife waiting for me. A life. I need to go back and pick up the strings again.” He looked Nick in the eye. “I’m sorry, Nick.”
Nick shook his head. “No, you’re perfectly correct. You have a life of your own. I’ve been selfish asking you to stay and build my world for me.” He held out his hand. “I appreciate everything you’ve done, Josh. I intend to let your President and CEO know that.”
Josh grinned as he shook Nick’s hand. “He’ll shit himself. A call from you?”
“Oh, I planned to do it in person.”
Josh laughed. “Even better.”
Calli hugged Josh. “But you’ll be back to see us, won’t you?”
Josh squeezed her. Hard. “You bet,” he said. “Once things are ironed out.”
That was when she saw Nick’s face over Josh’s shoulder and put it together. Icy fingers touched her spine.
Nick thought Josh was leaving because he believed Nick was going to lose Vistaria. Nick put his glass down and slipped back into the house. It had taken Minnie’s intuition for Calli to find him, hiding away in the bedroom, twenty minutes later.
She looked at Nick now, the edges of her own anger stirring. Yeah, so he was upset about Josh returning to the States. Big deal. “There’s things that need doing, Nick. Your little boy tantrum isn’t going over with anyone.”
His lips parted as his jaw dropped. His eyes widened. “I beg your pardon?” he said, his voice hard and low. It was the tone he used on generals and diplomats when he wanted to keep them in line.
“You can’t make me cower with your whiplash commanding presence,
el leopardo
,” she told him, putting her hands on her hips. “I’ve had you begging me for mercy too many times, your cock in my mouth and your balls in my hands, so quit trying to intimidate me. You’re just a man and we both know it.”
His features darkened with the quick, black Irish temper he’d inherited with his bastard blood. “You dare—”
“I dare because you’re being a pain in the butt, Nicholás Escobedo. You need a kick up the rear.”
“Calli, I warn you….” His fury was rising. She could see his hand was shaking as he gripped the window frame. She wasn’t afraid. He had never in his life hit her and he wouldn’t now.
“You’re behaving like Josh’s vote of no-confidence is the only one you’ve had lately!” She laughed shortly and even to her it sounded strident and strained. “The whole fucking world thinks we’re in a tailspin and never going to pull out of it! Jesus, Nick, wake up and smell the coffee! I couldn’t get better than less than even odds on us from a wet-behind-the-ears bookie on his first day on the job!”
“You think it’s overwhelming odds that have me at this window?” he shot back.
“You turned tail and ran from that verandah the moment Josh admitted he didn’t want to see us fail,” Calli snapped.
“You’re calling me a coward,” Nick breathed. His eyes seemed black in the low light. Black like the leopard he was named for. He was still and completely motionless, just like the leopard would be the second before it leaped on its prey.
She held up a hand, cold sense slapping her. “No. Never, Nick. I would never call you a coward. Not in a million years.” Images flitted through her mind. Nick at the controls of a helicopter, while bullets streaked past the canopy like lines of white fire. Nick with an arm around her, a gun in the other hand, with three dead bodies lying in the hot sand at his feet, which he’d just taken out with cold, calculating shots inside five seconds. Nick facing down generals,
insurrectos
, more….
Courage was not a quality Nick lacked.
Calli lifted up her other hand so that both were palm-out, facing him. Peace. “You bolted, Nick. Now you’re hiding.”
He stared at her and she watched his anger drain. Bull’s-eye, she thought. Nick was at least fair enough to acknowledge when someone spoke the truth, even if he didn’t like the taste of it.
He turned back to look out the windows. Finally, he lifted his fist and pummeled it lightly against the frame.
“Our last tie to the United States is departing,” he said softly. “Now we’re truly on our own. We don’t even have Mexico. It’s just us in this big house and a few hundred people camped on five hundred acres on a beach property north of Acapulco. That’s all that is left of the old Vistaria.”
“Rank sentimentality,” Calli snapped.
“Truth,” Nick said.
“Bullshit,” Calli shot back.
“Facts,” Nick said. His tone was very, very tired.
“God, I am so sick of Vistarians and their…their chest beating,” she declared. She held out her hand. “Give me your switchblade,” she demanded.
“What?” He turned, startled, to look at her.
“You heard. Give it to me. I’m not going to draw your blood, Nick, so relax. I’ll leave all the melodramatic gestures for you guys.” She kept her hand out. “Gimme.”
Nick dug in his pocket for the switchblade he always carried with him and dropped it onto her palm. The scratched, worn instrument was hot from his body heat. The outer casing was red tortoiseshell. The knife was an antique from an Irish relative who had spilled the blood of others with it. She curled her fingers around it and strode over to the huge old-fashioned walnut wardrobe where they kept most of their casual clothes. “Know how many people it took to defeat Japan in World War II?”
“You’re about to tell me,” he said from behind her. The tiredness had gone from his voice.
“One hundred and seventy-five people.” She threw open the door and reached inside.
“Everyone who worked on the Hiroshima bomb?” Nick guessed.
“And delivered it,” she confirmed.
“I don’t have thermonuclear devices stashed in that wardrobe,” Nick said
“You’re missing the point.” She pulled out one of Nick’s designer tee shirts, the ones he wore most days around the house when he didn’t have a formal appointment as the President pro tem of Vistaria. With a flip of the wrist, she reversed the switchblade, stabbed it through the tee shirt and ripped it down to the seams and out.
Nick sucked in a sharp breath. “Calli!”
She held up the knife. “Come near me and I will draw blood.”
He rocked back on his heels, because he had taken a step forward. “You’re going to explain yourself, of course.” His tone was very calm, but when she glanced up from reaching for a pair of his jeans, she could see the pulse in his temple. His temper was back up.
“No,” she said airily. She used the knife to rip the crotch out of the jeans and shred them into two pieces. She tossed them onto the floor. “How many generals and colonels do you figure Serrano has in his inner circle? How many do you figure he truly trusts?”
She reached into the wardrobe and pulled out another tee shirt and tore it in half and let it flutter onto the ruined jeans. She heard Nick’s breath blow out hard.
“How many?” she repeated and sawed another pair of jeans in half and let them fall.
It took him another breath before he could answer. “Duardo said he thought less than a dozen. Perhaps only as few as six.”
“Six trusted lieutenants running the whole
insurrecto
operation,” she said as she swiftly destroyed three more tee shirts and a casual shirt and dropped them on the growing pile. “Or, let’s be generous and say ten.”
Nick was staring at her hands, watching her maul his jeans and shirts, all the casual clothes in the closet, one garment at a time, as if he could not tear his gaze away. “Ten,” he repeated, his voice distant. A vein was throbbing in both temples and the base of his throat.
“The
insurrectos
don’t have diplomatic status, the Americans and Mexico haven’t acknowledged them either. They look like they have the whole island, but if you actually did a head count of people who really support the
insurrectos
and who were genuine Loyalists when push came to shove, I think you’d be surprised by just how much support you really have on Vistaria, despite who is sitting in the palace right now.”
Nick blinked as she ran the blade down the back of a sleeveless and collarless silk shirt he often wore around the house and dropped the two halves onto either side of the pile. He cleared his throat.
Calli reached into the wardrobe and came up empty. She folded up the knife and hefted it in her hand, studying Nick. “Japan was defeated by one hundred and seventy-five people…and a leader. Someone who made decisions and made the call. Someone who knew that a war can be won by a small handful of people who don’t quit. Serrano knows that. Mexico knows that. The United States knows that. You need to brand it on your soul and live it, too, or Serrano really will win this war and Josh will be right.”
Nick lifted his hand toward the pile of clothes. “You cut up my clothes.”
“Just the non-leader garbage. You need to stop mooching around this house like
el leopardo
, hugging the shadows. If you really are President pro tem, then you need to lead, Nicholás Escobedo, and stop fucking around.”
He came for her then, but she had been expecting it and sidestepped his charge.
But he had been expecting her sidestep, too. Nick knew her far too well. He knew how she worked.
He was a strategist.
He changed directions at the last second and she smacked up against his chest. The impact almost winded her because she hadn’t been expecting it. Fright tore through her. Nick’s expression was implacable. His fury radiated over her like a hot shower, making her shiver. His arms trapped her against his chest and he lifted her off her feet. He was carrying her. Her fright lifted higher.
“What are you doing?” she demanded, trying to struggle but with her feet off the ground and her hands trapped between her chest and Nick’s, she could barely breathe, let alone do anything that resembled fighting him off.
His eyes were glittering with an emotion she was unable to name and that added to her uncertainty. Had she provoked him too much? Pushed him too far?
He kicked the bedroom door and it thudded shut with an impact that made the walls shudder. Then he dumped her back on her feet.
But her respite was short-lived. He snatched the knife from her fingers, then gathered her hair at the nape of her neck, holding her head captive in one hand. He pulled her head back so that he was looking down into her eyes and flicked the knife open over her face. “Payback.” His voice was the controlled, soft whisper of
el leopardo
.
She shuddered.
He sliced her blouse open from neck to hem and shoulder to shoulder, then pulled it from her body. The bra he dispensed with quick flicks of the blade. Then he picked up the remains of her shirt and ripped it into strips that he tied around her wrists, binding them together.
Standing behind her, he stretched her arms over her head and around his neck. Calli was tall, but her bound wrists stretched her and pushed her breasts out, making them jut. She suppressed a moan that pushed at her lips. She was unbelievably aroused despite Nick’s temper. Or perhaps because of it.
His hands grabbed at her breasts, squeezing and pinching her nipples. This time she couldn’t stop the moan that escaped her. Her breath shuddered in and out and her pussy clamped and squeezed. She was soaked beneath the short skirt she was wearing. Her panties were sopping and her juices were starting to run down her thighs. She wanted Nick inside her in the worst way. She wanted him to take her as roughly as he was handling her breasts. He was plucking at them, rubbing the nipples, drawing them out, chafing them, and making them hot and hard.
Calli trembled and writhed against him. With her hands tied, she could not reciprocate. She couldn’t touch him in any way. She could only accept and could only wait for his hands to go where she wanted them.
“Just a man, hmmm?” he breathed in her ear.
“I’m just a woman,” she said and cried out as he tugged at her nipples. “God, Nick, please!”
“Please what?”
“Fuck me!”
“No.” His voice was a caress against her temple.
She whimpered. She had never heard herself make that noise before and it astonished her to hear it come from her lips.
He slipped her arms from around his neck and turned her around to face the foot of the big mahogany bed. The bed was as old as the house, which made it over a hundred years old. It gleamed in the evening light.
Nick retied her hands so they gripped the big post at the end, with little play in the ties. Then he grabbed her hips and forced her to bring her feet out. It made her bend over and with his hands on her hips, she bent from the hips.
She felt the cold steel of the knife touch her back just above the skirt and caught her breath. The skirt parted easily under the blade, for Nick kept it sharp. The cotton drifted down to the wooden floor beneath her.
Calli’s breath hitched when Nick touched her bare hips. Cold steel pressed against her ass just above the lace of her thong.
“Spread your legs,” he said.
She spread her feet, knowing he would see that she had soaked through her panties.