Bulletproof (Unknown Identities #1) (9 page)

Read Bulletproof (Unknown Identities #1) Online

Authors: Regan Black

Tags: #alpha bad boys, #bodyguard, #paranormal romantic suspense, #military heroes, #alpha hero romance, #political suspense, #Boston romance

BOOK: Bulletproof (Unknown Identities #1)
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“Why would my contact mention you?” Getting this discussion back on track was first up. In the past few minutes she’d been trying to figure out how her contact could have known she’d hired a bodyguard. And more than that, how the contact would know the name of her bodyguard.

“Make a gut call. Is your contact a man or a woman?”

There he went, trying to lead again. “Why?”

“Humor me.”

She wasn’t about to admit she didn’t have enough clues to sway her gut one way or the other. “What does gender have to do with him or her knowing about you?” She felt his eyes on her, but she kept her gaze on the wet, dreary road ahead of them.

“Not even a guess?”

“Again,” she crossed her arms over her chest, “it doesn’t matter. Information is information. Gender ambiguity is one more layer of protection for my source.”

“You don’t know.” He sighed, flexing his hands on the steering wheel. “Ms. Bennett, you have no idea how few people know anything real about me. Your source used my name for a reason –”

“It’s a common name,” she tossed his argument back at him. “Where are we going?”

“Using my name was probably an attempt to scare you or distract you from the story you’re trying to tell.”

She didn’t like him noticing her fear, but she really didn’t like how he ignored her question. “The story I
will
tell.”

“How will you decide if anything you’re told is relevant?”

“I verify the facts.” She turned to face him, ready to read every twitch of his face, any telltale reaction in his body. “Do you know about locker thirty-one?”

He shook his head slowly, the picture of serenity. “No.”

His body said he was telling the truth, but he was lying. She was sure of it, despite the lack of any physical indicators. Trusting him might be out of the question, but her instinct and intuition never failed her.

“Would you know something about that locker if I agreed to share something about my story?”

His response didn’t change. “No.”

Her curiosity piqued, she considered her options. He might be an expert in protection and security, but she was an expert at ferreting out the whole truth of a matter.

“Can we go back to Sudbury now and get my car?”

“No.”

“Soon?”

“It’s a big risk.”

She bit back a frustrated reply. The few belongings she’d salvaged from her apartment were in her trunk. “Are you suggesting we just leave it there indefinitely?”

“You parked illegally. It won’t stay there long. We need a place to lay low. Some place safe where you can tell me what the hell you’re working on.”

“John, how much can the story inform you about the threat?” She understood the logic, she just wasn’t ready to share. “Based on my experience last night and this morning, it looks like you’re safer if you don’t know anything.”

“To keep you safe, I need to have some idea of how your enemy will attack.”

She pressed her lips together, determined to keep her cool. Last night looked bad at first glance: the violation of an intrusion, vandalism, and the dire warning painted in blood. But if John was right and someone was watching her, they’d chosen to create that havoc when she was away from home. There’d been no danger to her personally, despite Bernie’s panic and the presence of Boston’s finest.

Today, however, getting nearly kidnapped... if she thought about it too long she’d freeze up. She just couldn’t let it get into her head. Doubt was a reporter’s worst enemy. She knew what she had in this story. Not the potential awards, though she wouldn’t turn them down if they came her way. No, this story would rock the public perception. It could very well mark an important shift in government policy. She refused to let it go because a few cowardly politicians didn’t have the courage to admit their mistakes.

“If you can keep the wolves away for forty-eight hours I can get the story done and Bernie can run it.” But she had to find that locker first.

“And then what? You can’t be so naïve that you believe the people you’re reporting on will let it go even after you break whatever it is.”

“When the story is out it will be too late to silence me and too obvious if they try.”

“Not necessarily.”

He was entitled to his opinion, but it didn’t change her mind. The public deserved to know exactly what agenda the senator was pushing forward.

“If the idea of telling the story brings out teams like the one that just missed,” he added, “I’m not looking forward to who comes at you next.”

“Well there’s one thing we have in common.”

“What’re you going to do about this locker thirty-one thing?”

‘John will know the rest’
. The words echoed in her mind. Knowing her bodyguard by name almost before she did, meant someone was digging too thoroughly through her life. She glanced at her purse, wondering if they were tracing her cell signal or if they’d put a ghost program on her computer at the office.

“If you really don’t have any idea about it, I guess you’re probably right.” She kept her voice light. “It must be some kind of misdirection.”

His silence intrigued her. She waited, but he didn’t offer up anything helpful.

So good at reading people, this man kept her off balance. She wanted to blame it on something simple like his startling green eyes or the obvious strength in every line of his body. But she knew herself better than that. The secrets shadowing his gaze and the temptation to lean against his hard body kept her feeling like she was walking a tightrope over a fiery abyss.

“The target of my story may not know it,” she said, focusing on the matter at hand, “but resorting to murder only makes me want to dig in deeper.”

“More the fool.”

“Exactly! If the locker is a red herring, I’ll go back and take a closer look at the earlier information. We should stop by the office for my laptop.”

“No.”

She was so tired of hearing that word. If she stopped every time things got sticky she wouldn’t have a career. Without her career, life would be... she dropped the pointless and uncomfortable line of thought in favor of the story.

“I need my computer.” She had the thumb drive, but the most recent searches were on her laptop at the office.

“You’ve got a smart phone.”

“One you won’t let me turn on.”

“Once I take care of the GPS you can use it again.”

She didn’t quite believe him. “I can’t write my story on a smart phone.”

He slid that sideways look her way and changed lanes, taking the exit toward the airport. There were lockers at the airport. “Where are we going?”

“We’ll dump the car and then buy you a computer.”

“That’s ridiculous. It would be like starting at square one.” Only a white lie there. Her source had taught her how to better assess her search results and had set up a secure cloud storage system. At least she thought it was secure. “I don’t do ridiculous, John Noble.”

A muscle jumped at his jawline and his neck turned red. As reactions went, it was more than she thought bodyguards were supposed to show. At least according to what she’d learned when she’d done that story. They were supposed to be present, but not intrusive. Alert, without telegraphing emotion or concern.

John was reserved, intimidating when he chose to be, but she could see the tension in his face and shoulders. He didn’t seem to care at all about intruding in her process.

He was quiet until he exited the Interstate and joined the slower traffic headed to the airport.

“What’s ridiculous is you thinking life can go on without any adjustment on your part,” he said.

“I’ve adjusted –” she began, but he cut her off with another hard look.

“Do you want to live?”

She blinked at his brusque question and the strain evident in the rigid set of his entire body. The black shirt and slacks, the gun on the seat between them, suddenly brought her precarious situation into stark relief.

Get it together, girl, and do the job.

Still, the affirmative answer she knew he expected lodged in her throat.

“Well?” he barked.

She jumped. But still unable to vocalize the simplest reply, she waited until he glanced her way and nodded.

“Are you finally ready to admit you’re scared?”

“No.” See how he liked getting those single syllable answers.

“I thought you were smart.” He pushed a hand through his wet hair. “Let me spell it out again. If we go back to your office, to your car, to your apartment, you’re dead.”

Finally something she could argue against. “Are you that bad at your job?” When he spared her a glance, his eyes were ice-cold.

He aimed the car for the rental car return lanes. “I’m good enough to see the reality. For a reporter who prizes the truth, you’re showing a remarkable affinity for denial.”

“I’m just supposed to go along with your plan, no questions asked?”

“It would be in your best interest.”

“But –”

“And it would be in the best interest of your story. You
are
in danger.”

“I know,” she whispered, watching the signs for the airport. Admitting it was one thing, accepting it something different. The bodyguard idea was supposed to be a balm for Bernie. She’d never expected the direct attacks. He was right, though she hated being dependent, she didn’t think she could finish this without him. “I’ll cooperate.”

She watched his hands relax on the steering wheel as he pulled the car into the correct lane. Body language was as important a resource to her as any verbal statement. More important at times. Times like this when she interviewed someone less than eager to cooperate.

“Is there an umbrella around here?”

Amelia looked around, leaned back and checked the back seat. “Maybe the trunk?”

“Got a scarf?”

“No. Is the locker here at Logan?”

She watched the muscle jump in his jaw again.

“Give it up. The locker is bogus.” He put the car in park and cut the engine. “Do you know who owns the airport?”

“The city?”

“Probably. It doesn’t matter.” He tucked the smaller gun into the holster at his ankle.

“Then why ask?” When he looked at her, she shivered at the grim intensity on his face.

“Today
you
own it. There are cameras everywhere, there’s probably more than one already on us. We’re going to use that to your advantage.”

She stared at him.

“When I get you somewhere safe you are going to tell me about your story. You’re going to tell me who and what you need to do to get it written.”

“On one condition.” His glare made her hesitate. “Do what you have to do to my phone, but I’m going to need it.”

Was that a real smile fighting with the corner of his mouth? It had charming potential.

He held out his hand and she dropped the pieces of her phone into his callused palm. This was the hand of a man who worked hard. A man who did more than follow clients around town or practice marksmanship at the firing range.

“What else do you do besides protect people?”

He poked at the pieces for a minute, then reassembled the phone and waited while it rebooted. “I’m not your story, Ms. Bennett.”

Even this early in their acquaintance, it was too late for the formalities to maintain an effective distance.

Besides, her instinct shouted that he was wrong. Oh, he wasn’t
this
story and mysterious red herrings disguised as locker numbers aside, she didn’t think he had any ties to the senator’s misdeeds. But the man had secrets and layers she wanted to uncover. Desperately.

It required a certain level of self-awareness and not a little courage to realize her curiosity stemmed more from a purely feminine place she didn’t typically acknowledge. A place she wasn’t sure she’d possessed. Until John Noble stole her breath just by showing up this morning.

“Condition met,” he said. When he’d changed the settings on her phone to his satisfaction, he handed it back to her. “Send your boss an email or text message that you have what you need and you’ll turn in the story tonight.”

“But –”

“Do it.”

Chapter Five

Amelia sighed, momentarily defeated. She supposed the message would either bring out more people to kill her or call them off. “Are you hoping for a challenge or a break?”

He applied his signature silence until she finished sending the message. “Now let’s get moving. Stay by my side and do not hesitate if I give you an order.”

She quirked an eyebrow and gave him a mock salute. “I promise.”

He grunted, the sound all kinds of ominous.

They left the car and walked toward the small shuttle bus headed for the departure terminals. When they were seated he laced his fingers with hers and rested their joined hands on his knee.

“I suppose there’s a point to this,” she said under her breath.

“To ensure they think you’re stupid parading about in front of so many cameras.” He gave her hand a light squeeze. “And that I’m seducing you to keep you in line.”

She beamed up at him, resisting the urge to bat her eyelashes. “Clearly they don’t know either one of us.”

“Let’s hope you’re right.”

Neither of them spoke as the bus creaked and swayed around turns, jostling their bodies together as the driver bumped along through the parking lot to the next stop.

“Tell me how you thought today would go.”

He posed an interesting question. She gave it some thought before explaining how she’d anticipated the meeting going smoothly, followed by an afternoon at the office nailing down confirmations and tying the threads together.

“What about tonight? Where were you planning to stay?”

“My grandmother’s house. It’s out near the coast.”

“Anyone know about it?”

“Not really. People knew I lived with her in college, but only a couple of my friends ever visited me there.”

“Are you still in touch with those friends?”

“Yes, but they left Boston and have careers in other cities now.”

She assumed his silence meant he didn’t have an immediate argument about her now-distant college friends knowing where her grandmother had lived.

“Talk to them lately?”

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