Read Into the Crossfire Online
Authors: Lisa Marie Rice
"That better, Dad?"
"Oh, yes, darling. Thank you." He reached up and placed his hand on hers.
"You're so good to me."
The one thing left to him was his voice--deep, strong, steady. Tears pricked
her eyes. She squeezed his shoulder lightly and opened her mouth to ask how he
was getting on in reading through the definitive history of medieval Japan, when
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the doorbell rang.
Frowning, Nicole went out into the hallway to the front door. Through the
side windows she could see a police car parked in front of her house.
Oh God. What now?
The man who stood on her porch had been staring at the house across the
street. He turned and took off aviator sunglasses to reveal piercing blue eyes.
Fiercely intelligent eyes. He was dressed in a dark blue police uniform, with--oh
my gosh--body armor. And about a ton of hardware on his belt, some of which
looked suspiciously like weaponry. And a big side holster strapped to his thigh
carrying a big black gun that definitely was weaponry.
She opened the door.
He wasn't much taller than she was, but she'd never seen shoulders as broad
as his. Everything about him was broad and strong and unyielding.
"Are you Nicole Pearce?"
"Yes," she replied. "Yes, I am. Is there something wrong, Officer?"
"No, ma'am, not at all. My name is Mike Keillor, with the San Diego PD. I
was asked by a mutual friend of ours, Sam Reston, to stop by. Make my presence
felt." He stopped, looking at her so intently it was as if he were walking around
inside her head.
The mention of Sam's name jolted her, threw her off her stride so much she
barely heard the rest of his sentence. She hit rewind and heard what he'd said all
over again, puzzling over it.
Sam had said-"Oh!" Of course! Sam had sent over his policeman friend, the man who was
like a brother to him, to intimidate the creeps across the street. Though the entire
effect was wasted if they weren't home. "Yes, thank you so much." He wasn't
answering, just standing there, looking at her. Nicole resisted the urge to wring her
hands. She'd been trained from childhood to deal with unexpected, even awkward
encounters, but all her savoir-faire deserted her.
Just the mention of Sam Reston flustered her so much that manners went
straight out the window.
She backed up, holding the door open. "Please come in, Officer. Or would
that be Sergeant?" A lifetime in the diplomatic corps had taught her the
importance of getting titles right.
"That would be Sergeant, yes ma'am. But please just call me Mike."
"Okay, Mike. Would you like to come into the living room?"
He ducked his head. "Thank you, ma'am. But first, I'm going to walk back
to the patrol car and get my long gun. I'm going to do it slowly, so whoever's
watching across the street will realize I mean business."
"Sam--" God, it was hard just to say his name. "Sam said that these two
men who are...who are bothering me will be deterred by you. I hope so. I also
hope they're watching right now, or else it's an exercise in futility."
"They're watching, all right." Mike's voice was grim. "Second floor, third
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window from the right."
Nicole's eyes flew to the window in question. She blinked. There were
closed grungy-looking Venetian blinds over the window. And--yes--a tiny
peephole created by someone holding the slats slightly open. You had to look
carefully to see it.
He turned and walked slowly back to the patrol car. Across that extra-wide
bodybuilder's blue back were stenciled big white letters. SWAT.
He reached into the car and brought out a rifle. A big, bad-looking weapon
that looked like cool, deadly business. Once he'd closed the car door, he just stood
with his back to her, staring across at the house of her nemeses. Holding that big
gun with complete familiarity, like a mother holds a child.
Finally, he turned around and walked back up to the house, following her
in. Once the door was closed, he stored the gun, upright, in a corner, said, "It's not
loaded, ma'am. But they won't know that," and stood at rest, impossibly wide
shoulders back, hands folded neatly over his crotch.
She'd seen a thousand Marine guards in embassies all over the world
assume that stance. Sam had mentioned that Mike had been a Marine, but even if
he hadn't, it was unmistakeable.
"Were you in the Marines, Sergeant Keillor? Mike?"
He looked startled. "Yes, ma'am. Six years."
She smiled faintly. She'd loved the embassy Marines, always so polite and
no-nonsense and utterly, completely competent. Unlike most of the political
officers.
"Can you stay for a cup of coffee, Ser--Mike?"
He fixed her with a ferocious light blue gaze. "Yes, ma'am, thank you,
ma'am. I need to stay long enough to establish that we're friends, that you've got a
police officer looking after you."
She called the housekeeper. Manuela appeared in the doorway, smiling,
wiping her hands on her apron. "Manuela, could we have coffee served in the
living room, please?"
"Yes, ma'am."
She turned to Mike. "Come into the living room, then, and we'll have our
coffee."
Her father had dozed off in his wheelchair. The officer looked a question at
her. Nicole smiled. "Don't worry about my father. We won't bother him.
Household noises don't wake him up." Pain would eventually wake him up, as it
did regularly. For now, if he was sleeping, the pain had subsided. He needed his
rest.
She watched his sleeping face. The skin now hung off his beautiful bones
like a too-large garment. His once magnificent head of black hair was bald, with
only a few tufts clinging here and there, the effect of the last course of radiation
therapy to the head.
During the day, her father put on a brave face, but what he felt was there,
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not hidden, in the sleeping man. He was exhausted and in pain and it showed.
Dying, she thought with a pang.
Nicole turned to her guest and indicated a chair. Mike Keillor sat stiffly,
back upright, hands on knees. Nicole sat on the sofa, facing him.
It had to be faced. "So. Um. Sam sent you?"
"Yes, ma'am. He said you were having trouble with two fu--guys who were
escalating."
"I beg your pardon?"
"Escalating. Becoming violent. It's a process, and it's always the same. I'll
bet they started bothering you by staring, then shouting insults or lewd invitations.
Am I right?"
She sighed. "Yes, since the day they moved across the street. Every time I
left the house, it seemed they were there."
"Because they were watching out for you. But after a while it wasn't just
words, was it? There were probably gestures. And the gestures got cruder and
cruder. Then they walked down the porch steps. Then they came to the edge of the
property."
Nicole stared. "Yes. Exactly that. How did you know?" She thought back to
her conversation with Sam. "Sam told you."
"No, ma'am, he didn't have to. It's behavior as predictable as the seasons.
Sam said they touched your car. Is that correct?"
Nicole shivered at the memory. "Yes. I mean, one of them did. Just
knocked on the window of the car, but it--it scared me." She gave a half laugh.
"I've lived in third-world countries, I'm not usually such a wuss."
His jaw tightened. "You're not a wuss, ma'am. Not at all. The next step is
touching you, and once they do, they won't stop. Sam recognized that. It's why he
sent me. Believe me, we've seen this behavior over and over. They're bullies when
they sense someone is weaker than them. But deep down, they're cowards. They
won't want to mess with the police. I'll keep coming around. Might actually have a
little heart to heart, in full gear. Scare the shit out of them." He bowed his head.
"Pardon the language."
Scaring the shit out of them sounded just fine. Fantastic, in fact.
He sat there, broad and square and tough as hell, actually frightening to
look at. Dangerous. Not to her, but to anyone he might deem an enemy. Those
heavy muscles moved with athletic grace. He was SWAT. He more than knew
how to handle weapons. Creepy and Creepier might very well try to attack a
woman, but not one with this level of protection. He'd put himself and all the
resources of the police department at her disposal.
He'd just made her safe.
A deep-seated tension dissolved. She hadn't even admitted to herself how
much Creepy and Creepier frightened her. How she'd had to steel herself to walk
out her front door every morning.
Nicole smiled. "Well, thank you very, very much, Mike. I must say I feel
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relieved. So far, they haven't done anything I would report, and half the time I
thought I was exaggerating their importance in my mind, but you're right. I guess I
felt that one day they might do something...violent."
"They would have done something violent, and soon. Count on it. But I'll
make sure they get the message. Mess with you and they're in deep sh--trouble."
His blue eyes fixed on hers. "And don't thank me, ma'am. Thank Sam. He's the
one who sent me. He's the one making you safe."
Nicole's heart thumped as a wave of heat washed over her. Oh my God. Did
he know? Did she have something on her face that showed she'd spent the night
making frantic love with Sam Reston? And that she'd been avoiding him all
morning?
"Ah--" she began, her voice a croak.
"Senora. El cafe esta listo."
Nicole turned gratefully. Manuela stood in the doorway with a tray holding
a pot of her world-class coffee and three cups, bless her. If her father woke up, he
would enjoy a cup.
Manuela put the tray down on the coffee table and Nicole leaned forward,
looking a question at Mike.
"Black, no sugar, ma'am."
She smiled. "Manuela's coffee is strong enough to wake the dead, Mike.
Are you sure you don't want sugar? And please call me Nicole."
"No. The stronger the better. I like the taste of bitter coffee. Reminds me of
the field."
His shoulders relaxed just a little as he accepted the small cup. It looked
tiny in his huge hands.
Well, she wasn't a Marine. She added two heaping teaspoonfuls of sugar
and stirred, watching as he downed the coffee in one gulp.
His eyes widened. She couldn't say it would put hair on his chest, he
already had that. There were thick tufts of dark hair showing in the V of his open
collar, but no doubt that hair just got thicker.
"Yes, indeed," she said, smiling. "Manuela's Cuban, and her corto is famous
in a couple of countries."
Maybe it was the smell of Manuela's coffee, maybe the sun that had shifted
in the sky, shooting a hot beam of light into his lap. For whatever reason, her
father snorted slightly and woke up. His head lifted, turned.
"Darling?"
Nicole's heart sank. His voice had turned weak, shaky, a sign that the pain
was coming. Not immediately, but soon.
She rose, coffee cup in hand. "Here, Dad." She put the cup in his hand, her
own hand cupped under his in case he spilled it, her other hand lightly on his
shoulder, in reassurance. His grasping strength was erratic. At times, he couldn't
hold on to things. "Manuela's finest. Drink up. If you ask nicely, I imagine she's
got some pasteles in the kitchen."
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Nicole plastered a smile on her face, pretending not to notice the bird-like
bones of his shoulder under her hand. Or his trembling hand as he brought the cup
to his mouth. Or the sound of his breathing, loud in the quiet room. The effort of
holding a cup to his mouth was enormous.
Her father had been such a handsome man. People turned their heads when
he walked by, even when they didn't know who he was. He had had such a regal
bearing, one of nature's aristocrats.
Now he was crunched in a wheelchair, often in pain, barely able to feed
himself.
Dying.
This was breaking her heart.
Mike had stood, doing that straight-shouldered hands-over-crotch thing
again. Her father took one look and nailed him immediately.
"Marine, young man?"
Nicole rushed to make introductions. "Daddy, this is Mike Keillor, former
Marine--good call, you still have a fantastic eye. He's with the San Diego Police
Department now. He's the friend of a friend of mine. Mike, this is my father,
Ambassador Nicholas Pearce." She shot Mike a hard glance. Don't you dare say
the real reason you're here. She would kill him with her bare hands, body armor or
no body armor, if he said he was here to ward off troublemakers. The very last
thing her father needed was to worry about her and her safety
Mike gave an imperceptible nod. "Pleased to meet you, sir. I just stopped
by to say hello to Nicole."
Her father brought the cup to his mouth again with shaking hands, Nicole's
hand under his so he could sip. He loved Manuela's coffee. She'd asked the doctors
what he could eat and drink. His oncologist, a wise and humane man, told her to
let him have his pleasures for as long as possible.
Nicole had understood quite well what the gentle oncologist was saying. It
won't make any difference. He'll die soon, anyway. Let him enjoy what he can