Read Into the Crossfire Online
Authors: Lisa Marie Rice
though. There's a lot of work with the military, it's a big field."
"State Department?"
"The State Department has its own internal translators, a really good
service. They don't outsource anything."
"What about industrial espionage?"
"I beg your pardon?"
"Do you get translations--texts--that someone could make money knowing?
Some industrial secrets?"
Nicole was shaking her head. "We're too young a company for that. We do
good work, but any corporation that had industrial secrets someone would be
willing to steal at the point of a gun--well, they wouldn't send them to us. I
guarantee a certain degree of confidentiality, there's a non-disclosure clause in the
contract, and my firewalls are pretty good. But any corporation that entrusted me
with truly valuable secrets, well, they'd be so foolish that presumably just about
anyone could access them. Someday I'm going to set up the company to guarantee
a maximum degree of confidentiality, including encryption, but that kind of
software costs a lot of money and I'd have to up my price considerably. Now is not
the time to do that."
Silence, male cogs whirring.
Finally the lieutenant stirred. "All this banking stuff. Is any of it--" his cell
rang and he held up a finger. He listened, grunted, closed the cell. He looked at
Nicole. "My men are in place, your father's protected."
Nicole slumped, letting out a long breath. "Thank you."
Sam's warm hand on her shoulder reminded her that she was protected, too.
"Hey." The tech who'd been dusting for prints lifted something that looked
like a thick plastic string. "Look what I found. Guy must have lost it off his utility
belt."
The men turned to look. Sam's hand tightened on her shoulder.
"Jesus," Harry breathed. It was the first word he'd spoken since coming into
the room.
"What?" Nicole looked around at the grim male faces. "What is it?"
"A goddamned restraint," Sam said, the words falling out of his mouth like
stones.
"A what?"
"A restraint." He turned, eyes burning into hers. "He was planning on
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handcuffing you."
"Why would he--" Nicole began, then stopped. There were all sorts of
reasons an intruder would be willing to handcuff her, none of them good.
Sam nodded. "Yeah. So let's fucking figure out what the fucker wanted so
fucking badly, so we can fucking go get him."
Nicole sat back, a little shocked at the idea that Sam had foiled a plan that
not only included guns but also included handcuffs. And, if they included
handcuffs, it probably also included pain.
A part of her also noticed that Sam's language deteriorated badly when he
was stressed.
"You seem to do a lot of banking stuff," the lieutenant said again, breaking
the silence.
Nicole nodded. "Yes, we do have a great deal of economic expertise."
"Could there be anything someone would be willing to kill for in those
bank reports? Sometimes a lot of money can be involved in these things. Maybe
someone was looking at losing millions."
Nicole was shaking her head before he finished. "I can definitely rule that
out. Most of the economic texts we translate are to fulfil legal requirements, for
board meetings and such. In Europe, the record usually must be in the language of
the meeting and English, so foreign shareholders can read it. No one would send
us information that would involve a lot of money. We're simply too small and too
young for that kind of data. Our work is strictly routine."
Silence.
"Okay. I think we might be done here." The lieutenant was staring at her,
face closed like a fist. He blew out a breath. "Can you send me a copy of
everything you've received over the past three days? No, make that a week."
Nicole hid her wince. It was borderline unethical, her clients definitely
would not want her to be sending out their documents. But this was the police, and
they certainly wouldn't be broadcasting them. "Yes, of course, though most are in
foreign languages."
The lieutenant looked pained. "Yeah, that will be part of the fun." He stood.
"I think we've done everything we can here. Jansen--" he indicated the young
fingerprint tech, "will be taking your prints for comparison purposes. Will we find
anyone else's?"
Would he? Nicole thought about it. "I don't know. I actually don't think so.
The last client in here was Maxwell Rubens, the software guy, to discuss an
ongoing contract for translations of his programs into Chinese. But he was here ten
days ago, and the cleaning service has been in here at least three times since then.
So if you find prints that aren't mine, they might be Mr. Rubens's. And anyway, as
Sam said, the intruder wore gloves."
"We'll check anyway." The lieutenant gave her his card. "If you remember
anything, anything at all, call me. Day or night."
Nicole understood very well that she was getting special treatment because
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of Mike. No way would a botched burglary, where nothing was actually stolen, be
getting all this attention. Not to mention a police lieutenant giving her his private
cell phone number and authorization to call him day or night if she needed
something.
She put the card in her purse and held out her hand. "I cannot begin to
thank you enough, Lieutenant."
His grasp was firm and dry. "No problem." He nodded. "Sam, Harry. Mike,
you're with me."
A source of energy left the room with him, the medic, the young tech guy,
and Mike. Nicole felt suddenly drained, exhausted beyond measure. She swayed
slightly, then felt Sam's strong arms go around her. She leaned into him, into his
strength, leaning her forehead against his chest for just a second, inhaling the scent
that had been imprinted on the primitive part of her brain all last night.
Harry cleared his throat and she straightened, suddenly ashamed of her
weakness, but Sam held her tightly before she could pull away.
He spoke over her head to Harry. "I'm taking her home. You look after
things here."
Harry nodded.
"And check our security cameras, I'll bet you anything we caught him as he
was running away."
"Yeah. I'll freeze a couple of frames and e-mail them to the SDPD. They've
got facial recognition software, just like the FBI. If the guy's in the system, we'll
get him. I'm on it." Harry closed the door softly behind him. They were alone.
Sam tightened his embrace and bent down to her ear. "Let's go home,
honey." His voice was so low, she felt the vibration in his chest more than heard
the words. His breath washed over her ear and she broke out in goosebumps.
She pulled away and looked up at him. At that strong, unhandsome face. Of
course she was going home with him. There was no question of that. He'd come
for her in her hour of need, without hesitation. He'd saved her life. In some
important, primordial way, a way that was blood and bone deep, she now belonged
to him.
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Escaping hadn't been hard. For someone who'd graduated SERE with only a
busted shoulder to show for it, getting out of the fancy building with the pretty,
pretend security had been a cakewalk.
Up the fire escape, and up onto the roof. It was night and the satellites that
passed weren't equipped with infrared cameras. That was for war zones.
Outlaw was seriously annoyed at having his work interrupted, though. And
by someone who knew what he was doing. Fuck, another few minutes and the lady
would have talked. She'd been terrified. He could still feel the deep tremors
running through her. He'd even been tempted for a second there. The bitch was a
real looker and Outlaw liked his women just a little scared. Made them real
accommodating.
But he knew better than to mix sex with the job. It was the kind of mistake
that could have gotten him killed in the service and the kind of mistake that would
cost him money in his new job. So sex while working was off the table, always.
The job wasn't done. He'd just sat down to her computer when he'd heard
the key in the lock and had barely made it to the door and turned out the lights
before she walked in.
And a couple of minutes later, the big asshole from across the way picked
the lock and came in and the whole mission had gone FUBAR in a second.
It was a very good thing that the guy cared about Nicole Pearce. Outlaw
had seen it in an instant and realized that she was his get-out-of-jail-free card.
He'd tossed her at the window, knowing that if the guy didn't catch her,
she'd fall nine stories to her death and he'd never get the info. But he also knew the
guy would rather catch her than him.
Up on the rooftop, Outlaw went to the southern edge of the building. Only
two feet separated this wall from the next building. He tossed the trolley suitcase
and his briefcase over onto the next roof and jumped.
This building had a service elevator from the roof to the garage, and a
quarter of an hour later, Outlaw was dressed in his banker's suit and driving away
in his rental.
Next stop--Nicole Pearce's house. She would either go home and he could
get the job done there or if she didn't, he'd grab the dad and force her hand.
Outlaw had never understood the hostage thing. There wasn't anyone in the
world he'd give something up for. You could blow up any head you wanted and he
didn't care. But for the rest of the world, it was a surefire winner. There were
people who'd give up anything if you held a gun to a loved one's head. Or knee or
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elbow, promising to shoot the hostage to death, piece by piece.
Ah, yes. That always got results.
Outlaw parked two blocks from Nicole Pearce's house, then made his way
in the dark to the back of the Pearce house.
It wasn't a wealthy part of town. The houses were small, about sixty years
old, most of them badly kept.
He knew how to move in the dark, it was in his bones. He ghosted from tree
to shrub to wall, ending up crouching behind the Pearce house, looking out over
the backyard. It was the best-kept house on the street, sporting a fresh paint job.
The garden was well tended, with neatly trimmed shrubbery and flowering plants
and a recently mown lawn. Someone worked hard.
There were lights on in every room downstairs. It was ten thirty. Pretty
soon the household would be going to bed, if there was an old man in the house.
Outlaw would make his move a few hours after lights out, when the father would
be deep in sleep. He leaned his ear against the wall. There were voices in the
room, a male rumble and the lighter tones of a woman, but he couldn't make out
the words.
Well, he'd come prepared. That's what they paid him for.
He entered the combination to open his suitcase. Inside the lining was a
soundless electric mini-drill and a snake mike with inbuilt microcamera. He
carefully drilled a hole through the exterior wall of the house, the drill so silent he
could barely hear it inches away. He broke through at floor level and threaded the
mike and camera into the hole.
Shit!
The room was set up like a hospital room. There was a high cot surrounded
by medical instruments, an IV tree, a bedside table with pills, a man in a
wheelchair. A woman in a nurse's uniform bending over him.
Outlaw pulled his eye away and sat with his back to the wall.
Well, fuck. Nicole Pearce's father was sick. How the hell could he have
known? It's not as if it was on her website. That complicated things, because the
geezer might die on him and he'd instantly lose his leverage. And that bag hanging
from the IV tree would probably have a sedative in it. Outlaw could end up having
an unconscious hostage.
Not to mention the fact that the nurse was contractually obliged to stay
awake and by his bedside all night.
Shit. This was supposed to be fucking easy.
At least the nurse would be easy. And he had a preloaded syringe of
adrenaline he could always shoot into the geezer. It would work.
He'd wait until all the lights went out, then break in. The place had no
security, none. No cameras, no burglar alarm and he'd seen the locks on the front
and back doors. Pathetic. These people deserved what was going to happen to
them.
Outlaw settled with his back to the rear left-hand corner where he could
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keep an eye on the front and back of the house, stretched his legs out, preparing to
go into sniper's lethargy for a couple of hours, when every cell in his body went on
red alert.
A squad car pulled up outside the Pearce house. Two cops in the front seats.
The passenger window rolled down and Outlaw could hear the squawk of the
radio. The guy riding shotgun pulled a mike from the dashboard attached to a
curly wire, put it up to his mouth and talked, staring out the window at the facade
of the house. The cop listened to a static-filled voice, then got out of the car, hand
on the grip of the Beretta 92 in its holster, clearly preparatory to doing a look-see.
He was wearing body armor and he looked alert.
He started walking toward the side of the house.