Read Into the Crossfire Online
Authors: Lisa Marie Rice
the door. Forty men with shaheed jackets stacked on one side and lime green
scarves around their shoulders, just waiting to become shaheed batal--martyr
heroes.
Terrorists. Headed for New York with bombs strapped around their torsos
and access to radioactive material. Simonet's fingers trembled as he fumbled for
the phone, dropping the cordless receiver in his haste. His hands were slick with
sweat, he could barely breathe around the terror in his chest. His fingers punched
in 17, the emergency gendarmerie number, but he hung up almost immediately.
This information was too important to be given to a telephone operator.
His brother-in-law knew the Commissaire de Police. That's it--he'd plead a
headache and leave early. There would be suspicions if the police swarmed his
office building, people would talk, his name would be known. If there was one
thing Simonet knew, it was that these people were vicious. He didn't have much to
live for but by God, he didn't want to die at the hands of these canailles.
No, much better to leave early and go downtown to the Commissariat and
speak with the Commissaire himself.
Having a plan calmed him down a little, until he heard footsteps coming
down the hallway.
No one came to his office in the early afternoon. Were they coming for
him? He stood, terrified, listening as the steps came closer, closer. Two sets, two
men.
The information! He had to get it out!
His eyes fell on the list of files to be sent out for translation. Perfect.
Simonet knew his way around computers and he knew steganography. Inside of
five seconds he managed to hide the necessary information in a file. He pressed
ENTER and turned at the sound of his door opening.
Two men, one small and armed, the other huge and un-armed, burst into the
room. The big one stepped forward and with a contemptuous twist of his big
hands, snapped Simonet's neck.
The big man opened his hands and Simonet's lifeless body collapsed to the
floor. Simonet's last thought had been of the thousands, perhaps millions, of
Americans he had saved from attacks he hoped he had stopped.
28
San Diego
Nicole held up the eight-year-old Dior and the seven-year-old Narciso
Rodriguez, one a flattering periwinkle blue, one a chic black. Blue, black,
blue...she couldn't decide.
It was a very good thing that she hadn't lost or gained weight over the past
few years because there was no way she could now afford a new Dior or a new
Rodriguez. Caring for her father ate up every spare dollar and then some.
That was okay. She didn't miss her heady days in Geneva--young, single
and rich. She'd had those years, enjoyed them, and now they were over.
She was a little less young now, still single and far from rich. Her life had
changed beyond recognition. But she didn't mind. It was worth scrambling to be
able to take care of her father.
Black, blue, black...
It wasn't like her to be so indecisive. And late. When was the last time she'd
been late for anything, let alone a date? No, not a date--an appointment. An
agreement. Dinner-out-as-thank-you-for-unlocking-her-door. Whatever--just not a
date.
And yet here she was, dithering about what she was going to wear, argh!
This was so crazy. What was she doing, going out with a man she didn't
know? Had only exchanged a few words with? Would have crossed the street to
avoid only yesterday?
It had never even occurred to her that the lowlife she'd seen walking into
and out of Reston Security might actually be the owner of the company. Clearly,
security-company executives didn't need to dress for success. Every time she'd
seen the man in the corridor he looked like he was coming off a drunk--incredibly
scruffy, pissed off and none too clean.
As soon as she got off the phone with the hedge fund manager and her
Russian experts, having happily negotiated an excellent contract, she'd checked
out the website for Reston Security and had read the bio for Sam Reston. It was a
long one. He was ex-military, a former SEAL, in fact. She remembered he said
he'd been in the Navy. Well, that was modest of him. Being a SEAL was a little bit
more than having spent some time in the Navy. SEALs were elite soldiers who
underwent a gruelling selection process. As a soldier, Sam Reston had been the
best of the best.
He didn't list his medals but there they were on his chest in the formal
military photograph, for those who knew how to read them. Nicole was familiar
29
with Special Forces. It was quite likely there were other medals in a shadowbox he
would take to the grave with him for missions no one would ever know about,
secret to the end of time.
He didn't have the Marine high-and-tight she was so familiar with from
Embassies around the world, but his hair in the picture was definitely militaryshort and he was clean shaven.
The grim expression was the same, though. She'd been right. Take away the
military trappings and he still looked like one dangerous dude. The kind of man
she ordinarily wouldn't speak to, let alone spend an evening with.
But she'd given her word and that was that.
Still, it looked like there was much more to Sam Reston than met the eye.
The medals, for one.
Nicole's father had always drummed into her enormous respect for the US
Armed Forces. Her father had served in places where often the US military was
the only thing that stood between civilization and the abyss.
The medals on Sam Reston's very broad chest weren't there for showing up
on time or keeping his shoes and brightwork shined. They were medals of valor,
for bravery under fire.
She'd swallowed heavily as she perused his website, letting the facts filter
in, changing perceptions.
He'd been a very successful soldier and he was now a highly successful
businessman.
Not an angry drunk, after all.
So she had to peel a layer of fear off the strong reactions she'd had to him
every time their paths crossed in the Morrison Building's hallway, which had been
often. Sometimes she'd wondered if he had some kind of radar. More often than
not, when she'd turned around from locking up her office door, there he had been,
behind her, just closing the door of the company he worked for. His company, she
now had to remember. He seemed to have been just behind her or just in front of
her every single time she moved from the building. And every single time, her
entire body had gone haywire.
Every cell in her body had stood to attention in his presence. He often
seemed to be going to the office when everyone else in the building was knocking
off for the day. She'd been intensely aware of his presence even when he was
behind her, as if she were made of iron filings and he were the lodestone.
This morning, it was only paralyzing anxiety that had kept her from sensing
him behind her. At all other times, she'd had a sixth sense for his presence.
At the time, she'd thought it was fear. He looked so utterly frightening.
Terrifying, actually.
She'd never seen male power like that up close before. His muscles were
long and lean, not bulging, and looked as if they were used, and used hard instead
of being for show, as most modern men's muscles were nowadays. It was as if
Sam Reston belonged to another race of man.
30
Tougher, stronger, faster, bigger.
A bell rang downstairs and Nicole started. Oh my God! It was seven and
she still wasn't dressed!
Luckily, Manuela would be there to open the door, since her father couldn't.
It saved Nicole from having to run down the stairs in bra and panties with no
makeup on and still-drying fingernails. Wouldn't that be a way to greet Mr. Sam
Reston, former US Navy SEAL?
It wasn't like her at all to run late for a date, but she'd been running late all
day. She'd only made it back home half an hour ago, craving a long, cool shower,
but her father had waylaid her when she got in. He was agitated about an article on
the government's response to the latest bombing in Indonesia.
Her father had spent three years as ambassador to Indonesia and was
infinitely better informed than the hapless State Department mouthpieces or the
hacks who covered the press conference on the bombing.
It was such a pity that his illness prevented him from sharing his experience
and expertise. Nicole's heart ached for him. He had been planning a rewarding
retirement of lecturing, writing newspaper articles, starting up a diplomacy blog.
Finally finishing that book on the diplomacy of the Medici he'd been writing
forever. The sudden onset of cancer had shot those plans down.
To Nicole, her father was the very embodiment of light and reason and
goodness. The very best of humankind. She'd never seen him do or say a
dishonorable thing. The world desperately needed men like him and yet his light
would soon be snuffed out by illness. Even desperately ill, often in pain, he
remained kind and considerate. Never complaining. It was breaking her heart.
Nicholas Pearce had always been her hero. Tall and handsome and smart
and affectionate, the very best. A wonderful husband and father. She'd grown up
feeling her family was blessed. Then they lost her mother in a car crash and now
he had stage-four brain cancer, diagnosed a year ago.
That was when Nicole quit her job with the UN in Geneva to take care of
him. It wasn't easy, taking care of a severely ill man, but there was no question in
her mind. He'd been a wonderful father to her all her life. Taking care of him in his
time of need was a privilege.
However, having a very sick father wreaked havoc on her love life. One
whiff of what she was dealing with, and a lot of men who'd been very interested in
a date suddenly lost interest.
It was her little test. As her philosophy professor in college would have put
it, being able to deal with her father was a necessary but not sufficient condition
for her to think of hooking up with a man.
If the man in question could deal with her life and all its troubles, fine.
They might just take it a step or two further. If not...good-bye. If you wanted her,
she came with her father. They were a package deal.
She'd had a lot of good-byes before the relationships even started, and now
that her father was deteriorating so rapidly, she wasn't open to dating at all.
31
Not that tonight was a date, of course. It was a thank-you.
Blue, black, blue, black...
Blue, she finally decided. The periwinkle blue polished cotton sheath paired
with a black linen jacket. After ten years of Swiss winters, San Diego's mild
climate never failed to delight her.
Makeup! My God, there was no way she could go down with a naked face.
She glanced at her watch and shuddered. Twenty minutes late, unheard of
for her. Nicole dressed and made up in record time and started descending the
stairs when she suddenly stopped, transfixed.
There was her father downstairs, facing her, sitting in the fabulous
wheelchair she'd bought with part of her severance pay from the UN. It did
everything but make coffee and sing. He had a celebratory finger of whiskey in a
crystal glass on the occasional table at his elbow and Sam had his own glass of
twenty-year-old Talisker. Guests were few and far between and her father rejoiced
at visits.
Sam Reston was sitting across from her father--she couldn't see his face but
she could see his shoulders, so broad they over-shot the chair back--clad in an
expensive midnight blue suit.
But what had her blocked at the top of the staircase, one foot up, one foot
down on the first step, was the expression on her father's face. He was...happy. He
looked animated and there was color in his cheeks. His eyes--the color so like her
own--sparkled. No doubt he'd been telling one of his wicked jokes.
She hadn't told Sam Reston that she lived with her father and that her father
was ill. She hadn't told him anything, in fact. So when he came to the door
expecting to find a woman to take out to dinner, he'd been confronted with a
visibly very ill man. An ill man he'd made smile.
Sam Reston just kept on moving up the scale. Lowlife to security company
owner to guy who made her father smile. That last attribute was the best one.
Her father's gaze shifted and his smile broadened. "Hello, darling."
"Hi, Pops." Smiling at her father's expression, she walked down the
staircase. If he was happy, even for a fleeting moment, then so was she.
Sam turned in his seat and their eyes met.
Nicole stopped. Everything in her stopped--head, lungs, legs. It was like
taking a punch to the stomach. All the air left her system. His dark eyes were so
intense, it was as if they were hands, reaching out to touch her. She could hardly
breathe, hardly think.
She'd always seen him looking grim and dirty and dangerous. Now he still
looked deadly serious, two hundred plus pounds of male potency, completely
focused on her. His eyes made a quick trip down to her feet then back up to her
face. With anyone else, she would have bridled at the blatant male once-over.