Saving Liberty (Kissing #6) (9 page)

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Authors: Helena Newbury

BOOK: Saving Liberty (Kissing #6)
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And that was exactly what I needed. It was the first time since the park that I hadn’t felt totally alone. I stared right back at him as all that rage flooded around me and prayed that he understood.

Kian let out a long, slow breath as his anger cooled, his eyes never leaving mine. And just for a second, I saw it in his gaze: he
did
understand.

But then he pushed open the door, bathing me in night air that felt shockingly cold. He was out of the car so fast I barely had time to react. I lunged across the seat after him, already missing the closeness.

“Okay,” he muttered, already turning to walk away.

“Okay?” I echoed.

“Talk to the Secret Service,” he said without turning around. “If you can get me reinstated, I’ll do it.” He wouldn’t look at me, wouldn’t let me see his expression.

I swallowed. “Thank you, Kian.”

He took a deep breath. “Ma’am.”

And he was gone.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Kian

 

What the hell am I doing?

It was dawn. I’d gotten the call the night before, just one day after Emily had sought me out, telling me to report for duty that morning at eight. I needed to get going if I was going to make it on time. But….

But I looked at the guy staring back at me from the mirror and just shook my head grimly. I hadn’t been right for the Secret Service back then. I sure as hell wasn’t now. None of it fitted: not the big, muscled body, not the tattoos I’d picked up in the Marines, not the gleam of resentful anger in my eyes, like a burner turned to low. I couldn’t even imagine taking orders again. Not from
them.

In the Marines, it had been different. I’d respected my captain and I’d had no problem obeying him. They’d known how to use my anger: I’d always been the first one through the door, the one they didn’t so much
send in
as
unleash.
In the Secret Service, there’d been too many damn rules... but even that had been bearable. I’d been good at my job and that had bought me some slack.

Until that day at the hotel when I suddenly went, in their eyes, from hero to criminal.

And now I was meant to take orders from them again, after they’d chewed me up and spat me out?

I closed my eyes and sighed. I’d call them. I’d call them and tell them the whole thing was off. They’d be relieved. I’d been able to hear it in the guy’s voice when he called: they were going along with this under duress. They’d be relieved, I’d be relieved…

... and Emily would be unprotected. She’d have the Secret Service, but not that close, personal protection she needed to feel safe. The nightmares would continue. She’d turn into even more of a recluse. That light in her eyes would fade to nothing.

I growled and thumped the wall with my fist, then stomped through to the bathroom. When I’d showered, I rooted through my closet and dug out the black suit I’d used to wear. It was still wrapped in plastic: I hadn’t touched it in a year. When I pulled on the white shirt, I felt like a kid forced into their Sunday finest for church. The black tie made it even worse.

I took another look at myself in the mirror, then ran a hand through my hair. It was long enough to be soft and tousled, not like the clean buzz-cut the other agents sported. I drew my thumb down my cheek, feeling my stubble. That was wrong, too.
Aw, the hell with it.

I fastened on my holster, checked my handgun and slid it in, then pulled on my suit jacket. It was tight across my shoulders: I must have packed on a little more muscle, since I left. I shook my head at my reflection. I looked like a criminal who’d jumped a Secret Service guy and taken his clothes.
This is nuts!

But I didn’t have a choice. Not if I wanted to save her.

I stalked out of my apartment and headed for the subway before I could come to my senses.

 

***

 

At the White House, the guard at the guard post looked me up and down and radioed for confirmation,
twice,
before he let me in. To be fair, I probably would have done the same.

Waiting for me in the Secret Service command room was Miller, the head of the White House detail. I’d never been assigned to the White House—my job had been to guard foreign dignitaries—so we’d never met. But I knew the type right away: the close-cropped hair, speckled with gray, the perfect suit and shiny shoes; the disapproving look he gave me. Smaller than me but fit: the sort of guy who hit the ground every morning doing a hundred push-ups just because he felt that he should. He was made for the job as surely as if he’d popped out of his mom with his Secret Service earpiece already in his ear.

“Before we start, I want to make something perfectly clear,” he told me. “You’ve been temporarily reinstated as a courtesy to the President and to Miss Matthews. Don’t get the idea that any of us here actually like the idea.”

I nodded silently.

“Your job will be to guard Miss Matthews. Her codename is
Liberty.”

“Liberty?” It suited her.

Miller continued as if I hadn’t spoken. “The President is
Lone Star.
The First Lady is
Lark.
You’ll pull one eight-hour shift per day: whichever one coincides with her leaving the White House. You will stay by her side and
you will follow orders.
Are we clear?”

“Crystal.” His barely-concealed contempt for me was really starting to get to me but I wasn’t going to give him the satisfaction of letting it show.

He picked up a file as thick as my fist and shoved it at me. “You’ll need to get up to speed on procedure: read and inwardly digest.” He slapped a radio and earpiece down on top of the file. “Wear this. Now wait while I get you your service weapon.”

I shook my head and patted the bulge under my jacket. “I have my own gun.”

Miller shook his head. “Not on my team. Hand it over.”

My gun was a Desert Eagle: big and dumb and all about brute force. We’d always gotten on very well. It had saved my life more times than I could count, including at the park. I raised my eyebrows:
really?

Miller just glared back at me and held out his hand.

I had to take a deep, calming breath. I drew my gun out but hung onto it for a second. I loved everything about that gun, from its worn handgrips to the little chip in the side of the barrel where some guy had caught it with a samurai sword.

For Emily.

I laid it in his hand, secretly loving the way his arm dipped a little under the unexpected weight. He glowered down at it in distaste and then locked it away in a gun safe, returning with a plain black SIG Sauer. It felt like a toy in my big hand but I sighed and holstered it. “Anything else I should know?” I asked. I lifted the file he’d given me. “Aside
from memorizing the rulebook?”

He just stared at me.

It took me a few seconds to realize what he was waiting for.
Aw, hell. Really?!
“Anything else I should know...
sir?”

“Since you’re guarding Miss Matthews... you should be aware that she had a tracking chip implanted under her skin when her father took office, in case of kidnapping.”

“You can track where she is? Via satellite?”

He shook his head. “It doesn’t have that sort of power: the chip’s only the size of a grain of rice. But if she was taken, we can set up roadblocks and make sure she doesn’t pass them, or sweep the city with a low-flying helicopter and zero in on her that way.” He fixed me with a look. “Obviously, this isn’t public knowledge.”

I’d just about had it with this guy. I wanted to slam a fist right up under his jaw and send him halfway to the ceiling. I knew how to keep a damn secret. I’d had security clearance the whole time I was with the Secret Service.

But, of course, he knew that. He was making sure I knew that I was no longer trusted. The reputation I’d built up when I was here was a distant memory: I was going to have to build it up all over again.
What the hell am I doing back here,
I wondered.

Then I thought of that fading light in Emily’s eyes. The way she’d seemed smaller, more fragile, than she had in the park. She needed help... and if I didn’t save her, who would?

“Yes sir,” I grated. “Understood.”

Miller turned on his heel. “Come on,” he snapped. “There’s someone else who wants to meet you.”

I fell in behind him. The first few rooms we passed through were used by the Secret Service and, at first, I assumed we were going to meet someone else from the detail. Maybe they’d buddied me up with someone so they could keep an eye on me.

But then we were into the main part of the White House, with its softly-carpeted hallways and hushed conversation. I’d only ever visited a few times when some dignitary I’d been guarding had an appointment there. I hadn’t thought it would affect me but... it did. There’s something about the place, the power that throbs through every room. I’m just about the most cynical person in the world but even I could feel the hairs on the back of my neck standing up. We started to pass by guys I recognized as senators and lobbyists. All of them did a double-take when they saw me: the differences between Miller and myself were obvious.

And then it got weird. We entered the West Wing. I glanced around uncertainly.
He
must be around here, somewhere. We might even run into him. I straightened up—I didn’t mean to, it was just an unconscious reaction.
Don’t be stupid. We probably won’t even—

We stopped outside the Oval Office. I turned to Miller and blinked but he didn’t give me a chance to speak, just knocked twice and then opened the door. Inside was a sort of anteroom: wood paneling and an elderly but very intimidating lady behind a desk. She picked up a phone. “Mr. President,” she said, the disapproval clear in her voice, “Special Agent O’Harra is here to see you.”

Special Agent O’Harra
was something I hadn’t heard in a long time. Normally, that alone would have been enough to make me reel. But the
Mr. President
part made that seem insignificant.
Wait! Are we—We’re not seriously going to—

The lady put down the phone and nodded us towards a door. Miller led the way and I followed dumbly behind him, still playing emotional catch-up.

We walked into the room, Miller stepped out of the way and….

I’d always disliked politicians. I’d always thought of them as a bunch of privileged rich guys sitting smugly round a table, carving up the world. So I wasn’t ready for what I felt, what had been building inside me ever since we’d entered the West Wing.

I stared at the man sitting behind the desk and... I was in awe. I’m a big guy but, in his presence, I suddenly felt small.

“Well,” said the President. “So this is him.”

I tried to speak but my mouth had gone desert-dry, so I nodded instead. I’d underestimated how deep it all ran: my time in the Marines; every time I’d sung
The Star Spangled Banner
or looked up at the flag.

He wasn’t a politician. He was the President of the United States of America.

I glanced across at Miller and caught him smirking, as if my reaction was entirely predictable. I suddenly wished I’d shaved.

The President strolled out from behind his desk, straightening his jacket with a little tug. Like his daughter, Jake Matthews still had a lot of Texan in him: he hadn’t tried to smooth out what some saw as rough edges. Squint and you could still see the ranch owner and oil man. He folded his arms and leaned back against his desk. “My daughter tells me you’re the one guy she trusts.”

I swallowed. There was something about the way he said it: just a hint of suspicion. He was a master of reading people: could he read something in me? Did he know just how much I wanted to take Emily, push her up against a wall and kiss the hell out of her? I couldn’t speak. I settled for nodding again.

“And people at the Secret Service tell me you’re the one guy she shouldn’t,” said the President. He gave me a look I suspected he reserved for hostile dictators. “Can I trust you, Mr. O’Harra?”

I finally found my voice. “Yes sir, Mr. President.”

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