Read The Helen Bianchin Collection (Mills & Boon E-Book Collections) Online
Authors: Helen Bianchin
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Erotica, #Collections & Anthologies, #Contemporary Women, #General
Settling back to work took effort, and she was glad when the day ended and she could go home.
Grief sat uneasily on her shoulders, and Alicia's hissy fit only served to exacerbate her emotions. It
would be all too easy to rage against fate or sink into a well of tears.
What a choice, she decided as she let herself into her apartment. The cat ran up to her, and she crouched down to caress the velvet ears. A feline head butted her hand, then smooched appealingly before curling over onto its back in silent invitation for a tummy rub.
âUnconditional devotion,' she murmured as she obligingly rubbed the cat's fur, and heard the appreciative purr in response.
She was all alone with no one close to call.
Cameron was in Melbourne, Siobhan had returned to Italy, and she couldn't,
wouldn't
ring Diego.
OK, so she'd feed the cat, fix herself something to eat, then she'd clean the apartment. An activity that would take a few hours, after which she'd shower and fall into bed.
W
ORK
provided a welcome panacea, and Cassandra applied herself diligently the following morning as she adjusted the binocular microscope and focused on the delicate setting. Its intricate design provided a challenge, professionally and personally.
She wanted the best, insisted on it, aware such attention to minuscule detail brought the desired resultâ¦perfection.
If achieving it meant working through a lunch-hour, or staying late at the workshop, nothing mattered except the quality of the work.
Yet there were safety precautions in place. Loose stones were easy to fence, and therefore provided a target for robbery. Priceless gems, expensive equipment. Security was tight, the vault one of the finest. Bulletproof glass shielded those who worked inside, and a high-priced security system took care of the rest.
It all added up to a heightened sense of caution. Something she had become accustomed to over the years, and one she never took for granted.
The cast-in-stone rule ensured two people, never one alone, occupied the workshop on the premise
that if by chance something untoward happened to one, the other was able to raise the alarm.
In the three years she'd worked for this firm, no one had attempted to breach the security system in daylight.
Oh, for heaven's sake! Why were such thoughts chasing through her mind? Instinct, premonition? Or was it due to an acute vulnerability?
No matter how hard she tried, she was unable to dismiss Diego from her mind. He was an intrusive force, every waking minute of each day.
She could sense his touch without any trouble at all.
Feel
the way his mouth moved on her own. As to the rest of itâ¦
Don't go there.
The memories were too vivid, too intoxicating.
Great while it lasted, she admitted. A fleeting, transitory fling orchestrated for all the wrong reasons. Manipulation at its worst.
So why was she aching for him?
The deal was done. Preston-Villers would flourish beneath Diego's management. Cameron retained anonymity in his private life. As to her? She'd fulfilled all obligations and was off the hook.
A hollow laugh sounded low in her throat. Sure she was! She'd never been so tied up in her life!
She barely ate, she rarely slept. Some of it could be attributed to grieving for her father. The rest fell squarely on Diego's shoulders.
The electronic buzzer sounded loud above back
ground music from wall-speakers, and Cassandra glanced up from her work to see a familiar figure holding twin food bags on the other side of the door.
Sally from the café near by with their lunch order.
âWant to take those sandwiches, or shall I?' Cassandra queried, only to see Glen in the throes of heating fine metal. âOK, I'll get them.'
She laid down her tools, then moved towards the door, released the security lock and reached for the latch.
At that moment all hell let loose.
She had a fleeting glimpse of Sally's terrified expression, caught a blur of sudden movement as Sally catapulted into the workroom, followed by a man whose facial features were obscured by a woollen ski-mask.
A nightmare began to unfold as he whipped out a vicious-looking knife and brandished it.
The drill in such circumstances was clear. Do what you're toldâ¦and don't play the hero.
A knife wasn't a gun. She had self-defence training. Could she risk attempting to disarm him?
âDon't even think about it.' The harsh directive chilled her blood as he pulled out a hand gun and brandished it. In one swift movement he hooked an arm round her shoulders and hauled her back against him, then he pressed the tip of the knife to her throat.
Calm, she had to remain calm. Not easy with a
gun in close proximity, not to mention the threat of a knife.
At the edge of her peripheral vision she glimpsed Glen making a surreptitious move with his foot to the panic button at floor level. An action that would send an electronic alert to the supervisor's pager, the security firm and the local police station.
Had the intruder seen it? She could only pray not.
âEmpty the vault.' The demand held a guttural quality, and she saw Glen lift his hands in a helpless gesture.
âI don't know the combination.'
He was buying time, and the intruder knew it.
âYou think I'm a fool?' the intruder demanded viciously, tightening his hold on Cassandra's shoulders. âOpen it
now
, or I'll use this knife.'
She felt the tip of it slide across the base of her throat, the sting of her flesh accompanied by the warm trickle of blood.
Glen didn't hesitate. He crossed to the vault, keyed in a series of digits, then pulled open the door.
âPut everything into a bag.
Go!
'
Glen complied, moving as slowly as he dared.
âYou want me to hurt her bad?'
The knife pressed hard, and Cassandra gasped at the pain.
âI'm being as quick as I can.' And he was, withdrawing trays, tossing the contents into a bag. âThat's all of it.'
âGive it to me!' He released her, and backed towards the workshop door.
She saw what he could not, and she deliberately kept her expression blank as two armed security guards positioned themselves each side of the outer door.
One well-aimed kick, the element of surprise, that was all it would take to disarm the intruder and provide the essential few seconds' confusion to give the guards their opportunity to burst in and take him down.
She went into calculated action, so fast it was over in seconds as her foot connected with his wrist and the gun went flying.
A stream of obscenities rent the air as he lunged for her, and she barely registered the door crashing open, or the security guards' presence as he swung her in against him.
Oh, God. The pressure against her ribs was excruciating, and she had difficulty breathing.
Sally began to cry quietly.
âLet her go.' One of the security guards made it a statement, not a plea, and earned a scathing glare.
âAre you crazy? She's going to be my ticket out of here!'
âPut down the knife.'
âNot in this lifetime, pal.' His snarl was low, primal, and frightening.
What began as a robbery had now become a hostage situation.
Then Cassandra heard itâ¦the distant sound of a siren, the noise increasing in velocity, followed by the diminishing sonorous wail as the engine cut.
Seconds later the phone rang.
âPick it up!'
The guard's movements were careful as he obeyed, listened, spoke, then he held out the receiver to her captor. âIt's for you.'
âTell the man I want clear passage out of here and a fifteen-minute start. That's the deal.'
They wouldn't buy it. At least, not without resorting to any one of several psychological ploys in an attempt at negotiation.
The scene was too close to a movie script. Worse, the man holding her was desperate and wouldn't hesitate to hurt her.
Did your life flash before your eyes in a moment of extreme crisis? Cassandra pictured her mother, father. Cameron was there.
Diego.
Oh, hell, why Diego?
She didn't have a future with Diego. Dammit, she might not have a future at all!
âI want all of you out.
Now!
' He was incandescent with rage, and she consciously held her breath.
The guards, Sally and Glen filed out quietly, the door closed, leaving only Cassandra and the madman in the workshop.
âWe're going to take a ride together, you and me.' His voice was close to her ear. âIf you're very good,
I just might let you go when we've put in some distance from here.'
Sure. And the sun shone bright at midnight in the Alaskan winter-time.
His hand closed over her breast, and squeezed. âOr maybe you and me could shack up together awhile, have some fun.'
âIn your dreams.'
He pinched her, hard, then thrust her roughly against a work-bench. âPick up that damned phone, and tell those bastards to get their act together.'
She could hardly believe they'd let him walk out of here alone. The gems in the vault were worth a small fortune. And there was the matter of her life.
Her hand stung, and she saw blood seeping from a deep cut as she lifted the receiver.
âStay calm. Do what he says. We've set up road blocks. He can't get far.'
The masculine voice was quiet, steady. As if he controlled a hostage situation on a weekly basis. Maybe he did, she thought wildly.
âThey make a wrong move, and you're history, y'hear?'
What happened next was a nightmare of action, noise, fear in a kaleidoscope of motion as she was forced to carry the bag of gems, then used as a human shield as her captor hustled her towards his waiting car.
Would they try to take him out? Shoot, or hold their fire?
In those few terrifying seconds out in the open she consciously prepared herself for anything, and it wasn't until he shoved her across the driver's seat and climbed in almost on top of her that she realised he was about to make good his escape.
Taking her with him.
He fired the ignition and surged forward, wheels screeching as he took off at a frightening speed.
Cassandra automatically reached for the dashboard, not that it afforded her any purchase, and heard his maniacal laughter as he swerved in and out of traffic, then he took a hard turn left, only to scream with rage as he saw the road block up front.
She barely had a second to gauge his next move when he swung the car round and roared back down the road to crash through a hastily set-up road block.
The car bounced off another vehicle with a sickening thud of grinding metal before careening off down the road. Car horns blasted, brakes screamed.
Cassandra saw impending disaster a few seconds ahead of contact, and she acted entirely on impulse, throwing open the passenger door and leaping out an instant before the car hit.
There was a moment of searing pain as her body hit the asphalt, a conscious feeling of movement, then nothing.
Â
Cassandra was dreaming. Her body felt strangely weightless, and at some stage she seemed to drift
towards consciousness, only to retreat into a non-intrusive comfort zone.
There were voices, indistinguishable at first, then invasive as she came fully awake.
White walls, bustling movement, the faint smell of antisepticâ¦and a uniformed nurse hovering close checking her vital signs.
Hospital.
She became aware of an intravenous drip, bandages on one armâ¦and the dull ache of medicated pain. Her head, shoulder, hip.
âGood. You're awake.'
And alive. Somehow that fact held significance!
The nurse spared Cassandra a steady look. âMultiple contusions, grazed skin, superficial knife wounds. Concussion.'
No fractures, no broken bones. That had to be a plus!
âWe have you on pain relief. Doctor will be in soon. Meantime, you have a visitor.' Someone who had descended on the hospital within minutes of the patient being admitted, the nurse acknowledged silently. Insistently demanding the best specialists be summoned, and the patient allocated a private suite. Each attempt to compromise had been met with a steely glare.
âA visitor?'
âIf you don't feel up to it, I can have him wait.' It wouldn't hurt to have him cool his heels a little
longer. And if he dared upset the patient, she'd have his guts for garters.
Who knew she was here? It was probably a police officer needing her statement.
âIt's OK.'
âFive minutes,' the nurse stipulated, and left the suite.
No sooner had she swept through the door, than it swung back and Diego entered. A tall, dark force whose presence seemed to fill the room.
Her surprised expression brought a faint smile to his lips, one that didn't reach his eyes as he advanced towards the bed.
âNo
hello
?' He lowered his head and brushed his lips to her cheek.
Not even being pumped up with painkillers stilled the fluttering inside her stomach, nor did it prevent her quickening pulse. âI'm temporarily speechless.'
âThat I should come visit?' He kept his voice light, and wondered if she had any idea what he'd been through in the past few hours. Angerâ¦hell, no,
rage
on being informed what had happened. And fear. Unadulterated fear he could have lost her.
He was still fighting both emotions, controlling them by sheer force of will. Her captor would payâ¦and pay dearly for putting this woman's life at risk.
âNo one could stop me,' Diego drawled, his voice a mix of steel and silk.
Cassandra looked at him with unblinking solem
nity. âWho would dare?' His power was a given. His use of it, unequivocal.
His expression softened, and his eyes warmed a little. âHow are you,
querida
?'
The quietly voiced endearment almost brought her undone. âAs comfortable as can be expected.'
He lifted a hand and trailed gentle fingers along the edge of her jaw. âIs there anything you need?'
You.
Except he wasn't hers to have. âWhen can I get out of here?'
The pad of his thumb traced the lower curve of her mouth. âA day or two.'
She had to ask. âMy abductor?'
Diego's features became a hard mask. âArrested and behind bars.'
So there was justice, after all.
The door opened and the nurse returned. âI must ask you to leave. The patient needs to rest.'
For a moment Cassandra thought he was going to refuse, then he moved in close, lowered his head and covered her mouth with his own.
It was a gentle kiss, and his tongue slid in to tangle briefly with hers. Electrifying seconds that sent a rush of blood to her head. Then he straightened, touched a light finger to her cheek, and vacated the suite.