Scott floored the gas, swerved out onto the coastal highway in hot pursuit of the bride bent low on the Harley. Honey skidded across the seat, bashed against the passenger door as the truck hugged a corner.
“Sorry, bud. Hang ten.”
The road grew narrow, climbed, hugged cliffs that dropped sheer to the ocean. Skye veered to the right, following the curve of the twisting tar ribbon.
His hands tensed around the wheel.
She leaned low into the bend, naked knee almost skimming the tarmac. Scott winced, prayed her long dress wouldn’t catch on anything. If she wiped out at this speed, she’d be grated to shreds. And that laurel garland on her wind-whipped tresses was nowhere near a helmet.
But by God, the woman could ride. She looked as though she’d been born with a machine between her legs. She was one with it. And it looked as if nothing else but speed mattered to her right now. Speed and escape.
From what?
He matched her pace.
She veered sharply off onto a dirt track.
He rammed on the brakes, skidding sideways onto the shoulder.
He could see a plume of dust as she followed a rough switchback down to the sea.
“Hold on to your teeth, Honey!” Scott gunned the gas, kicked up dirt, fishtailed back onto tar and swerved onto the rutted track.
It was pocked with small craters, rock. He squinted into the dust. He’d have to slow down if he was going to make it down alive. Damn, he’d lost sight of her.
By the time he reached the isolated cove at the base of the dirt track, the bike was propped on its stand alongside a gnarled arbutus tree.
Scott opened his truck door and stepped out into a cloud of settling dust. Honey followed, staying close at his feet. She seemed to sense this was no time for play. “Where is she, girl?” he whispered to the dog at his side. Then he saw her in the dim evening light, across the white sand of the cove near a rock at the water’s edge.
She was frantically tugging at her clothes, shedding layers as though she was yanking and discarding parts of her life. She tore at the garland in her hair, tossed it to the sea. Wild wind-knotted curls fell loose below her shoulders.
Scott swallowed.
Her back was to him. She had nothing on now, save for a scrap of lace cut high away from the graceful curve of her buttocks. And she wore a white bra, the strap thin across the olive skin of her back.
“Sweet Mother Mary,” he whispered to no one in particular. Then he saw the lacy wedding garter around the top of her lean thigh.
What happened, Doctor? What happened to your wedding?
He watched, immobile, as she rubbed her hands through her hair, shook it free. Then she stepped into the water. Even from this distance, he could see the shiver that ran through her body. Then she took another step.
And another.
And she didn’t stop until she was waist deep. Scott watched as she dived, sleek, into the steel-gray water. He held his breath as the calm ocean swallowed her, leaving nothing but ripples where she’d last stood.
Then he saw her head come up yards away. She struck out with a strong, smooth crawl. And she was going.
Going.
Straight out to sea…
Scott came to his senses in that instant.
The woman was suicidal.
She had no intention of coming back.
He started to run down to the water, buckled in pain. He turned back, hobbled to the truck, grabbed his cane. He might not be able to run with his crippled leg, but by God, he could swim. He knew once he hit the water he’d get to her in no time.
But when he looked again, he saw her dark head over the gentle swells. And he saw that she had turned and was swimming back to shore.
The relief was overwhelming. He stopped, held back, retreated to his earlier vantage point under cover of the orange-skinned arbutus, heart beating wildly.
He gave her the space she seemed to need. But still he watched. He could leave. But he told himself it was for her own safety.
He told himself this was his assignment.
These were his orders.
To watch the doctor.
But never, not once in the course of his undercover work, had he ever felt so much like a voyeur. He was looking into some very naked, private and anguished moment in this exquisitely beautiful woman’s life. He felt both privileged and dirty. As foul and titillated as a damn Peeping Tom.
He wiped the back of his hand hard across his mouth, realized his heart was still hammering in his chest. He sucked down a deep breath of salted sea air, strained for calm. She was emerging from the water, a spectral vision in the dusk. He could see now how her bra was cut low against the firm swell of her breasts. Water shimmered down her flat belly. The garter was gone. Left to the sea. Her hair was slick as a seal’s. She ran her hands up over her face and over her head. Her chin was held high and she was breathing the night air in deep. He could see her chest rise and fall from the exertion of her swim, her ride…whatever had made her flee.
She sat on the rock, upon the remains of her wedding gown, facing the ocean, her back to him.
She sat like that for a long time, until it got dark. There was pale light from a fat gibbous moon. It shimmered like silver sovereigns scattered in a path over the bay. Scott could see Skye’s silhouette against the water. Honey made a plaintive little noise at his side. It was getting cold. Still the doctor sat, damp, on her rock, wearing nothing but her underwear.
Scott crouched next to Honey, spoke softly in her ear. “Wait for me in the truck, pooch. I think the lady out there needs some help.” Either that or she was going to get pneumonia.
Scott let Honey back into the truck, grabbed his old brown leather jacket, made his way slowly over the sand of the cove. She didn’t seem to hear him approach. She was shivering, holding her hands tight over her knees.
“Skye,” he whispered behind her. A jolt cracked through her body at the sound of her name. But she didn’t move otherwise.
“It’s okay, Skye.” He carefully positioned his jacket over her shoulders, lifting her wet hair away from her back. A small noise escaped from somewhere deep in her throat at his touch. It was so primal, so basic a sound of need, it sliced clean through to his core.
“Skye, I’m going to take you home. You need to get dry. Warm.”
She turned then to face him.
He sucked in his breath.
Her face was pale as porcelain in the moonlight. Her eyes dark and big. Mascara traced sooty trails of tears and saltwaterdown her cheeks.
She looked like a broken doll.
“Oh, Skye…” He didn’t plan it, just did it. Gathered her into his arms. It was the right thing to do. The only thing. And he held her like that, under the moon, wondering what in hell he’d gotten himself into.
“Skye, I’d carry you if I could, but I can’t, with this bloody leg. Lean on me and I’ll lean on my crutch and we’ll both get there. Together.”
She did as he asked. In silence.
Honey’s face was eager in the truck as she saw them approach. Scott helped Skye into the passenger seat. She climbed in, grasped on to Honey as if for warmth, for tactile comfort.
“Is that your bike?”
She shook her head.
“Okay. So we’ll leave it here. Is there someone I can call to come and fetch it?”
She nodded.
“Fine. I’ll call whoever it is when we get home.”
* * *
Scott pulled into Skye’s driveway, heater still cranked.
“No!”
It was the first time she’d spoken since the beach.
“Not here. Not my house…please.”
He looked at her. She was still shivering under his leather jacket, arms still wrapped around Honey. “Where?”
“Anywhere but here.” She looked away, out the dark window. “The wedding stuff. The caterer’s stuff…it’s all in there. In my house.”
“I see. Is there anywhere else, anyone you want to stay with?”
She shook her head.
Scott backed slowly out of Skye’s driveway, turned down his. He couldn’t think of another plan. The woman was in shock. And if she didn’t get some clothes on, her core temperature up soon, she’d be dealing with hypothermia, as well. If she wasn’t already.
Scott ran a hot bath, then fished around in his closet for something for her to wear. It all looked foreign to him. Rex had provided him with a “writer’s” wardrobe. Scott found a pair of sweatpants, a T-shirt and a fleece sweatshirt. She would swim in them, but they’d keep her warm.
While she bathed, he built a fire. He heated soup and poured a large brandy. This he pushed into her hands when she walked into his living room.
“Here. Want some soup?”
She looked deep into his eyes, as if seeing him for the first time. “Scott, thank you. I—I don’t know what to say…”
“It’s okay. Come, sit here by the fire.” He pulled the sofa up close to the warmth of the flames. She sat. Her hair hung in damp, dark waves, her silver eyes were wide, startling against her impossibly thick dark lashes and pale skin.
She took a deep sip of the brandy, swallowed, coughed, eyes watering. Honey settled at her feet, curled into a ball. Scott watched the blush of color creep back under those high cheekbones, into that lush mouth.
He tore his focus from her lips, seated himself in the chair on the opposite end of the hearth. “What happened? Why’d you run?”
She didn’t look at him, just stared into the flickering flames, shaking her head.
“Skye?” he said softly.
Her eyes looked slowly up into his. He swallowed sharply. What he saw there was vulnerable, raw. She’d dropped the veil. She was all naked emotion as she looked at him. It threw him completely.
“He…he didn’t show.” Her voice was thick. “Jozsef left me at the altar.” Moisture pooled along the bottom rims of her eyes, making them glimmer like quicksilver in the fire-light. It spilled over onto her cheeks into shimmering trails.
Something snagged in his chest. He took a shallow breath, came quickly over to her side, put his arms tentatively around her. “It’s okay, Skye. Take it easy. You don’t have to talk now.” He lifted a hand, hesitated, then let it gently stroke her dark hair. His breath caught in a ball. It was soft. So soft under his palm.
“I—I should’ve seen the signs…” A soft sob jerked through her body. Tears spilled softly over her face.
“Shh.” He pulled her close, enveloped her in his arms. Her scent surrounded him, a clean freshness mingled with the sophisticated scent of brandy and the faint saline of seawater. He held her a little tighter, stealing her fragrance with a flare of his nostrils.
She relaxed slightly, rested her dark head against his chest. It was a movement so innocent, so trusting. He couldn’t seem to breathe normally. He allowed his cheek to brush softly against her head, to feel the sensation of her hair on his face.
And something swelled painfully inside him, brought a sharp prick of emotion to his eyes. He hadn’t held a woman like this in a long time. Not since his wife.
His jaw tensed.
Sure he’d held women in that time—but not like this. Not like it mattered.
He’d fought hard against this very feeling, this aching sense of vulnerability. He’d gotten himself out of civilization. He’d left home, family, friends—anyone who reminded him. He’d blocked it all out by fighting. Fighting against bio crime, terrorists, the world, himself, his guilt…against finding himself in a moment like this.
His heart beat a wildly increasing pace against his ribs.
And now he was here.
He felt afraid—of himself, of feeling. But the instinct was overpowering. He gave in to it furtively. He closed his eyes, allowed the sensation of her body, warm against his, to sink into him, through him. He nestled his nose softly against the top of her head, drank in the silkiness of her thick dark hair, of the little breaths that shuddered intermittently through her body as she fell asleep in his arms. He held her, listening to the pop and crack of flames in the hearth, to the sounds of the night outside.
He didn’t want to think of anything, only of how it felt to hold a woman in his arms. A woman who needed him.
Honey gave a little whimper. Scott’s eyes flickered open. The dog watched him with her liquid brown pools.
God, he’d fallen asleep with her. The flames were faint glowing embers, the cool night air creeping in as their quavering watch against the cold dwindled.
Shocked, Scott edged out from under Skye’s weight, careful not to wake her.
She murmured.
“Shh. Sleep,” he whispered.
She stirred. “The…the bike, Peter Cunningham’s bike—”
“Shh. Not to worry. I’ll call him. Get some rest. I’ll get you a blanket.”
She nodded, snuggled deeper into the sofa.
* * *
Scott covered her with a blanket, stoked the fire, flicked the living room lights off, leaving only the shimmying copper flames and dancing shadows on the walls. He stared down at her. She looked like something unreal. So exotic, so striking…yet fragile, vulnerable.
How, wondered Scott, could anyone in their right mind ditch a woman like Skye Van Rijn? How could a man leave a woman like this at the altar?
Then with a rude jolt, he remembered his mission. He dragged his hand hard through his hair, reached for his cane, went to look for the phone book.
He called Peter Cunningham from the kitchen.
“Thank God she’s all right.”
“Yeah. Your bike’s fine, too.” Scott told him where he could pick it up.
“Who did you say you were?”
“Scott McIntyre, her neighbor…a…a friend.”
“You weren’t at the church?”
“I was late. Caught her bolting, so I followed her.”
There was a moment of silence on the other end of the line. “The cops are out looking for her.”
“She’s okay, Peter. She’s sleeping, but I can wake her if you want…or you’re welcome to come ’round. Send the cops, whatever.”
Peter hesitated. “I’ll get Charly to come ’round. I think she’d prefer that.”
“Fine. Any idea what happened to her fiancé?”
Peter cleared his throat. “After the church, when I got home, I checked my voice mail. There was a message from Jozsef. He’s gone.”
“What do you mean, gone?”
“Skipped town. Vamoose. Decamped—”
“I got it. Why’d he go?”
“Lord if I know. I thought I knew this guy…thought he loved her. I thought—”
“He say where he was going?”
“No. I went to his place to see if I could catch him, but he’d already cleaned out. I mean totally.” He hesitated. “We’re all terribly sorry for Skye. I just can’t believe this. We were worried sick. Thank God she’s all right.”
“Yeah.”
“I’ll let the cops know you found her…and thank you.”
“Sure.” Scott hung up, then checked to make sure Skye was still sleeping. He closed the heavy kitchen door, activated the scrambler and called Rex.
The Bellona boss picked up on the first ring. “Hey, I was just about to call you. Bloody good hunch on Danko, old chap.”
“Meaning?” Scott spoke quietly.
“He’s linked with several offshore companies who’ve made a killing from this U.S. beef embargo. And get this, they’re companies Bellona has suspected of having financial ties to the Anubis group.”
Scott’s fingers tightened around his sat phone. “You’re kidding.” Heat pulsed through his veins. Images seared through his mind. The Anubis cell in the Thar that he’d been hunting. His blown-out knee when he’d gotten too close. “These links,” he said. “Anything proven?”
“Not yet. Working on it. But it appears we’re not the only ones interested in Danko. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is nosing around. These particular companies Danko is aligned with also happen to have a vested interest in seeing the North American produce market go down the tubes.”
He whistled softly. “You think Danko and these companies are tied somehow to the Rift Valley Fever and this whitefly thing?”
“Hell knows, but I’m joining the dots and it’s shaping up to be a pretty darned interesting picture, especially when you throw Dr. Van Rijn into the mix. If the whitefly get much further south, Danko and his bunch stand to make another killing from investment into the stock of U.S. competitors.”
“Danko must have gotten wind of the S.E.C. probe.”
“What do you mean?”
“He’s split. Left town.”
Silence. “What about the wedding?”
“He left our doctor high and dry at the altar.”
“And where is she?”
Scott glanced at the kitchen door. Behind it the broken bride lay sleeping in front of the fire. He cleared his throat. “She’s still here.”
“You getting close?”
Too close.
“Close enough. She took it pretty bad, the whole wedding thing.”
Scott could hear the hesitation on the other end of the line. It wasn’t like him to get personal. Rex knew that. “Yes. Well, good…and keep me informed.”
“No worries. I’ve got my eye on her.” I’ve just got to keep my hands to myself.
Scott flipped the phone shut, shoved his feelings brusquely into a dark corner of his brain, ran through the cold facts. This possible Danko-Anubis tie threw everything into stark new light.
How was Skye connected?
He shoved open the kitchen door, limped slowly into the living room. Soft amber light glowed from the dying embers in the hearth. But the room was still a cocoon of warmth. Honey was having little doggy dreams at the foot of the sofa, her paws quivering in imaginary chase. Skye was curled like a child on the couch, dark hair soft across her face, blanket falling to the floor.
Scott lifted it to cover her properly. As he did, he caught the scent of his own soap. Then he caught something else.
A tattoo.
He stilled.
His baggy gray track pants had slipped low on her slim hips, exposing a tiny image on the smooth olive-toned skin near her hipbone. He bent closer.
His breath caught in his throat.
It was the stylized head of a jackal on the body of a man. Black and angular. Egyptian style. Bared teeth. Long, pointed snout. Ears like horns.
Anubis!
Scott’s heart thudded hard and quiet against his chest. This was too much to be coincidence.
Dr. Skye Van Rijn bore the ancient Egyptian symbol hijacked by La Sombra the mysterious mastermind behind the vast and growing shadowy Anubis organization. A group that had begun colluding with international organized crime.
But instead of a staff, the Anubis on her hip was depicted with a long, slim sword.
Scott gritted his teeth, yanked up the blanket, dropped it over her, spun around and grabbed the heavy iron fire poker.
He dropped to his haunches and jabbed the poker at the glowing logs. He thrust more fuel onto the rising flames, yanked the fire curtain shut, then slumped into the armchair beside the hearth.
He stared at the mysterious woman asleep on the sofa opposite him. Calm and innocent in repose. But who would she be when she woke?
One of La Sombra’s soldiers?
He flopped his head against the back of the chair, closed his eyes. Little was known about La Sombra apart from the code name given him when he trained under Castro’s regime on the Isle of Pines.
Authorities did not know his real name. Nor his nationality. And no one knew where The Shadow was based. It was believed he moved around, adopted different identities, and only those in his closest confidence knew it was he who called the shots. His cells, stationed around the world, were so tightly structured that none of the members knew who delivered the orders and who controlled whom.
La Sombra was the genius who’d stepped into the confusion created by the demise of the Soviet Union and the dissolution of the Warsaw Pact. He began to consolidate a loose net of international terrorist groups that were spawned during the 1960s and 1970s. Groups that were left retarded or disenfranchised and directionless with the collapse of the Soviet empire. No matter the religion or ideals of these various groups, La Sombra had reinstated a flow of funds and given them common cause, a reason to unite and cooperate in a massive international web…to fight what he called the American Evil, or Western Imperialism.
And he’d kicked into gear aggressive and sophisticated training programs.
La Sombra had theatrically dubbed this network Anubis, after the ancient Egyptian god who judged the souls of the dead and guided them to the underworld.
Scott pulled a face at the notion. It suited La Sombra to see himself as the ultimate judge. But there was little doubt in Scott’s mind that the philosophies he espoused were purely Machiavellian. It was power that drove the man.
Not ideals.
Possession. Power. Ruthless control. That’s what La Sombra got off on. He had no soul. And that’s what made him infinitely dangerous.
Harsh images flashed into Scott’s brain. He flexed his leg, flinched. Sometimes it still seemed like it had happened yesterday. But it was almost a year ago that he’d been tracking an Anubis cell in the northern reaches of the Thar desert. A cell comprised of rebels who had been flirting with a suspicious zoonosis, one that had already killed several children in Mumbai. But Scott had been ambushed. His guides, tipped off earlier, had fled with camels and supplies. There’d been nothing but him against the rebels.
But they hadn’t killed him.
They’d fired a bullet into his knee, shattering the joint, turning cartilage into gelatinous mash. And they’d left him to die a slow, tortuous and certain death under the merciless Indian sun, hook-beaked vultures circling up high.
He’d had time to think as he’d begun to die, tongue thickening, cracking with thirst in his mouth.
Visions of mercurial delirium had shimmered in front of him with the waves of heat off the sand. He’d seen Leni and Kaitlin, spectral figures, wavering, calling to him. He’d tried to call out to them, but no sound had come from his parched throat. He’d reached out for them to take his hand.
The insects had come to his bloodied knee.
The vultures had come closer.
The desert would have eaten him alive if it hadn’t been for that lone Jawan soldier.
That man had taken him back to his camp. The Jawans had nursed him under a white canvas tent, eased him back out of fever and delirium. He’d eventually been carted off to Mumbai. And there he’d spent many months under the care of Dr. Ranjit Singh.
He’d survived, and he’d vowed revenge. Not against the rebels—he wanted La Sombra himself. It was men like him who’d taken his family, his life.
Could this job be giving him another stab at his nemesis?
Scott opened his eyes, studied the sleeping form in front of him. If Skye was involved with the Anubis group, it was most likely she didn’t know the man.
She stirred, moaned softly in her sleep, rolled over.
His heart stumbled.
And for a second he wanted to believe the image on her hip was sheer coincidence. He couldn’t begin to mentally align the broken bride, the raw pain he’d seen in her silver eyes with the calculating cold of an Anubis terrorist.
He cursed.
He was deluding himself. She had the moves, the secrets in her eyes, the gritty edge. He’d recognized that the instant she’d stepped across that threshold and into his life.
And she had connections. But if she was in partnership with Danko, why had he left her? What was their game?
Scott took in a deep breath, filled his lungs to capacity, blew out slowly.
Questions. Lots of questions.
And he’d get answers.
He’d play her.
He closed his eyes, allowed the tired, rhythmic throb of his knee to pulse through him. He strained to find mental space.
Like the wild, hot emptiness and endless horizons of the desert.
He took his mind there. But instead of numb space, he saw only a bride, a broken Aphrodite shivering on her rock, overlooking a sea as mysterious and silver as her eyes…and a snarling jackal-headed beast.
He awoke with a start.
The fire was dead. Cold. Gray fingers of dawn searched through the blinds.
His eyes flashed to the sofa.
Nothing.
Just a pile of blanket.
Skye was gone.
He jerked to his feet, threw back the blanket.
Damn. She’d sneaked out under his trained nose while he’d dozed in front of her. She’d cut under his highly tuned radar. Only a bloody expert operative could do that.
Then he heard it.
The unmistakable deep-throated growl of a powerful motorcycle engine.
He hobbled quickly over to the window just in time to see Dr. Skye Van Rijn pull out of her garage astride her bike. Her hair hung in a thick dark braid down the center of her back. And, Scott noted, she was wearing his old leather jacket.
She roared into the street, spun her tires and disappeared in a cloud of dust and fumes.
A brown sedan, parked across the street, pulled out behind her.