She stood her ground in the middle of village square. “I will stay away from the police. I will show you around the Gazette office. I’ll help you because I want to find out what happened to Amy. But I will not move out of my house.”
He dropped his voice to a gravelly whisper. “You’re making a scene. Keep moving. For Christ’s sake act normal.” Rex tucked his arm around her waist and led her down the cobbled walkway toward the Gazette office. “It would just be for a while, until I can figure out what’s going on.”
“That’s ridiculous.”
Yet, after her scare this morning, after what he’d revealed at the bistro, she wasn’t so sure. She wasn’t sure of anything anymore.
He kept her close with his arm. Solid, fluid strength, guiding her down the path. But what path? Where in hell were they headed?
“Rex,” she whispered. “I don’t want a bodyguard.”
“Well, you got one.”
She slipped out from under his possessive hold and climbed the concrete stairs ahead of him, pushing open the glass door with the White River Gazette logo emblazoned on the front.
She marched in without holding the door open behind her. She had a photograph of Danny on her desk and she wanted to make sure he didn’t see it. Not now. She didn’t want to have her precious boy play any part in this. She herself couldn’t seem to grasp what was happening.
“Hey, Hannah. Didn’t expect you in today. It’s been like a train station this morning.”
She stopped short. “Georgette?”
Hannah hadn’t anticipated seeing anyone at the Gazette reception desk on this weekend morning, especially not the village gossip. “I didn’t think you’d be in, either.” She turned to motion to the arrogant man in her wake. “That’s Rex.” She didn’t use his last name. She didn’t want Georgette putting two and two together and linking little Daniel Logan McGuire with this man. She had a hunch Al had already made the connection. She sure didn’t need the town windbag to do the same. “I need to show him some archived stories on Amy’s disappearance. Rex, this is our superefficient office coordinator, Georgette.” Hannah started to make for her office down the corridor, anxious to slip that photograph of Danny into her drawer.
“Archives, huh?” Georgette called after her. “That’s what Al and that freelance writer were after earlier today.”
Hannah stopped dead in her tracks, spun round to face Georgette. “What freelance writer?”
“Mark Bamfield. He met Al here this morning.” Georgette chuckled, turning her smile up a few watts for Rex. “And there I was thinking I’d have a peaceful Saturday doing catch-up.”
“Don’t worry. We won’t disturb you, Georgette.” Rex flashed that sharp white smile of his at the office coordinator, and Hannah felt something twist inside her gut.
Georgette tilted her chin and brushed a lock of hair behind her ear. “No problem, Rex. Take as long as you like.”
Hannah stalked off to her office, leaving Georgette batting her eyes at Rex. So he had a way with the ladies. Little did they know he was a love-’em-and-leave-’em cad who sneaked off in the dark. The sooner they got to the bottom of this business, and the sooner he got out of her life, the better.
Hannah scooped Danny’s picture off her desk and slipped it into her purse.
“What’s the big rush?” She heard Rex behind her and jumped. The newsroom seemed to shrink in his presence.
“Uh, I’m worried that Bamfield…Mitchell whoever, has gotten to the files.” She spoke quickly as she booted up the computer and seated herself in front of the terminal.
“Well, no amount of rushing now is going to change that.” Rex pulled up a chair and squeezed it in beside Hannah’s.
He was invading her space again. Her chest felt tight.
“Perhaps you could shift over just a tad, or do you plan on doing this yourself?” he said.
She glared at him and edged her chair over an inch. He pulled his seat in, bringing his arm almost into contact with hers. They sat side by side looking at the computer screen as it crackled to life. She could feel it, the intensity, the energy mushrooming warm between them. It raised the fine hair along her limbs in little goose bumps. She rubbed her arms.
He said nothing. The silence was thick.
She cleared her throat. “Where do you want to start, Rex?” Where did one start after six years?
He turned to face her. He was so close. She could feel her heart rate increase, her breathing become more shallow. His glacial gaze held her. She couldn’t look away. She watched as the light in them shifted from crystal to dark, the center starburst of indigo radiating out with the heat of his gaze. It knocked her completely off guard. She felt herself being drawn in, being physically pulled, her body leaning imperceptibly toward his.
She swallowed.
He turned and looked back at the screen, clearing his throat. “So, where are Amy’s files stored?”
Hannah felt overwhelmingly relieved to have a clear task. A defined road. “This was her terminal,” she told Rex. She needed to refocus. “It’s basically what I inherited when she went missing. It’s a Macintosh system. Most small newspapers use Macs.” She was babbling.
Hannah clicked open a file and showed him where Amy’s work had been stored. “This is not the morgue. This is…was, her personal working stuff. I didn’t delete anything, just filed it here. Amy’s notes are in here.” She clicked. “Her interviews, contacts and stories.” Hannah moved the mouse. She could feel the heat emanating from the body almost touching hers.
“Um, once Amy completed a story she would have filed it here.” She clicked on network folder that was shared by all the computers in the office. “This is where Al would have picked it up for editing before dumping it into another folder where production would access it for layout.”
His fingers brushed over hers as he gently took the mouse from her hand. Her breath caught in her throat. Those long, gently tapered fingers that had once stroked slowly up the inside of her thigh touched hers. Hannah felt warmth pool, unwanted, delicious in her belly.
Her hands were trembling.
This was ridiculous.
She jerked off her chair, stalked over to the large newsroom windows. There were tufts of white cloud over the granite peaks. She could see the lift lines, chairs winking as metal caught sun, and she could see Grizzly Bowl, where Amy had lost her life.
Hannah turned back to face him. “Take a look and see what you can find in there, Rex. If you have any questions, I’ll be in the next office.”
His blue gaze bored into her. “Don’t go anywhere, Hannah, I might need you.” The timbre of his voice was low, rough.
She stared at him, a battle of emotions raging in her brain and in her heart. And where were you, Rex, all those years ago when I needed you? Where were you when I went into labor with your child? Where were you when he got his first tooth? Where were you, Rex, when he asked if he had a daddy?
She wanted to shake him. Strike him. She wanted to ask him why he deserted her that night. Why he’d left the warmth of their sleeping bag and stalked off into the African veldt. She wanted the touch of those hands on her skin. Heaven help her. She wanted him. And she hated him.
“Fine. I won’t go anywhere.”
From where she stood she could see the small muscle pulsing on the right side of his jaw, just near his ear as he watched her. She knew by the look in his dark-rimmed sky-blue eyes that he felt it, too. That unspoken frisson, that undeniable seductive pull. It was that same sensual vortex that had sucked them down together in Marumba.
Silence stretched thick and elastic between them. She could think of no words to break the spell that held them.
The light from behind her played unforgivingly on his features but did nothing to diminish them. God he was striking. More rugged than beautiful. And hard, as hard as this unforgiving terrain, this mountain playground she called home. She watched the white sunlight catch in his eyes.
They made her think of a pool. An ice-cool pool that lay still as glass under summer heat. But when a swimmer plunged with breathless delight into its cold depths, the surface would shatter into refracted, laughing light and dancing crystal.
She suspected swimmers didn’t play there often.
His eyes held her prisoner as he slowly pushed his chair back and moved over to her. She was incapable of backing away, like a small mouse mesmerized by the hungry stare of a serpent.
He came closer. Closer.
Breathe, Hannah. She seemed to have lost the ability to do what came so naturally. Breathe.
He lifted his hand and hooked a knuckle under her chin, tilting her face up to him.
There were dark fathomless depths lurking in those glacial blue pools now. Swirling undercurrents. They mirrored the dark passion that swam warm inside her.
He softly traced the outline of her lips with the roughened pad of his thumb. She felt the world around her recede, her vision blur.
She allowed her lips to part slightly as he pushed against them, and she let the tip of her tongue test the salt of his finger.
In response the pressure of his finger became a little more urgent, more forceful, parting her lips wider. The sensation of wanting to take his whole finger into her mouth, to suck him into her, was overwhelming as she felt the rivers of warmth in her body threaten to overrun their banks.
Her legs were unsteady.
“You feel it, Hannah.” His voice was throaty, rough with want. “You feel it, too, don’t you? I can see it in your eyes.” He ran his finger forcefully along the edge of her teeth. His other hand found the small of her back and he started to pull her in close to his hard body. She felt her breasts push up against his chest.
She wanted him. All of him, deep inside. She wanted to wrap herself around him, drink him in. Six years had not dulled the edge of her hunger for him. It was sharper. She ached with a raw need she thought she had buried all those years ago.
No. She couldn’t go there. Couldn’t repeat it. Her drugged brain scrambled to pull at threads of rationality. “No. Rex, please. No!”
He backed away instantly. For what seemed an eternity they just stood, close. Trying to compute the depth of what still existed between them.
Then he reached up and gently brushed a lock of hair from her cheek.
The retreat, the tenderness of the movement as he touched her hair was too much for Hannah. What had been locked inside spilled out in hot silent tears onto her cheeks.
“Damn you.” She pushed against his chest. “Damn you, Rex.”
She felt his muscles brace solid against her hands as she tried to shove him away.
It had happened in Marumba. She had let passion override reason. It had been a mistake. She was not going to make that mistake again. Especially not now. There was too much at risk. There was Danny.
She turned her back on him to face the timeless peaks. She held her arms tight about herself, trying to hold in the ache, the pain, the need.
“Hannah.” He put a hand on her shoulder.
She jerked out from under his touch. “Leave me alone, please, Rex.” She swiped the back of her hand across the wetness of her cheeks and turned to face him. “I’ll be in the next room.”
She forced her knees to bend, she made her legs walk across the newsroom to the door. Her limbs felt like rubber.
* * *
Rex stalked down the concrete stairs from the Gazette office, following Hannah into the village streets. He battled to hold his raw anger in check. He was used to being in complete control of emotions. It was a requirement of the job. But this woman had power over him. The power to turn off his internal controls. He was furious he’d stepped over the line. He wanted her. He’d wanted to take her right in that office. Sweet Jesus. How could he do that to her? How could he hurt her like this?
“Where are we going?”
He took Hannah by the elbow and steered her down the walkway. The afternoon sun had turned a soft yellow but it did nothing to mellow the naked emotion that seethed between them.
Rex had found that CIA agent Ken Mitchell had indeed accessed the office files. Mitchell now knew what they knew, that Amy had demonstrated an unnatural interest in biological weapons and urban terrorism and that she had a file of information devoted exclusively to the topic, along with Website addresses.
“I said, where are we going?”
“My hotel. I told you I need a shower.”
“Well, I don’t.” She pulled free. “I’m going home. If you need me you can call me there.”
“No.” He grabbed her arm. “I need you to make a phone call to the Vancouver library, find out about those books—when Amy took them out, what else she may have borrowed. You can do that from my room.”
“You expect me to jump at your command? You’ve got the social grace of a military despot, you know. Didn’t your parents teach you anything?”
She was lashing out at him. Good. It was better that way. “You’re right, they left my education to the military. Everything I learned about life, I learned in the army.”
She seemed to halt at his words, her eyes flared briefly in question. But she said nothing.
“Come.” He ushered her up the wide stone stairs of the White River Presidential Hotel.
The doorman snapped to attention as they approached, and held open the door. Rex gave his thanks with a curt nod and escorted Hannah into the cavernous hotel lobby.
She said nothing as he ushered her into the elevator and pressed the button for the sixth floor.
The doors closed them in. Just the two of them, alone, as the elevator started to hum. It threw their predicament into stark relief.
After six years of nothing, no contact, they were now trapped together. But the feelings between them were no different. Only deeper, darker, more convoluted. He had to try to stay clear of that abyss. He had to keep his head and keep her safe. He had to clear this case and get the hell out of here. Leave before they destroyed each other.
But she was sucking him in, even now as she watched the numbers of the floors flash by. He could feel her feminine presence touching him in this confined space. He could feel the energy coming from her, waves of it. Passion and anger and hate and pain. He yearned to reach out and quell it, stroke it away.
He thrust his hands into the pockets of his loose sweatpants. Deal with it, Logan. A few more days and you’ll be out of her life.
Hannah just about leaped through the elevator doors as they opened onto the lush carpet of the sixth floor. She started quickly along the corridor to the left. He reached out and caught the fabric of her dress in the small of her back. “No, this way.”
He turned and made his way down the corridor to the right. She stormed after him, the carpet swallowing the angry impact of her feet.
* * *
Hannah stood in the hotel room. There was one large double bed. Soft white diaphanous curtains were tied back from French doors that opened onto a small balcony.
A bathroom led off to the right. The only sign that anyone occupied the suite was a laptop on the black-lacquered desk under a small window that was graced with the same white bridal curtains.
Rex pulled his T-shirt over his head and tossed it onto the bed. He yanked open the drawer of the bedside table, pulled out a telephone directory and tossed it onto the desk. “There. You’ll find the Vancouver Public Library number in there. And here.” He tossed a bag onto the chair. “Amy’s library material is in that bag.”
Hannah could see the scar that sliced across the left side of his chest from underarm to nipple. She saw the dark hair that ran in a slim dense whorl from below his navel into the track pants slung low on his narrow hips. The suggestive swirl of hair lured her eyes down his flat belly. It whispered of what lay beyond. She’d been there. Her hands had once traced that line…her mind swam back.
He was watching her again. She grabbed the phone book and started flicking through the pages, looking for the library number.
Rex marched into the bathroom. The door closed behind him with a click. Hannah could hear the shower. She picked up the phone and punched in the number of the Vancouver library. She glanced at her watch. There should still be someone there this time on a Saturday.
“Vancouver Public Library, how may I help you?”
“Yes, hi, I have a couple of titles here.” She rummaged quickly in the bag, pulling them out. “I think they belong to a deceased friend of mine and I was wondering if you could help me out by telling me when they were borrowed.”
“Certainly. One moment.”
Hannah was put through to another person who asked for the titles. It was the first time she’d seen the books, and as she read the titles out loud, the seriousness of the situation started to seep in. Biological Agents Used in Assassination, and Mapping Human Genes—Implications in Biological Warfare and Genetically Engineered Biological Weapons.
What on earth was Amy up to?
“Okay, I’ve pulled up the file here.” The voice was perky. “Yes, those were signed out by Grady Fisher on the fifteenth of September last year. They’re almost a year overdue but we can certainly waive any charges under these circumstances.”
“Who did you say signed the books out?”
“Grady Fisher.”
Hannah didn’t know any Grady Fisher. “Ah…do you have an address registered on file for Mr. Fisher?”
“Sorry. I thought you said the borrower was deceased, a friend of yours.”
Hannah’s mind raced through the possibilities. “Well, her books must have been signed out in someone else’s name. Is it possible to get this Grady Fisher’s address?”
“Sorry. Library policy. We can’t give out that sort of information.”
Hannah hung up.
Grady Fisher. Perhaps one of Amy’s friends knew who he was. Perhaps if they could find Grady, he might have some answers.
She stood up from the desk and walked over to the French doors. She pulled them open with both hands, and the scents of the mountain immediately blew into the room in a rush of fragrant air. It smelled of straw and honey and earth.
Hannah stepped out onto the small balcony. Six floors down lay the sparkling pool. There was nothing between the back of the hotel property and the ski slopes. In winter, skiers and boarders carved their way right down to the hotel doors, or they crunched along the pathway to the village as steam rose from the heated pool.
Hannah drank in the late-afternoon air. She could see why the hotel was a favorite of honeymooning couples and why the White River marriage commissioner did such a brisk trade. People came from all over the world to tie the knot in these mountains, hoping their love would be as enduring as the snow-capped granite peaks that inspired them.
But she had run to White River as an escape. She had run from love. Well, at least for her it had been love.
Hannah watched as a couple, the man with a baby in a carrier on his back, picked their way slowly down the hiking trail toward the hotel. She had always known she would have children. She had dreamed that she could make it all possible, kids, her successful career, a proper family…a storybook family.
Well, that was for storybooks. She did have a child. It was not the way she had planned things, but she had a wonderful, beautiful son and she was going to make the best of what she did have. She had been doing fine, until now.
Danny, she needed to phone Danny. She needed to make contact with him, to hear his little voice, to ground herself.
Hannah stepped back into the hotel room and eyed the phone. No, not here. She didn’t want Rex to be able to hear.
He was still in the shower; she could hear the splash of the water.
Now was her chance.
She gathered up her purse and sweater and walked quickly across the soft carpet to the door. She put her hand on the knob, pausing to listen for the shower.
It stopped. She’d better hurry. She pulled open the door and made a dash for the elevator.
* * *
Rex stepped out of the shower in a fog of steam, feeling vaguely human again. He wrapped a towel around his waist and rubbed a circle clear in the misted mirror. He slathered shaving cream over his jaw, pulled a trail through the creamy froth with his razor, rinsed the blade and took it to his face again.
As the steam once again started blurring the edges of the clearing he’d rubbed on the glass, Rex’s mind drifted back in time, back to that day he’d first seen her in Marumba, that small pocket of troubled country nestled between Sierra Leone and Liberia, near the Ivory Coast.
She’d been in that bar, celebrating with a raucous crowd of foreign journalists and photographers. She’d just broken a story about illegal diamonds being smuggled from Sierra Leone through Marumba.
He’d been downing beer, internally seething over the botched lab raid and his wasted time.
Rex had been just hours away from doing a deal with the Plague Doctor himself. It had taken him months of undercover work to infiltrate the Marumba research lab that posed as pharmaceutical plant. He’d won the confidence of the Plague Doctor who’d then given Rex a tour of his facility. Once in the lab, Rex saw the extent of his evil. Most of his experiments with biological agents like the plague, hemorrhagic fevers, anthrax, e-coli or HIV had been carried out on dogs and baboons.
He knew for certain then that the Plague Doctor had been responsible for an Ebola outbreak in Kenya that had killed hundreds. He could also be linked to an outbreak of hoof and mouth disease in animals in Britain.
The doctor personified evil, and he sold his secrets to the highest bidder, to the country or army with the deepest pockets. He was a scientific mercenary in the biological weapons war and he had no conscience.
Rex had almost had the proof he needed, almost had access to the Plague Doctor’s new genetic research on ethnic bullets. A few more hours and the Bellona Channel would have had evidence in hand, knowledge it could use in the fight against the proliferation of biological weapons worldwide. Knowledge Bio Can Pharmaceutical could in turn use to create antidotes.
The CIA had also been watching the lab, aware of the Bellona Channel’s work. It wasn’t unusual for the two organizations to cooperate. But then Mitchell had blown the whistle too early and the troops had moved in.
The result was a fire, a raging white-hot blaze, an ecological nightmare. Everything in the lab was burned. But there were no biological agents found in the fire-safe refrigeration unit in what was the Biosafety Level 4 sector and most of the staff had escaped—including the Plague Doctor.
Rex dragged the razor over his skin, cursing the CIA agent under his breath. He swore again as he nicked his skin with his blade.
It was as if Mitchell had deliberately tried to thwart the Bellona Channel and facilitate the escape of Dr. Ivan Rostov.
It was in that bar, after the disastrous raid, that he’d first seen Hannah. She’d been leaving for Ralundi the next day. Rex also packed his bags that night. But he didn’t ship out to Canada as planned. When the pink copper sky over the Marumba mountain range promised dawn, he’d left for Ralundi, a small town on the Marumba coast, telling himself he needed a break.
That decision six years ago to leave for Ralundi had cost him his heart.
Rex splashed cold water over his face and ran his hand over his jaw, testing the result of his shave. He wondered if Hannah had had any luck with the Vancouver library.
He opened the bathroom door and was greeted by cool early-evening air billowing the gauzy curtains out from the French door. He didn’t see her. He didn’t need to, he could sense she wasn’t in the room.
He stalked over to the open French doors and pushed aside the pregnant drapes. “Hannah?”
There was no one on the balcony.
He whirled round and stormed back into the room. “Hannah!”
She had gone.
He swore as he opened the door into the hallway. Nothing but silence along the empty corridor.
He muttered an expletive and yelled down the row of room doors. “Hannah!”
Where in hell was she? Didn’t she get it? She wasn’t safe. This was no time to play games.
Rex started down the hallway toward the elevator before remembering the towel around his waist. He cursed again and turned back to find some clothes.
She didn’t have her car with her; she’d be on foot. Knowing her stubborn streak, Rex figured she’d probably decided to walk all the way home. That meant she would have to go back through the park.
He didn’t like this one bit.
He pulled on a white T-shirt and black jeans. Then, as an afterthought, he lifted the mattress, pulled out his .38 and shoved it into the back of his pants.