ELSA LOPEZ COULDN’T stop pacing. She’d spent the past week hiding in her Viennese apartment obeying her mother’s request to stay inside until the man tasked with escorting her home to Valencia arrived, and her nerves were shredded.
Her usually unobtrusive security detail had quadrupled with no warning a week ago. She now had a bodyguard stationed outside her front door, another guarding the front entrance to the apartment building and another guarding the back entrance. In a top-floor apartment on the other side of the courtyard were more guards watching every person who came within its vicinity. Her trip home to Valencia for her sister’s engagement party had been bought forward. Her mother wanted her home and within the safety of the Lopez estate as soon as possible. That could only mean there had been a specific threat against Elsa.
Still pacing, she read her mother’s latest cryptic email again. Their communications were supposed to be secure but both women worked on the assumption that every call was listened to and every written communication read. After what had happened to their family, paranoia was to be expected. Jumping at shadows had become a part of Elsa’s life.
Be ready to leave on the day of Samson’s birth. Your escort has made all the arrangements. Trust him. Trust no one else.
Samson had been Elsa and her sister Marisa’s first pet. Their parents had bought the dog for them when they’d been in infant school. They’d faithfully celebrated his birthday on the ninth of July for every one of his twelve years of life.
Today was the ninth of July.
There was a rap on her front door. She checked the security camera before opening it, just in case. Since her father’s murder a year ago, ‘Just in case’ had become something of a mantra.
‘Your escort has arrived,’ the unsmiling guard told her.
‘Is he one of your men?’
He shook his head.
‘Who is he?’
Her question went unanswered. The guard indicated the oversized handbag sitting by the door. ‘Is this all you’re taking?’
She picked it up and secured it over her shoulder. ‘Yes.’ She always travelled light when she returned to Valencia. She’d lived in Vienna for five years, but her childhood bedroom was still hers, the wardrobes still stuffed with all her clothes and accessories. All she’d packed were her cosmetics, purse and passport.
Elsa’s apartment was set above a pizzeria and book shop in a beautiful building with white walls and green window frames. She followed the guard down the narrow stairs to the ground floor and stepped out into the cobbled courtyard. Mid-morning and the coffee shop on the other side was spilling over with people. Summer in Vienna was hitting its stride, the students and hipsters who usually made up the bodies wandering through this laid-back district increasing rather than decreasing in numbers.
A tall, well-built figure with a full, thick black beard standing propped against a lamppost caught her attention. Arms with biceps the size of her thighs were folded across a powerfully built chest. There was something familiar about him, something that made her heart give a sudden jolt. Shielding her eyes against the glare of the rising sun, she stopped walking and stared.
It couldn’t be...?
She dropped her hand from her brow and stared some more. The figure moved towards her. Incongruously dressed for the weather and bohemian vibe of the district in a pair of dark grey trousers, a dark blue shirt unbuttoned at the neck and a charcoal waistcoat, the unruly curly black hair had been slicked back, dark shades along with the new beard covering much of the face she’d tried her hardest to forget.
Santi.
Her mother had sent Santi.
He was standing in front of her before she could unfreeze her shocked brain, straight white teeth flashing in a wide smile, bear-like hands lightly gripping her shoulders. He leaned down and placed his cheek against hers as if this was a planned meeting between two close friends and whispered, ‘Smile and look pleased to see me.’
But her shock was too great. The cologne she’d caught in ghostly fragments over the years had already engulfed her senses. The skin on her cheek tingled from the soft brush of his beard. Elsa reared back. Her frozen mouth managed to form one word. It came out like an accusation.
‘You.’
He tightened the hold on her shoulders and increased the wattage of his smile. ‘Me. Now, as delightful as this reunion is, we need to get moving.’
His gravelly voice dived straight into her stunned senses. The courtyard began to swim around her. Of all the people in the world she’d have wanted to escort her home, Santiago ‘Santi’ Rodriguez would have been at the very bottom of the list.
It had been five years since Elsa had left his bed crushed, shamed and chastened but those years melted away and, cheeks now burning under the weight of his stare, the old humiliation slapped her afresh.
In desperation, she turned to the bodyguard who’d accompanied her but he’d melted away too.
Santi hid his impatience and kept the smile on his face as he released Elsa’s slender shoulders to take her hand. She tried to jerk away but he didn’t relinquish his hold. ‘We don’t have time for this, chiquita. We need to move. Now smile and come with me.’
Tugging at her hand, he set off, forcing her to move alongside him.
‘Of all the places you could have set up home, you had to choose a pedestrianised area?’ he joked in an effort to ease the tension as they weaved through the crowds and onto Mariahilfer Strasse. ‘I thought I might have to kill someone for a parking space.’
She didn’t respond. Her pretty face was clenched from smooth brow to heart-shaped chin.
Using his excellent internal sense of direction—Santi had never been lost in his life, had only to look at a map once to memorise it—they crossed the wide road bursting with shoppers and slipped down a side street. Although Elsa trotted beside him in mute obedience, he didn’t release her hand. His intuition, which was as excellent as his sense of direction, told him strongly that should he let her go, she would bolt.
After the way she’d ignored him at her father’s funeral, he hadn’t expected her to greet him with whoops of joy but did she have to act so repulsed when he was putting his life on the line for her? The woman who’d once been his little shadow now recoiled from him. The first word she’d spoken to him in five years had been hissed at him as if he were dirt on her shoe.
The last time they’d spoken was the night he’d found her in his bed. Considering how drunk she’d been, he’d be surprised if she remembered any of it, actions or words.
He’d done his damned best to forget it too.
They reached the Naschmarkt, a mile-long market already bursting at the seams with locals and tourists. If anyone was following them, this was where Santi intended to shake them off. Keeping a firm hold of Elsa’s hand, he cut through food stalls and restaurants, backtracked a few times, cut through a coffee bar and then led her outside and down another side street where the car he’d acquired was parked.
Elsa took one look at the tiny, battered white car and raised a brow. ‘You’re saving me from what I assume are kidnappers in that?’ The car had to be the same age as her and could in no way be called a classic.
He grinned and unlocked the passenger door manually. ‘If you aren’t expecting it then the kidnappers aren’t either.’
This confirmation of her suspicions hit her like a needle of ice being injected directly into her veins and she grabbed hold of the opened door to stop her weakening legs dropping her to the ground.
Santi must have read something on her face for his smile fell. ‘You didn’t know?’
She tried to get moisture into her arid mouth. ‘I knew there was a threat to me but not the details,’ she croaked. ‘Mamá said my escort...you, I suppose...would explain.’
‘I’ll explain everything once we’re on the road,’ he promised.
In the car, she dropped her head between her knees and breathed deeply. At least she hadn’t fainted. That was one good thing.
Santi leaned in through the driver’s door. ‘I need your phone.’
‘Why?’ she asked dimly.
‘They’re probably tracking it.’
Mutely, head still dipped, she pulled it out of her bag and handed it to him. He dropped it to the ground. It crunched beneath his giant foot.
‘I have a replacement for you in the boot.’
‘Okay,’ she whispered.
‘Are you okay?’
She raised her head and took another deep breath. ‘I’m fine.’
‘Then buckle up, chiquita, and let’s get this heap of junk to the airport.’
Only when he’d turned the engine on did she cast him a sideways glance. The sick, faint feeling that had enveloped her disappeared and she was suddenly struck by an urge to laugh. All six feet four of pure muscle that was Santiago Rodriguez was folded into the driver’s seat. His head skimmed the roof, his knees touching the steering wheel so intimately he could use them to drive.
He flashed the grin that had once made her insides melt and put the heap of junk into gear. With a screech of tyres, they were off.
Elsa stared out of the window while they drove out of the city she’d made her home. Her heart had lodged in her throat. When would she next see her apartment? Sit at her desk in the calm open-plan office? Enjoy a quiet cappuccino with a good book at her favourite coffee shop? Would she ever feel safe again? Would she ever be safe again?
When they were safely crawling on the Ost Autobahn, she cleared her throat. ‘You said you were going to tell me everything.’
Santi waited until the articulated lorry overtaking them had safely passed before answering. ‘How much do you know about the efforts to bring the cartel who killed your father to justice?’
The dizzy, nauseous feeling started up again, white noise buzzing in her ears at the mention of the cartel.
Elsa’s family owned a shipping company that transported freight across the world. Fifteen months ago, a representative of the cartel in question approached her parents offering a ridiculous amount of money to use their cargo ships to smuggle drugs. Her parents said no. The cartel increased their monetary offer. Her parents still said no. The next day they found their dog, Buddy, drowned in the swimming pool. Things escalated from there. Her parents refused to be intimidated and called the police. They also increased their personal security.
Three months after the cartel’s initial approach, Elsa’s father Marco had kissed her mother goodbye and set off for a round of golf. While he’d played eighteen holes with his regular golfing friends, someone had tampered with the brakes of his car. Whether they’d intended for him to die or just wanted to scare him was irrelevant. Marco Lopez had driven into the back of a delivery truck at a set of traffic lights five hundred yards from the golf course and died instantly.
‘I know the new security guy Mamá hired, that Felipe Lorenzi, has a team working to bring them down,’ Elsa croaked.
‘Things have moved quickly in the last month. International authorities are involved. They’ve been putting the final pieces into place to make a co-ordinated swoop on the cartel and arrest them. One of Felipe’s men received a tip-off that the cartel have got wind of it and are planning pre-emptive action.’
She could hardly unfreeze her throat enough to whisper, ‘Me?’
‘Yes. They want to frighten your mother into dropping her evidence. Right now it’s the only solid non-circumstantial evidence the authorities have against them.’
A day after her husband’s death, Rosaria Lopez had received a phone call from the cartel’s representative. The caller had commiserated about Marco’s death then casually asked about the health of her heavily pregnant daughter Marisa. The threat had been implicit. Rosaria had agreed to a meeting with the representative, which she’d attended wearing a pair of teardrop earrings with a recording device implanted in them. Elsa still struggled to comprehend how her formidable but grieving mother had found the courage to walk into the lion’s den, but walk into it she had and, during the conversation in which the cartel had laid out their fresh demands, came a concrete admission of guilt for Marco’s death. And more threats.
The cartel were satisfied they had the Lopezes in their pocket. They completely underestimated the Lopez women’s steel. Rosaria made numerous copies of the recording, fired her security team and, on Santi’s advice, hired Felipe Lorenzi in their place. Felipe’s team beefed up their protection and formed an impenetrable fortress around them. Communications from the cartel suddenly ceased. None of the Lopez women dared believe that would be the last they heard from them, and set about bringing the cartel down before they could go for their family again.
Elsa tried to process this specific threat to her but there were so many emotions ravaging her that it was hard to get her thoughts in order. ‘Why am I in your care and not Felipe’s?’
‘Your mother asked me,’ he answered with a shrug. Santi couldn’t be completely certain but he thought they’d escaped the city without being followed.
He thought back to the conversation of five days ago. He’d been sat in the garden with Rosaria and her elder daughter Marisa. Santi had been regularly updated about the situation, had thrown his own time and resources at assisting the Lopezes’ fight for justice, and he’d listened to the revelation about the new specific threat to Elsa without a flicker of emotion.
Rosario had fixed the green-brown eyes her younger daughter had inherited on him. ‘Bring her home to me, Santi,’ she’d said.
Although he’d had a good idea she was going to ask him to do this and had learned skills over the past year in anticipation of something like this happening, he’d still sucked in a breath. ‘Wouldn’t it be better for Felipe and his men to bring her back? They’re the experts.’
‘They will give you every assistance but I trust you.’ Tears had glistened in her eyes and her voice had caught before she could continue.
Marisa had been the one to finish for her. ‘To them, Elsa’s just another job.’
He’d understood. God help him, he’d understood.
Santi had been as near as dammit a part of the Lopez family since they’d employed his mother as their housekeeper when he’d been a boy of ten and Elsa had been incubating in Rosaria’s womb. Everything he had and everything he was was because of this family. There was nothing he wouldn’t do for them.
Elsa rested her head against the window and closed her eyes. Her parents had always believed the sun shone out of Santi’s backside. She’d once believed that too.
A memory flashed in her mind. Her first house party without adult supervision. She’d been, what, fifteen? Sixteen? Her parents had, of course, believed there would be responsible adults there. It had never occurred to them that their baby girl would lie. She’d had a cigarette. It had made her cough so hard and had tasted so disgusting that she’d never touched another. One of her friends had smoked dope but Elsa’s throat had been too sore from the coughing fit to try it for herself. She’d drunk beer, though. She hadn’t liked the taste but there had been no other alcohol available, not that she’d found anyway.
As was often the case with unsupervised teenage house parties, alcohol and illicit drugs meant things got pretty raucous. When a game of Beer Pong resulted in a flat-screen television being smashed, Elsa had still been sober enough to know it was time to leave, and had sent a message to her dad asking to be collected.
A little woozy but still the right side of drunk, she’d waited out front with her friends Lola and Carmen. A handful of older boys joined them, boys the three virginal girls had whisperingly agreed were sexy. When offered a bottle of beer each, the giggling girls had accepted, too naïve to realise the boys expected payment.
That payment had been of the tongues down throats and hands up tops and down skirts variety. Elsa had never expected her first kiss to be of the drunken, unwanted kind, but that’s what it had been. The boy in question hadn’t even asked. It had been disgusting, all slobbery, like what she’d imagine kissing Rocco, her dad’s English mastiff, would be like. She’d pushed him away. He’d grabbed hold of her again and pinned her hands behind her back to stop her resisting.
There hadn’t been time for her to feel scared because that had been the moment a shadow had fallen over them and then suddenly the boy had released her and levitated... But he hadn’t been levitating, she’d realised a blink later. He was hovering inches off the ground because Santi had hoiked him into the air by his neck.
He’d grinned at Elsa and, still holding the boy aloft with one hand, had dug into his pocket with the other and thrown his keys to her. ‘Wait in the car for me, chiquita. And your friends.’
From the safety of the car, the three girls had stared with their faces pressed to the window as Santi entered the house. Moments later teenagers of differing stages of inebriation had flooded out.
When he’d finally joined the girls in the car, he’d told them to buckle up, turned the radio on and, singing along to the song playing, driven away.
‘What did you do to that boy?’ Elsa had asked after Santi dropped her friends at their homes. There had been no need to question why he’d collected her rather than her father. He’d always been happy to run errands for him and act as occasional chauffeur to the Lopez girls.
‘Nothing you need worry about,’ he’d answered.
‘Did you hurt him?’
‘How would you feel if I had?’
She’d thought about it. ‘Good. But bad too.’
He’d laughed. ‘I didn’t hurt him or his scum friends, but I promise you this much—those boys are never going to manhandle you or any other female again.’ His voice had then become serious. ‘I want you to promise me that when you are out with your friends, you all look out for each other. I get that you’re at an age where you want to experiment but you need to keep safe too and for women, safety comes in numbers. You understand?’
That was the night Elsa had fallen madly in love with Santiago Rodriguez. Overnight, the chiselled face with the broad nose, wide mouth and black eyes surrounded by lines that seemed permanently crinkled with amusement turned into the most handsome face she’d ever seen.
The next day she’d received an enormous bunch of flowers from the manhandling boy with a note that simply read, ‘Sorry.’ She’d received presents from Santi that day too—a rape alarm, a can of pepper spray and self-defence classes.
And now, as much as she wanted to seethe that her mother had entrusted her safety in the face of such danger to Santi, Elsa understood why she’d done so.
Santi would never let anything happen to her. He might have gained a fortune in his own right over the past decade that put her family’s wealth to shame but he would put his own life on the line for any of the Lopezes. His loyalty was unwavering and eternal.
For all that being with him made her want to curl into a ball and cover her face, and for all that she hated him for his cold cruelty that night five years ago, the fear that had gnawed in her belly all week had settled. The old feeling of safety she’d always had when she’d been with him had smothered the fear.
Elsa was pulled from her trip down memory lane when Santi entered the car park of an airport hotel. He found a space near the entrance. She went to open her door but he put a hand on her arm.
‘Wait.’
She waited.
When satisfied no suspicious cars had joined them, he said, ‘Follow my lead and save any questions until we’re alone.’
Striding into the hotel, he headed straight to the reception. To her surprise, he produced two passports which he handed over with a credit card. A room key was given in return and then Elsa found herself being led to an elevator. Thinking he intended for them to stay hidden in a room until the last possible moment, she was further surprised when he pressed the button to the basement.
‘Where are we going?’
The doors pinged open before he could answer, revealing a loading area for deliveries and rows of industrial bins, trolleys and other random items. The most random of all was a gleaming Aston Martin with tinted windows nestled between a row of overflowing green bins and a pile of discarded crates.
Santi waved an arm with a flourish. ‘Your chariot awaits.’
‘I know the other car was a hunk of junk but isn’t this a bit excessive for a short drive to the airport terminal? Can’t we take the shuttle?’
He raised his brow.
‘What?’
‘Didn’t your mamá tell you? We’re not flying to Valencia.’
‘Then how are we getting home?’
White teeth slowly exposed themselves under his widening grin. ‘We’re taking the scenic route. You and I, chiquita, are going on a road trip.’
Copyright © 2021 by Michelle Smart