Chapter 68

CHAPTER

SIXTY-EIGHT

Natalie’s world slowed. The gun barrel looked enormous, impossibly dark.

Her father’s face went white.

“Don’t,” her father whispered. “Please. She has nothing to do with this.”

“Then authorize the shipment.”

A flash of movement caught Natalie’s eye—between two containers about thirty yards away. Dark clothing, careful movement. For just a fraction of a second, she saw his face.

Hudson.

Her heart lurched with simultaneous hope and terror.

He was here. He’d come for her.

But there were at least a dozen armed men on this pier. How would he get to her to help?

She forced herself to look back at Brass. She couldn’t give Hudson’s presence away.

But her mind raced.

Hudson needed a distraction. Needed time to get closer, to do whatever he was planning.

“Wait,” Natalie heard herself say. “I’ll authorize it.”

Everyone turned to look at her.

Her father looked horrified. “Natalie, no—”

“I’m his daughter. I have access to his accounts, his systems. I’m on the board of Ravenscroft International.

” She lifted her chin, trying to look confident instead of terrified.

“If you want this to look legitimate, it should come from both of us. Father and daughter approving a shipment together. It’ll be harder to dispute. ”

She wasn’t sure exactly what she was doing—only that she needed to buy time.

Brass studied her, calculation in his cold eyes. “You’re smarter than you look.”

“Don’t hurt my father. I’ll do whatever you want, just don’t hurt him.”

“Natalie, don’t,” her father pleaded. “Don’t do this for me.”

But she was already moving toward Brass, toward the tablet, giving Hudson precious seconds to get closer. Her hands trembled as she reached for the device. She was all too aware of the gun trained on her.

Brass pulled up a document. “Press your fingerprint here.”

Natalie looked at the screen—an official shipping manifest for Ravenscroft International.

She’d be signing off, giving the okay for these chemicals to be delivered.

She prayed this didn’t backfire.

Before she could do anything, an explosion sounded and rocked everything around them.

As a blast of heat hit her, Natalie’s heart raced.

What had that been?

The explosion came from behind the container stacks. It had been a deep, concussive boom that shook the pier beneath Natalie’s feet and sent a column of flame shooting into the darkening sky.

Dimitri’s head snapped toward the sound, his gun wavering for just a fraction of a second.

That was all the opening she needed.

Natalie grabbed her father’s arm and yanked him sideways, pulling them both behind a pallet of cargo drums. Just then, gunfire erupted across the pier. Men shouted, boots pounded on concrete, and the acrid smell of burning fuel filled the air.

“Run!” Her father grabbed her hand, trying to pull her toward the edge of the pier, toward the water, toward escape.

But Natalie planted her feet and jerked free. “We can’t leave!”

“Natalie, we have to—”

“Those vans!” She pointed toward the white panel vans parked near the ship’s gangway, their back doors still open, drums of chemicals visible inside. “If they get away, thousands of people will die. We have to stop them!”

Her father’s face went pale with understanding. He looked at the vans, then back at her, conflict warring in his expression.

Around them, the chaos intensified. More explosions—smaller this time, like grenades or flashbangs. The screech of tires. Brass’s men scrambling for cover as someone—multiple someones—returned fire from the container yard.

“How?” her father demanded. “How do we stop them?”

Natalie’s mind raced. The vans had keys in them—she’d seen one of Brass’s men checking the ignition earlier. If she could get to them, disable them somehow. Maybe grab the keys. But there were too many vans, and not enough time—

A hand clamped over her mouth from behind, and she started to scream.

“It’s me.” Hudson’s voice, low and urgent in her ear. “Don’t make a sound.”

Relief flooded through her, and she nodded.

He released her, and Natalie spun to face him.

Hudson was here. He was really here, dressed in tactical gear, a rifle slung across his chest, his face streaked with dirt and determination.

“Hudson—” Her voice cracked with a confusing mix of relief and residual anger.

“No time.” He pulled her deeper into the shadows between cargo containers, her father following close behind. “Maverick is working on disabling the vans remotely. But we need to get you two out of here before—”

“I’m not leaving.” The words came out fiercer than she intended. “Not until this is over.”

Hudson’s jaw tightened. “Natalie—”

“She’s right.” Her father stepped forward, his voice steady despite the fear in his eyes. “We started this. We need to see it through.”

For a moment, Hudson just stared at them both. Then he pulled a compact handgun from his tactical vest and pressed it into Natalie’s hands.

“Safety’s off. Point and shoot if you have to.” His eyes locked on hers, intense and burning. “But stay behind me. Both of you. Understood?”

Natalie’s hands trembled as she gripped the weapon, the metal cold and foreign against her palms. She’d never held a gun before, never imagined she’d be standing on a pier with chemical weapons and armed terrorists and the man she’d fallen in love with asking her to—

“Understood?” Hudson repeated.

She nodded. “Understood.”

If ads affect your reading experience, click here to remove ads on this page.