Chapter 22 #2
Sharp anger flooded her at the way Kev spoke. So matter-of-fact. So cool. Like he was reciting facts for a quiz instead of being held captive by an insane terrorist.
“How can you be so calm? He’s a madman, and he’s going to kill us both if we don’t get out of here.”
Kev strode over and stopped inches away. He was crowding her, but she didn’t really care as his big body radiated heat. It took her a second to realize that he was utterly furious. Behind all that calm cool demeanor was a tiger on a leash.
His tuxedo was rumpled, his tie askew. And the white zip ties stood out in stark contrast to the darkness of his suit. “We have to be calm. He wants us scared, but calm is what we need. HOT won’t leave us.”
“But the king…” Tears pressed against the backs of her eyes. They were the only ones who knew there was a plot against the king. If HOT had to choose rescuing her and Kev or rescuing a king whose survival could dictate the balance of power in the region, which would they choose?
She knew the answer and it wasn’t them.
His eyes flashed hot. “Don’t think about that. Concentrate on us.”
She wanted to do that so much, but it wasn’t easy when her body bore the marks of that madman’s knife. And he was coming. She felt his impending arrival like a malevolent cloud hanging over them, squeezing the life from their tortured bodies. Because he would torture them. She had no doubt.
And she would rather die than ever be at his mercy again.
“You won’t let him take me, Kev. Promise you won’t.”
His brows slashed down. “I said I wouldn’t.”
She reached out and gripped his fingers with her own. “No, I mean it. Whatever it takes, don’t let him take me away from here. Away from you.”
His eyes searched hers, widening when he realized what she meant. “No,” he said hoarsely. “Fuck, no. We aren’t going there. You aren’t going to die, you understand me? I won’t let it happen.”
She squeezed his fingers. “I only meant it as a last resort. If all is lost.”
“All is not lost,” he said fiercely. “They’re out there.”
“Are they communicating with you?”
“No.”
Her heart squeezed. “Maybe they’ve lost the signal. This room is completely closed in.”
“Or maybe they’ve gone into radio silence because they had to. This isn’t our first mission, for chrissakes. HOT knows what they’re doing.”
She didn’t mention Marco and Jim because she knew that wouldn’t help the situation. Instead, she pulled in a deep breath and turned to study the walls too. Maybe there was something they were missing. A weakness, a secret entrance, something.
“These things have got to go,” Kev growled. She turned back to see him ram his elbows against his hip bones—and the zip ties broke, falling uselessly to the floor.
Keeping his eye on the door, he bent and picked up the useless plastic and stuffed it in his pockets.
Then he produced a small knife from somewhere and sliced her restraints. Lucky rubbed her wrists where the plastic had cut grooves into her skin.
“I could have broken out on my own.”
“I know. But it’s nicer on your skin this way.”
“I thought you wanted us to stay bound.”
“I did. And then I didn’t.” He shrugged. “Change in plan.”
There was shouting somewhere outside their cell, and they both stiffened, listening. But no one came to the door.
Kev slid the knife back inside his cuff and she shook her head. “They should have searched you a little more thoroughly.”
He shot her a grin. “They should have. Thank God they didn’t.”
“So what’s the plan, Captain America?”
She had to have something to concentrate on other than the fact Al Ahmad was coming. This time, he wouldn’t spend days torturing her. This time, he’d make sure she suffered hard and fast. And then he’d kill her in the most painful way he could devise.
She ground her teeth together. At the very least, she’d take a chunk out of him before she died.
“We wait.” Kev shrugged. “If the plan is to take the king, Al Ahmad will be tied up for a bit. And when they open this door again, we’ll take them out. If we’re lucky, that’ll be before he gets here.”
“We don’t know how many of them there are.”
“No.” He smiled. “But we have something they don’t.”
She knew he meant the hand-to-hand combat skills she’d spent week after week learning. Her heart thumped up a few degrees.
“You sure are sexy when you’re determined, you know that?”
He lifted an eyebrow. “You know someone’s listening to what we say, right?”
“I don’t care anymore.” She walked over and put her arms around his neck before pulling his head down and pressing her lips to his.
He took her mouth passionately, their tongues rolling and sliding together as desire set up a drumbeat in her belly.
She couldn’t hold it in any longer, and she didn’t want to.
Whatever happened, happened. But not without her telling him how she felt.
“I love you, Kevin MacDonald. And I don’t care who knows it.”
He squeezed her tight against him. “Jesus, Lucky, you rip me inside out, you know that? You always have.”
Her heart thumped for a different reason now. “Does that mean you love me too?”
He hesitated for a long moment, and her blood pulsed slow and sticky in her veins as she waited. It was as if time slowed too.
“Yeah, that’s exactly what it means.” He tilted his head back and looked up at the ceiling. “Forgive me, Marco. And while you’re at it, can you help us out of this mess?”
She tilted her head back too, her throat tight with emotion as she gazed at the peeling plaster on the ceiling. “I hope he’s listening.”
If she expected a sign, she didn’t get one.
It was eerily quiet in their prison as they stood there together and just held each other.
She never wanted it to end—and yet it had to if they were going to have more than a few stolen moments together.
This was a moment in which she should be elated.
But instead, she felt a heavy sense of dread.
“I wish they’d get here already,” Lucky said.
“Have faith, sweetheart.”
There was a shout in the distance that rang down the metal corridors. Answering shouts sounded, and then it went quiet again. Lucky’s heart throbbed.
“Could you understand that?”
“It was too garbled.”
Kev kissed her again, a brief touch of his mouth that had her wishing she could lean into him and let herself go. “We’re getting out of here, Lucky,” he said firmly. “Never doubt it. This doesn’t end here.”
She nodded, even though she wasn’t as confident as he was.
What if the team didn’t come? What if Al Ahmad had found them too?
They could be blown to bits even now, their van overtaken and obliterated with a rocket launcher or an IED.
Al Ahmad had to know they were coming, or he wouldn’t have been able to grab her and Kev off the street the way he had. He’d been expecting them.
The mission was compromised. And they were in grave danger.
Booted feet sounded in the corridor, running toward the cell. Kev pulled her over to the wall beside the door. “Stay back when the door opens.”
“What are you going to do?” she whispered.
His eyes looked hard. “Whatever it takes.”
Panic threaded through her then. She reached up and curled her hand around the back of his neck, pulling him down for a kiss. “I love you.”
He grinned. “Ditto, babe.”
Someone banged on the door and she jumped as it reverberated through the wall. A man’s voice shouted, “Move where I can see you. Do it now or I will kill you when I enter.”
She knew Kev didn’t understand a word the man was saying, but he also didn’t look concerned. He put a finger to his lips and she kept her mouth shut. The lock on the door clanged—and then the door slid back on the track, and the barrel of an AK-47 poked through.
Kev lashed out and grabbed the barrel, jerking the gun forward.
The terrorist on the other end came with it, pulling the trigger as he did so.
Automatic gunfire erupted, the muzzle flashing repeatedly as the sound echoed like a sonic boom in the empty space.
Lucky put her hands over her ears instinctively.
Kev had the man partially through the door, and he still had a firm grip on the gun. “The door,” he yelled at her. “Shove it closed as hard as you can.”
Somehow she heard him. And she obeyed. The heavy iron door didn’t slide easily, but it picked up momentum the harder she pushed—and it slammed into the terrorist’s arm.
He screamed and let go of the gun. Kev jerked it the rest of the way through and flipped it.
Then he shoved the door open again and shot the man on the other side.
His face was grim as he looked over his shoulder at her. “Come on, we’re getting out of here.”
More shots rang out and he ducked back into the room.
“Goddammit,” he breathed. He waited a few seconds, listening hard at the door.
And then he sprang into action, rolling out the open door and over the body that lay there, firing the entire time.
When he stopped firing, the echoes died away.
Kev jumped to his feet and motioned to her.
Lucky hopped over the man in the door. At the end of the corridor, two men lay still, blood pooling on the floor beneath them.
Kev took her hand and they ran down the corridor in the opposite direction.
Each time they came to an opening, he stopped and listened before sweeping across it with the gun at the ready.
They finally came up to a massive door that was rolled down over what must be a loading dock. Off to the side, there was a smaller door, and he headed for it, pulling her up short when he reached it. There was no window to look out of but they both knew this had to be a door to the outside.
“No telling what’s on the other side,” he said. “You ready to do this anyway?”
“Anything’s better than waiting for Al Ahmad.”
Kev eased the door open softly. There was no noise outside it. He went through it with the gun to his shoulder. “Nothing,” he called back to her.
Lucky joined him. They stood against the wall, surveying the area. They were in shadows here, but the light on the lot in front of the warehouse wasn’t strong. It was quiet and empty.
“That was too easy,” Kev said. “It shouldn’t have been so simple to get out of there.”
Lucky’s heart thumped. “There were three bodies. I didn’t see all the men when they grabbed us, but there were three on the street and at least two in the back of the van—and one driving. So where are the other three? And were there more?”
“Good question.”
“It’s not his style to let us go after having us captured. But maybe it was just a diversion. Maybe the real trouble is still to come.”
“That’s what I’m afraid of.” Kev tapped his ear. “Hey, Richie, you copy? Y’all out there?”
Lucky bit her lip. “No communication?”
Kev frowned. “It’s possible the unit was damaged when they threw us in the van. But I’m getting nothing on this end. Doesn’t mean they can’t hear us though.”
In the distance, they could hear a car engine approaching. Tires squealed against pavement, and a pair of headlights grew larger as the vehicle raced toward the warehouse. Kev hunkered down behind a stack of pallets, braced the rifle against the wood, and aimed.