Chapter 6
CHAPTER SIX
“What’d you do to me?” She sat upright and blinked a few times, trying to focus on her surroundings.
She was on a bed and in what appeared to be a hotel room. Her jacket and boots were off, but she was still clothed, thank God.
“We gave you something to help you relax.” Luke tucked his hands in his khaki fatigue pockets. “Can you see without your glasses?”
She was still too tired to even feel angry. “Those are a Clark Kent thing,” she said softly, in a bit of a daze.
“A what?”
“I, uh, don’t need them.”
Luke stood alongside the bed now, and she eyed the veins on his forearms like they were a decadent showcase of male power. When he shifted a step back, she also spotted ink peeking out from beneath his black short sleeve shirt.
“You didn’t need to drug me. I would’ve come willingly.”
“Sorry, but we couldn’t take any chances.” His blue eyes darkened for a moment as his gaze swept up the length of her body before seizing hold of her eyes.
Even in a semi-foggy state, there was something about this man that both calmed her and made her shaky. “Where am I?”
“Somewhere safe.” He cocked his head. “Why don’t you go back to sleep? We’ll be leaving in a few hours.”
“Leaving to where? People are going to worry when I don’t check in. I-I need to make a call.”
“I can’t let you do that.”
“Why not?”
“Because you’re in danger.”
“What are you talking about?” She thought back to the whirlwind of a night that had happened .
. . well, she wasn’t sure when it had happened.
Had it been hours ago or days? How long had she been asleep?
Her stomach tightened, hunger stirring inside.
“You told those men I had a code.” Her eyes closed with the memory.
“You did it to keep me alive. I remember now. So, you think they’ll come after me? ”
“Most likely.”
“Are you going to use me as bait?”
“The thought has crossed my mind.”
His words had her eyes opening, her chin lifting to look at him. A hint of a smile brushed across his face so fast she almost missed it. “Didn’t you kill everyone?”
“Most, but the important ones are alive.” He pressed his back to a closed window and continued to study her.
“Who do you work for?”
“We’ve been through this before. It’s still classified,” he said, his voice all cloak-and-dagger-like. “Boyfriend? Husband? Who might wonder where you are?”
Her lips pursed in thought. “My brother’s very protective. He’s the one who called. I didn’t think to turn off my phone in the haste to try and get to safety.”
He went over to the desk for a minute. “Who’s your brother?”
She didn’t want to tell him his name, but she had a feeling he’d find out anyway. “Harrison Reed,” she said softly. “Can you let him know I’m okay?”
“Give me his number, and we’ll send a message. We’ll have it appear to be coming from you and out of New York.”
She breathed a sigh of relief. Harrison’s name hadn’t triggered any change in Luke’s eyes. Maybe he didn’t know of her family.
She dropped her feet to the side of the bed and prepared to stand.
“I wouldn’t do that yet,” he said, without even looking at her.
Did he have eyes in the back of his head? “I need to pee if you don’t mind.”
He tucked his phone in his pants pocket; his pants had a ridiculous number of pockets, she realized. And then he faced her and reached for her hand.
“I can walk by myself, thanks.” She tugged her hand free of his. “You’ve done enough.” She slowly brushed past him, trying to ignore the size of his muscular arms in the process.
She shut the door and splashed some water on her face, contemplating how far she could get if she tried to make a run for it.
Even though she wanted to trust Luke, a man who had shielded her body with his own, she also didn’t like the idea of being a prisoner.
And what if he did end up using her as bait?
No, his people had rescued her to keep her safe, blowing whatever operation they had planned in doing so.
Operation: a word she was familiar with because of her TV show. But this shouldn’t be happening in real life, not in her life, at least.
She eyed herself in the mirror and wiped the faint bit of mascara from beneath her eyes.
It was the only makeup she ever wore on a daily basis.
Now, she looked about as tired and plain as possible.
But looks didn’t matter, because she’d almost died tonight.
Still, there was a hot badass guy out there right now, and for the first time in years, she had a sudden desire to be seen.
A tap at the door startled her. “You okay in there?”
“Yeah. Give me a second.” After finishing up, she went into the room. She positioned herself at the edge of the bed, and he sat across from her at the desk and leaned back.
Over six feet tall atop strong and powerful legs—she could just tell, at least. His blond hair was short, but not too closely cropped, and his strong chin and hard cheekbones were covered in stubble.
He had such a commanding presence about him that maybe should’ve intimidated, and yet, she found comfort in his rugged sexiness and obvious strength.
“I don’t have a choice in any of this, do I?”
“For starters, your life is probably at risk,” he replied.
“And if my life weren’t on the line?”
“What my team and I do is—”
Irritation bunched tight in her stomach and she snapped, “Classified. Got it.”
He looked past her and at the wall, as if eye contact was suddenly awkward. It gave her a chance to eye the tattoo on his bicep peeking out from his shirt sleeve; her eyes widened at the familiar tatt. “You’re a Navy SEAL, aren’t you? Or you were, at some point, right?”
He jerked his attention to her lightning-fast, his eyes catching hers, and she noticed how blue they actually were. Nordic or Northern European descent, she had to assume by his Viking-like perfect structure and features.
“What?” He stood and grabbed a dark long-sleeved shirt draped over the office chair, and pulled it over his head. “Just because you write for a SEAL show doesn’t make you an expert.”
His eyes shifted to the floor, and she focused on the black military boots he wore.
Yup, military might as well have been carved into every inch of his body. Why did the man who’d wreaked havoc in her life, while also being a savior, have to be so damn good-looking?
The last thing in the world she needed to be thinking about was what he looked like naked.
She couldn’t believe a SEAL heartthrob stood before her, whether he’d admitted to it or not.
Teamguys, as they seemed to call each other, tended to be cagey and secretive, but what had blown her mind was his ability to make her legs tighten with some foreign need when she should’ve been scared shitless.
She refused to be a cliché and fall for the hero, especially a hero who’d gotten her into this hot mess.
Even in her own screenplays, she’d never willingly let the woman get wet with desire within sixty seconds of meeting the guy who’d saved her.
She had standards for her characters, and so, damn it, she wouldn’t—no, she couldn’t think about this man before her as anything other than that.
A man. A man who’d better get her out of this storm.
“Actually, I am a bit of an expert on the military,” she finally said as confidently as possible. She’d spent the last two years researching anything and everything about the military, with particular regard to SEALs. Her friends at work joked she was a walking Wikipedia.
“Mm-hm. Sure you are.” He found her eyes again, and the sizzle she didn’t want snapped straight down her spine and into her toes.
It’s the drugs. It has to be.
“So, what about you?”
“What about me, sweetheart?” He cocked a brow, the amused twist of his lips disappearing fast.
“Do you have someone at home who might be worried about you?”
His mouth parted, but he didn’t say anything. He kept staring into her eyes as if she held all of the answers in the world. He looked speechless, and she wasn’t sure how she’d rendered him that way.
“You okay?”
His jaw beneath that sexy stubble clenched briefly. Even in a semi-lucid state, she realized this man tried damn hard to hide his emotions.
“Shouldn’t I be the one asking you that?” He heaved out a deep sigh. “You’re handling this pretty well. I have to say I’m surprised.”
She was a little shocked, too. “I’m alive and no longer shackled inside a truck.” She shrugged. “Could be worse, I suppose.”
Her boring little life had shattered and fallen into pieces the moment this man had knocked on her door. Why hadn’t she listened to him? Why hadn’t she stayed away like he’d asked?
No normal person paid five times the rental fee because of privacy. “I’m an idiot. I should never have rented my place to you.” She stared down at her nails, the paint beginning to chip as a result of the insane night she’d survived.
“It’s hard to find property at the last minute. Your place was a lifesaver.”
“Until I ruined everything for you. I just wish I knew what you were trying to do.” She nervously glanced up, regret filling her. “But I know you can’t tell me.”
“You already know too much, I’m afraid.” He turned his back, walked over to the wall, and braced against it with both palms.
She stared at his ass in the fatigues, even though she fought like hell to look away.
“I won’t tell anyone anything. You can trust me,” she whispered.
“If you’re really who you say you are . .
. a good guy . . . then I’d never want to do anything to jeopardize your work.
” She cleared her throat. “Maybe you shouldn’t have let your people save me.
You were okay with being taken; maybe I’d have been okay, too. ”
He glanced over at her but didn’t drop his hands. “The potential loss of civilian life is not a risk we’re willing to take.”
Civilian. God, you’re so military.
“Were those men terrorists? Will you tell me that much?”
He faced her and crossed his arms, casually leaning against the wall now. The room was too small for a man with such an unassailable presence. He clearly wasn’t military anymore, or he wouldn’t be operating on U.S. soil, so she had to assume he worked with the FBI or Homeland Security.
She was safe, then. But, she’d like to be home within three weeks, before work started up. And, at the very least, before her family started asking questions about her whereabouts, and the world discovered Everly Reed had been living as Eva Sharp.
She hung her head at the realization that her identity might be exposed, anyway. “They took a picture of me without my glasses,” she said under her breath.
“Yeah, which is why you’re in danger. And then they’ll figure out your name is on the property deed of the cabins.”
“Right, but they might also figure out that my life is a lie.”
“I’ve got you on speaker. Eva says there’s something we should know.” Luke held the phone between them.
“I’m pretty sure she’s about to tell me her name is actually Everly Reed.” Jessica cursed through the phone, and Luke’s eyes narrowed in distrust as he stared at Eva.
What right did he have to be angry, though, when he’d said he was Travis Davenport?
“Everly? Who is—”
“She’s famous. Well, her family is,” Jessica cut him off. “I just found out when I did some more digging.”
“Sorry, I never heard of you or your family,” Luke rasped, clearly upset.
“Well, get familiar,” Jessica said, and Eva shrank back onto the bed. “They’re always in the spotlight, and her brother Harrison also owns a media outlet and newspaper.”
“Great.” Luke’s free hand balled at his side, and it had Eva tensing. “We really picked the perfect cabin to rent, didn’t we?”
“I-I’m sorry.” Some sense of responsibility clung to her like wet clothes after getting caught in a rainstorm. What if people died because she’d been rescued?
“This is my fault. I should’ve done a better job picking the cabins, but we were on a time crunch,” Jessica said. “Plus, whoever created her new identity did one hell of a job. It took me awhile to discover it.”
“I promise I won’t tell my family or anyone about you guys,” Eva said, trying to come across as even-toned as possible, despite the fear hollowing out her stomach.
“Why’d you change your name?” Luke asked.
“I don’t want the world to know who I am, probably as much as you don’t want them to know about you.” She bit the inside of her cheek. “So, you can trust your secret is safe with me.”
Luke stepped away and shielded his eyes from her by turning his back. “See if there’s any chatter about her. Look into both names.”
“If anyone is looking for her, I’ll find out and hopefully track down a location,” Jessica vowed.
“Do you think these people you’re after will find out who I really am?”
“They’ll probably assume Eva Sharp’s an alias, so they’ll dig,” Luke answered.
An alias? Jesus. “What about my family, then?” The realization that her parents and siblings might get caught up in all of this suddenly hit her. “They have a lot of security, but . . .”
“Send a credible tip to the FBI. Lead them to believe her family is in serious danger, so the Feds will keep a watch out, and ensure her family ups their security,” Luke suggested.
Eva had to assume Luke and this woman weren’t FBI. Otherwise, why would they need to send a “tip”? Why wouldn’t they just tell the Feds what was going on? Well, unless they were super deep under? Her thoughts would run nonstop until she sank her teeth into the truth.
“We leave in a few hours. Did you secure a location?” Luke edged closer to the hotel door and put the phone back to his ear. “You’re off speaker.” He peeked at her, but she guiltily looked away.
After a minute, he ended the call.
“Try not to worry about your family, okay? I know it might be hard, but we’ll ensure they’re safe.”
She nodded. “Okay. But there is one thing you could do that might help.”
“Yeah?”
“I’m starving.” Her fingers splayed across her abdomen. “I probably shouldn’t be thinking about food at a time like this.”
“We can get room service before we go.”
“Thanks. Uh, is it pancake or burger time?”
“I think rich people call it brunch.”
She couldn’t stop her eyes from rolling. “I’m not rich.”
“Sure, honey. And a frog’s ass isn’t watertight.”
“Now, that’s just gross.” She puckered her lips. “And you really are a SEAL, aren’t you?”
He dragged a large hand down his face, his eyes damn near twinkling. “What?”
“Knowing you were once one of the most elite operatives on the planet will make me feel safer.” She swallowed the hard knot that formed in her throat.
“What makes you think that wouldn’t make me more dangerous?” he asked in all seriousness.