Chapter 3

Finally!

This was the Wyatt she’d been waiting to see since he’d arrived at the ranch a few weeks before. Callie knew from the reports Orrin had shared with her just how lethal a weapon Wyatt was.

Why had Wyatt been holding back with her? She was curious about his actions but relieved that he finally seemed to be set on the same course as her. She’d been about to give up.

“Should we leave?” she asked.

Wyatt’s gold gaze was sharp as he scanned their surroundings. “This defense is good. Traps are set for anyone who thinks to sneak up on us. We have the higher ground, as well.”

She looked down into the sloping valley below. The arid climate didn’t provide the tall trees or thick foliage she was used to, but it didn’t seem to faze Wyatt.

“Owen and Natalie are at the ranch protecting Ragnarok,” she said. “A weapon we don’t understand yet. Cullen and Mia are on the hunt for the scientist. We have no idea where Orrin is or if he needs us.”

“My father doesn’t need our help. And we’re going after Jankovic.”

She cut him a look. “Need I remind you of the doctor, Kate Donnelly? The one who Yuri kidnapped, who had to save Orrin.”

“I’m well aware of the doctor and how she helped Cullen and Mia.”

Callie took in a calming breath. “My point is that everyone seems to be doing something. We split up at the ranch to separate the Russians, but that was before we knew that our own country was involved in this. Let Mia and Cullen hunt the scientist. We should return to the ranch and join forces.”

“It won’t matter where we are. The sect is coming for us. I’m not going to bring them to the ranch with the possibility of them winning and finding Ragnarok.”

She opened her mouth to talk, but he quickly continued.

“I’ll also not meet up with either of my brothers to give the Saints a chance to take two of us out at once. The bastards are going to have to fight each of us.”

His gold eyes flashed dangerously, and she realized he’d been thinking about this from the very beginning. “So you want us to wait for them? Like sitting ducks.”

“We’ll draw them out, yes.”

“Cullen thought he and Mia had taken out two of the top men in that crazy organization, but that wasn’t the case. What makes you think we will?”

“I’m going to make sure of it.”

She scratched her eyebrow. “I’m all about confronting these wackos, but we got a taste of what they can do at the ranch. We had Cullen and Owen there for help. And before you ask, this has nothing to do with me thinking you can’t defend this area.”

“I think it does.”

“I believe you’ll do everything you can with what we have. But we have no idea how many they’ll send. Even with the high ground, it’ll only be a matter of time before we’re overrun.”

He faced her then. “What do you want to do?”

Callie slid her gaze to the house before turning around and looking at the area. If they left, the Saints—with their many supporters—could keep her and Wyatt on the run or corner them somewhere.

As much as she hated to admit it, Wyatt was right. This was the best place for them.

“I don’t like being on the defensive,” she said.

One side of his lips lifted slightly. “Defense has a tactical advantage.”

“I’ll get back to the computer then and see if I can come up with any information on those involved with the Saints.”

Wyatt followed her into the house. “Have you heard anything from DC?”

“As a matter of fact, I have,” she said as she sat down at the table and opened the emails. “Hewett continues to send encrypted messages, but I’m not opening them.”

“Why not? There could be information we need within them.” He placed a hand on the table near hers.

Her heart kicked up a notch whenever Wyatt was this close. It reminded her of hot summer nights and pleasure so intense she still dreamed about it, waking with his name on her lips and her body aching for him.

“Callie?”

She inwardly shook herself. Damn him for affecting her so. “Mitch Hewett will know if I open the messages. Right now, he has no idea if I’m dead or alive. That gives us an advantage.”

“Not for long.”

“Any lead we can get is a good thing. Hewett is still suspected of betraying Orrin.”

Before Wyatt could answer, her computer dinged as an email came in. Callie frowned as she looked at the unknown sender. But it was the subject of the email that made her smile.

“What is it?” Wyatt asked.

She sat back. “It’s from Orrin. I taught him how to hack into a server and send me an email about a weather forecast for whatever city he was in.”

“This is DC weather.”

“Yep.” She had a difficult time thinking when she felt Wyatt’s fingers near her neck as his hand rested on the back of the chair.

He leaned closer to read the screen. “What if it is Hewett?”

“It could be Hewett trying to trick me. But it’s not.”

“Surely you can figure out a way to open it without the sender knowing in case it is Hewett.”

She looked up and met his gaze. There was such certainty there that she wanted to figure out a way to do it. “Yes.”

“I’ll leave you to it then.”

She closed her eyes as he walked away. She hated Wyatt being so close to her, but after he’d moved away, she missed him. Just as she’d missed him when he left for college.

Not that she had any sort of hold on him. Their brief time together ended well before he departed the ranch. He’d shown her just how little he thought of her during those months before he left.

A realist, she’d known there was no use holding onto hope when it came to Wyatt Loughman. Once he made a decision, there was no changing his mind in any capacity.

He was done with her. Had been done with her. Thankfully, she’d managed to put him out of her heart. That lovesick schoolgirl was long gone.

She looked at the computer, took a deep breath, and focused.

Then she opened a new screen and began keying in a sequence of commands to help her get in the back door of the server so she could read the encrypted emails without leaving a trail.

She knew the email was from Orrin, but at this point, they couldn’t be too careful.

In all the years she and Orrin had worked with Hewett, Callie had never felt the need to hack the system. Now, she wished she’d have worked at it earlier.

Every direction she took was cut off quickly. But she didn’t give up. She kept at it for another three hours before she realized someone was in her computer.

Shock, fear, and anger rose up in her all at once. She was the one who did the hacking – not who got hacked. Her fingers moved quickly to shut out the intruder. While she was writing the last bit of code, a picture popped up.

Just as she was about to move past it, the Americans in uniform caught her eye, causing her fingers to halt.

The picture was from a newspaper and showed a desert village in what looked like the Middle East. There was one man in particular who snagged her attention.

He was looking at something to the left with only a portion of his face visible. But she’d know him anywhere.

“Wyatt,” she murmured.

Another window popped up showing, a clipping from a Middle Eastern newspaper written in Arabic. Callie hesitated. Did she remove the intruder, the picture, and the article? Or did she find out what they wanted?

Her gaze returned to the picture of Wyatt. There was no way she could ignore this – whatever this was. Her decision made, she quickly translated the article to read that a terrorist group had attacked Syria in an attempt to target a Delta Force team who had captured their leader.

“Shit,” she murmured, her blood turning to ice.

She didn’t know who was sending this or why, but she wanted them out of her system.

Callie redoubled her efforts to get to the coded message and block the intruder.

Once the trespasser was gone and new firewalls were up so no one else could get in, she put everything she had into accessing the back door to the server.

Since it was a government system, it was tightly monitored with all the latest security to keep hackers out. However, she had an advantage, a side door she’d learned about through a friend years ago.

Callie found the way in and immediately pulled up the latest email. Her excitement that confirmed it was indeed from Orrin was swiftly replaced by dread.

They’re coming for Wyatt.

Four words. That was all Orrin had sent. Not how he’d found out, or where he was. Just a warning.

“How’s it coming?” Wyatt asked from the kitchen doorway.

Callie looked up at him but couldn’t get any words past the lump in her throat. Something must have shown on her face because he was at her side immediately.

“Orrin sent this?” he asked. Then kept reading. “Who’s coming?”

With a click, she showed him the two pictures. If she thought he was closed off before, it was nothing compared to now. She could literally feel the wall that came down over his emotions as he looked at the computer.

“What happened?” she asked.

For long seconds, he was silent. Then he said, “We went to Syria to take out a radical group. There was a local man who gave us intelligence on the extremists and their location. It was through him that we found the leader.”

She saw Wyatt’s hands fist at his sides, his body taut with anger. “You got your man.”

“That photo of the bombing was taken by the same group of terrorists we thought we’d dismantled. My team was driving through the village on our way to the base to head home. The only one who knew our destination was the man who helped us to find the terrorists.”

“I see.”

He didn’t look away from the laptop. “No, you don’t.

I lost three men that day. There were twenty killed in the village.

My team found our informant hours later.

He begged for his life, saying the extremists had threatened his family.

So he told them where we’d be. And the terrorists then killed his entire family anyway. Including the dog.”

Callie thought she might be sick.

“We’ve been hunting those same fuckers ever since,” Wyatt stated angrily.

“How would they even know where you are?”

His eyes swung to her. “My guess is that the Saints don’t include just Americans and Russians. I’m beginning to think it’s a whole lot bigger.”

“You think they’d work with other terrorists?”

“Who else wants to take out so many?”

She looked back at the bombing. “These are the people coming for us?”

“Yes.”

When Wyatt returned his eyes to the computer, she closed the laptop and stood, facing him. “You were doing your job.”

“To stop innocents from being killed.”

“There will always be innocents who lose their lives. Just as there are those who deserve death and escape it.”

“Not these men. Not any longer.”

It excited her to see this deadly side of him. The alpha baring his fangs and issuing a growl of fury. Wyatt’s gold eyes were alight with determination.

She knew that anyone foolish enough to get in his way would die—painfully. The last thread holding back Wyatt’s true nature had been snapped in half.

He didn’t have the nickname Denali, which meant The Great One in Sanskrit, because he sat on the sidelines. Wyatt earned his spot on Delta Force and moved into a leadership role because of the vicious, savage way he fought.

He gave no quarter as he sniffed out his opponents. He was merciless to those who bullied the innocent, ruthless in bringing the perpetrators to justice. He was an avenging angel for those who needed him.

With his eyes trained on her, he took a step closer. “I’m going to kill the bastards once and for all. Here. Now.”

The Saints were growing in numbers by the second, and she feared there was much more they didn’t know. But now they knew who was coming. It didn’t matter when because they could prepare.

Orrin had given them that.

This fight went beyond the bioweapon. This was a battle for the freedom of the entire world. And right now, the only one standing between a secret killer organization and the rest of the world was Wyatt.

She smiled at him. “And I’ll be standing right beside you.”

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