Authors: Mia Dymond
Tags: #Mystery, #tattoo, #color, #psychic, #Contemporary, #Romance, #soldier, #snake, #seal, #Navy
Brett let the tension leak from his m uscles. “You know how she
is. She’ll call when she’s ready .”
Shadow chuckled. “I’v e said it a thousand tim es. Strange
arrangem ent y ou two hav e.”
“That’s the way she wants it. Besides, I’d know if som ething
was wrong.”
Shadow lowered his v oice. “I just worry about her som etim es,
y a know? She can’t be as strong as she wants us to believ e.”
Brett felt a surge of pride. No one else but Shadow understood
Claire as well as he did. And, they would both be lost souls without
her. “She’ll call.”
Brett heard the deep beat of drum s and som ething close to a
war cry . “What the hell is going on there?”
Shadow laughed. “Relax, just the nativ es. What else y ou got
for m e?”
“We need som e help on a case.” Brett sum m arized the recent
action, not surprised when Shadow jum ped at the opportunity to
weav e in and out of the darkness. Only , he didn’t quite expect
Shadow’s next bit of adv ice.
“Sleep with her, jungle boy .”
“Say what?”
“You heard m e. Sleep with her. Get her out of y our sy stem ,
then y ou can concentrate on the case.”
That would be way too easy . And since Shadow knew him too
well, there was no since try ing to bullshit him self out of it either.
“Not this tim e.”
A long pause crossed the line before Shadow responded. “No
way .”
“She’s different. I can’t explain it.”
“What about Claire?”
“I hav en’t told her.”
“Hell, she probably already knows. You better pull y our head
out of y our ass and call her.”
“I will, just not y et.” Brett then rem em bered the bond between
Shadow and Claire. “And y ou better not say any thing to her
either.”
“Your funeral, m an.”
Although Brett knew Shadow was right in his assum ption
about Claire’s reaction to another wom an in his life, he wouldn’t
adm it it. “Are y ou com ing or not?”
“I’ll be there. Giv e m e a couple day s.”
***
He breathed fire as he entered Holly’s house and stabbed
numbers into the alarm keypad. Stupid airhead. Anyone in their right
mind would know to try her birthday first. Lucky for him, though, he
needed to get the formula and get out.
He closed the door behind him, braided the fingers of his black,
leather gloves, and popped his knuckles. Did Holly really believe the
cocky surfer guy could help her? The man only wanted one thing from
her, and it wasn’t a job. Then again, her error in judgment made
finding the formula that much easier.
He stomped into the study, yanked the top drawer from the desk
and scattered papers all over the floor. Why was Holly even interested
in the over-confident SEAL? She normally went for old guys. He
snickered while he pawed through the pile. Ole Albert really was a
genius. Even at sixty, he knew the key to keeping Holly was to make
her happy at home, in bed. That’s why the PermaSlim was the only
diet aid on the market laced with a hidden prize.
He tossed page after page onto the floor. Where was it? She put it
here, in this drawer. He witnessed it with his own eyes. He yanked
out the next two drawers, rage consuming him when he continued to
come up empty handed.
Sweat coated his brow and his heart pounded as he paused to
consider his next move. Maybe he had underestimated Holly. Albert
had mentioned several times her body was her only asset, but that
didn’t appear to be entirely true. Sure she was easy on the eyes, but
since Albert’s death she proved him wrong. She seemed stronger,
more independent, and a whole lot less trusting. Bile rose in his
throat. He was losing control of her, and that was very unacceptable.
His eyes darted around the room until they rested on a metal
cabinet in the corner of the office. Did the ditz even know how to file?
He snatched a paperclip from the top of the desk and straightened it.
Cursing both Holly and himself, he poked it into the cabinet’s silver
lock and jiggled it back and forth until he heard a snap in the silence.
Once the drawer rolled open, he shoved his hands inside, thumbing
through every paper. Nothing. He growled and slung the file folders
over the side of the cabinet before he headed back to the living room.
Where the hell did she hide it? He crammed his hands into his
pocket and smirked when his fingers grazed the cool metal of his
pocket knife. He stepped to the sofa, flicked open the blade, and
punctured each cushion until the fabric resembled a plate of spaghetti
noodles. Still, he didn’t find the bounty.
Sure he was now certifiably insane, he turned over tables, leveled
bookshelves and even emptied plants from their pots. He paused only
when he assured himself he wouldn’t find anything. Hatred and panic
had him by the balls; failure was not an option.
Suddenly, a shrill beep sounded from the front door. Warning
bells chimed in his head as he focused on the rectangular panel on the
wall. His eyes widened and he pushed his anger to the side when he
saw the red “armed” light flash in rapid succession. Someone had
remotely reactivated the alarm.
With a loud curse, he took several long steps across the room and
then slipped out of the house into the lazy Arizona afternoon
.
***
Holly hum m ed softly to herself as she parked in her driv eway ,
reliev ed that re-opening the gy m had gone rem arkably well.
Thanks to Max’s expert state-of-the-art design, the new security
sy stem assured safety . Ev en when she’d accidentally hit the panic
button this m orning, the police responded before she could explain
her error to the operator.
She grabbed her gy m bag and headed up the driv eway ,
encouraged that m ay be the pool incident had been a practical
joke. Although no one found it funny , at least there wasn’t a repeat
perform ance. And with the new security sy stem , she fully
intended to m ov e sensual dance class back to the gy m . When
Jack’s patrons figured out the girls practiced there, Jack had no
choice but to start happy hour a few hours earlier.
Holly reached into her bag for her house key and wondered
how she could conv ince Brett he could leav e her alone again. Ev er
since he discov ered the class, he insisted he attend ev ery practice.
She sm iled. Not a bad thing, really . She enjoy ed dancing for him
while he fidgeted and pretended he was only there for security .
She didn’t hav e the heart to tell him she secretly nam ed him
Pinocchio. No way could he conceal that lie.
She placed her key against the lock and frowned when the
added pressure popped open the door. Before she could analy ze why
the door was unlocked, an eerie, m uddied red haze swirled from
inside the house and pulsed around the door. Her heart rolled ov er
and she sucked in sev eral gasps of air as dark brown-y ellow
splotches m ingled with the haze and then flashed in blinding
strobes of light.
Evil. Hate. Anger
.
Holly forced herself to focus and eased the door open wider to
discov er the chaos inside. In m ere seconds, her head pounded and
she fell lim p against the doorfram e, sliding down until she sat
braced in the opening. She felt her brain sum m on a com forting
shroud of sleep in an effort to dull the pain. Fighting to stay
conscious, she fum bled through the depths of her bag until she
found her cell phone and pushed speed dial.
“Brett,” she whispered into the phone, “som eone’s been in m y
house.”
Unable to wait for his response, she slum ped to the cem ent and
succum bed to the darkness.
CHAPTER EIGHT
In what seem ed like hours later, Holly awoke to the sound of
her nam e.
“Holly .”
She forced her way through the fog in her brain and braced
herself for the excruciating pain she’d inv ariably find on the other
side. Except, once she pried her ey elids open, she felt only peace
and serenity . What happened to the pain?
Brett knelt beside her, one hand resting on her shoulder and
the other stroking the side of her face. Max stood behind Brett, his
expression hidden behind his tradem ark Av iator shades and his
aura doused in his usual soft blue calm . Thank goodness som eone
could rem ain controlled in the face of danger.
Brett grasped her chin and turned her gaze to his. “Are y ou
hurt?”
She blinked sev eral tim es to clear the fuzziness from her ey es
before she answered. “No.”
Turquoise bands with a silv er ov erlay wrapped the length of
his body as he slid a hand under her back and helped her to sit.
Relief ov ertook her when she recalled the m eaning of his color.
Protector
.
Still puzzled about her lack of pain, Holly stood and touched
one hand to her left tem ple out of habit. She wasn’t surprised when
she heard Brett’s m uffled curse. “Were y ou attacked?”
Holly returned her gaze to his. Heav y , thick gray stripes
outlined the hard contours of his body and she fought herself from
cowering from the force of his unm istakable anger. Her lips
trem bled and she forced a sm ile to reassure him . “No, another
headache.”
Afraid to say too m uch m ore, she stood silent and waited for
him to respond. She gav e his m ind a m ental push with hers,
am azed when she m anaged to slip through undetected. He was
deep in soldier m ode, determ ined to find and elim inate the person
responsible for her distress. Yet there was m ore. Much m ore.
Som ething beneath the pain and rage. Ray s of clear, bright, pure
red spurted from his chest.
Passion. Tenderness
.
Brett cleared his throat and the clink of arm or echoed in her
brain. Holly bit her bottom lip as she brought his face back into
focus. His head m ov ed m ay be a m illim eter from one side and then
to the other. She froze, fearful of her next thought.
No?
Did he feel
her intrusion? Holly quickly dism issed the possibility as
im possible, confident he couldn’t hide that particular skill. Besides,
the tell-tale color escaped him . Not a strip of y ellow in sight.
“Holly ,” he prom pted, “hav e y ou been inside?”
She concentrated harder on his color. Nothing. Holly wanted
to kick him . She knew the extent of his anger. Where was the
gray ? She inhaled and tried again.
Come on, give me something
.
He reached to squeeze her shoulder. “Are y ou okay ?”
Holly nodded. “I’m fine. I saw all I needed to from out here. I
waited on y ou.”
Scream ing sirens echoed in the quiet afternoon as Max shov ed
the door all the way open and stepped inside. “Hell.”
Holly peeked around the brick wall of Max’s body and her
heart pounded. The liv ing room looked like a war zone. Books,
separated from their spines, and paper shredded into confetti
littered the carpet. Stuffing from the sofa cushions resem bled
snowflakes on the end tables. The sofa rested upside down on both
arm s, the upholstery split from one end to the other. Som eone had
gone through the room with a fine-tooth com b and she knew
exactly why .
Brett turned to her with flam es in his ey es. “The form ula’s
here, isn’t it?”
“Yes, but no one found it.”
Too late, she realized her adm ission. Strike two. Soon she
would hav e to tell him .
Brett’s ey ebrows cam e down in suspicion. “You know without
looking?”
Holly glanced around the room at the strewn papers and
ov erturned furniture, buy ing tim e to find a reasonable answer to
his question. There was really no need to panic. She was one
hundred percent sure the form ula was safe, a fact that didn’t hav e
to be prov en with her
talent
. “They didn’t look any where close.”
Interrupted by the arriv al of the police, Brett was forced to
stop questioning her. Max led the first two detectiv es to arriv e into
the house. Brett grabbed Holly ’s hand and pulled her inside behind
him .
Holly watched detectiv es coat the contents of the house with
powder and snap pictures of the v andalism until she saw polka
dots.
“Dam n.” Brett ran a hand across the top of his wav y , m ussed
hair. “Diet pills are a dim e a dozen. Why is som eone so desperate
for this one?”
She cleared her throat and braced herself for another round of
interrogation. “There’s som ething I didn’t m ention.”
Both Max and Brett folded their arm s across their m assiv e
chests and planted them selv es in the carpet, obv iously expecting
her to elaborate. Holly blew her bangs off her forehead. Another
explanation. Why m ust she alway s explain herself?
She glanced at the two m ountains of m ale and then at the
front door. A low growl left Brett’s throat. So m uch for av oiding the