Read Long Gone Online

Authors: Marliss Melton,Janie Hawkins

Long Gone (3 page)

BOOK: Long Gone
2.08Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“Where are you now?” 

“In a motel room in—”

“Wait! Don’t say it. All I need is the room number.”

“Um…” It took her a moment to remember. “314.”

“Got it.
Don’t go anywhere, babe. I’ll be there as soon as I can.”

“Wait, h-how will you find me?” Panic made her heart race. “When will you get here?” She was terrified of letting him go.


Soon, sweetheart.
Believe me, I could find you anywhere.”

His answer assured her that there was no Mrs. Drake Donovan lying in bed next to him.
Thank God
. Drake was going to rescue her, just like he had four years ago when she’d been faced with an arranged marriage to her father’s peer, Ashton Jameson.

“I’ll be here,” she whispered.

Her only answer was silence. 

 

Chapter Two

 

Drake forced himself to hang up. God knew he didn’t want to.
Skyler’s
voice was manna to his hungry heart, and she so clearly needed him, too. 

But he couldn’t risk the off-chance that the mob was listening to his calls—not that he could see how. His cell phone had been issued by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Uncle Sam had deemed it secure and untraceable. On the other hand, his affection for Owen
Dulay’s
daughter had been no secret to the mob four years ago. If Centurions thought Sky might contact him someday, they’d keep tabs on him for as long as it took.

He should never have given her his phone number. But the thought of being apart from her had been more than he could bear.

Luckily, she’d only called him a handful of times and, better still, she hadn’t even spoken. The only way he’d even guessed she was the caller was by the aching silence that echoed his greeting. One call had been from Omaha, another from Portland, and the most recent from Myrtle Beach.

He checked his caller ID. She was still in Myrtle Beach. A special program on his cell phone pinpointed her coordinates.

He leapt out of bead, stripping as he stalked into his bathroom in the basement of his mother’s house in Arlington, Virginia.

Skyler’s
words replayed in his head as he showered.

How could Centurions have found her in the first place, let alone three times? WITSEC had a flawless record. No one in their protection had ever been targeted—until now. Obviously, something was amiss with the program. Once he joined her down in Myrtle Beach, he’d assess the situation and decide what to do.

As he toweled off, he pondered the fastest way to reach her. Driving to Myrtle Beach would take about nine hours. A commercial flight, with all the hassles of airport security checks, would consume at least five.
Skyler
needed him
now.
  

Damn it, he would have to ask his father for help. If Connor Donovan weren’t his boss in the FBI’s Undercover Division, Drake would have nothing to do with the man since he’d walked out on his wife after twenty-seven years of marriage. But Connor had a pilot’s license and he owned his own small plane.

Swallowing his pride, Drake dialed his father’s number and set his cell phone on his dresser in speaker mode so he could finish dressing.  

Connor answered on the second ring.
“What happened?”

Clearly there had to be a calamity for Drake to call his father—sad, but so true.

“I need a favor.” He strapped his gun holster to his calf and reached for his jeans.   

“What kind of favor?”  

“I need you to fly me to Myrtle Beach tonight, right now. It’s a matter of life and death,” he added, stepping into his Levis. 

“Whose death?”

“Mine.” Considering his life wouldn’t be worth living if anything happened to Sky, that wasn’t an exaggeration. 

His father breathed heavily on the other end.  

“Y
es or no?
I don’t have much time.”

“Fine.
I’ll meet you at the airport in half an hour.”

“Make that twenty minutes—please,” Drake tacked on. In truth, he was taken aback by his father’s cooperation.

Connor hung up on him. 

Stowing his phone in his rear pocket, Drake turned toward his closet to pack a bag. Having no idea what he was up against, he tossed a hodgepodge of clothing into his black duffel, stuffing in a dozen spare clips for his nine millimeter, just in case.

He fetched his shaving kit from the bathroom. In the process of zipping it shut, his gaze fell on the box of condoms he'd purchased months ago for the purpose of expunging
Skyler
Dulay
from his heart and mind. Only he’d never used it.  

If the fates were kind, maybe he would never have to.

 

 

Drake had to give the old man credit. He’d filed a flight plan, fueled up, and completed a preflight check
by the time Drake joined him in the cockpit of his
Beechcraft
Bonanza.

“Let’s go,” he said, urging his father to take off right away. 

Luckily, the weather was
crisp and clear with a full moon and a light tail wind blowing out of the north. It gave the two-seater added speed as they climbed into the night sky and banked south. 

“Are you going to tell me what this is about?”

The question came one hour into the flight. Drake had hoped the audio on the headset he was wearing wasn’t working. Instead his father had waited until they were three thousand miles up in the air to interrogate him.
Typical.
Keeping his gaze fixed on the thin veil of moonlit clouds, Drake answered “Nope.”

“Does this have anything to do with your current assignment?”

Drake spent his weekdays down in Freeport, Bahamas, posing as a yacht salesman in an FBI-coordinated effort to curb drug smuggling out of the Caribbean and into the United States. “Nope,” he said again.


Did you tell your mother anything?”  

Drake whipped his head around. “I left her a note.” He fought to keep his resentment from bubbling up, but it boiled over suddenly. “That’s more consideration than you ever showed her—especially the last time you walked out.” 

Connor sighed. “You have no idea what happened with me and your mother,” he said tiredly.

“I don’t need to know,” Drake snarled.

“Son, if this is company business, you need to tell me what the hell is going on
.”


Don’t call me son.
I stopped feeling like your son the day
I took over your household responsibilities.”

Connor shot him a scowl. “Stick to the subject.”

“I am. Trust me, Dad, the less you know about this the better.”

“So...plausible deniability,” Connor concluded, using a term coined by the CIA during the Kennedy administration. “You think I’d lose my job if I knew,” he guessed.

“Exactly.”

Gnawing his lip in frustration, Connor went back to fiddling with his instruments.

Drake, in turn, studied the stars burning light years apart in the vast expanse before them. They made him think of star-crossed lovers, fated never to be together.

Screw fate. He was flying to
Skyler
now, and nothing in the universe could stop him.

 

 

An hour and a half later, the two-seater came to a standstill at Myrtle Beach International Airport.

As the single piston engine wound down, Drake set aside his headset and unbuckled his seat belt. He was now within minutes of
Skyler’s
last known location. Dawn silvered the sky above the trees dripping with Spanish moss. It had been three hours since she’d contacted him. He hoped she’d been asleep all this time. 

“Thanks for the ride,” he grated. He unlatched the door and was stepping out onto the wing when a large hand clamped down on his shoulder.

As fast and strong as Drake was, he hadn’t inherited his father’s stature. He had no choice but to halt and look back at him. “What?”

“That’s it? You’re going to go off on your own? I thought you were smarter than that.”

Considering the trouble Drake might be walking into, he knew he could use his father’s help, but not when Connor offered it like that. Besides, the options running through his mind weren’t exactly by-the-book. He didn’t want to get his father in trouble if he chose to go vigilante.  

“I guess I’m not,” he countered. Yanking free of Connor’s hold, he slammed the hatch behind him and leapt to the spongy ground with his duffle bag.

Jogging toward the bright lights of the General Aviation Terminal, he placed a call on his cell phone to Hertz Car Rental. His alias, Tom Keane the yacht salesman, would have a vehicle waiting by the time he reached the lot.

He figured his father would fly off in disgust shortly. After all, leaving was what Connor did best.  

Chapter Three

 

Skyler
dozed in fitful spurts, waking periodically with her heart in her throat.

Had she dreamed someone was knocking on her motel door or was it real?

Groggy with sleep, she rolled out of bed and stumbled past her lit bathroom. Wiping a grain of sleepy dust from one eye, she went up on tiptoe to peer through the door’s peephole.

The familiar sight of Drake wearing a
hoodie
made her heart leap with joy. He had dressed like that when pretending to be a teenager at the homeless shelter her father had used to launder his money. It was there that they’d met—her as a volunteer, him as a runaway in search of a new beginning. The hood was pulled up over his head, leaving his face in shadow, but she’d have recognized him anywhere.

With a dry mouth and fingers that could scarcely unlatch the safety chain,
Skyler
hauled the door open.
Drake!
Her cry of anticipation curtailed abruptly as the light from her bathroom hit his face.
No, not Drake
. She was letting in a total stranger.

She tried to back up, to slam the door on him, only the stranger was stronger. Forcing it open, he shoved his way inside and pinned her against the closet with his sturdy frame. A moist cloth came out of nowhere, covering her mouth and nose and stifling her screams.

Caustic fumes scalded
Skyler’s
airways. She caught her breath and fought her captor’s cruel grip, but he was stronger. In her panic, she saw two more strangers slip into the room, including the man who’d taken her picture yesterday. Ordering his accomplice to fetch her belongings, he watched with a smirk as her attacker subdued her.

Desperate for air,
Skyler’s
lungs convulsed. Cloying vapor seared her throat, and darkness pooled at the edges of her eyes.

How
did these men even find me here?

Anguish speared her as she felt her consciousness slipping. She’d come so close to seeing Drake again. 

 

**

 

Drake pushed the elevator button for the third floor. Then he jabbed the close-door button until the elevator finally lurched upward. The adrenaline juggernauting through his system rocked him on his feet. Anxiety twisted his intestines.

He had dreamt of the moment when he and Sky would be reunited; every one of those dreams had been impossibly sweet—not like this. Foreboding robbed him of any pleasant anticipation. 

For Centurions to have found her
three
times, WITSEC had to have unintentionally leaked her location. If WITSEC couldn’t keep her safe then who could?

I can.

He pictured them running away together to a place like Thailand, where his sister, a CIA case officer, was assigned. Imagine making love to
Skyler
whenever he pleased and watching her
graceful interactions with the locals! On one hand, it sounded like paradise. On the other, could he bring himself to walk out on his obligations to his mother the way his father had?

The doors parted with a chime on the third floor.
This is it.

With a deep breath, he marched out onto the landing and turned left toward 314. At the end of the hallway, two men were pushing through the emergency stairwell exit, and one of them was carrying a woman.

The unsettling sight broke Drake’s stride.

The woman’s hair was auburn hair, not gold like
Skyler’s
, but she could have colored it. He couldn’t see enough of her face before they stepped out of sight to make a positive ID, but he swore that her scent—a blend of gardenia and honeysuckle—still hung in the air. Given the way her head had lolled on the man’s shoulder, she had to be passed out, cold. 

They’d gotten to her first
!

The realization had him pausing to retrieve his nine millimeter from under his pant leg. Then he pursued the pair, slipping stealthily through the fire door in their wake. Several levels below him he could hear footfalls and low-pitched voices. There were three of them, he realized, not just two.

BOOK: Long Gone
2.08Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Devil in Disguise by Martin Edwards
One Bright Morning by Duncan, Alice
October Breezes by Maria Rachel Hooley
Cutting Loose by Tara Janzen
Cocotte by David Manoa