Running Blind (2 page)

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Authors: Cindy Gerard

BOOK: Running Blind
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2

A rush of icy February air blew in as Bobby Taggart arrived. He glanced around, spotted Coop, and did a comical double take. Coop grinned and prepared for the flack the square-jawed, tough-as-nails Bronx native was bound to give him. His brown hair was military-­cut, his eyes were always watchful, and if the ink on his right forearm paying tribute to his fallen brothers hadn't pegged him as a warrior, his Ironman build left no question. One look from those hard green eyes sent grown men scattering and women wondering if they should be fascinated or fearful.

Yet Taggart could always make Coop laugh. Despite the fact that Coop was retired Marine and Taggart was retired Army Special Forces, they were best friends.

Taggart reached the table and pulled out a chair. “So who lit a fire under your ass?”

Coop gave his buddy the one-finger salute, grabbed one of the coffeepots the busboy had just brought, and poured them each a cup. “What? I can't be the first one here for a change?

“You? Early? It goes against all the laws of nature.” Taggart shrugged out of his worn leather jacket, hung it on the back of the chair, and sat down across from him. “And it hurts my heart to think that a pretty boy like you might not've gotten all your beauty sleep.”

Taggart's flack over Coop's past as a model got seriously old. “I know something else that'll make your head hurt,” Coop warned.

“Your fist in my face if I don't mind my own business?”

Coop lifted his coffee cup in salute. “There ya go.”

Brewed Awakenings was one of several places the two teams gathered once a month on an irregular rotation. Original brick walls, stained pine floors, and a shabby-chic décor made the place comfortable—not to mention that the coffee was the best he'd found outside of his own kitchen. The general public had no idea who they were or that their two units were the first line of human defense for homeland and international terrorist threats. Even so, they still varied venues and arrival and departure times as precautionary measures. It was all about security, mixed in with a healthy dose of Spec Ops paranoia, but come hell or hurricane, they kept their monthly breakfast date.

Because even though they worked together day in and day out and all had lives outside of Uncle Sam's domain, the deal was, they liked one another. To a man and a woman, all of them had ties to one another that only they could understand. And they needed these out-from-under-the-umbrella gatherings to stay connected.

“Man, she's something, huh?” Taggart said.

Coop followed his gaze and saw Rhonda walking back toward the table.

Combat boot. Direct hit. Solar plexus.

Rhonda gave Taggart a big grin and an even bigger hug. “Aren't you a fine sight on a cold Monday morning?” she drawled in a Georgia peach voice she reserved for people she liked—which explained why Coop heard it only in mixed company.

“New shirt.” Taggart shot Coop a needling wink over Rhonda's shoulder.

“I noticed, and I like it.”

Taggart beat Coop to the carafe. “Let me pour you some coffee, darlin'.”

“Good to know I can count on someone.” The glance she shot Coop could have leveled a small building.

He gave her a mock salute.

Which she ignored, walking toward the door to greet more team members as they entered.

“God, I love how she busts your balls,” Taggart said as they both watched Rhonda walk toward the new arrivals. “How does it feel to finally meet a woman who doesn't automatically worship at the altar of your bed?”

Coop cracked up. “Worship at the altar of my
bed
?”

“Can't decide if it's that ugly face of yours,” Taggart speculated, slinging an arm over the back of his chair, “the smooth talk, or the sock you stuff in the front of your pants that attracts the ladies like sharks to chum.”

So, okay. He didn't exactly have a face that broke plates. He got a lot of long, lustful looks from the opposite sex. And yeah, sometimes he took them up on their offers.

But he wasn't a dick about it. He didn't make promises he didn't intend to keep, and he sure as hell didn't invite most of the attention he got. But as he opened his mouth to tell Taggart to shove it, Rhonda and the others joined them.

When she had settled back in and picked up her coffee, Taggart poured on the charm, making it clear how much it amused him that she was unaffected by Coop's . . . sock.

“Careful, the coffee's really hot,” Taggart warned her.

What was really hot was the woman who took pains to ignore him. And damn it, if she'd just flirt with him like she did with Taggart and the rest of the guys, he wouldn't be in this fix now. But no. She had to give him all kinds of crap all the time.

Well, she could pretend indifference until there were solar flares on the moon, but he'd caught her looking at him more than once. Looking a little perplexed, a little peeved, and maybe even a little turned on. He'd love to mine those cracks in her personal firewall to see what was going on inside her head—or maybe not.

The truth was, she wound him up as tight as a recoil spring in a shotgun, which was a huge problem, because Mike had partnered them up next week to do security checks at a couple of Air Force bases.

A week with the Bombshell. Alone.

He glanced at her, all silken blond hair, big blue eyes, and tight sweater. He hadn't told her yet about the field assignment; he'd do that back at the office. But he'd told himself plenty: she was hands off, and not merely because DOD wouldn't approve. No, he'd keep his distance from the Bombshell because bombs exploded, and he didn't want to get blown to hell.

3

She shivered with anticipation as she sighted down the rifle's scope for perhaps the hundredth time since she'd set up the nest. The air was bitter cold, but adrenaline kept her blood pumping, sending heat to her extremities, keeping her fingers nimble as she made minute adjustments to the legs of the tripod mount.

The Ruger M77 bolt-action was her new personal favorite. She loved the irony that it shot ammo similar to the M16 rifle that the U.S. military loved so much. And regardless of the range of almost three hundred yards, the cartridges she'd hand-loaded would ensure maximum destruction.

She'd have made this hit free of charge, so it was icing on the cake that the Russians were paying her a king's ransom. And it was no accident that they'd contacted her to take out one of the Department of Defense's top covert tactical teams. She'd laid bread crumbs from Munich to Moscow, making certain they'd follow the trail straight to her and understand that she had the goods they needed and a product to sell.

Her intricate planning had paid off. Yet another thing she owed to her mentor. He'd left her the means to this end, and the thought of finally exacting revenge for his death had her shaking with excitement.

•    •    •

“Are you all ready to order?” a preppy young waiter asked Rhonda.

She didn't find it unusual that she'd been singled out as the spokesman for the group; it had always been that way. She'd been told that she had a look—social organizer, office administrator, corporate deity, boss lady, whatever—that drew others to assume she was in charge. She'd stopped fighting it long ago.

She glanced around the table. Her boss, Mike Brown, sat beside his wife, Eva. Then came Jamie Cooper. If he'd meant to annoy her by moving to a chair directly across from her, he'd done a good job of it. After him were two other team members, Enrique Santos and Josh Waldrop. Only Joe and Steph Green had made it from the other Black Ops team, rounding out the group.

“Anyone else coming?” she asked Brown. When he shook his head, she turned back to the waiter. “Why don't you start with the big guy here”—she patted Taggart's shoulder—“and work your way back to me?”

While the waiter took orders, Rhonda sat back, feeling the disbelief that sometimes hit her when she thought about her new job. These men were elite operatives. They made up the core group of the International Threat Analysis and Prevention Agency (ITAP), along with Brett Carlyle, who hadn't made it to breakfast today.

Now she was one of them. A member of a covert antiterrorist team.

Never in her wildest dreams.

She'd thought long and hard before she accepted the position. She'd known from the get-go that it wasn't as innocuous as the name of the unit implied.

And after she'd signed so many confidentiality and security clearance documents that it made the NSA's requirements seem like hooking pinkie fingers and crossing hearts, Mike had briefed her on the unit's real mission.

“ITAP is a cover agency created to ensure we can operate with anonymity and complete autonomy,” he'd said.

Yikes. Who in any government agency was granted autonomy?

“For instance,” he'd added, “if someone starts snooping around DOD records, they won't discover anything, because we're listed as a private consulting firm, hired on a contractual basis for security and threat assessments.”

“But that's not what you—I mean, we—do?” she'd asked him.

“Security assessment is one of our functions, yes. In fact, our first field assignment will most likely be a cyber-threat analysis of a high-value military facility. But our primary purpose is rapid response and deployment when a specific threat to national security is confirmed.”

At that point, it had started to sound a lot like covert operations. And she'd been right.

The team could deploy to any U.S. military facility for the official reason of assessing potential security breaches, when, in fact, they might be there to take out an Al-Qaeda kingpin.

“So, we are and we aren't who everyone thinks we are,” she'd concluded.

Mike had grinned. “Exactly.”

It was really quite ingenious. With the security consultant cover, the team could get into facilities stateside and internationally that no one else could.

Rhonda looked around the table. In private, the team called itself the One-Eyed Jacks; she didn't know much about the story behind the name. She knew they all carried old, tattered jacks of hearts and spades like they were treasured club membership cards, cards that only came out of their pockets when they were drawing for who bought breakfast. She imagined there was a much bigger story there—just like ITAP had a bigger story.

“Big responsibilities,” she'd said, after absorbing all the information Mike had fed her. “Why so few operators?”

“Because we run fast and lean. Only the best make the cut. I keep the unit scaled down for that reason, and it's going to stay that way.”

She couldn't help feeling a twinge of pride that Mike considered her among the best at what she did. Turned out she was pretty good with weaponry, too. Passing her probation had involved time on the rifle range and in close-quarters combat drills. But even though her instructor said she was a natural, she had no interest in being part of any shoot-'em-up operations. She wanted to be on the front lines fighting cyber-terrorism with a unit that could make that happen.

Cooper was the only wrinkle in her game plan. She glared at him when she was sure he wasn't looking. If she had an Achilles' heel, unfortunately, he was it—which ticked her off. Not that anyone would ever know. She was not only good at finding secrets, she was also good at keeping them. Nope. No one would ever know that she'd spent far too much time wondering what was behind the pretty boy's face . . . and what it would be like to sleep with him.

“So, how's it going?” Stephanie Green asked, reminding her that this morning was about socializing.

“Good,” Rhonda said with a firm nod, taking advantage of the ordering and male-to-male ribbing that gave them a moment of privacy. “It's going well.”

Three years ago, Rhonda and Steph had worked together as cryptologists at the National Security Agency. Then Steph had left the stifling bureaucracy of the NSA for greener pastures. She'd turned in her secret decoder ring for a wedding ring, married Black Ops agent Joe Green, and adopted a street orphan from Sierra Leone who had been instrumental in saving their lives. Steph had also joined Nate Black's unit and, judging by how happy the pretty brunette looked, was loving every minute of it.

“So you're not sorry I talked you into applying for the ITAP position?” Steph asked.

Rhonda covered Steph's hand with hers and squeezed. “Are you kidding? You saved me from a life of endless boredom. I'm in the front lines now, chickie. I'm no longer a drone slogging through a maze of cubicles like a robot and praying for something big to happen.”

Stephanie laughed. “In the first place, you could never be categorized as a drone. Drones don't look like you or get stared at the way you do. Speaking of which,” she added quietly after a furtive glance across the table, “what's with Golden Boy over there?”

Rhonda glanced at Jamie Cooper, then quickly away. Damn. He
was
staring. And damn, he was . . . golden. From his skin—he clearly had some Latino blood—to the gold rimming his chocolate-brown irises, to the natural highlights that shimmered in the dark brown hair that was just long enough to make him look like a badass. A very sexy badass.

“We haven't quite figured each other out yet,” she hedged.

“Really?” Steph's sparkling eyes smiled as she gave Rhonda an all-knowing look. “Seems clear to me. The man's got the hots for you, my friend.”

Rhonda snorted. “What man doesn't?” She knew what she looked like, and she liked to maximize her assets. She had a passion for Manolo Blahniks and vintage angora sweaters, and she was on a first-name basis with the clerks at her favorite makeup counter. So sue her
.

When she'd decided to take the position, she'd also decided that the team was going to have to take her as she was—blond and curvy and not shy about showcasing those curves. She enjoyed being a woman. She also had a smart mouth that she'd have to make a big effort to control; so far, that wasn't working out too well. She took way too much pleasure needling Cooper, who had the mistaken impression that he was God's gift to womankind.

“At least, until they get to know me and they figure out what a bitch I am,” she added.

“You're not a bitch. You're protective of yourself. Nothing wrong with that.”

Rhonda changed the subject, as she always did when it veered too close to her emotional space. “Better give the man your order,” she said as the waiter reached them.

Steph was her dearest friend, but even she didn't know the reason Rhonda evaded, avoided, and even sabotaged budding romantic relationships. One day, maybe she'd tell her. In the meantime, she kept it to herself.

Feeling a tingle at the base of her spine, she glanced across the table again. And again, there was Cooper, that cocky smile on his face, his gaze lasered in on her, irritating the hell out of her.

She was going to have to do something about that man. She didn't like the way he made her feel . . . off her stride, a little bit out of control. And too often unfocused—­not something she could afford if she was going to pull her weight on the team. She still had a lot to prove before she won their complete confidence.

Cooper might want to play silly games, but she didn't. Before they headed for work, she'd get him alone and call him on it. By the time she finished with the Golden Boy, he'd be looking for a new hobby—one that didn't involve messing with her mind.

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