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The Sharpshooter's Secret Son
by
Mallory Kane
CHAPTER ONE

They called them ghost towns for a reason.
Black Hills Search and
Rescue Specialist Deke Cunningham wasn't afraid of anything. Not anymore.
But the late afternoon shadows spooked him. They moved with him, reaching
out like gnarled fingers across the empty, dusty main street of Cleancutt,
Wyoming, He tried to shake off the feeling, but it wouldn't shake.
Probably because today he wasn't working a routine assignment to rescue a
deserving but nameless innocent.
Today he was searching
for his ex-wife.
He glanced at the GPS
locator built into his phone, then at the two-story building with the
letters H E L barely readable above the door. The O and the T had long
since faded.
This was it. The
location where BHSAR computer expert Aaron Gold had finally managed to
triangulate Mindy's last cell phone transmission.
Mindy. She didn't
deserve this. She hadn't deserved anything she'd gotten for loving him.
And he'd
never deserved
her.
Deke approached the
two-story building, doing his damnedest not to swipe his palm across the
nape of his neck where prickles of awareness tingled. He was being
watched.
No surprise there.
He even knew who was
watching him. The same person who'd kidnapped his ex-wife. Well--who'd
ordered her kidnapped anyhow.
Novus Ordo. The
infamous international terrorist who'd already targeted another member of
the BHSAR team, Matt
Parker.
We've got your wife,
the obviously disguised voice on the cell phone had said.
Alarm bells had clanged
in his head and his gut had clenched with worry. Still, he'd had to smile
a little. Whoever the kidnapper was, he had no idea what he'd gotten hold
of when he'd grabbed Mindy Cunningham.
"Ex-wife," he'd
muttered, working to sound bored and uninterested. "And be my guest. You
can have her."
"This is no joke,
Cunningham. We've got her and we'll kill her if you don't do what we say."
"The only thing I can
tell you've got is her cell phone and a death wish."
The kidnapper had taken
the bait. He'd put Mindy on the phone.
Deke Cunningham, don't
pay them one red cent! It's a trap--
Tough words. Exactly
what he'd expected from her. But beneath her brave words he heard fear--a
soul-deep terror he'd never heard in her voice before. And that, more than
anything the kidnapper said, scared him to death.
Something was wrong
with her. Something beyond being kidnapped. While that alone would be
enough to terrify any woman, his Mindy was made of stronger stuff.
In the twenty years
since he'd first spotted her hanging by her heels from the top rung of the
elementary school Jungle Jim, he'd never seen anything she couldn't
handle.
Except him.
Her tight, strained
voice, cut by static, still echoed in his head as he paused at the bottom
of the dilapidated wooden steps of the only hotel in Cleancutt, Wyoming.
He'd heard about the
ghost towns of Wyoming all his life. Eighty years ago, Cleancutt and other
coal-mining camps had been booming towns. But by the nineteen fifties,
underground coal-mining had given way to strip-mining, so today Cleancutt
was a ghost, a dying piece of history located near the city of Casper.
A vibration started in
his breast pocket. Damn it. His phone.
As he retrieved it, he
glanced around him, in case he could catch someone watching him, waiting
for him to answer. But the display read Irina Castle, his boss, not Mindy.
He pressed the TALK button without saying anything.
"Deke, where are you?"
Irina asked.
"I'm busy," he said
quietly.
"You did it, didn't
you? You went after Mindy alone. I told you to wait until I could arrange
a meeting with Aaron Schiff."
"Irina, do not get the
FBI involved in this. It's too dangerous for Mindy. I'll handle it.
Besides, you know the drill. They threatened to hurt her if I brought
backup."
"And you know the
drill. My specialists never take unnecessary risks."
"This one was
necessary."
Irina blew out a sigh
of frustration. "You told Aaron not to tell me where you are." Her voice
was accusatory.
"It's for your own
good, and Mindy's. You can't know. It's too dangerous for you. Besides,
there's nobody alive who's better trained to run a covert rescue mission
than me." He'd meant the comment to be reassuring, but it hung in the
sudden silence between them.
Irina's husband, Rook
Castle had been the best, until he'd been assassinated by Novus Ordo two
years ago.
"Aaron and Rafe have my
projected timeline," he continued. "They know what to do. You've got to
trust me, Irina."
"I don't like it."
"You think I do? I
should have known what was going to happen as soon as Matt told me he'd
been followed back here from Mahjidastan. I should have anticipated that
Novus would go after Mindy."
Novus Ordo was
desperate to find out why Irina had suddenly called Matt Parker back from
assignment in Mahjidastan, and announced to her employees that she was
ending her two-year-long search for her husband--or his body.
"It's not your fault,
Deke."
"The hell it's not. I
should have taken care of her, put her in protective custody." He shook
off the feeling of failure. He'd let Mindy get captured. Now he had to
rescue her.
"Don't worry, Irina. I
know more about Novus than anyone alive. You listen to Rafe and Aaron and
Brock. They each have their instructions. Their primary mission is to keep
you safe." He paused. "And Irina, don't leave the ranch without one of
them with you. Make sure all three of them know where you're going and who
you're going with."
Irina sighed in frustration. "You sound like you don't trust your own
team."
"My helicopter was
sabotaged. I don't trust anybody but you and me."
"You mentioned your
timeline. What is it?"
"I plan to be out of
there with Mindy in less than twenty-four hours."
"What's your drop dead
time?"
"Seventy-two." He had
his timeline. He wished he knew what Novus's was.
"Be careful, Deke."
He hung up, and started
to pocket his phone, then hesitated, looking at the display.
Two days ago, the BHSAR
recovery team, along with the FBI, had found the body of the man who had
tried to get his hands on Matt Parker.
Papers and a prepaid
cell phone found on the dead man proved his involvement in terrorist
activities, with ties to Novus Ordo. It was bad enough that it only took a
couple of hours for Novus to find out that Irina had recalled Matt. What
made it so much worse, was the ruined helicopter motor on the floor of
Deke's hangar that proved that his bird had been sabotaged. The grounded
helicopter had caused Deke to miss a critical rendezvous point, and had
almost cost Matt Parker and Aimee Vick their lives.
There was only one
explanation for those security breaches.
Both the sabotage and
Novus's intel had to have been engineered by someone who had unrestricted
access to Castle Ranch. They had a traitor in BHSAR. Someone who was
working for Novus.
Deke had put his most
trusted specialists to guarding Irina. He just wished he could trust them
without reservation.
But there was only one
man in the world, other than himself, that he could trust with Irina's
life.
Trying to ignore the
fact that his fingers were shaking, Deke dialed a number he'd thought he'd
never call.
Irina's innocent action
had negated everything Rook Castle had done to keep her safe.
Deke listened to the
electronic message, hoping he was doing the right thing. He spoke quickly,
quietly, then hung up.
It was done. Two years
ago he'd made a promise to his best friend Rook Castle. Today he'd broken
it. But he'd had no choice. It was time to raise the dead.
#
DEKE CAREFULLY CLIMBED the crumbling steps
and put his shoulder against the weathered front door of the abandoned
hotel. He stopped dead in his tracks when it creaked loudly. Clutching his
weapon in both hands, he listened.
Nothing. Not a
scurrying rat or the buzz of a disturbed insect.
He'd expected Novus to
come after him. He'd hoped the terrorist wouldn't be savvy enough to go
after his ex-wife. Hell, they'd been divorced over two years.
It disturbed him that
Novus knew that much about him. Mindy was his weakness.
His only weakness.
The Air Force had done
what nothing else ever had--it had made a man out of him. He could fly a
helicopter. He could shoot a housefly off a general's lapel at two hundred
yards--hell, he could take that shot while flying a bird.
Being a Special Forces
Op had taught him there was nothing he couldn't face and conquer.
But with one
disappointed look, and the sparkle of a tear, Mindy could reduce him to
his pathetic, arrogant high-school self, trying to bully his way through
school and drink his way through life.
He stood outside the
hotel's door and wondered what kind of traps Novus had set for him. He'd
have preferred a face to face confrontation but he already knew the
publicity-shy Novus wouldn't do that.
There was a reason the
terrorist wore a surgical mask in every known photo. An excellent reason.
And only a few people knew what that reason was.
Yeah, he was walking
into a trap. But Novus had baited it with the only lure he couldn't
resist.
His ex-wife.
All those thoughts
swirled through his mind in the two seconds it took for him to flex his
fingers, retighten them around the grip of his Sig Saur, and take a deep
breath.
Here goes.
He nudged the door
another inch and slipped through.
The hotel lobby could
have been lifted out of one of the western movies his old man had watched
when he wasn't passed out from cheap vodka.
When Deke stepped
inside, eyeing the ornate desk and curved staircase, glass crunched under
his boot. Shattered prisms from a broken chandelier.
Then something moved at
the edge of his vision.
Startled, he swung
around. His finger tightened on the trigger.
A raccoon. It scurried
across the room, claws clicking on the worn hardwood floor like faraway
machine-gun fire.
Deke's breath whooshed
out and his trigger finger relaxed. He took another step, eyeing the dark
room beyond the arched doorway. He figured it was the dining room.
What was the raccoon
running from? He crossed the lobby and angled around the arch so his back
stayed to the wall.
Heavy curtains revealed
only slivers of late afternoon sun. The smell of mildew and rotting wood
tickled his nostrils. He held his breath, resisting the urge to sneeze as
he moved silently across to the shrouded windows and reached up to push
the drapes apart. Too late, he saw the flash and heard the report.
Something stung the
curve of his cheek. He whirled, ready to shoot, but whirling turned out
not to be such a good idea.
Things got real hazy
real fast. A fuzzy shadow loomed in front of him. He aimed, but as hard as
he tried, he couldn't make his fingers hold onto the gun, and he couldn't
make his legs hold him up.
As the room tilted
sideways, the haze before his eyes turned to black.
#
DAMN, HE HATED the waiting. He liked to be
the one making the phone calls. When he had to wait to be called, he
couldn't control who might be listening.
He paced back and forth
in front of the big picture window with its panoramic view of the Black
Hills until he couldn't stand it any longer. He yanked the blinds shut. He
despised those desolate looming mountains. He'd seen enough of them to
last him the rest of his life, and beyond.
The prepaid cell phone
hidden in his shaving kit rang.
Finally.
"Everything's in place
here."
"No change here."
"There better be a
change soon."
"I'm working on it. Do
you have any idea of the level of security around this place? It's tripled
since--"
"Do you have any idea
of the time constraints we're facing?"
"I think I'm close--"
"You think? You'd
better know! We've only got one chance. I'm guessing you remember what'll
happen if you fail me."
"Why all the mind
games? It'd be a hell of a lot easier to just go in and get it over with."
"Are you questioning my
methods? Because you're not indispensable. Nobody is."
#
SOMETHING SOFT rocked against
his side, rousing him. His mouth felt stuffed with cotton and his stomach
clenched. Beneath the nauseating smell of
mildew and rotten wood, he noticed a sweet, familiar scent.
He tried to push
through the drowsiness, but whoever had filled his mouth with cotton had
put lead weights on his eyelids. He wanted to turn over, but he was too
tired.
The unmistakable supple
firmness of a female body rocked against him again. "Eee!"
"Mindy sugar," Deke
mumbled. "Move over."
Whoa. A sharp blade of
reality sliced through his mental fog. That wasn't right--on so many
levels. For one thing, his tongue wasn't working, so all he'd managed to
do was grunt unintelligibly.
"Eee, ake uk," she
retorted.
What was she saying?
Maybe she was dreaming. Maybe he was.
"Okay," he whispered,
smiling drowsily to himself. "You know what happens when you don't move
over." Anticipating her giggles and kisses, he turned--or tried to.
He couldn't move.
He wasn't in bed. He
sure wasn't in bed with Mindy. That hadn't happened in a long, long time.
So where the hell was
he?
More shards of reality
ripped through his brain. The flash of gunpowder. The biting sting in his
cheek.
He forced his eyes
open. It was dark. Totally dark.
Danger! His heart rate
skyrocketed and his special forces training kicked in.
Judging by the way his
head wobbled like a bobble-head doll, he figured he'd been drugged. He
clenched his jaw and worked to gather his thoughts.
The gunpowder. The
sting. He'd been shot with a tranquilizer gun. Ah hell.
He bit down on his
tongue, using the pain to clear his brain. Giving in to drugs--or
fatigue--or torture--in combat rescue missions could be fatal. Not only to
the rescuer, but also to the innocents depending on him for their safety,
their protection, their very lives.
Before he could help
anyone else, he had to assess his own condition. He needed to take
inventory.
Blood? No stickiness or
wet warmth.
Broken bones? He
shifted enough that his arms ached and his legs cramped. No.
Other injuries? Nope.
Just the sting from the tranq dart. That and the drug it had delivered.
Location? Somewhere
dark and damp.
Position? Tied up--arms
behind his back, and gagged. He pushed his dry tongue against the cloth in
his mouth. Gagged tight. Then, gingerly, he moved his legs--and nearly
fell off the crate.
That explained the
cramps. His ankles were tied.
Mission? Not quite as
easy. What was he doing here, tied up and drugged?
"Eee!"
Mindy. Her voice
ripped the haze from his brain. That was it. He'd come here to rescue her.
Novus Ordo had kidnapped her to get to him.
Her soft warmth was
close--way too close for comfort. Her shoulder was touching his. Judging
by her restricted movements and incoherent mutterings, she was tied up and
gagged too.
He wanted to reassure
her, but that would be a waste of breath with the gag in his mouth. So he
spent his energy getting rid of it. He rubbed his mouth and chin against
his shoulder, not easy with his hands tethered behind his back.
His neck and jaw ached
like a sonofabitch and the skin of his chin was raw by the time the cloth
peeled away from his tongue and lips.
His throat was too dry
to swallow. "Mindy? You all right?" he croaked.
Her answer was a
frustrated growl.
"Okay, okay, just a
second." He scooted closer and twisted until he was leaning heavily
against her shoulder.
Another not so good
idea. But this time it was because he got a whiff of that tangerine bath
stuff she always used. He bent his head and nuzzled her cheek, feeling for
her gag with his mouth.
Soft, warm tangerine
sweetness. That solved the dry mouth issue. Her familiar scent made his
mouth water and his body tighten in immediate, familiar response. He
clenched his jaw and swallowed a groan of frustration. Sex had never been
the problem between them.
It sure as hell hadn't
been the solution.
Mindy stiffened at his
frustrated moan, slamming his brain with a harsh reminder that this wasn't
old times, it was deadly serious.
But she didn't lash out
at him or try to move away. In fact she angled her head to give him better
access to the cloth that gagged her.
He bit and tugged at it
with his teeth until it began to loosen. He tried to hold his breath,
tried to ignore the soft, sensual tickle of her hair against his nose and
cheek.
After a lot of tugging
and nibbling, and some extremely uncomfortable brushing of his mouth
against her lips, cheeks and chin, he finally got her gag loose.
When he straightened,
his head felt clearer, although wherever they were was dark as the cargo
hold of a C-17 transport plane at midnight. The only light was pitifully
dim and came from a window high above their heads.
The smell of mildew and
dirt chased away Mindy's familiar, evocative scent.
"Basement," he
muttered. They had to be in a basement.
Mindy groaned and
wriggled against him.
"Min? Are you okay?" he
asked, squinting in the darkness. He could barely make out the silhouette
of her face. Her dark clothes blended into a pool of shadows just below
her shoulders. "Did they hurt you?"
She shook her head.
"Just practically broke my arms when he tied me up." Her normally husky
voice was soft and raspy.
And sexy as hell.
Deke cursed to himself.
What a chump he was. After all this time, his ex-wife could still turn him
on just by talking.
She coughed. "By the
way, thanks for involving me in your little adventure."
And she could still
tick him off.
He took a deep breath
and winced when the blast of air sent a piercing ache through his temples.
"Here we go again," he muttered.
"Don't even try to tell
me this doesn't involve one of your rescues," she rasped.
"You think I'd put you
in danger if I could help it?"
"What I think is that
you've gotten yourself in over your head again. You're never going to
learn that you can't save everybody. And even if you could, it wouldn't
fill up that hole inside you."
Deke grimaced. It was
an old argument and he'd be damned if he let her lead him down that road
again.
He raised his gaze to
hers and curved his lips in a confident smile, prepared to give her back a
smart retort. But even in the dimness he could see the fear that darkened
her olive-green eyes. The same fear he'd heard in her voice. It knocked
the confidence right out of him.
"Min, are you sure
you're okay? You don't sound too good."
She focused on a point
somewhere behind him and to his left. Then she arched her neck, and
sonofagun if she didn't stick the tip of her pink tongue out to moisten
her lips.
Do not go there, he
ordered his brain. But it went there anyhow--to all the amazing things
Mindy could do with her tongue. Not the least of which was cut him down to
size with a well-chosen word.
"I'm--okay," she
rasped, then coughed again.
He knew how she felt.
Her throat sounded as dry and sore as his. "What the hell happened? How'd
they kidnap you?"
"I got a call about
some--something addressed to me that had been delivered to the wrong
place." Her voice gained a bit of strength as she talked. "When I went to
pick it up, they grabbed me."
"Damn it, how many
times have I told you--don't go to strange places alone. You know how
dangerous it can be."
"Right," she croaked.
"Because of your dangerous profession. Well, silly me. Since we're been
divorced for two years I was kind of hoping your danger wouldn't rub off
on me any more." Her hand went to her throat.
"Besides, this was a
young woman. She told me she was also pr--." She stopped.
"Also what?"
After a split-second's
pause and a brief shake of her head, she continued. "She said a store had
delivered some things to her by mistake. They were addressed to me. She
asked if I could pick them up because she was--ill."
"Damn it, Min. That's
an obvious scam. I can't believe you fell for it."
"Would you listen to
me?" she snapped. "She said the sender's name was Irina."
Deke's scalp prickled.
More proof that Novus had deliberately targeted Mindy. He'd expected it,
but that didn't mean he liked it.
"The girl said that?"
She nodded. "I should
have been suspicious, because Irina wouldn't know--I mean, there's no
reason she'd send me a b--a gift out of the blue."
"What's the matter with
you? Did they drug you too? You sound strange."
"As soon as the door
opened, somebody dragged me inside and stuck something in my neck. The
next thing I knew, I woke up here."
"Did you get a look at
them?"
"No. I was blindfolded
until they brought you in this morning. He took my blindfold off right
before he left. I never saw him."
"But it was a man? What
did he tell you? Anything? What made you think it had anything to do with
me?"
Mindy made a small, impatient noise. He knew the look she was wearing as
well as if she were standing in a spotlight. He'd
seen it too many times before. It was her do not treat me like an idiot
scowl.
"What made me--? Maybe
because I've never done anything that would cause anyone to kidnap me.
You, on the other hand--"
"Me what?" His evasion
was automatic. He'd practiced evading the truth from the time he could
talk. It was ingrained in him--part of his survival tactic.
But he knew she was
right. He'd done plenty in his lifetime that might make him the target of
revenge. Not the least of which had been just two years ago.
A lot of people,
including Mindy, would want his head on a pike if they knew what he'd
done--for and to his best friend. His only friend.
However, what a lot of
people thought meant nothing. He'd do it again. That and more, for the one
man who'd always believed in him--who'd trusted his life to him.
His life and his death.
I just hope your
sacrifice wasn't in vain, Rook. Because here we are battling Novus Ordo
again. And this time he's not going to give up.
"Okay fine," he snapped
at Mindy. Supposing for the moment that I've screwed up your life yet
again. I can't change that. But I can do my best to get us out of here. I
promise, as soon as I can manage it, I'll get you back to the normal, safe
life you like so much." |