Hot Ice (A Hostile Operations Team Novel - Book 7)
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The Hostile Operations Team
Hot Ice: Garrett & Grace
© 2015 by Lynn Raye Harris
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ABOUT THIS BOOK
When fire and ice collide, you get steam…
Grace Campbell leads a privileged life. The daughter of a United States senator, she moves within the social circles of the rich and famous. But Grace is also a scientist, and when someone learns she possesses the knowledge necessary to create a new super virus capable of destroying entire nations, she becomes a target for terror groups and foreign governments alike.
Garrett “Iceman” Spencer didn’t join the Army’s elite Hostile Operations Team to babysit a spoiled rich girl, but when his superiors insist on assigning him to a senator’s daughter as her security detail, he has no choice but to comply.
It’s a shock to find that beneath the glasses and serious scowl, Grace Campbell burns hot. And Garrett, who’s been burned before, suddenly wants to immerse himself in the flames.
Keeping Grace alive—and keeping his hands off her—is a full-time job for this HOT soldier. Failure is not an option…
CHAPTER ONE
DR. GRACE CAMPBELL LET OUT A YELP as a hand settled on her shoulder.
“Easy, tiger.”
She spun in her lab chair, her heart pounding a million miles an hour. She’d been lost in her research, double-checking all her findings as she prepared her paper for presentation at the World Health Organization conference taking place in a couple of weeks. It was extraordinary research, and she needed to be absolutely clear on how nations could prepare for a health crisis that had the potential to kill millions.
Tim Fitzgerald smiled down at her in that familiar, easygoing way he had.
“You scared me to death,” she said, pressing her hand to her heart as if that would slow it down.
“I could tell. Any idea what time it is?”
Grace blinked. The last she’d looked, it had been almost five p.m. “I don’t know… six?”
Tim shook his head, his smile indulgent. “Try a quarter to eleven.”
Her stomach fell as she processed the information.
“Crap.” Grace started to break down her equipment, stowing the slides and shutting off the microscope. “I’ve missed the party. My mother will kill me. My father…”
She shuddered to think of what her father would say. Senator Preston H. Campbell III did not appreciate his children missing events they’d promised to attend. Especially when they were campaign events and he was in the process of seeking funding for a go at the presidency. He hadn’t formally announced his run, but he’d intended to tonight.
And she’d missed it.
“It’s all over the news that your father is running for president,” Tim said as if on cue, and her stomach tightened a little more.
“It’s not really a surprise, is it?” She tried to keep her voice light, but inside she was a mess of nerves and emotions.
“Not a surprise, maybe, but still big news.”
He didn’t say what she knew he was thinking: the profile of the lab was about to become a lot more public as the media swarmed on everything Campbell-related. Which could be good news or not-so-good news.
She thought of her research and tried to calm the churning in her belly. She really should have eaten more than a donut this afternoon.
Tim helped her gather her things—purse, laptop, umbrella—while he chatted amiably and walked out of the lab with her.
She badged out, then started fumbling for her car keys. She wanted them in her hand before she stepped outside the building.
“You already missed the party. Want to get a drink?”
Grace blinked. Her eyes were tired, and she realized her glasses were still perched on top of her head. She’d put them up there to look through a microscope. Now she pulled them back into place and stared as Tim came into focus. She’d been at Magnolia Laboratories for six months, and he’d never paid her much attention other than the usual polite colleague chitchat.
But her father had just announced he was running for president.
As the only unmarried Campbell daughter, she was a prime catch in some circles. On her own, she couldn’t attract the attention of any man, much less one who looked like this one. Tim was tall and good-looking, with brown hair and warm brown eyes. He even had a tan, heaven bless him, which was pretty rare for a guy who spent his time bottled up in a laboratory.
“I, uh… I can’t tonight,” Grace said, swearing under her breath for stammering. She wasn’t ten anymore, and she no longer had a horrible overbite thanks to modern orthodontia. But she was still plain and, well, mousy, when compared with the dazzling light of her three sisters.
Three married, successful sisters.
Tim was frowning now. “Come on, Grace. One drink. How about it?”
She ran through the possibilities. They went for a drink, it was nice, he kissed her good night, they started to date, maybe he’d come to some family events with her, they’d get engaged, and then…
No. Just, no.
If he’d asked before tonight—if he’d asked at any time in the past six months before her father announced he was seeking the presidency, she might have said yes. God knew it had been a long time since she’d had a man in her life, and while she didn’t necessarily believe she had to have one to be happy, she would admit that sex was a whole lot more fun with someone else than by yourself with a vibrator and a steamy romance novel.
“I have to decline,” she said with that hint of steel she’d learned from her mother. “Another time perhaps.”
Tim’s frown got darker before it suddenly eased and he was smiling again. “Great, another time. Saturday?”
“I’ll, um, check my schedule and get back to you.” Because she didn’t want to tell him no here and now and he suddenly propose a different date. Maybe she didn’t want to tell him no at all. She was just pathetic enough to admit that until she explored all the possibilities in her head, she didn’t want to push him away. What if it was just a coincidence that he’d asked her out tonight of all nights? What if her father’s bid didn’t really result in much media attention for her and Tim still wanted to go out with her?
His grin was broad. “Excellent. Now wait right here, and I’ll get my things so I can walk you to your car.”
“That’s really not necessary—”
“I insist, Grace.”
She fumed as he turned and walked away. She really did not like a man telling her what to do. She’d spent a lifetime under the thumb of her father, and while she loved him deeply, she hated how he ordered everyone’s life as if he had the right. She was almost thirty, and she didn’t need to be told what to do.
Still, she waited for Tim because in her head she could hear her mother saying that he was only being nice and that it was gentlemanly for him to walk her to her car in the dark, rainy night. She’d lost count of how often she’d left the lab late at night and walked to her car alone. There was security at the gate, and no one was getting into the parking lot undetected. But apparently, because Tim had suddenly offered, she had to wait.
And wait.
When he didn’t return after ten minutes, Grace snorted and turned to walk out the door. The rain was coming down steadily, and she opened her umbrella and started walking toward her car. There was a nip in the air now that September had arrived. It was sti
ll warm during the day, but evenings were getting a little cooler. She suspected once this rain moved out, it would be even chillier.
Her heels clacked on the pavement as she walked. Her car was a white gleam beneath the streetlights. There were still cars in the parking lot, so she wasn’t the only one working late. She hit the button to unlock her car when she was still a few feet away.
A shape materialized out of the darkness. A tall man, hooded. Menacing, but then that was probably just her imagination.
“Hello, Dr. Campbell,” the man said.
Grace stopped, her stomach churning. “I’m sorry, but do I know you?”
The man took a step forward until the light gleamed down on him—and the pistol in his hand. Her blood turned to ice as her brain started sending danger messages to her body.
“I work for someone who would like to talk to you.”
“I, uh…” Grace fumbled with the keys in her hand, finding the panic button to her BMW’s alarm and hitting it. The alarm shattered the night with its high-pitched blaring. The man whirled, startled.
Grace took that opportunity to run in the other direction. She dropped the umbrella and sprinted for the building, but her high heels didn’t allow her to move very quickly. She kicked them off as she ran, stumbling and cursing—and then she collided with a body.
The body was solid, the arms going around her, and she fought and kicked like a madwoman. It took a few seconds for her mind to process what was being said to her.
“Grace, what the hell’s the matter? It’s me. It’s Tim. You’re okay, Grace. You’re okay…”
*
“Fuck you, Melissa!” Garrett Spencer yelled into the phone at the same moment his ex-wife hung up on him. He slammed the cell phone onto the table, uncaring whether he shattered it into a million pieces or not.
And then he’d picked it back up, prepared to dial her sorry ass up again and tell her she was a fucking bitch and a whore and no way in hell was she keeping him away from his daughter, that he’d fight her for custody and to hell with the agreement, when he looked up and saw his teammate standing in the locker room where they kept their gear, watching him with a heavy frown.
“You okay, Ice?”
Garrett put the phone down again, more gently this time, and dragged in a deep breath. Threatening Melissa would do him absolutely no good, and he knew it. Hell, his attorney had told him the same thing. And he wasn’t stupid, even if Melissa pushed his buttons like no one else ever could.
He’d made the bad decision to fuck her repeatedly nine years ago, and then he’d made the decision to marry her so he could be a father to the child they’d created when they got stupid and careless with the birth control.
But he loved Cammie more than he loved anything else in this world, and while he might regret ever marrying her mother, he damn sure didn’t regret her. He shoved a hand through his hair and yanked on the ends in frustration. What a fucking life he’d made for his baby girl with a mother like Melissa.
“Yeah, I’m fine. Just a relationship gone wrong.”
Ryan “Flash” Gordon looked at him with one arched eyebrow. And then he laughed. “Relationship? Didn’t know you did those, Ice. So far as I can tell, you fuck anything that moves—but only once.”
“Yeah, well. How do you think I got that policy?”
He’d never told the guys about his marriage—and the spectacular disintegration of it—because he didn’t like to talk about Melissa. It made his blood boil, and he didn’t particularly like the way that made him feel. Out of control. Manic. Ready to fucking kill someone.
Flash walked over to his locker and took out his pack. They’d just returned from a mission a few days ago, but there was always another one on the horizon. Everyone checked and double-checked their gear in their downtime.
“You want to talk about it?”
Garrett snorted. “Like bestie girlfriends? Hell no.”
Flash shrugged. “Whatever, dude. Just offering to listen if you want to vent.”
“Nah, I’m good. But thanks.”
He knew Flash was only being nice, but he just couldn’t talk about Melissa. It made him feel stupid. Like a failure. Not because his marriage had failed, but because he had a beautiful kid out there in the world with parents who couldn’t stand each other. He never said anything bad about Melissa to Cammie, but he knew his ex filled their daughter’s head with negativity about him. It hadn’t made Cammie hate him yet, but God knew he feared it as she got older.
She was still too young to understand most of it, but she often cried about things Mommy told her about him. All he could do was tell Cammie that her mother was wrong and prove to her that he loved her. But holy fuck, he often wanted to wrap his hands around Melissa’s throat and squeeze. It was gut-wrenching to hear his child crying on the phone to him when he could do nothing about it.
Garrett slipped his phone into his pocket as he stood. Best thing he could do right now was hit the weights. He was stripping out of his clothing so he could put on workout gear when Matt “Richie Rich” Girard appeared in the locker room.
“Hey, guys.”
Flash and Garrett acknowledged him before he turned to Garrett. “The colonel needs to see you, Ice.”
Garrett started buttoning his shirt again. He had no idea what the fuck Colonel Mendez could want with him, but it was just fucking icing on his shit cake today. Mendez was tough, secretive, and wily as hell. And if he wanted to see you alone, there had to be a reason. Garrett thought back to that stupid bar fight he’d gotten into a couple of days ago—after a call from Cammie—and gritted his teeth.
He’d known responding to that posturing asshole who’d called him a pussy was a stupid thing to do, but he’d done it anyway because he’d wanted to punch something. And it had been damned satisfying to hit that guy.
“Any idea what it’s about?” Garrett asked as he joined Richie in the hall and they started walking toward Mendez’s office.
“I’ll let him tell you.”
Fuck—that was never a good sign.
Richie knocked on the door and then swung it open when Mendez’s gruff voice replied. Garrett followed his team leader inside and stood at attention. The colonel stood and came around his desk. He was tall and muscular, his hair always cut in a high and tight, the salty gray making him look older than he probably was. Hell, not that it was a problem for him, Garrett imagined. If George Clooney had a twin in the Army, this guy could be him.
But that was as far as the resemblance went. George seemed like an amiable kind of guy—hell, he’d even been Garrett’s idol for his stance on marriage until he’d decided to get married—but Mendez was the kind of man you never underestimated if you were smart. Amiable on the surface, but ice-cold the deeper you went.
And they called him Iceman rather than Mendez. The irony.
“How you been, son?”
“Fine, sir,” Garrett replied, keeping his eyes straight ahead.
“Heard you got in a fight in Annapolis.”
Shit. Garrett’s insides clenched just a little. “The midshipman called me a pussy, sir.”
“Did he indeed?” Mendez folded his arms and leaned back against his desk. A deceptive pose if ever there was one.
“He did, sir. He suggested the entire United States Army was filled with pussies who had no other options in life but to become ground pounders, sir. The smart ones went into the Navy, according to him.”
“I see.”
Garrett resisted the urge to close his eyes. Fighting with Naval Academy cadets was not the wisest course of action, that’s for sure. But the middie hadn’t been in uniform, at least. Not that it would have stopped Garrett in the mood he’d been in.
“Sergeant, when a midshipman calls you a pussy, just smile and tell him that you are what you eat. Got it?”
Garrett nearly choked. “Uh, yes, sir.”
Mendez waved a hand. “At ease, soldier.”
Garrett relaxed his stance and met the colonel’
s eyes. He would have sworn he saw a gleam of humor there, but then the colonel reached down and picked up a folder from his desk.
“You have an interesting background. Football champ in high school, scholarship to the University of Georgia, great freshman season on the team—and then you dropped out and joined the Army.”
Garrett swallowed. Of course Mendez knew his history. He’d known that from the beginning. No one got into this outfit without a thorough background check. Garrett had chosen never to discuss his marriage with his team when he’d arrived in HOT a year ago, but he didn’t kid himself that the colonel didn’t know. Of course he did.
“I had a wife and child to support, sir. College football doesn’t do that.”
“No, it doesn’t.”
Had he hoped to be a college football star? Hell yes. Had he coveted the Heisman and an NFL career? Of course he had. What football-playing college freshman didn’t?
But then he’d met a hotter-than-hell psychology major who was two years older—and the rest was history.
Mendez cleared his throat. “Your mother teaches Junior Cotillion. Tell me about that.”
Garrett blinked. If this wasn’t a strange turn of conversation, he didn’t know what was. “Sir?”
“Cotillion. What is it? And did you go?”
Garrett felt his brows drawing down. But what the colonel wanted to know, the colonel was going to know. Though Garrett also knew damned well that Mendez already knew the answers to both those questions.
“Cotillion, sir, is where young Southern boys and girls learn how to be gentlemen and ladies.”
“Dancing. Which fork to use. Polite conversation. Proper behavior. That sort of thing?”
“Yes, sir.”
“And did you learn these things as well?”
“I’ve attended more Cotillion classes than any kid alive in Paris, Georgia, sir. I guarantee you that.”
Because when his mother needed another boy for the dancing or needed an extra set of eyes on the students, he got dragged into it. He could “yes, ma’am” and “yes, sir” his way through a fricking White House dinner if he had to, and all without using the wrong fork or saying anything inappropriate.
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