Die Run Hide

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by P. M. Kavanaugh




  Die Run Hide

  PM Kavanaugh

  Avon, Massachusetts

  This edition published by

  Crimson Romance

  an imprint of F+W Media, Inc.

  10151 Carver Road, Suite 200

  Blue Ash, Ohio 45242

  www.crimsonromance.com

  Copyright © 2012 by Patrice Marie Kavanaugh

  ISBN 10: 1-4405-5161-8

  ISBN 13: 978-1-4405-5161-1

  eISBN 10: 1-4405-5141-3

  eISBN 13: 978-1-4405-5141-3

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, corporations, institutions, organizations, events, or locales in this novel are either the product of the author’s imagination or, if real, used fictitiously. The resemblance of any character to actual persons (living or dead) is entirely coincidental.

  Cover art © bigstockphoto.com/istockphoto.com/© epicurean

  This book is dedicated to my husband, Peter, who inspires me to be my best self and loves me even when I’m not. And to my sister, Kay, for introducing me to the fictional characters who sparked my imagination for this story and for sharing in the twists and turns of my journey to publication.

  Contents

  Acknowledgments

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  About the Author

  Also Available

  Acknowledgments

  The following people played a special role in bringing this book to fruition.

  Sharon, Marcia and Brandy, talented writers all, became my first critique-and-support group, but mostly support. Despite geographic dispersal, they remain so today. Jane Underwood, founder of the fabulous The Writing Salon, taught my first creative writing class and set me on my way. Nanou Matteson, teacher, mentor and unwavering believer, was the first person to convince me this book had a real chance of being published. Tiffany Colter, writing coach and book doctor, helped deepen the emotional pull with her repeated question, “Feelings?” Glen Shannon provided the German translations and Elio Acosta, the Cuban Spanish translations. (I claim all mistakes as my own!)

  Beta readers, Kay, Patty, Amanda and Jack, highlighted favorite words, phrases, scenes and posed need-to-know questions. BAM friends — Chris, Gail, Jessica, Kathleen, Marlita and Susan — asked me to share excerpts at our annual weekend retreats and offered to read an early version. (Girlfriends, this version is way better!)

  Members of the Maumee Valley Romance Writers of America welcomed me with open arms, cheered my writing and publishing efforts, and shared their industry smarts. My family listened to dozens of still-working-on-the-book, then still-trying-to-get-published tales at numerous gatherings. Are you ready for tales about the sequel?

  To anyone not mentioned here, please know how much I appreciate your enthusiastic inquiries over the years along the lines of, “How’s the book coming?”

  Venti-sized thanks to you all!

  Chapter 1

  “They’ve arrived.”

  The words shot through Anika’s ear comm. Her pulse jumped and she sipped in a breath to steady herself. “Copy that.”

  Facedown inside the blast-proof container, the operative wriggled her arm forward until it reached the switch. She pressed the glowing green button and the short end of the rectangular box slid open.

  A light breeze carried in the urban perfume of asphalt, diesel, and cut grass. Straight ahead, a crosshatch of blue beams indicated the access point into the museum. The beams emitted a low buzz, like a swarm of drowsy flies.

  Anika tugged the laser out from under her and set the barrel, coiled in a tight circle, in front of the beams. She was careful not to touch them and set off the museum’s alarm system. Then she activated her wrist monitor.

  A hologram of the top floor boardroom appeared. Five men and two women in business suits sat at a large oval table cluttered with handhelds, disposable news discs, and coffee tumblers. On the surface, nothing suggested a gathering of two different terrorist cells. Except for the man at the head of the table.

  His erect posture and unblinking gaze telegraphed military training. Now the director of Columbus, Ohio’s New Museum, the ex-army general used the art institution as a front for terrorist operations. No one would question his use of this room for a meeting with the museum’s biggest fundraisers. Not even today, when the building was closed to the public.

  A fair-skinned woman, blond hair knotted at her neck, removed an e-pad from her purse. A founding member of First Aryan, her icy blue eyes had witnessed half a dozen lethal attacks in the past two years. The museum director and the men on either side of her belonged to the same cell.

  Opposite them sat the other woman and her compatriots from Syria Free.

  Both organizations had vowed the total destruction of Israel. The first one specialized in attacks against the Jewish nation’s allies while the second targeted synagogues during holy days.

  Two more men entered and took up positions at opposite ends of the room. Padded all-black uniforms signaled their status as bomber bodyguards, the deadly new twist on security measures adopted by the most zealous cells. At the first sign of a breach, the director would give the order to detonate. Any chance of capture and interrogation would be destroyed along with everyone inside the kill zone.

  “All accounted for.” Gianni’s faint northern Italian accent threaded through his words.

  It startled Anika, how the timbre of his voice reverberated through her body. It was as if he were lying right beside her instead of sitting in the transport vehicle two blocks away. Lying here, with his lips pressed to her ear, like when they were … but no, they hadn’t been together like that in ages.

  She jerked her mind back to the mission. Told herself that her elevated heart rate wasn’t caused by the sound of his voice, but by its message. “Go time” was fast approaching.

  She flexed her toe against the endorphin patch in the inner sole of her boot. After one slow breath, she was calmer, like a warm wave had rolled through her. The effect wouldn’t last long, just a few minutes, just until she needed adrenaline back in her system to rev her through the mission.

  The bomber guards trained their eyes on the surveillance monitors. The visual sweeps displayed only what U.N.I.T., the global counterterrorist organization that she worked for, wanted them to see — a closed building and lightly trafficked streets. The alley where Anika lay in her container appeared empty except for recycling bins.

  She studied her target, the guard on the right. Taking him out would trigger the other bodyguard. The resulting blast would look like an accident by one of their own.

  “Deactivating entry point,” Gianni said. The blue beams preventing access into the museum flickered and disappeared. “Begin weapon prep.” His voice had evened out, the accent almost undetectable.

  Had he used his endorphin patch, too? Anika smiled. Unlikely.

  She
aimed the silver tip of the laser at the now-open vent and pressed the button on the weapon’s handle. The barrel uncoiled like a snake and slithered its way inside the narrow tunnel. The plastic silicone sheath, no thicker than two fingers, slid without a sound along the tunnel floor and up two levels.

  Her lips curved in admiration. The latest pride-and-joy of the agency’s weapons group was working without a hitch. When it neared the vent overlooking the boardroom, she pressed another button. The laser stilled and settled, like an animal waiting to strike.

  “Weapon in place.”

  “Copy that,” Gianni replied. “Downloading in progress. Wait for my signal.”

  Anika eased back from the opening. At least the midmorning temperature still registered in the mild range. She flattened her arms and legs against the hard surface and sought the welcome sensation of cool metal against warm skin. Her heart thudded like steady drumbeats against the bottom of the box.

  The endorphin was starting to wear off. How much longer?

  She had to wait for the ops team to finish downloading the logistics for the group’s planned attack against the supporters of the state senator who had negotiated the latest Mideast peace agreement. Then she would take her shot.

  This was one mission Anika had no qualms about executing. Taking out terrorists in order to save civilians appealed to her sense of rightness. She wished more missions were so black and white.

  She started to re-scan the museum’s interior. The front door flew open and a jumble of arms, legs, and youthful energy streamed inside.

  First schoolers by the looks of them, six- to ten-year-olds. They weren’t part of the mission scenario.

  “Gianni.”

  “I see them.” His voice thickened with the cadence of his native language.

  The children jostled one another and the adult chaperones kept circling them, trying to maintain order. A museum guide began to address the group and motioned for them to move to the right.

  Anika held steady. The endorphin continued to fizzle away. She wished she had agreed to a second patch.

  A little boy ran behind a pillar and an adult chaperone chased after him.

  “Team B will intercept.” Gianni came back in. “ETA three minutes. Until then, stand down.”

  Anika suppressed a sigh of impatience. She hated in-between time, when doubts and questions and what-ifs hit like bursts of laser fire.

  She switched back to the boardroom. The museum director sketched a pattern of x’s and o’s on the wall board.

  How much longer will the meeting last? How much longer before I have to take the shot? Will the kids be far enough away by then?

  She pressed the wrist monitor again. Boredom had settled on the young faces as the guide talked. Anika sympathized. She, too, had been dragged to plenty of museums on national holidays.

  The uniforms on the kids hadn’t changed in the five years since she had worn one. Although she had been raised in a different federal orphanage, the square-cut tops and pants were the same dirt brown color she had lived in for eighteen long years. She was willing to bet they were made of the same indestructible synthetic that had scratched her skin and left a constant rash on the back of her neck.

  Her own forced museum trips had almost killed Anika’s interest in art. It hadn’t become important to her until high school drawing classes.

  She spotted one girl, a head taller than the rest, just like she had been at that age. The girl wore the same bowl-shaped haircut the orphanage had given her, with the dumb fringe two short millimeters below the hairline.

  Anika wore her hair long now, a silky black curtain of rebellion that hung well past her shoulders, usually cinched in a low braid when she was in the field.

  The girl stood apart from the others, one arm wrapped across her waist, hand cupped in her chin. She had angled her face toward the guide as if paying close attention to every word.

  Anika zoomed in on her. The girl’s eyes flicked from place to place, taking in the other kids, the adults, the artwork, the surveillance cams.

  Be careful, Anika wanted to warn her. They’re watching you. Don’t let them see how clever you are.

  She switched back to the boardroom. The museum director jabbed his finger at the wall board. He glared at one of the Syria Free men who slouched in his chair, arms crossed behind his head. The expression on the younger man’s face mirrored the blankness of some of the kids. Except in his case, Anika speculated, the boredom masked darker emotions.

  “Team B has arrived.” Gianni’s tone had evened out.

  One of the operatives approached the adults standing together in a corner. Another one shut off the interactive display of the Second Battle of Fallujah, setting off protests from the kids. The tall girl Anika had noticed earlier crouched low. Her eyes darted from the operatives to the kids to the security cams.

  In the boardroom, the director turned off the wall board and the blond slipped the e-pad back into her purse.

  Come on. Anika switched back to the gallery. The operatives were herding everyone through the high archway and back to the first floor. Move.

  The museum director stood at the head of the table, his back ramrod straight, issuing final orders.

  “Downloading complete,” Gianni said. “Get ready.”

  Anika reached for the laser, re-checked her grip. Still dry.

  She took a final look at her monitor. Saw the departing backs of the kids and the operatives. Started to ease out a breath, then stopped. Where’s the girl?

  “On my count,” Gianni said.

  “Wait.” Anika pressed the buttons on her wristband and scanned the galleries. “There’s a kid missing.”

  “What?”

  “A girl. She didn’t make it out.”

  “Team B has cleared everyone. Proceed.”

  “No,” Anika said, still scanning.

  In the boardroom, the two sides were pushing back chairs. The bomber guards took their exit positions, hands inside their pockets where the detonators were kept. Anika’s target stood closest to the door.

  She changed visual again. In the corridor outside the boardroom, a tall slender figure stood against the wall.

  “I found her. Top floor.”

  “I can’t confirm visual.”

  “She’s in the corridor. East wall.”

  “No time,” Gianni said, his accent back.

  The girl inched forward, her gaze fixed on a spot above the boardroom door. A yellow light glowed a warning to stay away from the closed session inside.

  “Get her out.” Anika tried to swallow, but her mouth was bone dry.

  “Drop the bomber,” Gianni commanded. “Do it.”

  Anika switched back to the boardroom. She sighted the bomber, inhaled, held her breath and positioned her finger over the trigger.

  Chapter 2

  “Tell them the laser jammed.”

  Gianni stopped Anika outside the security checkpoint of the agency’s subterranean complex. A strand of his dark-blond hair had escaped from the band secured low on his neck.

  The other operatives had already filed past and were moving through a narrow passageway toward the guarded entrance.

  Anika stared at the receding backs of the two men who had retrieved her and the container, then avoided all eye contact during the tense journey back to New Angeles.

  “Did you hear me?” Gianni’s brown eyes hardened.

  “She was a kid,” Anika shot back. “I did the right thing.”

  “They won’t see it that way.”

  “I don’t care.”

  “I do.” He took her shoulders between strong hands.

  “I’ll take the discipline.” Her mind cringed in anticipation of it. “Even Isolation, if it comes to that.”

  “It won’t be Isolation.” Gianni’s fingers tightened. “Tell them.”

  “The mission discs won’t back me up. Neither will the weapons techs. And what about them?” She nodded in the direction of her team members who had now cleare
d the checkpoint.

  “I’ll take care of it.”

  “You can’t keep covering for me. This isn’t like Budapest.” Anika pulled his hands off her. “It’s not working, Gianni. It never has for me.”

  She pushed past him, tugging at the neckline of her bodysuit.

  Inside the safe zone, Gianni swung her around to face him, but before he could say anything, before she could cut him off, another operative called out.

  “Gianni, there you are. I’ve been looking for you.” Jewel’s heels clicked along the cement floor. With her dark-rimmed eyes and rosy cheeks, the petite curvy blond looked like she had just come from Make-up. The smell of orange blossom hovered around her like a citrus-scented cloud. She flicked a glance at Anika.

  Every streak of dirt darkened, every drop of sweat itched under Jewel’s appraising stare. Anika’s hands curled into fists.

  Jewel tilted her head up at Gianni, her glossy lips parting in a private smile. “Our mission’s been moved up. Briefing in three minutes. Shall we?” She slid her hand down his arm and wrapped her fingers around his.

  Anika couldn’t take her eyes off those fingers, their nails coated in pale lilac.

  “Give me a minute, Jules.”

  Anika stiffened. Jules? Was she the reason for Gianni’s recent aloofness? Heat flared inside her, igniting a fireball in her chest.

  “Remember. The laser jammed.” Gianni had turned back to her, his eyes unreadable in the flat artificial light.

  Anika glanced from him to Jewel. “You’d better get going.” She took two strides, then stopped.

  The second most powerful person in the agency blocked her path.

  Even in ultra-heels, Second only reached Anika’s shoulder. Despite her diminutive size, she exuded the power of a much bigger woman. Power that came as much from her mental prowess as from her position.

  Before Anika could say anything, Gianni spoke up. “Weapon malfunction.”

  Second switched her laser-beam intensity to him. “Where are the discs?”

  “Tech has them.”

  “You can go.” Second included Jewel in her gaze. Then, returning to Anika, she said, “Command’s office. Now.”

 

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