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Code of Honor

Page 6

by Radclyffe


  As Cam followed Blair to the ring, watching the muscles ripple in her bare shoulders and her thighs bunch with each determined stride, she considered that a workout might also be a form of seduction.

  Blair slowed, looked back over her shoulder, and said, “Spar first. Play later.”

  “You should stop reading my mind.”

  Blair grinned. “I don’t think so. But you’d better keep your mind on your guard. I’m not feeling friendly.”

  Cam laughed. “Well then, let’s see what you’ve got.”

  *

  Loren watched Skylar finish her breakfast in a nonchalant, unhurried fashion, while trying to work out the angles—what would be in it for Skylar to come out of the dark like this if she actually were Loren’s handler. Or, looking at the other side of the coin, who Skylar might be working for if her goal was to expose Loren as an undercover agent. Logic and Loren’s experience told her the second was a much more likely scenario—Skylar was lying. Maybe one of the middlemen Loren used to procure arms had gotten suspicious and run a background trace. Her cover was good, but if anyone searched far enough back, they’d discover she didn’t have much of a history before she went into the army. At least, no history that anyone could find. She had a family, though—parents and a younger brother. Her only demand when she’d accepted the offer of a nameless man who had appeared at her tent in the middle of the desert in the middle of the night offering her the opportunity to serve her country in a way, as he put it, “that would be far more significant than anything you might do if you stayed in the regular forces,” had been that her family would be untouchable. He had assured her that was possible if she was willing to leave her past behind—all of it. He’d given her a week to decide, and she hadn’t slept for most of it, wondering if there was some way to tell them what was happening without putting them at risk. The best she’d been able to do was ask them to trust her and to tell them she’d be in touch again when she could. She’d Skyped with her mother, and she could see her mother’s brilliant mathematical mind analyzing what she wasn’t saying, the way she always had. Her mother had looked at her for a long time in silence and finally said, “You’ve always made us proud. I know that will never change. Be careful. We’ll talk to you soon.”

  Loren had talked to her father next, and he’d had that slightly befuddled look he got when he was concentrating on a new project and part of his mind was elsewhere, but at the very end, when she’d said good night, his focus had grown steady and clear. He’d smiled at her and said, “Good night is a good phrase. I never did like good-bye. I love you.”

  A deep background check might tag her past as questionable, but she would rather she be vulnerable than them. Maybe Skylar was the bait someone had sent to try to convince her that she was actually talking to her handler. Then again, Skylar had her burn-phone number, and no one except her handler had that. She bought the phones herself and sent the number by text to a drop-box number after rerouting it around the world half a dozen times. Someone might possibly have killed her handler and taken her phone, but the chances of that… She ran the probabilities in her mind nearly as fast as her mother would have and came up with a pretty small number.

  “Make a decision yet?” Skylar asked.

  “I guess you forgot to add mind reader to your list of accomplishments.”

  “Not really.” Skylar wiped her mouth on a paper napkin, balled it up, and slid it into her pocket. She tugged another paper napkin from the holder and methodically cleaned each utensil she’d used as well as the rim of the cup. Her movements were practiced and, unless someone was watching her very carefully, not at all obvious.

  “Okay, that’s impressive.”

  Skylar laughed shortly. “Never can be too careful.”

  “I know.”

  Leaning back, Skylar shrugged. “There’s not much else I can do to convince you. And, really, if you were an easy sell, I’d be worried. But we don’t have a lot of time. Things are heating up, and I’m not sure we have a great picture of exactly where all the pieces are going to fall. We need to get out in front of this.”

  “There’s nothing going on with the Renegades that hasn’t been going on for the last couple of years. So you’re here because of the militia.”

  Skylar’s left eyebrow rose an eighth of an inch. “Well, I see you’ve made a decision.”

  She had, and it wasn’t because of any conclusion she’d come to through logic or analysis. Her gut told her Skylar was on the level, and her gut had kept her alive this long. If she was wrong, then she could hope that she’d figure it out before Skylar reported back to whoever had hired her. If she took Skylar out and made it look like an accident, she’d buy time before someone else came looking. She’d just have to keep Skylar close. “So? What’s going on with the militia?”

  “That’s what we want to find out. Right now, all we’re hearing is a lot of chatter on the Internet and reports of high-level deals from various informants—details murky.” Skylar leaned forward. “We need to compare notes.”

  Loren scanned the diner. No one was paying much attention to them, but she was never happy about staying in one place for too long. If they bumped into someone she knew, she wasn’t sure how she’d explain her early-morning breakfast with the babe who’d showed up out of nowhere the night before. She pulled her wallet from her back pocket and laid a twenty on the table. “Let’s go somewhere else to talk.”

  “Where do you suggest?”

  “My place.”

  *

  Cam landed hard on her back and tucked her chin to prevent her skull from slamming into the thin canvas mat. Blair dropped beside her and trapped her right arm in a figure-four hold before flipping her onto her stomach. The pressure in her shoulder increased as Blair ratcheted her arm higher between her shoulder blades. Cam tapped the mat and the pressure disappeared. She rolled over and Blair knelt on the mat, her hands relaxed on her thighs.

  “Nice move,” Cam said.

  “Your attention was wavering.” Blair grinned.

  “No, it wasn’t. You were just a little faster that time.”

  “I’ve been wanting to try that move.” Blair shrugged. “Had enough?”

  They’d been at it for forty-five minutes. Cam’s T-shirt was soaked with sweat. Blair’s hair lay in dark golden strands along her neck, her face glowed, and her eyes gleamed bright and clear. “If you’re satisfied, I could do with a shower and a late breakfast.”

  “Shower here or at home?” Blair asked.

  Cam pushed herself up to a sitting position and flipped the wet hair off her forehead. She eyed Blair slowly. “I think home would be safer.”

  Blair laughed and rose gracefully to her feet. “Something you have in mind?”

  “Yeah. A move I’ve been wanting to try.”

  Chapter Seven

  Cam held the line while the operator at Quantico patched her through to Eddie Byrnes, an FBI special agent she’d worked with when she was in the investigative division. They’d run a few joint task forces together, chasing drug money being laundered through seemingly legal gambling operations in Atlantic City. Eddie had moved over into counterterrorism after the bombings, and she’d eventually been rerouted to Homeland Security. Counterterrorism covered a lot of potential threat areas, from monitoring terrorist activities overseas to ferreting out sleeper cells at home. Eddie would be working closely with teams monitoring subversive domestic groups, and he’d know who she ought to talk to. She just had to get the information from him without revealing exactly why she needed it.

  “Byrnes,” a raspy voice said.

  “Eddie, it’s Cam Roberts.”

  “Cam, hey. I hear congratulations are in order.”

  “Ah, thanks,” Cam said, still not used to how her private life had suddenly become public. When you married the president’s daughter, privacy became wishful thinking.

  “Nice catch. Any advice?”

  Cam laughed. “’Fraid not. Just lucky.”

  “Uh-
huh. So—what’s doing?”

  “Can you spare me a few minutes?”

  “Sure—what’s your schedule like?”

  “I was hoping today.”

  “Must be important,” Eddie said, probing a little.

  “It’s time sensitive. I’ll come to you—you still based out of Richmond?”

  “So I heard you were HS now. They give you your own plane too?”

  “A loaner.”

  Eddie snorted. “Hate to disappoint you, but I’m in DC. You can take a cab.”

  “Even better. When and where?”

  “How about Duggin’s around three?”

  “I’ll be there. Thanks, Eddie.”

  “Sure thing.”

  Cam hung up and checked a text that had come in while they’d talked. Lucinda. Meeting at 1345. Her office. Cam sighed. Back to the White House.

  On my way, Cam texted back.

  Blair had gone to the spare room she used as a studio to paint, and Cam stopped to say good-bye. Blair had her back to the doorway, applying background colors to a five-by-five canvas in broad, sweeping strokes of magenta and purple. She was listening to something through her earphones and swaying rhythmically with each bold stroke. She’d stripped off her shirt and wore just a faded green tank top and low-cut jeans. She was barefoot, her hair damp from the shower they’d finally shared after a fast and furious few moments in bed. The lovemaking had felt as cathartic as the workout in the gym and nearly as rigorous. Despite the intense connection they’d shared just a short while before, Cam chafed under the uneasy sense that something was off between them. She suspected she was the cause—she didn’t want Blair anywhere near the campaign trail until the threat of reprisal for the thwarted attack and apprehension of Jennifer Pattee was resolved. And she couldn’t do a damn thing to stop her. Deciding not to inflict her dark mood on Blair, she turned away.

  “Call me if you’re going to be late,” Blair said from behind her.

  Cam turned back. “Sorry, I didn’t want to disturb you.”

  Blair studied her solemnly, her brilliant blue eyes stormy gray. “You bother me in many ways, Cameron, but being near me has never been one of them.”

  Cam walked over and kissed her. “I love to watch you paint.”

  Blair held both hands out away from Cam’s crisp white shirt and tailored charcoal jacket. “You won’t love me if I get paint on you.”

  Cam grinned. “I might. Depends on the circumstances.”

  Blair leaned in and nipped at Cam’s lip. “Guess we’ll have to see, then.”

  “I don’t expect to be too late. Meetings. You know how that goes.”

  “All right. Whatever you need to do.”

  “I’m flying to Atlanta first thing in the morning.”

  Blair nodded. “If you don’t mind, I think I’ll go home for a while.”

  “Yes. Of course.” Cam’s condo was their Washington residence, but it’d never been home for Blair. The sanctuary she had made for herself in New York City across from Gramercy Park was home. The loft space, the wide-open studio, but perhaps most of all, the city itself—where she could step out the door and disappear into the throngs of people—were her touchstones. The city represented freedom to her like no other place ever had. Right now, facing the constraints of heightened security on the campaign trail, she probably needed that freedom, or at least the semblance of freedom, more than she had in a long time. “When?”

  “Tomorrow after you leave.”

  “Do you want me to join you there?”

  Blair’s eyes softened and the storm clouds disappeared. She leaned her cheek against Cam’s shoulder. “Of course I do. There’s nowhere in the world I want to be without you.”

  Cam kissed her forehead. “Then I’ll be there. Soon as I can.”

  Blair kissed her neck. “I know. I love you.”

  “I love you too,” Cam said quietly.

  *

  Lucinda’s aide directed Cam into Lucinda’s West Wing office as soon as she arrived. Paula Stark and Adam Eisley—Andrew Powell’s political strategist and campaign manager, a fortysomething Ivy Leaguer with hawk-like eyes—were already waiting in the formal sitting area. Lucinda put aside a report and joined them.

  “Can I order anything up from the kitchen for you, Cam?” Lucinda asked.

  “No, I’m fine. Thanks.” Cam nodded to the others and sat down.

  “I won’t keep you long, then,” Lucinda said. “Paula and Adam have been discussing the itinerary, and since there’s some difference of opinion as to just how we should proceed, I thought you ought to be here for the discussion.”

  Adam looked like he had developed an acute ulcer. “This is a waste of time, as I’ve already noted. There’s nothing to discuss.”

  Stark’s normally calm dark eyes sparked. “You can’t just make unilateral decisions about areas outside your expertise.”

  “I can when my job takes precedence over everyone else’s—which it does if any of you want to have a job in a few more months.”

  “We’re not talking about job security here, we’re—”

  “If you did the job you were—”

  Cam followed the thinly veiled insults being hurled back and forth, as to who knew what and who had the final say, for a few minutes, then interrupted. “I take it this is about Blair.”

  Paula and Adam looked at her as if just now realizing they were discussing her wife. Paula blushed. Adam just shook his head in apparent disgust.

  Paula said, “For the record, I’m opposed to Ms. Powell accompanying the campaign entourage given the recent circumstances.”

  Adam made a sound like rocks tumbling down a metal chute. “What the hell does that mean?”

  Lucinda said, “We’ve had a recent spate of death threats aimed at POTUS.”

  “So what else is new? That’s part of the job description.” He cocked his head at Cam. “Isn’t the whole point of the Secret Service to see nothing comes of it?”

  “Yes,” Can said, aware that Lucinda had purposefully not told Adam about the actual attack, “but when the density of threats increases, we take notice.”

  “So—put more bodies around him.”

  “Then you’ll complain we’re keeping him away from the public,” Stark muttered.

  “Cam,” Lucinda said calmly, “what are the chances the security threat level will be lowered by the time we depart?”

  Cam sighed. “A situation like this can change quickly—there’s no way to say.”

  Adam grunted. “There you have it. We can’t keep the president under wraps, and if he goes on the trail, Blair goes.”

  “Blair isn’t essential,” Paula said. “Not enough to outweigh the risks. She’s been a target before. She’s an obvious secondary now.” She glanced at Lucinda. “I can’t order her to stay, but you or the president could.”

  “Look,” Adam said. “No one wants anyone in harm’s way, but that’s the reality of the game. None of you can say whether next week, or next month, or four months from now will be any safer.” He glared at Cam. “Right?”

  “Yes,” Cam said reluctantly.

  Paula sat forward in her chair. “From a security point of view, it makes sound tactical sense to remove an obvious secondary target and put all our resources into securing the primary, at least until we can investigate some of the potential threats.”

  “I agree,” Cam said. “If we could have a few weeks to get this cleared up before Blair—”

  “You just said you can’t guarantee a quick resolution,” Adam said, “and the president has a fight on his hands right now.”

  Lucinda rubbed her eyes. “Cam, I know how you feel, but I’m afraid Adam is right. The opposition is gaining strength all the time, and Andrew, right or wrong, has gotten the reputation of being remote and removed from the people. Never mind that he’s working thirty-six hours a day handling foreign crises and economic upheaval here at home. The voters need to believe that he is one of them, that he understands their proble
ms, that he can walk in their shoes. And the only way for him to do that is to get out there, with them.”

  Adam stood and looked pointedly at Cam. “You’ll just have to see that the people assigned to protect them do their jobs.”

  “Thank you for your time,” Lucinda said, rising. “Anything you need, Cam, just let me know.”

  Stark’s jaw looked tight enough to crack, but she said nothing as Adam turned and walked out.

  “Thank you.” Cam appreciated Lucinda’s offer of support, but the one thing she needed, Lucinda couldn’t give her. A guarantee that Blair would be safe.

  *

  “So,” Sky said, glancing once around the cavernous garage. Three motorcycle bodies in various stages of disassembly occupied the center of the room, and one entire wall was taken up by a counter covered with tools. Shelves above and below sagged under jumbles of spare parts. A few small windows on one long wall let in a little light, casting everything in a gray pall. Despite the clutter, the place seemed unusually clean for a garage. “This is home?”

  Loren hung her leather jacket on a peg beside the double-wide pull-down door and hit the button for the automatic closer. She kept the temperature in the garage in the high sixties—cool enough to weld damaged motorcycle chassis in comfort, but high enough to inhabit when not working. She pointed to a half wall toward the far end of the room. “I sleep down there.”

  “Cozy,” Sky said.

  “It suffices.” Loren poured water into a glass coffeepot, filled the reservoir of a drip coffeemaker, dumped grounds into a filter, and set the pot to brew. Leaning against the counter, Loren braced her elbows on the wooden ledge and surveyed Sky. She’d unzipped her jacket and stood with her hands on her hips, looking sexy and cocky and unsettlingly seductive in her tight tank and hip-hugging jeans. Loren ignored the twinge of attraction. “So, why are you here?”

 

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