Crazy Cool
Page 1
Contents
Title Page
Author’s Note
Prologue
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
Preview of Crazy Hot
About the Author
Also by Tara Janzen
Copyright Page
AUTHOR’S NOTE
Anyone familiar with the beautiful city of Denver, Colorado, will notice that I changed a few things to suit the story. Most notably, I took Steele Street and turned it into an alley in lower downtown, a restored historical neighborhood in the heart of Denver known as LoDo. Also, I would like to thank Nigel for sharing his encyclopedic knowledge of muscle cars—there was no question too obscure, no answer that didn’t tell me more than I’d asked. A special thanks to Stan for taking me under the hood and letting me get a little grease on my hands. Any mistakes in the book are mine . . . in other words, if one of these cars “splits a gut” it’s because I didn’t take my mechanics’ advice!
PROLOGUE
Washington, D.C.
GENERAL BUCK GRANT, commanding officer of an outlaw team of black ops warriors known as Special Defense Force (SDF), stared down at the orders in his hand and swore under his breath. He’d been in this man’s army for thirty years and seen plenty of bureaucratic nonsense come down the pike, but this took the friggin’ cake. What in the hell, he wondered, was going on over at the Pentagon?
He threw the sheaf of papers down on his desk and sank deeper into his chair. Then he swore again. Politics, that’s what was going on, bad politics. Nothing else could have gotten two of his SDF operators assigned to a low-level security detail for a friggin’ art auction.
It didn’t make any sense, especially given his team’s current situation, which was going from bad to worse on the hour, every hour. He picked up the papers again, scanned the page, and yes, there it was, at the bottom, “. . . art auction benefit at the Denver Botanical Gardens.”
Unbelievable. The brass wanted him to pull his men off a top priority mission in Colombia, South America, to do guard duty at a garden party? Davies must be out of his ever-lovin’ mind to have let this get by him, but there it was, in black and white.
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Office of the Honorable William J. Davies,
Assistant Secretary of Defense for Special Operations and Low-Intensity Conflict.
To: General Richard “Buck” Grant
Re: Special Defense Force (SDF)
Mission: Security Detail, Denver, Colorado
Buck,
Don’t kill the messenger. I don’t dream this crap up. I just expedite it. Your men have been requested for a security detail in Denver, specifically Christian Hawkins and Dylan Hart—so find them and get their butts on a plane to Denver. The CIA pulled out of northern Colombia last night. The Marines you somehow shanghaied into helping your team have also been ordered out. The mission is over, Buck, by order of the secretary of defense, and from what I can see of the scoreboard, you lost:
• Creed Rivera—taken hostage by the National Revolutionary Forces (NRF), a narco-guerrilla group terrorizing northern Colombia; presumed dead (Rpt. 32A.91M)
• J.T. Chronopolous—taken hostage by the NRF, presumed dead (Rpt. 32A.92M)
That still leaves three SDF operators running loose in the jungle:
• Dylan Hart
• Christian Hawkins
• Peter “Kid Chaos” Chronopolous
They failed to negotiate a release, and we’ve run out of time for a rescue, which leaves us with damage control and to salvage what we can, like the lives of the men still down there, before even more crap hits the fan.
I know your guys don’t play well with others, but SDF operators have pensions, too, Buck, unless they go AWOL and end up with Unauthorized Absence (UA) on their records. Don’t let that happen. Bring them in. Let them do themselves and the secretary of defense a favor: Hart and Hawkins, August 29, suits and ties, armed and dangerous, seven P.M., security detail for an art auction benefit at the Denver Botanical Gardens.
You do this for me, Buck, and I’ll see what I can do to get your boys set loose on the NRF bastards who killed Creed Rivera and J.T. Chronopolous. They were both fine soldiers.
Buck tossed the papers back on the desk. Davies was missing some facts. As of yesterday, Dylan was already back in Denver. He had negotiated one release, and Creed was only half dead. Report 32A.91M was wrong. Buck was praying 32A.92M was wrong as well.
He checked his calendar—August 27. He had two days to get Hawkins out of Colombia and into a suit and tie. Then, when this garden party was over, SDF was going back, and they were going to be taking names the hard way.
CHAPTER
1
Two days later
“TWENTY BUCKS says the guy in the Armani suit is hired muscle.”
Hired muscle? Katya Dekker looked up from her auction catalog.
“Where?” She glanced around the outdoor amphitheater, her brow furrowing. She knew what her secretary, Alex Zheng, meant. She knew exactly what he meant, and she could only think of one reason for there to be any “hired muscle” at an art auction: her.
The thought only deepened her scowl.
She followed Alex’s gaze across the delicately lit nighttime grounds of the Denver Botanic Gardens, searching through the crowd and the two dozen canopied tropical huts that had been erected for the dining comfort of the evening’s guests. She found the “hired muscle” on the edge of a group of people next to the caterer’s tent.
He was good, discreet, but she could spot a security detail at a hundred yards—and he had “high-priced bodyguard” written all over him, very high priced.
“What do you think of the suit?” Alex said. “I almost bought that one myself.”
“No way, babe. Too structured. Too conservative,” she told him, her gaze going over the man in the distance. There was nothing particularly remarkable about him, other than his choirboy looks, his shock of silky brown hair, and the alertness of his every move—the dead giveaway. He was quartering the gardens with his gaze, looking for God only knew what. Fund-raising art auctions hosted by the Denver Botanic Gardens were not hotbeds of intrigue.
“Not with my blue silk shirt,” Alex countered. “So you don’t know him?”
“No,” she said, trying to keep her jaw from clenching, trying to hold back the first, faint teasing of the headache she felt coming on. Even for August, the day had been unconscionably hot, and for Denver unbelievably humid, and the night wasn’t setting up to be much better—especially now.
A bodyguard. Dammit. She knew who was behind this, just like she knew this wasn’t the sort of event that required a bodyguard. Bottles of French wine and magnums of French champagne were being opened by bartenders in tuxedos. White-boxed dinners tied with forest green bows were being delivered to the tables by waiters in tails. Every female patron at the art auction had been given an orchid wrist corsage upon arrival, and each man sported a boutonniere of exotic rain forest leaves and a bit of liana—even the choirboy. Tonight’s auction was for the Amazon River Basin Coalition and in honor of t
he Botanic Gardens’ new orchid pavilion. Alex had designed the boutonnieres, his contribution, and they were nothing short of fabulous, very masculine, very primal. They would speak to the Rain Forest God in every man, and to his wallet, according to Alex, who had impeccable taste and instincts—two of the many reasons he was Katya’s right-hand man.
His six years with the Los Angeles Police Department were another.
“What about the other man?” he asked. “Next to the Jaguar Gate.”
Two bodyguards?
“My mother wouldn’t dare,” she muttered, biting back a curse and turning toward the Jaguar Gate, a multicolumned, elaborately constructed plywood and papier-mâché portico serving as a grand entryway into the party.
There was only one man standing beneath the fierce black cat bridging the last pair of palm tree posts, and he turned away just as she looked at him. All she saw was his back and the champagne flute in his hand as he disappeared into the trees, but that was enough to make the hair on her nape rise in sudden, unexpected awareness.
She hadn’t known the first guy, but this one . . .
After a couple of seconds, she let out her breath in a soft rush and told herself to get a grip. Of course she didn’t know him. Maybe it was the cut of the stranger’s dark hair, longer than most of the men’s at the exclusive and rather elegantly conservative soirée, that had sparked her fleeting instant of recognition. Maybe it was his height, or the way he carried himself, or maybe it had been nothing at all.
She’d been wrong before in her life, an inordinate number of times actually, especially about men.
“Your mother would dare anything she thought she could get away with.” Alex belied her statement with a short laugh. “As a matter of fact, her latest pork-barreling in Congress was a consummate dare to every budget-watcher in Washington.”
Katya cast her secretary an annoyed glance. He did not look like someone who read the Los Angeles Times and the Wall Street Journal every single morning of his life—but he did, religiously, usually while drinking a double espresso and wearing his autographed Lakers jersey, which he’d had his tailor integrate into a cinnabar-colored silk robe. His hair was short, jet black, expertly cut, bleached gold on the tips, and moussed to artistic perfection. He had beautiful Asian/American features, a black belt in tae kwon do, and a boyfriend he’d left in L.A. His suit was Armani, his shoes Chinese red, his shirt snowy white and worn open at the throat with a loosely knotted Prada tie.
She didn’t know how she was going to keep him with her in Denver, Colorado, or what she was going to do without him when he’d had enough of the former cow town and hightailed it back to Los Angeles.
“That’s going to cost you a mocha latte,” she said. Growing up in Denver as Senator Marilyn Dekker’s daughter, Katya had lived, breathed, and eaten politics every day of her life. As an adult, she didn’t touch the stuff. She voted. End of story. That, however, did not dissuade Alex from keeping her informed of every maternal political detail he gleaned out of the newspapers or saw on CNN—and every bit of unwanted news cost him a latte.
“And I’m still up on you by seven for winning the point spread on the Lakers game. The last time you got a mocha latte out of me was before the last Ice Age.”
True, but he didn’t have to rub it in.
“Mr. Armani Suit and his friend probably don’t have anything to do with me. Let’s just ignore them, and maybe they’ll go away,” she suggested, glancing back at her catalog. She did not want to deal with unwanted bodyguards. Not tonight or any other night. “Our painting is up first. Maybe we should go check and make sure it’s still in one piece.”
Katya’s newest addition to her art dealership business, the Toussi Gallery of Denver, had donated a large, beautiful floral painting by Oleg Henri to the auction. The staff at the Botanic Gardens had picked it up two days ago. It only made sense to go check on the painting before it went up for bid.
But Alex was like a dog with a bone.
“Sorry, luv. You’re the only one here worthy of high-caliber security. My guess is your mother sicced the two freelancers on you. Though God knows why, unless she knows something we don’t,” he said, his tone of voice suggesting she give him her undivided attention until they figured this out. “I guess we could ask her Sunday morning.”
“No, we couldn’t,” Kat was quick to say. Her mother was kicking off her campaign with a brief stop in Denver on Sunday, but there had been no plans for them to get together. Marilyn was too busy—thank God. Stifling a sigh, Katya looked up at him again. “My mother is paranoid.”
“About everything,” he agreed, tracking the choirboy bodyguard with his gaze. “But this . . . I think this is about your youthful transgressions.”
He would bring that up, she thought, feeling the headache start to win.
“Who was it you said you ran into tonight?”
“Ted Garraty,” she said flatly, hating the turn of the conversation. “But I didn’t exactly run into him. As a matter of fact, I made a point of not running into him.”
She’d gone to school with Ted at Wellon Academy in Denver. They hadn’t been friends, but Wellon was small, very exclusive, and she and her date had ended up in the same crowd with Ted and his friends on prom night thirteen years ago—a night that had changed her life forever.
“Well, your mother obviously got ahold of the guest list and didn’t like it.”
Katya rolled her eyes in his direction. “I don’t need a bodyguard to protect me from Ted Garraty, let alone two bodyguards.”
But on that long-ago prom night, she had needed someone to protect her from Ted and his group of drunken friends.
Her gaze slid to the Jaguar Gate, but just for an instant before she forced her attention back to the catalog. Just about every gallery in Denver had donated something to the auction, but the Oleg Henri was a true signature piece, and she expected its sale to help launch her into the Denver art world—not that her name wasn’t already about as high profile as it got in the Mile High City.
And with that unpleasant thought, she finally did give in to another sigh. God, what an odd night. Seeing Ted had been nothing short of a ten on her weird-o-meter, and the visceral reaction she’d had to the second bodyguard had red-lined the weird-o-meter and hit an easy number one on her Don’t Go There, Girlfriend list.
Bodyguards, dammit.
She’d known that returning to her hometown, the location of her “youthful transgressions,” had held the inherent risk of zealous parental meddling, but she truly hadn’t expected her mother to jump in with both feet at her first event. Marilyn had left her well enough alone in Los Angeles, barring a couple of embarrassing intrusions into her personal life over the last several years. Professionally, though, her mother had been strictly hands off.
But then it was here in Denver, not Los Angeles, that she had been associated with a high-profile, high-society, front-page, scandal-ridden murder of another senator’s son. That sort of thing was bound to stir up even the most latent parental instincts, and Marilyn’s had been pretty darn latent while Katya had been growing up—at least until Jonathan Traynor III had shown up dead in a back alley in lower downtown, a neighborhood known as LoDo, with a bullet through his brain, heroin in his veins, her phone number written on the back of his hand, and a bloodstained piece of her prom dress stuffed in his pocket.
Of its own accord, her gaze shifted back toward the gate again, and this time she let it linger.
No, she assured herself. The man who’d disappeared beneath the trees couldn’t possibly be who she’d thought. A teenage car thief who had been sentenced to life imprisonment for Jonathan Traynor’s murder thirteen years ago couldn’t possibly be wandering around the Botanic Gardens wearing a suit and drinking French champagne. He’d been pardoned after two years in prison, justice had finally been served, but this would still be the last place he would show up, right? The last place he would ever be invited.
But for a moment, just a moment, her heart ha
d raced and she’d remembered how it had been on another hot summer night in Denver. She’d been eighteen, a little crazy, a lot in love, and scared senseless by the intensity of living so far out on the edge she wasn’t sure she’d ever get back to familiar ground. The boy had been a year older, the wild boy, the bad boy, the street thief who had saved her. That boy, the boy she’d loved, would never have murdered Jonathan, but he’d been convicted of the crime, and she’d sat by helplessly and watched it happen.
The trial had been a travesty, her silence a betrayal she still hated herself for, and deep in her heart, she knew he had to hate her for it, too.
HAWKINS drained his glass of champagne, wished it were Scotch, and took a breath.
Kat Dekker.
Son of a bitch.
His luck couldn’t possibly be running that bad—except “Bad Luck” was Katya Dekker’s middle name. Hell, it was her first name—Bad Luck Dekker.
He hadn’t believed General Grant had called him back from South America for a frickin’ garden party to begin with—her being here just made it all that much worse, all that much more unbelievable.
He’d left Kid, and he shouldn’t have, not the way everything had gone to hell. Dylan had been driving a hard bargain with the NRF for the release of two SDF operators who had been ambushed and taken hostage two months ago, J.T. Chronopolous and Creed Rivera. But on the designated day of the release, the NRF had brought only one man, Creed Rivera, saying J.T. was too ill to be moved from the mountain camp where he and Creed had been held.
All the more reason to let him go, Dylan had insisted, but the commander had been adamant. The second prisoner would be released within a few days’ time.
Dylan had immediately left Colombia to take Creed home, and Hawkins had stayed with Kid.
Geezus, Creed had been messed up, beaten to within an inch of his life and drugged to the point of unconsciousness. It had been hard to see him like that, and his condition had just made everyone that much jumpier about J.T.—especially Kid.
Early this morning, they’d received a message that J.T. was dead, that he hadn’t survived the journey out of the mountains. They’d heard those rumors before, about both J.T. and Creed, but Hawkins had a real bad feeling about today’s message—that it was true. The final part of the message, that the rebels would deliver J.T.’s body to the village of Rosalia in northern Colombia tonight, had made it seem even more real—and Hawkins wasn’t there to be with Kid, because some asshole somewhere in Washington, D.C., had decided he should be here, eating foie gras and drinking champagne and providing additional security for a bunch of “very important people.”