MILITARY ROMANCE: The War Within Himself (Alpha Bad Boy Marine Army Seal) (Contemporary Military Suspense & Thriller Romance)

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MILITARY ROMANCE: The War Within Himself (Alpha Bad Boy Marine Army Seal) (Contemporary Military Suspense & Thriller Romance) Page 148

by Claire Branson


  “I don’t know.” She smiled sleepily at him. “I think I’m too tired, but you can try.”

  “Look at me, little bird,” he murmured. “We are back in Tokyo now, and we are dancing under the stars. I am looking down at you, at your lovely face, and thinking how much I want to kiss you. I’m going to kiss you, Wren.”

  Eliot took her mouth, and the memories and gentle rubbing of his fingers brought her quickly to the edge. Wren looked into Eliot’s gold-shot dark eyes as she felt the sweet, hot delight cresting inside her.

  “Oops. I was wrong,” she murmured, and then arched as the pleasure broke over her, sweeping her off like a dark tide.

  “That’s what I wanted, my lovely one,” he murmured. “Give it all to me. Yes, like that.”

  Eliot stroked her through the orgasm, and then held her close while she rode the tremors of the aftershocks. Wren closed her eyes, feeling more drained and yet more satisfied than she ever had in her life.

  Wren heard him switch off the lamp, and snuggled close as he closed his arms around her. She listened to his deep breathing slow as he fell asleep, and turned her face to the pillow. The tears slipping from her lashes made a dozen damp spots on the pillow cover.

  When finally Eliot slept deeply enough for her to ease from his arms, Wren got up. She watched him as she dressed in silence. The darkness didn’t allow her to see too much of him, which was good. If she saw his handsome, beloved face now she might not be able to do this.

  Wren quietly left the suite with Eliot’s mobile, which she used to report in.

  “I know I’m late,” she told her handler, “but there were complications. I had to dump the sound transmitter when we left the club. Did you get all the boys out?” As she listened she glanced up at Tashiro’s suite. “Mine wasn’t a pervert. He was a do-gooder, trying to rescue me. Listen, I need to get out of Paris—”

  A big hand snatched the mobile from Wren’s grasp and threw it into the bushes. A matching hand seized her by the throat.

  “Not just yet,” the scar-faced Slav told her before he plunged the needle into her neck.

  Chapter Five

  Eliot woke to a half-empty bed and the sound of something pounding heavily. Quickly he pulled on a robe and went to answer the door, through which a huge man dressed like a bum strode in.

  “Wren’s been snatched,” the man told him, his Boston accent as flinty as his tone. “I need your help to get to her. Dress in something dark that won’t show blood.”

  Eliot saw the intelligence in the cold, unmatched eyes, and other signs that the bum look was only a façade. “And you are?”

  “Her handler, T.J.” The man made an impatient gesture. “You want to get moving before this perv does something irreparable?”

  A minute later Eliot emerged dressed and ready to go. “Do you have a car?”

  “I have a tracker. You have a car.” T.J. led him out to the elevator, where he checked the display of a handheld device. “She’s been in the same location for fifteen minutes, so that’s probably ScarFace’s dump.”

  Eliot summoned his driver, and when the car arrived dismissed his man. “How does this happen?” he asked as he climbed in behind the wheel.

  “I can track her because she has a locator implant,” T.J. told him as he peeled the fake scruffy beard from his strong jaw. “And the bastard got to her before I could when she came out of the hotel. Normally I wouldn’t be worried, but he gave her a needle of something.” He glanced at Eliot. “This is your fault, you know.”

  “Yes, I suppose it is.” Eliot suppressed an urge to punch the other man in the head as he sped across the city. “Do you have some sort of extraction planned?”

  “I’m going in there and getting her out in one fucking piece,” T.J. told him. “How’s that work for you?”

  Eliot nodded. “I like this plan.”

  Once he parked a block from Wren’s location, Eliot followed T.J. to the back of the rundown building. “You get Wren out,” he told the handler. “Let me deal with the Slav.”

  “You’re not trained for this, Tashiro.” T.J. stopped outside the back entrance, and cleared his throat as he saw Eliot draw his blades from his forearm sheaths. “Okay, I take that back. Try not to kill him. The paperwork’s a bitch.”

  Inside the hall Eliot stepped around a pair of young addicts dozing on the floor and assessed the interior. The first level appeared to be a warren of drug and sex dens, and the only sober person he spotted stood guard at the base of a narrow staircase.

  “That way,” he told T.J., who nodded and strode up to the guard.

  “Excuse us,” the handler said. When the guard uttered something vile, he kneed him, clubbed him over the back of the neck and shoved him aside. “They just don’t make leg breakers the way they used too,” he told Eliot as they trotted up the stairs.

  Everywhere Eliot looked he expected to see Wren. Not finding her made his muscles knot into hard, angry cords. On the second floor their search exposed only more addicts and deviants enjoying their dismal pleasures. He used persuasive grips on arms and throats, but none of them knew anything.

  “Where is she?” Eliot muttered as they ascended to the third level.

  “Gotta be here,” T.J. told him as they passed rooms filled with crates and electronics, and one locked door. He stopped in front of it and listened. “Yeah, here.” He kicked the door in.

  A shot pierced the air; blood spurted from T.J.’s shoulder. He staggered before Eliot grabbed him.

  Heart thumping, Eliot dragged the handler out of the way. He moved into position by the door, his fists tight around his drawn blades.

  A pair of bulky arms holding a gun emerged. Eliot knocked the weapon away, swept the thug’s legs, and dumped him to the floor.

  A well-placed kick to the temple knocked him unconscious.

  “Go,” T.J. told him as he tugged out a rag and clamped it over his shoulder wound.

  Eliot glanced into the room, which had been outfitted like a torture chamber. At the other end, Wren dangled nude and unconscious from a chain. Seeing her body bruised and her mouth bleeding woke a dark force inside him. His chest expanded to let the ravenous beast soundlessly bellow in outrage.

  “You.” The Slav appeared behind Wren, and jerked her head back by the hair to hold a blade to her throat. “Why did you come after us? She is worthless. A woman.”

  Eliot smiled. “Come. I can give you more sport. If you take me, you’ll have a man to rape and torture.”

  “I like boys.” The Slav released Wren from the chain, and held her like a body shield. “Get out or I’ll cut her.”

  As Eliot backed out of the room, the Slav advanced. Wren opened her rapidly blackening eyes, and saw Eliot. “Run. Please.”

  “Not happening, sweetheart.” T.J. stepped into the doorway, his blood-streaked hand holding the bunched rag to his wound.

  “I’ll kill her,” the Slav promised.

  “Yeah?” The handler whipped out the bundled rag. The bloody fabric fell from the gun inside it as T.J. pulled the trigger. A small hole appeared in the Slav’s forehead, killing him instantly.

  Eliot quickly moved in to snatch the blade from Wren’s throat and catch her as the Slav collapsed. Quickly he shrugged out of his jacket and covered her with it. “The paperwork?” he asked the handler.

  “Eh.” The big man shrugged. “Sometimes it’s worth it.”

  #

  Sunlight and the smell of something delicious woke Wren from a deep, dreamless sleep. Since coming to the T.J.’s safe house in Provence she had done little more than sleep, eat and think. The time had come to get up, get dressed, and tell her handler about the decision she had made.

  Wren winced as she slowly eased her battered body out of bed. The Slav had been outraged to find she wasn’t the boy he’d wanted, which had saved her from rape. It hadn’t spared her a vicious beating, however. At least now the swelling in her eyes had gone down enough for her to see where she was going. For the first day after he
r rescue they’d been completely swollen shut.

  Wren pulled on the pretty floral frock left hanging on the back of her bedroom door and dressed. Slowly she limped out into the front of the old farm house, where she breathed in the savory perfume of the stir-fry drifting out of the kitchen. Once she sat down at the battered old dining table, she rested her forehead on her hand.

  “T.J., we need to talk,” she said, knowing he could hear her. “I can’t do this anymore. Well, I can, but I don’t want to. I don’t want to spend the rest of my life risking it every time I step outside. Or inside. Or anywhere.”

  A grumbling male sound came out of the kitchen.

  “Yeah, I know, I’m a wimp.” She took an apple from the get-well basket Simon Denning had sent her and studied it. “But the guy who helped us – Tashiro – he’s in love with me. I’m kind of in love with him, too. So I want to take a desk job in Tokyo so I can hang out with him. See where this goes.”

  “Kind of in love?”

  Wren’s head snapped up and she stared at Eliot, who wore a flowered apron over his immaculate suit and carried a large pan of sizzling stir-fry to the table. “What are you doing here?”

  “I am cooking.” He placed a plate in front of her.

  She blinked to making sure she still wasn’t hallucinating from the Slav’s drugs. “How did you know where I was?”

  “Do you know what happens when you call MI-6 and threaten to create an enormous media scandal in which you will expose two of their best agents?” he asked as he placed a mound of rice on her plate. “They will answer almost any question you ask.”

  Wren’s jaw dropped. “You didn’t.”

  “No, I did not. T.J. took pity on me. I may have threatened him a little.” He added a big helping of stir-fry to her rice. “But I would have like to have a word with your superiors. I still might, after we return to Tokyo. Is your jaw too sore for this? If it is, I made soup.”

  “It’s fine.” She knew before she agreed to anything she would have to tell him the truth. “Eliot, please. Sit down.”

  “I will listen, if you will eat.” When she nodded he sat down beside her. “All right. Tell me, and chew.”

  Wren smiled and tried a bit of the stir-fry, which was delicious. “There’s a reason I don’t exist, and it has nothing to do with my work. I actually don’t exist. MI-6 raided a yacht off the coast of Ireland, and me and a few other young kids were living on it.” She set down her chopsticks and met his gaze. “We’d been bred by a pedophile ring. They created us in a lab at a bogus fertility clinic, hired surrogates to carry us and, after we were born at sea, rented us out to abusers.”

  Eliot’s expression softened. “So MI-6 rescued you.”

  “They did. We were a bit older than they thought, too. Our masters starved us and used drugs to keep us from going into puberty. At the time I was sixteen, but I looked about ten.” She grimaced at her flat chest. “Anyway, I don’t have any parents. I was born in international waters, so I have no country.”

  “What happened after you were freed from these monsters?” Eliot asked gently.

  “The authorities placed me in a special juvenile recovery program where I got the help I needed,” Wren told him. “When I was older MI-6 put me through school, and then recruited me to work in their human trafficking department. I wanted to stop this from happening to other kids.”

  Eliot nodded slowly. “You are not eating.”

  “Kills my appetite to talk about it.” She saw compassion in his eyes, but no disgust or revulsion. “The point is, I’m damaged goods. Seriously damaged. Mentally I’m okay, but the abuse left me underdeveloped and sterile, and that’s not going to change.”

  “So that is what you meant when you said you were safe.” Eliot reached out to take her hand in his. “You were afraid to tell me about your past. Why? All that matters to me is you, little bird.”

  Wren almost laughed out loud. “Tashiro, I was cooked up in a Petri dish by perverts. I have no country. I can’t have children. I may even have to deal with some serious health issues later on in life. These things matter, if not to you, then to your family.”

  He nodded slowly. “My American mother is open and understanding, but my Japanese father is quite traditional.” He kissed the back of her hand. “We will lie to them.”

  He startled a laugh out of her. “Eliot.”

  “We can adopt children, Wren,” he told her gently. “Whatever health issues may come, we will see you through them together. And when you marry me, you will have Japanese citizenship.”

  She thought she might burst into tears. “You want to marry a woman you’ve only known for a couple of days?”

  “I would have married you while you were unconscious, but T.J. would not allow it. He is very strict, isn’t he? Now you must eat.” He picked up her fork and used it to bring a mouthful of vegetables to her lips. “I have scheduled my jet to leave in a few hours, and the flight to Tokyo is very long. I should not have sent my driver back to Paris. Do you think T.J. will take us to the airport? ”

  Wren took another bite of the stir-fry, and smiled at the man she loved. “If we ask nicely.”

  THE END

  The Hitman’s Hunger

  Bound to the Alpha Billionaire

  Book 6

  (Can be read as a standalone book)

  By: Lucy Wynand

  The Hitman’s Hunger

  Chapter One

  “Do you have plans tonight, Mr. Riley?” the flight attendant asked after she intercepted him outside customs.

  T.J. regarded her with his skeptical, mismatched eyes. As petite and blonde as he was big and dark, she had been eyeing him since they left Paris. His Southie accent and leather coat always made him stand out from the Manhattan suits in first class. Since sex with him made rollercoasters look tame, however, he had rules: no nice girls, no fashionistas, and absolutely no one he might accidentally break.

  “Yeah, I do.” He wondered if he should tattoo his chest with one of those measurement signs that read: “You must be this tall to take this ride.” Might make his life simpler. “Sorry, babe.”

  She tucked a business card in his shirt pocket. “My number, in case you change your mind.” She sauntered off with as much sass as her pencil skirt would allow.

  T.J. spotted Arthur Lecourt waiting outside the international arrivals gate. Although he wore a chauffeur’s uniform, the small, wiry man didn’t hold a name sign. Nor did he allow T.J. to elude him.

  “Please, Mr. Terence,” Lecourt said as he appeared beside him and tried to keep up with his long strides. “He only wishes a word.” When T.J. didn’t reply he added, “I am authorized to use force if necessary.”

  “That’d be entertaining.” He glanced at the older man and saw strain lines bracketing his thin lips. “Your hip giving you grief again, Arthur?” he asked, slowing his pace.

  “The arthritis. They want to replace it.” He watched T.J. pick up his duffle from the luggage carousel. “He gave me the Taser, Mr. Terence.”

  Because he liked the old thug, T.J. followed him out to the limo parked illegally at the curb. The back window lowered and another voice from the south of Boston said, “Get in.”

  “No.” The only way to deal with his father was in words of one syllable. “What?”

  “Get in, Junior, and I’ll tell you,” the elder Terence Jamison Riley said. “Or don’t, and Arthur will Taser you, throw you in here, and I’ll be late for my three o’clock class.”

  T.J. got in the limo and sat across from his father. “Class?”

  “Yoga.” As elegant in Armani as a reformed mob boss could be, Terence popped a piece of nicotine gum in his mouth. “Your mother thinks it’ll help with my anger management issues. I don’t mind so much. The girls are pretty, and hooboy, so flexible.” Terence gave him the once-over. “Why you over here? Work?”

  The old man looked tired, so T.J. took pity on him. “What do you want, Pop?”

  Terence shrugged. “Same old. Give up th
is spy shit, come home and work for me. I’m legit now, remember?”

  T.J. rolled his hand.

  His old man sighed. “Your mother wants grandbabies. We’re not getting any younger, you know. Your sister Margaret’s doing that test tube thing, but it ain’t working out. Her and Jack are talking about adopting.”

  T.J. rolled his hand again.

  His father rubbed his eyes. “Look. You come home, marry a nice Irish Catholic girl, and knock her up. It’ll make your mother happy. She’s happy, I’m happy. I’m generous when I’m happy, Junior.”

  T.J. looked over the seat. “Arthur, drop me at long-term parking, will you?”

  “Do this, and I’ll write you back in the will. I’m worth ten billion now, boy, and – you’re bleeding?” Terence jerked aside the collar of T.J.’s shirt to glare at his bandage and then him. “You got shot? And you didn’t say anything?”

  “Pop? I got shot.” As Arthur pulled over T.J. grabbed his duffle.

  “Love to Ma.” When the car stopped he climbed out and didn’t look back.

  T.J. walked to a black SUV with a license plate that read HOT4U2. He input the security code on the door panel keypad and threw his duffle in the back. Once inside he took keys, a wallet, a cash bundle and a smart phone from the glove box. As soon as he touched the phone it lit up and buzzed.

  “Yeah?” he answered it as he started the SUV’s engine.

  “Central is bloody pissed with you, Terry,” a friendly British female voice said. “Consider yourself severely reprimanded for that cock-up in Paris. Why are you in America?”

  “I’m taking some personal time, Ash.” T.J. reached under the seat for the untraceable handgun tucked there. He popped the fully-loaded clip to check the rounds. “Thanks for the nine.”

  “Can’t have you scampering about unarmed, love. There’s extra ammo in the boot.” Ashley’s tone turned crisp. “We have a vastly unpleasant situation brewing in Berlin. It will likely go critical by Monday. That’s all the time we can spare you.”

 

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