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Alpha Crew: The Mission Begins by Laura Griffin (11)

ELEVEN


Are you hurt?” he demanded.

She was still pulling the door shut as he peeled away from the curb.

“Answer me!”

“I’m—” She looked down at herself. Her knee was bleeding beneath the hem of her skirt. “I’m fine. What—”

“Seat belt,” he snapped, gunning the engine and racing for the intersection. He halted inches away from an SUV’s bumper.

She looked at him. “What just happened?”

He reached over and dragged the seat belt across her lap. The light turned green, and he punched the gas. They sped around the corner, and Emma tipped sideways, gripping the dashboard for support. He sped up again, swerving around a delivery truck as he raced to catch up with the pickup.

Emma looked ahead but didn’t see it.

“Hold on,” he ordered, careening around another corner. They skidded onto a wider road with a median down the middle. Emma looked ahead at the sea of taillights but didn’t see the pickup.

“Fuck.” Ryan pounded the steering wheel.

“Stop! What the hell just happened?”

But he didn’t stop, and he didn’t say anything. He sped through another intersection, then swerved into a gas station and whipped into a parking space near the convenience store.

He shoved the truck into park and turned to her. He reached over and clutched the side of her head. “Are you all right?”

“I’m . . . yes, I’m okay.”

He dropped his hand and stared at her, his eyes flashing with intensity. “How long has someone been tailing you?”

She tried to process the words, but her heart was still racing a million miles an hour. “Tailing me?”

“How long?”

“I don’t—”

“Cut the bullshit, Emma. Someone’s been following you, and you damn well know it. How long?”

She gulped and looked down. The pads of her palms were bleeding, and her hands were shaking uncontrollably. She folded them in her lap and looked up through the windshield at the convenience store.

“I think . . . Thursday.” She looked at him. “That’s the first time I noticed it.”

“Where?”

She stared at him.

“Where, Emma?”

“Palmeda Road.”

His eyebrows arched with surprise.

“I swung by your apartment,” she explained. “Just to see whether you were in town. I circled your block twice, and on the second pass, I noticed a car in my rearview mirror. I thought I’d seen it earlier.”

“A car, not a pickup?”

She nodded. “Then I noticed someone again Friday. A pickup truck this time. Gray. Maybe that same one from just now.” She glanced over her shoulder at the street behind them but failed to see a gray pickup. “It was parked outside my hotel, which wasn’t really a big deal. The windows were tinted, but I could tell someone was sitting in the truck, and I felt like . . .” She looked down.

“You felt like what?”

“I don’t know. Like he was watching. Not just people watching, but watching me specifically.” She’d been anxious ever since, jumping at shadows and checking over her shoulder.

“This was before I saw you?” His eyes were intense, his jaw tight. He was dressed much like the other night, in a black T-shirt that clung to his muscular chest, faded jeans, and scuffed leather work boots. But this was no pool-shooting playboy now. He was in warrior mode.

She nodded. “Yes, before. But I haven’t noticed anyone since. Not until just now.”

He muttered a curse.

“We need to go back there, Ryan.”

“Why?” He threw the truck into gear and shot backward out of the space.

“We need to call the police. Report what happened. Maybe a witness saw a license plate.”

“There was no plate. I looked.” He pulled out of the parking lot and cast a glance at her.

“You looked,” she repeated.

“Yes.”

“When?”

“When I followed him from your hotel.”

———

“When you followed him?”

He didn’t answer. He figured she needed some time to digest that.

“Why were you at my hotel?” She looked wide-eyed and shocked.

“You were spooked about something at the bar the other night,” he told her. “I needed to see what it was. You didn’t have a tail from O’Malley’s, though.” He glanced at her. “And believe me, I checked.”

Silence fell over the truck as he let that sink in.

No, he hadn’t gone back inside the bar.

Yes, he’d followed her home.

He took a turn, and she looked around like she was trying to get her bearings.

“We need to go back, Ryan.”

“No, we don’t.”

“We have to report it!”

Maybe. But they could do it from a police station, not from some street corner where she would be standing there talking to a cop with a target on her back.

“Ryan, please.”

He sighed. “You really want to file a report? Because I’ll tell you right now, it’s going to be a pain in the ass.”

“We have to! Maybe there’s surveillance footage that shows the front license plate. Or maybe someone saw the driver.”

It was a decent point, and as much as he dreaded the thought of wasting the next several hours of his life, he let her win this particular battle.

Because there was a bigger one coming, and she was going to fight him tooth and nail.

———

Ryan watched her walk out of the police station. She had a Band-Aid on her knee, a slip of paper in her hand, and her head bent over her cell phone. He muttered a curse.

“What’s that?” Jake asked over the phone.

“She’s done now. I have to go.”

“Okay, keep me in the loop, man.” Jake laughed. “And don’t do anything I wouldn’t do.”

Ryan hung up on him and intercepted Emma as she reached the sidewalk.

“Who are you texting?” he asked.

“No one. I’m just getting down my case number.”

They walked to his truck and got in. She didn’t seem shaken anymore, but she was definitely wired. She folded her arms over her chest and glowered at the windshield.

“They blew you off?”

She sneered. “Some patrol cop told me it was probably a drunk teenager.”

“Did you tell him who your father is?”

She looked at him. “What would that help?”

Ryan shook his head.

“What?” she asked.

“Nothing.” It wouldn’t have mattered anyway. San Diego PD wasn’t going to fix this problem for her. Ryan pulled out of the lot and hung a right.

“Aren’t we going back to my hotel?”

“No.”

“Why not?”

“Think that through, Emma. Someone’s been following you for four days. Whoever it is tried to hurt you tonight.” Actually, he’d tried to kill her, but she knew that already. Ryan had seen the look on her face just seconds after it happened.

She stared through the windshield. “They know my hotel,” she said softly.

“Yes.”

“And thanks to me, they know your apartment on Palmeda.”

“Yes.”

“Then where are we going?”

“I know a safe place you can stay.”

“How long?”

“Depends.” He looked at her. “When’s your flight leave?”

“My flight?” She hesitated. “I have an open ticket.”

It was a lie. He knew it the instant the words were out, just from the look on her face. What he didn’t know was why she would lie to him about that particular detail.

They drove in silence for a while, and he felt her agitation growing. His was growing, too, but probably for different reasons. She was a mess again, with wild hair and skinned palms and makeup smudged under her eyes, and everything about her made him want to pull his truck over and haul her into his lap.

Instead, he pulled into a burger joint and reversed into a parking space that backed up to a brick building. He had a clear view of the parking lot and the road so he could keep an eye on things.

“Emma.” He looked at her, forcing himself to concentrate on her wide brown eyes and not her mouth or her breasts. “We need to talk.”

A shadow came over her face, and he knew she felt cornered.

“Why is someone trying to kill you?”

She glanced down.

“Look at me.”

She met his gaze and cleared her throat. “I think my questions have been making people . . . nervous.”

“Nervous doesn’t explain a two-ton truck trying to mow you down.”

“I’ve been asking about the plane crash.”

“What about it?”

“We both know what happened, Ryan. You saw the wreckage. We took a hit.” She held his look. “I’m the sole survivor of that incident, and I’m not going to pretend I don’t know what happened, not when I was there.”

Ryan heaved a sigh.

She refused to play it safe, and nothing he said was going to change her mind, at least for now.

And damned if he didn’t admire her. Hewitt was right. She had balls.

He shoved his truck into gear and pulled around to the drive-through window. He ordered two cheeseburgers and turned to look at her. “Fries or rings?”

“Fries.”

“Chocolate or vanilla?”

She gave him a baleful look.

“Two fries, two chocolate shakes, and extra ketchup,” he told the speaker, and pulled forward to the window. “You call your dad yet?” he asked Emma.

“From the police station. Why?”

“Let me see your phone.”

She dug it from her purse and handed it over. It was in a stylish purple case with some designer’s name on it. Ryan popped off the case.

“What are you doing?”

He opened his door and dropped the phone onto the cement.

“Ryan!”

He smashed it with the heel of his boot, and Emma gasped. Then he dug his own phone from his pocket and smashed it, too.

“Why did you do that?” Her cheeks were flushed now, and her eyes blazed.

He scooped up the pieces and examined them. When he was satisfied, he reached back and dumped them into the trash can near the pickup window.

The food was ready, and Ryan handed her a bag. She snatched it from his hands and stashed it on the floor by her feet.

“Your phone’s a tracking device. So is mine.” He looked at her. “For the foreseeable future, that’s something we can do without.”

———

Next stop was a dog park, where they pulled into a small parking lot and abandoned Ryan’s truck for a white Toyota Tundra. Ryan reached under the floor mat and grabbed the key as Emma stashed the food bag and buckled herself in.

“Is this—”

“Jake’s.”

“Where is he?”

“Around.”

Ryan adjusted the mirrors. Silence settled over them as he snaked his way through the city, taking side street after side street to make sure they didn’t have a tail. When he was one-hundred-percent certain they were clear, he turned north and made his way through the hills of La Jolla. Emma stared out the window as he drove.

“Ryan.”

Her voice was low and serious, and he knew he wasn’t going to like whatever she had to say.

“I don’t know if this is a good idea.”

“If what is?” he asked.

“This. You being here, helping me. It’s dangerous for you to get involved.”

He smiled and shook his head. It would have been funny if it wasn’t so insulting.

“Ryan?”

He looked at her. “I’m going to pretend I didn’t hear that.”

She didn’t say anything else the rest of the way, and he felt grateful for the quiet. It gave him a chance to go over his plan. And steel himself for what was going to be a painful night, even worse than the one in the jungle, because he wasn’t going to have weapons and helicopter extractions to distract him from what he wanted to do, what he’d been freaking burning to do since he’d first laid eyes on her.

They reached the top of a hill where every street was lined with narrow houses that had big windows facing the ocean. Ryan swung into a driveway and stopped at a solid black gate. He tapped a code into the keypad, and the gate slid open to reveal a driveway that sloped down steeply. The garage door was already lifting as he rolled through.

Emma shot him a baffled look.

Ryan smiled. “We’re here.”