Hot Shot (A Hostile Operations Team Novel)(#5) (5 page)

BOOK: Hot Shot (A Hostile Operations Team Novel)(#5)
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His cell phone rang and he picked it up without taking his eyes off the road. Not many people had his number, and they were all people he wanted to talk to anyway.

“Hunter,” he said.

“Jack.” Her voice was soft and shaky, but he recognized it anyway.
 

“Gina? How did you get this number?” Anger shot through him that someone in his circle had betrayed his privacy. And then there was the curiosity. What could she possibly want? To see him? To reminisce about old times?

Fuck no
. Even though his body went rock hard at the thought.

“My b…baby,” she said. “S…someone took him.”

His blood froze. “Jesus,” he breathed. “Why are you calling me? You should be calling the police.”

“No! They said not to. They said they’d kill him. Jack, please.” She sobbed then and it twisted his stomach into knots. The Gina he knew didn’t break down. She’d been so tough, even when she’d been scared beyond reason. She’d never broken down, not like this.

“Tell me what you need.”

* * *

What did she need? She needed her baby back. Gina twisted her hands together and then dashed her fingers beneath her eyes for the thousandth time since she’d gotten the call. Why had she left little Eli in New York? She didn’t like leaving him, but she’d flown down for this concert and then she was flying back immediately after, so it had seemed like the right thing to do. He had a nanny. The building was staffed by security. And she’d hired her own security once the new threats started coming.

She’d told herself it was simply a crazed fan. She was accustomed to that and she could deal with it. But someone had taken Eli from his nanny when she’d gone out for coffee that afternoon. Just snatched him up and then told her not to call the police. Instead, they’d given Cassie a note and told her to read it to Gina over the phone.

Call the police and your baby dies. Wait for instructions.

Gina shot up from her seat and paced the spacious living area of her suite. She’d thrown everyone out and told her manager to let Jack in the instant he arrived. He was the only person she could think to call since the police were out of the question. It hadn’t been easy getting his number, but she’d persevered because she had to. And then he’d answered with that clipped “Hunter,” and heat had flared in her belly at the sound of his growly voice.

She raked a hand through her hair and then pressed her fingers to her lips to stop a sob from escaping. She’d held it together pretty well up to now, but she was on the edge of her control. Eli was innocent, just a sweet little boy who was so happy and perfect. He didn’t throw fits. Cassie had said he was the calmest baby she’d ever cared for.

And he was. Just so unflappable and calm.

But what must he be feeling now that he’d been ripped from the arms of the nanny he knew? What would those people do with him?

The door opened and her manager stood there. He’d been furious with her the past few weeks because she hadn’t wanted to sign a new contract with the record label and their relationship had been strained. But now his eyes were red-rimmed and her heart dropped to her toes. Did he have news…?

“Barry?”

He stepped aside and Jack Hunter appeared in the door, all tall and golden and handsome. Oh dear God, she could see Eli in him. Her gut twisted into knots. She’d kept Eli a secret from him—from everyone except a few very trusted people who knew the baby she’d “adopted” was actually her own child—and the guilt of it tore at her.

But she hadn’t known, when she’d given birth, whose child Eli was—Athenasios’s or Jack’s—and she hadn’t known for months, not until he grew all that wheat-blond hair and his little face formed into a smaller version of Jack’s. Softer and sweeter, but unmistakable to her.

She’d been so relieved that her baby was Jack’s. But how could she tell him? How, when he’d told her he never wanted a child because he couldn’t be there for one? He’d lost his wife and unborn child, and it had nearly killed him. He’d decided he couldn’t have a normal family life like other men because he was a career soldier and his job required him to deploy at a moment’s notice. How could he be a typical husband and father with a life like that?
 

He’d made her heart hurt when he said that, but who was she to tell him differently? They’d spent three days together, talking about everything, but they’d still been strangers.

Jack strode into the room like he owned it. His hair was cropped closer than the last time she’d seen him, but it was still darkly golden. His blue eyes lasered into her. He wore a faded red T-shirt that stretched across his muscled chest. His tattooed arms were bare and he wore a pair of faded Levi’s with a hole in one knee. On his feet were flip-flops.

Gina broke at that moment. Whatever she’d been holding in escaped in a rough sob—and then she rushed into his arms and buried her head against his chest. If he was surprised, and she had no doubt he must be, he didn’t let it show. He just wrapped those strong arms around her and held on tight while she tried to control her tears and failed miserably.

“He’s just a baby, Jack. Just a baby.”

Jack rubbed her back. “I know, sweetheart. I know.”

The door quietly closed behind Barry and then they were alone. Jack continued to hold her, but she pushed away from him, determined to get herself together. She had to do it for Eli. She couldn’t fall apart like this.

She turned away and swiped her eyes, her fingers trembling and her heart hammering. She hadn’t seen Jack since she’d left the boat to head to the airport. He’d saved her life, taken care of her, and she’d walked away because she had to. Because he wanted her to.

She’d told herself in the weeks that followed, before she knew she was pregnant, that the feelings she’d had for him were simply the result of trauma. You couldn’t fall for a man in three days just because he talked to you like you were an ordinary person. Or because he touched you so sweetly that it made your body sing.

She knew what she was, what people thought she was, but for a few days in Jack Hunter’s presence, she’d felt fresh and clean. Like an unwritten slate. It had been a novel experience. She’d wanted more, but he hadn’t.

And really, wasn’t it best anyway? He was an Army sniper and she was a celebrity. How in the hell would that have worked out? He couldn’t afford the media attention that went with her, and she couldn’t ask him to leave his job just so they could date.

God, she was ridiculous. Always falling for the wrong guy and then finding out just how wrong he was.

Except, with Jack, she’d fallen harder than usual. It was just like her to want the unattainable.

“I’m sorry,” she said, turning back to him and forcing a smile. “I know getting upset won’t help.”

“No one can blame you.” His voice was full of sympathy and that quiet strength she’d gravitated to on the island. He made her feel safe. That’s all there was to it.

She went over to the couch and sank down on it, willing the phone to ring as she did so. Of course it didn’t. She put a hand over her eyes and tried to press the tears away. “I didn’t know who else to call.”

“Tell me what happened.”

She told him about poor Cassie, about her trip for coffee, about the three men who’d cornered her and taken Eli from his stroller. “They told her if she screamed or called the police, they’d kill her. They gave her a note and told her to call me.” Gina felt so helpless, so angry, as she thought of sweet Cassie enduring that. “They said they’d kill Eli if I called the police. They said to wait for instructions.”

“Do you have any idea who did this? Has anyone been stalking you?”

She tugged a throw pillow onto her lap and absently played with the fringe. “I always have stalkers. There’ve been some notes over the last few months…” She sucked in a breath. “But I hired extra security just to be sure.”

Jack’s face was dark with anger. “What kind of notes?”

“Someone hates me, wants me to suffer, wants me dead. That kind of thing.”

“I wish you would die, hateful bitch.” “I’m going to cut off your arms and legs and feed them to sharks.” “You should be raped repeatedly and thrown to a pack of hungry lions, deceitful whore.”
 

Gina shivered.

“Who were they from?”

She shrugged. “I don’t know. The postmark is often from Las Vegas, but that’s as far as we got.”

“Where was the security detail when your nanny went out?”

She looked up to find Jack still staring at her. “She didn’t think she needed anyone just to go for coffee. It was broad daylight, and the coffee shop is only a block away.”
 

Gina rubbed her temples. She was trying so hard not to be furious with Cassie. It wouldn’t do any good and it wouldn’t help find Eli, even if it would be satisfying to blame someone. Besides, Cassie was nearly inconsolable right now anyway.

In truth, the threats were always against Gina, not Eli. And since Gina was the visible one, the high-profile one, Cassie hadn’t considered that an anonymous woman with a toddler would be identifiable to anyone. And she shouldn’t have been. But someone had obviously been paying very close attention.

Jack came over and sank down in front of her. He took her hands in his and waited for her to look at him. “Gina, I’m sorry this happened. But I don’t know what you want me to do. This is a job for the police or the FBI, not for a soldier. If you want me to make some calls, I’ll see if I can’t get the FBI involved discreetly—”

“No!” She gripped his hands tightly. “I was with you on that island. I know what you did, what your team did. You know all about covert ops, and you can find where Eli is and get him before they know you’re coming. You did it with Athenasios and those men. You did what no one else had been capable of doing.
You
are the right man for the job.”

CHAPTER FIVE

SHE WAS HOLDING HIS hands tightly and her face was white. Her green eyes were wide and liquid, and she looked at him like he was her savior. Like he was the only one who could fix this for her.

But how could he fix anything? He was one man, and this wasn’t his area of expertise. His gut roiled with the idea that he had to tell her no, but he had to be honest with her. It was a blow seeing her again. He hadn’t expected it. He’d seen her on magazine covers and television, so he’d gotten used to that little knot of tension in his gut each time.

But to see her again in the flesh? To touch her? His body vibrated like a guitar string pulled too tight. Any second and the string would snap.
 

“Gina, sweetheart, the military doesn’t get involved in something like this. It’s a domestic kidnapping case, not a terrorist plot. I want you to get your baby back, and I’ll stay here with you if you need me to, but you have to let me call the FBI. This is their area of expertise, not mine. Or my team’s.”

Her expression fell—and then her face twisted in anger. Her cheeks flushed bright and her eyes were glassy. “If this was your child, would you be saying these things to me? Would you tell me that you couldn’t help, but you could call someone? Would you leave your child’s life in the hands of a bunch of strangers who might very well fuck the whole thing up?”

“I know you’re upset, but you aren’t being reasonable. The FBI isn’t going to fuck it up.”

“You don’t know that!” She ripped her hands from his and shoved to her feet. Then she stalked past him and started to pace. Her long blond hair shimmered under the lights as it whipped around with her movements. She was wearing stiletto boots and a black miniskirt with a purple silk tank top tucked into it. A wide black belt cinched her small waist and emphasized the swell of her hips and breasts.

She was beautiful. Gut-wrenching, cock-hardening, ball-busting beautiful.

And she was angry. The hairs on the back of his neck stood at attention as she sizzled and sparked. But he had to calm her down. She’d called him, of all people, and he knew that meant something. But he wasn’t a magician and he couldn’t change the laws. The military did not handle domestic kidnapping cases.

“Babe, it’s their job. They aren’t incompetent.”

She whirled again. And then she pounded her fist on her chest to punctuate her words. “He’s
my
baby. I love him more than anyone else, and you’re asking me to trust strangers who don’t even know him with his life?”

He spread his hands. “I can’t help you, Gina. I don’t have any authority here.”

She stopped her pacing and stared at him like he’d grown two heads. Her hands were on her hips and her chest heaved as if she were on the verge of something momentous.
 

“You have as much at stake in this as I do.”

A bolt of unease shot through him. “I care that you’re upset and that someone stole your child. I said I’d stay here with you. I’ll call my boss and tell him I have to take leave. I’ll be here for you.”

She stalked toward him then, her breasts jiggling with every step of her booted feet. Her hands stayed on her hips. Her eyes spit fire at him.

“There’s something you need to know, Jack. Eli is not adopted. He’s my baby.” She paused for a long moment, her gaze never leaving his, and his unease flared higher. “I gave birth to him nine months after you rescued me.”

He couldn’t breathe. Couldn’t process what she was saying to him. His chest grew impossibly tight, like someone was wrapping him in steel bands and tugging with all their might. He thought of Hayley, of her car skidding out of control, and of their unborn baby in her womb. Sweat rose on his arms, his chest, his brow.

BOOK: Hot Shot (A Hostile Operations Team Novel)(#5)
5.92Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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