Hot Conflict Rule number one for "How to Throw a Wedding": Don't get kidnapped. Rule number two? Don't let your rescuer be DJ McAllister, as in tall, dark, and secretive with a bod to die for. As in the man who pushed wedding planner Mary Grace Heyward away once and left her heartbroken for, um, well forever. But now that they're running for their lives (so that's what it takes to get a man to commit!), the looks DJ's giving her tell another story, one that's making her very, very warm. And Mary Grace's mission is clear: Indulge the hot Marine's every fantasy and secure a victory of the everlasting kind. . . Hot Landing Zone The mission went bad, really bad. And Jake Mackenzie blames Dr. Katherine Collier, the egghead scientist his team was rescuing from terrorists. If she'd just obeyed his orders they wouldn't be stranded--alone--on a remote island with no way off. But hell, Jake's a Marine. He'll improvise, adapt, and overcome. . .as long as the drop-dead gorgeous Katherine stops accidentally setting off his booby traps, prancing around in what's left of her clothing, and driving him wild with desire. Protecting her is his sworn duty, and the lady seems to have some specific requests in that area. . . Hot Target Rick Cahill's got his orders: Drop into the Amazon and pick up American Peace Corp volunteer Sam Previn. Who knew Sam was actually Samantha, a beautiful redhead with a temper to match? And who knew the Colombian drug cartels would be after them? On the run in the jungle, searching secluded spots for shelter, Rick has to remind himself that Sam is off-limits, no matter how it unhinges him every time her skin brushes his. But when the savvy Sam starts speaking in military abbreviations and can load a sidearm without looking, it's clear she's something special--and just Rick's type. . . The daughter, wife, and now mother of career U.S. Marines, Amy J. Fetzer has penned twenty-eight novels and novellas in historical, historical paranormal, contemporary, and romantic suspense. Amy's work has been nominated twice for Storyteller of the Year in historical and contemporary, Career Achievement, and hit the top spots of the Waldenbooks bestseller lists, as well as winning several genre awards. After twenty-five years of traveling with the Marine Corps, Amy and her family live outside Charleston, South Carolina, enjoying the quiet, retired life, trying to behave like civilians.
Release date:
August 15, 2012
Publisher:
Kensington Books
Print pages:
352
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Gunnery Sergeant David James “DJ” McAllister leaned back against a sunbaked stucco wall, and from beneath the well-worn Panama hat, he scanned the area. The sun was low in the sky, glaring and red.
In front of him, the narrow street curved down the mountainside in a line of odd-sized buildings, half-abandoned, each more cracked than the last. Toward the bottom, tourists strolled past shops, though most were closed at this hour for after-dinner siesta. A couple of kids raced by on bikes, barely noticing him in civilian clothes.
Uniforms, MP5 assault rifles, and black ops gear wouldn’t do for this mission.
Hell, he looked more like a drug dealer waiting for a sale in loose black slacks and a printed shirt.
“In position, Gunny,” came through the earpiece.
DJ motioned to his left. A fellow Marine stationed a few yards away moved in a little closer, DJ watching his six. Between them was an old tin warehouse once used to store fruit for transport to the city. Somewhere in one of the apartments across the street were a couple of CIA operatives, watching, perched like birds on a wire. His gaze slid along the rusted walls of the warehouse, hoping for movement, a sound.
He was still having trouble wrapping his brain around the fact that she’d been kidnapped. But that it happened in his “backyard” told him this was fate, that he’d never escape her. Even when he’d tried his damnedest to forget her.
He almost felt sorry for her kidnappers.
Mary Grace Heyward was a force to be reckoned with: beautiful, educated, and to say she was opinionated was lukewarm. Mad, she had a mouth that could peel the skin off the best of men. DJ included.
He and half the U.S. intelligence community here had been searching the trail from the posh hotel in Panama City for two days. She’d been snatched right after a reception for the U.S. Ambassador. Why he and his wife of twenty years had Mary Grace down here to plan the wedding-vow renewal ceremony was clear. The ambassador’s wife was her older sister. Why Mary Grace was taken was still a bit of a mystery.
“I got a sighting,” came through DJ’s earpiece. Another Marine was in the rear, moving through the dense forest backing the warehouse. “It’s her. Red hair, lavender suit. Gagged, tied to a chair. She looks asleep.” DJ prayed she wasn’t dead. “Three men, armed and looking mighty impatient, Gunny. One’s on a cell phone.”
“Translate?” DJ said. Impatience riddled him as the Marine repositioned himself closer. He had listening equipment that would pick up her breathing.
“They’re going to move her. Shit. They want to send on her finger to push the ambassador along.”
DJ cursed, fear nibbling at his spine. These guys were playing hardball.
“We need Intel.” This from the CIA birds in the apartment.
“Get it yourself some other way,” DJ snapped softly, not glancing up to the room he knew was lined with surveillance equipment and a couple of soft-handed analysts. “She’s not staying there a moment longer just so you can gather what you should have known!”
That the kidnappers had planned and executed this with stealth and precision warned DJ that they were not dealing with idiots. He pushed off the wall, walked in front of the tin building, then slipped between it and the neighboring structure. The ground was overgrown with weeds and flowers, the space too narrow for quick movement. Each step brought the stench of decaying animal feces as he edged the perimeter. He inhaled deep, making himself accustomed to it. Then he ditched the hat and drew his weapon.
“Markus, get high.” Sergeant Steve Markus was sniper-trained, and could pick dirt off a bug’s ass at three hundred yards, but this was a no-kill zone. They needed the kidnappers alive and had to get her out of there without much notice. No telling how many sympathetic rebels were hiding in these mountains.
“Aye, aye, Gunny.”
“Intel? Make yourself useful and trace the call.”
“You’re a real prick sometimes, McAllister, you know that?”
“Yeah, yeah, just do it.” DJ kept low, the bank of windows above him bleary with dirt. If the warehouse wall wasn’t tin, and wouldn’t make one hell of a noise, he’d brace himself between the two buildings and work his way up for a look-see.
Then he heard a short, harsh scream, high-pitched and muffled. Don’t fight them, he silently begged.
“Heads up, got a door opening.”
DJ stopped short of coming around the edge, heard the hinges scrape.
“One guard, one Uzi.”
DJ peered around the corner, saw the guard light a thin cigar. He backed up to speak. “Bates, Camden, get ready to go in. Markus, spot me.” He edged behind the kidnapper, and when he was within reach, he snatched the machine gun by the barrel and as the man whipped around, he popped him in the throat. It crushed his larynx, stripped blood from his brain, and he went down on his knees without much sound.
Camden rushed in, gagged and dragged him into the forest as Bates picked up the Uzi. The door was still open. DJ snatched the cigar, puffed on it to make like the man was still near, then peered, his gaze skipping past Mary Grace to the other two. With hand signals, he identified the enemy’s location. Bates advanced opposite him.
DJ gave a three count, then slipped around the edge of the door.
Head bowed, Mary Grace’s cheek burned from the slap, her eyes watering. A shadow to her right caught her attention and she lifted her head, afraid the man was going to make good his promises. What she saw was a one-man wrecking machine in a flowered shirt. DJ. His weapon out, his back against the open door, he scanned the room, and when he saw her, blue eyes pinned her to the chair. If she wasn’t tied, gagged, and highly ticked off at being kidnapped in the first place, Mary Grace would have laughed at the sheer irony of it all. Why did it have to be him? For a slivered moment, he just stared, so intense, so raw, Mary Grace felt her whole body tighten with an inescapable punch of need and emotion.
She wasn’t surprised he could still do that with a look, and right now, was damn grateful for it.
Her gaze flicked to the two men a few feet away. DJ put his finger to his lips and moved on silent feet toward them. He had one little gun, they had machine guns. What did he think he could do?
Then he did it, hitting so hard and fast she almost didn’t see it.
He clipped one in the throat, the second in the solar plexus. Both buckled, choking for air. Then, with double-fisted hits to the back of the neck, DJ sent one to the ground. The Marine behind him dispatched the other with equal speed.
“Well. That was fun,” a Marine said, aiming his gun at the kidnapper.
“We’re not done yet.” DJ kicked the weapons out of reach, then picked up the cell phone as his teammates secured the prisoners. “The line’s still connected.” He covered the receiver. “Shit! That’ll alert someone nasty.” Markus came in and he tossed the cell to him. “Give that to Intel, see what they can find. Let’s make this exit quiet—no telling who they were talking to on that cell or how far away they are.”
He searched the prisoners, ignoring her.
“Yo, DJ! Hurry up and untie me!” she shouted from behind the duct tape gag. It sounded like bad humming.
DJ faced her, his gaze moving over her in a clinical “inspecting for injuries” look, bypassing her porn queen position: thighs spread, ankles tied to the chair legs. Her skirt was hiked so high she felt a draft, and humiliated, she gave him her best glare.
“Bet that look sends men running home to Mama, huh?” he said, pulling up his shirt enough to holster his weapon and reveal a kevlar vest underneath.
Suddenly he touched his ear, all three men looking at each other as if listening to God. DJ cursed, motioning to the other two. Collecting weapons, they hurriedly dragged the unconscious men out the door.
“Untie me!” she shouted again and knew darn well he understood her. But he didn’t, and instead, he fiddled with the ropes cutting into her wrists and ankles, and lifted her from the chair. Then the man had the unmitigated gall to toss her over his shoulder like a sack of feed. Air punched out of her lungs at first impact, then again and again with every quick step he took out of the warehouse.
“Jesus, Mary Grace. Put on a few pounds lately?”
She twisted on his shoulder and glared murderously at him. He smirked, cupped her behind, and kept moving. The man always had more nerve than smarts, she thought, conceding temporary defeat, and slumped. She couldn’t breathe; her head was pounding with all the blood rushing between her ears, and never mind that this was the most unladylike position ever.
DJ stopped between the buildings, set her on her feet, then whipped out a knife and cut her bonds. She groaned, but before she could pull the sticky tape, he yanked it off.
“Ow!”
He covered her mouth, backing her up against the wall. “For once in your life, keep quiet!” He looked left and right. “Those three aren’t the only men after you.”
Her eyes flared and when he let her go, she huddled close to him, rubbing circulation back into her arms and legs and trying not to gag on the smells lingering in the humidity. She noticed the tiny, flesh-colored earpiece in his right ear—then she let herself notice the rest. Black hair, chiseled profile, he was still heart-stoppingly handsome and packed with a sexual energy she’d never found in any other man. Ever. Not even with her late husband. Just being this close made her hands itch to touch him, and never mind that her body was doing a happy dance. It’s been so long since I felt that, she thought. To hell with the kidnappers. She laid her hand lightly on his arm.
DJ’s gaze flew to hers, locking hard, her wide-eyed stare grinding right down to his bones and making him nuts in all the wrong places. He didn’t want her to look at him like that—not now, not here. The situation was too dangerous to get sidetracked.
Then, “Be advised, late arrival,” came through the earpiece and DJ focused.
The hollow rumble of an engine moving into the warehouse sounded like thunder. Doors slammed, footsteps, and their pissed-off Spanish crystal clear as the men passed toward the back where they’d found her.
Mary Grace made a tiny sound, and DJ looked at her, mouthing, “Let’s go.” He scooped up his hat, moving through the alley toward the street. He stopped at the edge as the warehouse door went down.
DJ felt Mary Grace press up against his back, every inch of her defined. “Intel! Intel?” he said just above a whisper.
“We’re packing out.”
“Like hell you are! Where’s the fucking car?”
“Behind this place.”
Great. It was supposed to be parked in front. DJ muttered something about national security in the hands of idiots and looked at Mary Grace. “We have to run to that building, get inside and to the car in the back.”
“And if we can’t?” she whispered back. If they shoot us?
He shrugged. “I’ll improvise when we get there.”
“That’s your plan?”
“Best one I got right now.”
He checked the area, and with her, took off across the street to the apartment. He shoved through the doors, overtook the hallway toward the back of the building. He stopped for a second, glancing around. They were trapped, no exit. Then he kicked in the last door. A woman inside screamed and hurried into the corner.
Mary Grace apologized in Spanish, but DJ headed straight to the nearest window, then shoved it open. He glared at the screaming woman. She shut up instantly.
He grabbed Mary Grace close. “It’s a short drop. Get going.”
She looked down, eyes wide. “Oh, no no no!”
He didn’t give her a choice as he scooped her up and put her legs over the sash, almost dumping her out.
Mary Grace grabbed the window frame. “DJ, that’s too far.”
“It’s only nine, ten feet. Where’s all that southern backbone?”
“Back in South Carolina in my panty drawer.”
They heard shouts and footsteps. “Now, dammit!”
“Okay, okay, I’m going.” Mary Grace closed her eyes and jumped. She landed fine, but her high heels stuck into the ground, toppling her backward on her butt.
DJ dropped to a crouch beside her. “You just gonna sit there?” He yanked her to her feet, pulling her along toward a car.
Mary Grace gaped at the vehicle, reaching for the handle. “This isn’t a car, it’s a go-cart.” His shoulders wouldn’t fit in it!
“It runs. Get in.” She did. Already inside, he started the engine and was pulling out when a bullet hit the side window. It shattered over her head. She yelped, ducking.
“You okay?” He ground the gear, jammed the gas, and the little car lurched forward, sliding on the steep incline. When she didn’t respond, he grabbed her shoulder and shook. “Are you injured?”
“No.” She brushed glass out of her hair as the car bounced along at an amazing speed, and Mary Grace held on for dear life. “You call this a rescue?”
“Nag, nag, nag,” he said calmly. “We’re still alive.”
He turned right, then left, then right twice more, speeding up the hill. The car moved faster than she’d expected, hitting every rock and dent in the road.
Mary Grace swore she lost a filling back there. “Where are we going?”
“Haven’t a clue.” He reached under the seat and handed her a radio. “Turn that to twelve megahertz and say, ‘Op one.’ ”
She obeyed, repeating it.
“You have to put your finger on the button.”
She flushed and did it again.
“Now let go of the button to hear.”
“Be more helpful next time.” She repeated the transmission.
“Op two to Op one,” came through instantly. She held the radio out like it was infected.
DJ grabbed it. “The gang is hot on my tail, guns blazing.”
“No backup. Intel took the other ride.”
Fucking cowards. “Then steal one!”
“Will do, Op one. Base is coming for the first team, but you have to lose those guys. Get out of sight, ASAP. Will contact at oh-seven-hundred tomorrow.”
“Shit.” DJ confirmed and handed her the radio. He was on his own.
“What did all that mean and why are you still driving so fast? There’s no one behind us.”
“Yes. There is.” He turned the car so hard she slammed into the door.
Then she saw it, a dirty black truck barreling after them.
“Man, I wish they’d give up. I really didn’t want to shoot anyone today.”
She glanced back, seeing only men and weapons. “Don’t stop on my account.”
“What the hell did you do to these guys?”
“Nothing.”
“Try that on someone who doesn’t know you.”
She shrugged, brushing the glass off her clothes. “I bit and kicked.”
“Scratched and clawed, too, I’ll bet.”
“Yes, well, a good manicure is a woman’s best weapon.”
He scoffed, amused, shifting gears and hauling ass. “What did they say?”
“They wanted me to pay for what my husband did.”
He scowled. “But Paul’s been dead for three years.”
“I caught that discrepancy, too.” And I hope he’s rotting in hell, the cheating bastard. No one knew that. No one. And Mary Grace wasn’t going to share her humiliation with anyone. Especially DJ.
“They had to have said more.” DJ glanced in the rearview mirror, saw the ride close in. Christ, they were a determined bunch.
“Nothing about why they took me.” She slapped a hand on the dash when he swerved to avoid a dog. “And my Spanish is a little more than passable.”
They were going to send her back in pieces—the fact that they hadn’t blindfolded her told DJ they never intended to trade her for a ransom. But he didn’t point that out. She looked scared enough and he wondered if they’d brutalized her, but didn’t have time to ask. He’d want to turn around and do some damage if they had.
He drove for another mile, cut right, took a dirt road, then slid the car behind a stand of trees. He killed the engine and motioned for her to hunch down in the seat.
Mary Grace slid to the floor, yet DJ remained as he was, dumping the hat on his head and looking like he was taking a nap, his eyes slitted. It was painfully quiet—no truck, no people—just the hot, humid wind coming through the shattered window. Without much movement, DJ cocked his weapon, his finger on the trigger. Then his gaze flicked to hers.
“Hello, DJ.”
His lips quirked. “How’s it going, Mare?”
He was the only one who called her that. She wouldn’t let anyone else. Even her late husband. “I didn’t know you were stationed here.”
“Two years.” DJ just looked at her, thinking that even dirty, with bruises on her jaw, her pinned-up hair falling and still stuck with dead flowers, she was still beautiful. And got to him. DJ wanted nothing more than to pull her into his arms and go from there. She’d probably beat the shit out of him if he did. Yet the past two days made him realize that the thing he had for Mary Grace had never died. Though he’d tried his best to kill it.
It just wasn’t easy to see the only woman you ever wanted in the arms of another man. Even if DJ had pushed her there. Even if neither of them deserved her.
“Just what is it you’re doing in Panama?”
“If I tell you, I’ll have to kill you.”
“How very bad-ass of you to say.” Mary Grace rolled her eyes. “And still playing it close to the vest, I see.”
He stared out the window, not wanting to have this conversation. He’d kept his feelings for her locked up tight for years, and he wasn’t about to break his silence now. “Makes life easier.”
“For you, maybe.” A tense, bittersweet silence stretched between them, gazes locked. DJ read a jumble of emotions in her eyes—curiosity, pleasure, and lastly, a sadness that ripped at his heart. “I almost wish it wasn’t you, DJ,” she said softly.
A sigh deflated his chest. “I know.” They’d been on the edge of something for years. The edge of desire? The edge of need? All he knew was that being near her for however long would lay nothing but a straight shot to mind-blowing temptation in front of him.
“But I’m glad it was a familiar face.”
He offered a half-smile, yet as she pushed a loose strand out of her view, her hand shook almost violently. DJ realized while this might be commonplace for him, it wasn’t for her.
She exhaled slowly, then said, “I didn’t think I’d get out of there. Thank you.” She stared at his profile. “I know what it took for you to do this.”
She had no idea. Mary Grace was the one big regret of his life. She’d been an ungodly craving under his skin since he laid eyes on her. But he’d never let her know that. She’d been young and wild, and the only person to offer friendship to a kid from the low side of town. She’d ignored his rebellious mean streak, his hand-me-down clothes, and brought him to her life, her house. He’d never wanted to lose that, so he never once touched her the way he wanted. Which was to explore every delectable inch of her.
DJ shifted on the seat, propping his elbow on the window as if the inches of distance would make a difference. It didn’t. The erotic images played hell on his mind and to distract, he popped out the earpiece.
“Too far out of range—we have the radio.” He opened the first couple of buttons of his shirt, then pulled out a thin black wire with a flat little box on the end.
Mary Grace sighed, resigned to the change of subject. What did she ex. . .
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