“You think I’d be stupid enough to come here without evidence?” Abbie had bluffed her way into a lot of situations, such as getting her first chance in the news business, but the line of hooey she’d just handed Gwen took the prize. She didn’t have anything more than a belief in the doctor who had cared for all the women in her family for over twenty years. Time to start negotiations. “If you help me, I won’t incriminate you in any way. But if you don’t help me, I’m going to expose everything I have on the Kore Women’s Center—and the Wentworths—to the world and let the chips fall where they will.”
Gwen sat so still she seemed mummified, then she shook her head, speaking in a whisper. “You can’t do that.”
“I can and will do that. My mother was perfectly healthy until she entered your clinic ten days ago. Now she’s dying. You help me or I’ll find a way to shut down the clinic. I don’t care how much propaganda you put out about helping other women.”
“We do help women. We—”
“Save it for someone who believes you.” Abbie figured she had very little time before someone came hunting for Gwen and ended her meeting. “I have years of documentation for her visits and blood donations. My mother’s doctor may have believed the bogus medical records Kore sent in response to his inquiries, but I now have proof of what you’re hiding and I’ll use it if that’s the only way to find out what happened to my mother.”
“You don’t have any idea of the repercussions of what you’re threatening.”
True, but that had never stopped Abbie before once she had her mind made up.
Dr. Tatum had shared everything he knew, but he didn’t know what had compelled Abbie’s mother to make annual trips to give blood at the Kore clinic for the past thirty-two years—starting two years before Abbie was born. She planned to find out. Her mother’s rare H-1 blood had to be part of the reason, but whatever test—or treatment—they did during the last visit had caused her mother’s spleen to fail.
Other doctors had concurred with Tatum, who said he’d never heard of a healthy spleen deteriorating so quickly with no clear reason. It had damaged her mother’s liver. At the rate she was going, she’d need a liver transplant soon. An unrealistic expectation with her rare genetic profile.
Abbie had the same rare blood but the RH didn’t match. Her sisters both had normal type-O blood. If she could determine the root of her mother’s illness Dr. Tatum might have a chance at slowing the progression until he figured out a cure.
“I have people willing to back me, so I won’t be alone in dealing with repercussions,” Abbie added. Did the lies get any bigger than that one? If Gwen called her bluff Abbie would find herself fighting a Wentworth lawsuit alone.
“You shouldn’t have involved anyone else.” Gwen’s eyes took in everything around them, jumping as fast as her short breaths. She swallowed hard and leaned forward, grasping the chair arms with finely shaped fingers. What would terrify an heiress of a family as powerful as the Wentworths? Gwen lowered her voice. “Listen to me. Leave here and promise not to mention a word of this conversation and I won’t say a word either.”
Not a chance in hell. “And if I don’t?”
“They’ll kill you… and me.”
Chapter Eight
Hunter signaled Carlos on his way to the front entrance then waited while Carlos diverted the exterior security force to one side to inspect a suspicious duffel bag. The one Korbin had planted earlier after parking the limo.
With security diverted, Hunter slipped soundlessly around the dark corner of the mansion. Cold penetrated his tux, but he welcomed the fresh air after being inside with so many people.
He lifted a night-vision monocular from inside his coat pocket and slipped it on.
If Linette made the drop where she’d indicated in her last message, he’d find a faux lipstick tube containing the USB key outside a bathroom window on the west side. The tube had a tiny infrared LED light on one end.
The latest in female accessories for the discerning spy.
BAD believed she’d created the device herself. Pretty sharp even for a genius since she had little freedom of movement.
Guess he’d find out soon enough if she could be trusted.
There it was in the middle of a bush, glowing bright as a hundred-watt bulb through the monocular. The poor placement—dangling in the bush—actually gave Hunter a measure of relief. Linette wasn’t a trained operative or she’d have made sure the unit reached the ground when she shoved it through the slit in the screen covering the window.
Hunter flattened his palm, fingers straight, and slid his hand into the center of the evergreen bush.
Out of habit, he made a scan of the grounds. A maze of gardens and walkways led through clusters of yew trees that partially hid the twelve-foot-tall brick-and-stone wall surrounding the premises.
BAD’s intelligence indicated sensors covered the top ledge.
No reason for security to guard the wall since the sensors were linked into a continual loop. Any break in the signal would send an alarm. Sensors detected movement up to twenty feet above the wall, allowing for animals up to the size of a hawk to cross over.
But the body moving through the sprawling limbs of a tree on this side of the wall was no bird.
Security?
No. Carlos would have alerted him to anything like that.
Hunching down so he could move through deep-shadowed spots, Hunter shuffled farther around the house to determine what the intruder was after. He’d covered a hundred feet when he spotted a waist-high stone enclosure for a patio lined with bushes.
Staying close to the house in the deep shadow until he reached the wall, he peeked over the ledge to find two women talking.
One had a head of curly hair. Abbie.
The other was Gwen.
Someone who actually knew Gwen Wentworth had to wait months to get on her calendar. What had Abbie said to gain a private meeting when they’d never met?
Hunter kept track of the figure in the tree, who moved another branch higher. In a series of crab-shuffling steps, he moved close enough to listen to Abbie and Gwen. They sat on opposite sides of a small table facing each other.
Neither one looked happy.
“Are you threatening me?” Abbie asked Gwen.
What the hell had they been discussing? Hunter kept an eye on the figure in the tree. Paparazzi?
“No. Not me.” Gwen’s fingers gripped the wicker chair arms so tightly the fine bones on the back of her hand threatened to break the pale skin.
“Who?”
“I can’t tell you.”
Abbie pointed a threatening finger at Gwen. “I told you what I would do. Did you think I was kidding?”
“No, I don’t. Ask your mother. If she tells you—” Gwen shook her head. Her fingers tugged nervously at her lips.
Keeping track of the conversation, Hunter eyed the figure in the tree, who had stopped moving.
“She did.” Abbie dropped her hand. “Not intentionally. I found my mother’s diary. I know the players and I’m going after all of them.”
“Are you crazy?” Gwen asked with panic shaking her voice. “The Fras will—”
The Fras? That snatched Hunter’s gaze back to Gwen, who’d frozen and covered her mouth as if she’d said a forbidden word. Her chest jumped with panicked breaths.
Hunter took in the tree climber again, who seemed to be leaning forward in a—
“The who?” Abbie asked.
—shooting pose.
Gwen uncovered her mouth. “What? I thought… you don’t know? You said—” She jumped up, hands fisted.
A bright explosion of light burst from where the figure stood in the branches, then the boom followed.
The bullet struck Gwen high in the back, slamming her forward at Abbie, who screamed.
Hunter leaped over the wall.
Abbie’s wild gaze whipped around to him.
If he could get them to the ground the wall would block the shooter.
A second rifle explosion blasted the air.
Chapter Nine
Hunter landed on Gwen’s patio and kicked over the stained glass wall of candles, killing the closest light. He dove for Gwen, who had fallen on top of a screeching Abbie. Wrapping up both women, he rolled, his momentum taking them with him.
All three bodies hit the tile-covered patio. Hard.
Abbie’s next scream died in a pained umph.
No more shots rang out. Darkness fell over him with the comfort of a safety blanket.
But security would be everywhere within minutes if they recognized that noise as a gunshot.
His BAD teammates would.
The smell of fresh blood soaked the air. Hunter lifted up on an elbow and turned Gwen over onto her back, gauging her wound through his night vision. A dark stain spread across one shoulder of her designer dress. He checked her pulse. Steady. Reaching for the closest chair cushion, he unzipped the cover and folded the soft material into a thick pad he shoved beneath her gown.
Would that stop the blood flow long enough for medical care to reach her?
He pressed the heel of his hand on the padding. Seconds were disintegrating quicker than his chance of walking away from this mess clean.
What had Abbie gotten into?
She lay facedown on the cold tile. Not moving.
Hunter used his free hand to ease her over on her back.
She’d landed with her fist between the ground and her diaphragm, which had probably knocked the wind out of her.
Emotional stress interfered with her resuming normal breathing again. Abbie might be unconscious, but even her subconscious would be in a state of terror.
“Breathe, Abbie,” he whispered, gently rubbing her shoulder. “Everything’s okay. You’re safe.”
Footsteps pounded toward the pool from the grounds.
The shooter?
Hunter couldn’t leave these women unprotected, even for the mission. He pulled Gwen’s dress strap over the wound padding to hold it in place and shoved to his feet. He wheeled to face the figure coming fast, ready to attack, but pulled up short at the sound of a familiar, “Fuck,” as Carlos jumped across the wall.
“What the hell’s going on?” Carlos was seconds ahead of everyone else only because the rest of the security hadn’t thought to head the way Hunter had gone.
His jolt of relief at Carlos showing up first vanished with impending discovery of Hunter’s presence. “Shooter in the second tallest tree at eleven o’clock, seventy yards from the outer wall of the patio, took out Gwen. Shoulder’s bleeding.”
Carlos dropped down next to Gwen, took one look, and pressed on the folded material to staunch the blood flow. He tucked his chin to his lapel and spoke low into a button that transmitted only to other BAD agents.
Hunter removed his monocular, his eyes now adjusted to the dim light filtering out from a lamp in the sunroom.
Abbie started wheezing like a squeak toy sucking air. Her chest heaved with strangled breaths. She struggled, jerking with spasms.
Fear would make every breath harder to draw.
He lowered his face close to her and whispered, “You’re safe now. No one’s going to hurt you.”
She gasped once, then again, eyes opening wild with panic. She raised her arms to attack.
He grabbed her wrists, gently pushing her hands to her chest and shushing her. “Take it easy. Just breathe.”
“They’re coming,” Carlos warned. “You gotta go.”
Hunter moved his mouth next to Abbie’s ear so only she could hear. “Don’t tell anyone I was here. I saved you from that second shot. We’re even.”
He needed ten minutes alone with her to find out what she knew about how the Fras, Eliot’s sniper, and the attack on Gwen were related.
And how Abbie fit into all this.
“She conscious?” Carlos asked, indicating Abbie.
Hunter stared into her eyes. Answering “yes” would pull her into BAD’s network, where she might not surface again any time soon, or at all, and way out of Hunter’s reach.
Decisions, decisions.
“Not yet.” Hunter held his breath. His fingers gripped her arms gently, thumbs caressing her cold skin.
Her eyes flared, then her chest expanded sharply. She finally drew a hard-earned breath and exhaled. Her eyelids fluttered closed.
Had she even been lucid when he spoke to her?
“I called Puzzle Queen,” Carlos told him, indicating Rae, which meant he’d instituted an improvised backup plan. “She’s headed to the laundry room. Back through the sunroom and library—”
“I know the way.” Hunter took one last look at Abbie, wishing he could stay long enough to be sure she was safe, but the shooter had likely left and Carlos would protect her.
Security would pour into this private sanctuary in seconds.
Hunter shoved up and rushed into the library. Navigating by a memorized floor plan, he located a door hidden in one section of the mahogany paneled walls. The invisible doorway provided the household staff access without any need for them to travel through the mansion’s family areas.
Hopefully, the majority of the staff would be dealing with the party and not passing through this area. If anyone did, they’d wake up in here tomorrow morning with a headache.
He flipped the light switch off in every hallway he entered, wending his way to the central corridor that led to the kitchen, laundry, and service areas. After the third turn, a slice of light beamed into the dark from a door ajar at the end of the hall.
When he reached for the handle the door opened all the way into a laundry room.
Rae swept one look up and down him. “That’s going to be a bugger to get out.”
Hunter dropped his chin to take in the blood-smeared front of his tuxedo. “Shit.”
“No worries.” Rae stepped over to clothes hanging on an electric track. She flipped several dark outfits out of the way, took a look at Hunter with an eye for sizing up a man, then selected a tuxedo she handed him. “If anyone looks closely, they’ll realize you’re not wearing Armani or whatever overpriced designer you patronize, but this will get you off the premises.”