As he headed for the door and his meeting with Irina, Mitch hoped to hell he was right.
v
Through the swirling haze of anger, Sloan recognized the dark expanse of water to her left and the twisting road in front of her. West River Drive. The road peeled away beneath her and she took the tight turns fast, leaning hard into the curves, her body knifing through the wind. She was on her motorcycle because Rebecca had borrowed her car earlier and hadn’t returned it yet. Sloan hadn’t given any thought to where she was going when she walked out on Michael. All she’d wanted was to outrun her rage before it spilled over on Michael and contaminated the only good thing in her life.
As the white lines flashed beneath her, the cold wind off the water bit at her face below the visor of her helmet and her mind started to clear. Her focus shifted once more to Avery Clark. It all came down to the feds, the same group that had turned on her. They’d put her in jail and years later, they were still manipulating her life. Only this time, Avery wanted her to risk something far more important than her life.
Michael.
She pulled into a turnoff that was empty save for one pickup truck at the far opposite end. Cutting the engine, she settled her feet on either side of her Harley and unzipped her jacket. Her body was hot and the cold air blowing off the water chilled the sweat against her skin. She
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RADclY fFe
wasn’t afraid for herself. She wanted to get close to the men at the top.
She wanted the man who had ordered the execution of two cops, and who had sent someone to run her down in the street outside her own home. Except she hadn’t been the victim, Michael had.
The man responsible for that attack had to be out there, and there was no reason to think he wouldn’t try again. Nothing had changed. In fact, the closer the team got to exposing the criminal conspiracies, the more likely the men pulling the strings were to take drastic action. She wasn’t afraid on her own account. She’d spent enough time doing covert work in Southeast Asia to know how to protect herself. Professional assassins in that part of the world put American wiseguys to shame.
But Michael didn’t have that kind of skill, and Sloan didn’t know how to protect her.
Her options were few. She could quit the team—she wasn’t a cop or a federal agent anymore. But if she did, there was no guarantee the threat would disappear. She could find whoever had tried to kill her and force them to tell her who gave the order. She’d never been an assassin, but she would kill to protect Michael, and she knew it wouldn’t bother her.
v
When the buzzer rang, Michael jumped up from the sofa, excitement overriding her worry. Then disappointment struck her hard. It wouldn’t be Sloan. Taking a steadying breath, she checked the small monitor set into the wall beside the elevator. Then she flicked the intercom. Sandy’s voice greeted her.
“Hi. Sorry to bother you. I know it’s late. Is Dell there?”
“No. No one’s here. Want to come up?”
Sandy looked up and down the street, her uncertainty and unhappiness clear even in the small black-and-white image.
“I’m not having a very good night either,” Michael said. “You don’t have to talk about anything.”
“Okay. Sure. Why not.”
Michael disengaged the lock on the front door and watched the monitor until Sandy was inside. Then she went into the kitchen to make tea. A moment later, the tall double doors enclosing the elevator slid
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Justice for All
back almost soundlessly. She called over her shoulder, “Come on out to the kitchen. Are you hungry?”
“No,” Sandy said, climbing up onto one of the stools. “Mind if I have a beer instead of tea?”
“One of those nights, huh?”
Sandy snorted. “For sure.”
“So,” Michael said, joining her at the breakfast bar. She handed her a bottle of one of Sloan’s microbrews and set her own tea aside to cool. “Dell wasn’t happy about the job offer?”
“Oh, she was. She can’t wait to stick me behind a desk.”
Michael couldn’t help but smile, considering that was how she spent almost all her time. But she understood what Sandy meant. “A little overprotective?”
Sandy rolled her eyes. “Like working in an office is going to erase the last two years of my life.”
“Is that what you think she wants?” Michael asked quietly.
“Don’t you? After all, would you want a whore for a girlfriend?”
Michael cradled the steaming teacup while she give that some thought. “I would absolutely hate anyone to use someone I loved, physically or in any other way. I think I’d be jealous too. Of someone touching her, even though I know that’s not what it’s about. And of course, I’d be afraid of her being hurt.”
Sandy leaned her elbow on the smooth granite surface, cupped her chin in her hand, and stared at Michael. “What about being ashamed or grossed out. You left that part out.”
“If I loved someone the way I know Dell loves you, I wouldn’t feel that way about what she needed to do.”
“You know she went to West Point, right? That she’s really smart?
I mean, they’re all smart—even Watts.” Sandy sighed. “You didn’t meet her sister, Erica. She’s an uptight version of Dell, and she definitely didn’t think I was good enough for her.”
“I can’t see Dell caring.”
“She says she doesn’t. Now.”
“You know,” Michael said carefully, “you could get your GED if you wanted.”
“Maybe. Someday.” Sandy picked at the corner of the label on her beer bottle with her thumb. “I want to take the job you offered. I don’t
• 83 •
RADclY fFe
want Dell to support me, so I need to be able to make money without doing guys for it. Besides, I’m sick of faking it.”
“Good.”
“But I’m doing something important already. With Frye.” Sandy met Michael’s gaze. “What I do for Frye makes a difference, just like what Sloan and Dell and the rest of them are doing. I don’t want to stop, and Dell wants me to.”
“Aha.”
“Yeah.” Sandy looked around the loft. “Where is everybody?”
“I don’t know. Something’s happening, but I’m not sure what it is.” Michael sighed. “Sloan didn’t tell me, but from the way she’s wound up already, it’s something big.”
“Oh boy,” Sandy said.
“Yes.” Michael squeezed Sandy’s hand. “So, Monday at ten?”
Sandy finished her beer, slid down from the stool, and placed the empty bottle on the counter next to the sink. “Okay. You’ll be there, right?”
“I will. You’re welcome to stay here. I have a feeling Sloan won’t be back for a while.”
“Thanks, but I think I’ll hit a few places before I head home. Look up some friends.”
Michael slid her arm around Sandy’s shoulder and walked her to the elevator. “You will be careful, won’t you?”
“Sure. I know what I’m doing.” Sandy kissed her on the cheek.
“No worries.”
For the second time that night, Michael listened to the elevator descend before turning back to her empty apartment.
v
“Yeah,” one of Gregor Zamora’s men said as he answered his cell, turning his wrist to check his watch at the same time.11:15. He’d been sitting in the same position behind the wheel in the cramped front seat of the Dodge sedan for so long his ass was numb.
“See the skinny little blonde headed away down the street?”
“The one that just came out of the building? Yeah, I see her.”
“Follow her.”
“You sure? I can’t see her being any kind of trouble.”
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Justice for All
“I didn’t ask for your opinion.”
The line went dead.
“Prick,” the man muttered as he pocketed his keys and slid out of the car. Fucking footwork. At least she had a nice ass, which he kept in his sights as he started after her.
v
“Funny how a slicked-back haircut and getting rid of the tits makes such a big difference,” Watts held forth between slurps of coffee.
“Hell, he even walks different than Mitchell. Must be the package he’s carrying between his legs.”
“Sure. That must be it.” Rebecca checked her rearview mirror, then scanned the street in front of them.
Ziggie’s was a strip joint in the middle of a block of abandoned factories, a darkened Mobil station on the corner, and very little in the way of foot traffic. They’d been in position for two hours, and during that time a dozen cars had parked, disgorging passengers, all men, who straggled alone or in groups into the club. The girls who danced in the dank, cavernous space or performed sexual favors in the airless rooms in the back would use the rear entrance. They hadn’t seen Irina.
“The boy better keep his head on straight,” Watts said.
“Mitch can handle it.” Rebecca knew Watts was partly concerned that Mitch would run into trouble and they’d be too far away to help, and partly jealous that Mitch was point man even though he was still green. But they couldn’t do anything to change either thing, so she focused on something they could affect. “If Clark’s people are here somewhere, I can’t see them.”
“Bet your ass they’re around somewhere,” Watts grunted, crushing the paper cup and dropping it on the floor between his legs. “Clark can pretend he doesn’t have enough manpower to run his own operation, but you can bet he’s got enough to fuck things up for us.”
Rebecca tended to agree. Clark’s modus operandi was to let her people do the dangerous or the boring work while he watched from a distance until something shook loose. Then all of a sudden he and his agents were right in the middle of it. She often wondered whether, if she had the power of his position, she would do the same. She didn’t like to think so.
• 85 •
RADclY fFe
“Let’s hope Irina shows, and that Clark is right about her,” Rebecca said.
“She could be playing him, you know,” Watts said. “Hell, if my choice was being shipped back to some gulag or pretending to work for the feds, I’d volunteer to rat out my fellow sleazeballs too. Doesn’t mean that once she’s out from under Clark’s thumb, she’s really going to do it.”
“I know.” Running a double agent was always a risk, because if they were informing on their one-time friends, they could just as easily turn the tables and betray you. If Irina was double-crossing them, she’d need information to convince the Zamoras and the Russians that she was still on their side. And she’d need to get that information from Mitch.
Rebecca didn’t see that they had any choice except to go forward and hope that Mitch would be able to tell if Irina was stringing him along.
As if reading Rebecca’s mind, Watts said, “I don’t mean to put the boy down, but you heard the two of them over the wire. She can seriously twist Mitch around.” He shifted his bulk and sighed. “She could definitely give me a little wood, and once that happens—”
“Not everyone’s brains are smaller than their dicks, Watts.”
Watts laughed. “Probably a good thing Mitch’s rod isn’t hardwired.”
Rebecca didn’t bother to explain how wrong he was about the way things really worked.
v
“Beer?” the bartender asked as Mitch slid onto a stool and dropped his motorcycle jacket onto the one next to him.
“Sounds good.” Mitch swiveled around to face the stage, putting his back to the bar and the husky blond bartender with muscles bulging beneath his tight white T-shirt. Like every other time he’d been here, a mostly naked girl gyrated in the center of the raised platform, one arm draped around a gleaming pole, her legs spread and her hips cocked, her pelvis an open invitation to the hulking figures lurking in the shadows.
He didn’t recognize her, but then the faces changed frequently in places like this. Women were used up quickly when they were bought and sold like commodities. This one, though, seemed too old to be one of
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Justice for All
the Russian girls smuggled in through the port. Mitch felt a flash of disappointment. Maybe the Russians had moved on.
“Here you go,” the bartender said, sliding a bottle in Mitch’s direction.
Mitch caught it and took a swallow. The cold rich flavor felt good in his parched throat. Nerves, he thought. As he took another deep slug, arms came around his waist from behind. He felt the pressure of full breasts against his back and warm breath wafted across his ear.
Fingernails played down his chest and over his abdomen.
“Hello, new boy,” Irina whispered, dropping her hand onto the inside of his thigh.
Swinging back around, Mitch parted his legs and pulled her in tight to his body. He kissed her, taking his time. She pressed slowly into his cock.
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