Authors: Rebecca Zanetti
happened. Her fingers shook. Her heart pounded. She swiped again, and the door clicked.
Please, don’t let it be too late. She ran inside a small cell and stopped cold.
Nathan hung suspended from the ceiling, his hands holding chains, his knees twisting the commander’s
neck. “Where the hell is Jory?” Nate yelled, veins popping along his jaw.
The commander fought back, punching up, turning and biting Nate’s thigh.
Nate bellowed in pain and struggled against the chains. “Why did you show me that video?”
The commander gurgled for air, reaching for his back pocket. “Because I’m not deactivating your chip
or Jory’s chip, and I’m keeping you separated. Matt and Shane will have to separate to rescue you both, and
that’s when I’ll reclaim all four of you.” He slowly drew a jagged-edged blade from his back pocket.
Audrey didn’t stop to think, didn’t stop to reason. She pointed the gun at the commander’s back… and
fired.
The bullet hit him in the shoulder and knocked him across the room. He crashed into a metal table.
Instruments of torture clattered to the concrete floor. His arms flailed, and blood sprayed from his chest.
Must’ve been a through and through. His eyes closed and he hit the ground.
Nate swung his body toward her. Cuts, stabs, and burn marks violated his chest, legs, and neck. Bruises
mottled a frightening purple across his strong face. “Get something sharp.”
She scrambled toward the bloody instruments on the floor and clasped a knife glinting red and silver.
She turned, her breath heaving, and studied him. Reaching for the damaged table, she rolled it toward him.
“I’ve got this.” Gingerly easing her good knee on the table, she leveraged herself and slowly stood up. The
knife sliced easily into the leather cuffs around Nate’s wrists, although she had to saw for precious
moments to free him.
He dropped with a groan, scrambling for the table and still going down.
Panic flooded her, and she leaned to balance on the table and hop down. “Nate?” She knelt next to him
and held his shoulders. “How bad?”
He shook his head, and blood arced across the room. “Couple of broken bones, internal bleeding, and
vision hazing.” Curling bloody fingers over the table, he hauled himself to his feet and hitched over to a
laptop opened on a narrow table.
“Nate, let’s go.” She stood and reached for his arm. “Bring the laptop.” Was his brain even functioning?
As he brought up a Pinterest site for some artist from Alaska, she shook him. His brain had been fried.
“We have to go.”
“Hold on.” His fingers fumbled on the keys. “I can’t function. Audrey, pin a picture of high-heeled
shoes on this site, would you?”
She coughed. “You’re going to be okay. Trust me. Let’s go.” She tried to drag him toward the door.
“Now.” He tugged her back. “Pin.”
On all that was holy. She couldn’t move him. “Fine.” Leaning around him, she searched and pinned a
sparkling pair of Louboutins onto the page. “Happy now?”
Satisfaction quirked his lips. “Oh, yeah.” He closed the laptop and shoved it into her hands. “Do not
lose this.” He turned back toward the commander, who remained motionless on the floor. “This will only
take a minute.”
“We have to go.” Audrey glanced at the downed man. “Right now. More men will be coming.”
A bellow sounded from up above, and boots clamored on the stairway. Nate growled, frustration
flushing his face red as he tore himself away from the commander’s prone body. Nate claimed a knife from
the floor and ran out in front of her, slicing one man across the face and the next across the neck.
He lurched on the stairs, and Audrey jumped forward to help him up. Grabbing her elbow, he stumbled
for the door. “We have five minutes.”
He tripped several times on the stairway up, and she tried to stabilize him, even with her leg buckling.
She tucked the gun in the back of her yoga pants. They reached the top stair, and Nate shoved open the
door. She followed him into the hangar.
Strong arms hooked her and threw her across the room.
She cried out, landing hard and bouncing. The baby! Her ears rang. She slowly sat up to see Nate and a
soldier grappling at the doorway. Nate jabbed an elbow into the soldier’s neck, and the soldier punched
Nate in his already damaged face.
Nate fell back, crashing against the metal wall.
Audrey shook her head, trying to focus. The gun. She set the laptop on the concrete and took the gun
from her waist. Rising, she started to aim and then stopped. Nate had the soldier in a headlock, and the
guy’s neck snapped with a quick twist.
She gulped down bile.
Nate turned toward her, a bloody mess, pure fury in his gray eyes. “Are you all right?”
No. Not even close. “Yes. What’s the plan?”
He grinned bloody teeth. “Sparkly shoes mean we’re heading out via air.”
“Huh?” Her brain had slowed to a crawl.
“Get in that helicopter while I sabotage the other two.” He staggered toward a helicopter.
Oh. The Deans used a fake Pinterest site to relay messages? Audrey tried to ignore the immense pain
attacking her body. What had she injured when she’d hit the ground?
No time for that. She reclaimed the laptop and limped over to crawl into the front seat of a Black Hawk.
She kept the door open and her legs out just in case. A sharp pain stabbed along her ribs, and she bent
over. “Ow.”
Nate whirled toward her. “What’s wrong?”
“I don’t know.” Another pain hit. Not again. “Please, Nate. Let’s go.”
Nate finished whatever he was doing with the other two vehicles and hitched over to her. “Get secure.
This is going to be bumpy.” He frowned. “Hasn’t it been five minutes?”
Audrey wiped dirt off her chin. “Why?”
The outside door opened, and almost in slow motion, Isobel Madison clicked into the room. Her gaze
on the tablet before her, she stilled, her head jerking up.
Isobel reached for her cell phone.
Audrey jumped from the helicopter, gun out and pointing. Her ribs ached. Bad. “Drop the phone,
Mother.”
Nate stood next to the helicopter, his gaze going from one woman to the other. “Nobody has to get hurt
here,” he said through swelling tissue.
Audrey swallowed and set her stance. “I will shoot you. Drop the phone.”
“You will not.” Isobel sighed and glanced at Nate. “Where’s the commander?”
“I shot him.” Audrey’s knees began to tremble. She’d shot two people. Her breath caught, and she tried
to remain standing.
Isobel’s eyes widened. “Where?”
“Down there. Go check on him but drop the phone first.” Audrey’s knee buckled, and she kept upright
only through pure stubbornness.
Isobel’s gaze darted to the far doorway and back to her daughter. She glanced at her phone. “You won’t
shoot me.”
“I will.” Audrey’s hands trembled, and she tightened her hold on the gun. Another pang rolled through
her abdomen, and she swayed. “I don’t want to shoot you, but to protect this baby, to protect Nate, I will. I
swear, Mother. I. Will. Shoot. You.” She meant every word, but she hoped she didn’t have to shoot.
“Audrey, don’t,” Nate said softly.
She kept her aim steady and turned slightly to look at his battered face. “I love you. I love this baby,
and nobody is going to hurt either one of you. Get in the helicopter, Nate.” If a choice had to be made,
she’d choose her baby and Nate. “I’m sorry, Mother. But I’m taking a stand.”
Her mother’s eyes blazed a light blue. “I can’t believe you’re mine.”
Audrey sighed and allowed sorrow one brief moment. “I’m not.” She turned toward Nate, wincing at
her aching stomach. “Let’s go.”
He eyed her and nodded before hitching his bulk around the front of the bird. Audrey turned back to
her mother. “Drop the phone. Now.”
Isobel’s eyes flared. “I will never understand you.” She threw the phone onto the ground.
“I know.” Sadness filled Audrey as she turned and lifted herself back into the bird. “Go check on
Franklin. He may be dead.”
With a soft cry, Isobel ran for the back door.
The world exploded outside. Even protected by metal, Audrey felt heat. Oh, no. What was happening?
Even though she had emotionally let her mother go, she was pathetically grateful Isobel had headed
downstairs in the metal shop and hadn’t been caught in an explosion. Maybe Audrey hadn’t let go
completely, but who could?
She hurried to shut the door and turned toward Nate.
He frowned. “That was more than five minutes. I had my brothers set the explosives and get back to
safety where they could remote detonate.” He leaned over and pressed a hard kiss against her mouth. “I
love you, too.”
She gulped as he flicked a bunch of levers. “Your brothers?”
“Bombs and other explosives set around the entire perimeter. The commander’s forces won’t know
where to concentrate.” Nate pressed a button, and the ceiling folded in two. “We’ll go pick my brothers up
now.”
“Okay.” Audrey buckled in, her mind reeling, her abdomen undulating. Something bad was happening,
but they had to get free. “Um, can you see to fly?”
“Sort of.” He ignited the engine, and a second later, they lifted into the air.
Audrey’s stomach cramped, and she squeezed her abdomen. “Oof.”
“What?” Nate kept his gaze outside.
She tried to take several deep breaths, her gaze outside at the fires billowing up from all around.
Soldiers scurried to and fro, shooting, but not at anybody. “I’m not sure.” Trying to remain calm, she
pressed a hand to her inner thigh. “I’m bleeding. The baby.”
Nate flew the copter through the storm, his heart thundering. Visibility sucked. “Lean back and take
several deep breaths.” He had to get Audrey to a doctor. Now.
She nodded and leaned her head back, closing her eyes. Even so, a tear leaked out to wind down her
face. “This is my fault.”
“No, it isn’t.” He needed both hands on the stick, or he’d reach for her. His hearing was off, and he
couldn’t get his bearings. “You’ll be okay. I promise.”
A light glimmered up from below, and he followed it, setting down right outside his cabin.
Shane and Matt ran out through the swirling wind and angry rain, both loaded down with gear. The
senator jogged out afterward, his arm in a sling.
Matt opened the back hatch.
Nate ensnared Audrey and gently lifted her, stepped into the storm, and into the hatch. “I can’t see to
fly,” he muttered. The senator scooted in next to him.
Matt nodded, shut the door, and jumped into the pilot’s seat. Shane stretched into the passenger seat,
and they rose back into the rumbling clouds.
Nate gathered Audrey close, his breath heating. She felt so small and defenseless in his arms, and for
the first time, he didn’t know what to do. She huddled into him, her head on his chest, her knees gathered
to her stomach.
“Audrey?” He leaned close to her ear.
She sniffed. “I hurt. Something’s wrong. Cramps.”
No.
Matt reached a low flying altitude and glanced over his shoulder. “We’ll reach the SUV we have hidden
in five minutes. Be prepared to run for it.”
“No.” Nate swallowed, his ears buzzing. “We need a hospital, Mattie. Now.”
Matt stilled, his gaze lashing to Audrey. “The copter is probably tracked, Nate. We have to ditch it.
Now.” The helicopter rocked to the side as the storm battered it. Lightning blazed outside.
Nate rubbed a hand down his face. “Drop us off and keep going. It’s the baby. Please.”
Matt cut Shane a look. “They’re tracking us right now. If we make a stop, they’ll know it. They’ll come
after you.” He grimaced and turned back to the stick.
Audrey groaned, her body shaking.
Nate tucked her closer. “There’s no choice. Drop us off and get to safety.” He’d figure something out
after seeing a doctor. Even if he had to call the real cops, he’d do it to protect her. As if they could.
The senator patted Audrey’s shoulder. “I’ll come with you.”
“No.” Nate shook his head. “You’ve disappeared, and you have to stay that way.” He leaned to better
view Matt’s face. “Audrey shot the commander. He’s slowed down.”
“Dead,” Audrey moaned.
“No.” It wasn’t a kill shot. “You didn’t kill anybody, baby.” Even the soldier outside the room had been
wearing a vest. “I promise.”
Her body relaxed against him as if she’d been carrying a weight. “Okay.”
Nate bit back a growl. He’d been so close to ending the commander, but he hadn’t had time with the
soldiers descending on them.
Shane looked back at Audrey, concern cutting grooves near his mouth. “Inova in Falls Church has one
of the best neonatal programs in the world. They have a heliport.” At Nate’s raised eyebrow, Shane
shrugged. “I memorized hospitals from here to home just in case.”
Thank God for his brothers. Nate nodded, emotion tearing into him. “Drop us off and go hide the
copter. We’ll meet you at home.”
Matt fought the storm while Nate fought the fire inside him. He’d been so cocky. So sure he’d be able to