Authors: Sara Craven
She didn’t need Vinland’s interest or his compliments, only his leadership on this mission and his respect when she did her job as ordered. This was business.
Dawn looked back out to sea where the dolphins leapt in unison and admired their ability to stay in synch. She hoped that she, Eric and the others could perform as precisely as those dolphins did and get this mission completed.
She could stand being Aurora, his compliant little wife, for a little while, but was in serious danger of losing herself in another way if the job with this specific Sextant agent lasted too long.
The day wore on as they tacked around the islands. Dawn tensed a bit when they docked for lunch at a quaint little bay on Kos. She hardly tasted the food that Eric consumed with gusto. However, when they reboarded the
Angeline
a couple of hours later, no one had approached them about a meeting with anyone.
Eric remained on deck and gestured for her to join him. “Shall we go for a swim? The captain says there is a perfect and very private inlet on an uninhabited island he knows about. We’re headed there now.”
“Your idea?” she asked quietly.
“Yes, but his choice of island,” he admitted, letting her know that this could be the rendezvous point with Quince if that was what the captain had been hired to arrange.
“Sounds lovely. Shall I go and change?” At his insistence, she had brought a bathing suit and beach cover in her tote.
“No, we will change after we get out there.” He got up and took her hand.
She was getting way too used to holding hands with him, Dawn thought. But to anyone watching, she figured it would seem a natural thing for a recently married couple to do.
Dawn hung back while the captain advised Eric that he would drop anchor just offshore and let the two of them swim to the beach. Damned difficult to do without someone noticing a gun tucked in your swimwear, she thought.
“Impossible!” Eric declared, red in the face and spouting the proper outrage. “I insist you lower the inflatable for us. I will not allow another man’s eyes to view my wife uncovered enough to go swimming!”
The captain shrugged as if it didn’t matter to him and set about doing as Eric demanded. Ressam gave him a hand with the inflatable, then stood away.
In moments, she and Eric were motoring to the pristine, unspoiled beach that appeared to be shielded completely by rough, rocky cliffs.
He cut the motor and they stepped out into knee-deep surf. She helped him tug the rubber dinghy up onto the shore where it would not be washed back out by the gentle waves.
“So what do we do now?” she asked, her hands propped on her hips.
“Stop looking so saucy and get out of sight behind that outcropping over there while you change.” He mugged at her and mouthed the word parabolics.
Was he kidding? Parabolic mikes? Out here? She must have shown her disbelief because he nodded emphatically. Maybe he wasn’t paranoid. Or even if he was, who was she to knock that? It would probably be what kept them alive. She obeyed, as usual, and went behind the rocks. But she did not undress right away. What if there were cameras, too?
Nonsense. Parabolic microphones that could aim and
eavesdrop at a distance, she might buy, but video was a reach. Still, she scanned the cliffs very carefully, then looked out to sea. The
Angeline
was the only craft visible.
That was when she saw Eric climbing up the face of one cliff, already about three-quarters of the way up. No rope, no belay pins, nothing but his bare hands and feet.
Dawn covered her mouth to keep from crying out, startling him and causing him to fall. Instead she watched, fascinated by the play of muscles in his calves and forearms as he gripped, reached and gripped again. Terrified for him, she held her breath and prayed for his safety.
The moments crawled by like hours. Finally, he hefted himself up onto the ledge and stood, surveying the portion of the island hidden from her view.
He turned and looked down, waving. She raised her hand tentatively and waved back. Surely he would find an easier way down. Hope fled when he dropped to his stomach, legs hanging over the edge, feet searching for purchase.
“Idiot,” she whispered to herself. “What the devil is he thinking?”
Well, whatever that was, she refused to watch any longer. Instead, she whipped off her shirt. Careful to keep the large rock outcroppings between her and those who might view her from the yacht, Dawn had changed and reached the water’s edge by the time Eric joined her.
“The place is clear,” he assured her. “I could see the entire island from up there and it’s uninhabited, only rocks and seabirds. No mikes and no cameras. I believe this is a test and also a diversion to keep us busy until Quince can check us out with his sources.”
He zoomed past her and splashed into the water. Dawn followed. When he surfaced next to her after a dive, he said, “Might as well enjoy ourselves while we wait for
the real summons. I figure we probably have a couple of days to kill.”
She was in over her head in all respects. He looked so damn good with his muscles all wet and shiny, his teeth gleaming when he smiled, his eyes twinkling. She missed the incredible blue of his eyes that was nearly the same color as the azure water in which they swam.
His hands gripped her waist as she treaded water to stay afloat. “Dawn, are you all right? You haven’t said a word. No one can hear us here.”
She blew out a breath and raked her wet hair off her face. “Shouldn’t we be making a plan? Deciding what we should do when we meet with Quince?”
“I told you already before we flew out. I make an offer, buy the gizmo with the information on it and we leave. Someone else will do the actual cleanup. My job is to get in, get the goods and get out. Yours is to identify the shooter if he’s there.”
She moved her legs, brushing against his, wishing he would turn her loose so she could breathe evenly and get her equilibrium back.
“You stay out of the confrontation so you can maintain this disguise for the next time something like this comes along?” she asked, trying hard to concentrate on aspects of the mission and not the proximity of that heat-seeking missile she felt against her stomach.
He shrugged one shoulder and smiled. “Jarad’s persona has come in handy a few times. Hate to ditch a good alternate identity just to collar Quince myself.”
“What if he’s copied the information? Suppose he intends to sell it more than once?”
“He advertised exclusive use of it when he put out the word. He’s gotta know he’d get himself killed for double-dealing.
No, all his bidders will be in one place and our people will make sure none of them leave with what they came after. I’ll outbid them all, anyway.”
It sounded too easy to her. “So we just…buy it and go?”
He smiled, looking straight into her eyes. “
I
buy it and we go. You remain in the background, very low profile. Your only job is to see whether Quince is the one who killed Bergen or if it was a close associate of his who is present when we have the meeting.”
She pushed at his hands until he released her. “I’m not in the mood to swim. Let’s go.”
He turned her around so that she faced the beach. “Stay in front of me till we get behind the rocks. Jarad can’t let the others see that lovely bod of yours from the boat.”
“They probably saw me get into the water,” she reminded him. “Jarad didn’t seem to care then.”
“Yeah, but that thong is way too enticing to give them a rear view.”
“It is
not
a thong!” she argued.
“Close enough. That’s the one thing I didn’t choose for you. I asked for a modest two-piece swimsuit. Maybe they don’t even make those anymore.” He sounded so disgruntled.
She half turned to glare at him. “You picked out the clothes? When?”
“While you were sleeping. Now get a wiggle on. We’ve got to sit behind those rocks long enough for me to have my wicked way with you.”
She shrieked in protest when he goosed her waist.
“Not really,” he assured her, laughing. “Just for show.”
Right. Dawn wished her pulse would quit racing. Her blood just would not behave when he was this close, especially not when he was talking so casually about having sex. Even the pretense of having it.
“I can handle this,” she said to herself. “I can.” “Sure you can. Never doubted it for a minute,” he said, following close behind her as she waded out of the surf. “Now get your pretty little butt behind that rock. The captain’s binoculars are probably glowing red with the heat from his hands.”
Dawn laughed with him. “You are impossible!” “Possible,” he argued. “Very possible. Try me.” “Not on a dare,” Dawn muttered. Not on a double-dog dare, she added to herself.
They remained behind the rocks for about half an hour. Eric stretched out on the sand, head resting on his hands, and fell sound asleep. Dawn sat there fuming. The least he could have done was talk to her while they knew they had no listeners.
She spent the time brushing off sand and donning her slacks and shirt. When he woke, she was dressed and more than ready to climb into the inflatable and get back to work. Damn the man.
Back in Leros at the hotel, Dawn passed the time watching television she couldn’t understand and looking at pamphlets on the local sights and those on the mainland of Greece. The area had never been on her list of places she wanted to visit until now. How beautiful it was, a veritable paradise.
Eric went out periodically and left her alone in the suite. The first time he did, he put on his superprotective husband attitude and gave her a weapon. “If anyone enters, shoot them,” he ordered. Dawn’s mouth had dropped open in surprise and disbelief that he would say that aloud. “I have left precise instructions that no one is to knock or come into our rooms. If they do so, you are to shoot them, do you understand?”
She already had the pistol he’d given her on the boat tucked away in her purse. This one must be for show, a warning to anyone listening, that she was armed. She held the gun loosely in her hand, as any wife without weapons training would do when handed one. “But why?” she asked meekly.
He glared at her, looking for all the world like the man he was supposed to be. “You must know how vulnerable you are to abduction. I am a wealthy man, Aurora. It would be a simple matter for someone to snatch you away from me and demand a fortune. If that happens, I warn you, I will not submit to it. So protect yourself.”
“Very well, Jarad,” she said, laying the pistol on the cushions next to her. “But what of you? Have you another one of these?”
“Of course,” he replied with a condescending smile. “Not to worry. I shall return in a while. One day before we leave, I will take you around the town so that you might shop. Would that make you happy?”
“Delirious,” she cooed, beaming up at him, going for coy. “I shall choose something wildly expensive!”
He laughed, but it sounded forced. “A woman of simple tastes. Silks and diamonds. What was I thinking when I married you?” With that, he leaned down and kissed her briefly on the forehead. “Be good, Aurora.”
“As if I have a choice,” she murmured under her breath as he left. She heard the click of the automatic lock when he closed the door and felt trapped in a gilded prison. What she wouldn’t give to put on shorts and a halter top and stroll the streets of Leros by herself.
A wife such as Aurora Al-Dayal would feel the same if an overbearing and authoritative husband ordered her to stay put while he took in the glorious sights outside. A woman like Aurora might even slip out of the hotel and risk
the consequences of her husband’s anger if tempted that way. But Dawn knew better than to entertain the thought. Strange eyes might be watching, ears listening, her every move monitored. Defiance would be highly unprofessional, not to mention possibly fatal. With a sigh, she went back to her magazine with the enticing pictures of all she was missing.
After two full days of seclusion, Dawn’s nerves were on edge. When Eric returned that afternoon, Aurora made a few demands of her own. “Take me out as you promised, Jarad. I wish it.”
He cocked a dark eyebrow and smiled the patronizing smile she hated. In her mind, she knew it was only part of the role he played, but the entire ruse was becoming somehow real to her. She had begun to feel more like Aurora than the fiercely independent Dawn Moon.
“Now?” he asked idly, strolling over to the window and parting the drapery to look out.
“Yes,” she said, almost desperately, almost forgetting her accent. “Today. This moment.”
“Put on your chador.”
“Must I?” she asked, risking his anger. Rather, Jarad’s anger, she reminded herself. Eric would understand.
“Yes, you must,” he answered curtly. “This is not Andorra and you are no longer a schoolgirl. There are rules and you agreed to them when we married.”
Then he sighed and dropped the curtain back in place, turning to her with outstretched hands. “I know things are changing. Perhaps I cling too fiercely to the old ways.” He pondered for a minute, rubbing his chin. “All right, you may leave it off, but only for today.”
“Thank you, husband,” Dawn murmured, wanting to smack him upside his head. “You are generous to a fault.”
She wasted no time getting dressed. Blue raw-silk slacks and a matching shirt looked smart and felt comfortable as well as cool. Instead of a scarf, she tucked her hair beneath a crushable straw hat of bright white that would shade her face. For good measure, she added dark sunglasses and the Beretta to a white crocheted sack purse and went to stand inspection.
“Very cosmopolitan,” he commented dryly. “At least you are modest.”
Together they went out into the bright afternoon. Dawn wanted to crow with delight. The air didn’t get much fresher than this, she thought.
With a spring in her step, she marched along beside Eric as he took her straight to a jeweler and purchased her a bracelet that would wipe out a year’s salary if she kept it.
“Image,” he whispered, as if he needed to remind her why her wrist was dripping with precious stones. Everything would be returned, of course. She knew that. Even the clothes, no matter what he said or what she wanted. She could not, in good conscience, keep those designer labels bought with government money, no matter how slushy the black op funds might be.