Read Thief Online

Authors: C.L. Stone

Tags: #spy, #spy romance, #Romantic Suspense, #The Academy, #Coming of Age, #New Adult, #Contemporary Romance

Thief (41 page)

“This isn’t the time,” Corey said. “Coaltar must have known for a while. He’s been biding his time, letting us watch him when he wants. He probably just looped old video.”

Raven grunted.

I had backed up against the wall, my hand pushed up against my heart. “He’s got a guy,” I said. Everyone turned to me. “Doyle. Some guy out in Hanahan. He’s got a farmhouse and a front lawn filled with satellite dishes and a big computer mess inside. A hacker of some kind. He’s able to listen in on phone calls and...”

Axel’s voice coming from the phone spooked me, until I realized that Raven had put the phone on speaker. “Marc,” he barked from the phone, “I need you to call Kevin. Have him replace me here. Get everyone on new lines.”

“We need to get her out of here.” Marc said.

“His first move is going to be to try to cover up what he’s doing. Does he have the last of this synthetic?”

Everyone looked at me expectantly, waiting.

“He’s supposed to get the last of it tonight,” I said. I was wondering if Doyle was listening to this now. If he was, could I stop him? How could I tell the guys without him knowing? He could have the walls bugged as they’d done to Coaltar. “He’s getting it delivered to his yacht at City Marina. I don’t know what time. He didn’t seem to need to be there for it to get delivered and when I left him, he was still at his house.”

“Raven,” Axel said through the phone. “Find a trainee who isn’t busy to go with you to the docks. I want twenty-four-seven monitoring. Try Silas Korba. He knows a few things about boats. He should be able to help.”

“What if he’s already there?” I asked. “What if he’s already gone?”

“He’s not leaving tonight,” Axel said. “He could try, but the yacht he owns takes more than one person to run. He’d have to get his crew together quickly. And if he’s waiting on this last shipment, he’s not going to leave without it. But we do have to be careful. He may suspect Kayli’s watching, so he’s probably going to be trickier. He may even divert where this shipment is going. We’ll need someone to intercept it if possible.”

“He’s not doing the delivery himself,” I said.

“Right,” Axel said. “We still need someone to watch him. Brandon, go down and start. Corey, I need you to start listening. Phone calls, emails, anything he might be using. Set up a monitoring team and figure out how the hell he’s been able to cut our feeds without us knowing.”

“What about Kayli?” Marc asked.

“What about me?” I sliced my hand through the air. “Don’t worry about me. Just make sure Wil is okay. Actually, you probably need to get him. I should probably go with Raven to the docks. I know what the guy making the delivery looks like. I know where Coaltar’s at now but if he’s already on his way...”

“Does he know your name?” Axel asked. “Does Coaltar know who you are?”

“He still knows me as Kate. He doesn’t know anything about me.”

“We don’t want to take any chances. Marc, stay with Kayli. Kayli, stay in the apartment.”

“What?” I cried. “I can’t stay.”

“Kayli,” Axel barked from the phone. “I’ll be forever grateful that you took the initiative. You found out more in a day than what took us a couple of weeks of surveillance. You’ve done a wonderful job, but let us take it from here. Go to sleep. You need to recover.”

“But—”

“If you want to help, you need to stay put. If he’s looking for you, if he thinks you’ll be watching, you won’t be able to go anywhere near City Marina without him being aware of it. He’ll have people looking for you. He won’t be expecting Raven. You need to stay away from Wil, and you especially need to stay away from Coaltar. We should probably even get you out of town for a while.”

“I can do that,” Marc said.

“Right now, stay put,” Axel said. “We may need her for information and to make any identifications. But if you see any sign of trouble, get her on the first plane out of here. And stay with her. Call up the Academy for a couple of favors if you have to.”

I grunted, shoving my fists at my eyes. I realized then why I was so frustrated with this group. I wasn’t used to letting anyone else tell me what to do. It was annoying when I wanted to go back and kick Blake’s ass for being a lying bastard. Had he known they were on to him? How much did he know? I wanted to go get Wil myself and warn him. I didn’t want to sit and do nothing.

The worst part was that they were probably right. They had been right from the very beginning. I was too stubborn and too angry. Like shooting Marc in the leg. Like getting jumped by a bunch of thugs in a back street alley. I bit my tongue now, hard, simply to stop myself from protesting. Even Blake saw it in me. I was going to get myself killed jumping the gun and not listening.

I sighed, with a lot of emphasis, just to show how much I really didn’t like it. “Fine,” I said.

“Everyone move,” Axel said, and he hung up.

With that, everyone started moving at once. Corey, who had been standing by, patted me once on the shoulder, looking like he wanted to say a whole lot of things to me, but couldn’t at the moment. He dashed out of the apartment to, I imagine, his own place where he could use the computers and do what he did best.

Raven ran for his room, stuffing his feet into boots and shoved on a shirt. Brandon did the same, borrowing some clothes from Marc’s room.

“Emergency phones, guys,” Marc said. He walked out to the computer desks in the dining room. He opened a drawer, pulling out what looked like brand-new flip phones. He curled his fingers at the other guys, and passed the phones off to them. He collected their old cell phones, too, leaving them on the desk.

“I need another ID,” Raven said. “I need to borrow a boat.”

Marc disappeared into his bedroom, and came back with an ID card, and a wad of cash. “There’s a hotel by the marina, plus there’s a little restaurant. See if you can set up surveillance from the hotel room. Get Silas to make friends with whoever is in the dock house. When it opens, go to the restaurant that has a good view of the docks. Call Silas from a pay phone. Make sure he brings an emergency phone and leaves his own behind. He needs a non-GPS car, too.”

“I’ll take the bike,” Brandon said.

“You need another car,” Marc said. “See if anyone has a spare. The bike will work for now, but it’s too loud and obvious. Have them replace your bike. Use the park to hide in for now. And you need some protection since Blake knows your face. I should probably be doing your job.”

“I could make it obvious,” Brandon said. “I could tail him and make sure he knows. He’ll be reluctant to make a move then.”

“He may figure out a way to divert you, instead. If he is with one of the cartels, that makes him more dangerous. We don’t want to take that risk right now. Just watch, but from a distance.”

Brandon nodded. “Have Corey send someone to find me. I’ll stay in the park if I can. If I need to, I’ll circle the block.”

I had my arms crossed around my stomach, and hovered in the hallway. I was in awe simply hearing them talking like this, the way they worked together. They talked about their plans. They came up with a solution. Marc made the final decision and they went with it. The fluidity of how they worked dazzled me. Raven, the least likely I suspected to take orders or advice from anyone, accepted what Marc had to say and simply absorbed it. It was like their fight from before had been forgotten completely.

I felt out of place where I stood, but inside I desired this. I didn’t understand it so well, and while I worked alone, being with the guys was like being more confident in my choices. With more than one person making the decision, it felt like more of the right thing to do. I didn’t feel like I was messing up any more.

I’d messed up enough. Now they were doing all this to fix my mistakes. Maybe Coaltar didn’t know about the cameras and the rest until I tipped him off. And I’d pointed him right at the boys by mentioning Brandon and their suspicions.

Marc walked over to the door to open it for the others as they left. As he moved, it was the first time I noticed the limp. Panic settled in. If the guys left, I’d be alone with him. He’d curse me out for shooting him. He’d tell me how stupid I was for getting caught up in this. I couldn’t run now. I’d already promised I’d stay.

Before Marc shut the door, I approached him. “Maybe we should go hang out with Corey,” I said. “Maybe we can help him.” I thought a third person being around would ease the tension.

“Corey works best when he’s alone so he can listen and think,” Marc said. He closed the door and turned the lock. “If he needs us down there, he’ll call. Besides, he may not stay here. He may need to work from somewhere else. We don’t want to slow him down.”

I tapped my fingers across my upper thighs, and started the awkward gazing around the apartment. Silence settled in. The crazy moments of before still coursed through me but I had nowhere to expend the energy.

Not much had changed since I left. The place still smelled like special blends of coffee. I curled my toes against the fibers of the standard beige carpet. Blake’s carpets had been softer. I cringed at the bitter thoughts of him, at thinking of how he had tricked me.

“What’s wrong?” Marc asked, his voice softer than I expected.

I flinched and looked up. He stood by the door still, leaning against it with his shoulder. His mismatched eyes focused on me.

“Nothing,” I said quickly.

“Liar,” he said quietly.

That stung. “Stop saying that,” I said. “Don’t call me that.”

“You were lying.”

“If I’m lying, there’s probably a reason.”

“Like what?”

“Like I don’t want to tell you.”

He blew out a perplexed sigh. “Bambi...”

“And stop calling me Bambi!”

“What the hell are you so mad at me for?” he barked back. He pointed his hand at his chest. “I’ve been looking for you for two days, and you come back in trouble and you’re mad at me?”

My breath became hard to manage. “I ... I don’t ...” I couldn’t think of the words to use, at the same time trying to stuff my anger back before I did anything else stupid. Why
was
I angry with him? Why couldn’t I stop?

Or maybe I wasn’t mad at all, but terrified. I simply didn’t know how to express it, too proud to admit it. Blake Coaltar was more trouble than I imagined.

And besides that, I worried that if and when this was over, the world Marc had dragged me into would suddenly disappear.

Being back, having the boys touch me, scrambling now to help me, when I’d been the one to bring them this trouble, it moved me in ways I couldn’t express.

Every moment I spent with them, it lured me further in. The guys were amazing and I wanted to spend more time with them. I wanted to learn what they knew. I wanted to go with Axel and Raven back to the shooting range. I wanted to play video games with Corey. I wanted to learn how to surf with Brandon. I wanted to know why their apartment smelled like a coffee house. I wanted Marc not to hate me. I didn’t feel so out of place here. I didn’t feel like I had to hide who I was.

I was scared of the truth. Because the truth was, I didn’t want to be alone. The more time I spent with them, the more I craved to be part of this. Perhaps that’s what drew me to Blake. He brought me in without question, too. He tried his best to involve me. Maybe he wasn’t what I thought it was, but he seemed to be genuine at the time.

I pushed back thoughts of Blake and simply stared at Marc. There were shadows under his eyes. The cord that hung from his neck, the silver sand dollar, dangled on top of his blue-collared shirt. The dark blue jeans and black boots, the whole ensemble with his sculpted chest and arms was exquisite. What didn’t match his otherwise striking face was the terrified expression he held.

He took a step forward. “Are you spacing out on me? What’s wrong now?”

“I don’t know what to do right now,” I said, trying to push back all the lies that were teasing my tongue, since he seemed to know when I lied anyway. This was the best I could do to answer, and it was true. I had no idea.

His shoulders relaxed. He held his arms out and open and he slowly stepped forward. “Kayli, come here for a second.”

I closed the distance between us, with my hands up in front of me, unsure what he wanted.

The moment I was close enough, he captured my wrists and drew me in. His arms weaved around my shoulders and he held on tight in an embrace.

The hug was awkward to me at first. I felt I didn't deserve it, least of all from him. I’d shot him in the leg. I left when he said not to. I ran to the only person he’d warned me to stay away from. Even after all of that, he came looking for me. He didn’t give up on me, even now. It took the last of my strength to close off my emotions so I wouldn’t cry.

His cheek met the side of my head, and he whispered. “I promised you,” he said. “I promised I’d never let you see Jack or that hotel again if that’s what you wanted. I promised I’d make sure Wil would be okay. What I forgot to mention was that I would make sure you were okay, too.”

“I’m fine,” I said, though I choked. I stuffed my face against his shoulder. “I don’t need anything.”

“You do,” he said. “I know you do. I was like you, once, and I needed the same thing.”

“You don’t know anything about me,” I said.

“You’re Kayli Winchester,” he said. “You’ve had a hard life, but you’re intelligent, and brave, and reckless. You push others away because you don’t want to be hurt. If people get too close to the real Kayli, you start lying or run away if the lies don’t work.”

I grunted and tried to push at his chest. “I don’t—”

He held strong, his arms tightening around my body. His head tilted until his lips met my ear. “But the real Kayli is amazing. She’s selfless. She’d risk her own life and freedom for anyone she cares about. She’s tender and a die-hard loyal person who demands only the best of loyalty in return. She’ll test you at every possible moment just to make sure you stick around. God help anyone who could win your heart and your trust, because he wouldn’t realize what would be unleashed in you.”

I swallowed, and tried to bury my head further into his shoulder, as if that was the way to get all the feelings inside of me to disappear. I wanted him to stop. The truth was, I didn’t want to look at myself as closely as he seemed to see me. “Marc,” I said, my voice smaller than I’d ever heard it before.

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