her credit for having enough sense to crawl out of harm’s way.
When he reached her, he realized she hadn’t found safety easily. Her hands and feet were bound in duct tape, her mouth covered with the same. He carefully removed the tape from her mouth, making it easier for her to breathe. When she coughed, he fought the relief that rolled through him. Quickly, he shrugged out of his jacket and draped it over her head. He lifted her into his arms, cradling her face to his shoulder.
The office held no other exit or windows, forcing Beck back through the flames. Dread raked his gut as he fought through the inferno. Hot sparks burned his neck, smoked his clothes.
Five steps from the front, a crack of thunder exploded over his head. He charged the broken display seconds before the ceiling crashed at his heels. Beck dove out onto the sidewalk and rolled, hitting the snow packed cement with his back, cushioning the woman against his chest.
For a moment he could do no more than drag in oxygen to his lungs, ignoring the raw burn in his throat. Tears filled his eyes, setting off a thousand needle pricks beneath the lids.
With an impatient hand he wiped the blurriness away and shoved the woman down beside him. He placed two fingers to the side of her neck. A flutter of her pulse beat against the pressure, reassuring him she lived.
The urge to protect speared through him, cutting him clean to the bone.
The feeling was familiar. Controllable. A person didn’t do what he did for a living without dealing with the instinct now and again.
Beck grabbed his switch blade from his pant pocket, and within moments sliced through the tape that bound her. Gently, he peeled it back, not wanting to mar the skin beneath the adhesive.
She was a little thing, he noted. The top of her head not even coming to his shoulder. Her hair was dark and shoulder length now, the color masked by the low light of the evening. According to the file, her eyes were hazel. But the file didn’t mention the pale skin—now smudged with ash and blood—the sprinkle of freckles across her nose, or the slender line of her neck.
Blood thickened in his veins, slowed the flow to his brain. It was the only excuse, he thought, for the sharp tug of attraction that pulled at the deepest part of his gut.
The wind blew a strand of hair across her cheek. With a gentle hand he brushed it away.
At his touch, her eyes fluttered opened. The irises were more mossy than hazel beneath heavy lids. Huge, somber eyes that drew on him.
“Chris?”
His father’s name hit him—a slap that stung worse than wind and ice.
He shouldn’t have been surprised. After all, he looked like his father and this, of course, was his father’s mistress.
“No.” Anger ripped through him, forcing him to tighten his jaw. Grief edged his temper.
“Chris?” A frown creased her brows, but she said nothing more as her eyes closed once again.
Like father, like son. How many times had he heard that in his lifetime?
Jordan Beck swore in disgust even as he picked her up, cradled her in his arms.
Instantly, a hand grabbed his arm.
“Shouldn’t you wait for the ambulance? We’ve called them.” A couple stood next to him, both bundled against the cold, like two misplaced Eskimos, in pea-green parkas.
Jordan dismissed the cell phone the man Eskimo waved in his face with a mitted hand.
“She’s my fiancée,” he replied instead, adopting an American accent. A British one would be remembered later. He tugged his shoulder free and stepped quickly into the street before the man could react. “I’ll take her to the hospital myself.”
For a split second, he almost gave in to the temptation to leave her and follow the street where the attacker escaped.
And if the guy had a partner waiting in the crowd for another opportunity to murder her?
He’d given his word to protect her. And she wouldn’t be protected well by the police.
Sirens sounded in the distance. The eerie sound blended with the crackle of the fire, the howling of the wind.
Even on snow-packed streets, it wouldn’t take them long to reach the fire.
“You’d better be bloody worth it,” Jordan muttered as he reached the car, opened the door and shoved the woman onto the front seat. “Or I’ll kill you myself.”
Smoke and tape choked her screams, smothered the oxygen she so desperately needed. The flames licked her skin—jagged knives that sliced a downward swipe, flaying a path through skin and nerves.
Suffocating, Regina struck out with her hands, defending herself against the swipe of blades, the bogged down fog that surrounded her.
“Wake up, damn you. Before you hurt yourself.”
Chris.
Relief flooded through her, intensifying the burning in her throat. But when she tried lifting her eyelids, they remained stubborn and heavy.
A string of curses floated above her head, then suddenly the weight was gone and in its place a cool rush of air.
Slowly, her eyes fluttered open. Light burst, bringing tears that stung under the lids. Regina looked down, waiting for her vision to adjust and for the first time, she realized her arms refused to move.
“So you’re finally awake?”
It took effort to turn her head. Chris Beck stood next to the bed, holding a wet washcloth in one hand.
“Well? Are you okay?”
Regina blinked. No, not Chris.
This man wasn’t her friend. She noted sharp cheekbones, the hard line of his mouth, the rigid set of his jaw.
What did Chris say about his son?
The man had no give.
“I asked if you were okay.”
“No, I’m Regina.” She glanced down for the first time, taking in the tan cotton slacks and gray cardigan with a scooped-neck tee beneath. All smudged with ash, all reeking of smoke. “Do I look okay?”
“You look like hell.”
No humor, either.
She almost sighed. Almost. But when her gaze met his, she actually forgot to.
The eyes were the same. Chris’s and Jordan’s. Both pale blue, cut laser-sharp with specks of silver that flashed little bolts of lightning-edged emotion. Pleasure, sadness, anger, impatience. It didn’t matter which, the intensity never diminished.
Harnessed, yes. Controlled, certainly. But never diluted.
“I guess this pretty much defines ‘in the nick of time,’ doesn’t it, Jordan?”
“Yes—” He stopped, surprise flashed in the blue eyes, just before they narrowed.
Regina bet not many caught this man off guard. A huge dose of satisfaction eased some of the frustration—and admittedly, a small bit of fear—stewing in her belly.
“You know who I am?”
She grimaced more from the pounding pain in her head, than his reaction. Know him? She wondered what the man would do if she told him the truth.
Instead, she settled for another truth. “Chris carried your picture in his wallet. You were younger and in uniform. You’d just received your Royal Air Force pilot’s wings.”
“Considering our relationship, it’s hard to believe he carried a picture of me around anywhere.”
“He