Cassie Miles

Mountain Bodyguard


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ago. They had both been polite, but she’d seen the flare of hostility in his hazel eyes. The two NSA dudes were a little scary.

      Josh’s pointy woodpecker nose jabbed in her direction. “I spoke to your father.”

      “I’m aware,” she said in a low voice oozing with sarcasm. “You made it sound like we were under assault from terrorist madmen. He’s freaked.”

      “Odd. He’s a marine. I didn’t think he’d get upset.”

      She hated the insinuation. Her dad was tougher than nails; he could handle anything. “Are you saying that my dad is a wimp?”

      “Hush, now.”

      “Take it back.”

      “Fine.”

      His head swiveled so he faced the head of the table. Again, he reminded her of a bird with virtually no neck and a round, soft body. Why did Prescott keep him around as an assistant? Josh was neither smart nor funny nor pleasant. He did, however, fulfill whatever he was ordered to do without question or hesitation. She supposed there was something to be said for blind obedience.

      Including Josh, there were seven men seated around the table and two women, one in uniform and one in a body-hugging cocktail dress with one shoulder bare.

      At the head of the table, next to the bared shoulder, was a slick, good-looking guy. He rose to his feet and buttoned the front of his tux. He wasn’t as tall as Mason, who was standing behind the admiral, and he wasn’t as muscular. But a lot of women would have found his sweep of glistening blond hair and brilliant blue eyes appealing. The tux helped.

      She leaned toward Josh. “Who’s that?”

      “Robert Collier, CIA.”

      His voice was a bit higher than she expected and had an interesting accent. Maybe French? Lexie had gotten accustomed to these suave, international men who came to visit at the Prescott home in Aspen. She suspected Collier would be a hand kisser.

      “The woman next to him,” she whispered to Josh, “is also CIA?”

      Josh nodded.

      Apparently, Collier had been waiting for the admiral to return. He addressed the group. “In my interrogation of the four men in custody, I have learned that they are part of a group called the Anti-Conspiracy Committee for Democracy, or the AC-CD.”

      The name of the group didn’t sound dangerous. Nobody in this room was against democracy. And who wasn’t anti-conspiracy? Resting her elbow on the table, she leaned forward and focused on Collier.

      He pointed to the flat screen mounted on the wall behind where she was sitting. She turned to look over her shoulder. The screen was blank. Mounted on the wall near the door was an elk head with an impressive ten-point rack. On the other side of the screen was a seriously ugly boar with curly tusks.

      “I would usually have photos and a logo,” he said in his lilting accent, “but the members of the very loosely organized AC-CD pride themselves on being anonymous. They meet in groups of no more than five. The head of AC-CD is referred to as the leader, and sometimes different people take that responsibility.”

      Bertinelli nudged the shoulder of his NSA boss as he pointed out the obvious. “For a group opposed to conspiracy, they have a lot of secrets.”

      “That is why,” Collier said with a cold glance toward the NSA contingent, “it is complicated to compile facts and information about the AC-CD.”

      “How did you get them to talk?” Bertinelli asked.

      “They would hardly shut up. I have never had an interrogation like this. They were eager to tell me that their job was vitally important on a global level. They all used the same words—‘vital importance’ and ‘international repercussions’ and more of those catchphrases.”

      He swore in French and stuck out his jaw. His icy blond hair shimmered under the overhead lights.

      “Excuse me,” said the uniformed woman, “but what was the job they were assigned to do?”

      “To kidnap the admiral.”

      All eyes focused on Prescott. Unperturbed, he shrugged and said, “Then they weren’t after my children. Is that correct?”

      “Correct, sir.”

      “Or my wife.”

      “Just you,” Collier said. “Their plan was to drug your wife’s bedtime drink so she would sleep soundly. When everything was quiet, they would slip into your bedroom and abduct you. Under no circumstances were they supposed to hurt you.”

      “Why?” Prescott asked.

      “They are searching for the Damascus Cache, and they believe you have knowledge of its whereabouts.”

      Prescott scoffed. “The Damascus Cache was destroyed years ago.”

      Beside her, Josh wriggled in his chair like a schoolboy who had the right answer to the teacher’s question. She gave him a nudge. “Go ahead and speak up.”

      “I better not.” That was why he was a woodpecker and not an eagle. To her, he whispered, “I’ve heard chatter. People talking about the cache.”

      Her cell phone buzzed. A text was coming through from Megan, the oldest Prescott kid. It said, Hurry back. The brats won’t go to bed.

      It was kind of amazing that Lexie had been away for as long as she had without a minor crisis or two from the children. It looked as though she’d have to wait until later to get Prescott to talk to her dad.

      She stood and pointed to her phone. “Please excuse me. Duty calls. I need to go upstairs and tell some bedtime stories.”

      “I’ll be up soon,” Prescott said. “Mason, accompany her.”

      He was at her side so quickly that he was turning the doorknob before she could touch it. In the hallway, he closed the door and spoke into his headset.

      When he was beside her, she asked, “Who were you talking to?”

      “Dylan. He has cameras in the conference room so he can keep an eye on things until I get back.”

      “Do you need to go back?”

      “Prescott asked me to stay close.”

      She didn’t like the way that sounded. “He doesn’t trust the people around him.”

      “Do you blame him?”

      “Not really.”

      The men and women in that conference room were spies, spooks and feds—high-ranking members of the intelligence community. It dawned on her that she’d met several of these people. “Do you think my dad is right? Am I in danger?”

      “Not right now.”

      As they strolled to the elevators, his vigilant attitude relaxed, and he seemed to shed his bodyguard persona. She liked being with him. And he must like her, too. He’d kissed her, after all.

      She pushed the elevator button. “Should I stay with the Prescotts or should I quit?”

      “Do you like your job?”

      “I do. It’s not a career I want for the rest of my life, but I like it.”

      “Are you scared?”

      She thought for a moment before answering. In the bathroom upstairs, she’d had a few moments of intense panic when she’d fallen through a time warp to relive her accident. But her fear had dissipated. “I’m cautious but not frightened.”

      “Cautious is good,” he said as they boarded the elevator. “There’s no glory in taking risks.”

      “I don’t know what to do.”

      The elevator doors closed. They were wrapped together in a wood-paneled cocoon. She caught a whiff of his