Cindy Dees

Taken By the Spy


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your pardon?”

      “My father traded in my mother when she hit fifty for a new model. Giselle is twenty-eight now.”

      “Isn’t that about how old you are?”

      “Yeah. How creepy is that? But hey, she’s gotten three Vogue covers and looks great on television.”

      Mitch sounded almost bitter when he commented, “I learned a long time ago not to put any stock in a woman’s looks.”

      Wow. Definite raw nerve there. She changed the subject quickly. “If you want to hide this monster, we’ll need to get her under a roof. There’s a big marina near Frenchtown with some covered slips, but it’s right by where the cruise ships come in. People crawl all over that area. Maybe something private…” She ran through the list of who she knew on the island. “I’ve got it. A sorority sister of mine and her husband have a place in Magen’s Bay. And I think they have a boathouse.”

      A cynical look passed across his features. “Of course they do.”

      What was his problem? She shrugged and pointed the Baby Doll toward Magen’s Bay. Only about half the estates lining its very exclusive, very private shores were lit tonight. Summer wasn’t prime season for Caribbean vacation homes. She had a little trouble finding the right mansion, but eventually spotted it high above the water. Its windows were dark.

      “Looks like nobody’s home,” she commented.

      “Think they’ll mind if we help ourselves to the boathouse?” Mitch murmured.

      “No. We go way back. They’ll understand.”

      “How do you know these people’s boathouse will have an empty slip?”

      She shrugged. “They always move their yacht up to Hyannis for the summer.”

      “Right. Hyannis.”

      She glanced over at him. “Look, I can’t help it if I know some rich people. Mitzi and her husband are actually very nice.”

      “It’s not the rich part I object to. It’s the spoiled part.”

      She cut the engine and let the Baby Doll drift toward the boathouse. “Are you calling me spoiled?”

      “If the shoe fits.”

      “The shoe does not fit. I can’t help being born into a wealthy family.” He was doing the same thing everyone else did. They took one look at her, labeled her a spoiled little rich girl and completely wrote her off as a waste of oxygen on the planet. What was it going to take for someone to take her seriously?

      Gritting her teeth in frustration, she guided the Baby Doll to the dock and Mitch jumped ashore. He made his way to the locked boathouse doors and did something to them that didn’t take more than a few seconds. And then they swung open. She eased the Baby Doll into the empty slip and tossed him a line. While he tied off the prow, she shut down the engines and tied off the aft line.

      In the abrupt silence inside the barnlike structure, a thick blanket of darkness wrapped around them, as warm and sultry as the night without.

      “What jobs have you ever held?” he challenged.

      Still grinding that axe, was he? “I graduated with honors in English from Vassar and was an intern in my father’s law firm. And I was a darned good one, too.”

      He shook his head, a sharp movement in the dark. “Not a paying job, and you were working for daddy. Nobody was going to bust your chops or fire you from that place. Name me one real job you’ve ever had.”

      She huffed in irritation.

      “I rest my case,” he stated archly.

      Annoyed, she replied, “How many charity balls for thousands of guests have you organized from scratch? How many millions of dollars have you raised for worthy causes and given away? How many scholarships have you interviewed a hundred people for and then granted? How many press conferences have you endured? How many political campaigns have you spent a year working on around the clock, road tripping and stumping and getting by on two and three hours of sleep a night for months on end?”

      He threw up his hands in mock surrender. “All right, all right. So you don’t sit around on daddy’s fancy boat every day working on your perfect tan.” But he still didn’t sound convinced.

      She wasn’t quite sure why, but it was tremendously important to her that this supremely competent man perceive her as being able to do something worthwhile. Maybe she was sick of being compared to tabloid princesses. Or maybe it was because she’d felt so helpless in the face of being shot at. He, on the other hand, had taken action. He shot back. He took out his enemies. And she…she splashed some water at them with her cute pink boat.

      Chad slept with her best friend and then posted those damned pictures of her on the Internet when she dared to be mad about him sleeping with her maid of honor two weeks before their wedding. And all she’d managed to do was tuck her tail and run away. She wished she had a gun like Mitch’s. She’d have blown off both their heads with it. Okay. Maybe not shot them. But she’d have scared them both to death. But no. She’d been as weak and spineless, as useless, as Mitch thought she was. Her face burned with the humiliation of it all.

      She was useful, dammit! Just because her entire family and everyone she knew thought she was supposed to spend her life doing nothing more than being attractive fluff to decorate the arm of some powerful successful man, didn’t mean it was true.

      She finished buttoning up the Baby Doll for the night, her movements a little too jerky. Mitch prowled a circuit around both the outside and inside of the boathouse and finally came to a halt beside the boat. His gaze was black. Inscrutable in the near-total darkness.

      “Now what?” she grumbled, still miffed.

      “Now I make a phone call. And we sit tight until the cavalry comes for us.”

      She watched as he pulled out his cell phone.

      “It’s me,” he muttered into it. “St. Thomas. In a boathouse at some private estate on Magen’s Bay. Heh, swanky doesn’t quite cover it. Any luck on a catamaran?”

      A short pause while he listened to whomever he was talking with. She could swear his eyes glowed in the dark, gold and dangerous. It must be a trick of the faint moonlight creeping in through the boathouse windows, but the effect was eerie.

      Without warning, his gaze speared into her, pinning her in place. “I’m telling you, she can do it. She’s perfect for it.” A short pause. “Yes, I know the risks. And yes, I’m sure.”

      He sounded like he was trying to convince himself as much as the person on the other end of the line about whatever they were talking about.

      “Okay. Call me back.” He disconnected.

      Not long on words, her pantherlike companion. When he didn’t say anything to her after he pocketed the phone, she said, “And?”

      “And we stay here while my people set up transportation for us.”

      “To where?”

      He didn’t answer right away. In fact, he almost looked hesitant to tell her. How bad could it be? He’d need to take her someplace secluded, far away from Cuba where the killer wouldn’t think to look for her. Maybe Europe. It was nice there at this time of year.

      “How do you feel about big game hunting?” he asked.

      “Africa?” she blurted, surprised, “It’s awfully hot there at this time of year. But I suppose I’m up for a safari. As long as we don’t shoot anything. But I could go for some big game photography.” Now that she thought about it, she could see where he’d feel at home on the Dark Continent.

      “Not Africa,” he bit out.

      “Then where?”

      Finally, he said reluctantly,