
Would-Be Christmas Wedding
Autore
Debra Webb
Letto da
17,8K
Capitoli
20
Chapter One
The National Mall, Washington, D.C.Thursday, December 18, 11:45 a.m.
So this is how it feels to be a traitor.
Emmett Holt exited the metro at the Mall. Of all his less-than-admirable traits and accomplishments, this one had brought him to an all-new low.
There was no going back from this, no explanation or excuse he could offer for the damaging evidence he was about to hand over. While it was only a flash drive, it felt like a fifty-pound weight-lifting plate from the gym. He knew Director Thomas Casey had someone tailing him and he knew better than to waste time trying to make that identification.
If this sting backfired, if either Thomas Casey or his nemesis, Bernard Isely, got impatient, Holtâstanding between themâwould get cut down in the crossfire. Not exactly the way heâd seen himself going out of this business, much less this world.
Handing over the reports from the Germany mission when Casey had killed Iselyâs father was a stop-gap measure. Isely wanted both the intel on the old mission and the vial of the deadly virus Mission Recovery had seized two months ago.
It didnât take a genius to know Isely wanted a whole hell of a lot more than that. The man had one goal: to exact revenge and destroy Director Casey.
Holt was running out of excuses to keep both men at bay. And timing was everything.
He walked with purpose toward the National Air and Space Museum gift shop, just another man picking up another gift amid the throng of tourists. The weather was clear and the wind cold, but winter hadnât turned truly bitter yet and people were still wishing for an idyllic white Christmas.
Holt could only wish he would still be alive come Christmas.
He stopped where the text message had told him to stop, feeling like a damned puppet on a string. Even knowing at the beginning that it would come down to this didnât make it easier to stomach the reality of doing so. He was used to giving orders, not taking them.
Handing over this tiny piece of technology and the huge intelligence it stored marked the beginning of the end.
It might have been a few years since his last field op, but the skills didnât go away. They were far too deeply engrained. He checked his phone, made the drop and didnât die or get arrested as he walked back to the metro station.
âDid my warning help?â
Holt didnât miss a step as Isely joined him on the escalator. âSure.â
After receiving a picture of Director Caseyâs sister, Cecelia Manning, and the single warning of âBeware,â Holt had dug into the womanâs recent history to see what threat or purpose she might pose for Isely. Or for him.
Heâd learned all kinds of details he didnât want to know, from her favorite perfume to her tight circle of wealthy friends who toddled about doing charitable works.
Then heâd found the big splashy occasion he knew Isely had been looking for: the charity gala the widow had organized to benefit cancer research in memory of her late husband. The event offered the perfect opportunity.
âAnd?â Isely prompted.
Holt wasnât inclined to answer truthfully. Heâd exhausted himself planting bugs in the womanâs house, a GPS tracker on her car, opening a profile that matched hers on an online dating site and monitoring her general safety while maintaining his own responsibilities at Mission Recovery.
âAnd her family will join her at tomorrowâs event,â Holt replied, giving the man what he wanted.
âYou will take the appropriate action?â
Holt nodded, letting his hand shake just a touch. He didnât want to oversell it, but a traitor would have reservations and a few jangling nerves at this point. He had a wild hope that a specialist would come charging inânowâbefore this got messy.
âI will send the address when it is time.â
Holt nodded again as the train came into the station.
âDonât worry, my friend.â Iselyâs hand landed heavy on Holtâs shoulder. âYou have a new team now. You are not alone.â
Friend?
Isely couldnât know it, but that was Holtâs worst fear.
Harlequin










