Chapter 17

The tense man sat at his desk musing over the scene at the dojo. He ran his hands through his short cropped hair. Overcome with fury, he thought about the tall dark haired soldier. His nemesis. He’d hated him for so long it was part of his DNA. He despised him for the way he’d skated past everyone, climbed over men twice his age. No one Gardner’s age should be a full bird. Maybe a captain or Lt. Colonel, but a full bird? Likely to be up for brigadier at any minute? No, way! The ignominy of it gnawed at his gut. Just because the guy was some kind of a fucking hero. He’d waited a long time for justice. But it wouldn’t be long now. Even heroes could be taken down, put in their place. Permanently.

He thought about the two of them at the dojo. Damn, the girl is beautiful. Shit, she does look just like her brother. And Gardner is obviously nuts about her. He flushed with pleasure. That made his work even more enjoyable. Nothing like taking that fucker down and letting him know what is happening to his woman before he dies.

Gloating over the thought, he turned his attention to the bank statements he’d just reviewed. Gardner could have his fucking glory. He was going to retire with more cash than twenty generals and even some of the shyster senators he dealt with every day. Those political assholes thought they were so smart, stealing from the public and making sure their crimes were legal. He scoffed. Penny ante horseshit. His nest egg was big enough now that he had off shore accounts in eight countries. He hadn’t spent his life overseeing special ops not to know where to hide things you didn’t want found. Like money. Or bodies.

He tented his fingers and turned his thoughts to Walt. Walt had been the perfect foil. On every base throughout the country where he’d set up his operation, he’d managed to find the Walts of the world. Drunks, discontents. The legions of men who never went anywhere in their careers and blamed those who did. Men who’d been shunted to positions that on the surface looked harmless, but for his operation were essential. Take Walt. Evidence clerk in the YPD. Couldn’t get less important than that. He chuckled. Unless you knew how many illegal drugs that insipid clerk catalogued in a day. This close to the border, it was a goldmine. It was easy to siphon off what he needed. He didn’t need much, just enough to cover his real source. In every transport plane carrying complex military equipment and supplies, there was always room to bury a belly load of drugs, if all the systems were in place. And he made sure they always were.

Hell, these locals thought the Columbian cartels were ruthless. They hadn’t messed with the Central Asian ones and the Eastern Block. And Afghani dust was the finest in the world. Nothing compared. At the rate they were selling it, compared to what they paid for it, they were making four times what they could with the local crap.

He groaned thinking about Beloi. The guy had been a lot like Gardner, too smart for his own good. Pressing, pushing. Never accepting anything at face value. In the beginning, drawing in the YPD had been a nice touch, took the focus off the base. If shit happened he planned to make Walt the fall guy. He knew from his contacts that Beloi was on to Walt. Figured Walt for the stooge he was and kept poking around, asking questions. Beloi wouldn’t let go. Couldn’t just accept that when drugs were involved it was the fucking gangs.

His stomach churned. The only person in the whole god damn army who was as smart as Beloi was his fucking commander, the mighty Jake Gardner. And thanks to Walt, the biggest fuck up alive, not only had he brought attention to the base by leaving Beloi’s body here, but they’d sent in wonder boy Gardner to solve the crime.

No question. Walt was history. He had to get rid of him. Walt was more of a liability than ever. He had one more job for the fucker then he’d give the order to take Walt out. One thing about the local gangs, as long as you stayed in their good graces, paid them the agreed cut, all you needed to say was, take him down. Their only question? How do you want it to look? In this case, he decided a scribbled suicide note would do nicely. One that described how Walt felt he had to kill Beloi, that he was afraid he would out him. Hell, nothing the press likes better than a cop killing a cop. That would take the heat off the base and his operation for years to come.

He looked up at the knock on the door.

He barked out a guff, “Yes?”

The young lieutenant saluted. “I have the reports you asked for, sir.”

He nodded, dismissing the soldier with an impatient flick of his wrist.

“Leave them.”

As the door closed, he turned back to the mountain of paperwork on his desk. Seeing the list of telephone calls he needed to return, he grimaced. Those fucking senators. He looked forward to the day when he’d never have to speak to an elected official again. Empty, pompous assholes. If you put all one hundred of them in a room with a couple of chimpanzees, the apes would win an IQ test with their eyes closed.

~~~

A sign on the outside of the door said: ‘I’m in the shower. Come in.’

Jake shook his head and growled an epithet under his breath. Brady and Clint chuckled behind him.

Jake unlocked the front door with his key and ushered his men in, hollering out as they entered, “Lexie, we’re here.”

She called, “I’ll be out in a minute. I’m getting dressed.”

Motioning his men into the living room, Jake grabbed three beers from the refrigerator and followed them.

Jake let Brady’s raunchy chatter and Clint’s appreciative laughter float over his head. Most of the time he enjoyed Brady’s off color humor as much as anyone, but tonight the ball of fear in his gut made joking impossible. He’d trusted his gut for so long that he didn’t have to analyze his anxiety. No need to wonder why. Use Lexie as bait? He’d have dressed down a subordinate for suggesting the idea. But here he was, the commander of the operation, deliberately putting a civilian in harm’s way. Not just any civilian. Lexie. He took a long pull off his beer willing the brew to settle his gut. It didn’t. He looked up when he heard her coming down the hall. When he saw her, the beer turned to acid in his mouth. He almost choked.

She stood in the doorway hopping on one foot trying to put a five inch red patent leather stiletto shoe on her other foot. The retro dance hall girl’s outfit was made to entice. Jake groaned. And that was before it went on Lexie’s body. A red satin corset laced up the front cinched in her waist, emphasizing the swell of her full breasts and curve of her hips. A flouncy skirt swirled when she moved, giving a tantalizing view of the scrap of red satin doing a piss poor job of covering her firm butt cheeks. She’d piled her hair on the top of her head, holding it with a careless clip. Errant curls teased the back of her neck and the side of her face. Jake was confident there wasn’t a red blooded man alive who wouldn’t want to snag the clip holding up her hair just to see it fall down her back in a curtain of gold. But it was her legs that had his nerves shrieking. Sheathed in thigh high black fishnet stockings topped by a black and red garter, she put Los Vegas showgirls to shame. A black velvet ribbon circling her pale throat completed the outfit, a blatant invitation to sin. The epitome of a “Naughty Lady.” She’d added a layer of bright red shiny goop to her already full lips and her flashing dark eyes lined in black and shadowed with sparkling color looked wider, more inviting than ever.

Brady let out a low whistle, speaking for all three men.

Lexie was startled when she saw Brady and another man sitting by Jake in the living room. They looked surprised at her appearance. Jake looked stunned. And pissed.

She nodded to Brady.

Shaking his head, he grinned at her,

“Hi there, hotstuff.”

Jake jumped up, glaring at her. His voice cracked.

“Fuck, Lexie!”

She tossed her head and put her hands on her hips, lifting her chin defiantly.

“Don’t tell me you’ve never been to the Senora Travieste. That you haven’t seen what the waitresses wear?”

He growled. “Yeah, I have. But I haven’t seen it on you.”

He ran his hands through his hair. His lips were pressed in a thin hard line. He shook his head in dismay.

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