“Put me down,” she ordered imperiously. She saw his lips twitch and he paused for a second, but eventually he lowered her to her feet.
Before he let her go, though, he had a condition. “You’ll talk to me?”
She nodded and released a breath signaling that the fight was over. He relaxed, too, and took a step back to let her come away from the wall. As soon as she was clear, she reached for his shoulders and slammed her knee into his groin. She watched him collapse helplessly to the ground.
He rolled onto his back and reached for his crotch, letting out a low pitiful wail.
Squatting down on her haunches near his head, Sabrina took a moment to enjoy the view of the mighty Quinlan on his back and writhing in pain. She’d imagined him in just such a position often over the past ten years. But somehow the reality of it was so much more special.
“Gosh, it’s been a long time,” she commented cheerily. “So how have you been?”
He moaned and rolled away from her, attempting to get to his knees but failing. Instead, he curled himself into the fetal position.
“That good, huh? Great. I’m doing really well myself. Good job prospect, nice house.”
“You’ll pay,” he finally managed to whisper.
“Well, it’s been fun catching up. We should do this again sometime.” She straightened herself to her full height and started to walk away, thinking she had at least a few minutes before he’d be able to regain his feet.
She’d kneed him pretty hard.
But one of her fatal weaknesses in life was that no matter what the situation, she always underestimated Quinlan.
She felt his hand around her ankle as she moved to take a step. She had the advantage of position, but she’d forgotten how strong he could be. He tugged hard on her leg and sent her tumbling. Unprepared for his speedy recovery, she wasn’t able to control her landing and ended up falling on her arm at a bad angle, her elbow smacking the pavement hard.
As she tried to breathe through the numbing pain, she felt him crawling up behind her using his weight to keep her down. She felt his knee press against the small of her back and gasped at the pressure he applied. Apparently, he wasn’t taking any chances of her escaping.
Either that or he was really ticked off.
He grabbed her wrists and pulled them behind her back, securing them with a thin piece of wire that she knew from experience he carried around with him like most men carried pictures of their kids. He wasn’t merciful as he pulled her to her feet and pushed her out in front of him.
“So help me, Bri, you pull another stunt like that and I’ll-”
“What? Hit me?” She turned around to face him so he could see the blood trickling from her lip. “Oooh. I’m scared.”
When they got to the end of the street he stopped her and signaled with his hand. A few blocks down, Sabrina could see a set of headlights blink to life. In moments the car pulled up in front of them-a dark Cadillac equipped with a driver.
“What, no limo?” Sabrina asked. “Those budget cuts must really be hell on you guys.”
“Get in.” He opened the rear door and Sabrina got in butt first, sliding over the red leather seat as she made room for who she now understood was Krueger’s choice. She checked the locks on the doors and saw that there weren’t any. No handles, either. It might not be a limo, but it was definitely government issue.
As soon as Quinlan shut the door, he gave the driver directions. “Her house. The long way.” He hit a button on a panel located on the arm of the car door. It raised a partition between the front and back half of the car. They were alone.
There was quiet for a time. Neither spoke as the impact of being in the same car together after so long apart settled on them. Quinlan, however, was the first to recover. He hit the car light on the roof and filled the back seat with a dim yellow glow.
Sabrina squinted at the light as her pupils adjusted. After a moment she turned to look at him only to find him staring back at her. He removed one of the black leather gloves he wore, and reached for her face to swipe away the blood.
She jerked her head back and snapped. “Don’t touch me.”
“It wasn’t my intention to be so rough with you,” he said, sounding regretful over their fight.
“It never is,” she replied.
Sighing, he removed his other glove and shoved them into his pockets. “Sabrina. Still angry after all these years?”
“Still an asshole after all these years?”
He didn’t bother to respond.
Impatient with his silence, she finally asked. “You? They sent you?”
“Me.”
“I never knew the government had such a sick sense of humor.”
“Hmm,” he murmured as a nonanswer. “You really thought they would send someone else? You really thought I would let them? That disappoints me, Bri. You used to be smarter than that.”
“I just figured you were too old for this sort of thing.”
She’d wanted to insult him, but the truth was he was right. She should have known who Krueger would send. Quinlan had been chasing Kahsan for most of his career. He was obsessed with the man and had been since the time he nearly caught him that one time in Africa. Instead he’d ended up with a nasty-looking scar over his left eye.
If she had to convince anyone to buck the system to go after Kahsan, Quinlan might be the candidate. But that didn’t mean she had to like it.
“Would you be surprised if I told you that I’ve missed you?” He turned his head toward her, his lips twitching ever so slightly. Quinlan’s version of a smile.
She snorted. “Yes. Because missing someone would actually imply that you have some capacity for emotion. And we both know that’s not true. Don’t we?”
Rather than answer, he faced forward again, his smile gone. “Your problem has always been an excess of emotion. An unfortunate circumstance for someone with a brain like yours.”
“That’s me,” she said sarcastically. “All heart. If only I could be an ice monster like you.”
“If only.”
Sabrina ground her teeth together and struggled to hold on to the last of her patience. “I’m tired. I hurt. My wrists are bleeding. My lip is swollen. You’re dropping me off at my house, and then you are gone. If Krueger thinks I can work with you, he’s deluding himself. I want someone else.”
The protest against his involvement was a pretense. Part of the play that had been scripted by Krueger. Quinlan would be expecting her to try and buck him, so she did. But it didn’t change the fact that what she said was true.
“No.”
Figures. Quinlan didn’t buck easily.
“Look, there’s something you don’t know. There’s another part to this that makes it…complicated. Which means I don’t need any more complications on top of it and you are the mother of all complications.”
“Another part. Really?”
“Yes,” she hedged. “I sort of had this idea.”
“Do tell.”
She glanced over at him. There was something in his tone that wasn’t right. As though he was holding back… rage. She thought about what might enrage him, aside from the attack on his manhood, and came up with only one answer.
“You know,” she stated.
“That you contacted Kahsan? Hell, yes, I know,” he spat, pushing his face into hers. “I have people all over the world whose mission it is to keep me informed about Kahsan’s every breath. The only thing no one can ever tell me is where the hell he is. You can imagine my shock when rumors started circulating about some female genius trying