âTHE women need strong, sweet tea,â Ilya Prakenskii greeted Jonas as he entered the kitchen. His cool, appraising gaze ran over Jonas, noting the smears of dirt and scratches, the evidence of the explosion. âI felt the surge in power and knew theyâd need help. Is Hannah all right?â
Jonas watched him gather mugs onto a tray. âSheâs fine. A little shaken up.â
Ilya rested his hip against the counter. âYou have something on your mind.â
âThe attack on Hannah by the Werners could have been directed by someone with your abilities.â
âI considered that as well, but I was close to the man. I would have felt it.â Ilya shrugged his shoulders. âUnless youâre implying I was the one directing him.â
âThe girls say no and I donât think so either.â Jonas rubbed his shadowed jaw. âIs it possible Nikitin has that kind of power?â
âAbsolutely not.â Prakenskii added a powder to the tea.
âThat could just be an act.â
âHe has no power. He would laugh if you told him anyone had the ability to manipulate energy. I would have known. Thereâs a charge in the air, much like an electrical current, when the elements are being manipulated. Youâve probably felt it. You have your own talent. Itâs the only reason Iâm allowed into this home. Youâd have shot me and asked questions later if you believed for one moment that I could have orchestrated the attack on Hannah.â
Prakenskii had read him correctly, Jonas couldnât very well deny the charge. Heâd considered the possibility because he had to, but he knew Ilya Prakenskii had saved Hannahâs life, not tried to take it.
âWhat did you put in their tea?â
âVitamins. A healing compound. All natural and nothing illegal.â
Jonas held out his hand for one of the mugs. Ilya handed him one and took one himself.
Both drank.
âIâll give this one to Hannah.â Jonas watched Prakenskii arrange cups on a tray and carry it toward the living room. âWhy arenât you floating it in like the girls do?â
Prakenskii shrugged. âEven small things are a drain on energy and I prefer to reserve mine for what lies ahead.â
âAnd what would that be?â Jonas asked, gliding easily in front of the man, blocking his way to the door.
Prakenskii glanced at him. âHunting, Mr. Harrington. I will be going hunting very shortly and Iâll need every ounce of energy I can muster.â
Jonas studied his expressionless face. âYou arenât what they say.â
âIâm exactly what they say. I do the job nobody else wants.â
Jonas continued to lock gazes. âMaybe you do, but the real question is not what you do, but who you work for.â
Ilya Prakenskii didnât so much as blink, but Jonas knew, in the strange way he often knew things, that he had hit a target.
âI work for Sergei Nikitin.â
âIs he the mark?â
âThink what you like.â Prakenskii stood waiting for Jonas to get out of his way.
Jonas shook his head. âYou canât have her, Prakenskii, not if youâre what you want the world to believe, and I think you know that.â
Ilya didnât bother to pretend not to understand. âMy relationship with Joley Drake is not your business.â
âActually, it is. The Drakes are my family and I look after my own.â
âIs that what youâre doing?â
Jonas stepped back, allowing Ilya to take the tray into the living room, where the Drake sisters sat, or lay, on the chairs, couches and floor, the drain of energy after helping Hannah taking a toll.
Jonas narrowed his eyes, watching as Ilya carefully handed each woman a mug of tea, giving Joley the one heâd sipped from. He opened his mouth, but a cough instead of words came out, and Joley frowned, looking up at him as she sipped, and then at Ilya.
âWhat did you do?â she demanded, her voice husky. âI felt that small flare.â
Jackson crossed the room to touch Elleâs cheek, placing his body carefully between her and the Russian. Jonas knew him well enough to know he had put himself in a position to get a clear shot if necessary.
Ilya appeared not to notice, but when he moved away from the sisters, he settled with his back to the wall, directly facing Jackson and the other fiancés of the Drake sisters. âI put natural vitamins in your tea. Nothing poisonous.â
Hannah took another swallow. âYouâll have to tell me how you make it. I can feel the difference already.â
âJonas,â Sarah called him to attention. âThereâs a message for you from a man named Duncan Gray.â She straightened in the chair and pushed back her dark hair. âHe said to tell you Petr Tarasov died a few hours ago from injuries sustained during the attempt to break him out of custody. He also said the agent he told you about has been identified.â
âWho is Duncan Gray?â Libby asked. âWhy is that name so familiar?â
âJonas worked for Gray when he first got out of the Rangers,â Sarah said. âWhy would he suddenly be calling you now, Jonas? Is this anything to worry about?â
âWho is Petr Tarasov?â Joley asked.
âPetr Tarasov is the brother of Boris Tarasov, one of the most violent mobsters alive today,â Elle answered. âBoris Tarasov is wanted around the world for just about everything from fraud to murder. Word had it that the defense department arrested Petr for murdering one of their agents, and was holding him in an unknown location. A few days ago, an attempt was made by Borisâs organization to get him free.â
âWhat else do you know, Elle?â Jonas demanded.
âPetr was shot and again taken to an undisclosed location for treatment.â She looked directly at Jonas. âThere must have been someone in the defense department feeding Boris information for him to find both locations, and if Iâm not mistaken, the cryptic message to Jonas was to tell him the traitor has been identified and is now deceased.â
âHow the hell would you know all that?â Jackson demanded.
Elle lifted an eyebrow at him and took a drink of tea to avoid answering.
Jackson took a step toward, going from protective to menacing in a heartbeat. âWe had a talk about this, Elle. I told you to quit.â
She stood up, her dark eyes flashing fire at him that fast. âYou tell me a lot of things. I told you to quit and I see youâre still a deputy.â She glanced at Prakenskii. âGiving me orders doesnât work, Jackson, so back off. And now isnât the time for this anyway.â
âThis isnât over, Elle,â Jackson said.
âIt is for me,â she replied.
Jonas held up his hand for peace, looking around the room at the women he called family.
They were tired and pale, but the tea was helping. âLetâs just put this aside for now. Weâre all tired and upset.â
âI have a bit of news that may interest you,â Ilya said, watching him closely. âThere is a rumor going around that four of Boris Tarasovâs crew went missing and when the fifth delivered the news, telling an outrageous tale of a house eating a man, trees coming to life and windows shattering and repairing themselves, Boris put a gun to his head and shot him.â
Jonas went absolutely still. Everything in him froze. The news was a sucker punch to his gut. Hard. Out of nowhere. Completely debilitating. For a moment he couldnât think or move, his mind screaming a denial. It was impossible for Boris Tarasov to connect him with Petrâs arrest. Impossible. That sneak and peek in the alley had been completely off the books. Gray had picked Jackson and Jonas up himself. No one else knew they had been there except Gray, and Jonas trusted him implicitly.
The silence stretched. The tension in the room climbing.
Had someone seen him? Recognized him? No one in San Francisco would know who he was. A stranger brought in, no name, no connection. Heâd gone to the clinic, but hadnât used his own name. Theyâd been careful to give no ID, careful of touching anything in the room. No one could identify them.
His gaze jumped to Hannah. He loved her with every breath in his body. He couldnât be responsible for the attack. He couldnât be responsibleâ¦
The attack. The pain. The terror. Her life destroyed because of him.
His eyes met hers across the room in sudden knowledgeâin complete and utter despair.
âThe picture.â His lungs burned. âGod. Oh, God. The fucking picture, Hannah.â
He couldnât look at herâat any of them. Without a word he turned and walked out of the room, slamming the kitchen door closed with such force it shook the house. A chair hit the door with an ominous crack and the sound of glass shattering followed.
Jackson started toward the kitchen. The Drake sisters pushed out of their chairs. Their fiancés followed them. Hannah beat them all to the door and stood in front of it, blocking the way.
âNo. Leave him alone. Everyone. Leave him.â Her blue eyes glittered with real menace, backing them all up. âThis is mine. No matter what, you stay out.â She decreed it, facing them down, knowing whatever was wrong, Jonas would never want them to see him so completely out of control.
Sarah nodded and waved her sisters back into the living room. She waited for the men to reluctantly follow before she squeezed Hannahâs hand and left her alone.
Hannah took a deep breath and cautiously opened the door. Slipping inside, she turned the lock and took a look around the room. The chairs were turned over, one was broken.
Plates lay smashed on the floor. Jonas was across the room, his arm and shoulders moving rhythmically as he hit the wall with his fist. With every strike, blood sprayed and he swore obscenely. His face was a mask of fury, the punching merciless.
Hannah stepped carefully around the broken glass, deliberately moving into his view.
âJonas. Stop. Whatever this is, whatever happened, we can deal with it.â
He turned to her, his eyes alive with pain. âCan we, Hannah?â He shook his head.
âThereâs no dealing with this one. Not now, not ever.â
She reached out to him and he jumped out from under her fingers, denying physical contact. âTell me then. Just say it.â
âIt was the picture.â His lungs burned. âHannah, Iâm so fucking sorry. They found the picture at the hospital. It was there, in my shirt pocket, and they cut my shirt off of me. I just left it there on the floor when we went out the window. It was my mistake. Mine.
He sank to the floor, his legs turning to rubber. âIt was in my shirt pocket,â he repeated, rubbing his hands down his face. âI did this.â
âI donât understand, Jonas. What did you do?â Hannahâs voice was gentle, compassionate, loving.
He couldnât bear for her to be loving. Or understanding. He wanted to put a bullet in his fucking head.
âWhich picture, Jonas? Start there.â
âThe one of you Sarah took outside in the backyard. You were surrounded by flowers and you were laughing. I was looking down at you. Sarah gave it to me and I kept it with me all the time.â He looked up at her in complete despair. âI should have known. It was in the back of my head when I saw the picture on my dresser. For a moment it was there and I lost it again. I didnât want to know.â He slammed the back of his head against the wall.
âDamn it. Just damn it.â
She eased her body down next to his, thigh to thigh, not touching, but close, so close she could feel his heatâand the jumble of emotions so intense they swamped the room. She was careful to allow them to wash over her and not let them in to affect her own emotions. Jonas needed her steady, not reacting.
âI loved the way you look, butâ¦â He bit off a curse. âAnyone looking at the picture would know Iâm in love with you.â
Hannah tried not to fixate on the blood dripping steadily from his knuckles but the sight of his mashed and bleeding flesh made her slightly queasy. She wanted to put her arms around him and comfort him, but he was ramrod stiff. She let the silence stretch out, forcing herself to allow him to tell her at his own pace.
âYouâre a supermodel, Hannah. No one knows who the hell I am, but your face is everywhere. They took one look at that picture and they knew just how to get to me. The fucking bastard is going to die for this.â
She was beginning to comprehend. Maybe sheâd known from the moment heâd gotten that look on his face, the dawning horror. She twisted her fingers together to keep from touching her face. In a way, it was a relief to know. She could never imagine why someone would hate her so much, but it wasnât about her. It had never been about her.
âBoris Tarasov did this to me because he was trying to get to you?â
âI should have known when there was no magic involved. It was too brutal. The killers were amateurs and both were reluctant. He must have threatened their child. And he would have done it quite brutally. Tarasov has a certain reputation for bloody vengeance.
He probably made them believe that if they didnât carry out the attack exactly as he instructed, he would chop their little girl into pieces and send her back to them one piece at a time. Thatâs the kind of thing heâs famous for.â
Jonas looked at her thenâat the scars on her face and throat. âI spent my life trying to take care of my mother and then all of you. I wanted you more than anything, Hannah, but my old job was so dangerous, and I was afraid Iâd bring that danger on you and your sisters. So I stayed away. When I took the job with the sheriffâs department, I thought we might have a chance. It was so much safer than what I had been doing.â He dropped his face in his hands. âAll those years of being careful, and in the end, I still brought the violence straight to you.â
Hannahâ looked into his eyesâhis gorgeous, dangerous eyesâand saw such misery, such rage and hopelessness. She forced her brain to slow down, not react, but to think. Jonas spent his life trying to save people. He put himself in harmâs way every single day in order to help others and it had cost him far more than he realized. He hadnât done this. He could never be responsible for what another human being chose to do and somehow she had to find a way to make him understand that.
âNo, Jonas. You didnât put that knife in my attackerâs hands. You didnât force him to use it. Boris Tarasov did. Heâs the one responsible, not you.â She put her hand over his knuckles, pushing healing energy to take the sting away.
âDonât!â he said sharply. âThis is⦠unacceptable, Hannah. Youâre my damn world and to have someone try to destroy you over something I didâ¦â
âYou donât,â she answered with equal sharpness. âDonât you dare! I mean it, Jonas. This isnât about you and donât try to make it that way. Your motherâs illness wasnât about you either. You take on too much, you always have.â
âShe was over forty when she had me. She was too frail to have a child and she never recovered.â He shoved both hands several times through his hair, needing to hit something again. âHer immune system shut down after I was born.â
âShe wanted you more than anything else in the world. Both your mother and father did.
You have no right to take that away from them. It was their choice and one they never regretted.â
âShe suffered, Hannah. Every damn day. She suffered.â
âShe was very strong, not frail, and she fought it long and hard because it was her decision to stay with you. Iâm an empath. I went with my family to see your mother. I knew what she wanted, and it wasnât death. Not even to escape the pain. She wanted every single minute she could have with you.â She took his hand again, linked their fingers together. âAnd thatâs what I want, Jonas. Every single minute I can have with you.â
âLook what happened to you, Hannah.â
âIt happened. It was frightening and horrible and we both wish it hadnât happened, but it did. And something good came of it. In a way, Jonas, I found my strength. I know who I am and what I want. I gained my freedom.â
âDamned hard way to get your freedom, baby. And youâre going to have nightmares for the rest of your life.â
âSo Iâll have nightmares. Donât we all? Donât you?â She framed his face with her hands because everything she said was true. She was stronger and she did know what she wanted. âWeâre partners. Now. Forever. You canât shield everyone you love from bad things, Jonas. Theyâre going to happen. When they do, weâll handle them together.â
Jonas stared into her eyes for a long time, searching for the truth. âI donât know if I can forgive myself.â
âHave you heard a word Iâve said? Jonas, if weâre going to make it together, if Iâm as important to you as you say I am, then you have to listen to me. I want all of you. Every single bit of you. I wonât accept a man who is afraid to love me with his entire heart and soul and body. If I canât have all of you, then thereâs no point in this. You canât control the world, Jonas, and you canât continue to blame yourself for things beyond your control. I never asked you to be different. Yes, you scare me sometimes, but Iâll take fear over you trying to be someone youâre not.â
Jonas opened his mouth and then closed it. If he had remembered the picture, then Tarasov would never have connected Hannah to him. He wouldnât have destroyed an entire family⦠He groaned. He couldnât take that on, too. The couple had choices. They could have gone to the cops, put their daughter into protective custody, but theyâd elected to murder an innocent woman to protect their own. That was on them. He rubbed his hands over his face and looked down into Hannahâs face.
âIâm not going to tell you that youâre right.â
âBut I am.â
His eyes softened. A small smile tugged at his mouth. âHannah. You didnât stammer. Not onceânot even when you were putting me in my place.â
He leaned in to kiss her. Gentle. Tender. So sweet it brought tears to her eyes.
âAre we good?â she asked.
âWeâre good,â he answered. Heâd live with what happened because he had no other choice. Heâd made a mistake and she was right, there was no going back. He wasnât about to lose her over it. If she could look him straight in the eye, then he was man enough to do the same.
He looked slowly around the room. âI donât suppose the house repairs furniture and dishes?â
Hannah laughed. âNo such luck. But if you notice, thereâs no hole in the wall. Next time you decide to go crazy and punch the wall, you might remember, this house could protest and just lock your fist inside, and then where would you be?â
He narrowed his eyes and looked warily at the wall. âThis place is definitely creepy.â He kissed her again. âI suppose Iâm going to have to face everyone. I hate telling your sisters that I put youâand maybe themâin danger.â
âIt isnât like we havenât been in danger before, Jonas,â Hannah reminded him.
The truth was, he could barely stand the idea that he had exposed his family to a madman like Boris Tarasov. The Russian was brutal and vengeful, his reputation scared even seasoned investigators. With a small sigh, he stood up and reached down to take her hand, pulling her to her feet.
âI guess I have to get it over with.â But instead of going into the living room, he wrapped his arms around Hannah and held her against him, his hands sliding down her jeans to cup her bottom and bring her tight against him. âThank you.â
âI love you, Jonas.â
âThank you for not telling me what an ass I am for tearing up the kitchen. Sometimes I have so much anger in me,â he confessed in a whisper against her ear, âso much rage, it scares the hell out of me.â
She pressed her mouth to his throat, remembering very vividly the day, long ago, he had come into their house so angry he couldnât stand still. Waves of grief poured off him and mixed with impotent rage. Heâd torn up the kitchen then, too. Her mother had taken Libby and had gone to do what they could to ease Jeanette Harringtonâs suffering. Mrs.
Drake had never chastised Jonas, but she had handed him a broom.
âIt doesnât scare me, Jonas,â Hannah said. She kissed him again. âBut after weâre married, if you break my dishes, be prepared to clean up the mess and then go out and get me new ones immediately.â She reached back, tugged at his hand until she had possession of it and brought his injured knuckles once more to her mouth. âLetâs go. I can feel how worried the others are about you.â
The moment they entered the living room, he was swarmed by Hannahâs sistersâhis sisters. They crowded around him, their hands soothing, bringing peace, healing his knucklesâhealing his soul. Sending him waves of love and support. He went from wanting to viciously beat something with his bare hands, to being choked up. The Drake sisters. His family. Hannah. The love of his life. Who could be luckier?
âAre you all right?â Sarah asked gently.
He nodded, wanting to ease the concern on their faces. âI lost it there for a minute.â He glanced back toward the kitchen. âI made a mess, Sarah, Iâm sorry.â
âTell us whatâs upset you.â
âBoris Tarasov went after Hannah to draw me out. Iâm the real target. Heâll try to kill her because she matters to me. He might try to kill all of you.â
Joley frowned. âI donât understand. Why would a Russian mobster want to kill you? That doesnât make any sense, Jonas.â
âDuncan Gray is my old boss and he asked me to do a little job for him, nothing dangerous, or at least I didnât think it would be, but we caught Petr Tarasov on tape murdering an undercover agent.â
Ilya Prakenskii made a small noise at the back of his throat. There was silence, as if by that one small sound, everyone instantly understood the chilling repercussions.
âI was shot in the ensuing battle and went to a clinic. I had a picture of Hannah and me, one I always carried with me. Tarasovâs crew must have found the picture, and in order to bring me out into the open, they attacked Hannah using an innocent family to do so. My guess is, weâll find that the mother has ties to Russia and thatâs how he chose her. She would know his reputation and believe absolutely that he would kill her daughter if they didnât do what he said.â
Joleyâs hand moved defensively to her throat. âIs that true, Ilya? Would someone be so convinced theyâd kill another human being?â
Ilya stroked a caress down her hair, a gesture of comfort. âUnfortunately men like this exist, Joley, very evil, and yes, those who know of him would do whatever they could to spare their loved ones the brutality of his chosen executions.â
âThen you have to stop him, Jonas,â Sarah said. âWe all do.â
âDo you know where this man is?â Joley asked Prakenskii.
Rare expression rippled across Prakenskiiâs face. âJoley, these peopleâ¦â
âWant to kill my sister, Jonas and possibly us. Do you know where they are?â
He pushed away from the wall. âIâll take care of it.â
Jonas shook his head. âThis is my fight, Prakenskii. He did this to my woman, not yours.
Where is he?â
Prakenskii swore in Russian. âYou cannot arrest such a man, Harrington.â
Jonas lifted an eyebrow and remained silent.
Prakenskii swore again. âHeâs on a yacht with several of his crew.â
Jonas nodded. âWeâll need Duncan to get the necessary warrant to board. Weâll have to strike fast before he has a chance to launch another attack. Can you girls give us the weather weâll need and help from here?â
âOf course, Jonas, tell us what you need,â Hannah said. Prakenskii shook his head and walked out. Jackson hesitated a moment and then followed.
THE Drake sisters may have overdone the fog, Jonas decided as he approached the boat where Duncanâs grim-faced men waited.
âThese people play for keeps, Jonas,â Jackson warned softly. âIf you leave Tarasov alive, heâll keep coming at youâeven from jail.â
âI heard Prakenskii, same as you,â Jonas snapped. âWhere the hell is he, anyway? Youâd think heâd want in on this.â
âHe didnât show, but then, with Duncan Gray running the operation, I canât blame him too much.â Jackson flashed a small grin. âGray thinks Prakenskiiâs both a spy as well as the worldâs best hit man.â The smile faded. âYou know Duncanâs going to want to take Boris into custody. It would be the biggest international arrest of the decade. It isnât going to matter that Boris is after you and your family. We have to get to him first.â
âI know.â Jonas leaned down to examine his gun for the hundredth time to avoid looking at Jackson.
âIâll take him out, Jonas,â Jackson said.
Jonas shook his head. âItâs my responsibility, Jackson, Iâm not laying it on you.â
Jackson didnât bother replying. Heâd already had a long conversation with Prakenskiiâwell, as long a conversation as two men like Ilya Prakenskii and Jackson Deveau needed when protecting a friend. Jonas had the courage to charge hell with a bucket of water, and he never walked away from a fight or a fallen comrade, but he didnât have the makeup for the kind of extermination job they needed to do. Jonas had been raised to revere life, in the same way the Drakes had been raised, and had far too much compassion in him to live comfortably with what needed to be done. Heâd do the job, but it would haunt him.
Jackson wasnât going to let that happen.
âThe girls will be waiting in case we need them. Already theyâve got the fog thick and still, so weâll have plenty of cover going in,â Jonas said. He stepped aside to allow Jackson to enter the boat with Gray and the rest of his team.
Gray barely looked up from studying the yachtâs layout for the millionth time. âOur information says Tarasovâs got fifteen men aboard the yacht and no civilians. All of his men are armed and will cut you down without thought. These four are the most dangerous. Donât get close to them for any reason. Donât try to cuff them. Donât try to disarm them. They know more ways to kill a man than you could possibly imagine.
Contain them and wait for my team to apprehend. This is our target.â Gray passed around photographs.
Jonas found himself staring at Boris Tarasov. The man was short and stocky, with a shock of gray hair and bushy eyebrows. He had heavy features and mean, bullish eyes.
The second picture was of the captain. He was taller with an athletic build, a very handsome man.
âThatâs Karl Tarasov, Petrâs son. Heâs been the number one hit man for his family for years. Heâs ruthless and bloody and doesnât mind killing women and children,â Gray continued. âNo one has ever come up against him and lived. Heâll do anything to protect his uncle.â
âIf we donât arrest them, Jonas, you and the Drakes are never going to be safe.â
That was a blatant lie and it twisted Jonasâs gut into knots. Gray knew as long as any of the Tarasovs were alive, Hannah would never be safe. Never. And that meant they had no choice but to see to it that each of them were executed. He sighed and rubbed his temples where the beginning of a headache was throbbing. He thought he was long out of that business.
âHow do they let someone like that into the country?â Jonas asked, disgusted.
âWe didnât know he was anywhere near the area,â Gray said, ânot until you brought us the information about the yacht. Our last information was that he left the country after Petr was arrested. Youâre absolutely certain of your informant?â
Jonas wasnât going to give up Ilya Prakenskii, not to Gray. Duncan was ambitious, and if he arrested Prakenskii or Tarasov or even Nikitin, his political career would be made.
Whatever Prakenskii was, heâd saved Hannahâs life and Jonas wouldnât betray him.
âYeah, Iâm sure.â
âThe other two Iâm really interested in are known for their extreme violence. Yegor and Viktor Gadiyan are brothers. Yegor was married to Boris and Petrâs sister, Irina. She died some years ago, but the Gadiyan brothers continued to work for Boris.â
âGreat family business.â
âIt was Yegor and Viktor who tried to kill Sergei Nikitin some years ago. The other Russian families stepped in when Nikitin brought in Ilya Prakenskii as his bodyguard. I donât think any of the families wanted to chance having Prakenskii come after them.â
Jonas studiously avoided looking at Jackson. âItâs funny how these men have such badass reputations, but no cop in Europe or here can pin a thing on them.â
âThis cop is going to,â Gray said. âWe canât waste any more time. The fog being so thick is a huge asset but it canât last. Weâve got to move now.â
THE men were grim-faced and silent as they approached the yacht, moving through the rippling water, their boats climbing waves and slapping down with enough force to shake their teeth, yet there was absolutely no sound. Jonas knew the Drake sisters were controlling the air around them, but he wondered what Duncanâs men were thinking. It was eerie to move over the choppy surface surrounded as they were by dense gray fog.
Within the fog bank, darker colors swirled and moved, but the heavy mist layers were thick and still, stubbornly holding position for several miles in either direction around where the yacht lay stationary. Waves slapped the sides of the ship while men patrolled the deck, peering through the fog in an effort to see.
It was imperative that Jonas and Jackson reach Tarasov first. If Gray did, he would do everything to keep the mobster alive. It had taken effort and a lot of persuasion to get Gray to agree to allow Jonas and Jackson to slip aboard first. Fortunately, theyâd always held that position when theyâd worked for Gray, so in the end, heâd agreed it was best for them to do what they knew.
Jonas and Jackson slipped into the cold water, some distance from the yacht, pushing their waterproof gear ahead of them while they swam toward it. Jonas felt a nudge against his body as a gray shape slid soundlessly past him. His heart jumped and he whipped his head around, trying to peer through the water to see what was coming up below him.
Beside him, Jackson pulled his spear gun out, but it was impossible with the combination of fog and darkness to see anything around them.
Voices rose and fell in the fog, soft and melodious, feminine. The voices sang of dolphins, sea creatures aiding sailors. The notes danced in the mist and slid easily into their minds. Both men relaxed, and when the dolphins pushed beneath their hands, they caught hold of the offered fins and accepted the ride.
As they neared the large bulk sitting in the water, Jackson caught Jonas by the arm and pointed at the splash of red on the side, down near the water line. The dolphin pulling Jonas suddenly abandoned him, diving deep, straight down. Jonas moved closer to examine the red smears.
âFresh blood, Jackson, and a lot of it.â
Jonas took a slow look around him. Waves slapped his face as the dolphin returned to the surface towing something behind him. Jonas saw the hand first, fingers outstretched and reaching up through the dark water. It seemed to come out of the fog and water, detached, a gruesome macabre sight. The knuckles had a tattoo across it, much like the one Rudy Venturi had described. Jonas reached to snag the sleeve and pulled hard. The dolphin let go, but the body seemed weighed down, too heavy to keep on the surface for more than a few moments.
Jackson reached over to help, tugging the arm out of the water. Shoulders and chest followed, and then the face with the heavy, handsome features and the gaping wound circling his throat from ear to ear like a ghoulish smile. Karl Tarasov had died hard. His eyes were dull and glassy, his face a mask of horror. He wore the coat of a captain, and beneath it, Jonas could make out the shoulder harness with the gun still in the holster.
Jackson indicated something under the body weighting it down and Jonas nodded his understanding before allowing the body to drop away, back under the sea.
Jonas boarded first, moving as soundlessly as possible, trying to puzzle out the implications of Karl Tarasovâs execution. He gained the deck and lay flat, waiting for his heart to stop pounding as he oriented himself to the surroundings. Jackson slid into position beside him and they pulled their gear from their waterproof bags and readied themselves for war. Jackson fit the radio piece into his ear and gave Gray instructions for his men. Two guards patrolled the deck. They would take them out as quietly as possible to allow Gray to get his men onboard.
Jonas signaled Jackson forward and he moved in the opposite direction, circling around to get in position to take out the guard as he came back around. He drew his knife and waited, heart pounding, a bad taste in his mouth. This day would haunt him. He knew it had to be done, and he was more than willing to kill these men to keep the Drakes safe, but that wouldnât make killing any easier. He just wasnât wired that way. His motherâand the Drakesâhad seen to that.
The guard loomed out of the fog, his footsteps muffled, merging with the sound of water slapping the sides of the yacht and the occasional cry of a bird overhead. Jonas let the man go past him and stepped in, arm whipping up fast, knife sinking deep. He let out his breath, holding the guard while the life drained out of him before easing him to the deck.
He asked the universe for forgiveness even as he was making his way down to the next level, seeking Boris Tarasov with every intention of ending his lifeâand wasnât that irony? Sometimes he made himself sick.
Jonas heard Jackson whispering through the earpiece. âIâm looking at Karl Tarasov alive and well. Heâs talking to two of the guards in front of the master state room.â
Jonas frowned. There was no doubt in his mind that Karl was anchored at the bottom of the sea. âAre you sure?â
âItâs him. He just patted a guard on the back. They laughed together and he went into the stateroom. The guards definitely think itâs him.â
âOne at the helm,â Jonas said. âHeâs got a birdâs eye view, Gray, get one of your best on him.â He made his way slowly down the stairs, hugging the wall, careful to make no sound as he eased each foot forward.
Someone laughed as he passed the salon. Jonas crouched down, making himself small as he studied the layout. The rooms were spacious, but there werenât a lot of places to hide.
Movement attracted his attention. Karl Tarasov came out of the master stateroom, clapped a hand on the guardâs shoulder and gave him orders. The guard snapped to attention. Jonas studied the Russian captain. He was tall and broad-shouldered. His uniform jacket was immaculate, not a wrinkle, the same with his pressed trousers. The shoes were polished and every hair in place. He walked down the hall to the salon and disappeared inside. Only then did Jonas realize he was wearing thin black gloves over his hands.
Jonas swore under his breath and lifted the gun, silencer in place. Before he could pull the trigger, both guards went down almost simultaneously, a crimson hole blossoming in each forehead. Jackson moved past them, kicking the guns out of the way and reaching for the door.
âDamn it, Jackson.â Jonas had no choice but to cover him.
Jackson slipped inside the master stateroom, Jonas right behind him. Boris Tarasov lay on the bed. His eyes were wide open, staring and glassy. The bed beneath him was soaked red and around his throat was an obscene smile.
âSon of a bitch,â Jonas said, and then spoke into his radio. âGray. Tarasov is dead. I repeat, dead. It looks like Karl Tarasov killed him before we got here. I saw him coming out of the room just before we entered.â He hesitated a moment before tossing in the red herring. âI think we stumbled into a power play, a takeover, going on here.â
Gray swore softly in his ear. âBen reported seeing Karl go toward the salon where the Gadiyan brothers were last seen. Everyone be damn careful, and for Godâs sake, keep the son of a bitch alive. We need one of the major players talking.â
Jonas shook his head. If that was the real Karl Tarasov, then who was in the water? And if it was Karl, he would never be taken alive, Gray should know that. He was handicapping his team, sending them against a lethal killer and ordering them not to fire.
They moved in tandem, Jackson point man, clearing the hall, and Jonas sweeping each room as they passed, then guarding their backs. Gunfire erupted in the vicinity of the helm.
Jackson let out a sigh. âThere goes any advantage we might have had.â
More gunfire burst out on the deck, this time a volley answered by another volley.
The doors to the salon burst open and bullets sprayed the hall, slamming into the walls and shattering glass, tearing up everything in their path. Two men stood side by side, automatic weapons blasting as they hurtled themselves out of the salon toward the stairs.
Grayâs men returned fire. One agent screamed and lay writhing on the floor, another was flung backward into the wall.
Jonas felt the familiar rage welling up and forced it down, taking careful aim, taking his time, making the shot count. Yegor Gadiyan went down without a sound. Viktor Gadiyan reached with one hand to try to grab his brotherâs collar and drag him even as he continued to spray the hall in a systematic and very thorough sweep. The noise in the small confines of space was deafening as well as frightening. Jonas stayed crouched low in the tiny alcove, sweating, pinned down, and waiting for an angry bullet to strike him.
Off to his left, Jackson signaled him, putting three fingers up, one by one indicating in three seconds Jonas needed to draw Gadiyanâs fire. Jonas closed his eyes and sent up a silent prayer. He counted to three and allowed the edge of his shoulder to show for half a second and jerked back into cover. Bullets thudded all around him, spitting splinters into his face and shoulders. He heard the single shot Jackson squeezed off followed by a heavy body hitting the floor and then absolute silence.
Jonas looked at the wall around him. Bullets had smashed into the wood in every conceivable spot without hitting him.
Some higher power was working to save him, but he didnât believe it could have been the Drakes this time. He allowed himself a moment to slump against the wall in relief. Viktor Gadiyan would have killed him given another few moments. He saluted Jackson, who was already checking the bodies.
Once more they began the dangerous task of clearing rooms. Overhead they could hear the firefight continue as Tarasovâs men fought Grayâs unit.
The earpiece erupted with a burst of chatter. âKarl Tarasov is trapped on the upper deck!â
Gray began snapping orders and both Jackson and Jonas took the stairs quickly, racing to try to intercept Grayâs men. Jackson circled to the left and Jonas went right. Tarasovâs back was to Jonas. The Russian snapped off an occasional shot to keep the agents away from him as he made his way to the railing. The agents were trying to surround him and take him alive. Jonas silently slipped into position behind him, cutting off his escape.
The fog thickened, swirling in and around the yacht, closing them into a gray, wet world, muffling sounds and cutting visibility nearly to zero. Karl Tarasov turned and ran right into Jonas.
The two locked wrists as Tarasov brought up a knife in one hand and a gun in the other.
Jonas drove him back toward the railing as they thrashed around, his body between Tarasov and the agents, preventing them from a clear shot. Jackson twice brought up his weapon and dropped it, when Jonas was thrown into the line of fire, unable to see through the blurring action and the thick veil that shrouded the yacht.
Jonas slammed Tarasov hard against the rail, still struggling to control the weapons. The gun dropped into the sea. Tarasov, in a sudden burst of strength, threw Jonas back a step and smashed his fist hard into Jonasâs jaw. Jonas staggered and the Russian turned and dove into the churning water. Duncan Gray ran to the edge of the railing and peered over.
âDamn it. Just damn it.â He pounded the railing with his fist. The water was choppy and dark, the fog making it worse to see. âHe canât survive in that. Itâs too cold. He doesnât have a wetsuit on and weâre too far from shore for him to swim. Get out there and look for him. Heâs got to surface.â
Jackson reached Jonas and whipped him around, examining him for injuries. He pulled his earpiece free. âYou hurt? That had to be Prakenskii.â
âI recognized his eyes,â Jonas agreed as he pulled off his own radio and slipped it into his gear bag. He rubbed his jaw. âHe enjoyed that just a little too much,â he said. âIâm going to have a whale of a bruise.â
âQuit belly-aching. Those women have made you go soft. Two minutes after you hit the front door, theyâll be all over you.â He pitched his voice higher. âOh, Jonas, darling, does it hurt? Let me make it all better for you.â
Jonas shot him a glare. âYouâre just jealous because they donât fuss over you.â
Jackson watched the boats searching the water in a grid pattern. âHeâs long gone, Jonas, theyâll never find him.â
âThat was always the point, wasnât it?â Jonas felt inexplicably tired, weariness setting in all the way to the bone.
Jackson surveyed the damage. âIâm just glad this is over. Letâs get home.â
âSounds good to me.â More than anything else, he wanted to be with Hannah, because wherever she was, that was home to him.