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A Perfect Storm(69)

By:Lori Foster


Startled, he jerked around so hard he almost fell. He froze at the sight  of her standing there. Staring at her wide-eyed, something awful shone  on his face, something akin to paralyzing fear.

She went still, too. He looked … ravaged. Her eyes narrowed. Her voice soft with menace, she asked, "What happened to you, Quin?"

A hot breeze sent the enormous tree limbs swaying, leaving dappled  sunlight to dance over his dark skin. He shook his head without  answering. "You came early."

An accusation? His eyes looked wild, filled with fear. Knowing the gig  was up, that Quin was part of a trap, Arizona shrugged. "I'm not a real  trusting sort."

Almost sick, he lifted a shaking hand to his face, and his eyes closed. "I'm sorry."

"Because?" She walked past him to the lone bench, all the while keeping  watch. All of the surrounding buildings offered concealment for creeps;  the danger could come from anywhere.

But if she didn't face the danger, she couldn't very well combat it.

"I had no choice."

"Yeah, I figured that, ya know? I can tell the good guys from the bad.  So how about we get away from here now? I could help you, if you'd let  me."

He shook his head. "I can't."

"Because?" she asked again.

"I … " He swallowed hard, went through an internal battle, and then  blurted with remorse, "I have a sister. A young sister. She is all I  have."

Ah, that figured. "So someone's using her to make you toe the line,  huh?" Sympathy welled up, but she hid that with the rage. She didn't  have a sister. She had … no one. Well, maybe Jackson-but God help anyone  who tried to use him. "How old are you, Quin?"

"Sixteen."

She sat down on the bench. "You're working with someone."

His face went pale.

"I already know it. The thing is, I don't know who. The raid you talked  about at the bar? How'd you get out? How'd this other person get out? Or  was he ever there?"

He shook his head. "I had no choice."

"Yeah, I know. We already covered that, right?" She kept her senses  open, alert to any intrusion of danger. "I'm not blaming you, you know."

"But you will!"

So much fear. She understood it, because she'd felt it before. Who was she kidding? She sometimes felt it still.

Otherwise, she wouldn't have gone to Marla, trusting her to cover her  ass. If this all went wrong, and it very well might, well then, Marla  would tell Spencer, and he'd let Jackson and the others know, and one  way or another, they'd find her.

She'd left enough info for them to easily track her.

And if she got hurt in the bargain … well, at least Quinto would be free. At least a scumbag would pay.

If she'd gone to the others first, no way would they have let her be  involved. Going to the bar was enough to get their panties in a bunch.  Meeting in this neighborhood?

No, they'd have nixed the deal to try something else, and while she  trusted they'd have eventually been successful, what would have happened  to Quin in the meantime?

"Come, sit down, Quin. Let's talk, okay?"

Shaking his head, he took a step back.

Her senses prickled. "I'm at least an hour early, so I'm guessing we have a little time, right?"                       
       
           



       

He breathed faster. "Actually … " His dark eyes lowered. He shook his head again. "No."

Arizona felt the shift in the air.

Oh, shit.

She sprang from the seat just as three men approached, all from different angles.

Three! Well, they weren't taking any chances with her, the buttheads.

She grinned as the first guy got close, and when he reached for her, she  kicked out, catching him in the balls. He doubled over. At the same  time she ducked a meaty fist from another man and spun around. She  kicked him in the knee. It hurt him but not enough.

She could draw her knife, but she had no illusions about getting away.

Not from three men.

Showing her knife now would only put her at a disadvantage-she'd lose  the knife for sure, and she had a feeling she'd need it later.

A hard arm wrapped around her neck, wrenching back her head, while  others grabbed for her wrists. A cloth-covered hand clamped over her  mouth.

She didn't understand … until she breathed in the sickly sweet scent, and dizziness assailed her.

Chloroform.

No, hell, no! Anger gave her strength. She tried to hold her breath as  she doubled her efforts, stomping toes, gouging shins, but the dizziness  got worse.

She managed a solid head butt, got her heel into a soft groin …

Someone cursed while someone else laughed.

Off to the side, a man said, "Get her feet, you moron!"

A fourth man? What the hell? Had they sent a battalion after her?

Unfortunately, Quin was cowed enough that he jumped to obey, struggling  to grab hold of her feet. She kicked him in the face, bashing his nose  and sending him backward. Poor Quin crumpled to the ground, blood  flowing.

Someone laughed even harder at that.

"You're useless," the man said. "Utterly useless." And then, out of nowhere, she got clubbed in the temple.

And even as she faded, Arizona feared for Quin.

She also recognized the voice.

Joel Pitts. The homely little creep from the bar. The kindly, goofy artist.

Well, hell.

Now it made sense.

* * *

FROM THE TOP of an abandoned building, his eyes burning, Spencer watched  Arizona being dragged into the pawn shop. Each of the men who'd dared  to touch her would pay dearly. He'd see to it.

He had himself under icy control, because that's what was needed.

But as soon as he had her safe again-

Jackson crept up beside him. "How many?"

"Counting the kid and the fucked-up artist, five. The artist and the kid went in with her."

"So the others are just guards, huh? That's convenient."

"She maimed them," Spencer said, and he tried not to sound admiring. But  damn, she was a handful and then some. If there hadn't been so many of  them, she just might have pulled it off.

Jackson leaned up to look over the roof and grinned at the sight of one  guy rubbing his crotch, another still bent double, holding himself, and  the third limping on a damaged knee as he went around to the back of the  building. "Girl's got deadly aim, ya know?"

Yes, he did know. He'd once been the recipient of that aim.

Before she'd come to trust him. Before she'd come to stay at his home.

Before she'd given herself to him.

Knowing he had to block those thoughts or emotion would overshadow  deliberation, he shook his head. "Dare is watching the back exit?"

"Yeah. He'll have that third guy covered, too. Unless they have an underground tunnel, they aren't going anywhere with her."

The building they'd dragged her into was square, squat and visible on all sides.

With the note she'd left, Arizona also had left detailed info about the  area. She must have gotten up early enough to run the neighborhood  through a program check. In one sentence she'd apologized to Spencer for  not telling him her plans, and in the next she'd told him that if he  insisted on getting involved, he should follow her instructions.

And he did.

"Could be a basement." It amazed Spencer that he managed to string  together coherent words with such blazing rage squeezing his throat and  surging through his bloodstream. Trust went both ways, but Arizona would  learn more about that once he had her safe.

"Probably is. At least a cellar or something like it. Most of these old  shitholes have them." Jackson chewed his bottom lip and shocked Spencer  by deferring to him. "So what do you want to do?"

"Kill them all."

"Seriously?"

Damn it. Jackson hadn't sounded particularly shocked or disagreeable  about that idea. Spencer shook his head. "No, not the kid." He rubbed  his tired eyes and accepted the truth. "I believe that's Quin, the  waiter from the bar. Arizona … cared for him, that's why she's here. He  could be in a forced situation. And she'll kick my ass if I let him get  hurt."                       
       
           



       

"And if it turns out he's not forced?"

"Then she can do whatever she wants with him."

"Gotcha." He sent a code to Dare and Trace, then looked through binoculars. "Huh. I can see them."

Spencer took the binoculars from Jackson and was relieved to see Arizona's eyes open, a mean smile on her mouth.

Thank God. The relief was enough to rob him of composure. He hadn't  wanted to consider any alternative other than her being dazed. Now that  he could see her-looking brazen as always-he could breathe a little  easier.

"We could force our way in-" Jackson said.

"But she could get hurt in the process." They didn't know if Quin or the  artist might be armed. "No, we have to do this right. And her note did  ask us to give her some respect."