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The Darkest Hour(39)

By:Maya Banks


"I sent him back into Colombia," Sam said tightly. "I'm meeting him in a  couple of days and we're going in after those bastards. I want  information, and I don't care how we get it."

Garrett's eyes glittered with anger. "You sent him back. Without telling  me. You're going back. Without me. Anything else you're doing without  me, Sam?"

"Cut the crap, Garrett. This is precisely why I didn't tell you. You'd get all pissed off and you'd want to go in with us."

"Goddamn right I would!"

Garrett stood and slapped his hands on the table.

"This isn't just your family, Sam. You aren't the lone patriarch of the  clan. I get it. You want to protect everyone and take responsibility  like a good soldier. Well guess what? That's not the way it works. We're  a team. Remember? We live and die by the team. Your words. Not mine. Or  do you think those rules only apply to everyone else but not you?"

"I made a decision. I stick by it."

"I don't give a fuck what you decided. If you think I'm going to let you  go on some half-cocked revenge mission, you're out of your mind."

Sam also stood and he got into Garrett's face. "We need information,  Garrett. We need to know why the hell they kept Rachel a goddamn  prisoner and treated her like an animal for a year!"

Garrett snarled and didn't back down. They stood nose to nose, each glaring holes in the other.

"I don't dispute we need information. You like to throw around that word  without giving any yourself. Think, Sam. Use your goddamn head for a  minute. You go off to South America and don't tell us shit. You get  blown to shit. What the hell am I supposed to tell Mom and Dad? What the  hell am I supposed to do when I don't even know where to look for you?  This is stupid and you know it or you wouldn't be hiding it from me."

"It's revenge. It's messy. It's not honorable, and I can't ask you or  anyone else in this family to do what I have to do," Sam seethed.

"Always Captain fucking America," Garrett said mockingly. "What about  Ethan and what he has to do? Rachel is his wife. Why are you fighting  his battles for him?"

"Because he's my brother."

Garrett stared into his eyes. He wasn't backing down, but there was understanding there where before there had just been anger.

"You're not going alone."

"You're not going, Garrett."

"Try and stop me."

Sam ground his teeth in frustration. "Goddamn it, Garrett."

"I'm going or I'll pull Rio out right now."

Sam raised a hand to his head. "Pull him out? When we need the intel?  Are you crazy? We have to find out why they targeted Rachel. There's a  threat out there to my family."

"Our family," Garrett corrected. He punched his finger in Sam's chest to punctuate his statement. "Our family."

The intensity in Garrett's expression took some of the wind out of Sam's  sails. He knew if the situations were reversed, he'd be every bit as  pissed and determined as Garrett. It didn't make it any easier to give  in.

"Son of a bitch," Sam swore. He bit out a few more colorful phrases  before Garrett rocked backed on his heels, a flare of triumph on his  face.

"Gotcha."

"Okay, okay. Don't fucking rub it in."

Garrett shrugged. "Now, you going to call Ethan or am I?"





CHAPTER 26



AS a matter of habit, Geron Castle had an array of local newspapers from  across the state of Tennessee delivered to his office every morning. It  was his practice to drink two cups of coffee as he browsed the human  interest stories.

Ever the politician, he looked for any angle to exploit, and he  pompously considered that it kept him in touch with his constituents.

He browsed through Knoxville, Nashville and Memphis first. Then he  focused on the smaller publications and yawned his way through  small-town bullshit. These people had no lives. Cattle, horses, hunting  and fishing. It was all they seemed to live for. It was a wonder the  suicide rate wasn't higher in this godforsaken state.

He consoled himself with the fact that these uneducated, backwoods louts  were the ones who put him in the Senate, and they would indirectly be  responsible for him shaking the dirt of Polk County from his feet when  he made the jump to the White House.                       
       
           



       

He was sipping at his second cup and idly contemplating his upcoming  vacation when his gaze lighted on the article about a Stewart County  resident declared dead who had miraculously returned after surviving a  supposed plane crash in a South American jungle.

He choked on his coffee and sloshed it all over his lap when he read the woman's name. Rachel Kelly.

He leapt to his feet, slapping at his pants as the heat scorched the  more tender portions of his anatomy. He let out a string of curses that  would have had his mother washing his mouth out with soap. She was a  devout, churchgoing woman, and she had no tolerance for ungodly  behavior.

Half his life had been spent following her dictates and example. The  other half had been spent veering as far from the path of righteousness  as a man could.

He wasn't proud of his sins, but he didn't regret them either.

And now it looked like his sins were coming back to haunt him.

He tossed the cup aside, ignoring the stain on the carpet and the line  of liquid on his desk. He snatched the paper back up and read the  article in its entirety.

This was a disaster. Not just a disaster but the end of his career. The end of his presidency before it ever began.

How the hell was the little bitch alive?

The fucking drug cartel had screwed him over. What possible motivation  they'd had for reneging on their end of the deal he didn't know, but  they wouldn't get away with it.

He grabbed his phone and started to dial and then slammed it back down,  shaking his head at his stupidity. This wasn't a safe place to make such  an important call. He couldn't use his cell phone either.

Impatience and panic vied for equal attention. He flung his chair back  and all but ran from his office, past his startled secretary, who  probably saw the mess he'd made of his clothing.

Then he forced himself to calm down. Nothing good would come of him  drawing unwanted attention. He forced a smile at his secretary and told  her he was going home to change. A slight mishap, he said with a fake  smile.

He drove out of town, giving thanks he hadn't been in D.C. when the  newspaper article was released. He didn't always get the papers at his  residence or his office there. What would have happened if he'd missed  it?

At the first gas station with a pay phone he came to, he pulled off and  made sure no one was close enough to overhear his call. Then he placed a  phone call. His instructions were clear.

The cartel had fucked up. He needed no witnesses. Anyone who could connect him to drug trafficking had to die.

And Rachel Kelly needed to return to the grave.





CHAPTER 27



RACHEL hung up the phone with shaking hands, and then she turned to  Ethan, praying she didn't look as sick as she felt. Her stomach churned,  and she was eternally grateful she'd refused breakfast.

"She'll see me right away," she said in a low voice.

Ethan closed the distance between them and pulled her into his arms. She  clung to him, her anchor, the only thing in her world that made sense  right now.

"Do you want me to go?"

She hesitated, because more than anything she wanted him to go with her.  She was scared to death and didn't want to do this alone. But worse  than her fear of being without Ethan was her fear of him finding out why  she was finally agreeing to go to the therapist in the first place. How  could she face him and relate the horrible things she dreamed about at  night when he'd been so absolutely wonderful to her?

"No, I need to do this on my own."

Her lips trembled so bad she could barely get the words out without the  urge to puke. The thought of going to some stranger and laying out her  soul terrified her.

He leaned in and brushed his lips across hers. Then he deepened the kiss, seeking and exploring her mouth.

When he pulled away, they were both breathing hard, and her lips were swollen and tingling.

He reached into his pocket and took out a cell phone, and placed it on the counter next to her.

"This is yours. I've programmed my number as well as everyone else's in  the family. Sean, the sheriff, and all the deputies. Anyone I could  think of that you might ever need. If you change your mind, you call me.  I'll be there as soon as I can."

She smiled and leaned into him, circling his waist with her arms. She  gave him a squeeze, pleased that she could feel and act so affectionate  with him after the terror of her dreams the night before. In the  daylight they faded and made her feel silly and reactionary.

The phone rang, startling her. They rarely got calls, and she was sure  it was because Ethan's family was respecting their privacy.

Tentatively she reached to pick it up, remembering that this was her  house too. She actually smiled as she brought the phone to her ear. Her  home. Her phone.