And why the hell was he contemplating the color of Geralt’s eyebrows? Holy shit fire, that didn’t matter a hill of beans even on a good day! And this likely wasn’t a good day because, first off, he’d napped with his face in a spot usually reserved for someone’s ass. And secondly, Delilah was here. Which meant something was wrong. Something had happened. His heart crashed against his breastbone.

Unless of course, a soft voice of reason whispered, she’s here because she already has information on Keystone Property Development.

A certified forensic accountant? Who’da thunk it? Because she didn’t look like any accountant he’d ever known. Not by a long shot.

“Where is she?” he asked as another flash of lightning blazed through the windows. “At the gate?”

“She came by taxi,” Geralt said, frowning down at him like he was a few brain cells short of a fully functioning cerebral cortex. “And I couldn’t very well leave her standing out in a thunderstorm. Although…” a devilish light entered Geralt’s eyes, “…a wet T-shirt contest does sound—”

“Then where is she?” Mac cut in, wanting to hear the end of Geralt’s sentence about as much as he wanted to schedule a colonoscopy.

“She’s out in the courtyard,” Geralt replied, now eyeing him curiously. When Mac pushed up from the sofa, Geralt stopped him from stomping toward the back door with a meaty hand on his chest. “You got a thing for her or something? Because I’ve known her for years, but I was thinking it might be time I try to get my swerve on, if you know what I mean. But if you’ve got dibs, then I—”

“No dibs,” Mac informed him, though, for some reason he refused to contemplate, his blood pressure shot through the roof. He could actually feel the vein on the side of his neck pulse in warning.

“Good,” Geralt said as he followed Mac down the long hallway toward the back door leading to the large, partially covered courtyard with its myriad outbuildings.

Before Mac pushed outside though, he quickly stepped to his left, glancing through one of the tall windows to see Delilah standing under the drooping, rain-heavy canopy with her arms crossed over her breasts, chafing her biceps like she was cold. And she probably was cold. You know, considering she was completely, deliciously, ball-swellingly drenched. Her hair was plastered down around her face and sticking to her pale cheeks. Her jeans—which always looked like they were painted on—now accentuated every tiny detail of her figure, like the fact that she had the cutest and most tempting little rolls right at the top of her thighs beneath her pert ass. And her T-shirt? Well, to put it simply, the damned thing should’ve been outlawed.

Wet T-shirt contest, indeed…

“If you’re thinking about going back and trying to claim dibs,” Geralt said from over his shoulder, “you can forget about it. You had your chance.”

“I don’t want your goddamned dibs,” Mac harrumphed. Though he didn’t know who he was trying to convince, Geralt or himself.

“Good.” Geralt dipped his chin. “Then I’m headed back to the front gate.”

“Good,” Mac parroted, watching the carrot-topped giant lumber back down the long hall before wrenching open the heavy metal door. He stepped outside and a gust of warm, wet wind frisked him as efficiently as a well-trained field agent.

“Oh, thank God,” Delilah breathed, taking a couple of steps forward to lay a hand on his arm. Her palm burned him. Actually burned him, and he had to resist the urge to yank out of her reach.

“What is it?” he demanded, trying, really trying not to look at her boobs in that wet T-shirt.

“It’s not just Eve’s father and ex-husband who are partners in Keystone Property Development.” She lifted a hand to pull a lock of hair from where it’d blown across her mouth. Yessirree. Her nipples were hard. And okay, so he was looking at her boobs.

Goddamnit Mac, stop being such a shit-heel, he groused at himself. Himself immediately answered back with, Yeah, easier said than done.

“There’s a third partner,” she said, and that got his attention. “He invested less than Parish and Edens, so I suspect that means he has diluted voting power when it comes to business decisions. But he’s still a partner.”

“But Chief Washington said—”

“Chief Washington said his initial investigation was cursory at best.”

Bill and the rest of the Knights claimed Mac had Spidey sense. He wasn’t sure about that. But something inside him, something chilling, snaked up his spine, filling his brain with an icy blast of foreboding. And then he knew…

“Jeremy Buchanan,” he muttered, the hairs on his arms standing straight as if in warning of another lightning strike. But the angry sky remained gray and unlit by electricity.

“Bingo.” Delilah’s green eyes were circled by mascara, but it did nothing to camouflage the fear in them. “And he knows where they’re headed…”

* * *

“Give me your phone,” Mac demanded, holding out his wide palm.

“Wh-what?” Delilah sputtered, looking down at his hand in confusion. “Didn’t you just hear me say—”

“I heard you.” The vein in Mac’s temple pulsed, and his blue eyes glinted like the vodka bottles she kept on the third shelf back at her bar. The wind whipped his dark hair around his head. “Which is why I need your phone to call Bill. Mine’s dead.”

“Oh!” She dug into her purse. Now, where’s my damned phone when I…aha!

She’d barely pulled her iPhone past her purse’s top zipper before Mac snatched it out of her hand, thumbing it on and punching in a series of numbers with a rough finger. He held the device to his ear while she held her breath and waited. A second slid by, then another and another until Mac cursed, bellowing into the receiver, “Goddamnit, Will Bill! I hope you check your messages, because Jeremy Buchanan is mixed up in that mess with Eve’s father and ex-husband, and he knows you’re heading to Ludington. Call me!”

He jabbed a finger onto her phone’s power button before handing it back at her. She curled her fingers around the device, holding it against her pounding chest, searching his impenetrable expression. “That’s it?” she demanded. “We just sit here and hope he gets that message? What if he lost his phone? Or what if he—”

“Be quiet for a second,” Mac said, his voice barely discernible above another boom of thunder. “I need to think.”

“Well, think faster!” yelled.

He scowled at her. She scowled back. She hadn’t gone through all this, through the hell of yesterday and last night and this morning, just so he could leave a freakin’ message!

“The Coast Guard!” he snapped his fingers. “They can relay a communique to Bill via the sailboat’s VHF radio.” He turned to open the huge metal door with Delilah hot on his heels. He quickly swung back around, and she skidded to a stop, her Converse sneakers squeaking on the slate ground-covering.

“Don’t you even think about leaving me out of this,” she said, lifting her chin. “I’m in it. I’ve been in it. I have the right to see it through.”

He stepped up close to her, his voice a low rumble. “Okay,” he said, and the victorious smile that started to curl her lips turned down at the corners when he continued, “But before you set foot in this building, you need to understand something. You can’t breathe a word about what you see inside.” He hooked a thumb over his shoulder. “Not one word. Not to anybody. Or you could land all of us in hot water.” The expression in his eyes was wary and worried…and perhaps a little bit beseeching. “Do you understand me?”

Her lungs froze in an instant, as did her heart. Jesus, Mary, and Joseph, what are they doing in there?

“Do you understand me?” he asked again, reaching up to grasp her bicep and give her a little shake. “I have to know I can trust you. There’s more at stake here than you realize.”

She swallowed, nodding jerkily. He searched her eyes for a second longer before turning to throw open the door. Following him inside, she quickly glanced around, expecting to see…she didn’t know what, especially not after that speech he’d just given her. But to her utter relief and astonishment, the place looked rather ordinary. Rather like she’d expect a custom motorcycle shop to look. The exposed brick wall lining the right side of long hall he led her down was covered with old motorcycle license plates. And when they pushed out into the main body of the shop, she saw all the usual equipment. Bike lifts. Power tools. Blow torches. A big, precision water saw. The place smelled like burned coffee, hot metal, and old oil. It smelled just as she’d imagined it would smell and—

“This way,” Mac motioned, turning to clomp up a set of metal stairs. She followed him, the sound of their footfalls on the treads echoing around the huge space, bouncing against the brick walls painted with massive, colorful caricatures of all the Black Knights. Yup. Nothing out of the ordinary there either. Bikers loved nothing better than to immortalize themselves in murals or in their own tattoos. Then she topped the last riser…

Uh…okay.

Because the lower floor might’ve looked like your typical custom chopper shop, but this second floor? Well, this second floor looked like what she imagined NORAD must look like. Stacked two-high against the far wall was a bank of massive computer screens, all blinking and buzzing, showing satellite images and real-time feeds from places that had to be on the other side of the globe. And sitting in front of that bank of computers, iPod earbuds shoved in his ears, head bobbing to whatever music he was listening to while tossing a pencil in the air, was Ace. The guy she’d been led to believe was the Black Knights’ resident wiring expert. She immediately adjusted her thinking on that score. Especially when he turned and his jaw slung open like there was a two hundred-pound weight attached to his bottom teeth. He yanked the earbuds from his ears. “Delilah? Wh-what the hell are you doing here?”