Rio nodded but he still looked pissed.

“Look on the bright side,” Garrett said. “Van sent them to fucking Alaska first. Steele’s probably not any happier that he’s had to haul ass to Central America from Alaska.”

Rio grinned. “Alaska, huh. Ouch.”

Garrett rolled his eyes at how delighted Rio was over Steele’s inconvenience.

“I’ll stick Steele and his team on the perimeter. They can sleep in the trees. They’ll have a bird’s-eye view of the valley and the river. If someone comes after us, they’ll come from the air or the river. Either way we’ll nail them before they get here.”

Garrett nodded. “I want Lattimer taken down the first time he shows his face. And Rio, tell your men to be careful. Lattimer is a ruthless bastard. He has no compunction about killing those he perceives as a threat. I don’t want to lose a single man.”

Rio’s eyes went flat. “I already lost one man. I’m not losing another.”

Months earlier, one of Rio’s men had been killed when Garrett’s mom had been abducted from the hospital where Garrett’s dad had been taken after suffering a heart attack. It had been hard on the team leader. He’d felt enormous guilt over his man’s death and Marlene Kelly’s abduction.

Garrett put a hand on Rio’s shoulder. “I know this sucks for you man, but I appreciate it.”

“What’s their ETA?”

“Two hours.”

Rio nodded. “I’ll meet them at the river and show them their posts.”

Garrett stifled a smile. Anytime Rio rolled out the welcome mat, it was guaranteed to be interesting.

After leaving Rio, Garrett went in search of Sarah only to find her curled on a couch in Rio’s library with a book in hand. It still amazed him that Rio had such refined tastes. In addition to the well-stocked library, the man had a wine cellar that would make royalty green with envy. It was obvious that Rio had spent a lifetime stocking his house in all the things he loved the most. Sarah had called it right when she’d suggested that this was Rio’s refuge. His home. Something he kept away from the rest of his life. It made Garrett look at his team leader in a whole new light. It also made him realize how little he knew about the men—and the woman—that KGI employed.

“Hey,” he said from the doorway.

She looked up, setting her book down on her lap. “Hi.”

A broad smile spread across her face, and her cheeks bloomed with color. It gave him a kick in the gut that she was obviously glad to see him.

“Enjoying yourself?”

She patted the spot on the couch beside her in invitation and he ambled over to settle beside her.

“It’s weird in a way. I feel almost guilty to be eating good food and enjoying good books. I keep thinking I should be looking over my shoulder and worrying.”

“That’s my job,” he pointed out. “Yours is to relax and not worry.”

She snuggled into his arms and lay her head on his shoulder. “You’re spoiling me, Garrett.”

He stroked a hand down her hair and kissed the top of her head. “Being spoiled isn’t a bad thing, surely.”

She sighed and rubbed her cheek over his chest. “No, it isn’t.” Then she raised her head up so sharply she almost butted him in the chin. “Hey, I never got a caramel num num.”

He chuckled. “They haven’t gone anywhere. Well, not unless Rio and his men found them.”

She scrambled out of his arms and hurried toward the door. “I’ll fight Rio for them.”

Garrett pushed up to follow her, grinning the whole way. In the kitchen, Sarah jerked open the fridge and stared inside, her brow furrowed in concentration. Then her eyes lit up and she reached in and pulled out the pie dish.

Garrett took it from her, turned the dish upside down onto a glass platter and tapped until the whole thing came out. Then he tossed the dish into the sink and began cutting the dessert into little pieces. Sarah hung impatiently at his side until he offered her a bite.

She pounced on it and nibbled at the treat. She closed her eyes and groaned. “Oh my God. This is wonderful, Garrett. Give me more.”

She shoved him aside and picked out several of the larger pieces. He chuckled as she viewed him suspiciously, like she was an animal guarding her food.

“They’re all yours,” he said, putting his hands up in defense. He watched as she put another bite into her mouth and closed her eyes with a soft groan.

“Rio has an enclosed pool off the left wing of this house. Wanna go for a swim?” he asked.

She lowered the candy and scrunched up her brow. “Is it safe?”

“I wouldn’t have suggested it if it wasn’t. Rio is a paranoid bastard. He’s made this place virtually impenetrable.”

“I’d like that.”

Garrett pushed in closer to her, swaggering as he said the next. “Skinny-dipping?”

Color rose in her cheeks. “Garrett! I don’t want anyone seeing me.”

“Did I mention this pool is completely enclosed? No one will see you but me, honey, and I’m going to end up seeing you whether you wear a suit or not. I just figure it’ll make my job easier if you forego a suit from the start.”

She laughed. “Incorrigible!”

“Yes ma’am, I am,” he said. “My mama has said so many a time.”

She shook her head. “Okay. Skinny-dipping it is. But if anyone else sees me, I’ll kill you.”

He lowered his mouth to hers with a growl. “If anyone else sees you, I’ll kill them.”


“YOU ever think we spend most of our time in transit?” P.J. asked as she hopped into the boat beside Cole. Behind her, Dolphin, Renshaw and Baker piled into the next boat while Steele stood on the dock coolly surveying the river.

“I’d say we spend most of our time getting jerked around,” Cole muttered. “First it’s fucking Alaska. Now it’s the damn jungle. I hate the fucking jungle.”

“You only say that because you got shot the last time we ventured into the jungle.”

“It was a ricochet,” Cole pointed out.

P.J. shrugged. “You still took a bullet and had to be carried out.”

Cole scowled as he stared at the smaller woman who serenely stared over the water. Steele climbed aboard and gave the motion to shove off. Damn woman was yanking his chain again and, as always, he rose to the bait beautifully.

“I wonder what we’ll have here,” she said as she turned. “In Alaska, it was BAFB. I guess here it’s BAFS.”

“BAFS?” Cole asked cautiously. He wasn’t even sure he wanted to know.

“Big-ass fucking snakes,” she said cheerfully. “They have anacondas here. They can swallow a man whole.”

“Great. Just fucking great.”

“You’re way too easy Coletraine,” Steele said, a hint of amusement in his voice.

“I hate snakes. They freak me the fuck out.”

P.J. patted him on the arm. “I’ll protect you, Cole. I won’t let the big bad snakes get you.”

“I’m tempted to feed you to them.”

Steele chuckled and turned his attention back to the river as the boats glided soundlessly through the water.

“I hope wherever we’re going, we get some sleep,” P.J. said with a yawn.

“The accommodations will be up to Rio,” Steele said through his teeth.

“Great,” Cole said glumly. “I think the man’s idea of first-class accommodations is having a rock for a pillow.”

“Rio has a nice place here,” P.J. piped up.

Steele raised an eyebrow while Cole turned sharply. “How the hell do you know what Rio has?”

P.J. shrugged. “He told me about it. Sounds like a nice place. He worked on it for years. Pretty high-tech too.”

“You had an actual conversation with Rio?” Cole asked in disbelief.

“Yeah, he’s cool.”

Cole’s gaze narrowed. “Just how well do you know him?”

“We talk.”

“When the hell do you have time to talk? When we’re all together for a mission, there sure as hell isn’t time for chitchat.”

“Duh, I have a life outside our missions, you know.”

Cole’s mouth popped open. Granted he didn’t know jack about what his team members did outside the job. If he was honest, most of the time they lived, ate and breathed the job. Sometimes they spent weeks together, day in, day out. It was hard to imagine anyone’s life outside the team.

“I saw him when he was in Colorado a few months back,” she said with a huff of impatience. “He knew I lived in the area so he looked me up. We had a few drinks. Talked shop.”

Cole scowled again and glanced over at Steele to see how he took the news. He appeared as unruffled as ever, but then that was Steele. He never interfered in their private lives. When they were on a mission, their asses belonged to Steele. No questions asked. They followed his command without question. But when they finished, they each went their own way, and until now, Cole never gave a thought to how his teammates lived when they weren’t together.

P.J. was a good looking, very in-shape woman. She was smart. Sharp as a tack. And she could damn well look after herself. Any red-blooded male would be tripping over his tongue to hook up with her.

Now it was going to bug him to wonder what had happened between P.J. and Rio. Not that it was any of his business. P.J. was just a teammate. Nothing more.

But as they slipped farther down the river, Cole couldn’t help but imagine P.J. with Rio.

He scowled harder.

Thirty minutes later, they docked at a bend in the river. It was a moonless night and they were far enough from any town that the entire area was shrouded in a cloak of darkness. Cole’s eyes rapidly adjusted and he caught movement at the other end of the dock.

He pushed P.J. back and stepped in front of her, then barked a low warning to Steele and pulled up his rifle.