Compromised Identity. Jodie Bailey
checks on each member after Craig Mitchum sold out to be Sam Mina’s inside man. Trusted team leaders like Ethan and Sean were spread thin as the unit regrouped, each doing the work of three men.
“Do me a favor, Sean. Remember you’re down there to see if this thing has legs, not to show you can handle an entire mission all by yourself. Don’t get in too deep trying to prove something.”
Sean clamped his back teeth together. Ethan Kincaid might be one of the people closest to him, but the man had no idea what it felt like to be helpless, unable to save yourself or the person you loved most in the world. If this mission blew up and Sean succeeded in bringing down another cell, it would prove he could do this job, would finally confirm to himself that he was truly past all that had happened in Afghanistan, that he wasn’t a failure and a danger to the people he cared about.
“I know you heard me say that.” Ethan was more stubborn than Sean gave him credit for.
“I heard you. Have any suggestions?”
Ethan’s exhale was loud in the microphone. “Tate’s out there in the wind, itching for something to do. Do you trust him?”
Though officially retired from the Army, Tate Walker acted as their jack-of-all-trades, their go-to guy when things went sideways. He’d lost his home and his identity while working to save Ethan and Ashley and now spent his time tucked away, building a new facade of a life. Aside from Ethan himself, Tate was the one guy Sean knew wouldn’t turn on him. “Call him in.” He’d breathe easier knowing someone had his back.
“Done. Based on his last location, he should be there in a few hours, but keep him close. He’s too valuable to us undercover to let anybody see him out there too much.”
Sean rolled his shoulder, trying to stretch the knot that persisted there. “I’ve let Specialist Dylan know what’s going on, so she’s clued in to the investigation. She’s shaken up a little, but she refuses to admit it.”
“You’re certain they were going to kill her?”
“Positive. They’ve made two overt attempts, and I had a buddy at a local lab test her drink.” Dropping off the sample was why he’d nearly been too late to save her at the Soldier Center. “It was tetramine.”
Ethan whistled low. “Rat poison out of China? That stuff’s a hundred times worse than cyanide. What made your buddy test for that?”
“Apparently, it’s making a comeback.” Sean held tight to the bottom of the steering wheel. “These guys aren’t playing. They’ll come after her again. We’ve got to be vigilant.”
“You’re in front of her house, aren’t you?” Ethan’s voice rang with conviction.
“Why would you say—”
“Knowing you, I’d expect no less. Just don’t let the neighbors catch you haunting the driveway.”
The light turned on in one of the upstairs rooms. Ethan hinted Sean was acting like a stalker, but knowing Jessica was in danger drove him to watch out for her as best as he could. If she died because he let his guard down... Well, that wasn’t an option.
He let his fingers knead the muscles in his neck as he surveyed the front of her house again. The two-story just a few blocks from the Cumberland River boasted a turret and a wide covered wraparound porch with enough rockers to seat an entire team of soldiers, but what Sean really needed was a clear view of the privacy-fenced backyard. “I’ll keep an eye on Staff Sergeant Dylan while you guys see if you can find anything about our attackers. One is in those emails I forwarded to Ashley. I’ll tag which one.”
“Sounds like a plan.” Ethan was back to his all-business self. “Keep me posted.”
“Make sure you don’t get dishpan hands.” Sean killed the call without waiting for Ethan to respond.
He tossed the phone onto the passenger seat and frowned at the silence, staring at the radio. He’d promised Jessica half an hour before he invaded the privacy of her home, and he had fifteen minutes of that time left. It would be nice if he could turn on music and fill the cavernous silence of the small vehicle with noise. Then he could keep back the memories that liked to creep up in the silence, but the radio would only mask any outside sounds he needed to hear.
No. He’d have to sit here in the quiet and try not to think.
Headlights turned from one of the side streets and headed slowly toward him. Sean slid lower, trying to make himself as small as possible, though, from his angle in the driveway and with the darkness settled in, it would be hard for anyone to see him. No need to get excited yet. This time of day it was likely a soldier coming home from duty or a nine-to-fiver headed home from work.
As the car came closer, it slowed in front of Jessica’s house as though the driver was searching for something. The vehicle crept past the house, then hung a U-turn, passing the house slowly again before it sped off down the street.
Sean sat taller and tapped his thumb against his thigh. It could be nothing, but he couldn’t shake the feeling he wasn’t the only one keeping an eye on Jessica Dylan.
* * *
Jessica shut her bedroom door slowly to keep from slamming it hard enough to crack the frame. The day had been too much like a bad action movie. She was hungry, tired...
And scared. Her fingertips pressed into the wood of the door. Everything had been just fine until she’d climbed into her car and Sean had shut the door for her, then turned and walked to his own car to follow her home. No matter how hard she’d tried, she couldn’t stop staring into the rearview, waiting for a head to pop up.
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