Chapter One
At 10:20 a.m. Gavin stepped into Mike Taylor's office and
found his boss sitting at his pristine, glass–topped
desk, his sleeves rolled to his elbows and his dark hair
sticking up in the back.
He checked his watch. Yep. 10:20.
I'm screwed.
The man's appearance was typically as neat as his
office. His hair sticking up? This early? In Mike's OCD
world? Unacceptable.
Whatever Gavin had been summoned for had to be a
disaster. Stabbing pin pricks crawled up his neck. He
shifted his gaze left. Vic Andrews, Taylor Security's
executive vice president, leaned against the window sill
with his arms crossed, eyes narrowed and a general
I'm–pissed–off–at–the–world
aura.
Screwed.
Gavin stepped forward. "What's up?"
Mike held his hands prayerlike in front of him, his
fingers mashed together until his veins popped.
Screwed in a big way.
Vic boosted off the window sill. "Roxann has been
kidnapped."
Bam! Forget the warm–up. Gavin threw his shoulders
back and those pin pricks turned to dagger stabs. Had he
heard right? He shifted to Mike. "Your Roxann?"
Mike nodded.
"Have they made contact? Ransom?"
"Not yet. I got a call a few minutes ago. They said no
cops and to expect communication in the next hour."
"Where'd they grab her?"
Mike looked down, shook his head and scrubbed his hands
over his face. "I don't know. We left together this
morning. She was heading to the lake house to get ready for
the Fourth of July party on Saturday. I've got Gizmo
getting me a trace on her car."
That wouldn't do them any good. Even the most
inexperienced kidnapper would know a high–end
Mercedes would have factory–installed tracking.
Couple that with the car being owned by the man who ran not
only Chicago's, but one of the nation's most elite private
security companies and it was a no–brainer they'd be
able to locate the car. The kidnappers probably abandoned
it somewhere. Mike knew that and Gavin wouldn't voice it.
"Are you considering calling the FBI?"
Vic moved to the side of the desk. "No feds."
Gavin ignored him. "Mike?"
"No FBI."
Lost that round.
"The FBI," Mike continued, "has to play by the rules. We
don't. I want my wife back without having to deal with red
tape."
"Damn straight," Vic added. "We got everything we need.
We find her and we go in and get her. End of story."
Gavin finally looked at him. "End of story? What's wrong
with you? You and your merry men charging in there with
your flash bangs and weapons will escalate the situation."
"Screw that," Vic said. "These assholes won't know what
hit them. Once we find her, we'll be in there so fast they
won't have time to draw on us. Besides, what the hell do we
need the FBI for when we have you?"
Gavin breathed deep. A sound argument considering, prior
to six months ago, he'd spent the last twelve years as an
FBI hostage negotiator. "Has it occurred to you that we are
not in some war–torn country? You're talking about
doing a takedown on U.S. soil. In case you weren't aware,
if someone gets shot, there are laws against that sort of
thing."
Mike put both hands up. "Enough." He dragged his gaze
from Vic to Gavin. "Look, Gavin, all due respect, I'm not
calling the feds."
"Thank you," Vic said.
"But we're not going tactical either. Yet. Gavin will
negotiate her release."
There it was. The assignment of his career.
"Mike," Vic said. "Why waste time trying to
head–shrink our way out of this?"
Jab number one. Gavin folded his arms, let the anger
inside flash and burn before reacting. Considering Vic was
married to Mike's sister and his own emotions were likely
in play, he'd give him a pass on the head–shrinker
comment. "We're not head–shrinking. We don't know who
these people are or what they want. Let's figure that out
and then make a plan."