"Baby, oh baby, oh baby." Like a hot breeze, a hoot of
laughter drifted across the night-lit airfield as Finn
Carver descended from the charter plane.
The laughing man crossed his arms and leaned against the
car parked on the edge of the Memphis tarmac, the runway
lights illuminating him. "My, my, my, don't you look
good."
But Finn was in no mood for teasing. "Cut the crap, Jack."
He pitched his briefcase and overnight bag to Jack
Saunders and tried to ignore the way the younger man was
making a big production out of admiring Finn's tuxedo.
"Yessir." Jack gave a long, low wolf whistle. "The storm
troopers have definitely arrived." Finn eyed Jack's baggy
Hawaiian shirt, worn loose over a pair of rumpled
khakis. "I wouldn't talk. You could take a few fashion
lessons yourself."
Jack grinned and shrugged off the criticism the way he
always did. "Yeah, but then I'd lose the thing that makes
me so ... so me."
Behind them, the pilot hurried into the hangar, leaving
Finn and Jack alone on the empty tarmac. It was past
midnight, and the heavy delta air seeped beneath the
collar of Finn's white dress shirt. But humidity wasn't
the only thing making him sweat.
He scowled, crushing that thought. Nothing on earth would
put him on the run, least of all a woman. He wrenched off
the sleek black jacket and tossed it in the back of the
car before folding himself into the passenger seat. "Come
on, Jack," Finn called out. "It's not like the bad guys
are going to wait while you get your rocks off ragging
me."
Jack stowed Finn's bag and briefcase in the trunk, then
slid behind the wheel. "I gather you want to skip the how
are you's?"
"Just brief me." Jack shook his head. "Someday you're
going to learn to slow down and say hello." "Jack-"
"Just trying to save your life here, buddy. You saved
mine." "I didn't-"
"You gotta learn to loosen up. You don't want to keel over
from a heart attack before you're forty, do
you?" "Jack ..." He could give the younger man a heart
attack himself and his voice clearly said so.
Jack only grinned at the threatening tone. Jesus, the guy
was worse than a puppy. Nothing you did put him off.
But Jack held up his hands in surrender. "Okay, I get it.
Work, work, work. So here's the deal." Suddenly he was all-
business. "I drop you off at the house where the party's
at, then take your stuff to the motel. Here's the
address."
He fished a business card from his shirt pocket and handed
it to Finn. "I stashed a cop at the house to keep an eye
on things. I'll drive back to the house, leave this car
there, and catch a ride back with the cop." He reached
into the glove compartment. "Here," he said. "Credit
cards, driver's license, social security card. Welcome
back, Agent Carver."
Finn shuffled through the identification, saw his own name
printed on everything, and replaced the cards he'd been
carrying in his wallet for the past six days. He let out a
tense breath and leaned back against the headrest. It was
good to be clean for once. Twelve hours ago he'd been
unshaven, scouring dockside bars and low-life coffee shops
for even the slightest hint of where the package he'd been
hunting might land. All he'd unearthed were the same
rumors they'd been hearing for weeks. Something big,
powerful, and nuclear was going on the market but no one
knew where or when.
Then Roper had contacted him, said they'd found the girl.
Finn had grabbed a fast haircut, a tux, and boarded the
charter almost before he'd had time to breathe. And now
here he was, about to resurrect a ghost. "You're sure this
is her?" Finn asked.
"People told me you had a problem with trust," Jack said
in a mock mournful voice, "but I didn't want to believe
it." He reached for a manila envelope imprisoned by the
visor in front of him, flipped it into Finn's lap, and
started the engine.
As the car pulled away from the hangar, Finn slipped out
the surveillance pictures and swore softly. "What'd I tell
you," Jack said. "It's her." "Now this is hard to
believe." "The eyes don't lie."
Finn nodded thoughtfully. No, they didn't, but pictures
did. He'd have to see for himself. "Where is she?" "At
Beaman's digs. Partying. Hence the party clothes." Jack
nodded toward Finn and the tuxedo he wore. "I thought
Beaman just died."
"A week ago." Jack gave a cynical snort. "But everyone
handles grief in their own special way."
Finn slipped into silence, thinking about the woman in the
pictures. He didn't know much about her, but what he knew
was keeping his palms slick, even in the air-conditioned
car. His record was piss-poor when it came to working with
women, especially this kind. Third-rate "actress," second-
rate country singer, first-rate gold digger. Well,
everyone had their talents.
And clearly men were hers. Old men. With lots of money.
Lucky for him that was exactly the skill he needed right
now. Yeah, real lucky.
"Beaman was what," Finn said, scanning the report enclosed
in the envelope with the pictures, "soul mate number
four?"
"And counting," Jack replied. "She chews 'em up and
spits 'em out. Can't help but admire her, though. At least
she's well paid."
"Those extra bucks are going to come in handy since old
Uncle Sam doesn't pay top dollar." "That's assuming she'll
do it."
"Oh, she'll do it. With Beaman out of the picture, her
free ride's gone-" "She's vulnerable," Jack said, egging
him on. "Probably lonely, afraid-"
"Exactly. Just ripe for the picking." Jack shook his
head. "Jesus, you're a cold bastard."
Not cold enough if his sweaty hands were proof. "It's a
cold world, Jack, and we're the ones keeping it from
getting colder. I do what it takes to get the job done."
Twenty minutes later Jack headed up a long winding drive
that led to a large estate overlooking the Mississippi
River. A columned portico set the front of the house off
from the stately brick wings on either side. Greenery
climbed the brick; thickly flowering shrubs adorned the
entryway. The house was old and dignified, or it had been.
Right now lights blazed out the windows like cut-rate
diamonds, and raunchy, bass-heavy music pounded so loudly
through the front door Finn could hear it outside. His
pulse notched up, pushed by a big fat slice of d?j? vu.
Scanning the grounds, he checked the perimeter and picked
out Jack's cop, who was dressed as a uniformed valet.
At a nod, he came to the driver's side. Jack rolled down
the window and murmured softly, "Everything okay?" The cop
knelt to window level. "Party's still going strong. The
other valet tells me it'll rage for hours yet." He eyed
Finn curiously. "Heard a rumor they were sending in some
hotshot undercover guy. If it's you, you're in for a real
treat, pal. But I got some advice." He leaned in close and
grinned. "Make sure you hold on to your zipper." Angelina
Mercer stood in a corner of Arthur Beaman's large,
luxurious living room and watched the party swirl around
her. Because of the June heat and the crush of people, the
air-conditioning was set at arctic, and she was cold.
Truth was she'd been cold for a week. Ever since she found
Arthur Beaman crumpled on the floor, dead from a massive
stroke. Tears pricked her eyes but she blinked them away.
God, she missed the old man.
She looked around at the drunken bodies crowded into
Beamer's house. The party was exactly as he'd specified:
loud, crowded, and full of booze. He would have loved the
send-off.
Too bad it wasn't doing much for her. She looked down at
the vodka in her hand. She should be drunk; she needed to
be drunk.
Trouble was, she didn't feel like drinking tonight.
Darling girl, she heard Beamer's crusty voice say in her
head. Life is too short for the mopes. Suddenly she felt
the old man frowning down on her from wherever the hell he
was now. And more than anything, she wanted to wipe away
that frown and put the mischievous smile back on his
eighty-year-old face. The hell with the mopes.
The hell with death and loss and moving on. This party was
for Beamer, and she'd be damned if she'd disappoint him.
She raised her glass heavenward. Here's to you, old man.
She tossed back half her drink and plunged into the crowd.
Finn stepped inside Beaman's house and grimaced at the
full force of the sound. Tuxedos and gowns swarmed over
the plush interior. He pushed his way past the laughing
group gathered under the hallway's vaulted ceiling.
Screaming to be heard over the noise, the partygoers paid
no attention to him. Balloons and streamers lay in
disarray over a gleaming black and white marble floor. He
stepped over them, pushed some away. Someone handed him a
drink, but he set it down. He needed a clear head tonight.
The crowd thickened as he moved inward, black satin over
white brocade. Well-fed men stood in clusters around
marble sculptures. Wraith-thin women draped over expensive
furniture. A few turned his way with an interested eye,
but he ignored them.
A burst of laughter came at him from the sidelines, sharp
as a gunshot. Somewhere someone was coking up, dropping
Ecstasy or whatever designer drug was the trend of the
hour. There was sex here, too. In the coatroom, the
closet, in furtive corners, people mating like rats in a
dark alley. And somewhere there was betrayal. Not his own
this time, but it was here, he could smell it. The
knowledge rose up like a sickness, the haze of booze and
smoke sliding over his shoulders like a coat he hadn't
worn in a long while.
A banner that read "Bye-bye Beamer" spanned the living-
room entrance. Inside, the room looked as though it had
been packed into a dice cup, shaken up, and rolled out,
furniture landing every which way. Green and gold striped
sofas with green velvet pillows stood uncomfortably out of
place against the edges. Gilt-edged mirrors still hung on
the walls, but the marble-topped tables that should have
been beneath them sat askew. A baby grand had been stuffed
into a corner to make more room for the horde, which
roiled, shifted, and all of a sudden split in two.
And then he saw her. The hair was looser, the clothes
outrageous, the face younger. But the resemblance was
unmistakable. A shaft of something almost like fear
pierced him quick and sharp. Deep down he'd been hoping
the pictures had been deceptive, that Roper and Jack and
everyone else had gotten it wrong. But they hadn't.
She held a drink in one hand, her lithe body undulating in
an impromptu belly dance while a ring of men clapped and
cheered her on. Thick blond hair fell in voluptuous waves
around her face and shoulders. A clingy white skirt,
shimmery with silver thread, hugged the curve of her hips
and exposed the top of her navel. Although it reached her
ankles and the knife-sharp heels she wore, the skirt was
also slashed open to the top of her shapely thigh. Encased
in a skimpy, sequined halter, her full breasts shone white
and shiny as her skirt. Between the two, bare skin gleamed
tan and supple, and exquis-itely tempting.
Your mouth's watering, Carver. No, it isn't.
He leaned into the living room's arched entrance and
watched Angelina Mercer work the room. Her long, tanned
leg swung sinuously in and out of the opening in her
skirt. Her smooth arms wove above her head, her hips
gyrated, her eyes glittered with the challenge, Come get
me if you dare. He'd bet that every male in the room felt
something move in his shorts.
Including him. A final guitar chord screamed, and she
upended her drink, downing every drop. "Here's to Beamer!"
Her crowd of admirers cheered. "To Beamer!"
Ample breasts rising and falling in breathlessness, she
headed out of the male circle, skin glistening with
exertion. "More!" the crowd took up the cry, stamping
their feet in time with the chant. "More, more,
more!" "You know what they say about too much of a good
thing," she shouted over the blare of the next song. With
a laugh, she threw herself at one of the men and gave him
a loud smooch on the mouth. "Get drunk, everyone!" And she
whooshed out of the circle toward Finn.
He lounged against the arch, making no overt move to catch
her attention. She'd notice him soon enough. Then the man
she'd just kissed pulled her roughly back into his arms,
and the problem of meeting her took care of itself. She
laughed and tried to squirm away, but the drunk had her
fast. "Come on, baby, let's have a little more of that."
"Let go of me." Rising panic edged her voice and Finn
pushed himself off the entry. He strolled toward the
struggling couple and casually placed an arm around the
drunk, looking for all the world like his best friend.
Except Finn tightened his grip, squeezing so hard that the
drunk gasped in pain and dropped his hold on Angelina.
Finn smiled. "You may want more, but the lady's had
enough." Before the guy could react, Finn spun him around
until the drunk staggered dizzily and faced the center of
the room. "Back to the party, pal." He gave the man a
gentle shove, and he disappeared into the crowd. Then Finn
turned to the woman, who raised an amused eyebrow at
him. "Well, well, Sir Galahad. Nicely done." A cool one.
Good. For what he wanted she'd need to be cool.
"Thank you." She extended her hand in a graceful arc, as
though he should kiss it. Something on her left shoulder
caught his attention-an odd-shaped beauty mark or tattoo-
but before he could examine it, she levered herself closer
and he found himself staring into a pair of ice-green
eyes.
That's right, Angelina. Come to Papa. "Not Galahad," he
said.
"Robin Hood?" She poked him playfully in the chest with
one long, slim, manicured finger. "Whoever you are, I
don't know you." Her breasts brushed his arm, her perfume
coiled around him, and the blood went straight to his
groin.
Silently, he cursed his own weakness and winked at
her. "Sure you do."
"Friend of Beamer's?" "I knew him, yeah." She appraised
him, a shrewd expression on her face. "No. I don't think
you did." He smiled. "Friend of a friend." She grinned
back; she had his number now. "You are a party crasher."
He didn't deny it. "What's a party without a few
uninvited ... friends?"
She dropped an arm lazily over his shoulder and looked up
at him. Her hip grazed his. He forced himself to stand
still and ignore the sweat starting at the back of his
neck where her arm lay like a cool steel trap. She smiled,
her lips promising worlds. "Do you have a name ...
friend?"
A moment ago, he would have sworn her eyes looked bright,
but up close the green was tinged with sadness. Weary
eyes. Old eyes. Where had he seen eyes like that before?
He said, "Finn." "Fin?" She threw him the 'that's weird'
look he always got when he introduced himself. "Yeah,
Finn. Like in shark."
She laughed, throwing her head back. "Well, Fin," she gave
his name mock emphasis, "sharks like to swim around in the
cool and the wet, and you're all dry." She held up her
empty glass, swirling the ice. "Me, too."