Prologue
Red Delilah’s Biker Bar
Chicago, Illinois…
Mac was drunk.
If the sight of the nearly empty bottle of Lagavulin
sitting on the bar in front of him wasn’t proof positive,
then the feel of his eyelids scraping across his eyeballs
like thirty-grit sandpaper was.
Shit.
Getting soused hadn’t been his intention when he casually
tailed Dagan Zoelner into their local watering hole. He’d
simply been curious why Zoelner had run like a scalded dog
out of the raucous barbeque that had been in full swing back
at the shop. And he figured a couple of cold ones might
loosen the guy’s tongue.
But it wasn’t a bottle of Budweiser that Zoelner ordered
after plunking himself down on a stool at the long mahogany
bar, hooking the heels of his biker boots over the brass
foot rail. It was scotch. An entire bottle.
And Mac hadn’t been able to sit by nursing a beer while
Zoelner proceeded to get piss drunk. For one thing, sitting
by and watching a friend and trusted teammate get piss
drunk, well, it was just…sad. And for another thing, he knew
when men like them set about getting piss drunk, it was
usually because something had triggered past demons to come
out and play. Past demons in the form of dark memories of
good men now dead, of missions or assignments or cases gone
horribly wrong, or of bad calls that drove a guy crazy
asking himself the sonofabitching question of what if.
What if I’d done things differently?
What if I’d moved just a little faster?
What if I’d taken a second look at that last bit of
Intel?
It was a useless endeavor... asking what if. But that
didn’t mean all the operators at the privately run covert
government defense firm known as Black Knights Inc. didn’t
indulge in it occasionally. Hell, more than occasionally.
Asking what if seemed to come part and parcel with the job.
And tonight it appeared Zoelner was doing just that…asking
what if with gusto and single-minded determination all
washed down with a healthy portion of twenty-year-old scotch
—hiccup. And Mac, sympathetic fool that he was, had
voluntarily joined in for the ride.
The good Lord knew he’d pay for it tomorrow with a
headache big enough to drop a mule, followed by eight to ten
hours of straight mainlining coffee in an attempt to combat
the effects. But for right now, he felt pretty good. Except
for the gritty eyes, his body was numb and tingly. His
tongue particularly so. Which was why when he finally turned
to Zoelner, breaking the we’re-men-so-we-drink-in-silence
thing they had going and asked, “So, you gonna tell me why
we’re sitting here gettin’ drunker than a betsy bug on a
Tuesday night?” the second to the last word came out
sounding more like Tushday.
Zoelner, usually known for his smooth movements and
strange bouts of statue-like stillness, turned unsteadily
toward him. His slate gray irises were nearly obscured by
the heavy lids hanging over them. The left lid appeared to
have suffered the influence of the scotch more than the
right because it drooped just a fraction lower.
“First of all,” Zoelner said, “has anyone ever told you
the big-hat-and-no-cattle Texan comes out in you when you’re
tipsy?” He grinned lopsidedly. “And secondly,” his
expression turned serious, “don’t go getting mushy on me.”
“I’ll have you know I grew up with a hat and cattle.” Mac
frowned. “And I’m not gettin’ mushy on you. I just thought,
you know, you might want to talk about,” he made a rolling
motion with his hand, “whatever.”
Zoelner glanced around the bar, squinting at the red
vinyl booths, the burly clientele, and the roaring jukebox
like he’d never seen the place before. “Where am I?” He
blinked owlishly. “I could’ve sworn I sat down in a badass
biker bar, but at some point I must’ve been transported into
the middle of a chick flick.”
When he turned back, Mac made sure his expression was
bland.
“Okay,” Zoelner rolled his eyes. “So, let’s talk. Let’s
delve into the depths of my emotions, of how I’m feeling.
Then, after we’re done doing that,” he batted his lashes
fervently, like he was trying out for a Revlon commercial or
something, “we can ask the bartender to exchange our scotch
for herbal tea and go find some Indigo Girls on the
jukebox.”
Mac snorted. His nose filled with the smells of stale
beer, crushed peanut shells, and cowhide from the
overabundance of leather being sported around the place.
Except for the peanut shells, the scents reminded him of
home, of The Lazy M ranch where he’d been born and raised.
All hat and no cattle, my ass.
“All right, shitheel,” he grumbled. “So maybe you’re not
too keen on hashing out what’s jerked a knot in your tail
tonight.” Zoelner’s wide grin returned, and Mac realized
with that last turn of phrase he’d proved the guy’s point
about the Texan coming out in him after he’d had a few. But
he couldn’t help it. Nor, come to think of it, would he want
to. Because like most Texans, he was good-and-goddamned
proud to say he hailed from the Lone Star State. Yeehaw! And
pray the creek don’t rise! “But I just gotta know…this
doesn’t have anything to do with Agent Winterfield, does
it?”
Luke Winterfield was a rogue CIA agent who’d leaked
information about the number and location of the U.S.
government’s black sites to the press. Some called
Winterfield a whistleblower. Mac called him a traitor. And
just this morning, splashed across the headlines, was news
that the bastard had found a country to grant him asylum. It
had to be a major blow for every CIA agent out there—even an
ex–CIA agent like Zoelner.
“Pssshht.” Zoelner made a face. “I stopped caring about
The Company and its shenanigans years ago. As for
Winterfield, I never met the ashhole.” Zoelner frowned and
rolled in his lips before trying again. “Asshole.”
“Then what on God’s green earth is tonight all about?”
Mac demanded. “Because I gotta be honest. This whole
sittin’-here-in-silence-while-we-drink-ourselves-good-
lookin’ thing has just about run its course with me.”
Zoelner tipped his glass of scotch toward the opposite end
of the bar.
“I don’t want to talk about it,” he said. “Actually, I
don’t want to talk about anything other than that brunette
over there, and the fact that she’s been eyeing the two of
us like we’re tall drinks of water and she’s been lost in
the desert for days.”
Mac glanced down the polished length of mahogany and…sure
enough. There was a bird in a tight top and buttery-soft
biker jacket sitting near the end. She looked like she
might’ve stepped off the cover of a motorcycle magazine—
having that whole sexy-without-being-overly-pretty thing
going. And when she caught him staring, she licked her ruby-
red lips and seductively lowered her thick, sooty lashes.
Can you say invitation, ladies and gents? Even in his
scotch-addled state, Mac recognized the blatant come-and-
get-me-big-boy look in her eyes.
Sorry, darlin’. But you’re barkin’ up the wrong tree.
“No, thanks,” he told Zoelner, sitting back and lifting
his glass of scotch to his lips. “She’s not my type.”
Zoelner hooted with laughter, slamming down his empty
tumbler. “Type? Dear God, it’s not like you’re looking for a
blood donor or anything. Type hasn’t got a damned thing to
do with it. She’s hot. She’s obviously horny. And one of us
should do something about that.”
“Be my guest.”
Zoelner cocked his head. “You remind me of a giant black
hole, sucking all the light and fun out of the evening.”
“Me?” Mac turned on the man incredulously. “I’m not the
one who decided to spend the night sitting at this…this
sausage-factory of a bar, quietly getting stone-cold shit-
faced.”
“Hmm.” Zoelner narrowed his eyes. “Sausage-factory of a
bar, eh? Meaning there are too many swinging dicks and not
enough soft and sexies around tonight? Do I detect a hint of
melancholy?”
“That’s a big word for a drunk man,” Mac chuckled.
“I’m not that drunk,” Zoelner insisted and Mac grabbed
his stomach, laughing out loud. “Okay, so maybe I am that
drunk,” Zoelner admitted, “but that doesn’t mean I’m wrong.
My point is, I think you’re not interested in the brown-
haired Betty over there because you’re pining away… Is that
how you Texans would put it? Pining? For a certain redhead
who’s suspiciously absent from the bar tonight.”
And that strangled Mac’s laughter into a cough. He lifted
his glass to suck down a drop of scotch. Carefully placing
the tumbler back on the bar, he ran his tongue over his
teeth and said, “I don’t know what you’re talkin’ about.”
“The hell you don’t.” Zoelner snorted. “Anyone with eyes
in their head knows you’re hot-to-trot for our usual
bartendress. And if all her come-ons are anything to go by,
she’s hot-to-trot for you, too. Which begs the question…what
are you waiting on? Why haven’t you hit that, like, a
thousand times by now?”
“Hit that?” Mac pulled a face. “What are we? Fifteen?”
“Dodging the question?” Zoelner countered, and Mac didn’t
know whether to applaud the man’s astuteness or strangle him
right where he sat.
Deciding neither scenario would be all that satisfying,
he shrugged his shoulders in what he hoped was a gesture of
supreme unconcern. “That Woman…” Mac always thought of
Delilah Fairchild, proprietress and namesake of the bar they
were currently sitting in, that way, in capital letters,
“isn’t my type either. And you know why.”
“Bullshit.”
Just the one word. Spoken with complete conviction.
Mac gifted Zoelner with a dirty look and reached for the
bottle of Lagavulin. Upending it, he poured the last few
drops into his glass, then slowly lifted the tumbler, taking
a leisurely sip.
“You know what I think of that whole thing, right?”
Zoelner asked. Mac ignored him, wishing like hell he’d never
opened his big mouth after that goddamned mission in
Somalia. But sitting in a bar in South Africa, basking in
the glow of a successful operation—and after having downed a
half dozen beers—the whole sorry story had come tumbling
out. “Oh, and what? Now you’re a mute?” Zoelner inquired
after it became apparent Mac wasn’t going to rise to his
bait.
But what could Mac say? The truth was, he did know what
Zoelner thought. The guy had flat-out told him he was an
idiot to compare one woman to another. Horseshit was the
world Zoelner used if Mac remembered right. But the guy just
didn’t understand. He didn’t know what—
“Fine,” Zoelner spat, shaking his head. “So, we’ll
pretend Delilah Fairchild isn’t your type either.”
And, yeah. It would be pretending. Because, in all
honesty, they both knew That Woman was every man’s type. Not
only was she a perfect ten on the curve-o-meter, but her
heart-shaped face, with her clear green eyes and pouty
Kewpie-bow lips, belonged on primetime television. And, as
if all that wasn’t enough, her pale, creamy skin had to go
and be all flawless and shit. Seriously, no matter how
closely Mac looked, he couldn’t find a single pore to mar
her porcelain complexion. To put it quite simply, from the
top of her head to the ends of her red-tipped toes, Delilah
Fairchild was one-hundred-percent-pure woman. And one-
hundred-percent, no-holds-barred beautiful. Beautiful and
vivacious and used to commanding the attention of every man
in the room. And that last bit made her all too familiar.
Too familiar and too…dangerous. And honestly? His life—
the one where he masqueraded as a motorcycle mechanic when
in fact he was part of a clandestine government defense
group that operated as the very tip of Uncle Sam’s sword—was
dangerous enough already, thank you very much.
And speaking of familiar…
Without warning, the unwelcome image of Jolene flashed
behind his gritty eyes. Hair as black as a raven’s wing.
Eyes the color of Texas bluebonnets. Skin like buttermilk.
And a heart as fickle and capricious as a Texas spring…
He shook his head and blinked away the disturbing vision
in time to see Zoelner raise a hand and call out to the
bald, goatee-ed man behind the bar. “Hey, Brendan! Where’s
the lovely lady of the house this evening? Not that my
rather large, rather slow-talking friend here,” Zoelner
hooked at thumb in Mac’s direction, “is wearing the sulky
look of a eunuch in a whorehouse because he’s missing her
gorgeous face or anything. Because she’s absolutely not his
type.”
Right then, Mac made the supremely wise and incredibly
mature decision to kick the former CIA agent’s booted ankle.
Zoelner turned to lift a dubious brow before he hauled off
and kicked Mac right back. Which, of course, left Mac with
no recourse but to respond with an even harder kick and soon
they were scuffling like a couple of rowdy college frat boys
instead of two highly trained operators. Then again, they
were highly tipsy as well. So maybe that explained it.
“Delilah’s down south,” Brendan said, coming to stand in
front of them while continuing to wipe wet pint glasses with
a dish towel. Short and squatty, Brendan had the physique of
a wrestler and the face of a boxer—the bridge of his nose
and his cheekbones looked like they’d been flattened more
than a time or two by heavy fists. What he lacked in height,
he obviously made up for in sheer scrappiness.
“Where?” Zoelner asked, adjusting his leather jacket and
shooting Mac a narrowed-eyed glare before turning his
attention back to Brendan.
“Southern Illinois,” the bartender said, and Mac thought,
Southern Illinois? What the hell is she doin’ down there?
“What the hell is she doing down there?”
He blinked, startled. Had he asked the question aloud?
Just how much scotch had he had?
But no. It was Zoelner Brendan turned to to answer. Of
course, Mac was forced to wonder again just how much scotch
he’d had when, before any words had a chance to form on
Brendan’s tongue, the thought don’t let her be down there
visiting a lover whispered through the back of his brain.
Whoa. What? Where the hell had that come from? He didn’t
give two shits what or…or…who she was doing down in Southern
Illinois.
Did he?
He couldn’t help but notice his question was answered
with resounding, cricket-chirping silence.
Well, hell. That’s just the booze talkin’. Because
anything else was too disconcerting to contemplate.
“Between you and me,” Brendan said, leaning in
conspiratorially. “I think she’s trying to avoid the bar.”
What? Why?
“What? Why?” Zoelner asked.
Mac glared at the mind-reading man. “Who are you?” he
demanded. “Carnac the Magnificent or somethin’?”
“Huh?” Zoelner frowned at him in narrow-eyed affront.
“Why are you scowling at me like that? Stop it, or that
brown-haired Betty over there is going to think you just
broke up with me.”
As a group, Mac, Zoelner, and Brendan all turned to smile
at the woman in question. Zoelner raised his glass and
wiggled his eyebrows, which elicited a seductive lowering of
the Betty’s lashes and a subtle quirk of one corner of her
lacquered lips.
“So why is Delilah avoiding the bar?” he asked, finding
his way back on track more quickly than Mac. Of course, the
instant That Woman’s name was mentioned, every single
thought in Mac’s head focused on her like a blue-tick healer
pointing out a covey of quail.
Shit, shit, shit.
“After Buzzard’s murder,” Brendan began, and oh, great.
Just what Mac didn’t need to be reminded of right now—the
all-out gun battle Delilah had found herself involved in a
few months ago, the one where her most loyal patron died.
Because that had been the night he almost threw caution to
the wind and went against all his better judgment to take
her up on one of her offers. She’d been so vulnerable and
sad. And he’d wanted to comfort her so badly, “she’s been
jumping at every chance she gets to hightail it out of here.
I think this place holds too many bad memories now.”
The three of them fell quiet for one moment. Then two.
“But anyway,” Brendan brushed a hand through the air, as
if he could wave off the cloud of discomfort hanging over
them, “she’s on a road trip with her uncle. Something about
a visit to an old friend of his, and—”
“Oh, I figured she was down there working her woo-woo
magic on the budget of some two-bit municipality,” Zoelner
said.
Her woo-woo magic…
Zoelner wasn’t talking about Delilah’s ability to
hypnotize a man with her cat-eyed stare, or the bewitching
way her hips swayed when she walked across the room. He
wasn’t referring to her talent for whipping up an alcoholic
concoction that could taste sweet as candy one minute and
knock a man flat on his ass the next, or how she could cast
a spell over the entire bar simply by tossing her head back
and letting loose with that low, throaty laugh of hers. Huh-
uh. The guy wasn’t talking about any of that, though it
could all certainly count as woo-woo magic, witchcraft, or,
in Mac’s not-so-humble opinion, straight-up voodoo sorceress
shit. What Zoelner was referring to was the fact that
Delilah Fairchild, the sex-pot owner of a down-and-dirty
biker bar, happened to spend her free time working as a…wait
for it…freakin’ forensic accountant.
Sweet Lord almighty, sometimes Mac still had trouble
believing it.
Though, truth be told, he had no trouble whatsoever
imagining it. He’d spent more than an hour or two
daydreaming about her sitting at a desk somewhere, hair
twisted up in a bun, reading glasses perched on the tip of
her prim nose. In fact, for the last six months—ever since
he’d learned what her second gig was—it’d been his favorite
go-to fantasy. Something like the tried-and-true naughty
librarian dream set on overdrive, because, you know, that
whole one-part-proper-lady-and-two-parts-sex-goddess shtick
had been a male spanktrovision standard since the beginning
of time and—
The front door burst open, slamming against the inside
wall. Mac turned to see who was in such an all-fire hurry to
get inside the bar. One look had his lungs playing the part
of Michael Jordan. They attempted to leap right out of his
throat.
Speak of the devil…
Even if he hadn’t recognized the long auburn hair
cascading from beneath a motorcycle helmet and tumbling
around a set of leather-clad shoulders, the shouts of
gleeful greeting and the lifted mugs of beer would’ve told
him the woman of the hour had made her way home.
See… Beautiful and vivacious and able to command the
attention of every man in the room...
He swiveled back toward the bar, but the hairs on the
back of his neck almost instantly alerted him to the fact
that That Woman had marched up behind him.
Slowly, with what he hoped wasn’t a patently false look
of unconcern, he turned around. But before he could open his
mouth, she whipped off her helmet and shook out her hair. He
was accosted by the spicy-sweet scent of her perfume and the
earthier aroma of the open road. Inexplicably, and to his
utter horror, Little Mac, the idiot in his pants, defied all
convention—not to mention the amount of liquor he’d imbibed—
and lifted to half-mast.
Well, for God’s sake, he thought with disgust, mentally
calling himself and Little Mac ten kinds of fool just as
Delilah blurted, “Thank goodness you’re here.”
“Huh?” Okay, and even in his scotch-muddled state, he
recognized his response for the gleaming bit of witticism it
was not.
Delilah frowned. “Are you drunk?” She placed her hands on
her hips. Her round, curvy, delicious hips. Her lovely hips
that just begged for a man’s hands and—
Ah, hell…
“Maybe.” He told her, holding his forefinger and thumb an
inch apart. “Just a little.”
“Goddamnit!” she growled, then immediately yelled for
Brendan to bring over two cups of coffee.
“Hey, now. Don’t do that,” Zoelner objected. “I’ve been
working all evening on this buzz and I—”
“Can it,” Delilah cut him off. Mac lifted his eyebrows in
surprise. Not that Delilah wasn’t a speak-her-mind, in-your-
face kind of broad, because she was. But this was something
different. The tone she’d taken with Zoelner bordered on
rude.
“I need you,” she pointed a red-tipped finger at
Zoelner’s nose, causing the man to go cross-eyed when he
attempted to focus on it. Whoa. What? She needed…Zoelner?
Then she turned to include him in that stomach-churning
statement. “I need both of you.”
Zoelner’s face pulled down in a considering frown. “Just
to be clear, I’m not usually the kind of man who likes to
share his pleasures.” Okay, and just the thought had a lurid
emotion—not jealousy, definitely not jealousy—buzzing at the
back of Mac’s head like a swarm of angry Texas yellow
jackets. “But if you’ve a mind to—”
“Not like that,” Delilah hissed, color climbing in her
already flushed cheeks.
All right. Something…Mac titled his head, blinking…isn’t
right here. Unfortunately, the discombobulating combination
of scotch and Delilah’s nearness ensured he couldn’t quite
put his finger on it. Then she saved him the trouble of
trying to figure it out when she blurted, “My uncle is
missing. And I need you guys to help me find him.”
Well…hello, sobriety.