Synopsis
Lisbeth, the lone eyewitness
of a shocking murder, believes the FBI witness protection program may be the
only way for her to survive. But when a powerful explosion reduces the safe
house to ashes, killing all of the FBI agents on duty, will she turn to a perfect
stranger for help?
Ethan, an
ex-Marine-turned-firefighter, has never really cared for any woman. He lives
his life to the fullest, enjoying the bad boy stigma and cultivating a
particular taste for dominant sex. Girls come and go, allowed to stay only long
enough to satisfy Ethan’s wild appetite.
One morning at dawn, Ethan’s
fire brigade is called to a fatal house explosion that levels the structure.
When he pries open a trap door to the hidden panic room under the house, he
find a gorgeous, though disheveled brunette. Lisbeth instantly turns Ethan’s
world upside down, and he’s overcome by the burning desire to protect her, no
matter the consequences.
Excerpt
Jack stood beside me. He was a
big guy, even taller and bulkier than myself. At six-foot-two I towered over
most of my buddies and coworkers. In our heavy fireproof coats, pants, and
bunker boots we looked like giants next to the short and plump chief.
Chief glanced back and to the
sides, as if making sure nobody can overhear us. “Jack, take the battalion
lead. The captain stays here. I have a special mission for him.”
“Yes, sir.” Jack nodded and
rushed into the building, no questions asked.
“What? You want me to leave my
guys and stay here? What’s going on?” I was puzzled. Such thing has never
happened before. I was the captain, and my team was my responsibility. But this
was also a direct order, and I knew better than to question my superior.
The chief lifted his hand,
palm facing me in a conciliatory gesture. “Jack can lead the team well enough.
You are required to take on another task.” He motioned to the area where the
excavation team was moving the equipment off the side. “You’re going to that
panic room. With your Marine’s training, you’re my best man for the job.”
“Jack has received the same
training as I have, Chief.”
He sighed and ran his hand
through his thinning gray hair. “I know, Ethan. But Jack’s temper is better
utilized there,” he nodded toward the building, “while you know how to restrain
yourself. Besides, this… well, hell, I will tell you what the feds said. But
that’s not to be discussed with anyone, Ethan. In that panic room is a sole
witness to some big case the FBI is involved in. She’s young and terrified, and
who knows in what state of mind she is after this mess here. They’re afraid she
will pull out, and they’ll lose the only witness they need to pin down some
troublemaker. What we need now is someone who can ease her out of there and
make sure she feels safe.”
I gave him a skeptical look.
Okay, so it was widely known that I had my way with women, although I would
never kiss and tell. But some of the women apparently have done just that,
because I’ve been quickly labeled as a “bad boy who won’t settle down”. No
matter what, this was my private life, which I never mixed with my professional
one. So why the hell would my superior hint at my special talents? I’ve proven
to him and everyone else at work that when it comes to my job, I won’t be
second-guessed.
“Ethan.” His bushy brows
pulled together as he pinned me with his steely stare. “Look, the FBI needs
her. She’s the only one who can testify in that case, and apparently there is
some big fish involved that can’t be easily touched otherwise. I know you can
talk to her and make her feel protected—”
“So that’s what this is about?
Giving some poor girl a false sense of security?” I kept my voice low.
He sighed. “I’m sorry, son.
That came out wrong.” The chief shook his head and exhaled forcefully.
“Apparently, she’s been already hinting at pulling out, and so this,” he
gestured around, “might be the last straw. What I’m asking is that you just
try.”
I narrowed my eyes, looking at
the spot where group 3 from Rescue 12 and a few black suits congregated in a
circle. More feds tried to keep the media away. Several local TV stations were
at the scene, cameras rolling. I spotted Anne, standing in front of the KOTS
News Station camera, talking to a large microphone with the station logo on.
When she gestured to the scene behind her, the fabric of her white button-down
blouse stretched tautly over her round breasts. A fleeting recollection of
those gorgeous tits under my fingers surfaced from some dark depths of my mind.
My cock stirred, and a pang of desire ran through me. I pushed the
not-completely-unwelcome memories out of my mind.
“That’s the order, Chief? I
will do it, but I strongly believe I’m needed much more with my men inside that
building.” I shoved my thumb over my shoulder, pointing to where my guys did
what was absolutely necessary—killing the possible fire inside and preventing
it from spreading onto the next building.
He sighed. “It’s a request.
Please, Ethan. She’s my daughter’s age, just twenty-three; a college girl in
the FBI witness protection program. The kid doesn’t have any family… she sure
as hell could use some help from a firefighter.”
That did me in. Chief Holton’s
daughter was born with Down syndrome. Her mother died, giving birth to her. The
girl has recently developed a rare type of leukemia and was going through chemo
treatments. She was the chief’s only child, and was slowly fading away. How
could I possibly refuse his plea?
“Okay.” I nodded curtly and
started to peel off my gloves and the heavy fire protection coat. The sun was
up, and I was getting uncomfortably warm. “Is there a two-way communication
established with that woman? A phone or a radio?”
“There was a separate
landline, but it’s out of service now. Must’ve been damaged in the explosion.
She’s not answering her radio either.”
“So no communication at
all?”
“Nothing.” He shook his head.
We passed all the media,
refusing the journalists’ pleads for comments about the incident. I bent at the
waist, slipping under the barricade tape, Chief Holton following close behind.
I heard him grunt in discomfort when he had to bend his bad knee to lower
himself under the tape.
Two feds approached us. This
time the chief made introductions. “Ethan, this is Agent Drasco,” he motioned
to one of the left, “and this is Agent Cornell.”
They both nodded.
“This is Captain Ethan McCoy
from Rescue 8. I briefed Captain McCoy about the situation,” Chief Holton told
them. We need to move in. The lady in there might need medical attention.”
“How is the air supply in that
panic room?” I asked.
“The room is equipped with air
scrubbers. They draw in fresh air from outside and can filter it indefinitely,”
Agent Drasco explained.
Long enough to wait out a
chemical attack for example. Or, at least the worse of it. Must be the
well-constructed safe room. I thought. “So smoke from the fire should be no problem
then,” I said.
Agent Cornell cleared his
throat and said in low baritone, “We are not completely positive on the air
scrubbers functionality after the explosion. The system might’ve been damaged.”
“Is there an escape shaft?” I
inquired.
“It was checked already, and
the access is blocked by a heavy debris.” Agent Cornell shook his head.
“So let’s have our guys clear
it.” What were the feds waiting for? Shouldn’t that be done already?
Drasco and Cornell exchange a
fleeting glance, just a flicker of the eye, but it was enough for me to catch
it.
Cornell drew in a breath. “The
explosives were deposited at the escape shaft exit. Good part of the passage
has collapsed.”
“So now this trap door here is
the only way out, right?” I knew the answer, but without the complete
blueprints of the underground structure I wanted to make sure we aren’t missing
anything.
“Correct,” Drasco confirmed.
The excavation unit was done
with clearing the area and salvage operation. They knew how to work fast and
efficiently. Uncovered, was a small, steel trap door in the warehouse concrete
floor. I kneeled by it and carefully ran my hands over the metal. There were
four handles flush with the surface of the door. I wrapped my fingers around
one handle opposite the massive hinges, fitting my hand into the round recess
under it. I yanked on it. Nothing. I suspected the door could only be unlocked
from the inside.
“I doubt we can simply pry it
open. This isn’t going to be easy.” I examined the edges closer. “Can we get
some tools to try?” I asked the guys from the drilling crew.
“This door is designed to be
unlocked only from the inside,” Agent Cornell confirmed my theory. He crouched
next to me and rapped his knuckles on the metal surface. “And it is soundproof,
so she wouldn’t hear if we tried to communicate with her.”
As expected, there was no
response from the room. This was a real-deal safe room, not the stuff you see
in the movies, where the person inside might be verbally coerced to do
something that the attacker wants. Sound insulation in real life was done to
eliminate such nonsense and also to prevent anyone on the outside from hearing
what was going on the inside, like a phone conversation with the police. But
with such powerful explosion, there was no doubt the woman inside knew
something went very wrong. So why wasn’t she trying to get out?
Agent Drasco stood a few feet
away with three other dark suits, quietly talking on his cell phone.
“Ethan. Here!” Chief Holton
handed me a crowbar.
A guy from the drilling crew
walked to the opposite side of the steel door. He held another crowbar. I stood
up and hooked my crowbar under the edge of the door. The other man did the
same.
“If it doesn’t budge easily,
we might need to try one of the excavation machinery to lift that door up,”
Chief Holton announced. “By the looks of it, it’s too thick to spring free with
the crowbars.
“Yeah. We can’t even make a
dent here,” I murmured, repositioning the crowbar. “Let’s get tow equipment in
here.”
At that moment I heard a
muffled sound like a distant scraping, coming from the trap door. Everyone else
around us must’ve heard that too, because the quiet conversations ceased, and
we all gaped in that direction. The door slowly lifted an inch and then a few
more. I was kneeling right by it, so I grasped the handle with one hand and
hauled up the door up, opening it completely. A pair of wide-open, bright-green
eyes stared at me from under a shock of dark, tangled curls. Lush, pink lips
slightly parted, but not a sound came out.
“Miss Glasson!” Cornell
stooped down, his hands on his knees. “I’m Agent Cornell, FBI. This is Captain
McCoy and Chief Holton, both from the Portland Fire Department.
The green eyes darted from
Cornell’s face to mine to Holton’s and back to mine. They locked with my eyes,
holding me hostage, spellbinding me with almost a child-like intensity. God,
she was gorgeous; breathtaking even, with her pale complexion highlighted with
a little splash of pink over her high cheekbones. Those green eyes were huge,
framed in thick, long lashes. She was scared too; I could sense it, although
she fought not to show it. She bit on her lower lip to keep it from
trembling.
I extended my hand to her.
“We’re here to help, Miss. Are you hurt? The paramedics need to see you
now.”
She took my hand. “My name is
Gloria,” the girl whispered. Her skin was warm against mine, her hand fitting
perfectly inside my hand.
“I’m Ethan,” I whispered back.
Why was I whispering?
“What happened here? It was
horrible to be down and not knowing.” She looked around, her eyes wide.
“There was an explosion. I’m
sure the agents will explain everything to you.”
“Where is Agent Vera? Agent
Kolaski?”
I slowly shook my head from
side to side. “The whole structure was leveled. Nobody survived. I’m sorry.”
She stared at me, open-mouthed
and then said, “I slept in the safe room, as always. Agent Vera told me to
secure the door last night and only open it when instructed by her or Agent
Kolaski. How… what caused the explosion?”
“We don’t know yet. Here, let
me help you out. Careful now.” I gently grasped her elbow with my other hand.
She had small bones and not much meat over them.
Before climbing out, she
hastily put her hood on. It fell down past her forehead, shading her face from
view.
Chief Holton and one of the
feds were on Gloria’s other side, trying to assist with guiding her out of the
chamber, but she placed her palm flat on the ground and pushed herself up,
swinging one knee out onto the ground covered with chunks of concrete and other
debris. She still held onto my hand though, squeezing it hard, until it
hurt.
I winced. For such a slim
woman she packed some muscle, at least in her grip.
The feds swarmed around us
like black crows. Agent Cornell was asking her questions and declaring her
absolute safety. Gloria shied away from them. A deep frown settled between her
dark brows, while her delicate mouth curved down as if in resolve to block off
his assurances.
“Are you a paramedic?” she
asked me hopefully. “I feel nauseous.” There was pleading in her eyes. She was
shaking.
I wrapped my turnout coat over
her shoulders, and she accepted it with a look of gratitude on her face. “Yes,
ma’am, I’m trained as paramedic.”
Drasco came up to Gloria and
said quietly, “Miss Glasson. As soon as you’re checked by the EMTs, I have an
order to take you to an undisclosed location.
“No!” she backed up, bumping
into me.
The contact made my body aware
of her even more than before. The top of her hood brushed the spot under my
chin, and a shiver ran through me, straight to my cock, which stirred and
strained against the fabric of my bulky pants.
“No. I want to be left alone.
Do not follow me,” she said without moving away from me. She looked straight at
Drasco. “I was promised the absolute protection. Is this what you call safety?”
Gloria angrily motioned around.
“Miss Glasson,” Cornell
hissed. “Not here. Not with the witnesses around, please.”
“Fine,” she murmured.
“Let me take you to the rescue
rig.” I touched her back.
She nodded and walked with me.
Chief Holton and the feds went with us. Two of our EMTs were by her side
already, but she seemed to want to stay close to me. That didn’t really
surprise me. I was used to women gravitating toward me, as if I reeked of pheromones.
But there was something different about Gloria.
Meet A.O. Peart
I write in multiple genres,
including paranormal, fantasy, urban fiction, sci-fi, contemporary, and short
stories. I am a member of Society of Children’sBook Writers and Illustrators, Western Washington Chapter, author
critique group, Writers In the Rain, and several authors’ and readers’
networking groups on Linkedin, Facebook, and Goodreads.
I love reading good books
almost as much as writing them. I describe myself as “European born, American
by choice”. I can never decide which season I prefer—summer or fall. I speak
with Polish accent and love listening to the Southern drawl. I am passionate
about watercolor painting, fashion—especially stilettos, rock climbing,
environment, and organic food and gardening. I live in the Seattle area with my
family and a chronically curious cat, Cinnamon.
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