
Five months ago, SG-5 operative Eli McKenzie was in deep
cover in Mexico, infiltrating a Spectra ring that kidnaps young girls
and sells them into a life beyond imagining. Not being able to move
on the Spectra scum right away was torture for the tough-but-compassionate
superspy. But that wasn't the only problem-someone on the inside was
slowly poisoning Eli, clouding his judgment and forcing him to make
an abrupt trip back to the Smithson Group's headquarters to heal. Now,
Eli's ready to return...with a vengeance. It seems his quick departure
left a private investigator named Stella Banks in some hot water. Spectra
operatives have nabbed the nosy Stella and are awaiting word on how
to handle her disposal. Eli knows the only way to save her life and
his is to reveal himself to Stella and get her to trust him. Seeing
the way Stella takes care of the frightened girls melts Eli's armor,
and soon, they find that the best way to survive this brutal assignment
is to steal time in each other's arms. It's a bliss Eli's intent on
keeping, no matter what he has to do to protect it. Because Eli McKenzie
has unfinished business with Spectra-and with the woman who has renewed
his heart-and this is one man who always finishes what he starts...

Coming Soon!

Coming Soon!

Eli McKenzie & Stella Banks
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Eli sensed movement just as he pulled the lock free. He
dug the edge of his boot into the ground at the base of the gate, braced
his thigh and hip against the galvanized aluminum frame, and held on.
The impact of her shoulder with his ribs sent her stumbling backward
with a loud grunt. He grit his teeth against the pain from the blow
to his mid-section and opened the gate to step inside the cage. He didn’t
bother locking up. She wasn’t going anywhere if she wanted to
stay alive.
Walking toward her, he bounced the heavy lock in his palm once, then
curled his fingers around it making a fist. “Are you done acting
like you don’t have a brain in your head? What the hell did you
think you were going to do if you got by me?”
“Run,” was all she said.
He backed her up into the center of the cage, halfway to the wall of
the structure Ramon’s men had thrown together and called shelter.
“Run,” he echoed, shaking his head. “You have a particular
destination in mind?”
“Yeah,” she spat out. “Across the border and into
the country where we both belong.”
“Assuming a lot, aren’t you?”
“What? Are you denying that you’re American?”
He wasn’t denying anything, but he wasn’t yet ready to reveal
who he was.
And so he lied. “Ramon knows who I am, where I come from, where
my loyalties lie.”
“What a load of crap. The fact that you’re here doing what
it is you’re doing proves you don’t know diddly squat about
loyalties.”
Her hair was a silver blonde mess of wind-blown strands beneath her
hat of crushed straw. Her cheeks and the tip of her nose were pink from
the sun. The jeans and boots she wore were filthy from the dust blowing
through the compound.
The fact that she’d mashed her lips together to seal in her hatred
didn’t stop him from thinking about her mouth. And her eyes weren’t
giving him any easier of a time. They were a crystal clear green and
as sharp and smart as he’d seen outside of the SG-5 or Spectra
ranks in a very long time.
She had the same snap he and his partners relied on to get out of scrapes.
The same snap Spectra used too often to elude the Smithson Group’s
grasp.
“The only thing here suspect is you. Trespassing and unlawful
surveillance aren’t going to earn you more badges for your Girl
Scout sash,” he said, spouting nonsense but with a reason.
“I’ll cop to the trespassing, but unlawful surveillance?
According to what law? The one you’re using to keep me in here?
Or the one giving you the right to snatch those girls out of their homes
and sell them on the streets?”
She shoved her index finger into the center of his chest and poked hard.
“Let me tell you this, mister. There’s no chance in hell
your make-believe laws will hold up in any court.”
She’d advanced on him while she spoke, her hat pulled low, her
chin held high. Her eyes burned with zeal and brimmed with tears. And
in that moment, that very moment, he felt the slow oozing return of
the disgust that had made him an easy target for annihilation all those
months ago.
This time, he was the one who advanced, the one who sent her retreating
until her backside hit the wall of her shelter and threatened to take
it down. “I’m going to tell you something, sister.
“I am your one and only hope of getting out of here without becoming
the prize in a game of roulette. Now, is that what you want? To let
the men in this camp take turns with you until you can’t walk
for a week?”
The moisture that had been welling in her lower lids spilled. She shook
her head, her fists balled tight at her sides. She refused to lift a
finger and wipe the trails of tears cleaning the dust and grit from
her cheeks.
The show of defiance, of will, of strength was Eli’s last straw.
This woman had been a holy thorn in his side from day one. But he was
not about to sacrifice her to the compound staff of ruthless, amoral,
cruel men to facilitate his own mission’s success.
He stepped even closer. Inches separated their bodies, but he still
felt her heat above that which hung in the air. When he reached up with
one hand, she flinched; he shook his head to still her and settled his
palm at her nape.
She shivered, and he absorbed what he could of her fear, calming her
as Hank Smithson would a filly, settling his lips at her temple, breathing
in her scent, learning the feel of her hair, her skin, while gathering
up his words.
“Okay, then. You listen to me. You do as I say. Exactly as I say.
And maybe, just maybe, we can save your virtue and get these girls back
to their families before the next transport arrives to take them away.”
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