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There was an impressive smashing of glass, a nice little poof of smoke. On cue, cars stopped, and people began to run toward or away from the accident. The shrill scream of the jeweler’s alarm system was a muffled buzz over her audio.

On the next monitor, she watched the delivery truck glide smoothly into place at the hotel’s rear, and Honroe step out of the shadows.

Like Roarke, the six figures who leaped out of the truck were dressed in black, with the addition of caps that fit snugly over heads and thin gloves that protected the hands and kept the fingers nimble.

“Mick’s with them,” Roarke murmured. “He’s seeing it through. I didn’t give him credit for it.”

That’s for later, Eve thought. “Seven, repeat, seven subjects, entering building from the west, delivery level.”

“Wait.” Eve laid a hand on his arm, gaze steady on the monitor. “There’s three in the lorry,” Roarke continued.

“How do you—”

“Mick’s telling me. It’s an old code. Three in the lorry, all with eyes and ears. Hand lasers, cop-style. One mini-launcher, heat-seeking, fully loaded.”

When Mick entered the building, Roarke shifted to the next monitor. He watched as his friend went to work on the first security panel, and listened with half an ear as Eve relayed the incoming data to her teams.

“The men inside are carrying, too. More than the tranqs previously reported. Two added basic police-issue lasers. There’s a woman, third back. Hand-to-hand expert. She has a blade in her right boot.” Roarke glanced to Eve. “You’ll use this for him.”

It wasn’t a question. He didn’t doubt her sense of justice.

“Let’s bring it down, then I’ll do what I can.”

“There, he’s through the second level. He’s better than he was.”

She watched Mick jerk up his thumb, then pound with the others up the service stairs. They moved fast and orderly, telling her they’d drilled well and drilled often.

But so had she. Her mind stayed cool and focused as Mick stopped at the fire door on the ballroom level, took out a handheld unit, and telescoped it out to elbow-length. His fingers were quick and steady, and made her wonder what was in his thoughts. His unit beeped three times, and its lights glowed green.

He went through the doors first, heading for the target at a jog.

“Move out,” Eve ordered. “Feeney, prepare to jam on my signal.”

“Copy that.” His voice spoke in her ear. “They’re at the doors, working on outer security. Second from the rear’s antsy. He’s sweating. Hey, Dallas, I got an ID on him. Looks like Gerade wanted to be in on the kill.”

“Beautiful.”

“And they’re through. E-guy’s adjusting his jammer. It’s flipping through levels, backtracking. He’s keying in another code manually. Must’ve gotten it from one of the inside men. He’s got a thirty-percent clearance.”

Eve stepped onto ballroom level, held up her hand. From the other direction, her secondary team leader mirrored her move. At her nod, they moved forward. Fast.

“Jam it!” she ordered and swung through the door. “Police! Hands in the air. Up!” she shouted, then sent out a warning blast that nipped the toes of the woman’s boots as she reached down.

Return fire whizzed past her ear. Even as she pivoted, she saw one of the figures in black jerk back from the stun shot out by one of her team.

Someone shoved over a huge glass display. It boomed and shattered like cannon fire. Through the shouts and scrambles for cover or escape, she saw Mick send Roarke a sunny grin.

Then she was too busy to be amused or baffled as the woman in black hurled a two-foot vase at her head, and followed the toss with a screaming leap.

Eve had a half-second to decide. The undoubted satisfaction of a good, bloody hand-to-hand, or . . . With some regret she fired her weapon and dropped her opponent into an unconscious heap.

“Too bad,” Roarke commented. “I would have enjoyed watching that.”

He turned toward Mick and, since there was little left to do, slipped the weapon he wasn’t supposed to have back into his pocket. “I’d like a look at that jammer of yours.”

“Well now, I have a feeling it’ll be going into police custody. A terrible waste.” Mick glanced about as his former associates were rounded up. In a slick move, he palmed the jammer to Roarke, then stepped away, raising his hands cooperatively in the air.

There would be times, countless times later, when Roarke would look back and remember that moment. How he’d stood there, amused, exhilarated. And unguarded.

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