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“Looking at the topless women?” she asked, pinching his butt. “I thought you were too sophisticated for that.”

“A man never gets too sophisticated for that,” he murmured and laughed when she pinched him again.

Late that afternoon he got another report from the Company men on shore. Ronsard seemed to have pulled his men; though there was still surveillance in place at the airports, no one was actively beating the bushes for them.

“Looks like we can do a little sightseeing,” he said.

She was aware he was indulging her. “You’ve been to Nice before, haven’t you?”

He shrugged. “I’ve been to most places before.”

“What do you do for relaxation?”

He thought about that for a moment. “Hide away on a boat on the Riviera and make love to you,” he finally answered.

“You mean . . . you never just get in a car and drive? Rent a cabin somewhere in the mountains, go fishing, look at the scenery?” She was aghast, wondering how anyone could live under such unrelenting stress.

“Like a normal person? No.”

Mr. Medina, that’s going to change, she thought staring at him. When he had downtime, she would make certain he relaxed some place where he didn’t have to constantly watch his back or keep up a cover. That would probably be the only way they could be together, somewhere so isolated they would have to make an effort to see another human being.

John radioed in that they were going ashore.

“Do you want surveillance?”

He thought about it. “How many men do you have?”

“We can keep the yacht covered, or we can cover you, but we’ll be stretched thin if we try to do both.”

It was a calculated risk, Niema knew. Just because Ronsard’s men hadn’t been spotted didn’t mean they weren’t there. But everything in John’s life was a calculated risk—and lately, so was everything in hers. This was how it would be, she thought; this was the life she was choosing, the life she wanted.

“Put one man on us,” John finally said.

“Will do.”

He tucked his pistol into his waistband at the small of his back, then put on a lightweight jacket. Niema had found a straw tote in the cabin and she dropped her pistol into it.

The yacht had its own motorized dinghy, and they went ashore in it. The sun was low in the sky, the light mellowing, the shadows deepening. They walked for a while, strolling along with the other tourists. They stopped for a cup of coffee at a sidewalk café; she browsed through some lovely little shops and started to buy a six-foot long, sky blue scarf, only to realize she had no money. “I’m broke,” she told John, laughing as she pulled him out of the shop.

He looked back. “I’ll get the scarf for you.”

“I don’t want you to get the scarf. I want you to get some money for me.”

“Independent hussy,” he remarked, tugging free and going back into the shop.

She waited on the sidewalk, arms crossed and toe tapping, until he rejoined her with the scarf wrapped in tissue paper. He dropped the weightless package in her tote, and a kiss on her nose. “That’s from me. As for operating money, I’ll have more funds delivered to us tomorrow.”

“Thank you.” Over his shoulder she caught a glimpse of a man watching them. He quickly turned away and entered a shop. She said thoughtfully, “Do you know what our Company tail looks like?”

“I spotted him when we left the dinghy. Khaki pants, white shirt.”

“A man wearing black pants, white shirt, and a tan jacket was watching us. He went in one of the shops when he saw me looking at him.”

John moved immediately, though without haste, curving his arm around her waist and walking with her into the nearest shop. Once they were inside he walked quickly through the shop, with the owner sputtering after them, and out the rear entrance. They were in a narrow cobblestoned alley, dark with shadows, open at both ends. He turned to the right, so they were going toward the shop in which their unknown watcher had gone.

If the man followed them into the shop and out the back, he would instinctively turn left, in the opposite direction from which he had come. If they could get out of the alley before he decided he’d been made and came after them, they would shake him.

They almost made it. The man burst into the alley when they were two doors from the end. The shopkeeper was squawking in his wake, frustrated that people were using her shop as a shortcut. He ignored her as if she were no more than a mosquito, brushing her off as he drew a pistol from the shoulder rig beneath his jacket.

Source: www.allfreenovel.com
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