Page 24 of In Too Deep


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“She’s fine now.” Max’s hand curved around her shoulder.

Crusty’s gaze fell right down to Max’s possessive grip. Yeah, he was staking sunflower-seed rights. If he was wrong for Darcy, then the dark-ops tester dude in front of him wasn’t any better for her.

Darcy angled to peek around Max. “Anybody see Doc Clark out there in the hall? I’ve got a little problem.”

Her lighthearted grin betrayed by her chalky face, she swept aside the corner of the spread to reveal three sets of puncture wounds climbing up her ankle to her knee. She adjusted her hold on the blanket, the Band-Aid from her spider bite earlier setting off alarms in Max’s head.

Two accidental attacks in one day.

Suspicion coiled into certainty in Max’s gut. He’d learned fast not to believe in coincidence. Too often coincidence translated to a threat still in hiding. And for some unknown reason, Darcy was the target.

CHAPTERSIX

“There areno coincidences in this business.” Kneeling to check the door lock for jimmied scratch marks, Max spoke over his shoulder to Lurch— known to the rest of the world as Captain Rick DeMassi. “Rule number three for undercover work, right, Perry?”

“You got it, boss.” Perry swept his hand along picture frames searching for bugs—the electrical, listening kind this time.

“Yeah, yeah, whatever,” DeMassi chanted. The Special Operations pararescueman assigned to oversee physical safety reached up into the light fixture to feel for openings. Hopefully, the guy would never have to serve in his primary capacity for this mission—dragging someone out of the water if the op turned sour. “But I’m telling you, I was watchin’ the place, keeping an eye out for Renshaw, too, like you…requested.Easy enough since you’re two doors down. I’m telling you, no one went in or out from eight until now.”

The CIA hadn’t spared any expense in tapping the best resources of the joint services Special Operations Forces. As much as Max chafed at accounting to others, he had to admit DeMassi seemed to know his job. The guy managed inconspicuous well, especially for an oversize New York-Italian in Guam.

Max skimmed a finger along the hinges of the door to the next room, but no fresh wood showed to indicate the hinges had been taken off and replaced. “Then somehow it came in earlier.”

Darcy had been locked in tight and alone with the snake lying in wait. Frustrated anger spiked. He needed the reassurance that he could hold someone accountable, nail that person to the wall and make certain no morecoincidenceshappened on his watch. “Perry, check the housecleaning roster. I want to know who serviced this room today.”

“Will do.” The assistant jotted a note in his day-runner with one hand, loosening his bow tie with the other. He tugged it free and draped it over his sports jacket hanging on a chair.

Max stepped up onto the bed and tapped the ceiling. Solid cinder block like the walls, built to withstand typhoons. Nothing had slithered in that way.

DeMassi’s arms bulged through the openings of his sleeveless T-shirt as he twisted a screwdriver along an air-conditioning vent. Finally he dropped his hands to his side with a huff.

“Nothing came in through those.” DeMassi raked a finger along the outside. “And the dust is so thick and undisturbed you can file a complaint with the cleaning staff when you get that name.”

Max stepped back to the floor and knelt beside the bed, trying not to think about Darcy sprawled on the floor earlier. A tough proposition when her baby powder scent clung to the sheet trailing off the side.

He didn’t even bother trying to control the urge to protect her. It would be weeks before he could suppress the image of that snake inches from her face. Dropping to his side, Max peered underneath the bed. He snagged his gun and tucked it in his waist holster before looking again. More dust and shadows.

Max reached a hand out behind him. “Hey, DeMassi, pass me a flashlight.”

The flashlight smacked into his palm. Max swung the beam under the bed. A long swath sliced through the dust, a clear coil pattern in the middle. A very big coil.

Max whipped upright before the anger could twist any tighter. “At least we know where the thing hid out. But then, who knows how long it slept curled under there?”

DeMassi crouched beside him. “It could have slithered past while the maids were cleaning the bathrooms.”

Max stood, scoping the room while scenarios played out in his head. “Who’s in the next room?”

Perry flipped a page in his leather planner. “Pilot from Beale Air Force Base. She left this afternoon to head back home to California.”

Max flung the flashlight on the bed and crossed to the connecting bathroom. A possibility. Returning to Darcy’s room, he paced while Perry worked the crank on the hurricane shutters.

Restless energy without an outlet fueled Max’s feet. “I’m not sold on the coincidence theory of two attacks in one day.”

DeMassi scooped the mag-light from the bed. “The same car or guy following you twice in a day, that’s no coincidence. Clicks on different phones, not a coincidence. But freaky weird animals in Guam are pretty much the norm, Doc.”

Max grunted, unwilling to dismiss the possibility so quickly. Could DeMassi be an insider leak? He’d been the one following Darcy, after all, with a free and clear order to do so. The guy had opportunity to plant the pests. Seemed unlikely, but Max wasn’t ruling out anything. He paused by the dresser, his hand absently flipping Post-it notes filled with Darcy’s scrawl scattered along the mirror.

Fill out mission reports.

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