Page 68
Story: Wicked and Claimed
He reached into his coat pocket and pulled out a pair of leather gloves. He handed her a purple latex pair, like she’d seen in a doctor’s office. “Put those on and listen to me. No matter what happens, you follow my instructions. Do you understand? If I tell you to hide, you hide. If I tell you to run, you run. No questions asked.”
“Nash…”
“Nope. Agree now or I’m taking your office key and sending you outside to spend an hour with Zeph. Your choice.”
She loved how protective he was, and she even had an appreciation for his bossy side. Not that she would tell him. Who knew if he was cautious because she mattered to him…or because he didn’t want to clean up her blood and guts?
She rolled her eyes. “Do I need your permission to breathe, too?”
“This is no joke.”
“Yes, your highness.”
“Keep with the attitude, and I’ll?—”
Nash’s phone buzzed in the otherwise silent lobby. He read it, then scanned the room.
“You’ll what?”
“Later.” He gestured her to follow. “We’re on the clock. Let’s go.”
He hailed the elevator. Together, they crashed inside it with just under a minute to spare. Thankfully, the people helping Nash had not only killed the cameras in the lobby, they’d cut off the lights inside the car, too.
God, she loved to see him at work. He was methodical, thorough, and seemingly thought of everything. It was surprisingly sexy. Maybe because that was the way he functioned in bed, too.
When they reached the floor of Benedict Land Development’s office, she inserted the key and let them in.
Surprisingly, the floor wasn’t totally dark. More than a few computers were rolling through their screen-saver sequences while ambient lights shone from the faux industrial ceiling. Neither of them bothered with more than a glance at her desk. Instead, they tiptoed down the hall, past the executive suites.
Mila’s door was closed and locked. Haisley wondered if she’d gone home to the man who had yelled at her or if she’d decided she’d had enough and found someplace else to spend her weekend. If Haisley knew the woman better, she would have reached out and offered her a spare bedroom as a kindness to someone going through a rough patch…but Mila might find that weird. Besides, her boss wouldn’t appreciate her trying to come between him and his wife.
At the end of the hall, she stopped and whispered, “You know I don’t have a key to the boss’s office, right?”
Nash nodded. “I would have been shocked if you did. But this door I can handle.”
He withdrew something from his pocket, stuck it in the lock, and started jimmying it. In less than thirty seconds, he was pushing the door wide open and, gun in hand, sweeping the office. “Clear. Come in.”
She did, carefully closing the door behind her. “Do we dare turn on the lights?”
Nash shook his head. “He doesn’t have cameras installed anywhere on this floor. I looked. But I don’t know if he has any other sensors, and I wouldn’t want to tip off the janitorial staff if they happen to see something. Hold this.”
When he handed her a flashlight, she took it with a scowl. “And do what?”
“Tell me where you think we should start looking.”
For the next ten minutes, they searched his desk drawers, his filing cabinet, and a credenza in which he kept various plaques and trophies he’d collected over the years. Nothing jumped out at Haisley as being suspicious. “It’s hard to find something when you don’t know what you’re looking for.”
Nash nodded. “There’s a reason his door is always closed, and he locks it the minute he leaves. It’s possible he’s merely private, but…”
“He could be hiding something, too. If he’s involved, what would he keep here?”
“If he was smart, nothing. But Benedict clearly thinks he’s better than everyone else, so it wouldn’t surprise me if his cockiness makes him sloppy. We’re looking for ledgers, receipts, notes…anything that would tie him to Yuslav beyond the employee-employer relationship.”
“I have an idea.” Haisley didn’t wait for Nash to follow her to the back of the room since she had the flashlight.
“Tell me.”
“When I tried to talk to Benedict earlier this afternoon, I knocked on his door and poked my head in. I noticed him fiddling with something on these bookshelves.” She gestured to the massive, wall-to-wall unit behind his desk. “Here on the right.”
“Nash…”
“Nope. Agree now or I’m taking your office key and sending you outside to spend an hour with Zeph. Your choice.”
She loved how protective he was, and she even had an appreciation for his bossy side. Not that she would tell him. Who knew if he was cautious because she mattered to him…or because he didn’t want to clean up her blood and guts?
She rolled her eyes. “Do I need your permission to breathe, too?”
“This is no joke.”
“Yes, your highness.”
“Keep with the attitude, and I’ll?—”
Nash’s phone buzzed in the otherwise silent lobby. He read it, then scanned the room.
“You’ll what?”
“Later.” He gestured her to follow. “We’re on the clock. Let’s go.”
He hailed the elevator. Together, they crashed inside it with just under a minute to spare. Thankfully, the people helping Nash had not only killed the cameras in the lobby, they’d cut off the lights inside the car, too.
God, she loved to see him at work. He was methodical, thorough, and seemingly thought of everything. It was surprisingly sexy. Maybe because that was the way he functioned in bed, too.
When they reached the floor of Benedict Land Development’s office, she inserted the key and let them in.
Surprisingly, the floor wasn’t totally dark. More than a few computers were rolling through their screen-saver sequences while ambient lights shone from the faux industrial ceiling. Neither of them bothered with more than a glance at her desk. Instead, they tiptoed down the hall, past the executive suites.
Mila’s door was closed and locked. Haisley wondered if she’d gone home to the man who had yelled at her or if she’d decided she’d had enough and found someplace else to spend her weekend. If Haisley knew the woman better, she would have reached out and offered her a spare bedroom as a kindness to someone going through a rough patch…but Mila might find that weird. Besides, her boss wouldn’t appreciate her trying to come between him and his wife.
At the end of the hall, she stopped and whispered, “You know I don’t have a key to the boss’s office, right?”
Nash nodded. “I would have been shocked if you did. But this door I can handle.”
He withdrew something from his pocket, stuck it in the lock, and started jimmying it. In less than thirty seconds, he was pushing the door wide open and, gun in hand, sweeping the office. “Clear. Come in.”
She did, carefully closing the door behind her. “Do we dare turn on the lights?”
Nash shook his head. “He doesn’t have cameras installed anywhere on this floor. I looked. But I don’t know if he has any other sensors, and I wouldn’t want to tip off the janitorial staff if they happen to see something. Hold this.”
When he handed her a flashlight, she took it with a scowl. “And do what?”
“Tell me where you think we should start looking.”
For the next ten minutes, they searched his desk drawers, his filing cabinet, and a credenza in which he kept various plaques and trophies he’d collected over the years. Nothing jumped out at Haisley as being suspicious. “It’s hard to find something when you don’t know what you’re looking for.”
Nash nodded. “There’s a reason his door is always closed, and he locks it the minute he leaves. It’s possible he’s merely private, but…”
“He could be hiding something, too. If he’s involved, what would he keep here?”
“If he was smart, nothing. But Benedict clearly thinks he’s better than everyone else, so it wouldn’t surprise me if his cockiness makes him sloppy. We’re looking for ledgers, receipts, notes…anything that would tie him to Yuslav beyond the employee-employer relationship.”
“I have an idea.” Haisley didn’t wait for Nash to follow her to the back of the room since she had the flashlight.
“Tell me.”
“When I tried to talk to Benedict earlier this afternoon, I knocked on his door and poked my head in. I noticed him fiddling with something on these bookshelves.” She gestured to the massive, wall-to-wall unit behind his desk. “Here on the right.”
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