He glanced at her and instantly drew back, an expression of surprise on his face.
“Gotta go,” he said into the phone. “Don’t even think about it,” he said to Mila.
So much for her advantage of surprise. Still, the tactic had a reasonable chance of success.
The elevator pinged behind her.
It was enough of a distraction that Troy was able to grab her left wrist. He tried for the right, obviously intending to manacle her hands behind her back. But she was too quick for him.
She was about to catch him in the solar plexus when a baby’s cries came through the elevator doors. She reflexively looked toward the sound.
Troy snagged her other wrist, disabling her.
“That wasn’t fair,” she grumbled over her shoulder.
“Nothing in this business is fair.” He let her go.
The elevator opened to reveal an attractive young woman with purple hair, a colorful bag dangling over her shoulder and a squalling baby in a stroller out front.
“He’s hungry,” the woman said to Troy as she moved forward.
Troy looked quite horrified by the sight.
Mila knew he didn’t have a wife. Maybe this was a girlfriend.
“Then feed him,” said Troy, sounding impatient.
“I will.” The woman bumped the stroller wheels over the lip of the door.
Mila could see her conversation with Troy coming to an abrupt and final end as the two of them dealt with the crying baby. She couldn’t afford to let that happen.
Making a split-second decision, she bent over the stroller. “Oh, he’s adorable,” she said.
The truth was the baby was quite unattractive at the moment. His face red and scrunched up, eyes watery, nose running and his mouth open with bawls of annoyance.
Mila refused to let it deter her. “Come here, precious,” she cooed, imitating the behavior of her sappy aunt Nancy around babies. She gathered the messy little guy from the stroller. “What’s the trouble, huh? Are you hungry?”
She felt ridiculous speaking to an uncomprehending baby in such a sickly sweet tone, but it was the only way she could think of to stick with Troy. And she was determined to stick with Troy.
She forced herself to keep from grimacing as she brought the baby’s gummy face to her shoulder. Her tank top would wash, and so would her skin. She patted him gently on the back, surprised by the warmth of his little body and by the softness. He felt as though he didn’t have a single bone or muscle.
His cries changed to intermittent sobs.
“Let’s get going,” the woman said anxiously. “This won’t last long.”
Mila refused to make eye contact with Troy, knowing he had to be angry at her pushiness. Instead, she marched past him, heading down the short hall to the doors at the end.
Two
Two women had invaded Troy’s apartment, for two completely different but equally frustrating reasons. Well, maybe not equally frustrating, since he could get rid of Mila Stern in short order, just as soon as she put the baby down. Though, for the moment, the baby was quiet in her arms, and he was hesitant to mess with that.
Kassidy was bent over his sofa sorting through her shoulder bag, pulling out diapers, flannel blankets and tiny socks.
“He likes you,” she said to Mila, straightening with a bottle in her hand.
“He seems like a sweetheart,” said Mila.
Something pinged on Troy’s radar. Mila’s expression was perfectly neutral, and there was no reason for her to lie about something as innocuous as a baby. But for some reason his suspicions were up again.
“He can be a terror,” said Kassidy. “Especially at night. It’s going to take Troy a while to get used to all the crying.”
“Hello?” Troy didn’t like the sound of that.
The guest rooms were on the opposite side of the apartment from the master bedroom, but the kid seemed to have quite a set of lungs.
“I’m Kassidy Keiser, by the way,” Kassidy said to Mila.
Mila looked surprised. She glanced to Troy. “So, you two are...married?”
“No,” they both barked out simultaneously.
Drake let out a cry of surprise.
“Kassidy is my sister,” said Troy.
Mila’s glance went to Drake. “So the baby isn’t yours?”
“No!” This time Troy beat Kassidy to the punch.
“I live in Jersey City,” said Kassidy, taking Drake from Mila’s arms. “That is, I normally live in Jersey City. But I’ve relocated for a while. Me and Drake. We’ll be staying here with Troy until things calm down.” She sat down on the sofa and popped the bottle into Drake’s mouth.
The baby dug into the meal, his little hands clasping and unclasping as he sucked and swallowed.
Mila took an armchair, perching on the edge to watch. “What things need to calm down?” she asked Kassidy, concern evident in her voice.
Troy started to protest. Mila wasn’t a guest. She had no business engaging his sister in chitchat while his lunch hour ticked away. He had a busy afternoon coming up, and he didn’t intend to spend it starving.
“Or until I get used to it all, I suppose,” said Kassidy. “And used to him.” She smiled down at Drake, smoothing a lock of his dark hair. “Isn’t he adorable?”
“You could have put him up for adoption,” said Troy.
The baby was adorable. There had to be dozens if not hundreds of stable, loving couples who would want him. Kassidy was in absolutely no position to take on an infant. She could barely take care of herself.
But her eyes flashed angrily at him. “I told you, I promised.”
“What a thing to say,” Mila cut in, adding her own glare at Troy. “What kind of support is that? This is your nephew.”
“He’s not my nephew,” said Troy.
“He will be,” said Kassidy. “Legally, morally and in every other way there is. You better get used to it, Troy. Because little Drake here isn’t going anywhere. Not anywhere.”
Now Mila just looked confused.
“She’s adopting him,” said Troy, wondering why he bothered to explain. It was past time for Mila to leave.
“Where are his birth parents?” Mila asked Kassidy.
“His mother passed away,” said Kassidy, her tone going soft and her hand smoothing over Drake’s head for a second time. “She was a good friend.”
The baby was blissfully oblivious to the discussion swirling around him. His hunger was being satiated, and that was all he cared about. Troy felt a pang of jealousy and then realized he could make that same decision for himself.
“I need to get lunch,” he announced, checking the time on his wrist.
He had less than thirty minutes before he had to be back downstairs. The Bulgarians had hired Pinion Security for an important upcoming UN reception, and he needed to get the team set up.
“Help yourself to whatever you want,” he told Kassidy. He dug into his pocket for a key card. “This will get you into the exterior doors as well as this apartment. You should know there are cameras all over the building.” His gaze moved to Mila. “We can track anybody, anywhere, at any time.”
She obviously understood. “You knew I was coming.”
“We saw you hiding from Vegas on the elevator. We were curious.”
“Sneaky,” she said.
“Seriously? Me, sneaky?”
“You could have said something.”
“Why would I say something?”
Kassidy’s gaze was ping-ponging back and forth between them.
“I only wanted to talk to you,” said Mila.
“And you did. And we’re done.” He gestured to the apartment’s front door. “The control room will be watching you all the way out. So don’t try anything.”
“Who are you?” asked Kassidy.
Mila looked at Kassidy, but obviously hesitated over her answer.
“I thought you were his girlfriend,” Kassidy continued as she lifted Drake to her shoulder and began patting his back.
“I’m applying for a job,” said Mila.
“She means she’s stalking me,” said Troy.
“Welcome to the club,” Kassidy said to Troy.
“Someone’s stalking you?” Mila was quick to pick up on the inference.
“I don’t know,” Kassidy answered. “Maybe. I have these fans.” She gave a little burst of laughter. “I guess if you’re not dating Troy—”
“I’m not dating Troy.”
“—then you wouldn’t know I was a singer. I’m a singer. And I have some fans. Not a whole bunch of fans, but enough. And some of them have been sending me emails. They’re a bit creepy.”
Mila looked to Troy.
He gave a shrug to indicate he wasn’t unduly alarmed. “I’ve forwarded copies to a profiler.”
“Can I see them?” asked Mila.
“Sure,” said Kassidy.
“No, she can’t,” said Troy. “She doesn’t work here, and they’re none of her business.”
“Why doesn’t she work here?” asked Kassidy.
“That’s none of your business,” said Troy.
“I’m serious,” said Kassidy.
“So am I.”
Kassidy turned to Mila. “Why don’t you work here?”
“I’m trying,” said Mila. “But your brother doesn’t hire women.”
Kassidy’s blue eyes went wide and she stared at him with patent disapproval.
“That’s not true,” said Troy, wondering why he was feeling defensive. “I have three women working in this building alone.”
“Not as security agents,” said Mila.
Troy glared at her, sending the unmistakable message that she should shut up.
“Why not as security agents?” asked Kassidy. Using one hand to hold Drake, she dug into her shoulder bag. “I’ll show you the latest emails.”
“Mila is leaving, and I’m having lunch.” Troy had to try at least.
“Go ahead and have lunch,” said Kassidy. “I want a woman’s opinion on this.”
He turned his tone to steel. “Goodbye, Mila Stern.”
“Don’t you be a jerk, Troy,” said Kassidy.
“I won’t charge you,” Mila said, rising to her feet and heading for Kassidy.
“Charge me with what?” He was baffled by the statement.
“Charge you for the time,” she said.
“You don’t work for me.”
“This new one came yesterday,” said Kassidy, holding out a sheet of paper.
Despite himself, Troy’s curiosity was piqued. He hadn’t seen this one. “Who’s it from?”
Mila was quicker on the draw, taking the printout from Kassidy’s hand.
“BluebellNighthawk,” said Kassidy.
Mila was reading her way through it, and Troy went behind her to look over her shoulder.
The message rambled about Kassidy’s hair and her eyes, her voice and a song she’d written that BluebellNighthawk seemed to think was about him.
“Is this the only new one?” asked Troy.
“Is there any significance to the word window?” asked Mila.
Troy stared down at her. “Why?”
“None that I can think of,” said Kassidy.
“He uses it twice,” said Mila. “And both times it’s the end of a thought followed by an awkward transition.”
Troy reread the note. “It’s all awkward.”
“True,” said Mila, sitting back down in the armchair, still gazing at the printout.
Troy summoned his patience. They were going backward here.
“I’m starving,” he said to both of them.
“So go have lunch,” said Kassidy.
Mila merely waved him away.
* * *
Mila had managed to stay in Troy’s apartment with Kassidy while he went downstairs for some meetings. She now had a hundred fan emails sorted into piles on the dining room table and had reconstructed Kassidy’s recent concert schedule on a digital map on her tablet.
Drake cooed in his baby seat in the corner of the living room. Kassidy chatted on the phone to her business manager in the kitchen, the occasional word or burst of laughter filtering out.
Mila was matching the emails to the performance dates, and now she needed to link them all on the map. For that, she needed a scanner.
She glanced around and spotted an open door that looked promising. She rose to look more closely and discovered it was Troy’s home office. Sure enough, she found a scanner on the corner credenza.
It looked straightforward enough, and she loaded in the documents.
“Can I help you with something?” Troy’s deep voice came from behind her.
“No.” She turned to meet his decidedly annoyed expression. “I think I’ve got it working.”
“I didn’t mean that literally.” His frown deepened.
“What did you mean?” she asked conversationally.
She refused to let herself be intimidated by his scowl. Kassidy was living here with him, and she had invited Mila to stay and sort through the emails.
“I meant, what the hell are you doing in my office without permission?”
She held his gaze. “I’m scanning documents.”
He advanced a couple of paces, shrinking the space with his presence. “I thought you’d be gone by now.”
“You have cameras all over the place. You’d have known if I left.”
“I don’t monitor the control center.”
“Your staff wouldn’t notify you?”
He paused at that. It was obvious from his expression they would have contacted him immediately.
Their gazes stayed locked, and a tickle of awareness found its way into her pores. There was no denying he was a good-looking man. And masculine strength was definitely a turn-on for her. But it was odd that his belligerence wouldn’t have counteracted those two traits. She wasn’t blindly attracted to just any tough guy.
The scanner chugged and whined in the background.
“You need to leave,” he said.
“You don’t want to know what I found?”
“We both know Kassidy’s in no real danger.”
“We do?”
Mila wasn’t ready to go that far. Though it did seem likely Kassidy was experiencing the harmless, if annoying, adoration that could be directed at any pretty young woman in the public eye.
“You’ve given it a nice try,” he said. “You’ve given it a terrific try. You’ve gone above and beyond in trying to get me to hire you. I’ll grant you that.”
“Thank you. So, hire me.”
“I’m not hiring you.”
“Why not?” she asked.
He rolled his eyes with obvious derision. “You’re stalling again.”
“I’m serious. In this day and age, what possible reason could you have for not hiring women?”
“You want the truth?”
“I’d love the truth.”
“Okay. Here it is. It’s a simple equation of muscle mass.”
She gave herself an extra beat to frame her response. She knew this was her last and only chance to change his mind. Simple, she decided. Simple and direct was her best bet.
“Skills can overcome muscle mass.”
“Maybe,” he allowed, surprising her.
She felt encouraged. “And don’t discount knowledge and intelligence.”
He squared his shoulders, not looking at all like somebody who was about to capitulate. “I don’t discount knowledge and intelligence. I hire for skills. I hire for intellect. I hire for experience. I hire for proficiency. And when all of those elements are present, I then hire for strength and power.”
“I have all of those things.”
“How much do you even weigh?”
“A hundred and twenty pounds. Almost.”
He shook his head in a pitying way. “Two guys come at you, big guys, five hundred pounds between them. What do you do?”
“Shoot them,” she said without hesitation.
“You’re unarmed.”
Mila knew two could play at this game. “What about you? How do you control a situation where the other guys are armed and you’re not?”
“I’m never not.”
“You know what I mean.” She stared levelly across at him. “There are times when even you, Mr. Two Hundred...whatever—”
“Two-fifteen.”
“Mr. Two-Fifteen, all muscle and sinew, are overpowered by the opposition.”
“Less often than you,” he said softly.
Something had shifted in the depths of his eyes, and she felt the sexual awareness all over again. He’d moved closer as they spoke. Or maybe she’d moved closer. But she could smell him now, and he smelled good. Another couple of inches, and she’d feel the heat of his body.
She told herself she wanted to fight him, not kiss him. But she knew it was a lie. She’d been trained to face the honest reality of any physical encounter. Anything less put her at an absolute disadvantage.
“You’re trying to distract me,” she said.
“You’re the one trying to distract me.” He leaned in, closing the gap between them even farther.
“It’s not on purpose.”
“Of course it is.”
“You think I can do that?” she asked, easing closer. “With you? With all that self-discipline you must have, I could distract you with sex?”
His expression faltered.
“If I can,” she continued, “you should probably hire me, because that’s something over and above what any of the muscle-bound brotherhood can accomplish.”
“That’s your strongest attribute?” he taunted. “I wouldn’t think you’d want to brag about it.” But his gaze kept hers trapped, and the air seemed to thicken around them.
She realized her mistake. “It’s not my strongest attribute.” As she spoke, she surreptitiously shifted her right hand around his side. “My strongest attribute right now is the knife pointed at your kidney.”
“You don’t have a knife.”
“It’s in its sheath. But I do have a knife.”
He moved, and she instantly jerked her fist against him to show she could have stabbed him.
He grabbed her wrist, and his other hand went to her throat.
“You’re dead,” she told him.
“I’m bleeding out,” he agreed. “But you’re dead, too.” His hand gently stroked the skin of her neck.
“Am I hired?” she asked.
“You’re insane.”
His voice was a whisper. His face hovered over hers. She smelled his skin, imagined the taste of his lips, the feel of his body enveloping hers.
He was going to kiss her. It was in the smoke of his eyes, the twitch of his fingers, the indrawn breath that tightened his chest. She shouldn’t let him. She couldn’t let him. But she knew she was going to let him. And it was going to be fantastic.
Kassidy’s excited voice sounded through the doorway. “Mila?”
Troy instantly stepped back.
Mila snapped to reality. “In here.”
“I’ve got a gig tonight,” Kassidy sang. “It’s a good one. The Ripple Branch on Georgia Avenue. They had a cancellation.”
She appeared in the doorway. “Oh, hi, Troy.” She focused her attention on Mila. “Can you come with me?”
“Love to,” Mila immediately answered.
Kassidy barely took a breath. “You okay to babysit?” she asked Troy.
“What?” The question clearly took him aback. It was probably the only thing that stopped him from ordering Mila not to go anywhere with Kassidy.
Mila knew she shouldn’t laugh at his obvious predicament, but it was tough to fight the urge.
“Drake should go to sleep by eight,” said Kassidy. “And I don’t have to leave until seven. I could have everything ready in advance. All you’d have to do is give him a quick bath, a bottle, and wind up his rainbow jungle toy. He loves watching it while he falls asleep.”
“Sounds easy enough,” said Mila.
“Go away,” Troy growled under his breath. “You don’t work here.”
“Your sister needs protection.”
“My sister needs a nanny.”
“Before you fight with me, take a look at what I’ve found,” said Mila. “I wouldn’t call your sister’s situation high risk, but it’s not zero either.”
“Nothing’s zero,” he said.
“There’s something there,” she said.
It was just out of reach, like the wisps of a dream. But Kassidy’s anxiety was real. The girl’s instincts were telling her to protect herself. Mila didn’t like to ignore instincts.
“You’re so transparent,” he drawled.
“Fine,” said Mila. “Believe whatever you want. Hire me, don’t hire me, but I’m going to the performance with Kassidy tonight.”
“It’s a free country,” said Troy, his blue eyes going icy gray. “Call a nanny service before you go,” Troy said to Kassidy. “I’m not your babysitter.”
“It’ll be easy,” said Kassidy.
“I’ve got work to do.”
Mila fought an urge to tease him, but she bit back the unwise words. She’d accompany Kassidy to the performance tonight and file a report with Troy in the morning. Maybe he’d read it. Maybe he wouldn’t. Even if her work was exceptional tonight, it might not change his mind. There might be nothing she could do to change his mind about hiring her. But she wasn’t going down without a fight.
* * *
In the ops control room, Vegas turned his head at Troy’s entrance. He did a double take of Drake sleeping on Troy’s shoulder.
“New recruit?” he asked.
“It’s the apprenticeship program,” said Troy, his hand splayed across Drake’s diaper-covered bottom, easily balancing the baby’s slight fifteen pounds.
Two dozen video screens decorated the walls, receiving feeds from fixed and mobile cameras, tracking devices and information from their international offices. This time of night, people were just arriving at work in Dubai.
“I take it this is the new nephew,” said Vegas.
“He’s not my—” Troy stopped himself. He supposed, technically, Drake was going to be his nephew. “There’s a nanny on the way. She had car trouble or kid trouble or something.”
All Troy knew for sure was that he was alone with Drake, and he didn’t like it.
“Kassidy’s out on the town?” asked Vegas, disapproval in his tone.
“She’s working.” Which he imagined was pretty much the same thing for Kassidy.
Troy had protected a lot of celebrities over the years. With a few notable exceptions, sports stars and film personalities were mostly professional. The lion’s share of what made it into the tabloids was a part of their carefully crafted public image. Musicians, however, were a breed unto themselves. They kept late hours, drank and partied, and a lot of them truly lived the rock-and-roll lifestyle.
Vegas eyed Drake up and down. “I don’t get it,” he said. “It would be one thing if she got knocked up.”
“You do remember you’re talking about my sister.” Troy wasn’t sure why he felt compelled to defend her at this late date.
Vegas’s brow went up. “Well, excuse me, but isn’t this the baby sister who trashed three rooms at the Poco Hollywood Hotel?”
“She had help.”
To keep the whole thing out of court, Troy had paid the bill.
“She’s not exactly mother material,” said Vegas.
Troy couldn’t disagree with that. He briefly tightened his hold on Drake. Poor kid. This was likely to be a rocky ride.
“I’m thinking a full-time nanny,” said Troy.
Vegas coughed out a chopped laugh. “One for each of them?”
Troy opened his mouth to defend her again, but he had nothing to say. There was no point in pretending Kassidy was in any position to raise a child. Why a terminally ill single mom had made his sister promise to take guardianship of an innocent baby was a mystery to him.
“I saw Mila leave with Kassidy.” Vegas let the sentence hang.
“I didn’t hire her,” said Troy.
“Does she know that?”
“Yes.”
Vegas gave a crooked smirk.
“She may not have accepted it yet,” said Troy.
“But she’s not equipped.” It wasn’t a question. If Mila had a company camera or communications device, Vegas would see it on his monitors.
“It’s not an op,” said Troy. “It’s a performance.”
“So you’ve analyzed the data.”
“Not all of it. Not yet. It’s fan letters. If Kassidy wants to flail around onstage in lingerie while she belts out pop tunes, guys are going to make comments.”
“You think there’s no danger?”
“Do you think there is?”
Vegas shrugged. “I doubt it.”
“There. Good.” Troy sat down on one of the rolling desk chairs. “What’s going on in the Middle East?”
Vegas zoomed in on a camera. “Prince Matin had a late night, but he’s up and around, and the car is out front of the hotel.”
“Gotta love the partying spirit of the reformers,” said Troy.
Vegas grinned. “He had a supermodel on his arm when he finally left the reception.”