Secrets Never Die (Morgan Dane #5)(70)
Not reassuring.
“You were informed of the rules?” the driver asked. “No cameras, no phones, no wires.”
“Yes,” Olivia said.
The driver raised a hand and made a circle in the air. “Turn around. Hands in the air.”
Olivia obeyed. Sharp did too.
The second man went to Olivia. She lifted her arms and let him run his hands along her sides. The way he took his time made Sharp want to shoot him. But at the same time, he didn’t want to die. Also, his gun was locked in the car. So he bit his tongue as the guard felt around Olivia’s bra line, clearly looking for a wire, but the hostile smirk on his face said he was enjoying the process.
Olivia didn’t cower or cringe. Instead, she bore an expression he’d never seen before, but then, he had never witnessed her being manhandled by a thug. She was pissed but also cool and collected.
When it was Sharp’s turn, he lifted the hem of his T-shirt. The guard ran his hands down the outside of Sharp’s legs and felt around his ankles. The whole pat down took five seconds. Sharp was glad he wasn’t wearing a clinch piece.
“All good?” Sharp asked without turning around.
“Get in.” The driver opened the rear door.
Sharp slid onto the leather seat. Olivia entered the vehicle on the other side. The two men got in.
The passenger handed two pieces of fabric over the seat. “Put these on.”
Olivia took them and gave one to Sharp. He held it up. A black hood. With an apprehensive blink, she tugged hers over her head.
“Is this really necessary?” Sharp asked.
The driver met his eyes in the rearview mirror.
Sharp put on the hood. The engine started. A minute later, the sedan lurched into motion.
Sweat rolled down Sharp’s back. What had they gotten themselves into?
Chapter Twenty-Eight
The vehicle came to a stop, but Sharp had lost track of how long the vehicle had been in motion. It felt as if they’d been driving in circles.
The hood was snatched from Sharp’s face. Overhead lights blinded him.
Next to him, Olivia squirmed. Her hood had also been removed, and her hair was tousled around her face.
The driver and passenger climbed out of the vehicle and opened the rear door. “Let’s go. Out of the car.”
Olivia stepped out. She wobbled, then caught her balance.
Sharp climbed out and stood next to her, blinking as his eyes adjusted to the bright light. The car had been driven into a small, empty warehouse. The overhead doors were down. There were no windows or signs to indicate where they were. A second black sedan was angled next to theirs. The sound of the car door shutting echoed in the two-story space.
The building was narrow, with a pallet of boxes in the center stacked six high. Sharp wondered what was inside them. Four men sat in chairs or leaned against the wall. Most were dressed in well-fitted jeans and T-shirts, like young professionals at work on casual Friday. Despite their lounging postures, they were focused much too intensely on Olivia and Sharp. He saw no guns but didn’t doubt that they had weapons handy.
The look in their eyes sent a chill through Sharp’s belly. They were dark and cold and filled with a vicious malice that Sharp had seen only a few times in his long police career. Every one of these men was extremely dangerous. Each would kill without blinking.
Hell, these men would kill if there wasn’t anything good to watch on Netflix.
Sharp automatically put his body between the men and Olivia, not that it would matter. If these men wanted to hurt her, there would be nothing Sharp could do to protect her. He was outnumbered six to one. One of the men sneered at Sharp’s chivalrous gesture.
They all knew it was an empty act.
Offices lined one wall. A man came out of one of the doors. In jeans and a polo shirt, he was whipcord-lean. Sharp pictured the photos on the whiteboard. This man looked exactly like Joe Martin had twenty-five years before.
“Aaron, bring them in,” a voice commanded from the room.
Clearly Aaron, Tina’s half brother, was still involved in his father’s business.
Aaron waved them forward. The door was guarded by a man the size of a refrigerator. The guard’s head was shaved, and the biceps that bulged out below his shirtsleeves were as big around as Sharp’s head.
Aaron stepped aside and gestured toward the open door. “After you.”
Sharp went in first. A rectangular table and eight chairs were set up like a conference room. Smoke filled the room. An older man sat at the head of the table. A cane was hooked on the table at his side. Sharp didn’t need an introduction to know this was Joe Martin, although he’d aged significantly since the photo on the whiteboard back at the office was taken. He looked much older than sixty. Prison had ruined him. He was twenty pounds underweight, and his skin was an unhealthy white. He wore gray slacks and a black long-sleeve button-down shirt with a dark-gray sport coat. Yet, despite his physical weakness, he radiated power.
When Joe walked into a room, everyone knew it. He had that same vicious look in his eyes as the men in the warehouse but amplified to the one hundredth power. Joe’s eyes also gleamed with acute intelligence.
The end of his cigarette flared as he dragged on it. “Have they been searched?” he asked Aaron.
Aaron nodded. “Yes.”
“Were they carrying weapons?” Joe flicked the end of his cigarette into an ashtray.
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