“And we’ll drive ourselves and them crazy if we keep focusing on it,” Jem had added.
“You were already there,” Key pointed out.
Now Jem concentrated on putting a microphone and camera buttons in some of the high-fashion bags and accessories Drea would wear when she met with Landon. Grace had taken her shopping, with Dare as their escort.
He’d grumbled something about it being horrible, but he’d come home with new clothes, Jem noted.
But the transformation hadn’t stopped with clothing. Drea spent part of the day at some kind of spa—and Dare got a manicure, Grace was quick to point out—and when she came home, she looked beautiful, but different. She looked high society. The right makeup and hairstyle, the right dress and jewelry and suddenly Drea was Andrea, pronounced with an O sound.
Drea was used to dealing with deadly maniacs. She’d been threatened for so long, standing in a room with men of Landon’s caliber wasn’t going to throw her.
That didn’t mean that Jem was ready to let her do it. And the fact that he’d bucked the idea so hard let him know that he had feelings for Drea. Real goddamned feelings, and he’d somehow let that happen when he’d promised himself he never, ever would.
She stood in front of him almost shyly, the expensive fabric of the well-cut dress draping over her perfectly. Her legs were long and lean and finely muscled and the heels she wore emphasized that.
He’d forced himself to stop sleeping in her bed weeks ago, when the planning intensified. They hadn’t done much more than kiss, even though he wanted much more.
“You look fucking fantastic,” he told her, and she blushed.
“Jem, come on. I don’t look like me.”
“No, you don’t. And when you’re done, I’m going to help you wash it all off,” he promised.
Her blush deepened. “Stop. I’m already nervous. I’ve never dressed like this. I feel . . .”
“Hot?”
“Silly,” she countered. “Why do women feel like they need all of this?”
He shrugged. “Armor. I carry my gun, a woman shields herself with makeup and earrings and bags.”
The meeting was set up for two o’clock. Drea had perfect identification—Jem saw to it that there were no mistakes. The real wife was in federal custody—Landon wouldn’t know that. For all intents and purposes, S8 made it look as though the feds leaked that she was still missing, that they were searching for her. The situation played right into their laps.
Except Jem would have to let Drea out of reach to pull this off. Landon insisted on sending a car for her. Jem would wait at the second safe house with her, but after she got into the car, she was on her own.
He’d spent the better part of the month making her brush up on her self-defense skills. She went to the shooting range. He gave her knives that were sewn into strategic places in her dress, ceramic ones that wouldn’t set off any metal detectors. She had pills she could dissolve into people’s drinks, if things got bad.
“It’s just a meeting, Jem. She’ll pull it off and be right back to us,” Gunner said, but his voice was tight too.
Everything they’d done over the past months had led up to this. Key and Dare, and sometimes Jem, had spent the time traveling to various ports and thwarting cargo ships filled with women and children. Gunner had the edge, knowing Landon so well, and although Landon might suspect Gunner was behind it, he had way too many fires to put out and his resources were stretched thin trying to plug the holes in his business. Because Gunner also stopped two major criminals from leaving the country with Landon’s men. It was all taking a chance, but that’s what they were all about.
Word was beginning to leak out that Landon’s business was suffering. Add to that the other men that S8 put out of business, traffickers and other businessmen who would normally support Landon, and Jem knew the walls had begun to close in on Landon.
He leaned back and snapped a picture of Drea, the way he’d been doing over the past months. And he fed it into the facial-recognition software.
They’d run tests on Drea for weeks now, with all different programs, and there had never been a hit.
Until now.
When the computer started beeping, he stared at it in surprise. Thankfully, Avery had called Drea away, so she hadn’t noticed, but Key had. Stared over Jem’s shoulder.
“The feds are after her,” Jem told his brother, who gave a low whistle.
“She ever tell you anything about that?”
“No. Don’t know if she even knows,” Jem said. “She’s been honest about everything else and it’s the first time she’s come up in the system. Maybe that asshole ex is using her for an immunity plea?”
“Either way, they’re gonna force her to testify.”
“Dammit.” Jem sighed, because she was definitely a fugitive. It was one thing to have her hiding out from the OA. But the feds were a whole other story, and once they got their hooks into S8 . . .
“She’ll compromise us, yes. But Avery’s not going to care.”
“Avery’s not the only one on the team.”
“Jem, did you stop to think this could actually work in our favor? The guy’s wife is wanted by the feds. If Drea’s face shows up as wanted . . . can’t we just change the information on her?”
Jem could easily change Drea’s name and other details, and he would, but that didn’t change the fact that he hated this plan. “She has a right to know.”
“Agreed. You tell her, and I’ll share with the rest of the group.” Key patted Jem on the back as he walked away, calling, “Hey Drea, Jem needs to talk to you.”
Drea came over to him. She’d taken off the heels since this was only a dress rehearsal for next week. She was already tugging at the dress and he knew she’d be back in her jeans as soon as they’d let her.
For now, Avery was busy taking pictures, building up a portfolio of a life Drea didn’t have.
“What’s wrong?”
“Your face came up on the recognition software.”
“What does that mean, exactly?”
“It means someone put you into the system as wanted.” He pointed to the computer and let the screen do the talking.
“The FBI?” she asked.
“And they don’t see the picture I scanned of you—I made sure of that. You haven’t been caught, but they want you.”
“What did they say I did?” she asked, her eyes wide. “Wait. I know. Dammit.”
Her eyes were troubled. He didn’t push her, thought about how he couldn’t wait until she showered and got all that shit off her face. She’d drop her towel and pull on a T-shirt to sleep in. Then she’d run her hands through her long hair—that was the extent of her beauty routine and she always ended up with hair that looked like something out of a magazine. It amazed him every time that she was so carelessly beautiful.
He’d fallen in love with her, maybe from the second he’d seen her helping a woman most doctors would’ve gone out of their way to avoid. In that split second, he’d known everything he needed to know.
Seemed maybe he didn’t know everything.
Finally, she told him, “It’s the drugs. Morphine mainly. Some Oxy. I never gave it to them—I told Danny they’d take my medical license. But I know the clinic was robbed a few times.”
“So Danny told them they got the drugs from you?” Jem asked.
“He’d do anything to get his ass out of a sling. Especially if it means I sit in jail next to him so he can keep an eye on me.”
“What’s their main source of income?”
She shrugged. “I didn’t get involved in that. I know they did some gun runs. Some drugs, obviously. Maybe some prostitution, but nothing I have any evidence of. Danny made sure I knew just enough to keep me in line and not enough to ever get the club in trouble.”