Шрифт:
“Hola, mi amigo,” Ace responded easily, shutting down the engine.
“Ah, Se~nor Ace, you brought company.” He punched Ace in the arm. “Is about time. Me and my wife, we think it will never happen. Welcome, lady, welcome.”
He reached across Ace, extending a hand. Ace pushed the man’s hand back. Nicole frowned at Ace.
“Perhaps I should make some introductions, first. Ricardo, this is Nicole Jackson. With WorldNet. Nicole, my friend, Ricardo Maldanado.”
Ricardo quickly dropped his hand to his side, as if the threat of her touch offended him. She turned the full force of her scowl on Ace. He’d known this would happen. But why? She wanted answers. Now.
“Later, Nicole,” he promised. “You can have a piece of me later.”
“You bring her here?” Ricardo demanded, waving his arms like the dodo bird he’d spoken of. “Are you loco? This is too much, even for you.”
“What did you want me to do? Kick her out of my plane?”
“That would be better than bringing her here, no?”
“I don’t think the lady likes parachutes.”
“No. No.” The man frantically shook his head, then glanced over his shoulder, his wide-eyed alarm clear. “Is too dangerous, Se~nor Ace. You must take her away. Pronto.”
A shiver of fear, unlike anything she’d ever felt, started at the base of her spine and spiked its way up, until it shimmered at her nape. “No,” Nicole said. She clutched Ace’s biceps and felt the tension coiled in solid muscle. She’d come too far; her future, and everything she’d always worked for, was on the line. She couldn’t quit. Couldn’t lose. “I must meet with Governor Rodriguez. Please.”
Because it vanished so quickly, she might only have imagined the momentary melting in Ace’s glacier-cold eyes.
“Relax, Ricardo. I’ll take care of the se~norita.“
The man shook his head in jerky motions. “No, no. Is too risky.”
“That’s my business, Ricardo. Besides, the lady here knows what she’s getting herself into.”
Under the faded shirt he wore, she felt Ace’s muscles bunch and constrict. “Tell that lazy brother of yours to get his butt over here with the taxi.”
Ricardo clasped his hands together in the motion of prayer and lifted them heavenward. He rolled his eyes. “Madre de Dios.”
“You’ll be meeting Her soon enough if you don’t do as I say, Ricardo. “Comprende?”
“Ah, s'i, s'i.” He bobbed his head, then hurried away.
With the man’s absence, the cockpit felt even smaller, the air lightning-charged. Frogs croaking and crickets chirping provided the only relief from the eerie silence.
“Satisfied?”
Ace had put himself on the line for her. And she had the uncomfortable feeling his help came with a price.
He turned slightly, his muscle flexing. She realized her hand was still wrapped around his upper arm. With a start, she unfurled her fingers and pretended the queasy feeling deep inside was from the flight and Ricardo’s strange reaction, and not from the powerful effect Ace exacted on her.
“I didn’t lie, did I? You really do know what you’re getting yourself into? You know what you’re up against?”
“You?” she asked, strangely breathlessly.
“Me?” He shook his head. “Hell, honey, I’m the least of your worries.”
His voice contained a grainy undercurrent of urgency that made her uneasy.
“A lot of people don’t want you here, Nicole. That should have been obvious by the meeting you just had with my friend. I can guarantee you my enemies won’t be so gracious.”
“What’s going on here?” Tendrils of apprehension held her in their grips.
“A small revolution, Nicole. Sparked by you and your client.”
She gulped and the blood drained from her face.
“Ricardo’s right. If you had any sense, we’d get the plane refueled and be outta here before anyone knows you ever landed. You can be safe and sound in your bed, probably in your penthouse apartment, before another sun sets.”
Ace shifted. The hilt of his knife reflected prisms of light from the faint runway lamps. She was in a hostile land, entrusting her life to a virtual stranger. Ace hadn’t candy-coated facts. Though the governor extended an invitation, others wouldn’t be so kind.