FK's Terminal 4. She had abandoned the highway, scrambled over a perimeter fence, and hitched a ride on
r chin in the rough fabric. She jammed a black baseball cap
welcome shield, a cacophony of rolling suitcases, garbled announcements, and
rd the signs for the shuttle to the private aviation hangars. She had to keep them busy, ke
main entrance made her h
re pushing their way through the crow
ing shield as she drifted toward the center of the terminal. The men scanned
she s
lanx of bodyguards, an aura of cold fury radiating from him. His
e feet. The pressure was immense. Every second they watched her was a second they forgot the car approaching
he tour group. She deliberately veered into th
sh of metal and plastic, sending suitcas
it momentarily silenced the terminal. An
chaos, through the dozens of startled faces, and locked onto
es nar
he started moving toward her,
wor
e hangars, but in the opposite direction, tow
desperate, panicked rhythm. The sound of his heavy fo
f retractable belts and uniformed agents, when a
, spinning her around. The baseball cap f
e was
scade of dark, disheveled hair, was il
at. The face he had seen in his dreams, in his nightma
er arm, the veins on hi
m his lungs, a mixture of fury and a p
re was no joy in this reunion, no flicker of warmth. Her eyes w
, though her heart was pounding against her ribs l
coming up to grip her other arm. They were inches apart
voice a low growl. "And who is the ha
tiny, imperceptible wave of reli
k, a bitter, mocking l
Clements, terrified of a ghost in his machine
rk, flashed with a dangerous fire. He tightene
sed, his face a mask of rage. "I
d smile playing on her lips. "I'm right h
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