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Secret Bodyguard
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Secret Bodyguard
Copyright © January 2009, Lori Crawford
Cover art by Valerie Tibbs © January 2009
This is a work of fiction. All characters and events portrayed in this novel are fictitious or used fictitiously. All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book, or portions thereof, in any form.
ISBN: 978-0-615533-52-0
Preacher’s Kid Productions
Santa Monica, CA 90405
www.preacherskidproductions.com
Dedication
In loving memory of my greatest fan: Ruth Mae Crawford.
Chapter One
The monkey was ticking.
Trevor Cole frowned at the furry electric blue animal he’d just picked up with his right hand. The gaudy thing was wearing a purple top hat and had the nerve to grin at him all while squeezing out soft ticks that marked each second.
At first glance, the monkey appeared harmless enough. The most apparent danger seemed to be limited to its extreme ugliness. Although if he stared at it long enough, he figured he might start to see it as cute. And that’s what had Trevor removing the monkey from its unassuming box for a closer inspection. No sooner had he picked it up, than he’d felt something snap followed by the steady ticks that shredded his nerves with each passing moment that could very well be his last.
Needing to calm himself, Trevor closed his eyes and took a long, slow breath like he would before going onstage. He needed a clear head if this latest present was indeed what it sounded like it was. Trevor opened his eyes, refusing to even acknowledge the jolt of fear that seized his heart. He addressed his driver from where he sat motionless in the understated Lincoln Town Car’s back seat. He was careful to keep his grip steady on the squishy little monkey body that just filled his palm.
“We need to swing by the police station. Immediately.”
The man spared Trevor a look in the rearview mirror. “No can do, boss. You put me under strict orders to take you straight to the mansion. You have that song to finish, and I’m not supposed to let you keep procrastinating.”
“Not to alarm you, but I think the monkey is a bomb. I’m pretty sure I activated it when I picked it up.”
Trevor watched the big man’s eyes widen in alarm. His large beefy hands gripped the steering wheel so tight Trevor was convinced that it would snap in two. Trevor hired the man in part because of those big hands. He had no trouble keeping a line of determined fans in check. Doubtless it didn’t hurt that those hands were attached to six foot nine, two hundred and seventy five pounds of solid muscle. Trevor figured hiring a guy who looked like him would get his best friend off his back about his lax security. What does a musician need with top of the line protection anyway? Talk about ego. Trevor conveniently ignored the monkey for the duration of that line of reasoning.
“Dude. Why’d you pick it up?”
“Not the most pressing issue at the moment.”
“Can you see how much time we have?”
Trevor frowned. “Let’s just get to the police station. They’ll handle it.”
The bodyguard shook his head. “I didn’t sign up for this. You said someone was playing pranks on you. Not trying to kill you.”
“We don’t know this isn’t a prank.” He struggled to hold his voice steady and even while he tried to convince himself of this along with his driver.
Trevor fought to keep his balance when the bodyguard slammed on the brakes. The car skidded to a halt in the middle of a busy intersection. Drivers behind them honked at their audacity of stopping at a perfectly good green light.
“What are you doing?” Trevor asked, thankful the jolt hadn’t set off the monkey.
The bodyguard turned and glared at Trevor. “I have a wife and kids, man.”
With that, the guy threw open his door and fled. Trevor watched in shock and some admiration at the speed with which a man of his size disappeared. Some bodyguard. He could forget about a final paycheck. Kids or not. Maybe a partial … Trevor shook his head. He had to get moving. Just in case he was holding the real thing this time.
Trevor unbuckled his seatbelt and inched from the backseat, careful not to disturb the monkey. He held his hand in place inside the vehicle until he’d gotten his body outside and stable. Not the easiest thing to do while his heart was thrumming a mile a minute. He was never one for sixth senses or whatnot, but something was starting to tell him that this was the real thing this go round.
Sweat beaded on his forehead when other motorists honked and swerved around him. Trevor flattened himself against the car’s door and cursed under his breath when some idiot in a truck drove by him with only inches to spare. He was relieved to feel anger take over his fear. He should try to hold on to that fury. He maneuvered behind the wheel just after the light turned red. Another round of angry honking ensued while Trevor fought to get the car in gear with his left hand then guided it from the intersection. It was all so surreal. One second he was thinking of ways to increase his business expenses to decrease his taxes, and the next …
It was an extraordinarily bad idea to walk inside the small police station with a ticking bomb in his hand. Trevor figured it was best they come to him. He eased the Town Car to a halt in the Authorized Vehicles Only parking lot. Using his available hand, he fumbled his cell phone from his pocket, opened it, and hit a speed dial button. In his anger, he pressed on the phone just a bit too hard. He eased up when he heard it creak in protest.
Detective Cameron Dobbs answered on the second ring.
“Yo, Trev. Don’t tell me Marcy called you already. I just hung up with her. She’s expecting you for dinner this Saturday, but I suggest you invent other plans. She’s dug up another date for you and—”
“Cam, I have a problem.” Trevor looked toward the grated window he knew concealed his best friend’s office.
“What’s up?”
“I’m out back. I think somebody sent me a bomb, and I don’t think I should put it down.”
“Jeez, Trev. Stay put.” The phone clicked when Cam hung up.
Claustrophobic and more than a little fed up with the fear that was trying to take over, Trevor stepped from the car. Disgusted to see his hand trembling, he rested the monkey on the hood. There were people who handled this kind of thing every day. Without even batting an eye no less.
Within moments, the back door flew open. Four guys in bomb gear dashed out and swarmed him. Case in point. These guys were rushing toward danger, and not one of them was shaking in his government-issued boots. Seconds later, Trevor frowned when they wrapped him like an adult sized baby in some kind of bright yellow blanket and jammed a hat with a face shield on his head before starting to work on his still-exposed hand.
Trevor followed the team leader’s terse instructions to the letter. Ten minutes after he’d pulled up, the monkey and his hand parted in peace. Trying to keep his shaky knees to himself, Trevor’s stride was a bit stilted while he followed another officer inside the station. Cam was waiting just inside the door, a thunderous look on his hard, aristocratic face. He thumped his wheelchair down on all four wheels to face Trevor head-on. Trevor avoided his angry stare by concentrating on shucking the protective gear.
“What kind of bodyguard doesn’t check your packages first?” Cam looked around. “Where is that big goof anyway?”
“He sort of took off when I told him what it was.” In vain, Trevor plucked at his sweat stained shirt and worked up the nerve to look Cam in the eye. He sniffed and then noticed a uniformed officer escorting an unkempt prisoner past them. Trevor hoped with fervor that the sudden stench came from the man and not him. Though he wasn’t about to lay odds on it.
“What the … where’d you find that idiot anyway? The phone book?” C
am asked, interrupting Trevor’s assessment of the other stinky dude.
Trevor looked at Cam, but couldn’t quite meet his eyes while he searched for a way to change the subject so he wouldn’t have to admit that was just what he’d done. When his friend popped up on his back wheels again, Trevor knew that Cam had read his silence for what it was—confirmation.
“That’s it. I’m getting you a bodyguard myself. Today.” Cam spun in his chair, and rolled off into his office. Trevor chased after him.
“Hey, Cam, it’s not necessary. We still don’t know that the thing was a bomb. Besides, I am capable of taking care of myself.” Which is why he refused to have a staff to wait on him hand and foot. Hiring the type of bodyguard he knew Cam would insist he have would start him down the slippery slope of everything he hated about stardom.
A muffled bang reverberated from the parking lot. Startled, the men looked toward the door. After a moment, Cam turned to level an irritated scowl at Trevor that dared him to try the whole prank argument again before picking up the phone to dial. Trevor scowled back to show he wasn’t intimidated and watched Cam’s fingers jab the numbers on a dial pad that had seen better years. Suspicions confirmed, Trevor hit the switch hook.
“Absolutely not. This is not worth Trecam’s time.”
Cam stared Trevor down. “Protecting the guy who funds their operation is not worth their time? You’ve lost your mind.”
“I just think Caitlyn and crew have better things to do than follow around some so called celebrity who might have an issue. Besides, the police are more than capable of taking care of this.” Trevor watched Cam’s chest expand with pride at the mention of his fellow brothers in blue. Even though he was co-owner of one of the top security firms in the world, Detective Cameron Dobbs was first and foremost a cop. Trevor wasn’t above using that knowledge to his full advantage to get what he wanted. Or what he didn’t want and that was Trecam’s involvement. Seeing his ploy taking effect, Trevor sank onto the ratty couch Cam kept in his otherwise immaculate office.
“Given the time, we can get to the bottom of this. But I worry that you’re running out of it.” Leveling a narrowed gaze on his friend, Cam replaced the phone receiver in its cradle. Trevor knew the man had just put him under the microscope of his keen detective skills so he fought to relax his posture and put a little flip in his tone. There was no way Trevor was going to give him even the smallest inkling that he couldn’t handle this stalker situation or whatever it was without Trecam.
“I’m going on tour soon. I’ll be out of reach. You’ll have all the time you need.” At least that’s what Trevor hoped. He wouldn’t give voice to his concerns. If he did, Cam would have Caitlyn on the line in two seconds flat. Once that happened, Trecam would be on the case whether he wanted them or not. Besides Caitlyn, no one even knew there were three founders instead of one. Given Trevor’s high profile occupation, Caitlyn and Cam had refused to expose his involvement with the Firm. It would make him too much of an attractive target for their adversaries. Truth be told, staying in the background of this security venture suited Trevor just fine. Too much of his life was already public. He kinda liked having a secret.
“If you remember, we didn’t go to any great lengths to hide our affiliation with the agency. You really want one of their agents poking around in my life because he’s bored? These are people adept at finding the unfindable. It would be short work to figure out I’m the Tre in Trecam.” Trevor sat forward to press home his point. “Then you, my friend, are going to find yourself back on the couch.”
Cam’s wife, Marcy, had enough to worry about with him being a cop. She’d kicked him out of their bed until he’d pulled his name off Trecam’s official masthead. Still, all someone had to do was pull the right thread and the whole truth would come tumbling out. Trevor was not about to give any of Trecam’s agents the opportunity to find those threads because they were bored babysitting him.
He was counting on Cam buying into his line of reasoning. If he did, he wouldn’t probe into Trevor’s real reason for not wanting Trecam involved. Cam would think he was nuts. Still, he couldn’t shake the feeling that having Trecam on the case would be as good as buying him a ticket on the pampered, but hated celebrity express. That was the one thing Trevor was determined to never be.
“I’m going to see if they have any questions for me and then I’m heading home,” Trevor announced when he stood. Cam raked a hand through his close-cropped, sunset red hair, making it stand up at all kinds of unnatural angles. He surprised Trevor by not raising any further objections.
“A piece of advice?” Cam wheeled out from behind his desk to follow Trevor to the door. “Never make a cell phone call while holding a bomb. It can detonate.”
Trevor blanched. He needed a little levity. Immediately. “How about I just never hold a bomb again? That sounds like a better plan.”
A grin blossomed on Cam’s face, and he slapped Trevor on the back.
“About Saturday, Marcy’s keeping this one under wraps so I can’t screen her for you.”
Trevor grimaced. “That sounds like a bad sign.”
“Believe me, it is.”
“Tell you what. I’ll host a party on the yacht this Saturday. Marcy can bring her there. See if she’s confident of herself around the groupies and hangers-on. If not, you can point out to Marcy that the mystery lady won’t be comfortable adjusting to my lifestyle. Win-win.”
Trevor and Cam pounded fists and shared a conspiratorial grin.
“Sounds like a plan. Later.” Cam wheeled around in his chair and rolled off while Trevor headed off the way he’d come in so many times.
A junior bomb tech almost ran over Cam in his haste to get to his team leader. “Sorry, sorry.”
“What’s the rush?” Cam studied the rookie’s reddening face.
“We got the visual results on the Cole bomb. There was just enough Semtex in it to damage a hand. Wouldn’t have killed him though. The rest was play dough.” The recruit’s expression filled with irritation. “Who does that? If you’re going to the trouble of building a bomb, at least try to kill the target.”
Cam fought to keep his own expression neutral. “Don’t you have results to deliver?” The recruit took off.
When Cam settled behind his desk, a photo of him and Trevor when they were boys and standing by a creek caught his attention. They were grinning from ear to ear and holding up a tiny minnow like it was a Great White. Cam tore his gaze from the photo and tried to concentrate on the stack of files in front of him. Nothing penetrated his brain except for how close he’d come to losing his best friend today. Sleeping on the couch didn’t sound any worse than not having Trevor around anymore. He was willing to risk it. Besides, Marcy would understand.
Cam picked up the phone and dialed. He drummed an impatient rhythm with his fingers on his desk.
“Caitlyn? It’s Cam. Call me when you get this message. I don’t care how late it is.”
Erica Kellogg sliced through the heated water of the Olympic-sized pool. She loved her morning swims. In particular, she loved it when the stars were still dazzling even in the predawn hours. Moments like these made her grateful for her career choice. It had never even crossed her mind before her swimming career had come to such an abrupt end, but everything had worked out for the best. Even while the thought passed through her consciousness, a little niggle of doubt sprouted. Erica ripped it out and focused on the plush headquarters that not only offered a state of the art workout facility, but also the just as modern pool Erica was enjoying on the building’s roof at present. Seemed to her, she got more use out of it than anyone else, but she wasn’t going to complain.
She would save her complaints for less trivial issues, like the fact that she’d completed her last assignment a good five days ago. She was ready and eager for action. Alas, things were just too slow at the moment. They hadn’t gotten wind of any good assassination plots. No one had been kidnapped. There wasn’t even any decent espionage happening. Wh
at was the world coming to?
Erica sputtered in disgust while she did a front walkover and then bodyrolled up to an eggbeater. Her powerful legs churned the water, propelling her sideways toward the pool’s wall.
Once she reached the side, she sank just below the surface of the deep water in a crouch to prep for a boost. Erica burst upward and raised both arms over her head then sank back to her prep position. When she surfaced for the fifth boost, she was surprised to see that her boss had materialized on the deck. Even after five and half years, Erica still marveled at how Caitlyn was able to move between points A and B in effect undetected.
“I have an assignment for you,” Caitlyn said with no preamble. Erica was used to that. She’d never heard her boss waste even one word.
Erica couldn’t keep the excitement out of her voice. She must be going solo on this one. If she weren’t, her partner would be with her or she’d be filling her in instead of Caitlyn. “Who is it? A foreign dignitary? I heard Ambassador—”
“Trevor Cole. You’ve heard of him.”
Erica noted that Caitlyn’s last words were a statement not a question. She couldn’t blame the woman. Who hadn’t heard of Trevor Cole? Erica frowned while she pulled off her nose clip and tucked it in the bottom of her suit. “Wait a minute. He’s known for his lax security, isn’t he? Something about preferring freedom.”
“Mr. Cole isn’t asking for protection. In fact, he expressly asked that we steer clear of his case.”
“Then why are we taking it?” Erica rested her goggles on her forehead to see her boss.
“He’s a friend of a friend.” Caitlyn’s unwavering gaze had Erica dropping the remaining questions that had leapt into her mind. Must be a very good friend to have put that uncharacteristic line of worry on Caitlyn’s smooth face. Hmm. Caitlyn and a rock star? It wasn’t difficult for Erica to imagine.
Even though Caitlyn was a little older than she recalled reading Trevor was, Erica suspected the woman had a wild side. She couldn’t help the speculation. It was all that wild sunset red hair Caitlyn worked to keep confined in a thick bun.