“Jamie, if we’re going to judge on stereotypes you’d be grumpy and pasty and miserly and I’d be a kid with a bloated stomach and flies in my eyes.”
“Too long in this country and I’ll be back to pasty and grumpy quick smart, don’t you worry. And on my income, I can’t be anything but miserly.” Humor. Yes. Humor was good. You couldn’t laugh and panic at the same time.
“I’ve forgotten what an income is.”
He peered out the windscreen. “How long until you’ve finished with that phone? I have an idea.”
“I’m done. I’ve uploaded the GPS data but I won’t be able to throw it into a mapping tool until I get to a computer.”
He lowered his window. “Give it here.”
She wiped her prints off it. As a double-decker sightseeing bus passed the other way, he tossed it onto the open top level. Rain had driven the tourists downstairs.
“That should have the mercenaries driving in loops around central London.”
“Nicely done,” she said, wonder in her voice. He liked hearing wonder in a woman’s voice. He’d missed hearing wonder in a woman’s voice. He’d missedhersilky voice, best heard murmuring sweet groans into his—
“How long until Putney?” she said.
“Uh. Twenty minutes. We’ll park a few blocks from your friend’s apartment and walk. Just a precaution,” he added, as her shoulders tensed. “Ninety-nine percent of precautions are unnecessary. It’s the one in a hundred that turns out to be necessary that makes the other ninety-nine worth it. But you don’t need any lessons in caution now, do you?”
He resisted pointing out MI6 headquarters across the river, a cross between a Disney castle and a tiered wedding cake.
“So...you came here because there was no one else available...?”
Shite. “Uh, well, I know the territory, so I was the obvious choice.” And the fact that Samira was the one at risk? Well, Jamie hadn’t needed time to stop and weigh things up. Some would call that his downfall. That and dopamine. “And it sounded like a bit of fun.”
“Huh.”
What did she want to hear? That he hadn’t stopped thinking about her in thirteen long months? In France she’d made it excruciatingly clear she wanted him gone, stat. And his conscious brain had told him she was dead right, for both their sakes. Other parts of him, on the other hand...
He stole a sideways glance at her. Whatever her reason for pushing him away, he’d swear indifference wasn’t it.
“A bit of fun,”she echoed. “Kidnapping a woman from a train station, hijacking an ambulance, trespassing through a hospital, impersonating a doctor, lying to police, stealing a car, drugging a man.”
“Ah, but you’re forgetting the time I saved a man’s life while under fire using a rare and controversial technique, outran a helicopter assault, engaged in hand-to-hand combat to rescue said woman, outwitted the entire Met Police force and escaped under the noses of MI5 and MI6.”
“MI6?” she said, looking around.
“Oh, we left them way behind.”
“I’m not sure if you’re brave or reckless.”
He smiled. “Definitely reckless. You, on the other hand, are brave.”
“Hardly. I’m only doing this because I have no choice.”
He shrugged. “So am I.”
“What do you mean you don’t have a choice?”
“Well, I wasn’t going to let you walk into the hands of those bastards, was I? And with guys like Flynn and Angelito—when they say they need you, you don’t say no, regardless of the cost.”
Samira was silent a minute. She pulled her glove back on. “You shouldn’t have come.”
And there it was. What had he expected?Jamie, you have to leave, she’d said that morning in France, pushing away the croissants he’d bought from the boulangerie while she’d slept in.This was a mistake.
“Samira, look, it’ll take—what?—half a day to get this evidence off to Tess? Then you’ll never have to see me again, if that’s what you want.”