She snorted. “Yeah, and then all those girls in that shipping container would be dead right now or worse, for Jacob to ship them off to God knows where.” She pushed back her pink strands behind her ear. “Besides, there was no way in hell you would’ve pulled the trigger.” She smiled. “You would now though.”
“London.” Kai walked down the aisle toward me.
Georgie smirked and leaned over to whisper, “You see… that man has it bad for you. He even wants to hold your hand during landing. You think your cupcake is scared?”
I laughed, glancing up at Kai as he approached. No, he didn’t look scared or annoyed. He just looked delicious. I got up. “I don’t think Kai has that emotion in him.”
Georgie sobered. “Yeah. I didn’t either—until you.”
The tunnels were damp and cold with cracked cement walls, and I could hear the occasional squeak of mice or worse, rats, but I tried not to think of it as I closely followed Kai. We jogged most of the way with Kai’s hand in mine, his other holding a pencil-thin flashlight that gave off a blueish tinge.
Deck took up the rear with Georgie behind me. I was completely out of my element, carrying a gun and wearing a bulletproof vest that Kai insisted on. Georgie and Deck had them on, too, but Kai didn’t. He’d said he’d never worn one and wasn’t starting now. It made me nervous because, despite Kai being as experienced as he was, I still wondered if he didn’t fear death because he didn’t care if he died.
And that was the scariest of all because I cared. I loved him and I couldn’t bear the thought of being separated again.
Kai’s light hit the steel door and we stopped. I was breathing heavily from the jog, but I was the only one. Now, I was kicking myself for not taking some kind of sport or doing an exercise program. But a few years ago, I never thought I’d be holding more than a test tube and sitting on a swivel stool, rolling across linoleum floors as I conducted experiments.
“You good?” Kai asked.
“Yeah.” I was as good as I could be breaking into a lab I’d spent more time in growing up than my own house. A lab that had dangerous men watching it. A lab that had developed a drug we knew nothing about, but my dad did. “My dad…” His car was in the parking lot and it was past eleven at night. I was terrified that maybe they’d already gotten to him. That his car was here but he was…. I couldn’t say it.
“He’s here. We’ll get him out,” Kai said, knowing exactly what I was thinking.
I nodded then gestured to the door. “There is another door at the top and it opens into a hallway where there are two labs.”
“Deck.” Kai stepped back, taking my hand and urging Georgie back, too. Deck approached the door and shot the padlock off then unraveled the chain on the metal bar and pushed it open, his gun still drawn.
“Clear.”
We ran up the flight of stairs and Deck was already crouched and fiddling with the lock on the door handle. “Need me to do that?” I asked Deck.
He snorted and shot me a scowl. I’d easily picked his lock in his penthouse.
Deck stood. “We’re doing this in five minutes.” Deck looked at me then Georgie. “You got me, Georgie? No distractions. If London’s father isn’t there, you get in the computer, find what we need, copy, delete, and then get out.”
Georgie sidled up to him. “I get it, baby. A quickie. In and out. You’re good at that.”
Deck snorted and shook his head. Georgie laughed.
I bit my lip to keep from smiling because Deck wasn’t laughing and neither was Kai. He handed me a white lab coat from his bag, which I put over my vest, and Georgie did the same.
Kai put his hand on my hip and urged me toward him then looked down, brows raised. “Gun, London.”
Shit. “Right.” I put it in my lab coat pocket. Although, if anyone looked close enough, they’d see it. With the weight of it, my coat was slightly skewed, but all of this didn’t concern me. My focus was on the possibility of seeing my father.
Vic was on the roof of an adjacent building with a sniper rifle looking for anyone who might be Vault. Since it was so late, there were few people still in the buildings besides security.
Tristan and Chess had stayed at his house to watch Connor. Josh and Tyler were flying in the following morning, which meant the microchips were now destroyed and anyone who had been tracking them knew it had been a false trail.
“Ready?” Deck asked.
I nodded, as did Kai, and Deck opened the door. There was one security guard to pass in order to get to my dad’s lab. Kai said he’d ‘deal with him.’ I didn’t know exactly what that meant, but innocent people getting hurt was something I wasn’t willing to sacrifice. Most of the people in this building I’d known since I was a kid.
We decided on my plan instead, so Deck and Kai wore suits and ties, teamed with Kai carrying his black bag, which wasn’t holding any sort of business-related material, but security wouldn’t know that.
We walked down the corridor…Kai beside me, Deck and Georgie behind us. When we rounded the corner a few steps away from my father’s lab, a security guard stopped us.