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  as happy to be alone on this little adventure, and given what a pain in his ass she’d been, he’d have liked nothing more than to let her be.

  Except for one thing. Several, actually.

  He could feel her nerves just beneath her cool surface, not to mention her fear.

  And then there was the fact that he couldn’t stand the thought of walking away from her, danger or not.

  As a result, he was sticking to her like super glue.

  Holding the handrail for support, she came down the stairs in rain coming down in sheets. A gust of wind blew the hood from her face, revealing how pale and wan she was, and looking just vulnerable enough to sucker punch him with her eyes alone.

  It was stupid, asinine even, but suddenly, he wanted to hug her, baby her, which would have been as smart to his physical well-being as babying a spitting cobra. Wrapping his fingers around her arm, he guided her quickly down the last step.

  “Thank you.” She surprised him by not pulling away. Her hair blew in his face, her scent coming to him on the wind as the rain pounded both them and the tarmac, sounding like a pack of angry bees. She slid her hood back over her head as together, they ran across the tarmac.

  Just inside the small metal hangar that served as the private sector of the airport, they shook off some of the rain and looked around. There was a single wood desk, behind which sat a mountain of a man smoking a cigar and eating a sub sandwich at the same time, all while gabbing on a telephone about some “fucking Cessna.” Above them, the rain pounded the metal building, making it shudder and moan.

  When the man hung up the phone, Maddie walked up to him. “Have you seen me already tonight?” she asked.

  The guy blinked. “Huh?”

  “Have you seen anyone who looks just like me come through here tonight?”

  The guy took her in from top to bottom. “Lady, I’ve never seen anyone like you before. You’re hot.”

  “Okay, thanks for that,” Brody said dryly, pulling Maddie away from the desk.

  There were several couches for waiting purposes, and beyond that, a vending machine stocked the usual heart attack–inducing items. Brody headed directly for it, taking Maddie with him. “Name your poison.”

  She curled her upper lip. “From there? No, thanks.”

  He pulled some change from his pocket. “You’re a food snob.”

  “Yes.” She eyed him as he bought himself three milk chocolate bars. “Seriously, where do you put all that crap?”

  He patted his stomach, and she let out a low, disagreeing snort.

  “And what does that mean?” he asked, wondering if he’d just been insulted.

  “Like you don’t know that in spite of your hideous junk food habit, you have the best abs on this side of the equator.”

  Uh, no, he hadn’t known that, but that she thought so made him grin like an idiot. “What about the other side of the equator?”

  “Shut up, Brody. You inherited good genes, and you know it.”

  He didn’t know how to tell her that the only thing he’d inherited was his mean gene. Oh, and his pickpocket abilities, which he’d honed as a youth. Yeah, that had come in handy. Thanks, dear Dad.

  “Someday, you’ll be old with a big belly,” she said. “One that flops over your belt.”

  “Flops over my belt?” Now there was a disturbing image.

  “I’m just saying, you’d better watch the chocolate. It’s going to sneak up on you.”

  “Maybe I burn it off trying to help people.”

  “People who didn’t want your help,” she reminded him. Turning away, she walked toward the front desk, but Brody hooked her good arm and brought her back around.

  “What?”

  “Where to?” he asked.

  Her eyes flickered, and she pulled her hood back up, hiding from him, goddamnit. “Getting a cab.”

  “To . . . ?” he inquired.

  “About that. I’ve been thinking.”

  “Shit.” He bent down a little to see beneath the hood and looked her right in the eyes. “Save your time. You said we’re a unit, and we’re a damn unit.”

  “Until this is over.”

  “Damn A straight. So give me some more details.”

  “Okay.” She shook her head as if she couldn’t believe she was doing this. “I told you, I need to stop my sister from doing something stupid.”

  “Like making that nine o’clock meeting on Stone Cay.”

  “Right. But I didn’t tell you that it might get ugly.”

  “I’ve seen ugly before.” At the doubt on her face, he arched a brow. “We’re a unit, remember?”

  “Only until we’re back in the real world.” She pointed a finger to the middle of his chest. “You remember that.”

  “Finally. We’re on the same page.”

  “Why is this so important to you anyway?”

  Hell of a question, one he didn’t have a real answer for, at least none that he liked. “Because it’s important to you. Now let’s go.”

  “Brody—”

  “Don’t argue with your husband, woman.”

  “Oh, my God, stop saying that!”

  He rented a car and got them on the road in the blackest, stormiest night he’d seen in a good, long while. Through the headlights and straining windshield wipers, they could see nothing but the slicked road lined with palms still nearly bent in half in the wind. “Anytime now, you’re going to be happy I’m here.”

  She snorted.

  He downshifted the piece-of-shit car and managed to keep them on the crazy road. “I’m serious.”

  “Okay, I’ll let you know when I’m happy to have you here.”

  “You do that,” he said grimly and outsteered a fucking golf cart on the road in front of them.

  “Renting a car was a completely unnecessary expense.”

  “Yes, well, it’s my expense, not yours.” He tried to turn up the speed of the windshield wipers, but apparently, the highest speed was a snail’s pace.

  “Since when do you throw your money around? Usually, you’re so tight you squeak when you walk.”

  He slid her a glance. “Hey.”

  “Admit it. You only rented the car because you can’t stand taking a cab. You like the control.”

  “I do not.”

  “Then why wouldn’t you let me make the arrangements? It’s what I do for a living.”

  “I realize that. I sign your paychecks, remember?”

  “I could have gotten you a cheaper car.”

  “No one could have gotten me a cheaper car. I needed more leg room.”

  “I meant a better car.”

  Okay, that may be. “The only other car was smaller. I needed more leg room.”

  “You need head room,” she said. “How you ever get through a damn door with that big, fat head is beyond me.”

  “You’re sweet.”

  She nearly choked on that. “Sweet?”

  “Yeah. You only insult those you care about. Face it . . .” He shot her a look, waggling his brow. “You like me.”

  She stared at him. “You’re crazy. And you still paid too much. Admit it—you like your control.”

  “Okay, I like my control. Now admit you like me.”

  “I like your damn fat head.”

  He snickered in triumph and kept driving. “You going to tell me where to anytime soon? Or should I guess?”

  “The docks. We need to stop Leena from taking a charter boat to Stone Cay.”

  Looking out into the nasty night, he laughed. “No one’s going to charter a boat in this storm.”

  “Hopefully not. But I just want to make sure she doesn’t try to go tonight.”

  No one would be going anywhere tonight. Not in this mess. But arguing with her was like beating his head against a brick wall. The brick wall of Maddie’s stubbornness. So he drove her to the docks where she was told by two different charter guys exactly what Brody had already said.

  No boat out tonight.