Night Fury: First Act (Page 6)

Night Fury: First Act (Night Fury #1)(6)
Author: Belle Aurora

Smiling softly, he approaches me slowly, as if he would a frightened animal. He holds his arms open to me, and with little-to-no thought at all, I step into his receiving arms. He wraps me up tight, and I close my eyes and inhale the zesty citrus-based scent at his collar. I forgot what it feels like to have a man hold you.

No longer nervous, but dizzy, I breathe into his shoulder, “Hi.”

His stubble scrapes my forehead as he moves to kiss me there. “Missed you, Cat.”

“I missed you too.” Clark had been a great friend to me before I was pulled from the program. We hung out for years before—

Well, just…before.

Someone clearing their throat breaks the spell I’m under.

I gently extract myself from Clark and turn to face a grinning Frankie and the inquisitive looking new guy. His eyes search mine a moment before he masks his curiosity and steps forward, holding out his hand. “I’m going to go out on a limb here and guess you’re Catarina.”

I’m momentarily stunned.

Stuck in my place in front of Clark, I look at the new guy through lowered brows.

Taller than Clark, but not as tall as Bob, his posture screams military man—legs parted slightly, his presence fierce. His body built the way it is, I feel small next to him. Buzzed light brown hair with green eyes, he watches me as if I may bolt any second.

Not going to happen.

My hand slides into his as I ask quietly, “How did you know that?”

He grins. “I know everything about you.”

Oh, my.

Gently dropping my hand, he clears his throat, crosses his arms over his chest and spouts information as if he himself were a computer. “Catarina White. Age eighteen. 5’6. 140—” I make a noise and glare at him. He smirks and continues, “I mean 130 pounds,” he eyes my body under my plain clothes, “of course. Shoulder-length black hair. Light brown eyes. Birthmark in the shape of a dove on your left inner thigh.” My face flames but he ignores it and carries on, “Trained by the best of the best. Black belt—E1—in Krav Maga. Highly trained in Eskrima. The weapons you are best at are the baston and largo mano yantok. Excelled in Fencing. Also highly skilled in weaponless combat fighting styles, namely Sambo. An expert in sword and dagger knife fighting, you favour the saber grip. You prefer an ivory-handled twenty-four inch Katana sword, which you affectionately named Koneko, which means kitten.” He smiles a cutesy smile my way before it falls and he continues quietly, “Your first job didn’t go too well. Target: James—”

I cut him off by snapping, “I get the point. Thank you.” I work at the pins attaching my habit, removing them one-by-one. When my hair is free, I ask, “Who are you?”

“I’m Marco. Codename: Flamethrower. Been here a year.”

My lip quirks up. “Flamethrower?”

Clark rests his hands on my shoulders, leans down to my ear and says an amused, “’Cause he can burn through any firewall put to him.” He sighs dreamily. “He’s amazing.”

Great. My old crush has a bromance on an ass**le.

Marco searches my pink-cheeked face before smirking, knowing he’s shown me up.

“Wonderful. Look forward to working with you,” I blatantly lie.

Chapter Five

My afternoon consists of preparing myself for tonight. I expected to be working closely with my old friend Clark, but instead, I’m put in a mildly uncomfortable situation when I’m paired with Marco to take me through who tonight’s target is.

Frankie and Clark make their way over to the furthest whiteboard, where Clark begins chatting away furiously. Frankie nods her head as he speaks, and I know they’re discussing upcoming contracts.

Feeling a little awkward, I wrap my arms around myself and wait for Marco to instruct me.

He watches me.

I watch him right back, my gaze unwavering.

He grins.

I do not.

He jerks his chin to the second office chair by his desk. “Yo, sit your ass down.”

This pisses me off. “You could ask nicely, you know.”

His grin turns into a smirk. I’m coming to learn is his trademark, and I can’t help but notice he is extremely attractive. It also makes me want to show him how well I was trained by gifting him a broken arm.

Marco surprises me when he stands, moves the chair right behind me and waits for me to take a seat.

I wait a moment…it could be a trick.

When he makes no move to send me flat on my butt and shows unexpected patience, I sit. He pushes my chair in gently, takes a seat next to me and states, “I can be a gentleman.”

Shame tightens my chest. It seems I’ve misjudged him.

His smile dazzles me. “It’s just I choose not to be.”

Nope, I was right on the money about this cocky bastard.

I roll my eyes and he chuckles, low and rough. The sound caresses me into awareness that this man is dangerous in more than one way. Voice cracking, I ask, “So, you’re ex-military, right?”

Clicking away at the keyboard, he jerks his chin and replies, “Yes, ma’am. Army.”

“How’d you get recruited?”

He barks out a laugh. “I’ve got no f**king idea. Bob turns up at my house one day dressed as Father Robert, tells me he has something to discuss with me.” He turns to face me and admits with a soft smile, “The man could sell ice to Eskimos. The very next day, I arrived at Mirage. Sorta never left.”

“I guess I’m wondering how you ended up at this end of the spectrum. You look like you can hold your own; I’m sure you’ve fought before.”

The statement clearly makes Marco uncomfortable. His body stiffens and his features tighten. “Honey, I’ve seen more than my fair share of carnage. I guess you could say I’m done with it. Call me retired.”

The way he says this only spurs more questions in my meddlesome mind. I want to ask a thousand intrusive questions, but instead, I ask, “How old are you?”

“Twenty-nine last week.”

My brows rise. “Happy belated birthday.” He looks younger than twenty-nine. I’d say he looks more in his mid-twenties.

He grunts, and I take it as a ‘thank you’.

He looks distractedly at the computer screen and mumbles, “Gimme a sec. I just got something to do really quickly, and then we’ll get down to business.”

“No problem. Take your time.”

I swing the office chair side-to-side, pretending to be comfortable and at-home in a completely unfamiliar and alien space. That’s supposed to work, isn’t it?