And she tried every day to forget it wouldn’t last.
***
“I got him.”
There was a bathtub in the bedroom. It sat in front of a fireplace that looked large enough to roast a whole hog. The tub was five feet long and four feet deep and it wasn’t hard to imagine some highland warrior soaking away the aches and pains of battle. It was a tub made for another age, and Alex was more or less obsessed with it because it was wildly impractical (It was abathtub! In thebedroom!) and utterly perfect, and she was up to her neck in bubbles when the words came—
“You haven’t asked, but I did it. I got him.”
“Kozlov?” King put his book down. He was lying on the bed, little horn-rimmed glasses perched on his nose. She would have mocked him for those years ago, but now they made her insides turn to lava.
Maybe that’s why her skin felt so cold when she said, “There’s a flash drive.”
She couldn’t face him when she said it, but that didn’t mean she couldn’t see.
In the mirror, she watched his face change, everything going alert. Like a Cold War bunker flickering to life after decades of collecting dust and being forgotten. He’d been out of the game for five years, but no one ever stops being a spy, let alone someone named Michael Kingsley.
“So it’s true.”
He didn’t try to deny that he’d been paying attention to the chatter, and Alex didn’t try to lie.
“Whatever rumors you’ve heard...” She ran a hand through the soapy water. “Yeah. They’re true. The backup was on the yacht.”
“And the yacht is at the bottom of the Mediterranean.”
Alex gave a shudder and a shrug and a nod all at once. The water was hot, but she was suddenly cold and numb and shivering. When she closed her eyes, she could feel the waves lapping against her, telling her to go to sleep. To just give up. That her mission was over and it would be okay to just let go.
“Kozlov has nothing without it.” She balled a washcloth in her fist and squeezed until the warm water trickled through her fingers. “Nothing except a lot of guns and goons and nothing to lose, so...”
“He’s more dangerous than ever.”
Alex nodded and let herself sink lower.
“Alex?” When had he gotten out of bed and crossed the room? She didn’t know. She just knew he was there and leaning over the tub, steam on his skin and fire in his eyes. “Where is it? Where’s the drive?”
“It’s...” The words didn’t come and she didn’t know why. She should have told him. She could have. Shewouldhave. She was wet and naked in front of him. She’d blown her nose in front of him approximately five thousand times. She’d told him about her sister and her past. Alex had shown King... herself. Not her cover or her persona or her lies. He sawher, and that made him dangerous. Because she trusted him, but she didn’t trust herself.
“It’s someplace safe,” she told him.
“Tell me where it is and I’ll go get it.”
“You can’t.”
He didn’t ask her to explain, because King wouldn’t waste time with such a silly question. “Then let’s go get it together.”
Alex curled up in the water and let her cheek rest on his cupped hand. “It’s safe where it is. If I go get it, they’ll find it, and then they’ll find me.” She rolled her head back and looked at the flames. It was harder than it should have been to say, “I don’t want them to find me.”
He took off his clothes, then slipped into the tub behind her, pulled her back against his chest, and held her tight. “Neither do I.”
Chapter Fifty-Six
Present Day
Scotland
King
King never wanted to go back to Scotland. There’d been a time when he’d thought he never would. But, in the end, he’d invested too much money there. Too much time. Too much history. And too much her.