Hot SEAL

Read Hot SEAL Online

Authors: Lynn Raye Harris

BOOK: Hot SEAL
3.91Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

The Hostile Operations Team

HOT SEAL: Dane & Ivy

© 2015 by Lynn Raye Harris

Find me:

[email protected]

http://lynnrayeharris.com/

Lynn on Facebook

Lynn on Twitter

HOT Readers and Fans Group on Facebook

Sign up for Lynn’s Newsletter

ABOUT THIS BOOK

Sex with the ex… It shouldn’t be this good the second time around.

Navy SEAL Dane “Viking” Erikson has sworn off women—or at least he’s sworn off one woman: DEA Agent Ivy McGill. His ex-wife.

But when they’re forced to work together on a critical military mission, Dane can’t help but notice how the one woman he shouldn’t want is the only one he can’t stop thinking about.
 

Ivy knows what it’s like to fall for a SEAL’s hard muscles and killer smile—and she knows what it’s like when everything falls apart. So why is she naked against a wall and begging Dane for more?

PROLOGUE

Five years ago…

Ivy moaned as a hand skimmed over her bare skin, coming to rest on her breast. Long fingers toyed with her nipple, sent instant lust rocketing through her core. She could hardly believe they’d already made love twice in the past few hours and she was still ready for more.

“Dane,” she whispered as he turned her in his arms and sucked her nipple into his mouth. His tongue slid around the peak, teasing, tormenting, before he let her go and moved on to the other breast.

“You’re beautiful, Ivy,” he said, rising up to settle himself between her legs. “So fucking beautiful. And you’re mine.”

He plunged into her body then, and she wrapped her arms around him, her heart filling with love and a kind of desperation that frightened her in some ways. Dane was too intense, too big and overwhelming to her senses.

And she loved him beyond reason.
 

His body took hers to heights she’d never experienced with anyone else. He elicited the kind of cries from her that would have been embarrassing if she’d thought about it from an objective point of view.

More, Dane… Harder, Dane… Fuck me, Dane…

Each time, he responded with exactly what she needed. His mouth took hers possessively, demanding surrender. She gave it to him. Gave herself to him. Wrapped herself around him as he rocked into her, as her body caught fire, as she tumbled over the edge with a sharp cry.

He came immediately after she did, and then he gathered her to him and rolled until she was cradled against his hard chest.
 

“So what’s it like being married to me so far?” he asked in a whisper.

Her heart thumped.
Married.
They were married now, had been for all of about twelve hours. She caressed the damp muscles of his chest. “Heavenly. Best decision I ever made.”

“Even if you were drunk during the ceremony?”

Ivy laughed. “Not quite drunk. Just tipsy. And so were you, I might add.”

He laughed too. “The dangers of Vegas, I guess.”

Ivy pushed herself upright to gaze down into Dane’s stunning blue eyes. A splinter of doubt gnawed at her, like always. Happiness wasn’t something she was accustomed to. In her experience, it wasn’t something that lasted for long.

It was spring break and they were still in college, though graduation was only a couple of months away. They were starting the next phase of their lives a little early, but it was okay. It
would
be okay.

“You don’t regret it, do you?” she asked.

His gaze softened and he reached up to brush her hair back from her face. “No. Do you?”

Ivy shook her head. “Absolutely not.”

When she dropped her gaze, Dane tipped her chin up with his finger. “What’s wrong, honey?”

“Aren’t you a little worried about what your parents might say?”

Dane’s eyes chilled. “I don’t care what they say. It’s my life, not theirs.”

She knew that his parents were a sore spot with him, but she’d never quite understood why. He came from a family where he’d gotten the best of everything, while she’d been bounced from foster home to foster home from the time she was eight years old. Eventually she’d ended up with her grandmother—her dad’s mother—but Beth McGill hadn’t had much to give her other than a grandmother’s love. Which had meant everything to her.

“Okay, baby,” she said. “I just don’t want them to hate me.”

Dane looked fierce. “They won’t. How could they? You’re perfect.”

Ivy’s heart thumped painfully. Dane was the only person in the world besides her grandmother who’d ever said she was perfect. She wasn’t, of course.
 

“I love you, Dane.”

He grinned and pulled her down for a kiss. “I know, honey. I love you too. Nothing can change that.”

CHAPTER ONE

Colombia, South America

Present Day

The submarine was gone. DEA agent Ivy McGill stood in the jungle with her team, listening to the
whop-whop-whop
of helicopter rotors as they beat the air nearby. They’d gotten the satellite imagery a few hours ago, and they’d busted ass to get out here in order to confiscate the sub and capture the workers. She hadn’t kidded herself that the drug lords who’d commissioned the damn thing would be here, but she’d hoped to at least get a worker who would talk.
 

All she’d needed was one. But there were no workers either. There were only bodies and the smell of burning rubber and spent gunpowder.

The jungle had been turned into a shipyard, amazingly, with living quarters for fifty or sixty men and workshops to build submarines. There were generators, gas stoves for cooking, and storage racks for marine parts. There was also a narrow estuary where presumably subs would be piloted out of the jungle and into the river beyond. From there, the subs would be taken to a port and loaded with cocaine before making the journey north to the United States.

“Middle of the fucking jungle,” Ace Martin said, coming up beside her. “How’d they build a fucking submarine in the middle of a jungle?”

“With a lot of money,” Ivy told her partner, her gaze poring over the abandoned shipyard.
 

Their information indicated there was only one submarine at the moment, with more commissioned to be built, but it represented a step up in design from the usual homemade fiberglass subs the drug runners used. The new sub was steel, fitted with Chinese engines, powered by lead-acid batteries, and capable of traveling for ten days without refueling. It could submerge to a depth that rendered it silent to the US Navy—and it could hold three tons of cocaine.

That was a lot of fucking cocaine hitting the streets of the United States.
 

A Colombian soldier shouted something, and Ivy took off at a run. Ace was right behind her. They skidded into one of the workshops to find a soldier pointing a gun at a grease-stained man who held his hands high and begged the soldier not to shoot.

“Are there others?” Ivy asked the soldier in Spanish.

“No,” he told her. “Just this one.”

She spoke to the man, told him not to fear them. But his eyes were wide as he darted his gaze between her, Ace, and the soldier. Outside, the shouts of other soldiers and DEA agents carried through the jungle.

“What happened here?” she asked the man.

All he did was repeat his plea not to shoot. Ivy wanted to growl in frustration, but instead she went over and handcuffed him. Then she told the soldier to lower the gun. He did, and she jerked her head at Ace.

“Get this one on a chopper. I want to talk to him when we get back to HQ.”

“Aye, aye, captain.”

Ivy frowned. “Very funny with the nautical stuff.”

Ace grinned and walked over to collect the worker. Ivy marched back into the jungle. The humidity was thick out here, and the stench from the nearby mangroves was strong. Men moved through the shipyard, searching for any signs of life.

Unfortunately, there was no one else alive. Whatever had happened out here, it hadn’t been pretty. It wasn’t unlike the Ruiz family to turn against the people who had helped put them where they were, but it didn’t make a whole lot of sense to kill everyone. These were the workers who’d built the sub. They were skilled men, recruited from the shipyards and navies of South and Central American countries. It took a lot of time and money to assemble this kind of crew. It made no sense to kill them, especially since getting the men out would have been far easier than getting the sub out. Hell, the way the thing was built, you could fill it with men and sail away.

So why the slaughter?

Ivy shuddered as she raised her gaze to the sky. That was what she didn’t understand about these bastards. What she could never understand. They killed when they didn’t have to. Because they could.

Ivy took one last look around before she headed for the chopper. She had work to do, and time was running out.

* * *

“You want to do what?”
 

Dane “Viking” Erikson stared at the two men standing across from him. He’d been training with his men at the Virginia Beach facility when he’d been summoned to this meeting. He hadn’t thought much of it at the time, but right now he was staring at an admiral in white and an Army colonel in desert camouflage and wondering what they’d been smoking.

The colonel—Mendez was his name—was the one to speak. “I need a SEAL team, Lieutenant. Your name came up as the one to lead it.”

“For the Hostile Operations Team.” Dane shook his head. “I thought that was a myth. Just a tale the Army guys told when they were feeling inferior.”

Mendez snorted. “Not a myth. And not strictly Army anymore either. HOT is joint service, and the SEALs are the next step. We’ve got a state-of-the-art facility in Maryland and more money than you can imagine. The missions are critical to national security, and their scope is widening. We need you.” Mendez glanced at Admiral Carter.
 

The admiral’s mouth was a grim line. “You’re the best fit, Dane.”

Dane’s gut tightened. “Because my dad is General Erikson, you mean.”

Mendez nodded. “Doesn’t hurt. You know the Army. Understand it.”

“I joined the Navy. I’m not interested in the Army.
Sir
.”
 

Mendez’s look could best be described as disgusted. For some reason, that made Dane feel contrite. He cleared his throat and stared at the wall behind the colonel’s head, not liking that this man could reduce him to feeling like a puny child in his father’s home.

Just like old times.

Mendez’s tone, when he spoke again, was conversational. But Dane didn’t kid himself that the man was as mild mannered as he appeared. No, there was steel in that tone and steel in his eyes.
 

“So you don’t care for the Army. I don’t much care for the Navy. But here’s the thing, son. We’re in this together. We’re fighting for the same goddamn thing, and if I need a SEAL team on my roster, I’m getting one. You can come willingly, or you can come with a grudge. Your choice. But you
are
coming. So pack your gear and get your ass up to Maryland. I’ll expect you at oh seven hundred the day after tomorrow. Any questions?”

“What about my team?”

“They’ll get their orders. In the meantime, you can come and get cozy with us while you wait. We won’t hurt you, I promise.”

Dane wanted to say something sarcastic. He very wisely didn’t. The colonel was yanking his chain at this point. He’d set himself up for it, so he could hardly blame the man. “Yes, sir.”

“Excellent.” The colonel pulled his cap from his belt as he turned toward the door. “Welcome to HOT, Lieutenant Erikson. We hope you enjoy the ride.”

CHAPTER TWO

The colonel hadn’t been kidding that the facility was state of the art. It took about half the morning to get clearance, a Common Access Card, and all the codes and various protocols needed to enter and exit on his own power, but finally Dane had everything and found himself in a locker room staring at a group of faces that looked at him curiously. There was no hostility, which he found encouraging.

Other books

Summer and the City by Candace Bushnell
Critical Reaction by Todd M Johnson
Footsteps of the Hawk by Andrew Vachss
Hungry Ghosts by Susan Dunlap
Pardonable Lie by Jacqueline Winspear
The Nightingale by Hannah, Kristin
It Happens in the Dark by Carol O'Connell
To Love, Honor and Betray by Lucas, Jennie
Duty and Desire by Pamela Aidan
Toy's Story by Lee, Brenda Stokes