Thin Ice
Thin Ice
Sleeper Seals, Volume 7
Maryann Jordan and Suspense Sisters
Published by Maryann Jordan, 2017.
This is a work of fiction. Similarities to real people, places, or events are entirely coincidental.
THIN ICE
First edition. November 28, 2017.
Copyright © 2017 Maryann Jordan and Suspense Sisters.
ISBN: 978-0998483276
Written by Maryann Jordan and Suspense Sisters.
Also by Maryann Jordan
Alvarez Security Series
Gabe
Tony
Vinny
Jobe
Sacrifice Love
Heroes at Heart
Jayden (Coming Soon)
Zander
Rafe
Cael
Jaxon
Letters From Home
Class of Love
Freedom of Love
Bond of Love
Lighthouse Security Investigations
Mace
Rank
Saints Protection & Investigations
Serial Love
Seeing Love
Honor Love
Healing Love
Remember Love
Discover Love
Serial Love & Healing Love Box Set
Saints Protection & Investigations Boxed Set 1
Surviving Love
Celebrating Love
Revealing Love
Protecting Love
Searching Love
Silver SEALs
SEAL Together
Sleeper Seals
Thin Ice
The Love's Series
Love's Tempting
Love's Taming
Love's Trusting
Watch for more at Maryann Jordan’s site.
Also by Suspense Sisters
Silver SEALs
SEAL Together
Sleeper Seals
Thin Ice
Thin Ice
Sleeper SEAL Series Book 7
Maryann Jordan
Contents
Copyright
Untitled
1. Prologue
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
34. Three Months Later
35. One Month Later
36. One Year Later
Thin Ice (Sleeper SEALs Series)
Copyright 2017 Maryann Jordan
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All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system without the written permission of the author, except where permitted by law.
If you are reading this book and did not purchase it, then you are reading an illegal pirated copy. If you would be concerned about working for no pay, then please respect the author’s work! Make sure that you are only reading a copy that has been officially released by the author.
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Cover Design by: Becky McGraw
Editor: Shannon Brandee Eversoll
Cover Photographer: Eric McKinney, 6:12 Photography
ISBN: 978-0-9984832-7-6
As a nation, we ask a great deal from our military personnel. Dedication to the mission. Fighting for the greater good. Putting their country above all else. This book is dedicated to those who have fought the good fight in spite of all the odds. From a grateful nation, we thank you.
Author Notes
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When writing fiction, I try to research each topic so the reader can enjoy the story and feel as though it is as real as possible. I often change the names of cities and places. Choosing to do so allows me creative license to write the places as I see them and not become bogged down in trying to re-create a real place.
In this story, I have taken that one step further. Our heroine is a scientist and is asked to utilize her skills in order to help our hero. I ask, dear readers, that you follow the story, accepting that not all laboratory procedures and methods are completely accurate. This is fiction—enjoy!
1
Prologue
The long road stretched endlessly before him. To most, stopping to take a picture of the scenery would have held appeal, but his focus was on his destination. And what he might find there. His thoughts were full of the man he was traveling to see and of the opportunity he was going to present. I wonder if he’ll even listen to a retired Navy Commander, like me—
Months ago, in the basement of the Secretary of State, he and a small group had played a game of poker. He usually lost, but that night Lady Luck had been with him and their scowls as he slid the pile of chips over to his side, indicated they had not expected his success.
The night had been like their many past evening meetings at the Pentagon, but as he glanced at the time, he had known he needed to get home. It was not much of a home anymore, since his wife had died right after he retired. But her Chihuahua had to be fed and, the mean-as-hell dog that hated him, had probably already chewed one of his favorite chairs.
The Vice President and the Director of the CIA had both stood as he did, moving to block his way. At that point, he realized that the group of old friends having a relaxing game, was actually a setup.
When he turned his keen gaze on them, they settled back into their chairs, presenting him with a post-retirement challenge. Terrorist cells were cropping up all over the United States and they wanted him to create an elite group of retired SEALs. He had chuckled at their concept…most former SEALs were injured, worn out, or not in any shape to keep working. And there would be no way to train them as a new team—a theory the Vice President denounced. They did not want a team. They wanted former SEALs to take on individual assignments.
The Director of the CIA had reiterated their proposal. They wanted men who would use their skills to plan and execute the mission to take down a cell with full resources—and plausible deniability.
Thinking back on that night, a slight smile curved his lips as he recalled the urge to get out of retirement, had nudged him into agreeing. Glancing at his gas gauge, glad that he had filled his tank at the last little town, his rental car churned up the lonely miles. God, let this hole-in-the-wall town have a bar.
2
“Can you take us higher? I want to get a picture of the very top.”
“Oh, honey, no. I feel like puking as it is.”
Logan Bishop heard the request and subsequent whining clearly, even with his headphones covering his ears, but pretended not to. It was easier that way. He maneuvered his H10, light single-engine helicopter, along his regular tourist path, ignoring th
e special requests coming from the back. Sometimes he deviated…depending on the passengers and his mood. But today, the monotony of the tourist season was getting on his last nerve, and playing nice was not part of the service.
Circling around the mountains of the Glacier National Park in Montana once more, Logan appreciated the view of snow-capped mountains, thick with green forests. The predominately coniferous woodlands of pine, fir, and spruce gave the vista its continuous color, while the lower elevations were covered in cottonwoods and aspens, which lost their leaves with the changing seasons. The park, considered the Crown of the Continent Ecosystem, was originally inhabited by Native Americans and was home to hundreds of species of animals. With over a million acres, including two mountain ranges and over one hundred lakes, the tourists wanting to experience the park from above the ground kept him in business.
Making another pass before dipping near a crystal clear lake, he decided the couple in the back seats was more interested in the photographs than any history, so he continued to keep his mouth shut as they chattered amongst themselves.
As he began the flight back over the Blackfeet Indian Reservation, which the Blackfeet have inhabited for over ten thousand years, he heard an audible huff behind him.
“Look at all this good real estate going to waste here for a bunch of Indians.”
“Native Americans,” came the response from the woman. “That’s what you say now. It’s politically correct.”
The other passenger pinched his lips before snapping, “Well, excuse me, Dorothy, if I ain’t all PC and shit.”
With a quick glance behind him, Logan could see their interest had waned so he made a straight trip back to the landing pad outside Cut Bank, Montana, circling over the small town right on the edge of a steep bank leading down to a river. He had knocked off about fifteen minutes on their tour but figured it was due him for having to listen to their bickering.
The population of Cut Bank was only about three thousand people, but this time of year brought in tourists looking for wildlife photo opportunities. The three small hotels in the town filled up quickly, as well as the three in nearby Shelby.
After assisting Dorothy down and, with a silent nod toward both of them, he turned his back and walked away, efficiently cutting off any more requests to see the natural Montana vista. At least from his helicopter. After refueling, he waved to Gus, the owner of the small airfield, and climbed back in the cockpit, soon lifting off the ground. Five minutes later, he landed once more, this time with an air of contentment, on his own property. Coasting into the metal, dome-topped hangar, he parked his bird next to his Lakota—a huge, military grade helicopter used for mountain rescues of skiers or stranded hikers.
Climbing out, he stretched the kinks out of his back before beginning his routine maintenance. Qualified as a mechanic as well as a pilot, he alone handled his birds, until the annual inspection was due. With a final pat on its side, he walked to the open hangar door and pulled it shut, sliding it along the channel until it closed securely. Locking it, he activated the security he had installed before making his way over the hardened ground toward his low-slung, ranch house.
His acreage included flat, scruffy land with the mountains in the background. He owned the one-story house, with a basement, which he built when he bought the property, adding the helicopter hangar at the same time. Not fancy, it was large enough for him, sturdy and somewhat plain. A porch gave it a homier look, but was really added to cut down on the direct sunlight that blasted through the front windows.
Stepping into the neat interior, he walked straight to the kitchen, threw open the refrigerator door and reached inside to grab a beer. None. Fuck. He knew he had been getting low, but dreaded making the trip to the grocery in town. To be honest, it was not the shopping he hated, but having to interact with people. Any people.
Sighing, he debated for a moment, but decided he also needed milk, bread, soup, vegetables, and a few other staples. So much for kicking back and watching the game on TV. Grabbing the keys to his truck, he headed out the door.
Fifteen minutes later, he drove into Cut Bank, stopping at the little grocery store on the outskirts of town. A larger one had opened on the other side of the tiny town, but he preferred the quiet, comfortable feeling in the older one, run by a couple who did not have a predilection for talking everyone’s ear off or asking too many personal questions.
Moving through the glass door, he nodded politely to the woman behind the cash register. “Marge,” he said, his voice rough even to his ears, realizing he had hardly spoken to the couple he took up in his helicopter.
“Logan,” she replied, her smile firmly in place as her grey, tight curls bounced about her head, before she looked back down at the magazine opened in front of her.
Walking through the aisles, he quickly loaded his cart with the necessities, calculating they would last him several weeks. He preferred to stock up at one time so he did not have to make too many trips. Avoiding the few other shoppers, he pushed his cart toward the counter and waited patiently as the woman in front of him balanced a toddler on her hip and tried to contain a small child interested in the candy.
The little boy fingered a candy bar longingly and Logan could see the wheels turning in his head, wondering if his mother would notice if he just took it. Clearing his throat, Logan gained the little boy’s attention, his wide eyes looking up at the large man standing next to him. He snatched his fingers back to his sides before looking down at his shoes.
As the mother paid and placed the toddler back into the cart, she turned to take the hand of her little boy, who glanced back at Logan as they left the store. Didn’t mean to scare him, Logan thought but, then, he knew his grumpy persona probably terrified the kid.
Sighing, he placed his items on the counter to be rung up, grabbing a candy bar at the last minute. Paying as Marge lifted an eyebrow, he grunted his thanks and pushed his cart out to his truck. Seeing the woman strapping her toddler into its car seat, he walked over and handed her the candy bar.
She looked up in surprise as he muttered, “Saw your boy looking at it. Thought he might want it. You can give it to him.”
With a nod, he turned and made his way back to his truck, hearing her thanks called out to his back. Opening the massive ice chest in the back, he placed some of the groceries there and the rest of the bags in the passenger seat. Hauling his tall body up into the driver’s side, he started the truck and pulled out of the parking lot, heading for home.
Offering a chin lift to a few people he knew as he left town, traveling down the road, he breathed easier now, being the only vehicle in sight. A few miles further, he turned onto his long, gravel drive, the view of his hangar and house always giving him a sense of comfort. Mine. All mine.
Parking in his garage, he left the door open for ease of unloading the groceries. Hauling the ice chest first, he moved through the laundry room that led from the garage to the kitchen. Setting it down on the floor, he went back to grab the bags before closing the door. Kicking off his boots, he padded into the kitchen and bent over the ice chest, placing items into the refrigerator and freezer.
Standing quickly, he halted his progress. No sounds could be heard, but the hairs on the back of his neck stood up, a sign of danger he had always listened to. A habit that served him well in the military. A former, decorated SEAL, his spidey senses had saved his life—and the lives of his men—more than once.
Setting the milk into the refrigerator, he closed the door, moving stealthily to the drawer where he stowed one of his weapons. Making no sound at all, he walked with a powerful grace that belied his size. Glad for his socked feet, he rounded the corner, his gun in his outstretched hand, his aim facing the living room.
The room, full of shadows from the darkening evening, made it easy for an intruder to hide but, even so, his eyes immediately discerned no one was there. His gaze jumped to the porch where a slight movement sent him to his front door, knowing no visitors ever came to his
house. And there was no one he wanted to see.
Throwing open the door, he caught a man in mid-knock, whose eyes landed first on his face and then immediately dropped to the gun in his hand.
“You wanna tell me who the fuck you are and what the fuck you’re doing at my house?”
The man lifted his hands up in a visible show of having no weapons, moving slowly backward a few feet. The illumination of the porch light gave Logan the opportunity to see who was standing there. The hair was a little greyer. The lines by his eyes were a little deeper. His clothes were no longer military, but the sharp creases in his pants gave evidence to an adherence of habits formed over the years. The man answered him with one word. “Preacher.”
Lowering his weapon slowly as recognition slid over him, his breath left him in a rush. “Commander. Commander Lambert?”
3
Greg Lambert smiled at Logan as he moved toward him with his hand outstretched. He reached out, clasping it, his handshake firm.
“Preacher, you’re looking good,” he stated, his eyes roving over Logan from head to toe and back again.