For San Diego's elite FBI agents,
risking their lives is standard procedure when it comes to capturing the city's
most dangerous criminals-but falling in love is the greatest risk of all.
Targeted
FBI Heat #2
Marissa Garner
Released June 7th, 2016
Forever Yours
RIPPED FROM THE HEADLINES . .
.
FBI Special Agent Marissa Panuska
faces the most explosive case of her career when she impersonates a female
terrorist to infiltrate an al-Qaeda cell. Her dark hair, olive complexion, and
Arabic fluency make her the perfect imposter, but each passing hour raises the
risk of discovery. Can she stop the dirty-bomb plot-alone-when the Feds don't
even know the target? And should she trust the mysterious man who bursts into
her life when her cover is blown?
SO CLOSE TO REALITY . . .
Former Navy SEAL Ameen Ali has a
very personal reason for hating the terrorists and vowing to stop them. But
when a beautiful woman joins the sleeper cell spreading death-to-America
propaganda at his mosque, he doesn't want to believe she shares their evil
goals. Can he convince her to join forces before it's too late?
Night had fallen when Samir parked the
truck in front of the dilapidated house in the drug-infested Tijuana slum. Once
he killed the headlights, the moon provided the only illumination along the
crumbling asphalt road. Wedged between Samir and Omar on the seat, Marissa
Panuska scanned the neighborhood of decaying buildings, hoping to catch a
reassuring glimpse of the two agents who were out there—somewhere—following
her, watching her back.
On five previous occasions, the
terrorists had brought her to their hideout in Mexico, just across the border
from San Diego. Marauding drug gangs ruled the area where crackling gunfire was
as common as barking dogs. The constant smell of weed permeated the air and
stung her nostrils. The residents were rarely visible, preferring relative
safety behind walls.
Marissa’s gaze swept over the run-down
house, checking for any signs of change or trouble. Boards protected the
windows from prying eyes, and a padlock secured the door against thieves. The
electrical connection dangling from the sagging overhead lines was one of the
few in the slum, and the satellite phone antenna on the roof was definitely
unique.
After an anxious look around, Omar jumped
out to unlock the door before all three darted inside. Samir switched on the
lamp that sat on the floor by the door. Ignoring the stench from the barely
functioning bathroom, they hurried past it and the bedroom on the left. A
narrow archway separated the front room from the larger back room, which
included a rudimentary kitchen along one wall. The furnishings consisted of six
metal folding chairs, a wooden table, and three tall lamps. Several boxes of
electronic parts, including a new one, were lined up near the rear door. The
place was filthy, but no one cared.
The stifling heat in the closed-up house
stole Marissa’s breath. Sweat dampened her skin beneath the long, black abaya and niqab, the Muslim robe and veil she wore over her other clothes.
While the men turned on the lights, she sank onto one of the flimsy chairs,
morbidly wondering if she was more likely to die from heat stroke than at the
hands of the terrorists.
Holding the niqab away from her face, she drew slow, deep breaths and grimaced
at the pain in her lungs and stomach. The stress of impersonating Baheera
Abbas, of pretending to be the female terrorist previously unknown to the US
intelligence community, gnawed at Marissa’s nerves. If only she could determine
Baheera’s role in the planned attack, she might be able to finish the covert
operation, might be able to survive. Every passing minute held the threat of
discovery and diminished that possibility.
Marissa wiped the sweat from her face and
watched the two men admire the sword-like knife Samir had purchased in a shop
along Avenida Revolución on their way
through Tijuana. On previous visits, Samir’s first priority had been to unlock
the metal gun cabinet bolted to the floor in the bedroom closet and to confirm
the delivery of additional bomb components. But tonight, the sleeper cell’s
leader and Omar were distracted by the massive blade, which they took turns
brandishing menacingly at each other.
Samir’s satellite phone lay on the table.
The phone never left his sight because it represented the cell’s umbilical cord
to the Middle East, the only method of communication between the terrorists
here and those at home. Homeland Security couldn’t fathom why just one means of
contact existed, why no alternate options were in place. They suspected the men
in charge didn’t trust anyone except Samir and wanted to minimize the risk of
the plot being traced back to the source. Unable to determine the terrorists’
reasons, US officials decided the terrorist mind was impossible to comprehend
and worked to exploit the obvious weakness in the cell’s strategy. The Bureau
and other government agencies had simply taken advantage of the situation and
monitored the terrorists’ calls with ease.
Until two weeks ago, Marissa had been one
of the agents monitoring those calls, listening to and translating many long
distance conversations between Samir and his bosses. Discovering the true
identities of the people had been a frustrating, and often futile, process. No
one used a last name, and even the first names were suspect as they were
frequently aliases. Husaam was the name used by the man who seemed to be at the
top, but the common Arab name made it impossible to positively identify or
trace him.
The sat phone’s ring interrupted Marissa’s
thoughts.
Everyone froze.
Samir shot it a startled glance. The call
seemed to confuse him for a moment, suggesting he didn’t expect to be contacted
tonight. He grabbed the phone, answering warily in Arabic. His face tensed, and
his tone turned respectful when he launched into a detailed status report. As
usual, he lowered his voice and walked into the front room so neither Omar nor
Marissa could hear.
She prayed that someone in Washington
would be listening in real time—not hours later to a recording.
Only five minutes passed before Samir,
wearing a Cheshire cat grin, strolled back through the doorway and held out the
phone to her. Her stomach knotted. Only Samir talked on the sat phone.
Saying nothing, he thrust it at her
again.
Hesitantly, she put the phone to her ear
and spoke in precise Arabic. “Allahu
Akbar.”
The man on the phone
greeted her affectionately—as his wife.
I'm a
wife, writer, chocoholic, and animal lover, not necessarily in that order. As a
little girl, I cut pictures of people out of my mother's magazines and turned
them into characters in my simple stories. Now I write sexy paranormal romantic
suspense, steamy contemporary romance, and edgy romantic thrillers. I live in
sunny Southern California with my husband, but enjoy traveling from Athens to
Anchorage to Acapulco and many locations in between.
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