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Undercover with the SEAL Page 2
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“You’re not my boss.” Alexandra said it with the same sticky sweet tone she used for most of her dumb bimbo roles. Over the years, it was a persona she’d perfected, to the point most people didn’t know the real woman from the roles she played. It was fine, she supposed. She should be grateful. She was well-paid, successful, invited to all the best parties with all the A-list people in the industry. But she’d paid a high price for fame, keeping her true heart and soul and brains hidden behind a slick wall of ditz and dream-girl fantasy.
Not that Hunter needed to know that or that he’d even care. She didn’t know him well enough yet to tell. Besides, he was here to find Beatrix. That was all. She crossed her legs and watched as he followed the movement with his gaze, a hint of color dotting his high, tanned cheekbones. Seemed Mr. Tall, Tough, and Taciturn wasn’t immune to her charms after all. “Tell me about yourself, Mr. Odenson.”
“Hunter,” he said, his eyes meeting hers. Green. His eyes were green and surprisingly gentle for a man of his sharp edges and impressive bulk. An array of emotions flickered across his gaze in a matter of seconds—surprise, wariness, attraction, resignation—and for a moment Alexandra found herself envying the ease with which he showed his emotions through his eyes. Critics were always complaining about her performances being one note—flat. He shifted in his seat, as if uncomfortable, and fidgeted with his tie. “Not much to tell. Everything’s in my resume.”
“Right.” Alexandra pouted her lips while the makeup artist applied a fresh coat of gloss, then narrowed her stare on him. “Now tell me what’s not on it.”
“Like what?”
“Like why an ex-Navy SEAL would want to come out here and babysit a media darling like me.”
If her statement put him off-kilter at all, he didn’t show it. His expression remained the same cut-in-stone façade he’d had since he’d removed her hood at the film set and Alex had gotten her first look at him in all his stud-muffin glory. Except now there was the tiniest flicker of respect in the depths of his sea-green eyes.
“I don’t know where to start.” He shrugged. “Most people don’t care about what I do in my off hours as long as I get the job done.”
“Hmm. I wish I had the same problem.” Alexandra waited until the hair stylist had removed the protective smock from around her shoulders, then got up to walk over to a full-length mirror to adjust her clothes. “Honestly, I can’t remember the last time I’ve been able to go out and just have a nice dinner somewhere alone without the paparazzi hounding me.” She glanced up and caught his watchful gaze in the mirror before concentrating on adjusting her boobs in the too-tight top again. “Not that I’m complaining or anything.”
“Could’ve fooled me,” Hunter said, pushing to his feet and heading for her wardrobe rack nearby. He pulled out a garment bag and eyed it like it might explode any second. “You have a reputation as being a bit of a party girl.”
“No.” Alex gave him a mock wide-eyed look of horror. Then she snorted and continued adjusting her trailer-trash-bimbo attire. When she’d asked the director about her clothes, all he’d said was more cleavage. Then again, the film they were working on here wasn’t exactly Oscar-worthy material. More like Police Academy met Training Day, with a bit of bawdy burlesque thrown in for shits and giggles. Her standard fair in Hollywood these days. It hadn’t always been like that. When she’d first come to town with Beatrix, she’d wanted to pursue important roles, make a real difference with her art. Too bad lofty ideals didn’t pay the bills. She’d soon been typecast as the pretty, dumb blonde and the money started flowing in. Alexandra didn’t like to think of herself as a sell-out, more like a scavenger. She stockpiled money away for the day she’d be too old or too ugly to play in these teenaged wet-dream flicks anymore and could afford to hold out for work that actually meant something, work that was fulfilling and meaningful. She shrugged and met Hunter’s eyes in the mirror. “You shouldn’t believe everything you hear.”
“True.” Hunter stepped aside to allow the hair dresser and makeup artist to leave the trailer then stepped closer to Alex, the heat of him sending tiny shivers of awareness through her body. He towered a good foot and a half above her own five-four frame, yet his size didn’t intimidate her at all. In fact, she really didn’t even notice it—well, if you ignored the fact that she had a crazy urge to see what he looked like without all those layers of clothes on. Once the door clicked shut again, he exhaled slowly. “Right. Let’s get down to business then. Tell me about Beatrix.”
Alex’s sunny demeanor fractured slightly at the thought of her missing friend. “She’s been gone for eight weeks now and I’m starting to get scared.”
“When was the last time you heard from her?” Hunter asked, taking a seat at a small dining table and pulling out a notepad and pen. “Any idea why she might have disappeared?”
“I do have one idea,” Alexandra said, swallowing hard against the rising lump of dread in her throat. She prayed she was wrong, because if this really was the reason Beatrix had vanished then chances were good she’d never see her best friend alive again. They hadn’t meant for it to go so far. It had only been an exercise, a chance to take their acting technique to the next level. But now Beatrix was missing and things only looked bleaker by the day. Slowly, she made her way to the table and took a seat across from him. Their knees collided and Alex pulled away fast, excusing herself and doing her best to ignore the zings of electricity sizzling through her system from their brief point of contact. “Um, Bea and I were in the same method acting class together downtown.”
Hunter made some quick notes on his pad, then looked up at her. “Go on.”
“One of the tenets of method acting is to become your character. To crawl inside their skin, so to speak, and live life in their shoes to really bring forth the sincerest and most emotionally expressive performance possible. Bea and I wanted to become the best actresses we could so we took this advice to heart. She was starting to get a lot of offers for stage work in New York and one of the young, up-and-coming playwrights sent her a script for a new production dealing with the plight of human sex trafficking.”
The scribbling stopped and Hunter looked up at her. “Please tell me you didn’t…”
“It sounded like a good idea at the time.” Alex winced, knowing how stupid it sounded in hindsight. “We hung out on some street corners in East L.A., made some connections, got inside one of the rings and were really learning so much about what was going on. We’d planned on taking what we learned to law enforcement as soon as we were done and have the whole thing shut down.”
“But?”
Alexandra squirmed in her seat. “I told Bea to be careful. I wanted to leave. My instincts told me something was wrong, that the people who had accepted us and confided in us were starting to treat us differently. Bea insisted on going back in one more time. She said she’d be fine. The last text I got from her was two months ago.” She pulled out her phone and slid it across the table with shaky fingers, Bea’s text shining brightly on the screen. “‘Don’t worry. I know what I’m doing.’ That’s it. That’s the last time I talked to her. I tried texting her back and none of my messages were returned.”
“Did you go to the police?” Hunter asked, his attention focused on the screen.
“Yeah, but they had nothing. No leads, no trace of Bea after weeks of work.” She squeezed her eyes shut against the sting of tears. “She’s just another statistic to them, but to me she’s my best friend. I have to find her, Hunter. I have to. Please say you’ll help me.”
“I’ll do my best.” He passed her phone back to her, their fingers brushing, and the sweet tingles started anew. “I’m sorry about ruining your movie shoot.”
“No big thing,” Alex said, reverting to her ditzy persona out of habit.
“Don’t do that.”
“Do what?”
“Dumb yourself down for me.” Hunter pulled away and sat back, watching her with a thoughtful expression. “It’s not necessa
ry.”
“Oh.” Stunned didn’t begin to cover what Alex was feeling at the moment. Most people saw her boobs and her blond hair and didn’t dig any deeper. But Hunter seemed to be far more perceptive than he looked. She’d have to be careful around him. “Sorry. And you should sit up straighter. Don’t play small because others can’t measure up.”
He raised a brow at her then pushed higher in his seat, a slow grin spreading across his full lips. “You’re not what I expected at all, Miss Valentine.”
“Nor are you, Mr. Odenson.”
A loud knock on the trailer door sounded, jarring them out of their newfound intimacy. “Five minutes to set, Alex,” a production assistant yelled.
“Thanks,” Alex yelled back, then pushed to her feet. “Well, I guess it’s back to work for me.”
“And me.” Hunter stood beside her and opened the door for them. “I’ll do some research on what you told me while you finish filming.”
3
Hunter tugged at the stiff collar of his white tuxedo shirt for the umpteenth time, wincing whenever he glanced downward and caught sight of the hideous pink bow tie around his neck. Lord help him, he’d thought the day could only have gotten better from earlier.
He’d been wrong.
Bright lights flashed in his eyes and he squinted at the crowd jostling before them on the red carpet. Apparently his pretend role as bodyguard for Alexandra Valentine extended to being her pretend date at social functions when the original guy she’d lined up called off.
“Over here, Miss Valentine!” several photographers called above the steady din of the onlookers. The movie premier was for some new thriller that Alexandra wasn’t even in, but it was being financed by her studio so they requested all their starpower to shine for the evening. The tie he’d worn was to match his pretend date’s dress—a floor length magenta satin showstopper that hugged Alex’s curves for days and showed off her exceptionally nice rack to perfection.
Not that he was looking. He was here to investigate the disappearance of her friend. That was it.
They moved about a foot farther down the red carpet and began the whole pose-smile-pose cycle all over again. Hunter would’ve much preferred to be back at the hotel in his room, wearing his comfy sweats and continuing his research into the sex trafficking trade here in L.A.
It was still hard to believe that Alex and her friend had been allowed to get involved in such a dangerous pursuit, acting classes or not. When Loki had first assigned him to the case, he’d mentioned Beatrix Camden’s disappearance and that there might be some shady dealings involved. That had been the understatement of the century. Not that Hunter wasn’t up to the challenge. He was, after all, trying to prove his abilities here. But these rings were nothing to toy with. Stories of rape, beatings, mutilations, and worse abounded on the Internet. And those were just the tip of the iceberg. Some of these groups had ties to the highest echelons of power within the mob and Columbian drug cartels. If Alex’s friend had gotten too close and been sucked in, there was no telling if he’d ever be able to get her out again.
Then there was the not so small concern of them coming after Alex too. After all, if they’d discovered her friend was lying to infiltrate their network, what was to stop them from hunting Alex down and taking her as well?
Not that Hunter would let that happen. Not on his watch anyway.
But before his watch went any further tonight, he needed a drink. Preferably strong.
They’d made their way to the entrance of the auditorium at last and had just stepped inside the gilded lobby when a hand clamped down hard on Hunter’s shoulder and a voice he’d not expected to hear rang in his ear.
“Jesus, they’ll let anybody into these things, won’t they?”
Hunter turned to find his older brother, Carter, standing there in his penguin suit, some brunette he’d never seen before on his brother’s arm.
“What the hell are you doing here?” Hunter asked. “Shouldn’t you be in Ohio or something?”
“Financing, little bro,” Carter said by way of answer, sending the brunette over to the bar to get them drinks. Even though he stood six inches shorter than Hunter, Carter thought calling him “little” was the funniest thing ever. “One of my clients is looking to invest in the movie business and asked me to come out here and personally take a look at the records of several companies for him.”
“Hey,” Alex said from Hunter’s other side, tugging on his arm. “I see some friends over there. I’m going to pop by and say hi. Be right back.”
He watched her walk away, doing his best not to stare at the seductive sway of her hips. She was far more than her bombshell persona, as their conversation earlier had proven. She deserved to be treated as more than a sex object and Hunter intended to do just that. Now, if he could get his traitorous libido on board with the plan, he’d be all set.
“You tapping that?” Carter asked, sipping the bourbon his date had brought him.
Hunter gave him a side glare. “No. She’s my client. I’m doing an investigation for her.”
“Right.” Carter snorted. “Because all those adoring fans can be such a pain in the ass, huh?”
“For your information there are all sorts of threats in this town that would make your stomach turn.” He swallowed half his whiskey in one shot. “Besides, extra security is never a bad thing.”
“Security? Hell, all it took for me to walk in was a ticket and a pass through a metal detector. Not exactly high-level stuff.” Carter gave Hunter a dubious once-over. “On second thought, maybe you should stick around, little bro. You might come in handy after all.”
Growing up, Carter had always considered himself the most successful of the Odenson brothers, being a hoity-toity lawyer and all. And maybe if you went strictly by bank accounts, yeah, he was. But Hunter had done okay for himself in the Navy and their younger brother, Ben, was currently backpacking his way through Europe to find himself while he was still unattached. There were more important things in life than money, at least in Hunter’s opinion.
Alex was now circulating around the room, every once in a while glancing over to catch Hunter’s eye, and each time a tiny wave of warmth washed through him. Weird, that. Wasn’t like things were that way between them. They barely knew each other. Theirs was a totally professional relationship, but still. She struck him as a goodhearted person, if a bit lost. Hunter couldn’t pinpoint exactly why he thought that, except maybe for the fact she hid her true self behind a façade most of the time, as far as he’d been able to tell so far. That he had experience with. He was perfectly happy to let most of the world think of him as nothing more than muscle for hire, all the brawn and none of the brains. That was how most people treated him too.
“So, an investigation, huh?” Carter said, breaking into Hunter’s thoughts. “You working alone on this one?”
“Yeah. I’m trying to earn a promotion at the agency.”
“Promotion?” Carter sent the brunette back to the bar for a refill. “You should have that in the bag.”
Hunter didn’t respond, just downed the rest of his whiskey, savoring the burn on the back of his throat from the alcohol. Carter never missed an opportunity to get in a jab and he figured tonight would be no exception. He waited for the punchline to come, but it never did. Finally, he looked over at his older brother and saw him staring back with a thoughtful expression.
“What?” Carter said at last. “Can’t a guy compliment his sibling?”
“He can, but that’s not your usual MO. What gives?”
“Nothing gives.” Carter shrugged. “I just think that you’ve always been much smarter than you give yourself credit for. Add in all the strategy skills you learned in the SEALs and that’s an unbeatable combination in the business world.” He hiked his chin toward where Alexandra stood with her back to them across the room, her form-fitting dress showing off acres of creamy soft skin, and Hunter looked away fast, that tingle in his blood threatening to flash over into a wi
ldfire. “Listen, we Odenson men are the total package. You keep doing what you’re doing, little bro, and you’ll get that promotion before you know it. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I need to go schmooze with the producer to see if he’ll let me take a peek at his expense sheets. See you around.”
He strolled away with the still unnamed brunette on his arm and Hunter stood where he was, shifting his attention from his brother to Alexandra. Standing head and shoulders above everyone else in the room did have its advantages sometimes. Now was one of those times. From his vantage point, Hunter could clearly see Alex standing beside a well-known computer guru and philanthropist, laughing and chatting. She really did have a lovely smile. And a kind heart. Not once, he realized, had she mentioned his size in a derogatory way since they’d met. For a guy who was used to taking regular slams about his bulk, that meant a lot. And it was another thing that pointed to the fact Alexandra Valentine was a whole lot smarter and deeper than her ditzy persona would suggest.
Then he spied Alexandra slipping her hand into the pocket of the computer guru’s tux jacket and pull out his cell phone. Hunter’s eyes widened in shock. Oh. Hell. No. America’s comedy sweetheart did not just pickpocket one of Forbes’ top billionaires. As he watched, she carefully slid the phone into her tiny beaded evening bag then excused herself from the group and headed back toward Hunter.
He was still gaping at her as she reached his side and took his arm, guiding him back toward the entrance.
“Let’s get out of here,” she said as they waved through the crowds, stopping occasionally to pose for selfies with her fans.
“Uh, what the hell did you do back there?” he asked, checking over his shoulder, expecting to see the billionaire’s bodyguards barreling down on them at any second. “Why did you steal that guy’s phone? Do you know who he is?”
“Of course I know who he is,” she whispered as they finally reached the doors and pushed out into the cool night air. The perspiration on Hunter’s skin chilled and made him shiver slightly. Alex kept a firm grip on his arm as she signaled the valet to have their limo pulled around. At least the maddening crowds had dissipated now, and things were calm and quiet once more. Well, as calm and quiet as you could get for downtown L.A. Car horns bellowed, tourists gawked and took pictures, and not one star was visible in the black velvet sky. Alex sighed. “I also know that Beatrix texted him shortly before she disappeared. I want to see if I can find the location that message came from.”