Ice Blue

Read Ice Blue for Free Online Page B

Book: Read Ice Blue for Free Online
Authors: Anne Stuart
Tags: Mystery
lenses against them. Soon.
     
    In the end, Takashi O'Brien had settled for a small park in a run-down neighborhood, pulling the car off to the side of the road. There were probably addicts roaming around, looking for a score, and maybe gangbangers, but they'd be much more interested in his very expensive car than a woman sneaking off into the bushes. If by any chance they found Summer more interesting he could take care of that as well.
    Because, of course, he watched. She shuffled into the bushes, the bedspread clutched around her, and made him solemnly promise not to look. Was she really that naive? So far she'd taken him at face value, and he could back up the Ministry of Antiquities story quite easily. He was very good at convincing people who and what he was—he often went undercover as Hispanic, Italian, Russian, Native American and any Asian background. Being a mongrel, or
ainoko
, as his grandfather would have termed him, gave Taka advantages. He looked different, but he could shift those differences to mirror any number of ethnic groups.
    He was going to need to make a decision, fast, before the Fellowship made its move. Once he finished this job he could get the hell out of here, back to the tattered shreds of the normal life his interfering family was assembling for him. The proper Japanese bride, the proper future.
    People who worked for the Committee didn't live a normal life, though he could hardly explain that to his disapproving grandfather. His mother's uncle, his mentor, had some idea that Takashi O'Brien's work entailed more than his involvement with the Yakuza, Japan's organized crime family, but he wisely never asked. As long as Taka completed the occasional duties assigned to him, no one asked questions, not even his crazy cousin Reno. Particularly when his great-uncle was head of one of the largest Yakuza families in Tokyo, a fact that filled his industrialist grandfather with horror.
    Not that it mattered. Takashi could never find favor in his grandfather's eyes no matter what he did. His blood was tainted by his American father and the eventual suicide of his beautiful, self-absorbed mother, and Shintaro Oda would never look upon his only descendent with anything but contempt.
    Summer Hawthorne was heading back toward the car, her long hair dripping wet on her shoulders. He didn't want to think about why he didn't finish the job he'd started. He had an instinctive revulsion for drowning, even if she'd been unconscious at the time, and it could have raised unpleasant attention. That was the second tenet of working for the Committee. Do what had to be done, without flinching, without moral qualms or second-guessing. And do it discreetly.
    She was shivering when she climbed back into the car, the bedspread clutched in her hands. He should have told her to toss it, but that might have given her a clue that she wasn't going to be returning to her little bungalow anytime soon. If at all.
    "I don't suppose you brought shoes," she said, not looking at him as she began to braid her long wet hair.
    "Behind the seat."
    She reached around for them, brushing against him in the cramped front seat of the car, and something odd shivered through him. A tiny bit of awareness, which was impossible. He liked statuesque American women with endless legs, he liked delicate Japanese women with tiny breasts, he liked athletic English women and inventive French women. He liked beauty, and the drowned rat sitting beside him, even when she was done up for a museum reception, was never going to be a classic beauty.
    Besides, she was a job, and he was adept at compartmentalizing his life. He did what needed to be done, and some of the things he'd had to do would make her shrink in revulsion. And he would do those things again, without question. To her.
    "What's next?" He could hear the strain in her voice, and he wondered when she'd break. He'd been expecting noisy tears anytime now, but she'd remained strangely stoic.
    "My hotel

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