Brynn Kelly - Forbidden River

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A dangerous game at the end of the earth…For French Foreign Legionnaire Cody Castillo, chasing deadly thrills is the only reprieve from a bloodstained past he can’t forget. But when the adrenalin junkie finds himself caught in a mass murderer’s crosshairs in the lonely wilds of New Zealand, he finds an unexpected…and intriguing…ally.Ex-air force pilot Tia Kupa has always found safety in nature, until a killer turns the wilderness into a playground. In this life-or-death game, the guarded woman who lives by the rules must rely on a risk taker with a death wish. The sexy devil-may-care legionnaire may be the wrong guy for her, but desire is just as primal as terror. Even if they outrun a predator, they can’t escape the sizzling bond neither of them saw coming.

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“You cover your own fuel on a search and rescue?”

She picked up the remaining straps and walked to the other side. “I’m funded to a point,” she said as they got to work. “But what am I supposed to do when the budget maxes out, leave them out there? And I took the second couple in, so... They’re probably snagged in tree roots, caught in a sieve. They’ll be flushed out soon, with the snow melting in the tops. The river always gives up its dead. The bush, not so much.”

“I’m getting the idea these aren’t the first people to disappear up there.”

She gave him a sideways look. “How much research did you do on this river?”

“Enough to know it’s one of the wildest kayaking runs anywhere.”

“See, I’d have thought that would warn people away, but it just seems to attract them. I’ve never understood that urge to put yourself in danger.”

“And yet you fly a helicopter.”

“I fly it very safely.” Her voice strained as she pulled a strap. “The lucky ones get airlifted out with broken limbs. Of course, by then they’ve usually been waiting awhile—hungry, dehydrated, hypothermic...”

“You trying to talk me out of it?”

She yanked. “Would you listen?”

“Yes, ma’am.”

“Would you heed the warning?”

“No, ma’am. You’re just saying that for the record, right? Covering your liability.”

“Yep. That and the fact I’m not your mother. I take it you’ve been in a helicopter before.”

“Many times.”

A dimple in her cheek twitched. “Okay, we’re good to go.”

“I’m a soldier.” Now, why did he feel the need to make that clear?

“You’re a soldier.” Not a question, more a sarcastic echo. She tipped her head and studied him like he’d blown her assumptions and she had to start over.

He laughed.

“What?”

“I can hear you thinking.”

“You’re a psychic, too? Wow.” Deadpan again, like it was the end of a long day and she didn’t want to encourage conversation. Neither did he, normally. Mindless chatter shriveled his soul. But she was fun. There was passion hiding in those eyes, a smile simmering under those lips.

“Yep,” he said. “You’re thinking, ‘What kind of soldier charters a helicopter rather than hiking in?’”

That dimple again. “Yes. Yes, I am.”

“‘And what kind of soldier buys a new kit instead of stealing military supplies?’”

“Maybe you are psychic.” She folded her arms. “Or maybe you’re a rich-boy fantasist who thinks that because he’s in some hick backwoods at the end of the Earth he can reinvent himself into anything he wants—like, say, a soldier—so the gullible local girl will trip over herself to fall in bed with him.”

“Whoa.”

“And maybe you’re also a risk taker with a death wish,” she continued, a twitch away from a smile. “You’ve done so many reckless things—out of rich-boy boredom, let’s assume—that you’ve overridden your survival instinct and now it’s only a matter of time before you make headlines and everyone says all that bullshit like ‘He lived life to the fullest’ and ‘He died doing what he loved’ and ‘He’ll always stay beautiful.’ But you’ll just be unnecessarily dead like all the other unnecessarily dead people.”

Shee-it. She was ten kinds of cool. “You calling me beautiful?”

The smile broke through, curving her lips at an intriguing angle. An exasperated smile, but he’d take it. “Still, it’s not a bad thing that fate weeds out the risk takers. Makes the herd stronger. Just try not to die in my country, on my river.”

“Your river.”

“My people’s river. Ko Awatapu te awa, ko Maungapouri te maunga. Awatapu is my river. Maungapouri is my mountain.” She jerked her head at the highest of the snow-crowned peaks jutting up behind the deep green nearer range. “I haven’t always lived here but my whānau—my family—are anchored by these mountains and that river, guardians of them. So yeah, don’t die on my watch because you’ve screwed up your wiring and death is the only challenge left.”

Oh, he was getting a reminder that a very different challenge could still amp him up. He had zero time for women who were impressed by his uniform or his family’s money. A pity legionnaires with death wishes didn’t do relationships.

She walked past him, toward the cockpit. “See, to me, you look like a rich guy with too much time to spend at the gym.”

Okay, so that stung—his fitness had come from hard work, self-control and self-loathing. Those he could take credit for. But it also meant she’d been checking out his body.

Guessing he wouldn’t get an invitation, he circled the chopper and let himself in as she settled in the pilot’s seat.

She raised her chin in cool appraisal, clipping on her harness. “What’s your weapon?”

A test? “Le Fusil à Répétition modèle F2. Sometimes a Hécate II.”

She hovered long, slender fingers over the dials on the instrument panel, eyes narrowed, following their path. Not taking chances, even though the blades had just stopped spinning. Overkill, but he’d tolerate that in a pilot. “That’s the FR-F2, right? Sniper rifles.”

“You know them?”

“Those don’t sound like US military issue. So...what? You’re a mercenary? Sorry, I mean security contractor?”

“In a sense,” he said. “Just not a well-paid one.”

“Isn’t that the whole point of selling out—making money?”

“Not for me. I’m a legionnaire.”

She gave him that sideways look again, pulling on her headset and handing him his. “What, like the French Foreign Legion?” Her voice boomed through the intercom.

“Oui, Légion Étrangère, mademoiselle.”

“You are so full of shit you could be a long-drop at a campground in January.”

“No idea what that is, but it sounds bad.”

She checked the panel above their head, again following her fingers with her eyes, and adjusted a lever. “Seriously? You’re a legionnaire?”

“Yes, ma’am. Caporal Cody Castillo du groupement des commandos parachutistes du 2e régiment étranger de parachutistes de Calvi.”

She did a three-sixty check through the windows, and engaged the starter. “Commandos parachutistes,” she repeated disdainfully. “A parachute commando?”

“You know, most people are impressed by that.”

“You’ll never catch me jumping from a perfectly good aircraft.”

“Afraid of heights?”

“Only of falling from them, which is totally rational and something you should be grateful for right about now.”

“Yes, ma’am. That I am.”

“Are you for real with that ‘yes, ma’am’ thing?”

“Habit. My abuela would have me over her knee if I didn’t show respect to women.” Okay, so he might be hamming it up there. His grandmother controlled the family fortune from a laptop, not a rocking chair. Why haul your grandson over your knee when a withering stare was plenty scary?

As Tia worked the controls with deft fingers and sharp eyes, a muted whine filtered through the headset and the shadow of a blade glided across the ground in front, slowly pursued by another.

“Vous parlez très bien français,” she said.

“So do you.”

“Expensive education—and that’s about all I remember. But you had an abuela?”

“My family’s from Mexico.”

“And you’re not?”

“Texas—born and raised.”

She gave a sharp laugh. “Right, so you’re a legionnaire commando from Texas.”

“Now, what have you got against Texas?”

“Nothing. It’s just that you’re not what I...” She shook her head. “It’s just one of those places that seems, I dunno, mythical.”

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