Christmas bodyguard, p.1

Christmas Bodyguard, page 1

 

Christmas Bodyguard
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Christmas Bodyguard


  Daphne tasted better than Kenji remembered.

  That was saying something because when he let himself, he always drifted back to the past and those moments in her arms. He held her closer because she’d scared him, and he was very afraid he might not be able to keep her safe.

  “Tell me what you were doing out there,” he demanded.

  “You know I was meant to meet an informant the other night when I got shot.”

  He kept his level stare on her.

  “It happened in the alley behind the coffee shop.”

  “You should have mentioned that.”

  “I know.” She rubbed her forehead with her injured arm and he saw her wince.

  She could have gotten herself killed by running off. She needed to start thinking of the consequences. “It’s dangerous for you right now. I’m here to protect you. Not judge you. Let me keep you safe.”

  She nodded. “I should explain it all when we are back at my place.”

  He wasn’t sure what else she had to tell him, but he wanted to get away from this place and the scare they’d both had.

  He’d gotten lucky that no one had been waiting for her.

  Dear Reader,

  Happy holidays! I’m so excited to bring you the third book in my Price Security series. We are back in Los Angeles this time, and all of the team are involved in helping protect Daphne Amana. She’s a human rights lawyer who is working hard to return disputed antiquities to their countries of origin.

  I’ve been obsessed with these stories in the news as well as the lucrative black market art deals and wanted a chance to include both in this book. Kenji and Daphne met when they were too young and too excited about the options in front of them to settle for a relationship. Both of them had a lot to prove to themselves and have managed to do that with long and successful careers.

  But life puts them in each other’s path again and they are different people now and want that second chance.

  I hope you enjoy this book!

  Happy reading,

  Katherine

  CHRISTMAS BODYGUARD

  KATHERINE GARBERA

  Katherine Garbera is a USA TODAY bestselling author of more than one hundred novels, which have been translated into over two dozen languages and sold millions of copies worldwide. She is the mother of two incredibly creative and snarky grown children. Katherine enjoys drinking champagne, reading, walking and traveling with her husband. She lives in Kent, UK, where she is working on her next novel. Visit her on the web at www.katherinegarbera.com.

  Books by Katherine Garbera

  Harlequin Romantic Suspense

  Price Security

  Bodyguard Most Wanted

  Safe in Her Bodyguard’s Arms

  Christmas Bodyguard

  Visit the Author Profile page

  at Harlequin.com for more titles.

  For Rob. Sharing our life together makes every day an adventure. Love you.

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  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

  Excerpt from A Spy’s Secret by Rachel Astor

  Chapter 1

  Daphne Amana was a leading attorney in international rights and criminal law. The company directory at Mitchell and Partners law firm described her as a brilliant mind who handled cases of real international importance. She was pretty sure her boss wouldn’t see this as her most brilliant move. But she was out of options, so meeting an informant in a dark alley...well...might not be the safest decision, but it was the only play she had in this case. She was trying to return contested artifacts back to the village of Amba Mariam, the modern home of the Gondar tribe from Ethiopia.

  The collection was part of items taken during the 1867 expedition of British and Indian soldiers with the stated aim of freeing British hostages and punishing Emperor Tewodros II and his people. The military assault was a success. Hundreds of items were pillaged by the soldiers, and many were sold at an auction where most of the collection that was housed at the British Museum was acquired. The only rival for its significance was the collection at the Los Angeles Museum of Foreign Cultures, which was donated by the grandson of one of the British soldiers and contained gold and silver regalia, jewelry, weapons and liturgical vessels and crosses from the Ethiopian Orthodox Church.

  Daphne became aware of the collection at the Los Angeles Museum of Foreign Cultures when a cultural minister for Ethiopia, Marjorie Wyman, hired her law firm to petition to have the items returned when her discussions with the museum director stalled. Working in international rights gave Daphne a background that made this case one she wanted—no, needed—and she’d asked to be assigned to it. But the director of the Los Angeles Museum of Foreign Cultures, Pierce Lauder, was being difficult, and his attorneys kept asking for postponements of the actual trial that were making the discovery of the items still in the museum’s collection difficult.

  Daphne had taken the museum to court, gaining a motion to compel them to allow her access to their museum and storerooms, but still they were coming up with excuses for why she couldn’t get in to inventory the items. Sure, it was the holiday season. Thanksgiving had been last week, so a lot of people had taken extra time off, herself included, but she could see through the flimsy excuse that Mr. Lauder kept providing.

  Especially when the list of items he’d sent over marked several as missing. Not stolen or lost, simply missing. She’d gone on a local news show to make the public aware of the contested collection, which had stirred up interest and spawned several public protests, but still, Lauder wasn’t returning her calls.

  History had always been a passion of hers—the fact that many of the exhibits she’d enjoyed at places like the British Museum were taken as spoils of war had never seemed fair to her. It was part of the reason she’d become an international rights attorney.

  The collection was a small one that had come to the Los Angeles Museum of Foreign Cultures by way of Jonathon Hazelton-Measham, who’d been part of the 1867 expeditionary force of British and Indian soldiers led by Sir Robert Napier into Maqdala, an almost impenetrable mountain fortress in northern Ethiopia that was the seat of power for Emperor Tewodros II. Tewodros had established a library and a treasury and dedicated a new church as part of his plan to unite the tribes of Ethiopia and create one united country.

  The British had been helping Tewodros, including educating and training his son, when they had a falling out, which resulted in a massive assault on the fortress in 1868. It caused the deaths of hundreds of Tewodros’s army with only limited British casualties. After the invasion, there was widespread looting of the fortress and church by soldiers.

  Many of the pillaged objects were subsequently reassembled and auctioned. But Jonathon Hazelton-Measham kept the objects he’d collected, which included many items from the new church that had been constructed. The items, or tabots, included a silver censer used to burn incense during mass, a ceremonial cross, two chalices, and processional umbrella tops. He also had several weapons and regalia that were rumored to have come from the fortress. The thirty-nine items that Jonathon looted and brought home with him to England were sold via his descendants to the museum in 1985.

  Of the thirty-nine items, the museum claimed that roughly twenty-five were still in their possession. Fourteen items either dropped off their inventory or were currently marked missing.

  Her client represented the department of culture for Amba Mariam, the modern day name for Maqdala. The items weren’t just in the Los Angeles Museum of Foreign Cultures but also in the British Museum. The bulk of the items still accounted for remained in England at different museums and libraries as well as a museum in Canada, all of which were holding ongoing discussions about their return to Amba Mariam.

  Which didn’t help Daphne’s case. There was no precedent stating that the items should be returned. If the items had been returned in London, that would go a long way to swaying the judge to rule in her client’s favor.

  However, the recent theft of items by a complicit staff member at the British Museum was helping her with this case. There were only so many places to sell rare antiquities without raising suspicion.

  The missing items included one chalice, the silver censer—apparently the brass censer was still in the museum’s possession—a piece of regalia not named, two other tabots, and a diptych in a silver case that may have come from a private collection in France, which suggested to Daphne that the thief knew the value of what they were taking. Then there were two manuscripts that were described in the late Hazelton-Measham’s will as part of his donation but had been dropped from the museum’s inventory in the 2010s before the current director was in place.

  It wasn’t the monetary value that was at the heart of this case as far as Daphne was concerned. It was the cultural value. Emperor Tewodro

s II had collected these items from all of the tribes of Ethiopia to unite them into one kingdom.

  Apparently there had been flooding at the museum, and some of the pieces had been lost during the evacuation of items. Which wasn’t a suitable response as far as Daphne was concerned. Museums were sticklers for cataloging their priceless antiquities. She’d been going round and round with Pierce Lauder and his lawyer, Ben Cross, ever since, trying to figure out what happened to the mysterious missing pieces.

  Which was didn’t explain why she was sitting in her car at nine p.m., trying to get up the courage to go and meet an anonymous person who had messaged her on WhatsApp, saying that they had information on the missing items.

  She’d tried to convince them to come to her office, but they’d been insistent they would only meet her away from both the museum and her offices. She’d suggested a twenty-four-hour coffee shop that she frequented, Zara’s Brew on North Hollywood Boulevard. Her informant had agreed to her request, but they wanted to meet behind the shop so they wouldn’t be observed.

  She was a single woman who could protect herself, but still, this had bad idea written all over it. She knew Carl would have forbidden her to do it and probably would have removed her from the case entirely, so she hadn’t let anyone know she was here. Which now seemed...well, not like her best idea. So she texted her assistant just to say she was meeting an informant and gave her location. She also held her phone in her hand with 911 ready in case things got dicey.

  She left her car and hit the lock button as she walked toward the coffee shop. The barista on duty had their head down scrolling on their phone, and there were only two diners in the café area. She took a deep breath as she headed around the back of the shop and saw that the alleyway was empty and dimly lit.

  Because of course it was. Right?

  Pulling the strap of her purse higher on her shoulder, she moved into the alley.

  “Hello?” she called.

  Stepping further into the alleyway, Daphne cautiously scanned the area. A shot rang out, and she felt the impact of the bullet in her shoulder. There was a sharp burning pain and she bit her lip to keep from crying out. God. That hurt. She hit 911 as she fell to the ground, trying blend with the shadows near the dumpster. She felt woozy and scared, and started the deep breathing exercises she’d learned to keep from passing out because she had a low blood pressure condition that gave her dizzy spells.

  “911, what’s your emergency?”

  She heard the sound of footsteps running away and a thud. Glancing toward the sound, she didn’t see anyone.

  “I’ve been shot. I’m behind Zara’s Brew. I got hit in the shoulder and am bleeding. I can’t see who shot me.”

  “Stay on the line. I’m dispatching police and ambulance to your location.”

  Daphne leaned against the dumpster, keeping her legs close to her body, her head tipped back as she held the line. The 911 operator kept talking to her, and Daphne always responded, but she knew she was close to losing the battle to stay conscious. She reached for her purse to get a tissue to apply pressure to her shoulder.

  She fumbled when opening it, and some of the contents spilled out on the dirty pavement. After a moment, she found the tissues and pressed one against her shoulder, then put her phone on speaker, setting it on her lap. She glanced around, realizing that her wallet had fallen out.

  Placing the bloody tissue on her lap, she reached for the wallet and other items, and she noticed something that looked like a burlap bag with the museum logo on it. She pulled it toward her just as the cops parked at the end of the alley. She shoved the bag into her purse along with her wallet.

  “I’m over here,” she said.

  Two cops came toward her location. One of them was on alert, gun drawn.

  “I’m unarmed and injured,” she said.

  “Don’t worry, ma’am, the ambulance will be here in a moment. Where are you hurt?”

  “Shoulder,” she said. She was starting to slur her words as the pain became too much. Her last conscious thought before she passed out was to draw her purse to her body. “Don’t...leave...my...bag...behind.”

  “I won’t. We’ve got you.”

  The world faded to black. She was semiconscious of being loaded onto stretcher and transported to the hospital. She was still in pain and still scared, but she knew that whatever was in that burlap museum bag was worth it. After all this time, she might have finally gotten a break in the case that would help her figure out why the museum had stopped talking with her and the cultural minister. What really happened to the missing artifacts?

  * * *

  Working for Price Security gave Kenji Wada a chance to use the skills he’d honed for nearly a decade in the CIA as a field operative. The job had been exciting, and there had been a few life-and-death moments, which suited Kenji’s need for adrenaline rushes. But he’d retired after a case had gone sour. And when Giovanni “Van” Price had offered him a job working as a bodyguard at his elite company, Kenji had said yes.

  He was Japanese American, raised by his single American mother. He didn’t know much about his Japanese heritage except that his father’s family was from a highly traditional background of wealth and status and hadn’t approved of her. They hadn’t been allowed to marry, so his mom had said deuces to his old man and came back to LA, where she’d raised him. He had been close to his mom from the beginning and had nothing but love and respect for her. But he always had questions about half of his lineage and no one to ask since his mom had died several years ago when he’d been overseas on an assignment. He still missed her.

  Something he didn’t like to dwell on.

  As he waited for the latest briefing at Price to start, he knew that he was going to volunteer for whatever new assignment came up. Didn’t matter that it was the start of December. Christmas wasn’t his favorite time of year. It had always been a struggle for his mom to buy him presents, pay the bills and keep food on the table. She’d always made the holiday special and since he’d lost her... Christmas just felt empty. If Kenji had his way, he’d work through the holidays. He needed to stay busy and focused on the job. Not his personal life.

  The others on the team arrived for the meeting. The Price Security team was small and tight. Van liked to say they were a family, and Kenji did view the other members like siblings. They all got along for the most part but also got on each other’s nerves at times.

  There were two women on the team. Luna Urban-DeVere was a former MMA fighter, wickedly smart and tough as nails. She was married to multimillionaire Nicholas DeVere, who she met while protecting him. Lee Oscar was the tech genius of their team, and though she had skills with weapons and hand-to-hand combat, most of the time she stayed here in the Price Tower, keeping tabs on the team and providing information to them.

  Next was Rick Stone, a former DEA agent who always looked like he was about to fall asleep until there was danger—and then he turned lethal. Then Xander Quentin, a big British bloke who was former SAS and Kenji’s best friend. Xander had recently fallen in love with a woman in Florida and was now splitting his time between the East and West Coasts. He had just finished an assignment in New York and was taking time off over the holidays to spend with Obie, his girlfriend.

  Last, but certainly not least, there was Van Price. He wasn’t that tall, but he was solid. All muscle from the tip of his bald head to his broad shoulders with the tattooed angel wings that peeked out from under his collar.

  “We’ve got a new client. Should be a nine-to-five gig and will be running through the holidays and into January,” Van said as he came in. “I know I promised some of you time off, so...”

  “I’ll do it,” Kenji said.

  “Mate, I thought you were coming to Florida with me,” Xander said as he turned to him. His best friend looked hurt.

  Kenji clapped him on the shoulder. “It’s more important you go.”

  Xander bro-hugged him. “Yeah. Thanks for that.”

  “Depending on where it is, I could do it. Nicholas will be working until Christmas Eve,” Luna said.

 

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