Chapter One
Tokyo, 2067
Sleep hadn’t been easy for Brandon Shea ever since he went to war. And it hadn’t been easy, either, after he’d returned from the hellhole thirteen months ago. The slightest sound, like a footstep or a sigh of breath, would send him jumping awake. Each time he was interrupted from his sleep, his next habit was to grab his Glock from under his pillow and aim it at the intruder. In Afghanistan, he squeezed the trigger and shot the fools before he even opened his eyes. He was a black ops soldier who had often been deployed solo behind enemy lines. Anybody stupid enough to sneak up on him would be automatically considered his enemy. His rules of engagement didn’t include taking prisoners of war. His job was to scout and kill—heavy on the killing part.
A train of thought flared across his mind, blaring an alarm that he wasn’t in the war zone before he was compelled to pull the trigger. He opened up his eyes and relaxed his stance. That’s right, I’m not in Kandahr anymore. I’m in Tokyo, the whore of civilisation. He blinked and focused his vision on his intruder. Ghosts from his past flashed before his eyes before he could shake them off. Faces of the enemy combatants he’d killed. Brandon blinked again. The ghosts scattered, replaced by the face of a young woman who stood frozen like a deer caught in headlights.
The realisation made his heart stop beating for a second. For the love of God, I almost killed you, kid.
Brandon gulped a lungful of air, and placed his Glock in his lap. “Miss Blackwell. Nan desu ka?”
She drew a relieved breath when the barrel of the gun was no longer staring at her. “I speak English, Mr. Shea. Very well.”
“What is it? What are you doing here?” Brandon repeated his question. His eyes skittered towards the door. The bolt was still locked from the inside. No one could get in unless that person was a ghost. “How did you get in here?”
Lillian shyly pointed to one side of the wall across from his bed. It had a small rectangle opening he hadn’t noticed before. “That used to be a tokonoma.”
Tokonoma? Oh, that weird small alcove thing he had seen in traditional Japanese houses.
“It was connected to my bedroom. I came here often. To hide.”
“I didn’t know this was one of your rooms. I’m new and Mrs. Mitsusaki gave me this as my bedroom.”
“I know.”
“Then why are you here?” Brandon felt irritated. He didn’t like being wakened from sleep. Not when he’d almost blown her pretty head off.
Lillian pursed her lips and sat at the edge of his bed, her hands folded in her lap. She studied his gun before staring at him with defiance in her eyes. “I have a proposition for you, Mr. Shea.”
Brandon ran his hand through his hair. “What kind of proposition?”
She leaned closer. Her icy-blue eyes blazed. “Take me away from this place. Anywhere. I don’t really care.”
“Excuse me?”
“I’ll compensate you, of course. I have an account that no one knows about. Not even my father. Take me away from this place and that money is all yours.”
“Take you away?” Brandon frowned. “Are you nuts?”
“You didn’t ask how much money I’m prepared to give you.”
“I don’t care. What you’re asking me to do is wrong.”
“Mr. Shea,” she whispered urgently. “I don’t want to marry that man.”
“Marry?” he echoed.
Seconds later, it dawned on him. Lillian Jasmine Blackwell, his new charge, was recently engaged to a billionaire named Maxwell Stanford. The news about their engagement had been plastered all over the tabloids, newspapers and the TV. He hadn’t paid much attention to it since he hadn’t been working with the Blackwell family at that time. Today was supposed to be his second day in the job as Lillian’s bodyguard. Actually, his shift wouldn’t begin until ten.
“I just found out my father has set a wedding date. It’s one week from now.” Lillian shuddered. “I hate Maxwell. I’d rather slit my throat than marry him.”
Brandon forced a blank expression on his face, hoping he’d look at least a bit apathetic, since bodyguards weren’t supposed to meddle in their employers’ business. Maxwell Stanford was infamous for his unsavoury personality and business practices. But he wasn’t worth her slitting her throat.
Brandon thought hard, choosing his words carefully. “Why don’t you have a word with your father if you don’t want to marry Mr. Stanford?”
“Are you kidding? When my father wants something, I really don’t have a say in it.”
Brandon felt pity for her. He’d seen Stanford’s picture before. Maybe he’d watched his interview on a late-night show, too. He recalled a friend of his calling Maxwell Stanford ‘toad man,’ and the billionaire lived up to the nickname. The man looked like a whisky barrel that had sprouted arms and legs. Almost as if God had been totally wasted when He’d created Standford, and that no amount of plastic surgery could ever make him decent to look at. Oddly enough, he’d heard Stanford was a world-renowned Casanova. His conquests included celebrities, models and actresses. Brandon found it disturbing to see a man’s wealth could make people overlook his true personality.