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“Shit.”

The Baja landscape didn’t exactly whirl past them as the cab driver made his way toward the airport.

“Andale,” Noah said. Faster.

The cabby nodded but didn’t speed up, and Noah resisted the urge to tear his hair out one strand at a time. He looked at Bailey, who was sitting with her hands clenched, mouth tight, eyes worried. “We’ll get there,” he promised.

She nodded.

With a sigh, he slipped an arm around her and pulled her closer, pressing his mouth to her temple. “We will.”

“I know.” In his arms, she relaxed some, and the marvel of that was never going to get old.

“Nos estan siguiendo.”

Noah looked up and met the cab driver’s eyes in the rearview mirror. They were being followed. Well, that was just perfect. He whipped around and indeed saw a dark SUV working its way around traffic to keep up with them. “Rapidamente.” He couldn’t stress enough the need to hurry, but neither did he want to risk having the cab driver pull over and kick them out. “Mas rapidamente.”

Again, the cabby nodded but didn’t speed up. In all fairness, he couldn’t. They were on a two-lane highway, with a huge rickety old truck weaving down the road in front of them, the back loaded to the brim with goats, all bleating mournfully in the afternoon air.

Coming the other way was a steady stream of traffic as well.

The cabby caught Noah’s eye in the rearview mirror again and helplessly shrugged.

“What?” Bailey asked, gripping Noah’s arm. “What’s the matter?”

The goat truck veered off to the right, and the cabby took his turn, revving the engine.

But nothing happened.

The cab was simply going top speed at approximately forty-eight miles an hour.

“What’s going on?” Bailey asked, searching his face. Clearly she could read him better than anyone else ever could because she looked scared. Hell. What had happened to his poker face? He was famous for it, but she seemed oblivious to the fact that no one was supposed to be able to read his thoughts and emotions like a damn book.

“El ir de la subsistencia,” he told the cabby. Keep going. They’d get to the airport, and he’d figure it out when they did.

Bailey looked behind them and gasped at the dark-windowed SUV behind them.

Finally they began passing some other streets, a residential area. Noah directed the driver into a series of turns, and at the end, miracle of all miracles, they’d lost their tail.

Finally, something going their way.

Then the cab driver met Noah’s gaze in the mirror, his filled with apology. “Gasolina de la necesidad.”

Need gasoline.

Hell. Before Noah could open his mouth to say…what, he had no freaking clue, the cab sputtered, coughed, and then stalled.

“Ohmigod, what just happened?” Bailey asked.

“A little car issue.”

“It broke down?”

“Out of gas.”

She stared at him in horror. “That’s some bad timing.”

“Princess, I couldn’t agree more.” He took in their surroundings, even as he opened his cell phone to call Maddie. No reception.

Oh, this just got better and better.

They were in front of a church, which had its doors flung open. There was a huge courtyard filled with people dressed to the hilt, laughing and clapping and dancing to a band.

It was a wedding, and everyone there was on the floor, partying hard. As far as diversions went, it wasn’t a bad one. Reaching into his pocket, Noah grabbed some cash, handed it to the cab driver, and pulled Bailey from the car.

“What are we doing?”

“Mingling.”

She looked down at their clothing. “At least we’re semi-dressed for it.”

No hysterics. His heart squeezed with pride and affection and something much, much harder to define.

Or maybe not so hard at all. He pulled her into the courtyard with one eye on the road-still no SUV. The wedding music was louder than his thoughts, and so was the crowd. No one so much as glanced at them. “Try to look like you belong,” Noah said. Bailey shot him a look that said she had no idea how to do that, so he tugged her onto the dance floor, spun her away from the street and hauled her close.

“What are we doing?” she hissed, stiff in his arms.

“Dancing.” He slid a hand down her spine. “Do it with me.” He rocked his hips into hers, moving with the music while she just stared up at him.

“You know how to dance?” she asked, clearly shocked.

“Yeah.” He shifted with her in tune to the beat, which was louder and more manic than he was used to, but then again, he didn’t spend a lot of time listening to Mexican carnival music. In either case, he had to figure it out because he was doing the dancing for the both of them.

Unbelievably, the music got louder. Bailey had to go up on tiptoe and put her mouth to his ear to speak. Since it plastered her body to his, he didn’t mind in the least.

“Do you know how to do absolutely everything?” she asked.

No, he didn’t know how to do everything. He didn’t, for example, know how to tell her he loved her.

And he did.

So much he ached.

He also didn’t know how to make her love him.

And he wanted that, he wanted that with everything he was, because when he was with her he felt alive. He felt happy. Hell, even running for their very lives, he felt those things, and he wanted to tell her. Instead, he just pulled her in closer and kept an eye on the street, sure that he could at least do as he’d promised and keep her safe.

No, that was a lie. He was pulling her closer because he couldn’t help himself. He moved with her across the floor, feeling the press and heat of the other bodies, the humid salty air, absorbing the music and the slight weight of her head against his shoulder, her body snuggling into his.

It would have been a moment to treasure for always, if it hadn’t been for the bad guys, or the ear-splitting music, or the fact that they were still in Cabo…

Damn, they had to get out of here.

“What if they see the cab and pull over?” she asked. “They can find us here.” Her fingers dug into his poncho. “We can’t bring trouble to these people, Noah. It’s a wedding.”

“I know. We won’t.” Over her shoulder, he kept checking his cell phone for reception. He needed to know exactly how far they were from the airport, and how fast they could get there.

At least if he didn’t check in with Maddie soon, Shayne would come find them. His only comfort at the moment.

Around them, guests were as loud as the music, and half of them looked plastered, with the other half well on their way. Now they were doing some sort of dance that involved hugging their partner real close and shaking everything they had.

“Let’s sneak into the back,” he said. “Maybe there’s a working phone.”

“And if there’s not?”

“I’ll liberate someone’s car and drive us.”

“Liberate? As in steal?”

“You have a better idea?”

“No.” She let out a soft laugh in his ear. “You really are a superhero.”

He was incredibly aware of her fingers, gliding up the back of his neck, sliding into his hair. Of her body, curvy and warm, pressed to his. “Not a hero. Just a man.”

Pulling back, she smiled into his face. His heart caught, and he fell even harder, if that was possible. “A man,” he said. “Who loves you.”

At that, her eyes widened, her mouth curved into a perfect little “Oh” of surprise.

“I do. I love you, Bailey.”

Her eyes went soft with what he sincerely hoped was wonder and hope, and not terror. “Noah-”

But then her mouth snapped closed, her body went stiff, and she didn’t finish her sentence.

Frowning, he went to pull her tighter to him, but she resisted.

That’s when he realized the problem. Someone had moved up behind her. Several someones.

And several more behind Noah.

He turned his head and looked out at the street. The cab was still there.