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Fragmented Loyalty
Fragmented Loyalty Read online
Table of Contents
Dedication
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-One
Chapter Thirty-Two
Chapter Thirty-Three
Chapter Thirty-Four
Chapter Thirty-Five
Chapter Thirty-Six
Chapter Thirty-Seven
Chapter Thirty-Eight
Chapter Thirty-Nine
Chapter Forty
Chapter Forty-One
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Discover more New Adult titles from Entangled Embrace… Fearless and Falling
Lost Years
Until You’re Mine
Wild Child
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.
Copyright © 2020 by Tonya Burrows. All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce, distribute, or transmit in any form or by any means. For information regarding subsidiary rights, please contact the Publisher.
Entangled Publishing, LLC
2614 South Timberline Road
Suite 105, PMB 159
Fort Collins, CO 80525
[email protected]
Embrace is an imprint of Entangled Publishing, LLC.
Edited by Heather Howland
Cover design by Bree Archer
Cover photography by 4x6, benedek, and
loops7/GettyImages
ISBN 978-1-68281-534-2
Manufactured in the United States of America
First Edition February 2020
Dear Reader,
Thank you for supporting a small publisher! Entangled prides itself on bringing you the highest quality romance you’ve come to expect, and we couldn’t do it without your continued support. We love romance, and we hope this book leaves you with a smile on your face and joy in your heart.
xoxo
Liz Pelletier, Publisher
For Elizabeth Dyer and the rest of my Bat Signal ladies. Thanks for keeping me sane this year!
Chapter One
Sami
Deep breath. Keep breathing. This is NBD. You’ve done crazier.
I repeated the words to myself, over and over, as I watched the tiny airport clear out around me. The people who had shared my flight to Wyoming picked up their bags and met loved ones or cabs or—did they even have Uber here? Kinda doubted it because I was literally in the middle of nowhere. I read somewhere that this was the only airport in the country located within a national park.
But even without Uber, everyone had a place to go. Except me.
Ha. Story of my life, wasn’t it?
Soon, I was alone. I walked along the baggage claim carousels, dragging my kid-sized Star Wars bag, its bum wheel squeaking obnoxiously in the empty space. I hoped the rest of my stuff had made it to wherever I was supposed to be going. Hell, I hoped I made it.
The airport looked exactly how I pictured Wyoming. Rustic and yet weirdly cozy for an airport. There were windows everywhere, framing what would probably be an impressive view of the Tetons during the day. A lot of wood with some stone fixtures, and even a fireplace. I sat down on one of the cowhide couches gathered around the fireplace and checked my phone.
11:35 p.m.
My flight from San Jose had been delayed due to mechanical issues, so instead of getting here at the reasonable time of before-dinner, I was stranded in the middle of the night. There was supposed to have been transportation waiting for me when I arrived, but the baggage claim was empty now. Nobody waited with “Samira Blackwood” scrawled on a cardboard sign.
I swiped my thumb across the screen of my phone. No calls. No texts. I don’t know why I expected…something. Mom and Dad gave up on me when I was fourteen, after I was convicted of a felony for hacking and sentenced to spend the rest of my teens in juvenile detention.
Who knew hacking the NRA and redirecting their website to a GoFundMe for school shooting victims was a crime?
I hadn’t.
All right, not true. I guess I’d known it was illegal. Technically. But I’d done it with nothing but the best intentions and never expected an FBI raid party. I just wanted to make the world a better place, but the government—and my parents—didn’t see it that way. The judge, an old-timer who probably still used a landline and had a TV with rabbit ears, was convinced I had the ability to launch nuclear bombs at the press of a button, and he’d given me the maximum sentence allowed by law: three years, plus three years’ supervised release and twenty thousand dollars in reparation.
And that judge had only been aware of a tiny sliver of my digital crimes. I can’t imagine what my sentence would have been had he known how much money I’d stolen. I didn’t even know the exact amount, but it was a lot. Like GDP-of-a-small-country a lot. Enough that I could’ve faced way more than a few years in juvie had anyone known. Idealist that I once was, I’d filtered all of it into various charities and anonymously paid off some student loans, but if I had known what my future held, I would’ve stashed some of it offshore. That money would’ve saved me a lot of uncertainty and fear.
My first night out of juvie, after my family made it clear they were done with me, I thought my life was over. I had no support system, nowhere to go, and nothing to my name but a bag of too-small clothes and a worthless Blackberry that my parents had disconnected ages ago. I was sitting on the curb in front of a 7-Eleven, scared to death—and the Blackberry chimed with a text.
Check your bank account.
Unnerved, I checked and couldn’t believe the number of zeros I saw.
Who are you? I texted back. What do you want?
A concerned friend, was the reply. Take the money.
What do you want in return? Because I may have been young at the time, but I sure as hell knew nobody freely gave out that much money without strings attached.
A favor, they’d said.
I’m not sleeping with you.
No, they’d replied, and I couldn’t help but think they were laughing at me. It was just a word on the screen, but I felt the laughter in it. I’m not interested in you that way. Someday, I’ll need your hacking skills. That’s it. A favor for a fellow hacker.
So I took the money.
It was either owe a nameless, faceless, genderless benefactor a favor or live on the streets. I was a terrified, homeless eighteen-year-old with nothing except a standing date with her probation officer. Anyone in my position would’ve taken the money. My benefactor had me in a chokehold, and they knew it.
Except now, whenever I closed my eyes, I still saw those two lit
tle words on the screen: A favor.
It had been three years since that night, and they still hadn’t called in that favor. The longer whoever it was waited, the more I worried.
Maybe they’d forgotten about me.
Hah. Right. All those zeros? No, they hadn’t forgotten. My mysterious benefactor was biding their time, but I was done waiting. I planned to pay them back and wash my hands of the whole mess, which was how I ended up in Wyoming. This new job promised to pay well.
I just wish I knew exactly what the new job was. The whole thing felt a lot like jumping out of the frying pan and into the fire.
Okay, maybe I hadn’t done crazier.
I scrolled through my phone again and opened the text message I’d sent my mom before boarding the plane. Still no reply. It didn’t even look like she’d read it.
I hadn’t spoken to my parents since my sentence was handed down on my fourteenth birthday. They paid the lawyers, paid the $20K, and cut all ties. Almost seven years now.
Still, I thought the message would’ve generated some kind of response. I was turning my life around. Or trying to. Or maybe it was too late. Maybe I’d irreparably damaged my relationship with them.
Not that we really had much of a relationship to begin with. The only thing we ever had in common was our mutual love of technology.
So here I was. Twenty-one years old, fresh off my supervised release, and completely alone in the world.
Well, not completely. I had Adrian, my one and only friend. He was also a hacker, and, like me, he’d had the book thrown at him when the hacktivist group we were both part of disintegrated. I could text him, but it was late, and I needed to figure this out on my own.
I sighed and put my phone away.
Now what?
I waited.
Twenty minutes passed before a guy came in through one of the sliding doors and glanced around. He was mid-twenties at least, with a mess of light brown hair that reflected auburn when the light hit it just right. His black T-shirt hugged a muscular chest—not steroid-bulky, but lean, sexy muscle. I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t attracted at first sight. And then I saw the writing on his shirt: I’m the Nigerian prince who keeps emailing you.
Ha. And a nerdy sense of humor to go along with all of that muscle. My kind of guy.
I snorted a laugh, and the sound carried across the baggage claim, embarrassingly loud in the empty space. He swung around, and his gaze zeroed in on me. He had light brown eyes, close in color to his hair. Whiskey eyes.
I stood as he strode over. His smile was just a little bit shy and made a dimple appear in one cheek, which did funny things to my belly.
“Are you Samira?” he asked.
“Sami,” I corrected and held out a hand. He enfolded my hand with long, elegant fingers. He could be a pianist with hands like that. Or an artist. I briefly wondered if maybe he was the latter, because his skin was also rough with callouses, like I imagined an artist’s would be.
“I’m your ride,” he said. “They didn’t mention you were missing from the group until the last minute. I hopped right into the truck but thought I’d be too late and— I’m sorry. How long have you been waiting?”
He was babbling. How cute was that?
“Not long,” I assured him. “My plane landed just after eleven.”
He made a face. “Sorry again. I’m Eric, by the way. Eric Physick.”
“Hi, Eric,” I said, hoping my voice wasn’t really as breathy with disbelief as it sounded.
“Uh, you can call me Harvard. Everyone else does.” His gaze dropped to my R2-D2 bag, and the hint of shyness melted away. He flashed a grin that caused the dimple to wink at me again. “Is this all you have?”
“Uh, yeah. Just this.” I hoisted my laptop bag up onto my shoulder and pulled R2’s handle out. “I had some stuff shipped to the address Tucker Quentin gave me.” An address I could find nothing about online. Which should freak me out. And did a little, if I was honest.
This was another moment of blind faith, but at least it was a moment I had decided on, rather than one driven by desperation like last time.
“Then your stuff’s probably already there,” Harvard said. “Tuc is nothing if not efficient. You ready?” He took R2 from me, and I winced as the broken wheel let out a nails-on-chalkboard screech.
Harvard didn’t seem bothered. He simply picked up the suitcase to carry it instead. “Your droid needs some oil.”
Really, I needed a whole new suitcase. I’d had R2 since middle school, but since my parents cut me off, funds were more than a little tight. I’d stupidly blown through my benefactor’s money in the first year of my supervised release and spent the past two years working as a barista for not-great pay. I had scraped the bottom of my bank account to have my custom PC and my Iron Throne desk chair shipped to Wyoming. Thankfully, the plane ticket had been covered by my new employer: Tucker Quentin, CEO and founder of Quentin Enterprises, which owned the second-biggest tech company in the world. One of the conditions of my supervised release was no computer access. I’d taken a huge risk to get his attention. By hacking his network when I wasn’t technically even supposed to be in the same room as a computer, I could’ve ended up in adult prison.
What can I say? I was desperate. I had done it with the hope that Quentin would recognize the value of my skills and hire me instead of siccing the cops on me.
Luckily, I was right. He did hire me, but instead of keeping me in Silicon Valley, where Quentin Enterprises was headquartered, he flew me to Wyoming, and I wasn’t entirely sure why I was here. All I knew was that Quentin wanted me for a training program for something called HORNET. Adrian had been thrilled when he found out this was where I was headed. He’d called it an adventure, encouraged me to embrace it.
Whatever. Anything was better than making soy lattes for hipsters. I was itching to get my fingers back on a computer keyboard.
“What do you think of the new movies?” Harvard asked conversationally as he carried my bag from the terminal to a truck parked at the curb.
The question dragged me from the turmoil of my thoughts. “Movies?”
“Star Wars,” he said and tapped the side of R2 for emphasis. “The new movies?”
“Oh. I love them.” I eyed the truck, rusted and dust-covered. He opened the passenger door for me and grabbed a sweatshirt off the seat. I caught an earthy whiff of hay and animal. Horse? Where was I going that they had horses?
In that moment, a lightning bolt of pure panic sizzled through me. I twisted the strap of my laptop case around my hand and told myself to breathe as the gulp of air I’d just taken stalled out somewhere in my throat. What was I doing? Getting into a beat-up, horse-smelling truck with a man who, no matter how adorable and nerdy, was a stranger? Going to God knew where to join a training program for a shadowy organization that I could find next to nothing about online?
Was I crazy?
“Hey, breathe.” Harvard lightly touched my arm, and I jolted. I must have looked as freaked out as I felt, because he held up his hands and stepped back. “It’s okay. I’m one of the good guys, Sami.”
I believed him. I’d developed a damn good sense of people out of necessity, and I could tell Harvard didn’t have a mean bone in his body. And, still. I’d never been more frightened in my life.
But what other choice did I have? My parents weren’t speaking to me, and all of my glimmering college prospects had gone down the toilet the day I’d been arrested. After six years in the criminal justice system, my options were less than limited. If I stayed on my own, I’d end up a black hat again. That was where the money was for someone like me. No legit security company wanted to hire a hacker with a prison sentence under her belt, and I didn’t want to work at Starbucks forever. I wanted more than that life.
Harvard reached to close the truck’s door. “You know what? I’ll go park, and
we can just sit down and talk until you’re comfortable.”
I wanted this. A chance to make a difference that wouldn’t land me on the FBI’s bad side again. I’d orchestrated this opportunity, and now I was going to blow it because of a panic attack?
I stopped Harvard before he could close the door. “No, I’m okay.”
He eyed me doubtfully. “You’re sure?”
My nerves settled at his question. He looked genuinely distressed by my discomfort, and a serial killer wouldn’t react that way, right? Not that I really thought he was a serial killer. He was too adorably flustered by my panic.
Yes, this was where I had to be. This was what I wanted to do. If I didn’t do this, I’d end up back in prison. Adult prison. Or worse.
I climbed into the truck. “I’m sure.”
Chapter Two
Harvard
She wasn’t what I expected.
I had compiled the dossiers for all of our trainees and already knew a lot about Samira Blackwood. She was a hacker who went by the name Fragment. She’d appeared on the hacking scene three years ago and had done some freelance penetration testing and security work for several well-known companies in the San Francisco Bay area. Although at first glance she looked like a squeaky-clean white hat, I’d found her on several dark web message boards. Never doing anything illegal that I could see, but definitely toeing the line between legal and illegal. That hat of hers was more gray than white. Maybe even edging toward black. Had to admit, I liked that about her. I’d been known to dip my toe over that line of legality myself.
Harvard, the man I was now, wouldn’t exist if I hadn’t.
Fragment was a genius, and she proved it when she hacked Quentin Enterprises to get the big boss’s attention. She got through my firewalls. Through my layers of encryption. I was both impressed and annoyed that she’d managed it.
This girl sitting silently next to me, though? Sami? She was a mystery. A fascinating bit of code I wanted to crack.
Up until I walked into the airport, she was a name on a screen. Based on the photo I had, I’d assumed she’d come with serious baggage—and not in the form of R2-D2. The asymmetrical, blond-tipped hairstyle and lip ring screamed BAD ATTITUDE in all caps. While nothing hinky jumped out at me as I compiled her dossier—except that maybe her background was a little too tidy for my liking—I still thought for sure she’d be a problem, but she didn’t seem like a troublemaker at all.