His smile allowed Quinn to answer him with a polite, “Humph.”
She remained seated because Gabriel and Raul were still standing in the aisle, talking to each other in low voices. They were a striking pair, the two tall men with the same strong-boned facial features and air of self-confidence that had been bred into them for centuries.
“Aren’t you going to order them to sleep?” Quinn asked.
“You have to pick your battles. I suggest that you at least follow my recommendation.”
Coming from her boss, that was an order. She stood and set her sights on a single chair just past the two men, trying to scoot around them without interrupting their conversation.
“Will you be able to sleep?” Gabriel asked, swinging around to face her.
“When my boss tells me to rest, I rest,” Quinn said, continuing to edge sideways toward the seat. “Mikel is always right.”
Raul made a wry face. “She has a point, Gabri. We should give it a shot.”
“You should have had more French toast. All those carbs make me drowsy,” Quinn said over her shoulder as she reached her goal and plunked down in the seat.
Gabriel made a sharp gesture of frustration before he shrugged and hit a button on the chair beside where he stood. It whirred as the back went down, and the footrest came up. Quinn hit the same button on her chair so that it stretched out. Gabriel must have also pushed the call button because the steward appeared and pulled blankets and pillows out of wall cabinets, distributing them to everyone except Mikel. Her boss still sat at the table, staring at his high-tech tablet. He was probably trying to reduce the amount of improvisation they’d have to do.
Quinn turned toward the window and snuggled under the cloud-soft blanket. Gabriel was right. She would never be able to sleep.
Someone shook her shoulder, shattering the pleasant dream she was immersed in. “Quinn, we’re starting our descent.” Gabriel’s warm baritone sounded right beside her ear.
She rolled over to see him kneeling beside her chair, his face level with hers. For a moment, she stared straight into his eyes, so close that she could see streaks of blue and dark gray painted through the pale silver. It was almost like waking up beside him in bed.
She shoved herself up onto her hip and threw off the blanket. “Thanks,” she said, hitting the button to turn her bed back into a seat.
“Come sit with me again,” Gabriel said. “I can point out the sights of Lisbon from the air.” He grimaced. “And I could use the distraction.”
He was away from his secure home base, and he might be facing the person who had terrorized and mutilated him. The least she could do was sit beside him. “I’d love to have an aerial tour guide.”
A look of relief crossed his face before he stood and stepped back. When they had settled into the side-by-side chairs and fastened their seat belts, Gabriel said, “You slept.” His tone was a cross between amazement and envy.
“I’m good at that.” Her father wasn’t big on routine, so she’d learned to fall asleep whenever there was an opportunity. “What’s that?” She pointed to a tall white tower with a statue on top.
He had to lean partway across her to see out the window, which meant that his smooth-shaven cheek and dark, glossy hair were within mere inches of her face. God, she wanted to touch both! The aroma of his soap teased her nostrils, but there was more—underlying the citrusy tang was a warm, masculine scent that was distinctly Gabriel’s own. She fought the urge to bury her nose in the angle where his neck joined his shoulder.
“That’s the monument of Christ the King. It was inspired by the huge statue of Christ in Rio de Janeiro. The bridge near it is called Ponte 25 de Abril. Interestingly, it was built by an American company.”
She forced her gaze back to the window. “That explains why it looks kind of like the Golden Gate Bridge. What’s the significance of April twenty-fifth?”
“It’s the date of the Carnation Revolution when the authoritarian government of Salazar was overthrown. The river we’re flying over is the Tagus.”
“I wasn’t expecting all the water around Lisbon. It’s quite beautiful.”
“Less so as we get closer to the airport,” Gabriel said.
He pointed out a couple of other features as the plane descended, and then the wheels whispered onto the tarmac, and they raced down the runway. They taxied straight into another private hangar, although this one was occupied by three nondescript cars. There was a flurry of activity as Mikel assigned them to their respective rides and made sure their luggage got stowed in the trunks.
As he had indicated, Mikel paired himself with Raul, while he put her in the car with Gabriel. The third car would carry two women and two men, also dressed in casual vacation clothing. However, they moved with brisk efficiency and unsmiling expressions that spoiled any attempt to pass as tourists. She was pretty sure she caught a glimpse of a gun under one woman’s windbreaker.
After seeing how striking Gabriel and Raul looked together, she understood why Mikel had split them up. Separately, they were very attractive men. Together, the concentration of charisma and almost mirror-image good looks would draw unwanted attention.
“Your drivers and guards are wearing two-way radios, so we will be in communication at all times,” Mikel said. “Follow their instructions, please.” He turned to Quinn and tapped his ear. “Sound check.”
“Right.” The day before, Mikel had given Quinn one of the miniature two-way radios and an earpiece. She dug it out of the pocket of her zippered gray sweatshirt and wedged it in her ear.
“Testing.” Mikel’s voice came from in front of her and inside her ear.