“Good thing I love you,” Quinn said, grabbing Gabriel’s free hand to tug him up with his back to the car. She stood on tiptoes and gave him a loud, smacking kiss on those gorgeous lips of his.
Peeking around Gabriel’s wide shoulder, Quinn saw the SUV pull away from the curb. The windows were tinted, which meant she couldn’t see Dupont in the back seat. But she swore she could still feel the coiled violence emanating from him.
She shivered again.
“Are you all right?” Gabriel asked, running his hands up and down her arms as though to warm her.
She threw a warning glance toward the restaurant where—lucky for them—Kodra remained inside. “Let’s take our fish home before it spoils,” she said. And get the hell away from the bad guys.
They ambled down the street, even though Quinn wanted to race to the safety of the car. Every time a vehicle came around the corner, she braced for the sight of Dupont’s black SUV. She didn’t know what he would do, but it wouldn’t be good.
Finally, they arrived back at the car. Only Anneliese and Ivan waited for them.
“Mikel’s with the prince,” Anneliese said. “He said to wait until he gets here.”
Quinn slumped back in her seat and blew out a long breath, her nerves still jangling. “That was tense.”
“What were you afraid would happen?” Gabriel asked, his hand curling around hers on the cushion between them.
“That Dupont would recognize you and Raul. You were too close together, and you look too much alike. Also, you both look—I don’t know—regal. Neither one of you knows the meaning of the word ‘slouch.’” She shook her head because it sounded like a flimsy excuse for her panic. “I probably overreacted. I’m not used to being out of the office.”
“You did an excellent job of creating a distraction. No one paid any attention to Raul once you started cursing,” Gabriel said. “It was impressive.”
He was trying to ease her nerves, so she tried to smile. It wavered because she didn’t want him to ask about the source of her vocabulary. “You said you remembered Kodra. What triggered it?” she asked.
“A phrase.” His jaw tightened, and he stared straight ahead.
“Are you all right?”
“I want to kill him.” His voice vibrated with rage, and his hand was shaking.
Quinn stroked his fingers to soothe him. “I don’t blame you. He’s just a tool, though. We’ll use him and then punish him. Mikel will make sure of that.”
“That’s why I restrained myself.” His grip on her hand tightened.
There was a knock on the passenger window, and Ivan again vacated his seat so Mikel could slide in. He was still wearing the rumpled suit jacket, and his hair was silver.
When Mikel pivoted toward them, Gabriel held out the plastic bag. “We got your fish.”
For a moment, Mikel stared at the bag. Then a smile cracked the tautness of his face, and he barked out a laugh. “I needed that.” He took the smelly bag, put down the window, and tossed it to Ivan to dispose of.
He turned back to them. “Nice distraction, Quinn. You kept Dupont’s attention away from Raul and Gabriel. I’m sure he didn’t recognize either of them as his previous targets.”
“Thank you. Your disguise was amazing,” Quinn said, while his compliment spread a warm glow through her chest. She’d done the right thing after all. “I couldn’t tell it was you, except that I knew it had to be.”
Mikel ran a hand over his colored hair. “This spray-on dye itches like hell.” Then he focused on Gabriel. “Was it worth the risk?”
“I remembered Kodra,” Gabriel said, his jaw tight. “A phrase about Paris not being cheap. I heard it when he was about to enter the room where my tent was. He must have opened the door before he finished speaking. It was definitely him.”
Mikel’s face lit with a dark energy. “Raul believes that one of Dupont’s thugs was in the group that abducted you. The man’s right pinky finger was missing its tip. He remembers the plastic glove he wore flapping at the end when he came close to knock Raul unconscious.”
Gabriel flinched. “That would explain why Raul noticed it. Fear makes you focus on strange things.”
Was he thinking of the surgeon’s fingers?
“It is not proof,” Mikel warned. “The muscle men often have missing body parts. It’s a by-product of their profession. However, the connections are starting to pile up.”
Quinn nodded. Her gut was telling her that Jean-Pierre Dupont was the mastermind behind Gabriel’s kidnapping. She would keep digging, and they would nail him to the wall.