playing the part. But he wasn’t, all at the same time. She could see that in his eyes. He pulled his phone from his shorts pocket. “Let me take your picture. With those trees in the background.”
Of course, it wasn’t the trees he wanted, but the men on the corner. The building behind them. Eliza kicked up one heel and smiled while Jack snapped the shot. “What should we do now?” Eliza walked past the surly-looking men and straight up to the door of the building. She tugged on it a few times.
Immediately one of the men turned around. “Get away from there!” He took a few sharp steps toward her, but Jack stepped in front of her.
“Back off.” Jack was taller than the guy. Obviously stronger. “We’re shopping, okay?”
The man retreated, but his scowl remained. “That’s not a store.”
Eliza pretended that was all she needed to hear. “Sorry.” She tugged on Jack’s hand. “Come on. Let’s find some ice cream.”
Jack didn’t look away from the guy until they were a few feet down the sidewalk. The next shop on the strip read “Sweet Treats.” Eliza was laughing again by the time they ducked inside.
“Go out the back door.” Jack stayed behind her. In case the guy on the corner followed them. Then with an ease she’d learned these past two years, Eliza hurried past the ice cream counter, down a narrow hallway and out the back door.
When they were in the alley, they jogged by a few stores and walked through the back of a souvenir shop. The place was bigger than most, so the two were safe here. Eliza could feel it. She was breathing hard as they found their spot between two racks of discount T-shirts.
“Your instincts are uncanny.” He had his arm around her again. “Which is another reason I love you, by the way.” He lowered his voice. “The question is, where are the girls?”
Eliza believed she knew. “There was a hotel across the street from where that guy was standing.” She took a bright pink T-shirt from the rack and held it up. “Let’s get ice cream and sit on the bench just down the street. That’ll tell us.”
Ten minutes later they were eating chocolate chip ice cream cones, acting like they were the only two people in the world, but Eliza had a view of the hotel. Again she’d been right. Three teenage girls appeared near the front door wearing short skirts and high heels. A man in a Hawaiian print shirt approached and one of the girls disappeared with him behind the hotel doors.
“There it is. Plain as day,” Jack said as they walked back to their hotel. No question they were being watched. He kept his tone and expression light. “But it took you, Eliza, to know where to look.”
Yes, Eliza thought. Because in another lifetime the girl standing outside the hotel had been her friend, Alexa. Or Rosa. Girls she had been forced to bring to the Palace. Eliza could accept that now. The past was behind her… she was a new creation because of her faith.
Jack had read her a Bible verse this morning over breakfast on her balcony. Before work started. It was from Romans 8:28. And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love Him, who have been called according to His purpose.
“See,” he had told her as he closed his Bible app. “No matter what it took to get here, today we will do good. We will fulfill His purpose in all this.”
The verse filled Eliza with hope and peace.
Halfway back to their hotel she had to use the restroom. He stayed outside the door of the building. If someone tried to follow her or harm her, Jack would stop them. Eliza had no doubt. He had loved her in ways she didn’t know existed. With his very life.
They filed separate reports late that afternoon and then strolled the resort grounds on their way to dinner. Tomorrow they would walk the street again, looking for other men, other traffickers. But already they had what they’d come for.
Now since they weren’t looking for traffickers, they could focus on the best part of the job. Pretending they were honeymooners.
Something had been on her mind since she had woken up that morning. She didn’t bring it up at breakfast, but maybe now was the time. She would have to talk in code. There was no such thing as being too careful, she’d