$2.99
'A 2013 Readers Favorite Award Winner'
*Warning - This series is not for those looking for a light easy read. It is filled with rough
language, sexual tension, and steamy hot romantic suspense!
WALK THE RIGHT ROAD: The Complete Collection includes all the books in this sizzling suspense series.
THE CHOICE: One woman. Two men. And a choice that could kill here.
LOST AND FOUND: A hit and run. A deserted country road. A parents' worst nightmare.
MERKABA: Everyone thought he was dead and that's how he needs it to stay. But the secretive dark haired beauty could ultimately be his undoing.
BOUNTY: Most cops have a past. A past they can speak of. A past they can share. But not Diane...
BLOWN AWAY, The Final Chapter: Imagine that the man who's been the source of all your misery shows up on your doorstep. Imagine this man wants your forgiveness for every bad thing he's done to you and your friends. Would you believe him?
Excerpt:
It was too quiet. Unnaturally quiet.
The sort of unusual quiet that happens
right after a big storm rips through. But there hadn’t been one—a
storm, that is. This was just another sunny day, exactly like
hundreds of other brisk autumn Fridays on this off-the-grid, rustic
island of Las Seta in the Pacific Northwest.
DEA Agent Sam Carre squinted from the
blazing sun that brightened the calm blue sky as he walked out of the
shade. From the edge of the old-growth forest, he glanced back into
the heavy foliage to where he’d separated from his partner, Diane,
two hundred yards back along the hidden fence line.
This island was an absolute crown jewel
to any logging company but a nightmare for Sam’s team. It provided
too many hideouts, the wrong kind—the dangerous kind—along with
the perfect cover for marijuana agriculture.
Sam popped on his dark glasses and cut
around three parked cars. He snagged his black jeans on some thorny
bushes as he hurried toward the six solid sure-footed male agents in
front of the wrought-iron gate protecting Lance Silver’s secure
estate.
“Nobody goes until I say so.” Sam
kept his authoritative voice even and his charming grin hidden as he
thought about slapping steel cuffs around Lance Silver’s wrists.
Tonight they’d celebrate, because today they finally had all the
proof they needed to bust Silver and lock him up for life. He was a
dangerous and connected man who had, until now, controlled the
highway of drugs flowing down the west coast across the country, with
deep ties into South America.
“What’s taking Diane so long? Can
she even make it over the fence?” Agent Donaldson, a junior member
on the team, pulled his ball cap over his prematurely balding head.
He stood with Agents Craig, Daniels, Green, Mercer, and Winters. They
were suited up in their Kevlar vests and dark glasses, weapons
holstered and ready to go.
Sam cursed under his breath. Donaldson
was pushing it again. It’d only been five minutes since Sam’s
partner, Diane Larsen, climbed the security fencing, leading four
agents, two of them women, into the forest behind the house. And this
was after she’d disarmed the wire triggering the alarm. Sam wasn’t
in the mood to argue with the young agent who liked to challenge
Diane’s authority. He undermined anything she did, which was
absolute crap. Diane, the only woman on this team with a leadership
role, worked ten times harder than any of these guys. She was kind
hearted and respectful—yet capable of kicking ass when she had to.
She’d been a rock for Sam when he needed a supportive friend to
help him keep his head together. But since she’d fallen apart at
the field office—the news her dad had died after accidentally
mixing up his meds had hit her hard—she’d been getting all kinds
of grief, especially from Donaldson. One incident, just one time, and
it was all these tough-ass pricks could remember.
Sam moved away from the gate and back
into the shaded forest to see if he could spot Diane.
“That kid’s really vying for
Diane’s spot,” said Agent Green as he dogged Sam’s heels. He
resembled a middle child, always trying to fit in, his round baby
cheeks a contrast to his quarterback shoulders.
“Yeah, well, he ain’t going to get
it.” Sam crouched down. “Can’t see anything.”
Green chuckled softly. “These damn
renegades love this off-the-grid wilderness. It’s the perfect
hideout. Nothing but a bunch of hippies, musicians, and artists live
here.” Green spat on the ground a few inches from Sam’s black
boots.
“Hard for those families raising kids
here, you’d think. No electricity, no stores.” Sam breathed in
the clean air.
“Sam, we’re inside,” Diane’s
low, silky voice whispered over the radio.
“Let’s go, let’s go.” Sam
signaled the six men with him.
Mercer stepped forward to cut the
padlock with heavy bolt cutters. It broke, and he yanked the chain
and tossed it to the ground. He and Green flung open the double
gates. Sam jumped into the passenger side of the first car, and
Donaldson climbed behind the wheel. As he slammed the door shut,
Donaldson floored it. Craig, Daniels, and Winters followed in two
cars behind, whipping up a trail of dust. Green and Mercer raced
behind on foot.
Two hundred feet up the long, narrow
driveway, the two-story estate house appeared magically out of the
secluded forest. It rivaled any mansion from the Old South, with a
fancy porch, woodwork, and gardens on all sides. Nothing moved, not
even a curtain shielding the floor-to-ceiling glass windows. Lance
Silver had people, a lot of them. The place should have been buzzing
right about now. Sam pulled the warrant from under his Kevlar vest.
He flicked the holster of his Glock and ran his fingers through his
short brown hair. His gut warned him something was wrong. Where was
everyone? They shouldn’t have been able to drive in without
creating mayhem. This had been too easy—and too easy meant a
problem. “Shit!”
Sam pressed his hand to his earpiece.
“Keep your heads up, eyes open. Something’s not right here.” As
a seasoned cop, Sam had learned the hard way to see things others
didn’t notice. And he analyzed. It was a coping mechanism that had
become his mode of survival, especially after what happened to Elise.
They pulled closer to the front door. He felt the downward slide of
something he couldn’t put his finger on, but Sam knew—something
was off.
Donaldson slammed the brakes and
skidded to a stop at the front door. Sam braced his hand on the
dashboard before jerking open his door and jumping out into a cloud
of dust. Donaldson bounded over the hood and raced Sam up the stone
stairs. Craig and Daniels hurried around the side of the house.
Winters, Green, and Mercer flanked Sam.
Donaldson banged on the door. “DEA,
open up.”
Nothing, no response, and Sam really
listened. By now, they should have heard footsteps, some kind of
rustling from inside.
Beads of sweat covered Donaldson’s
face, and he appeared to vibrate, as if he itched to kick open the
door.
“Open it.” Sam stepped to the side,
holding up his gun. Craig took the other side. Donaldson pulled up
his knee and kicked hard with the heel of his black boot over the
dead bolt, letting out a rough oomph. The doorframe splintered
as the mahogany door crashed open.
“DEA, we have a warrant,” Sam
called. His adrenaline pumped, and he aimed his weapon and went in.
Everything went into slow motion. Details stood out. In his
peripheral vision, Sam caught a glimpse of the shining black steel of
a gun and nearly crapped in his pants. It took a second to register
it was his gun—his image in a floor-to-ceiling wall mirror. It
filled both sides of the massive front hall. “Christ almighty,”
he muttered before gripping his weapon and shouting to the others:
“We’re in. Green, Winters, check the basement. Donaldson,
upstairs.” His gut twisted tightly as he struggled to listen. Where
was the scrambling, the shouting, something—anything to break this
chilly silence? “DEA, show yourself,” Sam shouted again, clearing
the front hall and the sunken living room, through an open archway to
a huge chef’s kitchen, which was extremely neat and tidy. Not even
a measly cup had been left sitting on the counter.
Floor-to-ceiling windows filled every
room. He could see Diane and the four agents out back behind the
solar panels as they searched the outbuildings. Sam frowned and
leaned against the double-pane glass door. This massive house was
silent except for his agents, who were scouring every room.
Winters’ deep voice grated through
Sam’s earpiece: “Basement’s clear.”
Everyone checked in. The garage, the
greenhouse, all empty. This upscale, state-of-the-art,
energy-efficient estate had been abandoned. Not even the caretaker
remained.
“Sam, there’s no marijuana. There’s
no equipment,” Diane said through his earpiece.
Beads of sweat popped out on Sam’s
forehead. Beneath his Kevlar vest, his snug T-shirt stuck to his
well-sculpted back. The radio buzzed with furious updates from their
twelve-man team on the mainland, which included the Sequim sheriff’s
detachment, the Coast Guard, Interpol, and the DEA. This had been a
simultaneous sweep of all Lance Silver’s property, both here on Las
Seta and in the underground truck trailer at his compound across the
water in rural Gardiner, Washington. All empty.
Sam pressed his microphone close to his
mouth. “Diane, where are you?” He slid open the glass kitchen
door and walked onto the massive stone patio overlooking the pond and
the luscious, well-tended rose garden. He slumped against the patio
door and tried to rub away the pulsating pain between his eyebrows.
Since this investigation started, he’d begun to experience a sudden
sensitivity to light and sound. It could be gone in several hours,
but the usual warning had been there for the last few days—a blue
aura in his peripheral vision, black spots. But he ignored it, told
himself it was the stress of running what had started out as an
independent investigation by the DEA but had escalated into an
international taskforce targeting the marijuana grow-ops running
rampant on the isolated islands in the Pacific Northwest.
World-renowned high-grade marijuana was
being shipped and traded for cocaine and guns. This was big time, a
major business and an international problem that law enforcement had
yet to defuse. As if they could.
“What’s wrong?”
He never heard Diane approach. Her
words stretched out long and loud. It took forever for his senses to
override the roaring in his ears. His blood began to pound through
his body, pulling him deeper into throbbing misery.
“Here, take this.”
He opened his eyes when Diane tapped
out three pills from a small bottle. He didn’t question it. He just
swallowed. There wasn’t much Sam wouldn’t take from his trusted
friend. Diane was a woman of medium height and build, compact and
tough, with tan short-cropped hair, the type of woman who didn’t
distract a man with flirtatious curves. But she was the kind of
partner who’d do the gritty groundwork while keeping her partner
focused, which was what she had done on the boat ride over this
morning, ignoring Agent Donaldson’s crude jibes, guzzling coffee
with Sam.
“If you don’t pull it together,
some woman on this team’s going to fulfill her dream and have you
bedded and nursed before we can wrap this up.”
Whatever she gave him took the edge off
the pain, which would have otherwise been blinding.
“Eat this.” She tossed him an
energy bar. He didn’t argue, ripping open the foil wrap with his
teeth and chewing the gritty bar.
“He knew we were coming,” he said.
“Click off your radio, Sam.”
He ripped the headset from his ear.
“You know we followed the letter of the law to make sure this
scumbag didn’t get off on some technicality. All those stakeouts—we
did our homework, Diane. We know who the little guys are, every
fucking one of them on the street. We have video footage and
rock-solid evidence that the drugs were here!” Sam pounded the
fleshy part of his fist against the smooth fir siding.
“Agent Carre, you better get in here
and see this,” Donaldson beckoned quite arrogantly, undermining his
superior, Diane, by not addressing her.
Diane, one to always hold her emotions
close and rarely show what she thought, tilted one eyebrow up as her
face hardened. This prick was deliberately pushing her buttons and
deserved a one-on-one ass kicking. Personally, Sam would have liked
to plant his foot far up that kid’s ass by now, except this was
Diane’s fight, and if she wanted those guys to respect her, Sam
couldn’t fight it for her.
Sam and Diane followed Donaldson down a
long hall, which resembled an art gallery, to Lance Silver’s study
in the solar glass wing. Green, Mercer, Winters, and Craig looked up,
but only Winters—a big, dark Irish and African-American guy with
long, fuzzy hair—would honestly look at Sam. The tension multiplied
when the other tough guys turned away slightly, crossing their arms
and glancing awkwardly at Lance Silver’s palatial mahogany desk.
All of its drawers hung open.
“We found this in the top drawer of
the desk.” Donaldson appeared to own the room when he picked up a
crisp yellow piece of paper from the cluttered desk and passed it to
Sam.
Diane peered closer, her head never
topping Sam’s shoulder.
His vision cleared. Bold black letters
spelled out his name. He didn’t miss how still the room had become.
He could feel the heat from every agent while they waited for Sam to
explain, but then Diane ripped the note from his hands and stepped in
front of him.
“What the hell is this, some kind of
game?” she snapped.
No one answered.
Sam was ready to clear out. When he
replaced his headset, he could hear his boss, Dexter, shouting over
the radio, bypassing Sam as he spoke directly to Diane. Diane pressed
her hand to her ear to listen.
“I want your asses back here now,”
Dexter said. “We got a problem. A tip was called into the Sequim
sheriff’s detachment telling us to check Sam’s locker at Ocean’s
gun club. The tipster said we would find a key to Lance Silver’s
estate and implied that my golden boy is on Lance’s payroll.”
Sam looked up so fast that his head
spun. Dizzy, he stepped back and leaned against the mahogany
bookcase. “What the hell? That’s bullshit.”
Dexter yelled, “There’s a chopper
en route to get you now. Two deputies from the Sequim detachment just
opened your locker, and they found a key, along with five pounds of
marijuana.”
Sam’s blood chilled. The bad feeling
he had earlier had just become a clear epiphany. He could almost see
that suave, tight-assed bachelor, Lance Silver, laughing at him.
Instead of Silver going to jail, all this shit flying around had
landed hard right on top of Sam. Not only did he look like the leak
in Lance Silver’s back pocket, doubt of Sam’s true allegiance was
painted on the faces of the agents surrounding him. He could feel
their censure.
Amazing how quickly they turned. They
thought he had tipped Silver off about the raid. Pissed and
completely furious, Sam gazed hard at all of the turncoats until each
one stepped back. He wasn’t about to dignify this with a response,
not after how hard he had worked to nail that bastard, following
every lead the other agents missed or brushed off. Sam hadn’t
missed a thing—he lived for this investigation. He had breathed
life into it and lost sleep because of it. Those guys should have
known that out of anyone, Sam wouldn’t be the one to betray this
team. He ground his lips together so hard that they trembled. He felt
as if the rug had been ripped right out from under him, and he was
positive he could hear a toilet flushing six months of steady, solid
work away. How could this have happened again? Why was he such a
target?
Well, for one, this was Las Seta, an
unpoliced, reclusive island, part of the San Juan Islands in the
Pacific Northwest. History alone should have warned him this job
wouldn’t be easy. The explorers and adventurers who had claimed
this island over a hundred years before landed there quite by
accident, for one reason or another. Whether hiding or running from
something, they had all insisted on a land free from politics and
civilized order. Families and clans remained year after year,
protecting each other, and, staying true to tradition, they followed
their own way of doing things. So, while Sam hunted Lance Silver,
Lance Silver and the island of Las Seta had changed the rules of the
game and ambushed Sam.
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