Showing posts with label Contest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Contest. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

A Little Late Posting This

So sorry. It's been a crazy week. So without further ado...



Congratulations, Robin. I will contact you by email to get your book to you. Thanks to everyone who played along.

I can hardly believe it's the last week of June. Where did the month go?

I'm starting to rewrite The Devil's Shadow this week, and getting ready to start The Devil's Due. Finally book three. I have mixed feelings here. A part of me is looking forward to finishing this series, seeing it all come together, and working on something new, but a part of me will miss these characters.

This past weekend the hot weather finally hit. I'm officeless again until I find a window air conditioner for the attic. Kijji here I come.

Hope everyone is enjoying the lovely summer weather.



Friday, June 21, 2013

Win a Signed Copy of Blood and Bone!

Today, I'm giving away a signed print copy of Blood and Bone. You know the drill. Leave a comment and be sure to include your email address so I have a way to contact you. I'll announce the winner Monday. Good luck!!



The deeper they dig into the past, the closer they come to a killer.

Crime writer Shayne Reynolds is looking for the next book that’ll get her out of her parents’ basement and on track to rebuilding her life. She’s found it in Robert Anderson, a confessed murderer who’s out on parole. Something’s never added up about that case.

From the moment she sets foot in Dark Water, nothing goes as planned. Anderson’s family wants her to drop the story—especially surviving son Des. A man who ignites sizzling heat even as he stands firmly in her way.

Laboring under his father’s crushing legacy and his grandmother’s iron resolve to get rid of the nosy writer at any cost, Des struggles to save the self-destructive sister who once saved him. There’s something honest and forthright about Shayne, though, that tempts him to help her get to the truth. Even if it means double-crossing his powerful grandmother.

Despite their resolve to keep it strictly business, sexual sparks quickly set fire to tangled emotions. And threads of a fragile bond that someone with a vendetta could use to weave their death shroud…

Product Warnings
This story contains a feisty writer, a sexy younger man and a mystery with enough twists and turns to cause vertigo.

Copyright © 2011 Dawn Brown
All rights reserved — Samhain Publishing, Ltd. publication


Excerpt

Des gripped her heel tightly, with quick fingers pulled out the glass and pressed a gauze pad against the wound to stem the bleeding. Fresh pain soared up her leg, before settling into a dull throb.

“Your foot’s really bleeding.” He lifted the gauze. She tried to pull her foot away, but his hold tightened, and he grinned. “I still need to clean the cut and bandage you up.”
She glared while he opened the antiseptic pad’s foil package. The same brand he’d complained hurt when she’d used it on his face. “Remember, I could have left you at the side of the road last night.”

“Duly noted.” He applied the damp wipe to her oozing injury. Stinging flames licked at her nerve endings.

“Sadist,” she hissed. Closing her eyes, she bit her lip and waited for him to finish. At last, the pain receded. When she opened her eyes, he was carefully applying a bandage.

“All done.” He bent his head and pressed his lips to the arch of her foot in a feathery kiss. A delicious tingle rippled over her skin. He peered up at her, those smoky eyes watching her through the hair that had fallen into his face.


She forgot the pain in her foot and a new ache settled low and deep inside her.

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Monday's Winner and Living Lies

Congrats to Denise! She has won an ecopy of Blood and Bone. I will be contacting you by email to find out which format you prefer.

Today, I'm giving away an ecopy of Living Lies. Leave a comment and tomorrow I'll draw a name when I announce Wednesday's contest. (Remember to include your email so I can contact you.)


Doing whatever it takes could get them both killed.

Twelve years after her sister’s disappearance, Haley Carling spends her days trying to hold what’s left of her family together, running her late father’s shop and caring for her alcoholic mother. Then her sister’s remains are uncovered in the basement of their old home, and fingers start pointing. At the Carlings.

Dean Lawson, long the prime suspect in the Carling girl’s disappearance, is sure he’s got evidence proving who the killer is. He’s determined to clear his name, and he won’t let anything stand in his way. Not even his lingering attraction to Haley.

Haley is just as determined to protect her family from the former town bad boy’s accusations. But now someone is stalking her, and Haley realizes Dean’s the only one she can trust.

With a killer closing in, Dean wonders if he’s made the biggest mistake of his life…a mistake that could cost Haley her life.


Living Lies - Excerpt
Copyright © Dawn Brown 2008

Haley left Dean at his car across the street from her store then started home. The name Sandra still played through her brain. Why did it sound so familiar? Where had she heard it before?
Absently, she nibbled at the corner of her lip. The only thing more perplexing than the name tickling her memory was her uneasy alliance with Dean. Who would have guessed he would become a strange sort of ally in all this? Ally or not, Sandra wasn’t a whole lot to go on, for either of them.

She pulled into her driveway and got out of the car. Her muscles had stiffened from the long drive and an air of defeat seemed to have settled over her. Maybe after she ate something she’d feel better.

She followed the narrow cement walk to her doorstep, digging for her keys in her purse. They jingled maddeningly just out of reach as she searched blindly, through the receipts, gum wrappers and ATM statements. She needed to clean this crap out.

At last her fingers closed over the cold metal, but as she reached out to push the key into the lock she realized she didn’t need it. The door stood open. Barely a quarter of an inch, but open just the same.

Her heart rate tripled as she pushed the door the rest of the way, fisting her keys in her other hand so that each one stuck out between her knuckles. A vague recollection from a self-defense class in high school phys-ed.

Maybe she should call the police. She shook her head as if answering herself. What if she just hadn’t closed the door properly when she left that morning? She’d look like an idiot.

From the small front hall, the pale kitchen light spilled into the living room. Had she left that light on this morning? She struggled to remember, but came up empty as she ran her hand over the switches for the light overhead and the lamp next to the couch.

Nothing moved, or seemed out of place in the sudden brightness. The house was silent except for the familiar tick of the furnace and the ever-present hum of the refrigerator. She stepped farther into the house, half expecting someone to jump out at her from the dining room, but no one did.

With her heart pounding in her ears, she went into the kitchen. Everything was as she left it. From the dregs of coffee still in the pot, to the mug, plate and knife on the counter, to the crumbs next to the toaster. But then, what had she expected? That an intruder would break in and tidy her kitchen?

She considered grabbing one of the serrated knives from the wooden block on the counter, but rolled her eyes at her own foolishness. She’d probably forgotten to turn off the light in the kitchen this morning. God knew she’d been a touch preoccupied lately. The door probably hadn’t closed properly behind her when she’d left for work. And the only reason she was climbing the stairs to make sure everything was how she left it was simply for her own peace of mind. Just so she could say "I told you so" to her overactive imagination.

Her breath locked in her throat as she reached the small hallway at the top of the stairs. Soft, pale light flickered through the narrow gap between the wall and her partially closed bedroom door. With feet that felt as if they were made of stone, she dragged herself forward and pushed open the door with one trembling hand.

Her stomach dropped and a strange sound escaped her lips, something between a whimper and a gasp. The room glowed as if on fire. Candles of every shape and color flickered on her dresser, vanity, and on the floor surrounding the bed. Someone had pulled back the bedspread as if in invitation and scattered dark red rose petals across the sheets.

She covered her gaping mouth with her hand and took a step back. Who could have done this? And more importantly why?

A dull thump from below made her freeze where she stood. Someone was in the house. She should have brought the knife.

Monday, June 17, 2013

My New Website has Launched!

My new website is up and running. dawnbrown.ca Be sure to pop over and have look.

To celebrate I'm giving away a book every day this week. Today, I'm giving away an ecopy of Blood and Bone. To win all you have to do is leave a comment (include your email so I can contact you if you win) and I'll draw a winner tomorrow when I post Tuesday's giveaway.



The deeper they dig into the past, the closer they come to a killer.

Crime writer Shayne Reynolds is looking for the next book that’ll get her out of her parents’ basement and on track to rebuilding her life. She’s found it in Robert Anderson, a confessed murderer who’s out on parole. Something’s never added up about that case.

From the moment she sets foot in Dark Water, nothing goes as planned. Anderson’s family wants her to drop the story—especially surviving son Des. A man who ignites sizzling heat even as he stands firmly in her way.

Laboring under his father’s crushing legacy and his grandmother’s iron resolve to get rid of the nosy writer at any cost, Des struggles to save the self-destructive sister who once saved him. There’s something honest and forthright about Shayne, though, that tempts him to help her get to the truth. Even if it means double-crossing his powerful grandmother.

Despite their resolve to keep it strictly business, sexual sparks quickly set fire to tangled emotions. And threads of a fragile bond that someone with a vendetta could use to weave their death shroud…

Product Warnings
This story contains a feisty writer, a sexy younger man and a mystery with enough twists and turns to cause vertigo.

Copyright © 2011 Dawn Brown
All rights reserved — Samhain Publishing, Ltd. publication
Excerpt

The sucking slop of footsteps in wet mud rose from the surrounding black. The hair on the back of her neck bristled, and a chill tickled along her spine.

Was it Hudson coming back to finish her off? Tic?

What was she doing standing around out here anyway? A woman alone, late at night, on a deserted country road, during a thunderstorm? The scene had slasher flick written all over it.

She started for the driver’s side door, but a low moan rose up from the darkness.
The wind? Had to be. Still, she picked up her pace.

The moan came again, louder this time. Shayne stopped and turned. A dark, hunched figure staggered toward her.

“Christ.” She gripped the door handle and yanked open the door.

The stooped outline lurched in front of her single headlight, and the glare illuminated the ugliest Hawaiian shirt she’d ever seen. Relief swamped her like a tidal wave, turning her muscles soft for the second time in one night. The feeling, however, was short-lived. He may not have been the homicidal maniac she’d imagined, but the jerk had scared the life out of her. And all because he was staggering drunk. Even from this distance, the smell of beer was nearly overpowering.

As he pitched forward, the light cast a ghostly pallor over his face. Dark smudges beneath his left eye, along his lip and circling the edges of each nostril stood out from the stark whiteness of his skin.

Blood.


He wasn’t just drunk, he was hurt.

Friday, December 21, 2012

Free Fiction Friday - Bait Part Three

Happy Friday folks! Sorry I haven't been posting this week. I was down with the flu, then busy wrapping up work at the day job before the holidays. The good news is I'm done with both.

Here's the next installment for Bait. Remember to leave a comment to be entered in a draw for a print copy of Blood and Bone at the end of the month.
 

 
 
Bait
Copyright © 2012 Dawn Brown
Part III

 

            Andy followed Ella up three flights stairs to the landing outside her apartment’s door, all the while struggling to ignore the soft sway of her hips as she climbed. Her long, heavy coat hid all but the mere outline of her figure, but he’d seen her shape before and thought of her often since Charlotte left.

            What an ass he’d been. His attraction to Ella Martin had been instant and intense, leaving him like bumbling idiot. Whenever dealing with her, he let Pete do the talking for fear of saying something stupid when he opened his mouth—like asking her out. Ella didn’t look like the type to date cops. Besides, Charlotte leaving him for his brother had torn a gash in almost all aspects of his personal life. He didn’t dare do anything to upset the delicate balance of his work life too.

            Andy jammed his hands into his pockets and trailed Ella into her apartment. With her back to him, he could no longer see her expression, and that was a good thing. The wounded indignation only seemed to fan the anger rising in him like brush fire threatening to rage out of control.

            Why did finding her with Summers infuriate him so much? He should be pleased. He may have discovered a crack in the case.        

Come in detective.” Ella’s voice, cool and annoyed, cut into his thoughts.

            He moved through the shadowy darkness toward her outline. She bent forward, a dry click sounded in the quiet and soft light from the lamp next to the sofa filled the small sitting room.

            Ella straightened and folded her arms over her chest. “I’d offer you coffee, but I doubt you’ll be here long enough for it to brew.”

 She didn’t bother to take off her coat or ask him to sit down. She just stood where she was and waited.

            Let her wait. Andy moved further into the room, pretending to ignore her. He took in the pale green walls, the cream furnishings and wood tables as if seeing it all for the first time. It wasn’t, of course. He just wanted to give her a little time to stew. To wonder just what he’d ask. To worry about just how much he’d pieced together.

            “No Christmas decorations?” he asked, turning to watch her reaction.

            Her lips thinned into a straight line and her left foot tapped the hardwood. “I don’t feel much like celebrating this year.”

            He turned his back to her and continued his mock appraisal of her apartment. He didn’t feel much like celebrating this year either. The idea of sitting at his parents’ dining room table surrounded by his siblings and their husbands and wives while Charlotte and Ben made wedding plans left him cold.

            Shoving the thoughts away, he made his way to fireplace on the far wall. The mantel was cluttered with knick-knacks and candles and framed photo of Ella and Pheobe. He lifted the photo and studied it as he had the first time he’d come to this apartment. The two women in the picture were laughing and looking at each other rather than the camera. In the time he’d known Ella, he never seen that kind of natural smile, and he’d never seen her laugh. The first time he’d looked at the picture, he’d wondered if he found Phoebe alive, could he make Ella smile like that.

What a jack ass he was. She didn’t want her sister found. She wanted her sister’s husband. Hell, he supposed he should be grateful that Charlotte just left him for Ben, and that the two hadn’t tried to kill him.

He shrugged out of his coat and draped the battered leather over the arm of the sofa before dropping down onto the soft cushion. Ella’s eyes brightened, but she didn’t move.

“Ms. Martin,” he said on sigh. “Why not tell me exactly what you were doing having dinner with a man you believe is responsible for your sister’s disappearance?”

She levelled her gaze on his. “Fine. I had dinner with Luke tonight because I’m going to get close to him, then I’ll make him tell me what he did with my sister.”

Friday, December 14, 2012

Free Fiction Friday: Bait Part II

It's Friday!! So here's part two of Bait. Hope you enjoy. Remember to leave a comment to be entered for a chance to win a signed copy of Blood and Bone. Leave a comment every Friday and increase your odds of winning.
 

 
 
Bait
Copyright © 2012 Dawn Brown
Part II

 

Even through Ella’s heavy coat, the weight of Luke’s touch pressed against her turning her stomach. The temptation to shrug away from him was nearly overwhelming, but she didn’t dare make a move that would leave him suspicious. She needed him to trust her if was ever going to find her way to the truth.

She tried to forget that it was a man she despised walking with her, focussing on the storefronts alight with twinkle lights and garland as they made their way along the slick sidewalk. She’d been forced to park nearly two blocks from the restaurant, and as she made her way to her car with Luke gallantly steering her through the throngs of harried shoppers, she wished she hadn’t accepted his offer to walk her. It had been hard enough being civil to him during the meal, but she wasn’t sure how much longer she could endure his touch no matter how casual.

“I’m glad we did this,” he said. “It’s nice to talk to someone who understands what I’m going through.”

I, me, my. God, all Luke talked about was himself. How in the hell could Phoebe stand to listen to him? Maybe she couldn’t, and that was why he… A shudder rippled down Ella’s spine. She didn’t know what Luke had done to her sister, didn’t know if Phoebe was alive or dead. And not knowing was devouring her inside.

Sure, on the surface she could look like she was still in control, still had it together. She could go to work every day and appear to function normally. But beneath the exterior she was slowly unraveling. She needed to know what happened to Phoebe before she lost her mind. 

She forced a smile. “Me too. I’m so sorry for what I said to the police.”

 There was actually a kernel of truth to her last statement. She was sorry she had to deal with the two bonehead detectives who’d been assigned to her sister’s case. The older one had been all placating assurances and no action, while the younger one just scribbled down everything she said in his notebook without saying a word. She might have thought he was mute if not for his occasional grunts when spoken to directly.

“I understand,” Luke said. “I’m sure Phoebe confided in you about the problems we’d been having, but I loved her. I never would have hurt her.”

Her fingers curled into a tight fist. Lies tumbled so smoothly from his lips, fanning the anger smoldering within her. She hated him like no one else she’d known.

“I know you wouldn’t. I’m glad we did this too. She and I only ever had each other. It’s nice to be with someone who feels her loss like I do.” He wasn’t the only one who could wrap bullshit in a pretty silver bow.

He rubbed a slow circle on her back and she stiffened before she could stop herself. He dropped his hand, and she mentally berated herself for her lack of control. She’d have to keep it together if she hoped to put him at ease long enough to get the truth out of him.

“Is this you?” he asked, as they approached the blue jeep parked at the side of the street. Cars drove past in a continuous procession, their tires hissing through the dirty, salt laden slush.

“Yes,” she nodded, stopping. She turned, forcing him to drop his hand, and offered him a tight smile. “Thank you for dinner.”

His pale blue eyes held hers and the corners of his mouth lifted. He was an attractive man. She understood why her sister had been drawn to him. Black hair, a little unruly from the wind, piercing eyes, a faint dimple in his left cheek when he smiled, and rich to boot, Phoebe had fallen for him like a ton of bricks. Phoebe had spent her life waiting for her prince to rescue her. Who knew he’d be the one she really needed rescued from?

Ella had.

Almost from the moment she met Luke, she hadn’t liked him. She hadn’t liked the way he’d criticized Phoebe or put her down, pretending he was kidding. Or the way her sister had begun deferring to him as though she no longer trusted her own judgement. Or the bruise that had appeared on Phoebe’s cheek two weeks before she’d vanished.

“My pleasure,” he murmured, leaning in and brushing his lips against her cheek.

Her stomach lurched. Oh God, she hoped the pasta dish she’d just forced down wouldn’t wind up splattered over his shoes. She held herself rigid, her skin crawling where he touched. She wanted to get home and into the shower, scrub herself raw where ever he’d made contact.

At last, he lifted his head. “Merry Christmas, Ella.”

“Merry Christmas to you.”

With shaking hands, she unlocked the driver’s side door and climbed inside. Luke waited on the sidewalk and gave her a quick wave before he turned and started back the way they’d come. She turned her key in the ignition, but kept her gaze on his back until the crowd swallowed him up.

“What am I doing? What am I doing? What am I doing?” she whispered, dropping her forehead to the steering wheel and squeezing her eyes shut. Hot tears seeped through her lids and spilled down her cold cheeks. Was she making a huge mistake? Should she just let the police do their job?

She might if they would.

Phoebe had been gone a year. One year as of November third, and the police were no closer to finding her now than they were when they found her abandoned car less than twenty minutes from the chalet she and Luke had shared in the mountains.

The clunk of the passenger door opening dragged Ella from her thoughts. She jumped and whipped her head up. The dome light overhead popped on, casting a faint yellow glow over a man sliding into the seat next her. A scream welled inside her throat. She grabbed the door handle ready to scramble out of the car, when he turned and rich whiskey colored eyes met hers.

“Detective Harlowe?” She couldn’t keep the confused disbelief from her voice. He’d barely spoken to her when he had to. So what the hell was he doing in the seat next to her?

“Enjoy your date Ms. Martin?” he sneered. The overhead light dimmed and darkness settled over them. 

Absently, she sniffed and wiped her wet cheeks with the heels of her hands. Date? What date? Luke. He must have seen her with Luke.

“It wasn’t a date,” she ground out.

“Really?” Derision dripped from his words. “You two looked quite cozy to me.”

Had he been watching her? Was Luke under surveillance? Maybe she was wrong. Maybe the police were going to get somewhere with her sister’s case after all.

“And to think, I actually bought into your concerned sister act. Really, an academy award winning performance you put on. If I hadn’t seen you just now with my own eyes, I wouldn’t have believed it.” Barely suppressed fury radiated from his tense frame.

She opened her mouth ready to explain why she’d agreed to dinner with Luke, but he cut her off.  “I know it’s been a year since you managed to get your sister out of the way, but the two of you should probably have kept away from each other a little longer, or chosen somewhere a little more discrete to meet. Hell, even cops Christmas shop.”

Waves of hurt and anger mixed with crushing disappointment washed over her. So much for any hope that the cops were doing something to find her sister. The corners of her eyes pricked with fresh tears, but she blinked them back. She’d be damned before she let this jack-ass see how much his words hurt.

“I don’t know what you think you saw,” she began.

“I saw a woman flirting with a man she’d been certain had played a major role in her sister’s disappearance. You know, Summers’s alibi is air tight, but maybe I need to take another look at yours.”

How ironic would it be for her plan to catch her brother-in-law to back fire, and for her to wind up suspect number one?  She wanted to laugh, she wanted to cry, but most of all she wanted to go home and stand under the hot spray of her shower while scrubbing the feel of Luke’s touch from her skin.

“Get out of my car,” she told him.

“I don’t think so. I want answers.”

“You haven’t asked me any questions.”

“Fine. Did you arrange for your sister’s disappearance so you could have her husband?”

If he’d hauled off and decked her, he couldn’t have hurt her more.  She swallowed hard before speaking. “No. Now, get out.”

She leaned across him, and reached for the door handle, but he caught her wrist in his hand, stopping her. Long callused fingers closed tight around her wrist, his grip firm but not painful—not yet.

“I’m not going anywhere until I know what you were doing with Summers just now.”

She sat back, jerking her arm from his grasp. His mouth had curved into a hard smirk. Fine, he could sit in her car all night for all she cared, but she was going home.

Without another word, she turned and started the car, but hesitated before pulling away from the curb, giving him a chance to get out on his own. He didn’t budge.

“What were you doing with Summers?”

“Having dinner,” she snapped.

            I don’t believe you.”

            She smiled tightly and turned to meet his gaze. “You saw me yourself.”

There was more going on at that table than sharing a meal, so why not tell me. Did you want him for yourself?” His bright, heated gazed raked the length of her. “Is that why you killed her? I just can’t figure out why you were so insistent that we go after Summers in the first place. To keep suspicion from falling on you?”

She hated that condescending sneer he wore, the icy loathing dripping from his tone. Who in the hell was he to judge her? If he had done his job in the first place, she wouldn’t be forced to bring down Luke herself.  “I wanted you to arrest him because he’s the only person who knows what happened to her.”

“I don’t believe that. Not after that sorry display.”

She ground her teeth so hard her jaw ached. “Frankly, I don’t care what you believe. Get out of my car, I’m going home.”

“I told you, I’m not going anywhere until you tell me what the hell you were doing with Luke Summers.”

She shrugged. “Fine. I’m going home. You can sleep in my car or hitch hike back to yours. I don’t care.”

After a quick peek in her mirror, she pulled out onto the street and started home. Harlowe didn’t so much as utter a word as he tugged the seatbelt over his shoulder and clicked it into place.

She kept her gaze fixed on the busy road ahead of her, doing her best to ignore the horrible man seated next to her. It wasn’t as easy as she hoped it would be. His scent, spicy and male, tickled her nose, and his presence seemed to fill the small space of her car with unseen energy, an electrical charge that tingled over her skin.

The first time she’d met him, she thought he wouldn’t have been bad looking were he not such an antisocial weirdo. He was tall, shoulders broad, body hard and lean. His clothes always looked rumpled and in need of a good iron. He wore his light brown hair spiked and a little messy, contributing to his overall dishevelled appearance. Fine lines creased the corners of his unusually colored eyes when he smiled—an expression she rarely saw when dealing with him—or sneered—an expression she was becoming only too familiar with.

As they left the down town core, the traffic thinned and the light from store fronts faded, heightening her sense of isolation and an unpleasant intimacy with the silent man seated next her. She wanted to get away from the detective nearly as badly as she’d wanted to get away from Luke, but for very different reasons.

By the time she pulled into the parking lot of three story walk up where she lived, the muscles in her shoulders and back was stiff. She didn’t look at Harlowe as she turned off the car, opened her door and stepped out into the frigid night.

Icy wind whipped her loose hair about her head and made her eyes water. She hurried across the lot toward the back entrance. The clunk of the passenger door slamming, followed by Harlowe’s hurried footsteps chased after.

            You’re not coming inside,” she told him, fumbling her key into the lock, but hesitating before she turned it. She didn’t need to look up to know he was standing next to her. His presence was practically tangible. If he were lost in a crown people, she would still know he was there.

            “Yeah, I am.”

            She gritted her teeth. “How did you plan on doing that? Forcing your way into my apartment?”

            “If I have to.”

            “I’ll—”

            “You’ll what?” he asked, his voice thick with dark mirth “Call a cop?”

            “Even you aren’t above the law, detective. Surely, harassing people in their homes could lead to a reprimand at the very least.”

            He shrugged. “If you’d rather, I could bring you into the station to answer my questions.”

            “On what grounds?”

            “Suspicious behavior, Ms Martin. I find your actions extremely suspicious. So here are your options; we can go up to your apartment and you tell me what I want to know in the comfort of your living room, or you can tell me down at the station. Either way, you’ll give me want.”

Friday, December 7, 2012

Free Fiction Friday - Bait

It's Free Fiction Friday, and as promised I'm posting the first part of a serial read, Bait. For anyone who leaves a comment, your name will be entered in a draw at the end of the month. The winner gets a signed copy of Blood and Bone (US/CAN only) or an ecopy of Blood and Bone (intl). Leave a comment every Friday and increase your odds of winning. In the meantime, enjoy!



Bait
Copyright © 2012 Dawn Brown


Part I

 

            The frigid wind kicked up, sending a cloud of tiny snowflakes swirling around Andy, but he hardly noticed. He stood motionless, gazing through the glass into the dim restaurant. His attention fixed on the couple inside. He must have been gaping like an idiot, but he couldn’t seem to help himself. The sight of her with him left him dumbfounded.

            How could he have been so wrong about her? He remembered her narrowed eyes, glassy with tears, the slight tremble in her voice when she furiously demanded that he stop wasting time and arrest Luke Summers.

             “I want to know what happened to my sister,” she’d said, her voice quiet with a soft rasp. “And the only person who really knows what happened is that bastard she married.”

            Good Christ, had it all been an act?

Andy watched her swirl the dark red wine in her glass. She lifted her gaze and fixed Summers with a soft, almost coy smile. His stomach twisted. How could he have misjudged her the way he had? Hell, he’d felt sorry for her when all this time she’d been stringing him along with one lie after another. He shouldn’t be so shocked. After all, this wasn’t the first time he’d fallen for a beautiful woman’s bullshit.

Slow fury rose inside him, burning through his blood and leaving him impervious to the cold. He wished to hell Phoebe Summer’s missing persons report had never landed on his desk—and that he’d ever met Ella Martin.

He had to give credit where credit was due, Ms. Martin was a damn fine actress.  The thin layer of angry indignation, barely covering the fear and pain in those misty green eyes while he interviewed her had seemed genuine. She was convinced Summers had played a role in her sister’s disappearance, and Andy had agreed with her. Unfortunately, Luke Summers had an  unbreakable alibi from the time his wife was last seen alive until her car—with traces of her blood on the seat and driver’s side door panel—turned up. 

Summers had been at a conference in Chicago with nearly sixty of his coworkers. Still, that didn’t mean the man hadn’t paid someone to help his wife vanish. But Andy and his partner, Pete, had yet to find evidence linking Summers to his wife’s disappearance.

Inside the restaurant, Summers had paid the bill and stood, offering his hand to Ella. She accepted and allowed the man she had so vehemently accused of foul play to help her to her feet.

Again hot waves of anger rolled through Andy. What game was she playing? Had she helped Summers get rid of her sister so they could be together? The idea turned his stomach.

He considered himself a good judge a character, his ability to read people better than most, but watching Summers guide Ella to the exit, his hand pressed to the small of her back, Andy came to a sad realization. When it came to beautiful women, he didn’t have a clue.

As the couple came toward him, he turned away, pretending to read the menu posted outside the restaurant. Ella’s soft laugh drifted to him on the frigid wind, chilling him. He didn’t know what she’d done to her own sister, but, damn it, he planned to find out.

 
Continued next Friday. Have great weekend!!