Amber awoke with a start at the loud noise and was suddenly struggling to breathe as Dex threw himself on top of her, his gaze darting around the room.
âWhatâs going on?â she whispered, as she tried to extricate herself from beneath him, very aware that her nightshirt had ridden up to her belly and that Dex had apparently shed all of his clothes during the night except for his boxers.
He glanced down at her as if only just now seeing her, then rolled off her. âAre you okay?â
âI think so. What was that noise?â
âGunshot.â
She stared at him in shock. âAre you sure it wasnât thunder?â As if in response to her question, thunder boomed overhead and another incredible wave of rain began pouring in earnest.
âThat sound came from inside the house.â
LENA DIAZ was born in Kentucky and has also lived in California, Louisiana and Florida, where she now resides with her husband and two children. Before becoming a romantic suspense author, she was a computer programmer. A former Romance Writers of America Golden Heart Award finalist, she has won a prestigious Daphne du Maurier Award for excellence in mystery and suspense. To get the latest news about Lena, please visit her website, www.lenadiaz.com.
Chapter One
Dex looked out the cockpit window of his Cessna Corvalis at the vast wasteland of the Everglades racing below him at 190 knots. The monotony of sand-colored saw grass went on for miles, broken only by occasional muddy canals and vast islands of mangled cypress, their roots sticking out of the brackish water like giant knobby knees. If the Glades were anything like the marshes back home in Saint Augustine, he didnât know how anyone could stand the rotten-egg stink of rotting vegetation enough to want to visit for very long, let alone live there.
âI donât get it, Jake.â He held his cell phone to his ear while he looked out the windows. âYou worked your butt off to convince me to front the money to create Lassiter and Young Private Investigations. But just a few months after leaving everyone you knowâincluding meâand setting up shop in Naples, youâre ready to close the doors. For whatâthis swamp full of smelly plants and more alligators per capita than people? Canât you get Faye to move instead of you moving to Mystic Glades?â
He maneuvered the stick and dipped the wing, veering from his flight plan for a birdâs-eye view of the town that had been at the center of their recent investigation but was now going to be his friendâs new home. Unless Dex could talk him out of it.
âHold it,â Jake said. âWhat do you mean âthisâ swamp? Arenât you still in north Florida?â
âI was. But then you called last week to tell me that you and the former target of our first and only case were an item and that you were quitting. I left my billion-dollar enterprise on the brink of ruin with people I barely trust so I could talk you out of this foolishness.â
Jake snorted. âDonât give me that. Lassiter Enterprises runs so smoothly no one will even notice that youâre gone. More than likely, youâre using me as an excuse to hide from the latest girlfriend you dumped. Who is it this time? That intellectual property rights attorney you introduced me to last Christmas? Didnât you date her for several months? I thought you two were getting serious. Veronica something-or-other?â
âYou wound me deeply to imply that I would use our friendship as an excuse to avoid my commitment issues.â
âUh-huh. Whatâs the name of the woman youâre running from this time?â
âMallory. I think she wants to kill me.â
âThey usually do. Dex? Exactly where are you?â
He tapped the touch screen of the GPS navigation system. âGood question. My state-of-the-art airplane isnât acting so state-of-the-art right now. Itâs blinking like a caution light on steroids.â The screen went dark. âWhat the...?â He rapped the glass with his fist.
âTell me you arenât flying over Mystic Glades,â Jake said.
Dex looked out the side window. âAs a matter of fact, I think I am. And it doesnât look any better from up here than I thought it would. I count fifteen, maybe twenty ramshackle wooden buildings down one long dirt road. Looks like something out of the Old West, or a ghost town, or both. Where are the houses? Where are the cars? Heck, whereâs the town? Is that all there is?â
âItâs bigger than it looks. There are side roads hidden under the tree canopies. Itâs fairly spread out. And most of the townspeople use canoes or ATVs to get around more than they use cars. But Iâm pretty sure Iâve told you most of that already. Do you even remember our last call? The one where I said I was getting married?â