From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Re: demolitions expert, Lucy Karmon
Christine,
I think weâve cornered Arachne. With the information from Divinerâs computer hacks, weâve pinpointed a potential home base in Cape town, South Africa. Itâs tricky politics down there, but Lucy Karmon has what it takes for this mission. Your recommendation was spot on.
Not only does she know the land and the people from her years in South Africa with her mother, but sheâs got a history of breaking the rules, especially when she feels the end is justified. This is one of those times. As you know, weâll do anything to take down Arachneâs web.
Iâll make contact with Lucy today.
D.
Dear Reader,
What a blast it was writing such an exciting, nonstop, action-adventure as Flashpoint. The story had a fluid movement that kept me glued to the keyboard, and the words just flowed. When it came to the ending, I actually suffered a week of depression, because I didnât want to let Lucy or Nolan go.
It was so exciting to watch their love story unfold amid the danger they both faced. And what a neat setting for them to fall in love! Africa, with its unforgiving harshness and its alluring beauty. It truly is a melting pot of all cultures, and thatâs what made researching Cape Town so special to me. There is no other place on Earth quite like it.
I can never do Africa the justice it deservesâno written word canâbut I hope Iâve painted enough mental pictures to pique your interest. Maybe one day youâll journey to Cape Town and think of Lucy and Nolan during your own adventures.
Hope to see you there!
Best wishes and happy reading,
Connie Hall
Award-winning author Connie Hall is a full-time writer. Her credits include six historical novels and two novellas written under the pen name Constance Hall. Sheâs written two action-adventure novels, Rare Breed and Flashpoint. Currently, she is working on The Guardian for Silhouette Nocturne. Her novels are sold worldwide.
An avid hiker, conservationist, bird-watcher, painter of watercolors and oil portraits, she dreams of one day trying her hand at skydiving. She lives in Richmond, Virginia, with her husband, two sons, and Keeper, a lovable Lab-mix who rules the house with her big brown eyes. For more information, visit Connieâs Web site at home.comcast.net/~koslow or e-mail her at koslow@erols. com.
Special thanks to Natashya Wilson, Stacy Boyd
and all the editorial staff at Harlequin, all Bombshells in their own right. As ever, thanks to Anne and Camelot. Couldnât live without you guys. And to Norm and the boys, for your support and for never complaining about the number of hours I spend at my computer. Youâll always be my heroes!
Prologue
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Epilogue
Tijuana, Mexico, Twenty years ago
The icy cold of the operating room soaked through the flimsy sheet, oozed through the hospital gown and bled right down to Jan Straffordâs bones. Her teeth chattered from the cold. Odd thing was, she was sweating all over. Must be a case of nerves.
Muzak played from a speaker in the ceiling. Was it Beethoven? Sheâd hate âFür Eliseâ for the rest of her life. She could see windows in the ceiling and an observation gallery beyond the windows. Was it emptyâno, wait. A shadow loomed across one window, but she couldnât see the person. The person must have been sitting in the last row of the gallery, beyond her view. She felt like a specimen being opened for a biology lab, for one special student.
The smell of disinfectant clung to her nostrils like a cloying fog. Why had she agreed to this? Why had she watched that HBO documentary on plastic surgeries gone bad? She could end up maimed, or worse. The doctor had reassured her facial reconstruction was a breeze, an outpatient procedure. But it wasnât him lying on the table, shivering, sweating every second. The hell with it. She was desperate. She owed several powerful men large sums of money. This was her way out.
A door opened and the nurse anesthetist entered the room carrying a menacing-looking tray. Overhead fluorescent lights gleamed off the glass drug vials and syringes. The end of a rubber tourniquet hung over the trayâs edge. The nurse wore a clinical blank face, a lot like her white coat. Not a hint of compassion in her expression.
Jan felt her palms sweating as she dug her fingers into the sheet covering. The gold charm bracelet she had insisted upon wearing during the operation clanked against the metal gurney, the Victorian ornaments rattling like bones. Sheâd had the bracelet since her twelfth birthday and never took it off. It was her talisman, her good luck charm. Boy, she needed it now.
âI must see both arms, por favor.â The nurse looked at the veins on the inside of her arms, then the backs of her hands. She grunted under her breath, grabbed Janâs right arm and tied a tourniquet around her bicep.