âAnd where do you think youâllbe when those bullets startflying?â
At last she turned. Her face was close to his, her eyes studying his mouth as if analysing the words that just came out.
He tucked a golden strand behind her ear. âI have a hard time with you â Ben, too â being a detail that gets overlooked. Benâs already growing up without a dad. I couldnât handle it if he had to grow up without a mother, too.â
She reached up and touched his face with her wet hand, stroking his jaw. âItâs for Benjaminâs sake that Iâm trying to be this strong. You saw how upset he got this morning at the diner. He needs to know that I can take care of us.â
âMy mum and dad were always stronger together.â
Her tremulous smile cut straight to his heart. She brushed her fingertips across his lips. âI donât know what thatâs like, Sawyer.â
âLet me show you. Letâs be that team.â
CAST OF CHARACTERS
Sawyer Kincaid â This gentle giant discovers a darker side to his personality when his father is murdered. When the woman who once rejected his love is targeted by a killer, will it bring out this Kansas City copâs protective instincts, or send him over the edge?
Melissa Teague â As a young woman, she married a man who turned out to be her worst nightmare. When her ex escapes from prison, she learns that putting her faith in another man may be the only way to survive.
Richard âAceâ Longbow â Melissaâs abusive ex. Heâs escaped from prison to save his own neck from an inside hit, but whatâs his plan for life on the outside?
Benjamin Teague â A bright, happy four-year-old who knows nothing about the father who never claimed him. Melissa wants to keep it that way.
Fritzi Teague â Melissaâs mother.
Hank Brennerman â Aceâs cellmate. He likes to talk.
Tyrell Mayweather â An enemy of Aceâs from inside the pen. But escaping from prison makes strange allies.
Riley Holt â The FBI agent in charge of recapturing the fugitives.
William Caldwell â Longtime family friends of the Kincaids.
John Kincaid â Deputy commissioner of the KCPD, Sawyerâs father. Unforgivably, unmistakably dead. But why, and whoâs responsible?
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Julie Miller attributes her passion for writing romance to all those fairy tales she read growing up, and shyness. Encouragement from her family to write down all those feelings she couldnât express became a love for the written word. She gets continued support from her fellow members of the Prairieland Romance Writers, where she serves as the resident âgrammar goddess.â This award-winning author and teacher has published several paranormal romances. Inspired by the likes of Agatha Christie and Encyclopedia Brown, Ms Miller believes the only thing better than a good mystery is a good romance.
Born and raised in Missouri, she now lives in Nebraska with her husband, son and smiling guard dog, Maxie. Write to Julie at PO Box 5162, Grand Island, NE 68802-5162, USA.
For my reading and writing students.
Thanks for keeping me on my toes and being such cool kids to work with. Remember, each of you has a talent. Learn something new every day â it keeps your brain healthy and makes life more interesting. Make a difference every day â in big ways or small, others will appreciate it, and youâll feel good about yourself. Keep working hard. And thanks for the chocolate!
John Kincaid touched his tongue to the coppery tang of his swollen split lip. His words were slurred, his confusion evident. âWho are you? What do you want from me?â
âYouâre a cop. Does it make any difference?â Dark eyes reflected delight in their power over him.
âShut up! Weâre not supposed to talk.â The one with the colorless eyes shoved the taller man.
âBack off!â
Not good. His enemies were fighting between themselves now. With his wrists handcuffed behind the rusting steel office chair, John sat helplessly in their path, waiting to bear the brunt of their discord.
âQuit playinâ us! You think weâre stupid, old man?â
Three of the fingers on his right hand were already broken when the kick came and crushed another joint. John gritted his teeth, his agonizing scream growling inside his throat.
Heâd been tortured like this before, having the crap repeatedly beat out of him, as though pulverizing the muscles and bones would loosen the tongue. But heâd been a young man then. Age and too many years on a desk job had weakened his body if not his will. It was harder to stay awake this time, harder to detach his brain from the violence so that he wouldnât reveal something he shouldnât.
Only, thatâs what made no sense. These two bastardsâthe hotheaded one with the prison tattoos and the older, more calculating one with the meaty fistsâhadnât asked him one sensible question beyond verifying his name and position as deputy commissioner of KCPD.
Nothing about an open case.
Nothing about revenge for someone heâd killed or put away over the span of his thirty-year career as a cop.