âDid you just see an empty boat floating in the middle of the ocean with the little girl in it?â Kelsey asked Ethan as she held the toddler close.
Ethan pulled out diapers and an extra outfit, very well-worn. Then he pulled out a card with a small handprint on it. He laid it on the table and stared at it.
âEthan?â
âAn ⦠n?. I didnât just find her. Someone sent me to the boat.â His hands shook as he stared at a picture of an infant around six months old-and not of the little one Kelsey held.
âEthan, who is that?â She gentled her voice. It was obvious the picture meant something to him.
He shook his head, his eyes on the photo.
Kelsey put her free hand over his, blocking his view. âEthan, look at me. Who is the baby in the picture?â
He swallowed hard, his eyes dark with pain. âThat picture is my son, Charlie. It was taken right before he died.â
What was going on? Why would someone use this toddler to get to Ethan?
Dear Reader,
When I started The Babyâs Bodyguard, I knew the basics. I knew that Kelsey and Ethan had both suffered a terrible loss, and that they both had some lessons to learn along the way to love.
I didnât know that human trafficking is a huge and growing problem worldwide, including in the United States. The suspense in this story is fictional, but the truth is that children are bought and sold as commodities every day.
Hereâs another truth: Love wins in the end. Itâs the happily ever after that we all seek.
For more information or to contact me, please go to www.stephanienewtonbooks.com. Iâd love to hear from you.
Blessings,
Seven months of deep cover had led to this exact moment. The meet heâd been angling for since heâd hooked up with Antonio Cantori all those months ago. A direct line to the man who was pulling the strings behind a group of businessmen. Businessmen who bought and sold millions of dollars a week. And their sideline moneymakerâhuman trafficking, specifically little girls.
Ethan Clark picked up the satchel of money from the passenger side of his Jaguar sedan and looped it over his head. Once the money changed hands, he was done. A team of field agents would swarm the plush office behind the restaurant and take down the man pulling the strings. And Ethan could go home to his wife and baby.
The stakes were high, had never been higher. This was his last undercover assignment. Heâd told his superiors at the FBI that he couldnât do this kind of operation any more. And the lives of those little girls were on the line, too. Heâd held the weight of it in his heart for four long months, knowing he was powerless to save them.
But tonight was the night he changed things.
Ethan straightened his two-hundred-dollar tie and rounded the corner, pausing just for a minute to check out the gleaming windows of the Ristorante Giorgio, Cantoriâs place. His blood thrummed through his system. Adrenaline. Excitement.
A blonde pushing a baby stroller eased into view, walking toward the restaurant. He hesitated. She moved like his wifeâlike Amyâbut it wouldnât be Amy. She didnât live in this town, didnât even know this place was on the map. He took a step closer. She stopped under a streetlamp, looked at her watch.
His wife. His baby.
Here?
Another step. She opened the door of the restaurant. She shouldnât be here. Shouldnât be anywhere close to here. But if he called out to her, his cover was blown and they were all dead. Amy, baby Charlie, and him.
The explosion slammed him against the building behind him. And when he opened his eyes, Amy was gone. The restaurant was a gaping, burning cave.
His mouth dropped open in a silent scream, his throat closing up on him so fast, he could barely whisper her name.
Sirens wailed and every car alarm in ten blocks blared.
âAmy.â
Tony Cantori walked out of the wall of flames toward a vehicle waiting on the corner. His black eyes searched the block, passed Ethan and came back. He shaped his fingers into the sign of a handgun and made the motion of pulling the trigger at Ethan. Laughing, he jumped into a black van, which slid smoothly away from the curb.
Ethan ran for the restaurant, dropping the bag of money on the sidewalk. âAmy!â
He pushed through the crowd of people that had begun to gather outside. âAmy!â
Rough hands grabbed him, holding him back. He fought them. âIâve got to getâmy wife, myââ
New hands held his face. His partner, Bridges, made him hold eye contact. âYou canât go in there.â
Ethan bucked against the arms holding him back. His legs were restricted, but he surged forward, screaming. âAmy!â
Bridges grabbed him the way he would a child and held him. âItâs no good, Ethan. Theyâre gone.â
His throat worked, tears locked against a wall of pain.
No.