A man undercover must reveal the truth in the swamps in the continuation of USA TODAY bestselling author Jana DeLeonâs Mystere Parish: Family Inheritance.
One day on the job and contractor Zach Sargent is ready to believe the dilapidated old LeBeau mansion is haunted. Some intruderâearthly or notâis threatening the youngest LeBeau sister, back to claim her inheritance. And though Danae keeps her distance from the sexy hired hand, he falls for her in a heartbeat.
Like Danae, Zach has come back to Calais in need of answers to troubling questions about the LeBeau family past. But Danae must never know who he really is and he canât let his attraction to her stop his search...or else a decades-old evil will claim a new victim.
âAre you hurt?â Zach asked.
The worry and care in his voice and expression was so clear that it made her heart ache.
âIâm sorryââ she started.
âDonât you dare apologize,â he said. âSomeone attacked you in your home. Anyone would have been terrified.â
âI was,â she said, and looked down, almost embarrassed that sheâd been so scared.
He placed his finger under her chin and tilted her head back up until she met his gaze. âBut you fought back and got away,â he said. âYouâre a strong, brave woman.â
Her heart pounded in her throat and more than anything, she wanted him to kiss her. No matter how hard sheâd tried to resist her attraction to Zach, her body always betrayed her. It came alive when he was close to her, as never before.
She felt her body lean forward, anticipating the kiss, but instead, he released her and scanned the cabin.
USA TODAY bestselling author JANA DELEON grew up among the bayous and small towns of southwest Louisiana. Sheâs never actually found a dead body or seen a ghost, but sheâs still hoping. Jana started writing in 2001âshe focuses on murderous plots set deep in the Louisiana bayous. By day she writes very boring technical manuals for a software company in Dallas. Visit Jana on her website, www.janadeleon.com.
CAST OF CHARACTERS
Danae LeBeauâThe youngest LeBeau sister had the roughest childhood of the three girls, and it left her with a strong distrust of people and an attitude that anything life handed her, she would handle on her own. But with her life on the line, she has to trust someone, or risk dying alone.
Zach SargentâThe construction company owner was looking for answers surrounding his fatherâs death and was certain they were contained on the LeBeau estate, where heâd gained a job as a contractor. He thought heâd have full access to the mansion, find the information he needed and leave, but the cagey LeBeau heiress kept him under her watchful eye. Could he convince her to trust him long enough to get the answers he needed?
Jack GrangerâThe disgruntled cook was mad enough that he didnât inherit from the LeBeau estate when the girlsâ stepfather died. Heâs even less thrilled that the woman who used to wait tables in the café turned out to be one of the heiresses. But was he angry enough to try kill her over it?
Bert ThibodeauxâThe long-haul trucker had been promised an inheritance by the girlsâ stepfather, Trenton Purcell, but he got stiffed, just like the cook. He was no stranger to trouble with the law, but would he go as far as murder to take his revenge?
Johnny MillerâThe local man had owned the café for decades and seemed to care about his patrons and the town. But was he another of the townâs residents that Purcell had promised would inherit from the LeBeau estate?
To my husband, Rene, who always believed in me.
Chapter One
The tortured soul wandered the mansion, calling for her children. Where had they gone? Why couldnât she hear their sweet voices? Why didnât their footsteps echo throughout the house?
Was it him? Had he done something to her babies?
The thought of it broke her heart and she screamed in anguish, vowing never to rest until her children were returned to her.
And until the man paid.
* * *
DANAE LEBEAU was running late, as usual, but today she had a good excuse. The local radio station had been abuzz since the wee hours of the morning, broadcasting information about the attack on Alaina LeBeau weeks before and the subsequent death of her attacker at the hands of the local sheriff. Until now, it had all been gossip and speculation, while everyone impatiently waited for the state police to clear those involved and declare it self-defense. Now it was the hottest bit of excitement the tiny bayou town of Calais had ever seen.
My sister could have died.
The thought ripped through her as she listened to the reporter relay the gruesome details of that horrible night at their motherâs estate, the weight of the words crippling her. Her sister could have died, and Danae had never even told her they were related.