Shadow Of Betrayal
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Shadow of Betrayal
Margot Harris Book 4
Nora Kane
Shadow of Betrayal by Nora Kane Copyright © 2021 by Nora Kane.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher. It is illegal to copy this book, post it to a website, or distribute it by any other means without permission. This book is a work of fiction. Any reference to real people or real locales are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the authors imagination and any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Books by Nora Kane
1. Secrets of Woodcrest Manor
2. Wolverine Harbor Novellas Series
Book 1- The Veil of Deceit
Book 2 -The Veil of Envy
Book 3 -The Veil of Vengeance
3. Emmy Grimm Series
Book 1- Lured
Book 2- Chased
Book 3- Blindsided
4. Margot Harris Series
Book 1- Shadow of Greed
Book 2- Shadow of Pretense
Book 3- Shadow of Suspicion
Book 4- Shadow of Betrayal
Book 5- Shadow of Misgivings
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When the Patriarch of the Woodcrest Family was found dead in the flowerbed under his bedroom window, the local police department called it suicide. His son hired Private detective Emmy wanting to uncover the real truth behind his father's death. Surrounded by so many individuals who could benefit from his death, now the responsibility is on Emmy to figure out who was responsible. When Emmy starts to talk to the heirs the Woodcrest family's secrets begin to emerge.
Table of Content
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Books by Nora Kane
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Today
Stick stopped the first place he could get service on his phone. He had driven a long way before he could get a single bar. He got out just because the nervous energy he was feeling was making it hard to sit still. He was in the middle of nowhere for sure; he was amazed at how much darker it was out here than the city. A look around revealed nothing but darkness in all directions except where the stars lit up the sky.
The starlight didn’t do much to illuminate the road, but he thought that might be a good thing. If someone came after him, he’d see the threat coming.
Normally, he liked to do this kind of thing from his office or his laptop, but Stick didn’t think he should wait, so he was sending out the message on his phone using his thumb. He didn’t like to use his phone to send emails. He didn’t really even like to text. Because of this, he was sloppy and realized after he hit send that he may not only have left out some vital information but failed to send it to everyone he should be.
After he hit send, he considered sending out another message explaining the things he hadn’t made clear, but he decided he’d do that once he got back to the city. The still air and total darkness were making him feel vulnerable. Stick was starting to get back in his car when he saw the headlights approaching.
He drew his gun and moved to the side of the road. The vehicle slowed as it passed his sedan, but they kept going. Stick didn’t worry too much about them. He didn’t think anyone knew what he had stumbled upon so there was no reason anyone would be chasing him.
Stick waited until they were out of sight and then started driving. He still had an hour and a half to go before he made it to his place out on the coast. He was tempted to stomp on the gas and make the trip faster, but he kept his speed reasonable. He didn’t need a ticket.
He was just about to the turn that would take him west when the bright lights hit his face. There was a big vehicle coming right at him with their lights on. He couldn’t see anything as he swerved hard to his left. The oncoming car caught his bumper and spun the car around. Stick skidded off the road, but the tires held onto the dirt and the car stayed upright. He steered out of it and this time he stomped on the gas.
Having failed to run him off the road, they started shooting at him. Stick got as low as he could as the back window fell out. The next bullet put a spider web pattern across the front windshield. The way the bullets were coming, he was thinking someone—or maybe more than one person—had something that could fire full auto. He kept his hands on the wheel and foot on the gas as the bullets peppered his car.
Once the shooting stopped, he could see the truck turning itself around so they could continue their pursuit. He put his foot down until the pedal hit the floor as he turned off the lights. Stick drove by moonlight over a rise and dropped out of sight of his pursuers. It was hard driving by moonlight, but the little dirt road he had spotted going in was just reflecting enough moonlight for him to make the turn.
He pulled in and left his lights out. Once he exited the sedan, Stick got out his pistol and leaned on the front left side of his car. If they spotted his car, Stick felt this was as good a place as any to shoot it out.
He was glad they chose to drive past. He let them get ahead a little bit and then stood up. It was at this point he felt the pain and wetness around his lower back. It was too dark to see anything, but he could feel the warm sticky liquid covering the lower half of his shirt from the front and the back.
Considering all the ammunition they had fired at his car; he shouldn’t have been surprised they had hit him. Stick tried to dial 911 but he was in another dead zone. He told himself he could get to the hospital faster on his own anyway. Stick got behind the wheel and started driving as the blood continued to leak out of him.
Chapter 1
Two Days Ago…
“Are you kidding?”
Melanie took a seat on Margot’s couch before she said to her older sister, “Of course not.”
“You want to hire me?”
“Do you ask all your clients really obvious questions you already know the answer to?”
“I’m not cheap.”
“I can afford it. I make more than you, I bet. Plus, I figure there ought to be a family discount.”
Margot wished she could dispute her, but Melanie was probably right about both the amount of money they made and the family discount.
“Okay, what did you have in mind?” Margot asked.
“I want you to find Randy’s mother and maybe Randy too.”
“Randy’s missing?”
“He went to find her himself. He told them where she was, but the cops would rather harass him than just go talk to her. That was three days ago.”
“Why would you know Randy’s been gone for three days?”
“We talked on the phone. Who else would he talk to?”
“Literally the whole world as far as I’m concerned.”
“You know, just because Dad beat on Mom doesn’t mean every man is abusive.”
“No shit, which is why I could care less about you dating Randy until he beat the shit out of you,” Margot told her. She caught herself before she said more. They’d already covered the subject of Randy’s abusive ways. As much as it drove her insane, if Margot was going to have any relationship with her sister, she was going to have to agree to disagree. At least
to a point.
“Look, I don’t want to rehash this. I get where you’re coming from. He called me and I answered. He just wanted to talk, so we talked. He said he’d call me when he got back. I guess the cabin his mom has doesn’t have any phone service and I haven’t heard from him since.”
“There could be a lot of explanations.”
“I know, which is why I want to hire you to find out the one that’s true.”
“I have to ask again, are you kidding?”
“Look, I know you don’t like him, but he needs help. He could be hurt or worse and even if he’s fine, he needs someone on his side right now. These two detectives…”
“Ames and Radcliff.”
“Yeah, that’s them.”
“I ever tell you the name of the cop I’ve been dating?”
“Is it Ames?”
“Hell no, but it is Radcliff. Are you really asking me to take the side of a man I despise, a man who almost got me killed, over my boyfriend?”
“No, I want you to find the truth. Randy didn’t do anything to his mother. He wouldn’t hurt her, he couldn’t hurt her.”
“The truth could be different. Most likely, he’s guilty and the reason he hasn’t come back is because he’s running.”
“If that’s the truth, I still want to know.”
“The last time I worked for Randy, it went really bad for everybody.”
“You’re not working for Randy, you’re working for me.”
“You’re paying the bill, but this is still for him.”
“I don’t see it that way.”
“I do.”
Melanie looked at the floor. “I thought we were trying to get along. I thought you were going to try.”
“Try? How did you think asking me to find Randy would go?”
“If you’re really right about him, you’d be finding evidence to send him to prison.”
“Then you’d hate me again.”
“I just said…”
“I heard what you said. You don’t mean it.”
“I don’t?”
“Okay, you might mean it, but that’s just because you don’t think it will ever happen.”
“So, you can read my mind now?”
“I don’t need to read your mind to see you think he’s innocent. Tell me I’m wrong.”
Melanie wanted to but she couldn’t.
“Look, Melanie, I want to help you, but if this goes the way I think it might, you’ll hate me forever.”
“Okay, but Randy—and more importantly, his mom—really need your kind of help.”
“What if I gave a referral?”
“Who, Mal?”
“Mal and I aren’t on the best of terms at the moment.”
“He doesn’t like your new boyfriend either?”
“Among other things. I know a guy who could do a good job while being a legitimate neutral party.”
“I don’t know. I know we don’t agree much, but I trust you.”
“Then trust me to find you someone good. This way, neither of us ends up mad at the other one no matter what the truth is.”
“I guess that makes sense. Are you going to give me his number?”
“Let me call first. Maybe I can get you a discount since we’re both in the same business.”
“Okay. Have you thought any more about visiting Dad?”
“Yeah, it stills sounds like a horrible idea.”
“What if he’s dying?”
“Then I’ll consider going to the funeral.”
“I talked to him on the phone. He really wants to talk to you.”
“And I really wanted him to not kill Mom.”
“Yeah, me too.”
“Then why are you talking to him?”
Melanie sighed. “Okay, I don’t want to fight you about it. I’ve got to get going anyway. Call me later?”
“Yeah, I’ll let you know what my friend says.”
Chapter 2
Today
“Hey, Rick. What’s up?”
“Can we talk to you a second?”
Margot looked past Detective Rick Radcliff to see Detective Ames was also standing by her door. Behind him was a tall sheriff’s deputy built like a tank. He was wearing a cowboy hat, which he tipped her way as he leaned against the railing in front of Margot’s second-floor apartment before giving Margot the kind of hard stare that made her think she was guilty of something.
“I take it since it’s ‘can we talk’ that this isn’t a social call?”
“I wish it was. Can we come in?”
“Do I need a lawyer?”
“I don’t think so.”
“Come on Margot,” Ames said. “Don’t be such a hard-ass.”
“I’ve got things to do, is this going to take long?”
“That depends on how much you cooperate. Things would move faster if we could come inside,” Ames told her.
“Who’s the cowboy?”
“That’s Deputy Brantley.”
“Alright, tell me what this is about and then I’ll decide whether to let you in or not.”
“Do you know a guy by the name of Ron Stickly?” Ames asked.
“You mean Stick? Yeah, I know him. We work the same business, only he’s probably making a better living at it than I am.”
“He’s not making a living at anything anymore,” Ames told her.
“What do you mean by that?”
“You’re a smart girl Margot, what do you think it means?”
“Are you saying he’s dead?”
“Yes,” Radcliff told her. “I apologize for my partner’s crude way of breaking the news.”
“No problem. I’m guessing he didn’t die of heart disease or you two and the deputy wouldn’t be here.”
“You guess correctly. Someone shot up his car with him in it. Given where he was found, the guess is he was on the way to the hospital. Can we come in now?”
“You don’t think I did it, do you?”
“No,” Ames replied, “but I’m keeping an open mind.”
Margot stepped aside and let the two detectives come into her apartment. The deputy was still leaning against the railing.
“You coming in?” Margot asked him.
He unfolded his arms and adjusted his hat. Margot took this to be a yes and left the door open.
“Were you and Stickly working on something together?” Ames asked after he, Radcliff, and Margot all sat down. The deputy found a wall to lean against and folded his arms.
“Not exactly. I hired him.”
“You hired a private detective?”
“Yeah, it was for my sister. I felt what she wanted was too personal, so I contacted Stick. Since I knew he’d give a professional courtesy discount, I figured I’d save my sister a few bucks and be the client of record.”