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Homicide at Whiskey Gulch

Page 21

by Elle James


  Epilogue

  “I’ve been thinking,” Trace said as he sat on the porch swing, looking out over the barn and the pastures beyond.

  “That’s a dangerous pastime for a former Delta Force soldier.” Matt leaned against a porch post, chewing on a strand of hay.

  “No kidding,” Irish said. “Every time Trace started thinking, we ended up knee-deep in enemy territory.”

  “Seriously, I think Matt was right. Adjusting to civilian life might be harder than we think,” Trace said.

  Lily frowned beside Trace. “Does that mean you’re going to sell and go back on active duty?”

  Trace squeezed her hand. “No. But I think we can manage the ranch, keep our combat skills current and help others.”

  “How do you figure we can do all that?” Irish asked.

  “I’d like to form a security service to help people who can’t get the justice they deserve for whatever reason.”

  Matt crossed his arms over his chest. “Are you talking about a vigilante group?” He shook his head. “If you are, count me out.”

  “No. I’m talking about people the law or the government aren’t helping because they don’t have the resources or time. Folks who need a private investigator, bodyguard or security detail.”

  “And you want the three of us to manage that while managing a ranch?” Irish raised his eyebrows. “Sounds like a lot.”

  Trace grinned. “No. I think this concept can be a lot bigger than the three of us. I want to bring on others like us, men and women who have special fighting skills. It will help others while helping our military personnel who have separated from service for one reason or another.”

  Irish leaned forward. “People like me who are good with a gun and not much else?”

  Trace laughed. “Mom says you’re a budding chef.”

  “I can cook a pot of chili,” Irish said. “I’m not a chef. But I could really get into being a private investigator or bodyguard.”

  “Same here,” Matt said. “The auto repair business doesn’t keep me nearly busy enough to maintain my sanity.”

  Trace clapped his hands together. “Then we’re all in?”

  Irish and Matt nodded.

  “Now all we need is a name for this organization.”

  “How about Outriders?” Irish said.

  Trace shook his head. “We’re not all cowboys or mounted heroes, but I like the ring to it.”

  Rosalynn stepped out on the porch, carrying a tray full of glasses and a pitcher of iced tea. “I like it.” She set the tray on the table, poured tea into a glass and handed it to Trace.

  He stared at his mother as he took the cup from her hand.

  “What?” she said.

  “I like it,” Trace said. “It doesn’t matter that you’re not all cowboys. You’re ex-soldiers who want to help and protect those in need.”

  Lily smiled beside him. “I think it’s perfect. You might not all be cowboys, but if you hire all former military, they’re all heroes. For serving this country.”

  Trace raised his eyebrows and looked around at Matt and Irish. “Agreed on the name?”

  They nodded.

  “Done,” Trace said. “Now all we need is to hire more resources and get started with our first case.”

  Matt took the glass Rosalynn handed him. “I think I have the first case, if you want to test our facilities and communication skills.”

  “What is it?” Trace asked.

  Matt stared across at him, their gazes locking. “I want to investigate the murder of Heather Hennessey.”

  “A relative?” Trace asked.

  “My mother,” Matt said.

  For a long moment, the people sitting or standing on the front porch paused in silence.

  Trace nodded. “So be it. We’ll start by finding Heather Hennessey’s murderer.” He stood and held out his hand to Matt. “Welcome to the Outriders.”

  Matt pushed away from the post and took Trace’s hand in a firm grip. “I don’t know about cowboys on horseback, but as long as I can ride my motorcycle, I’m in.”

  “You got it.” Trace pulled him close for a quick hug. “I’m still getting used to the fact I have a brother.”

  “Half,” Matt corrected and hugged him back.

  Trace turned to Irish. “And my other brother in arms...” He held out a hand.

  Irish took it and pulled him straight into a bone-crushing hug. “I’ve got your back.”

  With a grin, Trace turned to Lily and held out a hand.

  Lily chuckled. “Are you inviting me into this little bromance you’re having?”

  “Looks like it. Hell, with you by my side, we’ll be unstoppable.” He drew her to her feet and slipped an arm around her waist.

  Lily tipped her head back and raised her eyebrows. “Will you be accepting applications from cowgirls?”

  “You know it,” Trace answered. “I know I like you.”

  “About time you realized it,” she murmured.

  Trace brushed a strand of her hair back from her forehead. “I’ve always known it.”

  “You two should get a room,” Irish said.

  “Trust Irish to say what’s on my mind.” Trace bent and pressed a kiss to Lily’s lips. “Now, if the rest of you will excuse us...we have eleven years of catching up to do.”

  His mother grinned as they passed her, headed for the door. “That’s right. I want grandchildren before I’m too old to appreciate them.”

  Trace threw a thumbs-up over his shoulder as he stepped across the threshold. “Working on it.”

  * * *

  Keep reading for an excerpt from Agent Under Siege by Lena Diaz.

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  Chapter One

  Long before the shadow fell across the end of the dock and hovered over Bryson Anton’s wheelchair, he knew the man was there. Motion sensors and security cameras had made Bryson’s watch buzz against his wrist when the man parked his car in the driveway. More messages warned when the man crossed the back patio. And again, when he’d descended the gently sloping lawn that ended at the creek. Bryson didn’t care who was now standing behind him, as long as he didn’t have to engage in conversation.

  “Nice place,” the man’s voice rang out. “Probably one of the highest views in the Tennessee side of the Smoky Mountains. I’ll bet at night you can see nearly every light in downtown Gatlinburg from here.”

  Bryson sighed but didn’t turn around. “My former boss took pity on me after I got myself hurt on the job. He gave me a boatload of money, and I was selfish enough to take it and buy this property. But that doesn’t mean he can drop by any time he wants.”

  “I’m still your boss. I haven’t accepted your resignation.”

  “That’s not how it works, Mason. I resigned, whether you accept it or not. I’ll never be a Justice Seeker again. I’m not going back to Camelot. You and your knights of the round table are better off without a washed-up former profiler jacking up your investigations.”

  “Is that why you’re sitting out here drinking like a fish, because you think you jacked up everything?”

  “Something like that.” Bryson grabbed a can of beer from the cooler beside his wheelchair and popped the top. He took a deep long swallow, more to irritate his unwelcome visitor than because he wanted it.

  Mason retrieved a beer and eyed the label, then tossed it back unopened. “Fish biting?”

  “Do you see a fishing pole around here somewhere?” Bryson emptied his can in the water
and dropped it on his lap before wheeling around. “Enjoy the view as long as you want. You paid for it.” He rolled his chair up the flagstone walkway toward the house.

  “Dalton and Hayley missed you at their wedding last week.” Mason fell into step beside him.

  “Yeah, well. I didn’t have time to learn the latest dance steps.” He stopped at the sliding glass doors and tossed the empty beer can in the recycle bin. When he reached for the door handle, Mason leaned past him and held it closed.

  Bryson swore. “What do you want from me?”

  “I want you to do your job. A new client came to Camelot yesterday. She specifically wants to hire you.”

  He scoffed. “You expect me to believe she asked for a washed-up former FBI agent to screw up her case so someone else will die? If she did, send her on over. I can accomplish that without lifting a finger.”

  Mason leaned back against the door. “That’s a heck of a guilty conscience you’re nursing. Or are you just feeling sorry for yourself?” He waved toward the wheelchair. “If you’d actually go to your physical therapy appointments instead of being a no-show half the time, you’d be out of that thing by now. Don’t look so surprised. I pay your insurance premiums. I see what’s billed. And there’ve been a surprising lack of medical invoices lately. You’ve given up, Bryson. The question is why?”

  “Why?” he gritted out. “Let me remind you that when I was the FBI’s golden boy, everyone treated my profiles like biblical text. So when I presented them with a profile for the Kentucky Ripper, they focused all their efforts on Avarice Lowe, the suspect at the top of my list. Meanwhile, Leviathan Finney—the real Ripper—was no longer under surveillance. To celebrate, he kidnapped and gutted another woman. Because of me, he was able to kill again.”

  “Because of you, the police were able to significantly narrow their list of suspects much faster than they could have otherwise. The choices they made after that weren’t your fault. Hell, Bryson. If it wasn’t for the work you did, it would have taken far longer to catch the Ripper and put him in prison.”

  “Tell that to the family of the last woman he killed.”

  Mason shook his head. “I hear someone anonymously sends money to the last victim’s family every month. While I admire the generosity and kindness of the gesture, that person is making payments on a debt he doesn’t owe. The only person responsible for that woman’s death is the man who killed her—Leviathan Finney.”

  Bryson fisted his hands on the arms of the wheelchair. “Are we about done here? It’s getting late.”

  “Big plans tonight?”

  “I have to wash my hair.”

  Mason let out a deep sigh. “Just explain one thing, then I’ll go. Why now? You left the FBI over three years ago and started working for me as one of the Justice Seekers. Why is the Ripper case bothering you again after all this time?”

  Bryson stared at him incredulously. “Bothering me again? It never stopped bothering me. But I tried to make something good from the bad, atone for my sins by working investigations for you. And what did I do? I nearly got Hayley killed, got myself shot and here I sit with shrapnel they can’t dig out of my hip without risking the loss of my leg. Do I sit here feeling sorry for myself? No. I don’t deserve anyone’s sympathy, least of all my own. The people who deserve sympathy are the ones I’ve hurt, those who nearly died because of me, and the one who did. Accept my resignation and leave me alone. I’m not going to risk hurting anyone else. I’m done.”

  Mason’s jaw worked as he stared past him toward the creek. A full minute passed in silence before he finally met Bryson’s gaze again. “Sounds like you’ve made up your mind.”

  Bryson arched a brow. “Sounds like you’re finally listening.”

  “Oh, I’ve been listening. I just don’t like what I’m hearing.” He pulled a thick neon green folder covered with pink polka dots out from beneath his suit jacket and dropped it onto Bryson’s lap. “Guess you won’t be needing this.”

  He eyed the folder like he’d eye a coiled rattlesnake. “What is that hideous thing?”

  “I was asked to give it to you. It’s from the client I told you about, the one who requested that you work on her case. She put her pursuit of a master’s degree in criminal justice on hold to perform research on an alleged serial killer. She believes that you’re the only person who can convince the police that her conclusions are reasonable and help her catch him. She provided a summary of her research in that folder.”

  Bryson snorted and shook his head. “If she’s convinced that a failed criminal profiler is the key to her theory, then she needs to go back to school. Her deductive reasoning is skewed.”

  “Personally, I found her work intriguing, her theories compelling. And I’ve already got my master’s in criminal justice, not to mention a decade of experience as a chief of police and another seven years after that running The Justice Seekers.” Mason straightened and tugged his suit jacket into place. “But I can see that I’m not going to change your mind. The funny thing is, I never took you for a quitter. Even after the FBI.”

  “Yeah, well. I never thought I’d be responsible for another innocent person almost being killed either. Guess we were both wrong.”

  Mason stared at him a long moment, then looked past him again toward the dock. “That really is a gorgeous view. Let me know when you decide to go fishing. I can bring a pole, throw out a line.” He gave him a hard look. “All of your brothers and sisters at Camelot would love to toss you a line, including Hayley. You just have to ask.” He shoved his hands in his pants pockets and strode away without waiting for a reply.

  Bryson dropped his gaze to the ridiculous-looking pink-and-green folder in his lap. He stared at it long after he could no longer hear the sound of Mason’s car driving away. Long after the sun began to set and the mosquitos started buzzing around his ears. Long after the twinkling lights of Gatlinburg reflected in the sliding glass door, studding the night sky like glitter on a black velvet canvas.

  Then he tossed the folder in the trash.

  Copyright © 2020 by Lena Diaz

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  ISBN-13: 9781488067105

  Homicide at Whiskey Gulch

  Copyright © 2020 by Mary Jernigan

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events or locales is entirely coincidental.

  This edition published by arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.

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