Book Read Free

Cold As Stone (Family Stone #7 John) (Family Stone Romantic Suspense)

Page 1

by Lisa Hughey




  Cold As Stone

  Lisa Hughey

  Lisa Hughey

  Contents

  Cold As Stone

  Prologue

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Epilogue: Jack and Bliss’s Wedding

  The Reception

  Acknowledgments

  Author’s Note

  Also by Lisa Hughey

  About Lisa

  Excerpt from Stone Cold Heart

  Excerpt from Blowback

  Excerpt from Stalked

  Family Stone Romantic Suspense

  Cold As Stone

  A Family Stone Romantic Suspense Novel

  by Lisa Hughey

  October 2015

  Lisa Hughey

  ISBN: 978-0-9964352-2-2

  Print ISBN: 978-1-950359-01-1

  ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. This book contains material protected under International and Federal Copyright Laws and Treaties. Any unauthorized reprint or use of this material is prohibited. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system without express written consent from the author/publisher.

  This book is a work of fiction and any resemblance to persons living or dead, or places, events, or locales is purely coincidental. The characters are products of the author’s imagination and used fictitiously.

  Created with Vellum

  For survivors everywhere.

  Prologue

  John Pulaski stood in the small hospital chapel. The scratchy wool blend of his Dress Blues was stiff and formal against the scars of his mangled knee and prosthetic leg.

  A small unadorned urn sat upon the marble steps. Multi-colored light bathed the entire room in warmth and beauty. The intimate worship chamber was remarkably pretty, with a fancy stained-glass window in jewel tones that portrayed a nondenominational scene depicting doves and a rising sun.

  Mom would have liked this. The random thought broke through the thick fog that seemed to surround him, as if he were wading through an emotional soup of regret, grief, and finally, a burning cold rage.

  All his life, he’d asked about his dead father. All his life, she’d spun tales of a heroic soldier KIA. Her stories of his father were the reason he’d enlisted. The reason he’d done many things in his thirty-five years. He’d become a Marine because of her stories about a hero.

  But on her deathbed, her body ravaged by the cancer that had slowly eaten away at her flesh and bones, a husk of the woman who’d raised him—who’d nurtured him onto the path of becoming the man he was, especially with her many tales of a father who was larger than life—she had confessed.

  With one simple, emotionally complicated sentence she’d rocked his world. Because it turned out those tales were just that. Fiction.

  As she lay dying, she’d told him the truth: his father wasn’t dead. Then she begged him to find the man.

  His father wasn’t a dead war hero. He was just an asshole who’d abandoned his mother when she was pregnant and left her to struggle and scrimp her whole adult life when he apparently had millions. He was a multimillionaire who could have provided his mother with superior healthcare and treatment for the cancer that finally took her.

  John couldn’t give a shit for himself, because it had always been him and mom against the world. But a frigid rage stole over him as he lowered onto the hard, wood pew and laid his mother to rest. No big funeral, she hadn’t wanted it, couldn’t have afforded it and hadn’t wanted him to spend his savings giving her one.

  His mother hadn’t asked for much. She’d saved everything for her son. Even when he was finally able to take care of her, she’d continued to give as much as she could to John.

  Her final request? His mom, bizarrely, wanted him to find his father so he wouldn’t be all alone in the world. John mentally snorted. He wasn’t alone. Exactly.

  But after being honorably discharged after a roadside IED had rolled his Humvee, killed a civilian contractor, and taken his left leg from the knee down, he was definitely adrift. He’d promised his mother. So he’d look for the sperm donor who’d fathered him but never bothered to care for his mother. John hadn’t promised to be nice. He’d promised only to find him.

  John sat in the unnervingly quiet silence and plotted. His entire world was frozen by the realization that his mother had died broke because she couldn’t afford health insurance because of Jackson Stone Sr. Yeah, he had a few things to say to Jack Stone.

  His heart was as cold as the stone floor beneath his feet as he considered his next move. He’d find his father. Give him a piece of his mind. Then he’d start the rest of his life. If he didn’t know what that entailed yet, no problem. He was a Marine. Ooh rah.

  John bent his head and promised his mother. Always faithful.

  He had idolized and revered his father his whole life. Lived up to that image of his father. Lived up to the ideals that were suddenly a lie.

  So what did he believe in now? Who did he admire? Going forward, how did he live his live with integrity when the foundation was rotten?

  Chapter 1

  Six months later

  Sin City was hot as hell. John Pulaski strode down the crowded Las Vegas Strip, his knee and stump swollen and achy. Immense heat shimmered off the sidewalk in mirage-like waves, the high temperature causing his knee joint to swell. The silicone liner that covered his residual limb—and prevented his prosthetic leg from completely rubbing the already mutilated skin raw—was soggy with sweat. The swollen stump meant he really needed an ice bath and a shot of scotch. Instead he was trolling the streets of Vegas, on a mission to help his half-brother, Jack.

  He wondered how he’d gone from a place of anger and revenge against his absent, asshole father to having an instant family.

  One minute he’d been ringing the doorbell to a huge mansion in Monterey, California, waiting with trepidation and not a little bit of rage, not sure what he was going to say to the man who’d knocked up and then abandoned his mother, but gearing up for a confrontation.

  The next minute he had a ready-made family of grown-up siblings, their significant others, and a surrogate mom who was in actuality only a few years older than him.

  Jackson Stone Jr., his half-brother, had been determined to bring John into their odd little family fold. This job was a trial mission for both of them.

  John would see how he liked working for his brother’s companies, Global Humanitarian Relief and Stone Consulting. Global Humanitarian Relief was a privately funded disaster relief and humanitarian aid company, and performed missions all over the world. Their charter was to give aid wherever necessary. Although nothing had been revealed, John was pretty sure that Stone Consulting’s operations dealt in more covert purposes. Both possibilities appealed to him.

  With this op, Jack would be able to assess if John was a good fit for either company.

  When Jack had asked him to come to work with them, John had been hesitant. He had to admit the job sounded pretty awesome, and after all what else was he going to do?

  He’d been offered an administrative job with the Marines but he was used to doing, not sitting behind a desk. The thought of not being active had turned his stomach.


  So here he was working a temp job for his brother.

  Eight years ago, four girls had been abducted. They’d been on their way from school to the fields so they could work and help support their families. For eight long years, the case had remained unsolved. No leads. Until a few months ago, when Maria Torres had escaped her imprisonment and told the world what José Fernandez had done.

  Maria had been imprisoned and left alive for eight years.

  One of the girls had died after being raped.

  The remaining two girls were still missing. No one had seen them since they’d been abducted.

  They finally had a lead on the missing girls which was why they were in Vegas.

  This first mission was turning out to be a lot different than he’d anticipated. In the Marines he’d worked with a unit. They knew each other’s foibles and fears. They respected each other and worked together with a clear chain of command.

  On this job, his team consisted of three members. Him. Maria Torres. And Marissa Evans. Maria was the former kidnap victim and eight-year hostage who was still adjusting to a world that didn’t consist of only herself. Marissa “Ball Buster” Evans was a borderline hostile operative who worked with Jack’s fiancée at an image consulting firm. But today, at least, Marissa wasn’t playing nice.

  John had only met Marissa yesterday. She’d taken over registering at the hotel, ordered him to take the larger bedroom, and generally bossed him around. Then today, she’d insisted that they needed to take Maria shopping. She needed to have clothes that blended in the Vegas scene.

  John had suggested that Marissa and Maria go together. But that had been an even bigger no-go than not shopping at all. Marissa Evans had shut him down with one fierce look. So here they were walking the Strip after spending the last hour at the mall.

  While Marissa hadn’t said anything outright, he could sense her irritation with the situation, her aggravation with him, at least it seemed that way, and some other indefinable emotion emanating from her. She’d simmered all morning and now marched ahead of him and Maria in the thickening afternoon crowd on the Vegas strip.

  To add insult to injury, she was hot. Way hot. Way-out-of-his-league, even before he was missing half a leg, hot. And for some reason everything was bothering him, the heat, his leg, Maria’s stress, Marissa’s irritation, and the fact that a woman like her wouldn’t look at him once, let alone twice, and he could feel his temper rising.

  He never lost his temper when he’d been active duty.

  He was known for his cool under pressure. But his calm was unraveling with every tick up the thermometer and every snippy click of Marissa’s four-inch heels.

  People everywhere, tourists of all shapes and sizes, cluttered the sidewalks. Different colors, languages, English, Dutch, German, Cantonese, Japanese, Korean, French, Southern, New England, Surfer, assaulted his ears. Frenetic walkers and leisurely gawkers, tourists who stopped mid-stride to snap selfies, short, tall, fat, skinny, happy, angry—it seemed as if the entire population of Vegas was on this particular section of the Strip.

  For a few minutes, focused on his own discomfort and total sense of disconnect with reality, he’d zoned out, thinking Maria was in better hands with a woman, since her imprisonment had been carried out by men. Because of his inattention, he’d missed the signs that Maria was having a mini-freak-out.

  Marissa was on point. Maria was in the middle. John had positioned himself in the rear, to Maria’s left and slightly behind her so that he could watch her six and keep his focus on their surroundings. But now his attention zoomed in on Maria. She clutched her shopping bags in her left hand so tightly her light brown fingers were white with a lack of blood. Her steps had become more and more jerky, and he could see the bright shine of sweat on her face. He was pretty sure it wasn’t because she was affected by the soaring desert temps.

  He wasn’t thrilled with the number of people on the street either. It made it difficult to guard Maria and pay attention to anyone else who might be paying too much attention to them. Not likely but still he needed to be on alert.

  Of course, Miss BB, John’s pet name for Marissa, was too far ahead to get her attention. However he couldn’t wait until Marissa figured out they were lagging behind. They were almost at the steps of Caesar’s Palace when John curled his fingers around Maria’s bicep. She jerked, then held still. Small tremors skittered through her. He could literally feel her fear through the clasp of his hand. He leaned in to whisper in her ear. He hated to spook her by getting too close, but the street was actually loud enough it would be difficult to hear him otherwise. “You okay?”

  “Crowd” was all she whispered, but it was enough for John.

  “Come on.” He tugged her toward the curved portico in front of Caesar’s and into the shadows. He tucked her into the small corner so she was out of the traffic on the sidewalk. People still headed toward stairs and the entrance to the casino but this spot was far less hectic.

  Her breathing was becoming more and more erratic. He was hoping she wasn’t going to completely hyperventilate. “Hang on, chica. We’ll get you out.”

  John glanced over his shoulder at Marissa. She’d finally realized they weren’t behind her and had turned around to search the sidewalk.

  She found them quickly, and her gaze locked on his. He lifted his chin, noted the tightening of her luscious mouth. Dammit. He must be one sick SOB to be attracted to a woman who couldn’t stand him. Yeah, she was hot, but he was too smart and too old to get drawn in by a smokin’ body and gorgeous face with a shitty attitude.

  BB strode toward them like she was on a mission, like she wanted to break his balls and eat them for breakfast. She could be pissed at him all she wanted but Maria needed to be treated with care.

  John raised an eyebrow.

  “Problem?” she asked quietly. And thank Christ, she’d toned down the attitude. Maria didn’t need any more strife.

  Maria was bent over while John rubbed her back. “Too many people.”

  Marissa glanced around as if noting all avenues of escape. “I’ll get the car.”

  “I can—”

  “Don’t. I said I’ll go get the car.”

  Yep, Ball Buster. He’d spent a sum total of three hours in her presence and she barely tolerated him. The next few days were going to be…difficult.

  “Let’s see if Maria can walk to the garage.” John overruled her. “Otherwise, we have to wade into the crowd again for you to pick us up.”

  The traffic on the Strip was insane and the garage wasn’t that far away.

  Marissa crossed her arms over her very generous chest. Round handfuls plumped as her mannish white broadcloth blouse gaped at the button. He didn’t think she’d appreciate it if he pointed that out. Her wide-leg navy pants and suit jacket screamed Fed, even though according to Jack she worked at Adams-Larsen. Which was ostensibly an image consulting firm. So exclusive they refused to name their clients. They guaranteed absolute and total confidentiality.

  But John had to believe that there was more to the firm than spinning politicians’ personal reputations and celebrity’s social media postings. Why? Because otherwise, Marissa Evans’s presence on this mission made no sense whatsoever.

  Her startling aquamarine gaze dropped to John’s hand as he continued to try to soothe their reluctant companion. He’d hated the idea of bringing Maria to Vegas. Had argued against it in fact.

  But the truth was, Maria Torres was one of the few women who actually knew the targets. And if they found them, she might be the only one able to get through to these women. Assuming they could find them.

  Once Maria had escaped from her solitary prison, they’d been able to finally arrest the man who had been behind the kidnappings. A local social activist who had wanted to make a name for himself, José Fernandez. Until he’d been arrested, Fernandez was a pillar of the community and considered a champion of farm workers’ rights. A veritable God in the Hispanic population.

  Supposedly José Fer
nandez had no idea what had happened to the two remaining girls. But he had finally, finally given the gag-ordered grand jury a name, Manuel Ortega, when it was clear that the only way he was going to reduce his own jail time was to cough up the accomplice.

  They had age-progression photos of the girls’, now women’s, appearance. If by some chance they found the two women who’d been abducted with her, Maria was the one who might get them to talk. Assuming they were even in Las Vegas. Assuming they weren’t completely traumatized by whatever had happened to them. Assuming they were still alive.

  It was a hell of a lot of assuming.

  “You okay to walk to the car?” John bent over to ask her and his pants rode up, exposing the ankle joint of his prosthetic leg.

  He heard the small gasp that the Ball Buster hadn’t been able to suppress. If she started being nice now, he’d be the one chewing glass and throwing dark glares. He would never fucking play the sympathy card. His leg, or lack thereof, was just a fact of his life, nothing more.

  Fortunately Maria answered, “Yes.” She stood and straightened her shoulders resolutely. Her swarthy face was pale, and about every third breath was a tight gasp, but her cinnamon-and- chocolate eyes radiated determination. “I can make it.”

  Pride welled in John’s chest. She was a fucking survivor. And BB was going to respect that or she was gone. He didn’t care how she treated him, but she needed to show Maria the deference she deserved.

  “Of course you can,” John said. Her unbreakable spirit shone through. If eight years of captivity with only a television and herself for company didn’t break her, she could handle the crowded streets of Las Vegas.

 

‹ Prev