Deadlock
Page 1
PRAISE FOR THE FBI: HOUSTON SERIES
DOUBLE CROSS
“DiAnn Mills always gives us a good thriller, filled with inspirational thoughts, and Double Cross is another great one!”
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“For the romantic suspense fan, there is plenty of action and twists present. For the inspirational reader, the faith elements fit nicely into the context of the story. . . . The romance is tenderly beautiful, and the ending bittersweet.”
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FIREWALL
“Mills takes readers on an explosive ride. . . . A story as romantic as it is exciting, Firewall will appeal to fans of Dee Henderson’s romantic suspense stories.”
BOOKLIST
“With an intricate plot involving domestic terrorism that could have been ripped from the headlines, Mills’s romantic thriller makes for compelling reading.”
LIBRARY JOURNAL
“A fast-moving, intricately plotted thriller.”
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“Mills once again demonstrates her spectacular writing skills in her latest action-packed work. . . . The story moves at a fast pace that will keep readers riveted until the climactic end.”
ROMANTIC TIMES
“This book was so fast-paced that I almost got whiplash! . . . [H]eart-pounding action from the first page . . . didn’t stop until nearly the end of the book. If you like romantic suspense, I highly recommend this one.”
RADIANT LIT
“Fast-paced and action-packed. . . . DiAnn Mills gives us a real winner with Firewall, a captivating and intense story filled with a twisting plot that will have you on the edge of your seat.”
FRESHFICTION.COM
“Firewall is exciting . . . thrilling. DiAnn Mills draws her readers in, holding them breathlessly hostage until the very last page. She is a master at her craft and her genre.”
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LYNETTE EASON, BESTSELLING AUTHOR OF THE DEADLY REUNIONS SERIES
“Firewall is an up-until-2 a.m. book. . . . I had no idea who the mastermind was until the last two or three pages. Mills keeps getting better and better. Can’t wait for the next one!”
LAURAINE SNELLING, AUTHOR OF THE WILD WEST WIND SERIES AND WAKE THE DAWN
“Firewall is a gripping ride that will keep your blood pumping and your imagination in high gear.”
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Deadlock
Copyright © 2015 by DiAnn Mills. All rights reserved.
Cover photograph of woman copyright © Juan Silva/Media Bakery. All rights reserved.
Cover photograph of man copyright © Kicka Witte/Design Pics/Corbis. All rights reserved.
Cover texture copyright © Toria/Shutterstock. All rights reserved.
Cover photograph of city copyright © George Doyle/Media Bakery. All rights reserved.
Designed by Nicole Grimes
Edited by Erin E. Smith
Published in association with the literary agency of Books & Such Literary Agency, 52 Mission Circle, Suite 122, PMB 170, Santa Rosa, CA 95409.
Scripture quotations are taken from the Revised Standard Version of the Bible, copyright © 1952 [2nd edition, 1971] by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Deadlock is a work of fiction. Where real people, events, establishments, organizations, or locales appear, they are used fictitiously. All other elements of the novel are drawn from the author’s imagination.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Mills, DiAnn.
Deadlock / DiAnn Mills.
pages ; cm. — (FBI: Houston ; 3)
ISBN 978-1-4143-8995-0 (softcover)
1. United States. Federal Bureau of Investigation—Officials and employees—Fiction. 2. Serial murder investigation—Texas—Houston—Fiction. 3. Government investigators—Fiction. I. Title.
PS3613.I567D43 2015
813'.6—dc23 2015017847
Build: 2015-08-17 10:07:52
To Stephanie Broene and Erin Smith, Tyndale House editors.
Thank you for all your support and encouragement. Our brainstorming sessions are amazing!
CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
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
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
Chapter 49
Chapter 50
Chapter 51
Chapter 52
Chapter 53
Chapter 54
Chapter 55
Chapter 56
Chapter 57
Chapter 58
Chapter 59
Chapter 60
Chapter 61
Chapter 62
Chapter 63
Chapter 64
Epilogue
A Note from the Author
Discussion Questions
About the Author
Preview of Double Cross
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I want to thank the following people for helping me with Deadlock. You are amazing!
Special Agent Shauna Dunlap, media coordinator, FBI Houston Division—You are the best! Thank you for your friendship and for answering my endless questions.
Pat Durham—Your experiences with a parrot helped Jasper come alive. Thank you for the fun!
Lynette Eason—Not everyone can have a fabulous brainstorming partner who shares the same birthday. We’re dynamite together.
Beau Egert—Thanks for your perspective on my plots.
Julie Garmon—I so appreciate your time and critiques. My stories would lack so much depth without you.
Guy Gourley, MA, LPC, NCC�
�Your insight into the mind helped me make this book real and powerful.
Dr. Richard Mabry—I’d be lost without your expertise about the human body and what it can handle!
Dean Mills—My sweet husband! You have more patience and love than any man on earth. Thanks for your encouragement and support.
Tom Morrisey—Every time I think I have a handle on weapons and how they work, you show me I have so much to learn. Thanks for always helping me out.
Lynellen Perry—Congratulations for winning the contest: name my character. You chose Elizabeth Maddrey, your dear friend.
Scott Silverii, PhD, Chief of Police, Thibodaux, Louisiana—Thanks for showing me how a small woman could maneuver her way out of danger.
CHAPTER 1
HOUSTON, TEXAS
NOVEMBER
7:15 A.M. MONDAY
FBI Special Agent Bethany Sanchez swung open the door of her truck with the same jitters she had her first day at Quantico. On this gray morning, she was beginning a violent crime assignment and would meet her new partner, Special Agent Thatcher Graves, the man who’d sent her brother to jail.
Bethany caught her breath and took in the unfamiliar surroundings. The residential area was flooded with Houston police officers and unmarked cars, part of a task force between HPD and the FBI. Alicia Javon had been murdered here late yesterday afternoon, leaving behind a husband and two daughters.
The homes rose like monuments in this older, exclusive neighborhood, a mirror of refinement and dollar signs. The Javons’ two-story brick with classic black shutters was no exception. Not a dog or cat in sight. In her parents’ neighborhood, dogs ran loose and usually in packs, whether the four-legged or two-legged type. Here, a pair of squirrels scampered up an oak. The bushes and hedges received regular manicures. Freshly mowed yard. The three-car garage was the size of her apartment.
Contrast the tranquility with a woman who’d been shot, and it was Bethany’s job to help bring down the killer.
She arched her shoulders and walked to the front door, wishing her first day in violent crime could have been less stressful. She’d been up most of the night giving herself a pep talk about working with Thatcher Graves despite their history. A little confidence on her end would boost her ego. She looked like a professional. Wore a black pantsuit and a white blouse. Hair secured at the nape. No rings. No bracelets. Just tiny gold balls in her earlobes, a small gold cross necklace, and a keen sense of determination that had never failed her.
After greeting two police officers and displaying her credentials, she entered the home, and another officer directed her toward a hum of activity to the right. She passed through a living area, where an upright bass, grand piano, and harp filled a third of the space. Beyond there she’d find Special Agent Thatcher Graves.
Her gaze pulled ahead. She wanted the partnership to work so badly that her blood pressure flared at the thought of it. She moved through the room to the kitchen. Thatcher bent behind the crime scene tape, where the body had been found. He glanced up, his earth-colored eyes stormy.
She extended her hand and hoped he didn’t observe the trembling. “Good morning, I’m Bethany Sanchez.”
He stood and towered over her, but most men did over her small frame. “My new partner. The gal from the civil rights division who solved a cold hate crime in the Hispanic community. And was influential in bringing peace to an Asian business district where a prostitution ring worked the streets. Welcome to violent crime.” He gripped her hand, not too firm and not an ounce of wimp. “We’ve met before.”
She offered a slight smile while her stomach rolled. “Yes, we have.”
“I think it was the Labor Day picnic. Certainly not what the victim had here.”
Had he forgotten Papá’s threat at the courthouse, or did he expect her to elaborate? “I understand there’s a link between this murder and a previous one, and that’s why the FBI’s been called in.”
“Right. Three weeks ago, Ruth Caswell, an elderly woman in the River Oaks area, was murdered. She was under hospice care but otherwise lived alone. Shot with a 9mm to the forehead, hollow-point bullet, and the killer left a plastic scorpion on her body. At that time, HPD requested our help, due to the unusual circumstances. Alicia Javon’s murder appears to be identical, but it’ll take weeks before we learn if the two women were killed with the same weapon.”
“Didn’t realize the lab was so far behind. Fingerprints?”
“Too soon to have the report. We’ll see about the DNA.”
“Anything to go on?”
“Looks like a serial killing.”
“But the husband is a viable suspect. Looks to me like a domestic squabble that went bad.”
He lifted a brow. “I’ve been at this longer than you have. The family will arrive in the next thirty minutes for an interview. They spent the night at a hotel.”
“Can’t blame them.” She glanced around the kitchen. A stockpot rested on the stove, a box of pasta beside it. A dinner that never happened. “I wouldn’t want to stay here either. What else do you have?”
He grabbed a large Starbucks cup from the kitchen counter and toasted her. The man wore a muscular build like an Italian suit. “You fit your MO.”
She lifted a brow. “What do you mean?”
“No-nonsense. Gets the job done. Analytical. Outstanding record—”
“Whoa. You’re armed, and all I have is office chatter and media headlines.”
He sipped the coffee. “I’m sure it’s all true.”
Egotistical, but with a sense of humor. She stared into his chiseled face. “I hope not or I’m doomed.”
“Doubt it, General Sanchez. Your reputation is outstanding.”
She drew in a breath. The ring of his tone pierced her like a dull knife.
“Guess I won’t call you a general again.” The muscles in his jaw tightened. “Okay, back to the case. The killer is most likely a psychopath.”
“We need more information to make that determination, a suspect whose behavior we can psychologically examine to determine if he’s hearing voices and the like.”
“Not every psychopath is a killer, but serial killers are psychopaths.”
She’d mull his explanation when she had time to think about it. “Has the blood spatter been analyzed?”
“Yes. Nothing additional for us to follow up on there. I’ve been here since five thirty poring over the reports, trying to find a motive for both murders. We have two victims killed with the same type of weapon and identical scorpions left on each body. I sent a copy of the reports to you about an hour ago.”
“Hold on a moment while I retrieve them.” She eased her shoulder bag to the floor and snatched her phone, berating herself for not checking it sooner. She scrolled through the various reports. There it was. “Go ahead. I’m ready.”
“Alicia Javon was a forty-five-year-old wife and mother. She held a vice president position at Danford Accounting. Two daughters are enrolled at Rice University majoring in music. Her husband is currently unemployed and on disability due to a spinal injury sustained in an auto accident. He told the police his wife’s Bible and several pieces of her jewelry are missing. All heirlooms from her family. HPD noted a sizable inheritance from her family’s estate.”
Bethany read the list of diamonds, rubies, and sapphires stolen. Motive? “The husband claims the jewelry is insured. Has HPD checked the pawnshops?”
“Yes, and they will continue,” Thatcher said. “No signs of forced entry.”
“She may have known her killer or opened the door without a visual check. Where was her husband? Do her daughters live at home?”
“The girls were out with their father. Walked in and discovered the body,” he said. “It’s in the report. I labeled it Scorpion.”
Ouch. Could this get much worse?
“Hey, I’m messing with you. Don’t worry about it.”
She smiled but didn’t feel it. “I noted Mrs. Javon’s arm was in a cast. Worth looking into.”<
br />
“I agree. Have a few thoughts about the injury.”
“Theory or fact?” Immediately she regretted her question. Arguing fact and logic solved nothing. “That was inappropriate. I know you operate on instinct, and you’re quite successful.”
“But you have no respect for my methods, right?”
She reddened. “I’d like to think our partnership could work well organically.”
He took another sip of coffee. “Well said. We could fail or become a dynamic team. When we’re finished here, let’s head back to the office and discuss the case.”
A police officer stepped into the kitchen. “The family has arrived.”
“They’re early.” Thatcher glanced out the kitchen window to a patio and pool area, his face stoic. “Tell them Special Agent Sanchez and I will talk to them in a few minutes. We’re stepping outside for privacy.”
CHAPTER 2
7:40 A.M. MONDAY
Bethany swallowed her incompetency and followed Thatcher outside. She’d been in such a nervous tizzy this morning that she hadn’t checked her phone. Now she had to waste time reviewing what he’d already learned about Alicia Javon’s murder.
Great way to begin a homicide investigation.
Thatcher stopped on the opposite side of the pool, and she quickly scrolled to his latest findings.
“Take your time,” he said.
She nodded, not looking to see whether he was being kind or condescending. She finished reading and had put her phone away when both cells notified them of an update. They read the new information.
Paul Javon’s background added a spin to the case. “This is priceless,” she said. “An ambulance was called to the Javon home three times for Alicia and transported her to the medical center. She was treated for injuries, once for a mild concussion and another time to remove a contact after a cabinet door hit her in the eye. She said they were accidents.”
“Her husband claimed her cast was the result of a fall down the stairs. Only a bully abuses a woman.”
“Can’t explain it away either.” Bethany studied the house, a deep-redbrick color, as though fired in the kilns of time.
“Right there with you,” he said. “If he mistreated his wife, then he might be strong-arming the daughters too.”