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Legacy of Evil

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by Sharon Buchbinder




  Table of Contents

  Excerpt

  Praise for Sharon Buchbinder

  Legacy of Evil

  Copyright

  Dedications

  Author’s Note

  Prologue

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Epilogue

  Other titles from Sharon Buchbinder from The Wild Rose Press…

  A word about the author…

  Thank you for purchasing this publication of The Wild Rose Press, Inc.

  Bronco now stood squinting

  in the late afternoon sun, knocking at a door with no bell, and waiting for a response. Dogs barked and a window curtain twitched. Good. Someone was home. He adjusted his pack, leaned his head back, closed his eyes, and said, “Any time now.” As the words slid out of his mouth, he heard the unmistakable sound of a shotgun being pumped.

  Uh. Oh.

  He raised his hands. “Don’t shoot. I’m unarmed.” Turning slowly to face his fate, his jaw fell open, and his heart rate kicked up a notch from being on the wrong end of a shotgun or from the weapon holder’s looks, he wasn’t sure. A raven haired Amazon in a tank top, jeans, and metal tipped cowboy boots held the Mossberg 500 in a perfect military stance. Long strands of hair blew across her face in the hot breeze. A large purple bruise bloomed on her left cheek. She squinted her dark brown eyes and gave him a laser-beam once over from his dusty black boots to his sweat soaked do-rag.

  “Who are you, and what do you want?”

  If he hadn’t been so intent on not getting killed, he would have spent more time staring at those full, luscious, kissable lips and thinking about how she would taste. As it was, he guessed he had less than a minute to respond before getting blasted into the next county.

  Praise for Sharon Buchbinder

  “Sharon Buchbinder seamlessly blends intriguing, sexy characters, and fast-paced suspense in a page-turner you won’t be able to put down until the end.”

  ~Sharon Saracino, author of The Earthbound Series

  ~*~

  “Ms. Buchbinder weaves ancient secrets and modern mysteries into a beautifully written story that will keep you turning the pages.”

  ~USA Today Bestselling Author, Roz Lee

  Legacy of Evil

  by

  Sharon Buchbinder

  The Hotel LaBelle Series, Book 2

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

  Legacy of Evil

  COPYRIGHT © 2017 by Sharon Buchbinder

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the author or The Wild Rose Press, Inc. except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.

  Contact Information: info@thewildrosepress.com

  Cover Art by Rae Monet, Inc. Design

  The Wild Rose Press, Inc.

  PO Box 708

  Adams Basin, NY 14410-0708

  Visit us at www.thewildrosepress.com

  Publishing History

  First Fantasy Rose Edition, 2017

  Print ISBN 978-1-5092-1722-9

  Digital ISBN 978-1-5092-1723-6

  The Hotel LaBelle Series, Book 2

  Published in the United States of America

  Dedications

  This book is dedicated with love

  to my first reader and husband, Dale.

  ~*~

  To our son, Joshua,

  our daughter-in-law, Elyse,

  and our grandson, Dexter.

  They remind me every day

  that family ties bind with love

  and priceless memories.

  ~*~

  It is also dedicated

  to my tireless and supportive editor,

  Amanda Barnett.

  She is my book midwife,

  helping to bring my book babies into the world.

  ~*~

  And to Sharon Saracino,

  my funny and fun critique partner and friend.

  She helps me see the humor in all things

  in the writing life

  and other parts of my sometimes-crazy world.

  Author’s Note

  Anyone who has read my previous novels knows that before I begin to write, I conduct extensive research and steep myself in the materials. This approach enables me to speak through the characters and narrative with rich and correct content. I also rely on subject matter experts and readers from diverse disciplines and cultural backgrounds who provide corrections and feedback to me before I submit a story for consideration for publication. I would be remiss if I did not thank my readers here, starting with my ever patient husband, Dale Buchbinder, who read every single draft of the story.

  My deep gratitude goes to the following people for their expertise and feedback: Cheryl Bosse, Toni Chiazza Diblasi, Sherri Denora, Hal Dorin, Karen and Ken Giek, Ernest and Toni Goetling, Nancy Greenwald, Sharon Saracino, Fred and Robin Vandenbroeck, Sonia Vitale-Richardson, Beth White Werrell, and Susan Willis. Big hugs to my brilliant editor and book mid-wife, Amanda Barnett, who assists with the birth of my book babies.

  Thanks to the hard work of Frank B. Linderman in the late 1920s, the world has a written history of the Absaalooke, or Crow Nation, a traditionally oral culture. If you have not read his work and are interested in Native American stories, biographies, and autobiographies. I recommend beginning with Pretty Shield: Medicine Woman of the Crows and Plenty-Coups: Chief of the Crows. Pretty Shield’s granddaughter, Alma Hogan Snell, offers us more contemporary perspectives with her books, Grandmother’s Grandchild: My Crow Indian Life and A Taste of Heritage: Crow Indian Recipes and Herbal Medicines. A fictionalized account of one of the most interesting Native American Warrior Women, Pine Leaf, can be found in Woman Chief by Benjamin Capps.

  Undercover agents for all our government agencies are unsung heroes and heroines. The assignments are dangerous, the agents must be consummate performers, and the lifestyle of the world the agents infiltrate can be enticing. If they remain undercover for a long time, some agents have difficulty removing the persona they assume. If you are interested in the ATFE’s undercover operations in motorcycle clubs, and the personal odyssey of one agent, I highly recommend No Angel by Jay Dobyns.

  The Central Intelligence Agency’s work with psychic spies, remote viewing, and the infamous MK ULTRA behavioral modification program is well documented. Disbanded for ethical reasons, the full text of the Project MKULTRA, the CIA’s Program on Research in Behavioral Modification 1977 Joint Hearing Before the Select Committee on Intelligence and the Subcommittee on Health and Scientific Research of the Committee on Human Resources United States Senate, Ninety-Fifth Congress, First Session, August 3, 1977 is available online and as a reprint from the collection of the University of Michigan Library. If you are interested in learning more about this unusual chapter in our intelligence agency’s history, I recommend the following: “Paranormal Activity: CIA Dimension” by Jim Popkin, in the November 11, 2015 issue of
Newsweek; The Men Who Stare at Goats by Jon Ronson (also adapted to film), and The Search for the Manchurian Candidate: The CIA and Mind Control, The Secret History of the Behavioral Sciences by John Marks. There are some who believe the CIA’s more unusually talented people have moved to the Homeland Security Agency. Who knows? Maybe the Anomaly Defense Division I created in 2015 is alive and well under another name!

  I hope you enjoy the story. If you are interested in additional sources I used to research this novel, I would be happy to send you a list. Just email me at:

  sharonbellbuchbinder@gmail.com

  Happy reading!

  Sharon Buchbinder

  Prologue

  Wild Mustang Ranch, Montana/Wyoming Border

  Emma Horserider pressed the gas pedal of her battered pick-up truck like a NASCAR driver in a dead heat with the devil. She hoped no mountain goats decided to go for a walk in the middle of the road winding around the side of the rocky cliff. She didn’t have time to stop and wait for the stubborn beasts to decide if they would charge her truck or get out of the way. She was on a mission to protect the horses she loved and help to keep them unfettered by human saddles and reins.

  The call from Margie Hunter, the long-time director of the Wild Mustang Ranch, had been frantic, almost incoherent, “Terrible. Slaughtered. Horses panicked. Get here fast!”

  A lump rose in her throat, and tears threatened at the recollection of Margie’s grief-strangled message. She shook her head.

  “None of that nonsense, Horserider. Marines don’t cry. Semper Fi!” As she shouted out the last words with a defiant whoop, she rounded the last bend in the road. Stunned at seeing the gates closed, she skidded to a halt in front of the white truck with the ranch logo parked dead center in the way. A string bean of a man in a worn Stetson, boots, and shearling vest leaned against the hood of the vehicle, a shotgun cradled in his arms.

  “Holy crap.” She’d never seen anyone bearing arms out here, much less standing guard. Things must be even worse than she thought. Grateful she’d brought her trusty Mossberg, Emma rolled down her window.

  “Thank God you’re here, Miss Emma.” Ralph, the director’s aged right hand man removed his hat and dragged the sleeve of his red plaid shirt across his pleated brow. “This is the worst thing I’ve ever seen in my life.” The creases on his sun-weathered face deepened. “We have no idea how it happened. No one’s been up here except the employees.” He pointed at the video camera mounted on the gatepost. “Nobody came through this gate last night. No one.”

  “Let me get in, see what’s going on.”

  Shoulders sagging, he nodded and opened the gate. “Talk to them, Miss Emma,” he called as she drove through. “They trust you.”

  Much as she kept her gift under wraps from the outside world, here in this equine sanctuary, everyone knew of her special bond with the animals. Her ancestor, Beautiful Blackfeather, would have called it horse medicine. Her brother Bert called it telepathy, in keeping with his work as Director of Homeland Security’s Anomaly Defense Division. No matter what other people called this ability, Emma had been born with an unbreakable sacred bond with horses, one handed down through generations of the Crow or Absaalooke people. When old age, sickness, or injury carried a mustang away, it was hard on the entire herd. But…

  Death by violence?

  She shivered. Every member would be traumatized. She had to get in there and communicate with the alpha mare, her best link to find out what happened and calm them.

  The rutted road came to an end, and Emma stopped the truck next to Margie’s four-wheel drive. Pulling on a denim jacket and slinging the tactical shotgun scabbard over her shoulder, she glanced inside the SUV for signs of Margie’s whereabouts. A backpack and walkie-talkie lay on the seat. She reached in and keyed the radio.

  “Margie, you out there? It’s Emma.”

  Static, then muffled noises that sounded like sobbing.

  “C’mon back?”

  A sorrow clogged voice responded. “Oh, Emma, I’m so glad you’re here. I’m over the rise, with him…” Her voice faded.

  Emma climbed a boulder strewn hillside and scanned the lush green valley below. A speckled horse lay on its side, and a woman knelt by its head, stroking its muzzle. A geyser of curses in English and Crow erupted from Emma’s lips.

  Powderkeg. The stallion had battled with every other male in the herd and had passed his distinctive gray spots on a white background to each of his offspring in varying patterns, so they knew exactly which youngsters were his.

  Emma took deep gulps of crisp, cold air scented with the hardy prairie grasses and began the hike down the hillside to Margie and the victim. Horses huddled together in clusters away from the stallion’s body—like mourners at a funeral—standing a discreet distance from the dearly departed. Mares encircled their foals, nickering, whinnying, and nipping at little ones when they attempted to exit the protective barrier. Halfway to Margie, she locked gazes with the alpha mare, a blue roan named Indigo. The horse cantered over, and Emma threw her arms around Indigo’s big neck, locking her fingers in her mane. Foreheads touching, she whispered, “I’m so sorry for your loss.”

  Indigo shook her head and chuffed.

  “What happened?” Emma closed her eyes, and the image of a large silver bird came into her mind. It dove down, buzzed the herd, and flashes of fire shot out. The horses reared up on their legs, wheeled away from the thing and bolted, but the mechanical monster pressed down on them and followed Powderkeg. One shot hit the mustang, then another, then a burst of gunfire slammed into him until the big stallion crumpled to his knees and fell. Full scale panic ensued—and the machine disappeared into the clouds.

  Overwhelmed with grief, Emma broke the connection. Unbidden, tears poured down her cheeks onto Indigo’s forelocks and muzzle. Just as she began to regain control of herself, something whined in the distance. Indigo’s ears flattened, and she jerked out of Emma’s hands. The herd, which had just begun to settle down, neighed and shuddered into action. The adults bolted with their youngsters, leaving Margie and Emma exposed and vulnerable.

  Emma screamed, “Lie down next to Powderkeg and stay there!”

  The unmanned aerial vehicle—a drone—dropped out of the sky. Sun reflected a blinding flash on glass, telling Emma the thing had a camera aimed straight at her—and was coming closer. The outcropping of rock was her best bet for cover. She turned and sprinted across the valley, but tripped and fell head first into a hummock of grass, pumping up her heart rate and kicking her military training into higher gear. As she leaped to her feet, a staccato burst of bullets tore into the grass ahead of her, throwing dirt into Emma’s face. The sound of the drone receded, as she raced for the boulders, and seemed to be moving away from her. Then the buzz grew louder. The machine circled back and came right at her like an angry raptor.

  “It’s my turn, you bastard.” Emma drew the pre-loaded Mossberg out of the holder, pumped, aimed, and fired six times at the dancing metal dragonfly. She nicked it—but that only seemed to make it more intent on aiming back at her. She dropped to her knees and covered her head. If only she could get a message to Bert—

  A thunder of hooves shook the ground, and a shadow fell over her. She looked up.

  “Indigo! No! Save yourself—take care of the herd!”

  The big blue mare snorted, shook her head—and screamed.

  “No, no, no, no, no!”

  The unmanned drone unleashed its load with cold-blooded efficiency.

  The mare staggered and sank to her knees. Great brown eyes fixed on the sky, she flashed Emma one last message before dropping to her side.

  “Save my foal. Save the herd.”

  Chapter One

  Crow Reservation, Montana

  Brandon Winchester, aka Bronco, rapped at the door of the address his boss, Bert Blackfeather, had texted him that morning with instructions to get there pronto. Pushing the big bike as hard as he dared, it had taken him most of the day to get from Colora
do to the Crow Reservation in Montana. Once there, he had to navigate his way through the maze of streets, pick-up trucks, SUVs, horseback riders, kids kicking a soccer ball, clusters of adults, and a yappy little dog determined to pursue him for the last mile. Saddle sore, tired, and hungry, he thought about his breakfast back in Denver, and his stomach growled.

  Much earlier that day, he’d been sitting in a restaurant, the kind he preferred with three glass sides and the kitchen at his back. On a much needed break between cases, Bronco had been inhaling a mountain of sausages and pancakes dripping with syrup, occasionally slipping a link to his whining friend in his mesh-topped leather backpack. When his phone buzzed and Bert’s number popped up, he knew it was urgent. Sticky fingers smearing prints on the screen, he had finally gotten the phone up to his ear.

  Bert’s voice boomed. “We’ve got a situation, and you’re the closest guy I’ve got in the region.”

  “What’s the assignment?”

  His boss barked, “When you get there you’ll find out.”

  Bert never snapped at his agents. Calm and cool under pressure, the big man’s voice held a note of panic.

  Something was wrong. Dreadfully wrong.

  “Hey, man.” Bronco waved at the server for the check. “I’m not trying to give you a hard time. Just trying to figure out what you need me to take care of.”

  “I’m texting you the address. Drop whatever you’re doing and get out there. Call me on my secure line when you arrive.”

  Bronco licked his fingers and sighed. He’d been hoping to break the long dry spell created by his last two assignments. So much for asking that cute little blonde in the next booth who’d been flirting with him for the last thirty minutes if she wanted to go for a ride.

  “Okay, boss, I’m on it.”

  “Good. And by the way, don’t take no for an answer.”

  He stared at the silent phone. Don’t take no for an answer? What was that supposed to mean? Mounting his bike and kicking it into high gear, he guessed he’d find out soon enough.

  Bronco now stood squinting in the late afternoon sun, knocking at a door with no bell, and waiting for a response. Dogs barked and a window curtain twitched. Good. Someone was home. He adjusted his pack, leaned his head back, closed his eyes, and said, “Any time now.” As the words slid out of his mouth, he heard the unmistakable sound of a shotgun being pumped.

 

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