by Sheryl Lynn
“About your fee—”
Letter to Reader
Title Page
Dedication
CAST OF CHARACTERS
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
Copyright
“About your fee—”
“I don’t have a fee.”
“I pay for whatever services I receive.”
“I don’t take cash from stalking victims.” Awareness of her alluring body heated his blood. He’d like to have her in his debt. He’d really like to have her in his bed. Thaw the ice, rev her engine, but now would definitely be a bad time to let her know what he was thinking. Especially since the frigid glare she gave him said she suspected exactly what he was thinking.
“How about a trade?”
She tilted her head to one side. “A trade?”
“I get rid of your stalker, you give me a honeymoon.”
“Pardon?” Her voice had risen slightly, and the corners of her mouth twitched.
Seeing her fight a smile convinced him that heat pulsed beneath her icy veneer “You’ve got the Honeymoon Hideaway at Elk River, right? Fancy cabins, room service, moonlight and romance. I could really go for that. Can you set up a honeymoon for me?”
“I could....” She relaxed—Daniel nearly melted into a puddle beneath his desk. “Are you engaged to be married?”
I’m going to marry you. “Not yet. We’ll just keep it open-ended.”
Dear Reader,
Sexy and sweet, tough and tender. These are the men of ELK RIVER, COLORADO. The men who still stand tall and know how to treat a woman. The men whom Sheryl Lynn writes about with emotion and passion in her new duet.
You may remember the legendary Duke family of Colorado, whom Sheryl first introduced in a duet called HONEYMOON HIDEAWAY a few years back. These titles—#424 The Case of the Vanished Groom and #425 The Case of the Bad Luck Fiancé as well as last month’s #514 The Bodyguard—are still available. Send $3.75 ($4.25 CAN.) each for the first two titles, $3.99 ($4.50 CAN.) for The Bodyguard, plus $.75 shipping and handling ($1.00 CAN.), to Harlequin Reader Service: 3010 Walden Ave., Buffalo, NY 14269, or P.O. Box 609, Fort Erie, Ontario L2A 5X3.
Happy Reading!
Debra Matteucci
Senior Editor & Editorial Coordinator
Harlequin Books
300 East 42nd Street
New York, NY 10017
Undercover Fiancé
Sheryl Lynn
TORONTO • NEW YORK • LONDON
AMSTERDAM • PARIS • SYDNEY • HAMBURG
STOCKHOLM • ATHENS • TOKYO • MILAN • MADRID
PRAGUE • WARSAW • BUDAPEST • AUCKLAND
For my favorite future superstars: Jennifer, Emily and Mikey Campbell; Abby and Tristan Manus; and Justin Murphy. Don’t grow up too fast, but when you do, get out there and dazzle the world.
CAST OF CHARACTERS
Janine Duke—The general manager of Elk River Resort is the perfect businesswoman, with a secret admirer who’s potentially deadly.
Daniel Tucker—His life mission is making sure that no one else has to suffer the way his stalker made him suffer.
Colonel Horace Duke—The owner of Elk River, who expects his staff and family to live up to his exacting standards.
Elise Duke—A gracious matriarch whose family is her life.
Kara Duke—Janine’s baby sister thinks Daniel is gorgeous, but is he really serious about pursuing Janine or could he get serious about Kara?
Pinky—He loves Janine and to prove it he’ll get rid of the colonel so they can live happily ever after.
Chapter One
Concentrate, focus. Daniel Tucker envisioned concentric circles of red, yellow and black surrounding a bright red bull’s-eye. Easy now, picture the dart sailing in a perfect arc. Two thoughts intruded: This is stupid. He was bored.
Scowling, he fingered the dart, testing the point against the ball of his thumb. A potential client should be arriving in a few minutes—his only client in more than a month. Antistalking laws were growing teeth. He felt like a soldier in the final days of a war—bored. The more battles his side won, the more obsolete he became.
He craved a useful purpose—and something else, too. He hadn’t figured out yet what that something else might be, though.
Shaking off the gloomy thoughts, he again conjured the image of the bull’s-eye. He drew back his arm, joints loose, wrist relaxed, the crimson sweet spot glowing like a beacon. And tossed the dart.
A high-pitched squeal shattered the silence. Daniel tore off the blindfold.
There she stood, the most beautiful woman he’d ever seen. The yellow fletch on the dart quivered in the doorjamb, scant inches from her face.
The face of an angel with wide blue eyes and a full, soft mouth. Luxurious chestnut curls fell in soft waves to her shoulders. A wine-red jacket hugged her lush bosom and narrow waist and flared over graceful hips. Visions of dart boards shrank and disappeared, replaced by an image of this goddess rising naked from the sea, riding a seashell, while cherubs—
“Are you nuts?” She looked between him and the dart. “You almost put out my eye.”
Her dulcet contralto vibrated within his heart. Daniel snapped his mouth shut. He tossed the blindfold on the desk and straightened the knot of his tie with a jerk. A glance at his watch showed four o’clock on the dot. The goddess must have accepted the “Please Come In” invitation posted on the office door.
“Some people think so,” he said and rose. “You must be Janine.” She was so stunning, he had to keep checking to make sure her perfection wasn’t an illusion.
A small frown formed between her eyebrows. “Yes, I’m Ms. Duke.” She clutched a large paper shopping bag—Neiman Marcus, he noticed—before her like a shield.
He rolled a hand, gesturing for her to enter. Reality seemed to shift. Women who looked like this only existed on a movie screen or on the airbrushed, expertly lit, artfully arranged pages of glamour magazines. He swept his other darts off the desk and into a drawer. The clattering assured him he was awake and she was for real.
“I’m Daniel Tucker.”
She eyed the dart in the woodwork warily.
He moved around the desk and held a chair for her. “Man, J.T. said you were a knockout, but as usual he understated.”
“Pardon?” She clutched the bag to her chest.
Those fabulous eyes glared up at him as if he were a bug in need of exterminating. He caught a whiff of light floral perfume with a note of vanilla. He wanted to bury his nose in her hair and snuffle like a horse.
“J.T. said you’re beautiful. I bet you hear that all the time.” He closed the office door and offered coffee.
She lifted that perfect chin. “I did not come here to be judged like a show dog, Mr. Tucker.” She frowned at the dart board hanging on the back of the door. “Or to have my eyeballs skewered.”
“Sorry about that, ma’am. I’m learning how to throw blindfolded.”
“Whatever for?”
Because the living was so damned easy he wondered why he even bothered getting out of bed in the morning. He lifted his shoulders. “New Year’s resolution. Sure you don’t want some coffee? Special blend, made fresh. Tea? Soda?” My heart, bank accounts, car?
“No, thank you.” She set the shopping bag on the floor at her feet. “I’d like to discuss busines
s. Did J.T. tell you about my...problem?”
“Only that you have one.”
“I need confidentiality. This is a personal problem. I want it solved without involving my family.”
“Confidentiality is my specialty.” He leaned back on the chair, but stopped himself before throwing his feet up on the desk. Her posture would make a finishing-school teacher proud; his should at least rise above slovenly. He opened a drawer and swept beanbag animals, puzzles and a miniature croquet set off the desk and out of sight. “What exactly is your problem?”
“I seem to have acquired a stalker.”
That dampened his good humor. He leaned forward and rested his forearms on the desk. “Go on.”
She looked around the office. The room was spacious, but cluttered with a jungle of plants and two computers. The screen-savers on both computers had words scrolling across the monitors. One said, “Vote for Dan Tucker, Emperor of the Universe.” The other said, “Smile, you’re gonna die anyway.”
The frown line appeared between her eyebrows again.
Daniel tried to guess her age. Her complexion was as smooth as polished marble. From what he could see, she didn’t sag or bag anywhere. Late twenties, he guessed. No wedding ring.
“What exactly do you do, Mr. Tucker?” She peered at his duck-decoy telephone as if it might offer information. “J.T. didn’t elaborate. Are you a private investigator? A security specialist?”
Lately he hadn’t been doing much of anything. “You might say I’m a professional problem solver.”
“And your credentials? References?”
“Confidential. My specialty is helping abused women escape their abusers. My clients come by referral only, and I don’t keep their names on file. Not even the CIA could trace anyone through me.”
“I see.”
“I also own some martial arts studios. J.T. runs them for me. His wife, Frankie, is your cousin, right?”
“Yes.” The frown line deepened. “I haven’t been in an abusive relationship. A man insists we’re in love, but we don’t have a relationship, and he won’t leave me alone. I don’t know if you can help me.”
The old, ever-present knot in his belly gave a little tug, reminding him that no matter how much time passed he’d never be completely, 100 percent free. “I know more about stalkers than most people care to know. Firsthand experience. I used to have one.”
Interest brightened her eyes, and her shoulders relaxed. She leaned forward.
“It started when I won the lottery.”
Those elegant eyebrows rose like wings.
“Do you buy Lotto tickets, ma’am?”
“No.”
“Don’t start. Imagining being a winner is a hoot, but actually doing it is a royal pain in the butt. I hit a jackpot for thirty-two million.” He paused; he never tired of seeing people’s reaction when the number sank in.
Janine’s lovely mouth formed an O.
“I get an annuity, and let me tell you, it’s a tax nightmare. I’m on a first-name basis with every IRS agent in the state. I also made the mistake of getting a big head and letting them put my picture in the newspaper and on television. Big mistake. Some folks make careers out of begging for money.”
“Your stalker is one of them?”
“No. At the time, I taught a karate class at the YMCA. She was one of my students. Kind of flaky, I thought, but a nice kid. After I went nuts with a new car, fancy condo, presents for everybody, I made some donations.” He stroked his thumbs under imaginary lapels. “The big-shot philanthropist. I paid for an annual YMCA membership for each of my students. She took it as a sign that I loved her.”
“Why?”
“It’s what she wanted to believe. If I’ve learned nothing else, it’s this—there’s no arguing with a delusion.”
“Does she have mental problems?”
“All stalkers have mental problems. My stalker was borderline schizophrenic, plus she had a disorder called erotomania. If that sounds sexy, trust me, it isn’t. It’s got nothing to do with sex or anything erotic. It’s a delusion about being in love.”
Janine lowered her gaze to the bag at her feet. She twisted a hank of hair around her fingers.
“Strike a nerve?”
“He insists what we have is true love.”
Daniel grunted. Erotomanic stalkers were the absolute worst. “My stalker called me dozens of times a day. I’d change my number, she’d find it. She broke into my home numerous times. When I called the cops, she told them she was my wife. One time she convinced them to arrest me for domestic abuse.” He shook his head at the memory.
“I moved out of state, but it only took her three months to find me. She intercepted my mail. She threatened the women I dated. I tried being nice. I tried reason. I got restraining orders. I took her to court. I had her arrested, but she convinced her parents and her attorneys that I was stringing her along. They always bailed her out of trouble.”
“How did you make her stop?”
The knot in his belly jerked tighter. “She stopped herself. She committed suicide.”
“Oh, my God,” Janine whispered.
He blew a long breath in a vain attempt to erase the sourness of old horrors from the back of his throat. “She hung herself off my bedroom balcony. She used a sheet from my bed as a noose.” He forcibly relaxed his hands. “That totally, completely sucked. I still have nightmares. But one good thing came out of it. I found my life’s calling. I don’t want anybody going through what I went through. I stop stalkers any way I can.”
Her slender throat worked, and the hair twisting increased. He recognized fear. Perfect hair, makeup and clothing aside, this woman suffered, and his heart went out to her.
“Before we continue with your problem, I want you to understand something about me. I fight dirty.”
She stopped twisting her hair. Her eyebrows lifted. He could spend a lifetime studying her incredible face. He’d give his left leg to see her smile.
“People who stalk are not reasonable. Some of them have serious personality disorders. Some are mentally ill. All of them are obsessed. Colorado has an antistalking statute. It’s fairly new, though, and not always well implemented. Unless violence is involved, the courts tend to give stalkers probation with a stipulation of counseling. Repeated arrests often do more harm than good. The stalker goes through the court system and comes out feeling stronger for the experience. So I fight dirty.”
“You use violence?”
“On occasion. Most of the stalkers I deal with are angry men. Bullies who beat up women and children. I’m a tenth-degree black belt, and I’m qualified with weapons you’ve probably never heard of.” He waggled his eyebrows. “Bullies don’t like the taste of their own medicine.”
“My stalker isn’t violent.”
“Stalking is violence. You must realize that on some level.”
Her slender throat worked with a hard swallow.
“Being nice does not work. Being polite but firm does not work. I have discovered, in many cases, that the judicious use of mayhem does work.”
“I see.” The softly hesitant words held volumes of skepticism.
“Have you gone to the police?”
“No.”
“Have you confronted your stalker?”
“I haven’t a clue as to who he is.”
He straightened on the chair, and the wheels squeaked. He’d wanted a challenged, and a doozy landed in his lap. He’d never dealt with an anonymous stalker before. They usually targeted celebrities or politicians.
“I don’t want anybody killed, Mr. Tucker.”
“I haven’t killed anybody.” He curled the corners of his mouth in a tight smile. “Yet.”
She lowered her gaze to the shopping bag as if it contained the secrets of the universe. Perhaps it did. “He’s threatened my family,” she said quietly. “I want him stopped.” She stroked the bag. Her hands were slim with long fingers. Clear polish on her nails had been buffed to a high shine.<
br />
Her vanity intrigued him. She knew damned well how gorgeous she was. He felt a connection. He was vain as hell, too.
“I’m at a loss. If I knew who he was, I’d talk to him. But he could walk into this room right now, and I wouldn’t have a clue as to his identity.”
“Anonymous stalkers need control as much as they need love. Anonymity helps maintain the control. You can’t reject him if you don’t know who he is. How has he threatened your family?”
She reached into the bag and rustled amongst papers. She brought out a pink envelope and placed it on the desk. “This came in the mail the day before yesterday. It’s why I called J.T. I didn’t know what else to do.”
“You did right to call him. Stalkers don’t go away by themselves.” He shook a folded sheet of paper from the envelope. He noticed the envelope bore no postmark. A bad sign. It could mean the envelope missed the marking machine in the postal service, or it could mean the envelope had been personally delivered. The letter consisted of three short paragraphs. The first two paragraphs extolled Janine’s virtue. The third paragraph chilled his blood.
It isn’t fair for him to keep us apart. He works you to death, taking up all your time, and now he is ruining the most romantic day of the year! Valentine’s Day is our day! I’ll help you, love. Your father is a tyrant. Death to all tyrants! I will make him go away. Then you and I can live together in the mountains forever, happily ever after.
It was signed, “Love you gobs and gobs and gobs, Pinky.”
“Am I paranoid?” she asked. “Or is he threatening my father?”
“Sounds like a threat to me. I always take threats seriously.”
Color drained from her cheeks.
“What’s the deal with Valentine’s Day?”
“It’s my parents’ wedding anniversary. Did J.T. tell you about Elk River Resort?”