A Kiss of Revenge (Entangled Ignite)
Page 1
A Kiss of Revenge
Natalie J. Damschroder
Also by Natalie J. Damschroder from Entangled
Under the Moon
Heavy Metal
Sunroper
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.
Copyright © 2013 by Natalie J. Damschroder. All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce, distribute, or transmit in any form or by any means. For information regarding subsidiary rights, please contact the Publisher.
Entangled Publishing, LLC
2614 South Timberline Road
Suite 109
Fort Collins, CO 80525
Visit our website at www.entangledpublishing.com.
Edited by Nina Bruhns
Cover design by Fiona Jayde
Ebook ISBN 978-1-62266-206-7
Manufactured in the United States of America
First Edition November 2013
The author acknowledges the copyrighted or trademarked status and trademark owners of the following wordmarks mentioned in this work of fiction: Tenacious D, Milk Bones, Bluetooth, Mercedes, Oldsmobile, Artsfest, iPod, Katy Perry, Tag Heuer, BMW, Prince, Taser, BlackBerry, Segway, Humane Society, Vespa.
This book is dedicated to all the people who believed in it. You know who you are.
Table of Contents
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
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Prologue
SOMEWHERE OVER THE GULF OF MEXICO
Reese struggled to be heard over the nonstop drone of the small plane’s engine. Normally she found the sound comforting, but today it added another layer of irritation to her argument with Brian—their first real argument in a whole year of marriage.
She twisted in her seat, straining against her seatbelt to get closer to him so he could hear her. Not that he wanted to. His scowl deepened with every word she uttered, his face flushing as if the pressure of his silence built inside him.
“It can’t be legal,” she argued. “Who would make you fly all the way to the Yucatán to pick up a legitimate import?”
“You don’t know what you’re talking about,” Brian said for the fourth time.
“I know what you’re talking about. Or what you’re not talking about. For God’s sake, Brian, this ‘deal’ is going to get us killed!” She stopped, her annoyance building when she realized Brian’s concentration had shifted. But the tension in the cockpit changed, and she knew he wasn’t just tuning her out. “What is it?” she asked.
He studied the instruments. “Something’s off. I need to check the weather.”
She waited silently while he did so, not wanting to distract him, but continued the argument in her head. She’d known about Brian’s secret partner for months. At first, it didn’t mean anything, because she wasn’t directly involved in his work. That was refreshing, a hopeful sign that she really had changed since her previous marriages. But when she’d realized he never said his partner’s name, refused to let her meet him, and got cagier and cagier about what they were doing, the harder she pushed to find out. Being invited on this trip had shocked her, but she’d decided the forced seclusion would be perfect for making him talk.
Then she’d found out the invitation hadn’t been Brian’s idea, but his shadowy partner’s, and that they were flying to Mexico. Fury had turned to fear when she imagined everything that could go wrong on the ground, if they were working for a drug cartel.
She hadn’t even considered something going wrong in the air.
“There’s a storm ahead. I’m going around it.”
A shudder went up her spine. “An unexpected storm?”
“I don’t know.” His jaw tightened again, telling her he knew she wouldn’t like the answer. “Maybe. I was in too much of a hurry and too busy arguing with you to check the weather information the tower gave me.”
Crap. She scanned the instrument panel, her fingers flexing with the urge to help, but she was clueless. Behind the compulsion to act was a seed of panic. “Why were you in a hurry?” Safety had always been his number one priority.
“He changed the pickup date on me.” Brian concentrated on the controls, but Reese let herself get distracted back to the original topic.
“He changed the pickup date? He, who? Your partner? Mr. Shadow? Why?” The fear came out as sarcasm. This argument could be pointless, the way he was frantically flipping switches and turning dials and looking ever more grim. “What aren’t you telling me?”
His jaw clenched, he stared at the wheel in his hands. He looked incredulous, like he didn’t believe what was happening. Finally, he relaxed and looked at her. “I told him I wanted out. I was done. He said one last pickup and told me when and where. Then he moved it up a couple of days and suggested I bring you, like a weekend getaway.” He lifted one hand and cupped her cheek, his face twisted with torment. “Reese, I’m sorry. So, so sorry. I’m so stupid. I should have known—”
She clapped her hand over his, panic blossoming into terror. “Brian, what? What are you saying?” She wrapped her free hand around his forearm, not wanting to let go of him. She couldn’t lose him. Not another one. Please.
“He didn’t want to let me out, but I thought he’d given in. I really did, Reese. Believe me, I didn’t want this to happen to you. I should have known better, but after all these years, I never thought he’d—”
An explosion of noise, water on metal, made her jump. She looked out the windshield, shocked to see torrential rain surrounding them. “I thought you were going around.”
“I couldn’t.”
Thunder boomed. She focused her attention on Brian instead of her rising terror. “What do you mean you couldn’t?” But she knew. All of her knew. Brilliant white light flashed all around them. Pain slammed into every part of her body, locking her muscles as the plane fell into a dive. Her vision turned red, then faded to black.
I’m never getting married again.
It was an inane last thought.
Chapter One
CRESTVIEW, MASSACHUSETTS
ONE YEAR LATER
Reese Templeton was all about the muffins.
Well, actually, she was more about justice and retribution. And maybe guilt. And money. But to the good people of Crestview, Massachusetts, she was all about the muffins.
“What’ll it be today, Chief?” She angled her head toward the bakery case, keeping her smile easy and light despite the tension induced by police chief Andrew Laine’s presence. “Blueberry’s freshest.”
“Then blueberry it is. And coffee—”
“Black,” they said in unison. Reese grinned and bent to retrieve the muffin.
“The new movie’s in town,” he said casually. “You free tonight?”
Her stomach flipped. The town’s one-screen movie theater was showing a second-run romantic comedy. Definitely date night material. She turned to wrap the muffin on the rear counter, and the hair began to rise along her arms. As she reached for the coffee pot, a spark of electricity leaped from her hand to the “on” swit
ch. There was a pop and tiny wisp of smoke. Dammit. That was the fourth switch she’d fried in the bakery, all of them Andrew’s fault. Hoping he hadn’t seen it, she quickly poured his coffee and snapped on a lid.
“I’m sorry.” She turned to hand him his drink and the bagged muffin, hoping her smile looked normal. “I have plans.”
“Another time, then.” His gaze was all too keen, and she knew he wasn’t going to get the message. Another time, another place, maybe she wouldn’t have hesitated to say yes. He had as much to offer as any guy. But her life wasn’t normal, and it was never a good idea to date the local chief of police when you spent your evenings breaking into the town’s mansions.
She had a better reason to give him, and she sighed, deciding it was time. There was a lull in business and no one close enough to hear their conversation.
“Andrew, I should have told you this before, but…I’m married.” She watched his gaze drop to check her bare left hand resting on the counter. It was quizzical when he raised it again, empty of judgment.
“I didn’t realize that. We haven’t met him.”
“No.” She smiled a little at the way he naturally represented the whole town. “My husband was badly injured in a plane crash over a year ago. He’s in long-term care and not going to recover. But he’s still my husband.”
His expression softened at her declaration. “I’m sorry, Reese. That’s got to be hard. But it explains a few things.”
She tensed. What if his interest wasn’t actually romantic? What if he was trying to get close to her because he was suspicious? “Like what?”
“You always seem to be waiting for something. And a little sad, I guess. I thought you were a widow.”
Okay, so not a suspect. She relaxed. “I am. Technically.” Way more than technically, but one big admission was enough for a day. She kept it to, “My first husband died.”
He nodded and picked up his coffee and the bag holding his muffin. “Again, please accept my condolences. If you want a friend to go to the movies with, you know where to find me.”
She raised her eyebrows. “But not the romantic comedy.”
He grimaced. “Hell, no.”
She laughed and waved him out the door. He held it for a group of kids coming in. The man who followed them nodded respectfully but watched Andrew several seconds longer than was normal. When she realized who he was, another, very different wave of electricity went up her arms and down her spine. She quickly turned to Kimmie and the kids in front of the ice cream case, who were babbling about which flavors they’d choose today.
“You guys are early,” Reese commented to the young woman, who rolled her eyes.
“I didn’t bring them in yesterday, so they insisted we do it first thing.” Kimmie worked as a nanny for two families, and ice cream cones were a weekly summer ritual.
Reese could tell Kimmie was dying for her to ask about the change. “What happened yesterday?”
Kimmie bounced on the balls of her feet and squeezed her hands together. “I had an audition! In New York!”
Reese’s mouth dropped open. “That’s fantastic! For what?” She began scooping cones while Kimmie told her about the music video she’d auditioned for. Reese had never heard of the band, and the place the young woman described sounded pretty sketchy, but she kept her mouth closed, not willing to burst Kimmie’s bubble when she was so happy.
Once Kimmie had wound down, paid for the ice cream, and escorted the kids to a big table in the corner, Reese turned to the man patiently waiting his turn.
He tilted his head toward Kimmie. “You two could be sisters.”
She shrugged. She hadn’t noticed, but they were of similar height and build, and their blond hair was the same length.
“I didn’t expect to see you today.”
Griff smiled, and her stomach did a whole flippin’ somersault.
“I had meetings at the office in Boston and was headed back to DC. I thought I’d stop in and see how you’re doing.”
She grabbed a towel to wipe off her ice cream–sticky hands. “Crestview is not on the way to DC from Boston.”
He shrugged and pointed at the butter croissants in the display case. “Close enough.”
With a pair of tongs, she selected the biggest croissant and put it on a plate. “Coffee?”
“Of course.” He leaned against the counter and folded his arms. “You have anything for me to check out?”
She shook her head. “Not at the moment.”
“What about him?” He jerked his head toward the sidewalk outside, where Andrew Laine stood talking to the couple who owned the hardware store. “He giving you any trouble?”
“Not anymore. I told him I was married.”
She cursed herself as soon as the words were out of her mouth. Griff’s gray-blue eyes darkened, his rock-solid chin tightening. He’d obviously meant “trouble” because of Reese breaking the law, not because the chief of police had asked her out.
“You’re not thinking—”
“No!” She grabbed the towel again and swept it over the few crumbs and coffee drips on the counter, scrubbing vigorously at one dried spot. “I didn’t want to shove him too far away, that’s all. As long as he had an interest, I could keep track of what he knew.” Even if it kept her on edge and fried her equipment. “Anyway, he knows now. It’s fine. You don’t have to worry.”
“You pay me to worry.”
That wasn’t strictly true. Griff was co-owner of a multi-city private detective firm. He ran Chase Investigations in Washington, DC, where Reese and Brian had lived before the plane crash. Reese had hired him to help her track down clues about Brian’s secret partner. But they’d become friends. He’d helped her through physical therapy, been a sounding board while she dealt with the reality of Brian’s condition, and was the only person on earth who knew what that lightning strike had done to her body.
“I’m paying you to do research,” she reminded him. “You choose to worry.”
He grinned and shook back his shaggy dark-blond hair. “You make it hard not to.”
Another group came in, and he retreated to a table with his breakfast. Reese saw Kimmie eyeing him, and the young woman flushed at his greeting. Reese couldn’t blame her. He had the classic “hunk” build, with a broad chest, narrow waist, and shoulders shown off by a tight gray T-shirt. His gray-blue eyes were nothing special at first glance, but they sparkled at everyone and made his charming smile even brighter. No doubt that smile was what pinned Kimmie in place now, wearing a slightly stunned expression.
Reese wasn’t immune, but her friendship with Griff had become one of the most important things in her life. It was something she’d never had before, and she was going to treasure it as long as it lasted.
He did paperwork while he ate his croissant and drank his coffee, and when she was once again free of customers he returned his plate to the counter, keys in hand.
She tried to hide her disappointment. “Short stay, huh?”
“I have to be back in DC tonight. Just wanted to stop and say hi.” He glanced over his shoulder, but Kimmie and the kids had left and everyone else had been to-go, so the bakery was empty. “What’s on your agenda?”
The mayor had mentioned this morning that the Snakewells were on vacation. They lived in one of the houses in The Charms, the exclusive neighborhood that was the target of her investigation, but Reese knew how Griff felt about her investigative techniques. His disapproval was hard enough to deal with over the phone. She didn’t want to face it in person, so she said, “Nothing at the moment. I’ll let you know if I come across anything.”
He didn’t look convinced, but after gazing out the window for a few long seconds, he changed the subject. “You sure Laine’s cool?”
“Of course. I’ve handled stuff like that before.” She was used to putting men off, especially in the last year. She’d never had to play up her statuesque body or color her naturally blond hair to invite interest, and Brian had called her blue
eyes “beguiling.” He was no longer around to fend off the occasional guy who hit on her, but the fact of his existence was usually enough to do the job, as it had been with Andrew.
“And that?” Now Griff indicated the burned-out switch on the coffee maker.
She sighed, less confident. She had to find a way to stop that from happening. Hard work had given her some measure of control over the electricity her body seemed to attract, but even a little fluster blew it all to hell. “I’ll call an electrician.” A new one, because the last one she’d called had installed heavy-duty surge protectors on all her equipment. Since her “problem” bypassed the protectors completely, the last thing she wanted was to call attention to the weirdness.
Griff shook his head, his expression sympathetic. “We’ll keep working on it. Call me.” And then he left her alone.
The bakery did brisk business all day—not that it kept her mind off Griff, Andrew, the Snakewells’ empty house, or the reason for all of it—her husband’s unresponsive condition. She’d never cured herself of tensing every time the phone rang, expecting it to be the home providing Brian’s care, telling her the nightmare had ended. Death had loomed over most of her adult life, but it usually took a more direct approach than this. Her two widowhoods had all been sudden, and though neither scenario was preferable to the other, she could handle sudden better. It had become almost routine, unlike this lingering, hopeless stasis.
Brian’s medical insurance had paid for her recovery and given her time to adapt to the “unusual” repercussions of the plane crash that had changed their lives. It contributed to the excellent care to which he was oblivious. But it hadn’t given her direction or purpose. So instead of sitting vigil, waiting endlessly, she’d used some of the money from a previous life insurance settlement to invest in the bakery. It was a good cover while she searched for the person who had tried to kill them.
The bakery was more fulfilling than she’d anticipated. No one would imagine that a young, grieving widow who baked the best muffins in town was hatching a nefarious plot in her backroom. The residents of tiny Crestview had welcomed her into their hometown lovefest. She felt part of every family who ate in her place, and it kept her life from being two-dimensional. It gave her hope for a future she wasn’t sure she could see beyond her vengeance quest.