Tempting the Devil

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by Potter, Patricia;




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  PRAISE FOR THE WRITING OF PATRICIA POTTER

  “Patricia Potter is a master storyteller, a powerful weaver of romantic tales.” —Mary Jo Putney, New York Times–bestselling author

  “One of the romance genre’s finest talents.” —Romantic Times

  “Patricia Potter will thrill lovers of the suspense genre as well as those who enjoy a good romance.” —Booklist

  “Potter proves herself a gifted writer as artisan, creating a rich fabric of strong characters whose wit and intellect will enthrall even as their adventures entertain.” —BookPage

  “When a historical romance [gets] the Potter treatment, the story line is pure action and excitement, and the characters are wonderful.” —BookBrowse

  “Potter has an expert ability to invest in fully realized characters and a strong sense of place without losing momentum in the details, making this novel a pure pleasure.” —Publishers Weekly, starred review of Beloved Warrior

  “[Potter] proves that she’s adept at penning both enthralling historicals and captivating contemporary novels.” —Booklist, starred review of Dancing with a Rogue

  Tempting the Devil

  Patricia Potter

  With many, many thanks to my editor, Christine Zika, for her invaluable input as well as infinite patience

  author’s note

  Although the seed of Tempting the Devil was suggested by an actual event, the characters and events in the book are completely fictional, the result of the author’s “what if?” mechanism.

  prologue

  JUST OUTSIDE ATLANTA

  Fear rushed through Jesse Carroll as he felt the barrel of a gun pressing into his back.

  Why the hell had he agreed to Zack’s invitation to sneak a few minutes off to smoke a cigarette and maybe take a swallow of that good ’shine Zack usually carried?

  The rough, almost overgrown road was just off their beats, a piece of private property being held for future development. Even the entrance was difficult to see.

  Zack had known the old man who’d owned it until his death two years ago. It was then purchased by a holding company. An old shack on the property still stood, but a heavy chain had been added across the entrance to block any traffic from entering.

  The property was outside Zack’s rounds, but he drove by every day on his way to the office, and tonight the chain was gone. He’d called Jesse on his cell and suggested he and his rookie meet him and take a look around. Jesse knew it was merely an excuse to meet. Zack always carried that ’shine Jesse liked, and he didn’t like drinking alone. Like Zack, Jesse would have been alone if Kell, a rookie officer, hadn’t been training with him.

  Meeting like this wasn’t in the training manual.

  But it often got lonely and boring in this part of the county where little happened except for the occasional speeder. So on especially dull nights, Zack and Jesse sometimes met in a secluded place, shared stories, took a sip or two.

  Why hadn’t he said no? Instead, he’d sworn Kell to silence and driven down the road to the remnants of a cabin. He’d looked for Zack’s headlights. Instead he saw the silhouette of a darkened blue-and-white squad car. Then another car behind it.

  He stopped the car, took out his weapon and stepped out. Lights from the squad car flashed on, blinded him. At the same moment, something hard and small and round pressed into his back.

  Jesse’s heart pounded. A shadowy figure pushed Zack forward. His figure blocked the blinding light. One handcuff dangled from his wrist.

  “What the hell …?” He stopped, then started again. “This is one hell of a joke, Zack.” He peered frantically into the darkness. “Who’s out there? This ain’t funny.”

  The figure seized his left wrist and hooked him to Zack. Still another man took his handcuffs from his belt and hooked his right one to Kell’s left hand. It was done so quickly, so professionally, he knew it must be a cop. Had to be.

  A joke. Had to be one. Probably aimed at Kell, the rookie.

  He kept telling himself that. The only other explanation was too awful to consider.

  So far he’d been the only one to speak. Kell remained silent, but Jesse felt the trainee’s tension. Smelled the fear.

  He blinked against the glare of the flashlight. He turned to avoid it and saw one man who stood alone. Lou Belize. He froze. God, he was a dead man.

  A deer in headlights. That’s exactly how he felt. And the truck was coming right at him! Did Kell realize they were up to their eyebrows in shit?

  Fear exploded in him.

  Hooked to the other two men, he couldn’t run, though that was exactly what he wanted to do. Kell muttered something, but Jesse couldn’t make out the words. Zack slumped, and now Jesse saw the blood on his face, the way his free hand clutched his stomach. Someone had worked him over.

  Belize came up to him. “This pig said you just happened to come here.”

  Jesse nodded, afraid his voice might reflect the stark terror he now felt.

  “No one told you about this place?”

  Jesse tried to think. Hold out and play for more time. But Zack’s expression revealed he’d already told everything. “We were just going to have a drink,” he said, hating the tremor he heard in his voice.

  “A cop? Isn’t that illegal?” Belize sneered.

  Jesse didn’t answer.

  Belize stepped back behind the light.

  Jesse was only too aware of the revolver still pressed against his back. He closed his eyes and thought of Sarah, and little James. Jesse and James. It had been Sarah’s little joke when she crawled over him on those nights they made love.

  If he hadn’t fought with her tonight, he never would have agreed to meet Zack for a quick bite of moonshine. Every bar would be closed on his way home, and a sip or two would relax him. Same old fight. She wanted him to quit and get a safe job. She couldn’t understand why he loved being a cop, how he enjoyed the comaraderie he shared with others of the breed.

  “Do it!” Lou Belize ordered.

  He frantically looked around for help. Shadows. They were all shadows. Then he saw a figure he knew instantly. He couldn’t see the man’s face but he didn’t have to.

  A mistake. It had to be a mistake.

  He started to call out, but the sound was interrupted by the blast of a gunshot. Kell’s weight dragged him down.

  “Sarah,” he whispered.

  He never heard the second shot, as the bullet tore into his skull.

  chapter one

  She’d never seen a dead man before.

  Much less three.

  Robin Stuart turned away from the bodies of the three dead police officers. She had what she needed for her news story. Three men in uniform, their faces drained of life. A bullet in the back of each head. Little blood.

  They’d seemed more like wax figures than men who had been alive just hours ago.

  Yet she knew they had been, and her heart ached for them, and for their families.

  Not professional. But it had happened before, this witnessing of tragedy and the resulting feelings she tried to mask. Today she knew she’d not mastered that particular skill. She’d often wondered how war correspondents learned to live with the death they observed daily.

  At first she’d fervently wished she could. In her first months at the Atlanta Observer, a chartered plane carrying more than a hundred prominent Atlantans had crashed in Europe, and she had been called, along with other staffers, to write obituaries for an Extra. Several family members she’d contacted had not yet learned about the crash, and
she’d had to break the news.

  That had been her worst day as a reporter.

  This was a close second. She couldn’t stop thinking about the families waiting for the three to return home. Two were young—around her age—and the third was probably in his forties. She fought to keep tears at bay. She would never live that down among the other reporters.

  Yet mixed with that was the adrenaline from knowing this was going to be a huge story.

  The heat of an Atlanta summer bore down. She felt perspiration trickling down her blouse as clumps of law enforcement officers huddled together some space from the bodies, as if distancing themselves from the dead. A bright yellow ribbon isolated the bodies from the living.

  But she couldn’t avert her eyes. It wasn’t like writing about a county budget, or a squabble on the county commission or even the occasional trial she covered.

  She scribbled several observations in her notebook. Other reporters stood quietly rather than being their usual raucous and competitive selves. One was a police reporter for the opposition daily, and then there were several from local papers. The television media hadn’t arrived yet, but they wouldn’t be far behind.

  Ordinarily, a crime story of this magnitude would have gone to the paper’s police reporter or one of the veteran general assignment reporters, but she’d been covering this county and an adjoining one for six months and had been sitting in the sheriff’s office when he received the call.

  Trying to ignore the heavy brace on her left leg, she limped over to Meredith County Sheriff Will Sammons.

  He was talking to another officer, but stopped when she approached. “Do you have the names of the victims?” she asked.

  He frowned. “That’s up to the county police to give out,” he said. “I ’spect they’ll wait till the families are notified.”

  “I won’t print them until they are.”

  He sighed. “Can’t do it, missy.”

  She hated the “missy,” but he’d insisted on calling her that since she’d first met him. Since he’d turned out to be a good source on county politics and news, she’d never considered it important enough to object.

  “What can you tell me?”

  “That some sons of bitches executed three officers,” he said.

  “Do you know when?”

  He shrugged. “Two called in at two a.m. and said they were taking a break. I don’t know about the third. They must have chanced on some kind of illegal activity. Probably drugs.”

  “It doesn’t look like there was a struggle.”

  His eyes turned hard. “Someone got the drop on them.” His gaze left her face as he watched a photographer take photos and newly arrived officers from the police department expand the crime scene ribbon.

  More people were filling the clearing now, including the first television van. She found her cell in her pocket and phoned Wade Carlton, city editor for the paper.

  “I have enough for a bulletin for the first edition,” she said.

  He didn’t waste words but handed her off to another reporter to take the story.

  “Three Meredith County police officers were found slain this morning in a clearing near Wilson Lake in the northwest corner of Meredith County. They had been handcuffed together and each shot in the back of the head, execution-style.

  “Meredith County Sheriff Will Sammons said all three officers were on duty last night. Two reported in to the police dispatcher at two a.m. They and the third officer did not report in at the end of their shift, and a search was instigated. Their bodies were found at eleven o’clock this morning, on a narrow dirt road leading to the private lake.

  “The three officers—as yet unidentified pending notification to their families—are members of the Meredith County Police Department. The department operates independently of the county sheriff’s office.

  “Sheriff Sammons said there are no immediate suspects but that the officers may have stumbled on a drug sale or stolen car operation.”

  To Wade Carlton, when he came back on the line, she said, “I’ll have more later.”

  “I’ll send Bob Greene out there,” he said.

  Bob Greene was the principal police reporter for the paper. She didn’t want the story taken away from her. “I know the people here. They trust me.” She took a deep breath, then said, “They don’t know Bob.”

  Wade Carlton hesitated, then, “Okay it’s yours. For now.”

  She closed the cell phone, then went over to a deputy sheriff who stood alone. When she was first assigned the county, she’d had coffee with him several times at the café across from the courthouse and had talked him into letting her ride along in his squad car for several days. It wasn’t quite against rules because there were no rules regarding reporters, but she knew he’d never reported it.

  They had become friends, and he’d flirted with her more than once, though he often talked about his wife and son.

  “Sandy?”

  He turned to her, his usually pleasant expression harsh with anger. “Damn them,” he said in a low voice. “Damn them to hell.”

  “Did you know the officers?”

  “Yes,” he said shortly. “Weren’t close, though. Our department and the police department don’t talk much.”

  She wanted to keep him talking. There was a rare anger about him that was explosive. She felt it, and an angry man often said things he might ordinarily be more cautious about.

  She was aware of the tension between the two agencies. The county had a sheriff’s office and a separate police department that covered the same area. She’d heard about some of the turf wars. The county police operated under the county commission; the sheriff’s deputies under the elected sheriff.

  “Two look really young,” she prodded.

  “They all have families,” he said bitterly. “One was just married.”

  “What do you think happened?”

  He cast a quick look at the sheriff, who was now talking to his second in command: Chief Deputy Paul Joyner. “What did the sheriff say?”

  “They must have stumbled onto some illegal transaction and were ambushed.”

  He raised an eyebrow.

  “You don’t think so?” she probed.

  “Three cops—two of them experienced?” he said in a low voice. Then he moved away and joined the sheriff watching the crime scene investigators at work.

  She talked to several other deputies but did not try to approach members of the police department who were now flooding the scene. Instead she watched as they stood in numb grief.

  The thump, thump, thump of news helicopters now thrummed from above. Reporters and local law enforcement thickened the crowd. The police chief arrived with an entourage and stalked over to Sheriff Sammons. The body language was angry, and she inched toward them, only to be told to stay back.

  Still watching, she limped over to the editor of the local paper, an older man with whom she’d often shared cups of coffee and exchanged information. His paper was a weekly and thus they didn’t have the competition that flared between daily papers.

  “Sandy tell you anything?” Hank Conrad asked.

  “Nope,” she said. “Only that one was recently married. You have the names yet?”

  “Yep.”

  “They wouldn’t give them to me,” she complained.

  “You’ll wait until the families are notified?”

  “Of course.”

  He gave her the three names. “You’ll have them before my paper comes out anyway. Rather you than those TV types.”

  “Do you know any of them?”

  “I know all three. Good officers. Never heard anything bad about any of them.”

  “About ‘them’?” She’d caught Hank’s slight inflection on the word “them.”

  He shrugged. “There’s always rumors flying around. Never been able to pin anything down.”

  “About who?”

  “No one specifically.” He turned around and approached the police photographer. She was lef
t standing there alone. Again.

  And, damn it, her leg was beginning to ache, the one she’d nearly destroyed when her car flew off the road and landed in a ravine. It was getting stronger day by day, but the brace she wore was heavy, and her muscles complained when they felt misused. She tried desperately not to show it. She’d worked too hard to get this far; she didn’t want to go back to an inside desk job.

  She used her cell phone again to call in the names of the slain officers. It was newspaper policy not to reveal names or contact relatives until they’d been officially notified. Sometimes there was a slipup, as she knew only too well, but she knew in this case they would hold back. Having the names, though, meant they could start on background. She was glad she wasn’t part of the television media where the pressure to “get there first” often clashed with ethics.

  She listened as other reporters tossed questions. She never liked to ask her own while others were listening. She would ask her questions later.

  When they were through, the sheriff asked the news media to leave. The detectives and forensic people needed to do their work without a media circus.

  Some protested as they were moved out. But she had more information than most since she’d been in the sheriff’s office when he was notified and had been one of the first on the scene. She could describe the initial reactions of anger and disbelief of first responders. Meredith County was mostly a bucolic area with few crimes, and fewer murders. Most of the latter were domestic disputes.

  She couldn’t shake the image of the bodies. Who would risk killing three police officers? Every law enforcement official in the state would want their heads. Every investigative tool would be used to find them.

  The pure cold-bloodedness of the crime was chilling.

  What secret—or secrets—was behind it?

  Her mind turned over what she’d heard during the past hour.

  “Damn them.”

  “There’s always rumors …”

  She made a mental note to call Sandy and find out exactly what he knew. Or suspected.

 

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