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Synopsis
Bestselling author De'nesha Diamond brings her dynamic storytelling talent to D.C.'s treacherous corridors of power - where scandal is merely the first move in a high-stakes game that makes its own rules.
It's an offer too tempting to refuse: One night as an elite escort will give Abrianna Parker the fresh start she's been searching for and put the pain and costly missteps of the past behind her for good. But getting framed for a high-profile murder isn't what the cool-headed beauty signed up for. With police, government agencies, and a lethal third party on her trail, Abrianna will have to use all her resources to clear her name. That includes trusting an ex-con and an attraction as incendiary as the lies they must expose. Now, as Abrianna puts her hard-won instincts and a team of street-rebels in play, secrets are their only chance to dismantle a powerful web of corruption-or be buried without a trace.
Release date: December 27, 2016
Publisher: Kensington Books
Print pages: 320
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Conspiracy
De'nesha Diamond
“Where is he?” she whispered as she scanned the growing crowd. Abrianna was more than an hour late to meet Shawn, but it couldn’t have been helped. Leaving her home had proved to be much harder than she’d originally realized. After several close calls, she’d managed to escape the house of horrors with a steel determination to never look back. Nothing could ever make her return.
Now it appeared that she’d missed her chance to link up with her best friend from school, or rather they used to go the same high school, before Shawn’s father discovered that he was gay, beat the hell out of him, and then threw him out of the house. Miraculously, Shawn had said that it was the best thing to have ever happened to him. Over the past year, he’d found other teenagers like him living out on the streets of D.C. His eclectic group of friends was better than any blood family, he’d boasted often during their frequent text messages.
In fact, Shawn’s emancipation from his parent had planted the seeds in Abrianna’s head that she could do the same thing. Gathering the courage, however, was a different story. The prospect of punishment, if she was caught, had paralyzed her on her first two attempts and had left Shawn waiting for her arrival in vain. Maybe he thought she’d lost her nerve tonight as well. Had she thought to charge her battery before leaving the house, she would be able to text him now to find out where he was.
Abrianna’s gaze skimmed through the hustle and bustle of the crowd, the taxis and cars. Everyone, it seemed, was in a hurry. Likely, they wanted to meet up with family and friends. It was an hour before midnight. There was a certain kind of excitement that only New Year’s Eve could bring: the tangible hope that, at the stroke of midnight, everyone magically changed into better people and entered into better circumstances than the previous year.
Tonight, Abrianna was no different.
With no sight of Shawn, tears splashed over Abrianna’s lashes but froze on her cheeks. Despite a leather coat lined with faux fur, a wool cap, and leather gloves, Abrianna may as well have been butt-ass naked for all the protection it provided. “Goddamn it,” she hissed, creating thick frost clouds in front of her face. “Now what?”
The question looped in her head a few times, but the voice that had compelled her to climb out her bedroom window had no answer. She was on her own.
Someone slammed into her from behind—hard.
“Hey,” she shouted, tumbling forward. After righting herself on frozen legs, she spun around to curse at the rude asshole— but the assailant was gone. She was stuck looking around, mean-mugging people until they looked at her suspect.
A sudden gust of wind plunged the temperature lower and numbed her face. She pulled her coat collar up, but it didn’t help.
The crowd ebbed and flowed, but she stood in one spot like she’d grown roots, still not knowing what to do. And after another twenty minutes, she felt stupid—and cold. Mostly cold.
Go back into the station—thaw out and think. However, when she looked at the large and imposing station, she couldn’t get herself to put one foot in front of the other. She had the overwhelming sense that her returning inside would be a sign of defeat, because, once she was inside, it wouldn’t be too hard to convince herself to get back on the train, go home and let him win . . . again.
Icy tears skipped down her face. I can’t go back. Forcing her head down, she walked. She passed commuters yelling for cabs, huddled friends laughing—some singing, with no destination in mind. East of the station was bathed in complete darkness. She could barely make out anything in front of her. The only way she could deal with her growing fear was to ignore it. Ignore how its large, skeletal fingers wrapped around her throat. Ignore how it twisted her stomach into knots. Ignore how it scraped her spine raw.
Just keep walking.
“Help me,” a feeble voice called out. “Help!”
Abrianna glanced around, not sure from which direction the voice had come. Am I losing my mind now?
“Help. I’m not drunk!”
It came from her right, in the middle of the road, where cars and taxis crept.
“I’m not drunk!” the voice yelled.
Finally, she made out a body lying next to a concrete divider—the kind work crews used to block off construction areas.
“Help. Please!”
Again, Abrianna looked around the crowds of people streaming past. Didn’t anyone else hear this guy? Even though that side of the building was dark, it was still heavily populated. Why was no one else responding to this guy’s cry for help?
“Help. I’m not drunk!”
Timidly, she stepped off the sidewalk and skulked into the street. As vehicles headed toward her, she held up her hand to stop some and weaved in between others. Finally, Abrianna stood above a crumpled old man, in the middle of the road, and was at a loss as to what to do.
“I’m not drunk. I’m a diabetic. Can you help me up?” the man asked.
“Uh, sure.” She knelt, despite fear, and asked, What if it’s a trap?
It could be a trap, Abrianna reasoned even as she wrapped one of the guy’s arms around her neck. Then, using all of her strength, she tried to help him to his feet, but couldn’t. A Good Samaritan materialized out of nowhere to help her out.
“Whoa, man. Are you okay?” the stranger asked.
Abrianna caught glimpse of the Good Samaritan’s shoulder-length stringy blond hair as a passing cab’s headlights rolled by. He was ghost white with ugly pockmarks.
“Yes. Yes,” the fallen guy assured. “It’s my blood sugar. If you could just help me back over to the sidewalk that would be great.”
“Sure. No problem,” the blond stranger said.
Together, they helped the old black man back across the street.
“Thank you. I really appreciate this.”
“No problem,” the white guy said, his teeth briefly illuminated by another passing car as a smoker’s yellow.
Once back on the sidewalk, he released the old man. “You two have a happy New Year!” As quick as the blond savior had appeared, he disappeared back into the moving crowd.
The old guy, huffing and puffing thick frost clouds, wrapped his hand around a NO PARKING sign and leaned against it.
“Are you sure you’re all right?” Abrianna asked. It seemed wrong to leave him like this.
He nodded. “I’m a little dizzy, but it will pass. Thank you now.”
That should be that. She had done what she could for the man. It was best that she was on her way. But she didn’t move—probably because he didn’t look okay.
As she suspected, he started sliding down the pole, his legs giving out. Abrianna wrapped his arm back around her neck to hold him up. “I got you,” she said. But the question was: for how long?
“Thank you, child. Thank you.”
Again, she didn’t know what to do next. Maybe she should take him up to the station. At least, inside, she could get him to a bench or chair to sit down. “Can you walk?”
“Yes. I—I think so.”
“No. No. Not back there,” he said, refusing to move in the direction of the station. “They done already kicked me out tonight and threatened to lock me up if I return.”
His words hit her strange. “What do you mean?”
He sighed. “Let’s just go the other way.”
With little choice, she did as he asked. It took a while, but the man’s stench finally drifted under her nose. It was a strange, sour body odor that fucked with her gag reflexes. “Where do you want me to take you?” she asked, growing tired as he placed more and more of his weight on her shoulders.
When the old man didn’t answer, she assumed he hadn’t heard her. “Where are you trying to go?”
“Well . . . to be honest. Nowhere in particular,” he said. “Just somewhere I can rest this old body and stay warm tonight. I read in one of the papers that it’s supposed to dip down to nine degrees.”
It hit her. “You don’t have anywhere to sleep?”
“Well—of course I do. These here streets are my home. I got a big open sky as my roof, some good, hard concrete or soft grass as my floor. The rest usually takes care of itself.” He chuckled—a mistake, judging by the way it set off the most godawful cough she’d ever heard.
They stopped when the coughing continued. Abrianna swore something rattled inside of his chest.
“Are you all right?” she asked. “Do you need a doctor?”
More coughing. Are his lungs trying to come up?
After what seemed like forever, he stopped, wheezed for air, and then wiped his face. “Sorry about that,” he said, sounding embarrassed.
“It’s okay,” she said, resuming their walk.
“I really appreciate you for helping me out like this. I know I must be keeping you from wherever it is you’re trying to get to. It’s New Year’s Eve and all.”
“No. It’s all right. I don’t mind.”
He twisted his head toward her and, despite the growing dark, she could make out his eyes scrutinizing her. “You’re awfully young to be out here by yourself.”
Abrianna ignored the comment and kept walking.
“How old are you?” he asked.
“Why?” she snapped, ready to drop him right there on the sidewalk and take off.
“Because you look like my grandbaby the last time I saw her. ’Bout sixteen, I’d say she was.”
Abrianna jutted up her chin.
“She had a beautiful heart, too.” He smiled. “Never could see any person or animal hurting.”
The unexpected praise made her smile.
“Ah, yeah. A beautiful smile to boot.”
They crossed the street to Second Avenue. She’d gotten used to his weight already, appreciated the extra body heat—but the stench still made her eyes water. Did he say that it was going to get down to nine degrees tonight? Abrianna had stolen cash from her house before she’d left, but hadn’t had time to count all of it. Maybe she could get a hotel room—just for the night. After that, she would have to be careful about her finances. Once the money was gone—it was gone. She had no idea on how she and Shawn were going to get more.
Still walking, Abrianna pulled herself out of her troubled thoughts to realize that she and the old man had entered a park—a dark park—away from the streaming holiday crowd.
“Where are we going?” she asked, trying not to sound alarmed.
“Oh, just over there on that bench is fine.” The old man pointed a shaky finger to their right. When they reached it, he dropped onto the iron bench like a sack of bricks and panted out more frosted air. “Whew,” he exclaimed.
“That walk is getting harder and harder every day.”
“You come here often?” Abrianna glanced around, catching a few figures, strolling. “Is it safe?”
“That depends,” he said, patting the empty space next to him.
She took the hint and plopped down. “Depends on what?”
“On your definition of safe,” he chuckled and set off another series of hard-to-listen-to coughs.
Abrianna wished that he’d stop trying to be a jokester. His lungs couldn’t handle it. She watched him go through another painful episode.
At the end, he swore, “Goddamn it.” Then he was contrite. “Oh. Sorry about that, sweetheart.”
Smiling, she clued him in, “I’ve heard worse.”
He nodded. “I reckon you have. Kids nowadays have heard and seen it all long before puberty hits. That’s the problem: The world don’t got no innocence anymore.”
“Doesn’t have any,” she corrected him.
He chuckled. “Beauty and brains. You’re a hell of a combination, kid.”
Abrianna warmed toward the old man.
“Trouble at home?” he asked, his black gaze steady on her.
“No,” she lied without really selling it. Why should she care if he believed her? In a few minutes, she’d probably never see him again.
“Nah. I didn’t think so,” he played along. “You don’t look like the type who would needlessly worry her parents.”
Abrianna sprung to her feet. “Looks like you’re cool here. I gotta get going and find my friend.”
“So the parents are off limits, huh?” He nodded. “Got it.”
She stared at him, figuring out whether he was working an angle. Probably. Older people always did.
“It’s tough out here, kid.” His eyes turned sad before he added, “Dangerous too.”
“I’m not looking for a speech.”
“Fair enough.” He pulled in a deep breath. “It’s hypothermia season. Do you know what this is?”
“Yeah,” Abrianna lied again.
“It means that folks can freeze to death out here—and often do. If you got somewhere safe to go, then I suggest you go there tonight. I’d hate to see someone as pretty as you wind up down at the morgue.”
“I can take care of myself.”
“Yeah? Have you ever done it before?”
“You sure do ask a lot of questions,” she said.
“Believe it or not, you’re not the first person to tell me that—bad habit, I suppose. But I’ve gotten too old to change now.”
“What about you?” Abrianna challenged. “Aren’t you afraid of freezing to death?”
He laughed, this time managing not to choke over his lungs. “Oh, I wish—but the devil don’t want nothing to do with me these days. I keep expecting to see him, but he never comes.”
“You talk like you want to die.”
“It’s not about what I want, little girl. It’s just time, that’s all,” he said quietly.
Abrianna didn’t know what to say to that—but she did know that she could no longer feel her face. “Well, I gotta go.”
He nodded. “I understand. You take care of yourself—and if you decide to stay out here—trust no one.”
She nodded and backpedaled away. It still felt wrong to leave the old guy there—especially if that whole freezing-to-death stuff was true. At that moment, it felt true.
The hotels were packed—or wanted nearly three hundred dollars for one night. That was more than half of Abrianna’s money, she found out. At the last hotel, she agreed to the figure, but then they wanted to see some sort of ID. The front desk woman suggested she try a motel in another district—or a shelter.
An hour later, Abrianna was lost. Walking and crying through a row of creepy-looking houses, she had no idea where she was or where she was going.
Suddenly, gunshots were fired.
Abrianna ran and ducked down a dark alley.
Tires squealed.
Seconds later, a car roared past her.
More gunshots fired.
The back window of the fleeing muscle car exploded. The driver swerved and flew up onto a curb, and rammed headlong into a utility pole.
Bam!
The ground shook and the entire row of streetlights went out.
No way the driver survived that shit. Extending her neck around the corner of a house, Abrianna attempted to get a better look at what was going on, but at the sound of rushing feet pounding the concrete, she ducked back so that she could peep the scene. She counted seven guys running up to the car. When they reached the driver’s side, a rumble of angry voices filled the night before they released another round of gunfire.
Holy shit. Abrianna backed away, spun around, and ran smack into a solid body.
The pockmarked Good Samaritan materialized out of the shadow. “Hey there, little girl. Remember me?”
Abrianna screamed....
Spring
Abrianna begged for death.
She had long stopped counting the days and nights. There really wasn’t a point. Each tick of the clock made it clear that she would die in this dark, dank dungeon of a basement. The only question was, when?
The door creaked open, emitting only a sliver of light into the room before the pasty, skeletal figure of a man entered. Another night of torture was about to begin.
“How are my ladies doing tonight?” he asked. The voice alone sent fear goosing across everyone’s body.
Chains rattled.
Three women manacled to the walls squirmed to get away.
Not Abrianna.
Her gaze followed the man’s flickering candlelight attentively. She was weary—and afraid. But for some unknown reason, she refused to let that fear show. The simple act of defiance gave her power. Not much—but it was there.
Her refusal to cry out or beg for mercy often got under her captor’s skin. In the first few weeks of her kidnapping, he’d marveled at the number of lashes or electric shocks she could take before passing out cold.
The man thought himself a scientist. Almost daily, he concocted some crazy mix of poison and got off injecting them with it as if they were a group of test animals.
Two girls had died since Abrianna’s abduction.
Maybe tonight, she would be next.
“Which of you wants to be my little guinea pig tonight?” He stopped before one girl. A white girl—blond. “How about you?” He moved the candle in close to her face and smiled when she attempted to twist away. Her chains didn’t let her go far.
“Aww. My pet. Don’t you want to play with me?”
“Oh, God! Please don’t,” she begged.
The skeletal man shifted the candle and leaned forward to roll his tongue up the side of her face.
The girl quivered and cried.
Abrianna looked on in disgust, her empty belly flopping.
“No. I don’t think that I’ll play with you tonight,” he informed the blonde, as if he’d been disappointed by her taste.
He moved to the next girl and repeated the same sick performance before the candle. Then his attention focused on Abrianna.
“Noooo. I think I’d rather play with you tonight,” he announced, creeping in her direction.
Inwardly, Abrianna screeched in horror. Outwardly, she watched his approach with something akin to cool indifference.
“My tough little black angel,” he cooed, placing the flickering flame so close that it burned her right cheek.
Abrianna winced, but said nothing.
He laughed. “Oh, I like you,” he praised. “And I got something that I think you’re going to like.” He held something else up but she was unable to make it out. At this point, she didn’t have to. It was a syringe—filled with his latest creation.
Despite the prayers for death, Abrianna was terrified.
But she was ready.
Her life had been nothing but one vast cosmic joke. Why not end it? Once she ascended, maybe she’d see her baby brother again—since she hadn’t been able to save him.
A key rattled in Abrianna’s locks, and minutes later, she went from being chained to the wall to being locked down on a metal table. Tears streamed, but the candle wasn’t near her face so her captor didn’t see. However, Abrianna could still hear and smell him.
Finally, the lone light in the room clicked on, but the grime and dust bunnies clinging to the exposed bulb dimmed the wattage it emitted.
“This little baby should drive you wild,” their captor bragged, holding up the syringe again. “Dr. Z helped me make this beauty.”
Abrianna stared at the pink liquid.
“Now this may pinch a little—or hurt an awful lot,” he laughed. Without bothering to look for a vein, he stabbed the side of Abrianna’s shoulder and jabbed the plunger, emptying the entire syringe.
The drug was like a fireball blazing through her veins.
Abrianna gasped—but her lungs seemed incapable of processing the oxygen that she desperately needed. Within seconds, she thrashed and convulsed—violently.
The man’s maniacal laughter filled her head. Soon, the arm and feet shackles bit into her skin, threatening to break bones. In her mind’s eye, the light above her went from a dull yellow to a blinding bright light. She looked away, but it was everywhere—even when she was sure she’d closed her eyes.
The all-consuming pain wrenched her body mercilessly.
She didn’t know if her abductor had finally succeeded in breaking her. She heard nothing. Saw nothing.
For an eternity.
Darkness descended over the quiet streets of Benning Heights, approximately twenty miles outside downtown Washington, D.C. A Seventh District police van turned the corner onto Benning Road and braked in front of a pale yellow vinyl 1930s colonial house. A second later, the back doors burst open. “Move it! Move it!” Lieutenant Gizella Castillo barked, ushering the ten-man crew out of the van. Geared up, they fell into position. Four of them, carrying a battering ram, rushed up the residence’s stone stairs first.
Lieutenant Castillo’s heart hammered in triple time while the hairs on the back of her neck stood at attention. A lot rode on this shit—mainly her career. Hours from a suspension, she committed to this ultimate Hail Mary to bring down Craig Avery—a creepy ex-scientist turned drug dealer, who not only had powerful political friends. For the past six months, as Castillo’s missing teenager cases piled up, she’d habitually stepped on toes and pissed off her own police chief by refusing to eliminate Avery from the list of suspects. There were just too many damn coincidences and holes in the man’s story to add up. Avery had a history of stalking schools and harassing minors. However, none of it had landed the man behind bars. Castillo believed that was only because Avery had selected the perfect victims. Lost girls. Runaways.
Girls who had no one to look out for them. Girls who had no power or hope. The few they had found had been broken, tortured, and dead.
Avery dumped their bodies in various places around D.C. whenever he finished with them. The bastard.
But there were a few girls still missing.
The smug bastard was so sure that no one cared what happened to these girls. But he was wrong about that. Castillo cared. She’d spent the past two years vowing that she would not only find them, but also take down the man who preyed upon the nation’s capital. So what if she’d forged a judge’s signature on a search warrant? The missing girls were in this house. She was certain of it.
With a few hard strikes of the battering ram, the front door to the colonial house blasted off of its hinges. “Police!” the officers yelled into the dark house.
Everyone reeled from the horrible smell. It was an awful combination of funk and rot.
Jackpot!
But was anyone still alive?
Elated but scared of what was actually rotting in the house, they moved in.
Three officers climbed the staircase to the second level, three searched the main floor, and three kicked open the door leading to the basement.
Castillo made the split-second decision to go upstairs behind the first set of officers. She got no more than halfway up when bullets rang out. Two slammed into the plaster wall, inches from her head.
All hell broke loose as her team returned fire.
It was hard to see what was happening since the staircase was dark. Castillo finally got a lock on a figure darting across the landing and recognized the man instantly as Craig Avery. The muthafucka wore only a pair of yellow-stained tighty-whities, but fired with a Dirty Harry silver revolver. Castillo and her team returned fire, splintering the banister and puncturing various walls. She fired and was certain that one of her bullets nailed his left shoulder. Avery retaliated. His aim was random, but he managed to hit Officer Clemmons. He tumbled back down the stairs, swiping her legs from underneath her like a bowling ball. She fired off a shot, but she had no idea where the bullet actually went because she was tossed back down the stairs with the other fallen officer. The three officers from the main floor redirected and jumped over her to rush up the staircase and join the action.
It seemed like she was down forever, but in truth it was likely no more than a few seconds. Lieutenant Castillo glanced at Clemmons and knew before placing her fingers against the side of his neck that he was dead.
“Fuck.” His death was on her. A door slammed somewhere as more bullets were fired. Castillo jumped to her feet and started up the staircase again. Once again, halfway up . . .
BOOM!
Lifted off of her feet and blasted back over Officer Clemmons’s body, she slammed into a wall and sank like a stone to the floor.
Five more officers—gone.
For a second time, she climbed back onto her feet, but her ears rang like Gabriel’s trumpet. This colossal fuck-up would . . .
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