Bestselling author Debra Dixon takes readers on a tense and taut ride in this thrilling romance that’s both sensual and edge-of-your-seat suspenseful. With his last breath, the man who took a bullet to protect her sent Emily Quinn on the run. Armed with only a name and an address, Emily makes her way to a small town in Washington State, where an ex–Navy SEAL just might be able to help her disappear—forever. As the bad guys and the Feds close in, Emily will have to put all her faith in this stranger, a man who makes her pulse race faster than any man ever has. She knows she’ll be damned if she trusts him—and dead if she doesn’t.
When Christian “Gabe” Gabriel first sets eyes on Emily, she’s dressed as a nun. But he can see right through that habit to the frightened, beautiful woman underneath. His time in the military has honed his reflexes and dampened his emotions—or so he thinks. Because Emily has tapped something deep inside Gabe—and it’s a temptation that may cost them both their lives. But what a sweet, sinful indulgence it will be.
Includes a special message from the editor, as well as excerpts from these Loveswept titles: All Is Fair . . ., Bad to the Bone, and Rescuing Diana.
Release date:
May 14, 2012
Publisher:
Loveswept
Print pages:
256
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Deputy Marshal Patrick Talbot keyed the radio again. “Dano, give me a sitrep.”
When no one answered, Patrick didn’t bother to try a third time. He put the radio on the table, pulled the automatic pistol out of his holster, and cocked it. The bullet shifted into place with an efficient, businesslike double click. “Get the lights.”
Emily Quinn scrambled to do as he asked. Patrick moved the window shade a tiny bit with the barrel of his gun. After a minute of studying the front, he checked the rear of the farmhouse and the security system keypad. Then he focused on her.
“I want you upstairs, Emily. In the front bedroom. Take my keys just in case, and don’t come down until I get you.”
She realized what he intended. The front bedroom was the only one above the porch roof. Patrick was giving her an escape route.
“Hey, cheer up. It’s probably just a radio on the fritz,” he said as he picked up the phone. “Goddammit! The phone’s dead. Upstairs, now! Move!”
Emily moved. Once upstairs and alone in the dark, she sank to the floor beside the bed. The glow-in-the-dark hands of the Lucite clock ticked off seconds like hell’s metronome.
Ten minutes of purgatory passed before she heard the shots. Three of them, close together. And then nothing. Only the sound of the farmhouse breathing and shifting. The sound of an empty house and old trees in the wind. Indecision and fear paralyzed her.
Instinct told her to get out the window, to follow Patrick’s unspoken advice and run. But the eerie silence flayed her conscience. What if Patrick were bleeding and too weak to call out? What if he needed help? She couldn’t just leave him to die.
Carefully she opened the door and peered into the hallway. Her heart pounded so hard she could feel the surge of blood in her fingertips as she eased her way toward the stairs. When she reached the landing she froze. Below her one man leaned over another, his gun hanging loosely from his hand. In the dark and from her angle she wasn’t sure which man was Patrick. Then she registered the brown hair, the suit, the silver-plated gun.
“Patrick,” Emily whispered as she walked down the stairs. Relief flowed through her like a sedative. “Thank God, you’re alive.”
At her voice the man cocked his head and straightened. When he turned around slowly and leveled his gun at her, Emily realized her mistake. But it was too late.
When the gun went off, she didn’t even scream. She closed her eyes. Not because she was brave; because she was a coward. But the bullet never ripped through her. Instead, the gunman made a sound as if someone beat the air out of his lungs with a baseball bat.
Forcing her eyes open, she watched the man pitch forward and stumble into the bottom stair. Patrick’s bullet must have hit him square in the back. By the time he tried to catch himself, it was too late. With a sickening thud his head connected with the hardwood spindle of the railing. He didn’t move again.
“Emily.” Patrick lay at the bottom of the stairs.
Please, God, don’t let Patrick die, Emily prayed. She inched past the gunman, afraid to look at him, afraid he’d open his eyes and grab her.
A sweet, cloying smell assaulted her as she shoved aside the overturned card table and knelt at Patrick’s side. The front of his shirt was wet with blood. He lay on the cards which had been scattered like confetti. Drinks and chips littered the floor as well. Emily swallowed hard and fought the nausea. She tried not to think of Patrick’s life seeping into the carpet just as surely as the spilled soda had.
“What do I do? Just tell me. I’ll do it.”
He rolled his head a little and made a negative sound. The gun slid out of his hand and onto the floor.
“I’ve got to stop the bleeding,” she said more to herself than to him. She scanned the room for something to use as a pressure bandage.
“Too late.” Patrick coughed.
“No, it’s not too late,” she insisted, fighting tears.
“Take my wallet … inside coat pocket. Now,” he ordered. When she had it he said, “You run. You cover your tracks. Don’t … trust anyone. The man who tried to kill you is a U. S. marshal, and … I don’t know who else is involved.” He paused to catch his breath and closed his eyes for a second. “The dog tag on my key chain … take it to Christian Gabriel. He owes me. Tell him I said to make you disappear.”
“I’m not going anywhere except for help.” She stretched to reach the afghan on the back of the couch to keep him warm.
“There is no help.” His tone was final. “Can’t trust—”
“You are not going to die on me, Patrick,” Emily interrupted, fighting to keep the fear out of her voice. “I won’t let you. You hear?”
“Shut up and listen,” he hissed. “Last Call—a bar … Rock Falls. In Washington State.” He struggled. “Find Gabe. Christian … Gabriel. Ex-SEAL, retired, owes me. You got it?”
“I’ve got it.” She took a deep shuddering breath to steady herself. He was close to dying. “Washington. Rock Falls. Last Call. Christian Gabriel.”
“Best shot. Targets, pool, people—” He coughed again, the sound ominous. “Emily?”
“I’m here. I’m listening.” She held both of his hands, trying to rub the cold out of them, trying to rub life back into his body somehow. “I’m here.”
“Don’t tell … the Archangel I caught a bullet. Thinks I’m … invincible.”
“I won’t say a word,” she promised.
“Emily.”
“Yes?”
“Shoot him.” His breathing was raspy, as if he were sucking in air but not getting any oxygen.
Slowly Emily realized what Patrick meant. Her gaze flew to the gunman. The man wore a bulletproof vest; he was only stunned by the fall. If she didn’t kill him, he’d come after her and try again.
“Shoot … him.”
Emily picked up the gun.
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