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Authors: Mallory Kane

Special Forces Father

BOOK: Special Forces Father
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MISSION: FATHERHOOD

Special Forces operative Travis Delancey is glad to be back from a difficult mission. But his long-awaited homecoming turns into a nightmare when he hears that his college sweetheart Kate Chalmet gave birth to his son while he was away…and the child has been kidnapped. His skills are instrumental in rescuing the boy, but his reunion with Kate is a distraction.

Kate had her reasons for not telling Travis about his son, but now she must put her doubts aside. His strength and determination to save their child make her realize he’s different from the man he was before entering the military. Perhaps Travis is ready for a family…if he can forgive her. But she cannot get ahead of herself—first they have to save their son.

Kate’s tongue slipped out to moisten her lips and Travis’s body reacted immediately.

After holding her close for those long moments, he was so in tune with her, so filled with the sight and scent and feel of her. Now the sight of her tongue stirred him and made him long to taste it and the inside of her mouth. To kiss her and feel her kissing him back, as they’d done back in college,
when they were still in love.

But this wasn’t the time. Hell, it might never be the right time for that again. This was about Kate and her son, and his attempts to help her get her little boy back. It wasn’t about anything else. Certainly nothing to do with him.

“Travis,” she said softly, her eyes glittering with dampness.

“I know,” he said. “I’m here. I’ll be here as long as
you need me.”

Mallory Kane

Special Forces Father

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Mallory Kane has two very good reasons for loving reading and writing. Her mother was a l brarian, who taught her to love and respect books as a precious resource. Her father could hold listeners spellbound for hours with his stories. He was always her biggest fan.

She loves romantic suspense with dangerous heroes and dauntless heroines, and enjoys tossing
in a bit of her medical knowledge for an extra dose of intrigue. After twenty-five books published, Mallory is still amazed and thrilled that she actually gets to make up stories for a living.

Mallory lives in Tennessee with her computer-genius husband and three exceptionally intelligent cats. She enjoys hearing from readers. You can write her at
[email protected]
or via Harlequin Books.

Books by Mallory Kane

HARLEQUIN INTRIGUE

  927—COVERT MAKEOVER
  965—SIX-GUN INVESTIGATION
  992—JUROR NO. 7
1021—A FATHER’S SACRIFICE
1037—SILENT GUARDIAN
1069—THE HEART OF BRODY MCQUADE
1086—SOLVING THE MYSTERIOUS STRANGER
1103—HIGH SCHOOL REUNION
1158—HIS BEST FRIEND’S BABY**
1162—THE SHARPSHOOTER’S SECRET SON**
1168—THE COLONEL’S WIDOW?**
1180—CLASSIFIED COWBOY
1203—HER BODYGUARD
1237—DOUBLE-EDGED DETECTIVE‡‡
1243—THE PEDIATRICIAN’S PERSONAL PROTECTOR‡‡
1275—BABY BOOTCAMP
1300—DETECTIVE DADDY
1351—PRIVATE SECURITY‡‡
1356—DEATH OF A BEAUTY QUEEN‡‡
1416—STAR WITNESS‡‡
1420—SPECIAL FORCES FATHER‡‡

**Black Hills Brotherhood
‡‡The Delancey Dynasty

CAST OF CHARACTERS

Travis Delancey—
The army Special Forces operative returns to New Orleans after five months in captivity to reconnect with the woman he has never forgotten. He discovers he has a four-year-old son. Furthermore, his child has been kidnapped, and all his specialized training may not be enough to save him.

Kate Chalmet—
This psychiatrist is devastated by the
kidnapping of her son, Max. When Travis, his father, shows up at her door, she’s torn between her still-burning love for him and her need to protect her son from the man who has a bad habit of leaving.

Myron Stamps—
This senior senator is facing trial for assault with a deadly weapon. But someone is so determined to see him acquitted that they’ve kidnapped Dr. Kate Chalmet’s son to force her
to find that at the time of the shooting he was temporarily insane.

Darby Sills—
Senator Sills is an elder statesman in Louisiana, alongside Myron Stamps. He and Stamps and Gavin Whitley are the last of a group of good old boys who are highly influential in the Louisiana legislature. Sills has the money to hire a kidnapper. Did he?

Gavin Whitley—
The congressman is the junior member of
Myron Stamps’s good old boy’s club. Did Stamps and Sills lean on him to hire the kidnapper to make sure Stamps doesn’t go to prison?

Bentley Woods—
This kidnapper-for-hire was imported from Chicago to abduct Max Chalmet. He’s good at his job, but he’s also a hired gun. When he finds out the boy’s father is a Delancey, he sees a chance to make even more money.

Dawson Delancey—
Travis’s
cousin is a private investigator. He rallies the Delancey boys to help Travis rescue his son.

To my family, who always supports me.

Chapter One

Travis Delancey knew exactly what Wild Will Hancock was thinking as he eyed Travis’s trembling hands.
Drugs.

That wasn’t Travis’s problem, but he didn’t bother explaining. He just shifted in the creaky wooden chair in the double-wide that served as Wild Will’s office and extracted the credit card from the side pocket of his military issue duffel bag. He held it
up.

The shiny platinum of the card reflected in Wild Will’s pupils.

“Did I mention I’m in a hurry?” Travis asked evenly.

“Yes, sir, you did,” Wild Will said, his eyes still glued to the card. “Now, as far as the amount of the down payment—?”

“All of it,” Travis broke in.

“All of it.” Wild Will’s prominent Adam’s apple bobbed as he swallowed. “Well then, if you’ll just
swipe your card right there—” he nodded toward the credit card machine “—I’ll get you on your way.”

Travis swiped and Wild Will typed. After a torturously slow two minutes of hunting and pecking, the man finally paused, his index fingers poised over the keyboard. “Your current address?”

Travis started to give him his parents’ address, then changed his mind. He gave him Kate’s address
instead. That’s where he was headed, and he didn’t want anyone calling his parents until he was ready to talk to them himself.

“And driver’s license?”

Just as Travis opened his mouth to recite his Louisiana driver’s license number, somebody banged loudly on the trailer’s metal door. Travis jumped. He instantly recovered and smiled sheepishly, but Wild Will’s attention was on the door.
“Come in,” Will yelled.

The door creaked open to reveal a pudgy man in a T-shirt and jeans.

“Yeah,” he said. “I want to drive that Camaro.”

Will nodded. “Gimme a minute.”

The pudgy guy nodded back. “No prob,” he said. He went outside and closed the door.

Will turned back to Travis. “Now, where were we?”

“Driver’s license number,” Travis answered. He rattled off his
and a random future expiration date. His license had actually expired two years before. Army Special Forces officers didn’t need civilian driver’s licenses, especially while on supersecret missions to unnamed countries overseas.

To his relief, the gaunt man who looked more like an undertaker than a used-car dealer didn’t ask to see the license. He merely gestured toward the credit card machine.

Travis scribbled his signature on the screen. His writing was worse than usual because of his trembling hand, but it satisfied Wild Will. It took a few more minutes to finish the paperwork and transfer the title.

“Congratulations. I know you’ll enjoy driving this little beauty,” Will said.

“Thanks,” Travis answered, irony tingeing his voice. The
little beauty
was a ten-year-old domestic
hatchback. The tires were relatively new but there was a definite smear of oily smoke on the tailpipe. Still, with any luck, a couple quarts of oil would get him to New Orleans, Louisiana.

After tossing his duffel bag into the back of the car, he jumped in and drove off the lot and onto the interstate. It was over a thousand miles from Bethesda, Maryland, to New Orleans. Travis squeezed the
steering wheel with both hands, then let go with his right hand and inspected it. Still shaking.

Not surprising. He hadn’t had any exercise or decent food for five months, unless he counted the protein shakes and flavored gelatin he’d been receiving at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center for the past two weeks. Walking up and down the halls of the psych unit hardly qualified as exercise.

Dr. Gingosian wouldn’t be happy that he’d left against medical advice, but Travis wasn’t interested in spending even one more day listening to the doctor drone on about post-traumatic stress disorder and other
understandable emotional effects of captivity.

He knew what was wrong with him and it wasn’t PTSD. He’d kept himself sane for five months in the windowless, unheated room where
he’d been held by doing three things. Cultivating his hatred of his captors, playing videos of his most treasured memories inside his head and exercising—until lack of nutrition and loss of weight had made him too weak to stand.

He’d learned a lot about himself during that awful time as he had ignored external discomforts and nurtured his memories. When he was brought to Walter Reed, he’d
gratefully accepted medical treatment, but he’d quickly figured out that his emotional problems wouldn’t be cured by medication or group therapy.

He knew what he needed. He needed the people he loved. His brothers and sister. His mom. Even his dad. At some point, in that dark stinking room where his only means of escape was inside his head, he’d forgiven Robert Delancey for the drunken rages
that had been his and his siblings’ relationship with their father throughout most of his life.

But the one person he needed the most was Kate. Not that he deserved her. He’d walked out on her twice. The first time he’d stomped out in a fit of anger that had matched the worst his dad could dish out. He’d marched straight from her dorm room to the army recruitment office and enlisted on the
spot. The second time, when he’d called her during a rare furlough prior to being shipped overseas, she’d kicked him out. Not in anger, that wasn’t Kate’s style. No. She’d calmly explained that a one-night stand every few years when he happened to be in town was not her idea of a relationship. She’d told him not to call her again. And he hadn’t.

During those horrific five months in captivity,
as the rivers of his memories had flowed over him, providing rare and precious moments away from the hunger, cold, filth and torture, he’d discovered that his most treasured memories were of her. And he’d realized that not fighting for her love that last time he’d seen her had been the biggest mistake of his life.

No matter where she was now or who she was with, he needed to find her and
apologize for walking out. But he needed something else, too. He needed to look into her eyes and see if the love that had once shone in them for him had really died, or if there was still a spark of it left.

He didn’t hold out much hope for a spark. Things had not gone well on that last trip. Okay,
some
things had not gone well. Other things had gone exceptionally well. He’d come home on
leave for the first time in two years and called her to see if he could buy her dinner or something. She’d agreed.

The dinner at Commander’s Palace had been excellent. The
or something
had been mind-blowing.

By contrast, the next morning had turned out awkward and sad. When Travis had stood at her door telling her he’d call her whenever he could, she’d waved a hand.

“Don’t bother,”
she’d said in her direct, no-nonsense way. “A drop-in every couple years is not my style.”

Her words echoed in his head now as he gripped the wheel more tightly and eased the accelerator forward until the little car was doing seventy. He glanced at the clock on the dashboard. Eight o’clock in the evening. Even with bathroom stops and a few hours’ sleep at an interstate hotel, he ought to
be in New Orleans within twenty-four hours.

What would he say when he saw Kate? A better question might be what was she going to say when he showed up on her doorstep?

* * *

T
HE
NEXT
MORNING
, Dr. Kate Chalmet picked up Myron Stamps’s police file. She’d been appointed by the Orleans Parish District Attorney’s office to evaluate Senator Stamps, who was pleading temporary insanity
in the aggravated assault of Paul Guillame, his former political adviser. She’d cleared her calendar so she could prepare, since the trial was scheduled to begin in ten days.

Kate knew that the senator had shot Paul Guillame during a shoot-out at Paul’s house. “Shoot-out,” she muttered, shaking her head. Sounded more like a John Wayne movie than an incident in the Lower Garden District in
New Orleans. But that’s exactly how the police had described it.

She opened the file and glanced over the initial report, which was filed by the first officer on the scene, Halan Matson. She skimmed it.

Upon entering at 4330 Tchoupitoulas Avenue, we observed the exchange of gunfire between four apparent occupants taking cover in the kitchen area of the house and two armed men in the
dining room. At that time, we observed that at least one of the occupants was armed.

We entered and arrested the two armed men, both of whom had suffered superficial gunshot wounds. At that point Detective Lucas Delancey arrived and took charge of the scene.

The name Delancey stopped her. Pressing her lips together, she took a deep breath and told herself to see it as Smith or Jones
or Rumpelstiltskin

anything but Delancey.

The report described the two gunmen being checked out by EMTs, then taken into custody and Harte Delancey and Paul Guillame, two of the occupants, being transported to local hospitals.

Harte Delancey.
Lucas Delancey.
The case was awash with Delanceys. She gritted her teeth.
Jones.
Smith.
Stiltskin.
The names of the people involved had nothing
to do with her or why she was reviewing the case.

She glanced through the other reports until she came to the statements given by Harte Delancey and Danielle Canto. She’d read one paragraph of Canto’s statement when her cell phone rang.

“This is Dr. Chalmet,” she said.

She heard nothing for a couple seconds. Then a voice spoke in a guttural whisper. “
Dr.
Chalmet. You understand
that Myron Stamps was insane when he shot that guy, right?”

Kate was surprised. This wasn’t the first time she’d received an anonymous call about a case. It wasn’t even the first time she’d been threatened. Although if this was a threat, it was starting off very mildly. Usually the calls came during the trial, once her name was on the witness list, not days ahead of time. Sighing audibly,
she asked, “Who is this?”

There was no answer.

“I do not respond to empty anonymous threats,” she said archly.

A hollow click told her the person had hung up. She set her phone down and tapped a fingernail on Stamps’s file. Who knew she’d been appointed to evaluate the senator? She ticked them off on her fingers. Vinson Akers’s secretary, who had called her two weeks ago with the
District Attorney’s request. Akers himself, of course, and his prosecutors, Melissa Shallowford and Harte Delancey.

Stamps’s attorney knew, too, and that meant there was probably a 99 percent chance that Stamps knew. That probably explained the phone call. The caller might be a supporter, a family member, even a constituent who really thought the senator might be insane. She’d learned a long
time ago that harassing, complaining, even threatening calls like this were part of the package if she was going to be a consultant and expert witness for the D.A.’s office. Moreover, she knew it was a waste of time to wonder about the caller’s motivation.

She went back to reading Danielle Canto’s statement. She’d studied most of the lengthy narrative by lunchtime when her secretary, Alice
Stott, stuck her head in.

“Kate, it’s eleven-thirty. We need expanding files, pens and a few other things. Want me to go by the office-supply store on my lunch break?”

“Would you rather leave early and pick up the supplies on your way home?” Kate asked. “I’m probably going to leave a little early myself since I don’t have any appointments.”

Alice smiled. “Leave early? Twist my arm.
I’ll just run out and grab some lunch. Can I bring you something?”

“I’ve got yogurt and an apple. I’m fixing Max
pasketti
tonight. We’re going to watch
Shrek.

“Max hasn’t seen
Shrek?
” Alice asked.

Kate laughed. “Please,” she said. “It hasn’t been that long since your kids were little. Of course he has. He’s seen all of them. This will be the third time. I just have to convince
him that we can only watch one tonight.”

Alice chuckled. “I do remember. I’ll be back soon.”

“Take your time,” Kate said, her attention already back on Danielle Canto’s statement. She’d finished it and was flipping back through, expanding on the notes she’d taken, when someone rapped on her door facing.

She looked up and for a split second, her lungs seized, and she couldn’t get
a breath. Then she blinked and realized that the tall lanky man standing in the doorway wasn’t Travis Delancey. It was Harte, Travis’s younger brother and a prosecutor in the D.A.’s office.

“Hi, Dr. Chalmet,” the young man said, smiling. “Your secretary must be at lunch.” He held a manila envelope in his right hand. His left arm was in a sling, a result of being shot during that same violent
night she’d just been reading about. Harte had undergone surgery to remove a bullet that had lodged alarmingly close to his heart.

She cleared her throat, pushing away the thoughts of how very like Travis he looked. “Mr. Delancey. What can I do for you?”

“Senator Stamps’s attorney sent this to the D.A.’s office.” He handed her the envelope, which was too thin to hold more than a couple
sheets of paper.

“Oh? Did she say what it was?” Kate grabbed a letter opener and slit the seal.

“Apparently it’s a report from an independent physician who evaluated Stamps.”

Kate glanced at the two sheets of paper. “An independent physician. Hmm.”

Harte laughed. “Spoken like a doctor.”

Kate glanced up, a little startled by his laugh. The laugh sounded just like Travis,
too. She shook her head mentally as she set the envelope on her desk. “Thanks,” she said, then nodded toward the sling. “How are you doing?”

Harte shrugged, then winced. “Fine. I’m still sore, but I’ve been in physical therapy for four weeks now. I’m doing lots better.”

She nodded. “I’m glad,” she said. “How did you get demoted to courier service? No prosecutor jobs?”

“I’m not supposed
to be working, and they’re sure not letting me do anything on the Stamps case except be a witness. I’m not even a reliable witness, since I was losing blood the whole time.” He looked ruefully at the sling. “At least delivering envelopes gives me a chance to get out and get some exercise, if walking fairly slow can be considered exercise.”

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