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Authors: Brenda Novak,Allison Brennan,Cynthia Eden,Jt Ellison,Heather Graham,Liliana Hart,Alex Kava,Cj Lyons,Carla Neggers,Theresa Ragan,Erica Spindler,Jo Robertson,Tiffany Snow,Lee Child

Sweet Dreams Boxed Set (168 page)

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“Thank you.”

“For what?”

“Placating me. Playing along.”

“Shit, Dare, that’s not—”

“Yeah, it is. Hank had a heart attack and just like that—” She snapped her fingers. “—I’m alone.”

“You’re not alone, Dare.”

Her eyes filled. “No?”

“You’ve got me, partner. You’ve got the force. We’re your family.”

“Yeah.” Micki glanced up at the angel, then back at Carmine. “Throw in a gun and a badge and I suppose I can live with that.”

He smiled, held out his arm. “C’mon. The party’s at Shannon’s. Let’s tip a few in honor of Hank.”

Micki nodded. “In honor of Hank,” she repeated. “Count me in.”

 

 

Read an exclusive excerpt to
THE FINAL SEVEN
, book #1 in
The Lightkeepers,
an exciting new series starring Detective Micki Dare. Available February, 2016

 

 

Chapter One

 

Detective “Micki” Dee Dare had gotten the call just as she was about to step into the shower. The brass wanted her downtown, ASAP. She’d been forced to resort to what her snake-bit family called a “whore’s bath,” then pull her unruly mass of dishwater blond hair back into a quick ponytail.

Her commander had sounded choked. Really off. She hoped to hell she wasn’t walking into PID ambush. The Public Integrity Division investigated claims of abuse against NOPD officers. Not that she had anything to hide, or had done anything she hoped stayed hidden, but shit happened every effin’ day.

Inside headquarters, she took the lobby to the third floor. The receptionist directed her to the war room down the hall. Feeling more than a bit queasy over the turn of events, she headed that way.

Micki reached the room and stepped inside. Something was definitely up. Too many suits in the room. Some of them looking at her strangely. Very strangely.

She immediately found her superior officer. “Major Nichols, I apologize for not getting here sooner.”

“Actually, you’re right on time. You know Captain O’Shay?”

“Of course.” She nodded in the woman’s direction. “Captain.”

He ran through the introductions: Krohn, the Deputy Chief; Richards, community relations point man; and Roberts, FBI Special Agent in Charge of the New Orleans office.

Okay, nobody from PID. But the Bureau? WTF?

Nichols motioned the chair across from his, though he didn’t meet her eyes. “Take a seat. Chief Howard should be here any moment.”

She sat. Nobody spoke. A strange energy crackled in the air, and every so often she’d catch one of them looking speculatively at her.

What the hell was about to happen?

Chief Howard arrived, striding into the room—polished, confident and oddly exuberant. “Where’s Detective Dare?”

“Chief Howard,” she responded, standing.

He smiled broadly. “There you are. Perfect.” He crossed to her, hand out. “This is a big day for you. We’re thrilled. Absolutely ecstatic.”

She took his hand. “Thank you, Chief.”

Instead of the brief handshake she expected, he pumped her hand, then clasped it between both of his. “I want you to know, we’re expecting great things.”

“Yes, Chief. I just wish I knew for what.”

He laughed loudly and released her hand. As expected, he took the head chair. He looked directly at her. “Law enforcement is changing, Detective Dare. Starting today. And you’re going to be a part of it.”

He paused a moment as if waiting for a response, so she gave him the B.S. he expected. “Happy for the opportunity, Chief. I won’t let you down.”

He leaned forward with unconcealed glee. “The government has officially acknowledged the existence of a sixth sense. In conjunction with the FBI, they’ve initiated an experimental program called Sixers. This program—”

“Excuse me, Chief. Did you say a sixth sense? As in, I can read your mind or move stuff just by thinking about it?”

“Yes, Detective, that’s exactly what I’m talking about.”

She had expected him to laugh. Had expected everyone else to join in. She had been prepared to be the butt of a joke for clarity’s sake.

She hadn’t been prepared for this. She did her best not to look comically thunderstruck.

“As I was saying,” he continued, “the Bureau has assembled a team of these Sixers, evaluated their—”

Chief Howard stopped, as if uncertain what to call their qualifications. Gifts? Talents? Superpowers?

“—abilities,”—he finished, after a moment—“then trained them at a specialized police academy. The first crop of recruits has graduated—”

“It isn’t my birthday,” she interrupted. “Y’all know that, right?”

“Excuse me, Detective?”

“I mean, I don’t know who put you up to this, or how they managed to get you involved, Chief Howard, but—”

“This isn’t a gag.”

He looked dead serious—they all did—but no way this
wasn’t
a gag. Sixth sense? Specialized police academies? It had to be bullshit.

“It’s one of those TV shows, isn’t it? That’s how they got you involved. They’re probably makin’ a big donation to the department and I hate to ruin all that, but the gig’s up.”

She stood and turned in a slow circle, looking for the video cameras. “C’mon out. You can bring in the next sucker.”

She expected a smiling show host and camera crew to magically appear. Maybe theme music to sound or confetti to fall.

Something other than this toilet-paper-stuck-to-the-bottom-of-your-shoe silence.

Major Nichols broke the silence. “You’d better sit back down, Micki. This is the real deal.”

Stunned, she sank back to her seat. “My apologies, Chief,” she said. “But I’ve got to be honest, y’all are starting to freak me out.”

He chuckled. “I reacted the same way. In fact, it took a bit longer for them to convince me my wife wasn’t behind it.” He leaned forward, hands folded on the table in front of him. “This is some pretty far-out stuff, but it’s happening. The first crop of recruits has graduated. An even dozen.”

He paused as if for dramatic effect. She wanted to tell him to get on with it, but figured that’d go over as well as a fart in church.

“The NOPD has been selected as one of the inaugural PDs to receive a recruit. He’s being assigned to the Eighth. Congratulations, Detective Dare, you have a new partner.”

Micki stared at him.
No way he meant—

“You’ll be meeting him shortly. Detective Zach Harris.”

She shot to her feet. “With all due respect, Chief, hell no. Absolutely not.”

“It’s done, Detective. I suggest you consider it an honor.”

“An honor,” she repeated. “I don’t see how—”

“You have the opportunity to make history here,” Howard said. “As do we all. You’ll not jeopardize that.”

Nichols spoke up. “Sixers are being paired with tough, experienced cops. Part of your responsibility will be to keep your Sixer safe from harm. The government’s spent too much time and money training him to have him killed by some street thug.”

Retorts jumped to her tongue, ones about being a glorified babysitter. The look in Major Nichols’s eyes told her to keep them to herself.

“What kind of cop is this guy?” she asked. “What’s his service record?”

“He has no service record, Detective.”

“I don’t understand. If he has the rank of—”

Then she did. “He graduated from his hocus-pocus academy with the rank of detective. That’s what you’re saying, isn’t it?”

She saw from their expressions that she’d guessed correctly. It pissed her off. Big time. She, like every other sworn officer in the room, had worked for their rank, paying their dues by putting their lives on the line every stinking day.

“Son of a bitch, does he even know how to use a firearm?”

Chief Howard ignored her question. “The Sixers program is top secret. Beyond this room, Detective Harris is just like every other officer on the force. It leaks out and we have a media circus on our hands. I think you’d agree, Detective Dare, it’s damn difficult to effectively do your job in that kind of environment.”

Micki considered the ramifications. Difficult wouldn’t begin to cover it. Fricking impossible was more like it. “What about Carmine?”

“Promotion. Cold case squad.”

“Let me get this straight. Carmine’s promoted. But instead of replacing him with someone from within, you’ve imported this Harris dude. Who, by the way, may or may not be able to use a firearm, and I’m supposed to protect.”

“Correct.”

She shook her head. “There’re going to be some mighty pissed-off folks. Off the top of my head, I can name a half dozen deserving candidates in the Eighth alone.”

“That’s not your concern.”

“With all due respect, Chief Howard, this blows.”

A hint of a smile touched his lips. “Welcome to the Sixers program, Detective Dare. We’ll give you an hour to familiarize yourself with your role. The real party starts then.”

“The real party?”

“When your Sixer arrives.” He stood. “Congratulations. The future begins now.”

 

 

About Erica Spindler

 

Erica Spindler is the New York Times and International Chart bestselling author of thirty-two novels and three eNovellas. Published in twenty-five countries, she has been called the “The Master of Addictive Suspense” and “Queen of the romantic thriller.”

 

A Romance Writers of America Honor Roll member, she received a Kiss of Death Award for her novels FORBIDDEN FRUIT and SEE JANE DIE, she won the prestigious Daphne du Maurier Award for excellence for her novel BONE COLD, and is a four-time RITA® Award finalist. In 1999,
Publishers Weekly
awarded the audio version of her novel SHOCKING PINK a Listen-Up Award, naming it one of the best audio mystery books of 1998. Her newest romantic thriller, THE FIRST WIFE, is out now.

 

RANDOM ACTS is the prequel to Erica’s exciting new series
The Lightkeepers
. The first book in the series,
THE FINAL SEVEN
, debuts February, 2016.

 

Erica lives just outside of New Orleans with her husband, son, and Roxie, the wonder retriever.

 

For more information about, or to buy Erica’s books visit:
http://www.ericaspindler.com/bookshelf/?page=bookshelf

To get social with Erica, join her on:

Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/EricaSpindler

Twitter:
https://twitter.com/EricaSpindler

Pinterest:
https://www.pinterest.com/ericaspindler/

 

 

 

 

 

Without Malice

A Thriller-Suspense Novel

 

 

 

 

by Jo Robertson

 

 

 

 

Without Malice

Copyright 2015 Jo Robertson

McKay Lewis Publishers

 

 

 

 

 

Dedication

 

This book is dedicated to all people who suffer from diabetes, including my wonderful son-in-law, Michael D. Love you, Mikey!

 

 

Chapter 1

 

Rosedale, California, Present Day

 

Parole Officer Santiago Cruz pulled a tee shirt over his head and adjusted his shoulder holster. A bagel clamped between his teeth, he slipped his feet into dependable size-twelve work shoes and laced them tightly.

In the small kitchen area he gulped down the last of his coffee and looked around the studio apartment, thinking for the hundredth time that he needed to get friendlier living quarters. For a six-foot four-inch former college quarterback, he felt like he was living in a box most of the time.

Cruz was tall, large, and dark – mixed race – white on his mother’s side, Native American and Mexican on his father’s side. His familiarity with street Spanish was probably why the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation had hired him in the first place.

He patted himself down. Cuffs, keys, clipboard, jacket – check.

Another shift of chasing down his parolees, most of whom hung out at the weathered shelter
Jesus Saves
on Sheldon Avenue in Rosedale
.
This morning his first appointment – he grinned at the loose term for a meet with a parolee, his teeth flashing white in his bronzed face – was with parolee Dickey Hinchey.

Not only had Dickey missed his last check-in time, but he’d failed his pee test the week before. Dickey was about to be returned to jail.

Some people never learned, and Cruz was betting this guy was one of them.

He parked his jeep by the left side of the convenience store which fronted the shelter. Catching the parolee unaware was always a good tactic. They had a tendency to run, and although the injury that’d ended Cruz’s football career was a torn rotator cuff, he hated the running.

It was the principle of the thing. Running down ex-cons was embarrassing for a man his size. Like a huge tabby toying with a mouse.

He strolled into the convenience store, glanced around, and lingered over the coffee dispenser. Syed, the East Indian owner of the store, nodded courteously to Cruz, grateful for the presence of an officer of the law in the dicey neighborhood.

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