Vengeance is Mine: A Jorja Rose Christian Suspense Thriller (Valley of Death Book 1)

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Vengeance is Mine: A Jorja Rose Christian Suspense Thriller (Valley of Death Book 1) Page 1

by Urcelia Teixeira




  Vengeance is Mine

  A Jorja Rose Christian Suspense Thriller

  Urcelia Teixeira

  VENGEANCE IS MINE

  A JORJA ROSE CHRISTIAN SUSPENSE THRILLER

  VALLEY OF DEATH BOOK I

  by URCELIA TEIXEIRA

  Copyright © 2021 by Urcelia Teixeira

  All rights reserved.

  Vengeance is Mine is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, incidents, events, and dialogue found within are of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, either living or deceased, is purely coincidental and beyond the intent of either the author or publisher.

  No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without the written permission of the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review where permitted by law.

  Bible scriptures were quoted from both the King James Version and/or the New International Version of the Bible. (Copyrighted worldwide as public domain)

  Copyrighted material

  E-book © ISBN: 978-1-928537-76-2

  Paperback © ISBN: 978-1-928537-77-9

  Independently Published by Urcelia Teixeira

  First edition

  Urcelia Teixeira

  Wiltshire, UK

  www.urcelia.com

  Contents

  Inspired by

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Dear Reader

  DON’T MISS OUT!

  Author Connect

  ADAM CROSS Mystery & Suspense

  ALEX HUNT Adventure Thrillers

  About the Author

  To the valued members of the

  ‘Between my Pages’ Facebook group,

  Your continual prayers and encouragement propel

  me forward and keep my eyes focused on the amazing

  God we serve!

  Thank you for your never ending support.

  You are near and dear to my heart!

  Inspired by

  "It is mine to avenge; I will repay. In due time their foot will slip; their day of disaster is near and their doom rushes upon them."

  Deuteronomy 32:35

  (NIV)

  Chapter One

  They say the truth shall set you free, but that's a lie. Her truth had not set her free at all. Jorja Rose was in captivity. Held prisoner by her conscience. Perhaps even guilt.

  Her mind was in an unyielding state of war as she fought a never-ending battle between good and evil. A battle she did not know how to win, or even if she could ever win. She was trapped. Caught between the person she once was and the one she had worked so hard to create. For nearly twenty years she had battled a secret war she had buried deep within, hidden from all who now knew her, pushed into the darkest corners of her soul, where no one could ever see it.

  There were days—one too many if she was honest with herself—where she found herself missing her past life. Almost yearning for it, at times. The adrenaline that surged through her veins, the rush of tempting fate, and the victory that came at the end. Memories of what she once had were sweet, as were the bitterness and despair of what could have been.

  Now, her life tended toward boredom at the best of times. Sometimes she hardly recognized the person she’d been forced to become. But it was what needed to be done, to keep her alive.

  Ironically, her deception was also what snuffed the inner torture and led her to discover that there was a higher power, a God who knew it all and cling to the hope it could bring—one day. But surrendering all meant that her secrets would be unveiled, her truth exposed and the precise retribution she had been running from all these years, unleashed.

  And so it continued. The perpetual loop of her past was holding her back from experiencing a future in true freedom. Blocked and trapped in a grip that would never let her go.

  But then she also knew she was not ready to let go. There was too much she still longed for. Too much she still missed. But, this life had chosen her. It was the bed she had made and she had found respite in that, built her hedge around her, locked the past away, and stepped into a world of pretense.

  To all who had come to know her in the tranquil English fishing village she'd called home for more than two decades now, she was as close to God as anyone on earth could strive to be. But in the deep corners of her soul Jorja knew the truth, the whole truth. She was a fraud. Someone who lived a twisted lie and deceived those who had taught her what it meant to truly love—and be loved. Like a festering sore it had eaten away at her soul, slowly devouring her, leaving her living in fear instead of freedom. The kind of fear that leaves you looking over your shoulder, always expecting the worst, waiting for your day of reckoning. By man... or by God.

  Even there, in the hidden corners at the very edge of Cornwall, England, she had never felt safe. Nor did she know if she ever would again.

  From behind the white marble counter in her small art gallery, she stared through the large window at the man who stood across the street. He'd been standing there for hours, watching her shop. At first, she’d thought he was admiring the painting in her window—a large oil-painted scene of a young woman staring out across the rugged Cornish coastline. It was easy to get lost in its beauty and not unusual for visitors to stop and admire. But something about this man seemed odd. She had lived on the peninsula long enough to know he wasn't one of them. Nor was he one of the regulars who visited their village on weekends or during the summer. He was tall, at the very least six foot, but if she had to guess, closer to six three. Someone like that stood out from the crowd. And it left her unsettled. There was something dark about his stance, threatening, foreboding.

  His camel-colored coat draped snugly over his broad shoulders and beneath it, he wore a black button-up shirt and matching black slacks. From where she stood, she could not quite make out his face but his bald head was unmissable.

  She fumbled with the sticky tape between her fingers as she wrapped the last piece of tissue paper around the eight by twelve-inch watercolor canvas in front of her. Why did this man make her so nervous? Deep in thought, she botched a strip of tape, tearing the corner of the wrapping paper as she shot another cautious glance at the man across the street.

  "Is everything all right, Jorja?" Myles Brentwood inquired. "You look a little on edge this afternoon." He would know. He was a regular at her shop and the art teacher at their local secondary school. Of average build and in his mid-sixties, Myles grew up in St. Ives and happily worked the same teaching job he had started back in his late twenties.

  "Yes, yes, I'm fine, sorry. Must be the cold that's getting t
o my fingers," she replied, flashing him a sideways smile as she grabbed a new sheet of paper.

  "Indeed, fall has come very early this year it seems. I had hoped to squeeze in a couple more trips to capture the new school of seals on Godrevy Island, but as we all know by now, these winds could turn on a dime and leave me stranded out there with Henry for who knows how long. God bless the boy but he is too much of a talker when he takes that rusty trawler of his out to sea. My desire to capture the island's magic on canvas is great, but not that critical. Art is best enjoyed in silence, you know." He chuckled. "Which reminds me, I was hoping you could stop by my class next week to give the kids your thoughts on our friend, Da Vinci? This year's kids are brimming with potential, an intellectual bunch if I dare to venture so early in the academic year."

  Jorja didn't answer as she slipped his neatly wrapped monthly purchase into the gift bag and handed it to him.

  "So, would you?" Myles pushed again when she didn't answer.

  "Would I what?"

  "Impart your wisdom to the class. Did you not hear a word I said, Jorja? You seem a little distracted. Are you sure you're not coming down with something?"

  "Of course, sorry, yes," she spluttered, knowing full well his suspicions were spot on. She was distracted, by the man across the street.

  She tore her attention back to her customer.

  "I'll be happy to pop by anytime, Myles. Now that most of our visitors have left I can slip away from the shop for an hour or so."

  "Excellent, that'll do just fine, thank you. If they don't bombard you with questions you should have it wrapped up in under forty minutes."

  He turned toward the exit, parcel in hand, then suddenly turned back to look at her.

  "You know, Jorja, I don't think I've ever told you. I think everyone was very wrong about you back then. This town of ours is blessed to have you. I don't know why we all gave you such a hard time when you first got here. Before you came along this town was dead, but this little gallery of yours gave us all life, put us on the map, so to speak. You have been nothing but a strength to our community. Small-town mentality is what it was. Or, if I'm brutally honest, it might have been your leather attire that had you looking like you were up to no good." He chuckled then continued. "But you've certainly proven these gossiping geese wrong, haven't you?" He winked as if he had just told her a secret.

  "Well, I'll be off then." He turned back to the door as he muttered, "Got a dreaded faculty meeting in fifteen minutes. Always so much talking at these things."

  The wood-framed glass door shut behind him and she watched as he crossed the street to where he briefly paused in front of the strange man opposite the shop. Almost intentionally, Myles looked him square in the face then said something she couldn't make out. Knowing him it was most likely a hearty welcome since he served on the town committee and was notorious for making their visitors feel welcome.

  The stranger didn't reciprocate and instead, promptly walked off in the opposite direction. As he did so, Myles looked back at Jorja and tipped his head forward in the slightest of nods as if to say she shouldn't worry, he had taken care of her. A quick wave of her hand thanked him before she watched him settle into a steady stroll back in the direction of the school.

  Yes, Myles Brentwood was an old soul, but a wise one nonetheless, and his alert observation was so typical of how the residents of St. Ives always looked out for one another.

  But, while knowing that her safety in the village should have provided her with peace, it didn't.

  She glanced at her watch. There was another hour or so to go before closing time, and she had intended on stopping by the supermarket to pick up a few groceries before heading home. If she waited until then, she would be walking home as dusk set in. Ordinarily, that would not have deterred her, but today, she wasn't sure she was prepared to risk it. Deciding she would close the shop early, she rushed over to the door, glanced up and down the street to make sure the man was gone, then dashed back behind the marble shop counter to find her purse. Her heart had snuck into her throat where it quickened to a pulsating sense of dread.

  "Stop it!" she admonished herself out loud, setting her purse atop the counter as she shut her eyes and took a deep breath in an attempt to pull herself together.

  She told herself it wasn't possible. It had been too long. She was halfway across the world and not even her parents knew she was still alive; a deliberate choice she’d been compelled to make. For her own protection, and theirs.

  Chapter Two

  She set off on her morning run earlier than usual. Her sleep had been interrupted by her tabby, Vincent—unashamedly named after Van Gogh because he was missing the tip of one of his ears. Vincent had darted off her bed at the crack of dawn, chased down the passage, and gone into hiding under the guest bedroom bed as if something had frightened him. When Jorja eventually unlocked his cat door and stepped out onto her porch he dashed past her legs and disappeared into the bordering bushes.

  Her feet hit the road in a comfortable rhythm as she took her usual route down toward the bay that soon appeared in full view in front of her. Above her, the sky was hinting at a sunny day, and early morning seagulls squawked noisily above a dark shoal of fish just below the ocean's surface. At forty-eight, Jorja was still in top shape and looked ten years younger. After she came to live in St. Ives she had kept up her training routine; ten-mile runs every day at 7 a.m. and an hour of Pilates on her living room floor in the evening, never missing a single day. Superficially, she had always told herself it was because she liked how it felt to be healthy, but if she was truthful, she knew the real reason was that she wanted to be ready, clinging to the hope that she would one day return.

  An only child of two blue-collar workers she’d run away from their modest English home at sixteen, dropping out of school after she traveled to Paris for the first time on a school trip to visit The Louvre. It was where she had first fallen in love with art, and all it came to offer in the years that followed.

  When she returned home after the trip she would sneak away from school as often as she could, taking the train to London to roam the corridors of the National Gallery. There, in Room 43, she would lose herself in Van Gogh's paintings, and eventually, it was where she would also lose her heart. Her life was never the same again after she met him.

  She had stolen money from her parents’ rainy-day fund to pay for her train ticket to Paris and a few months’ rent; silently vowing she would pay back every penny. And she did, with interest, in the form of an anonymous monthly check that enabled her parents to pay off their mortgage and retire early with change to spare. As far as she knew, they still lived in the same terrace house in Newcastle. Forced to break all ties when she moved to St. Ives she had not spoken to them since. For all she knew they had already passed.

  As she turned the corner toward the coastal path that weaved its way along the sea cliffs, her name wafted in the breeze toward her and brought her to a sudden halt. She removed her AirPods and turned to see her friend fighting for her attention at the top of the road. Ewan beckoned her to come over and seemed excessively eager to speak to her so she ran toward him. He had been her best friend for the better part of fifteen years and despite the townsfolk's speculation that they were romantically involved, they had remained just close friends. He was also the town's commanding law enforcement officer, formally ranked as detective inspector.

  "You're out early," he said as they neared each other, by now familiar with Jorja's running schedule.

  "Couldn't sleep so I thought I'd get an early start. What's up that couldn't wait until I got back home?"

  His face went grim beneath his handsome features.

  "There was an incident."

  "What type of incident?" She cocked her head to one side, wiping away a few beads of sweat that trickled down her left temple.

  "A murder."

  "A murder? You're joking. Here, in St. Ives?"

  "Afraid not. Times are changing, I guess." His eyes
narrowed as he held her eyes with his.

  "Why are you looking at me like that? Who was it?"

  "Myles Brentwood."

  His green eyes remained fixed on hers as if he was prompting her for answers.

  "What? When? How?" she rattled off, stunned by the information.

  "We're guessing sometime last night, but we're not sure of anything just yet. My men are processing the crime scene as we speak and I'm still waiting for the forensic team to arrive."

  Jorja rested both hands on her hips as she stared out across the ocean.

  "Wow, I just saw him yesterday."

  "I know." Ewan stared uncomfortably at his feet then looked up, struggling to find the words.

  "Why are you looking at me like that, Ewan Reid? What's going on?"

  He attempted to speak then stopped himself, drawing a deep breath instead.

  "Spit it out, Ewan," she pushed, sensing he was holding out on her.

  "I'm sorry, Jorgie, but I have to ask. It's my job."

  He took one deep breath for courage and forced the words from his mouth.

  "Where were you yesterday between five p.m. and sunrise?"

  His face flushed as soon as the words left his lips.

  Jorja's body tensed and she briefly turned her back on him before she spun around to face him.

 

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