Undisclosed: Nights Series Book 7

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by A. M. Salinger




  UNDISCLOSED

  NIGHTS SERIES BOOK 7

  A.M. SALINGER

  COPYRIGHT

  Undisclosed (Nights Series Book 7)

  Copyright © 2018 by A.M. Salinger

  All rights reserved. Registered with the US Copyright Office.

  www.AMSalinger.com

  The right of A.M. Salinger to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

  No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review. Your respect of the author’s rights and hard work is appreciated.

  This book is a work of fiction. References to real people (living or dead), events, establishments, organizations, or locations are intended only to provide a sense of authenticity, and are used factitiously. All other characters, and all other incidents and dialogue, are drawn from the author’s imagination and are not to be construed as real.

  Editor: www.ElfwerksEditing.com

  Cover Design: A.M. Salinger

  CONTENTS

  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

  Thank You

  About the Author

  Also by A.M. Salinger

  Hush (Nights Series Book 8) Special Preview

  Chapter 1

  CHAPTER 1

  EVELINE CLAUDE BLINKED SLOWLY. “COME AGAIN?”

  A muscle jumped in the jawline of the man seated on the other side of the conference room table.

  “You don’t own the freehold to the Tokyo branch of Le Secret,” Malcolm Brooks repeated stiffly.

  Eveline’s pulse started to race as she stared from Brooks to his poker-faced partner, Victor Kline.

  “I’m sorry, did I just hear you say that I don’t own the tenure of one of my most successful business enterprises?” Silence greeted her stunned question. “Are you guys yanking my chain right now?” Eveline chuckled in disbelief. “You are, aren’t you? Because there’s no way my one-thousand-dollar-per-hour, top-notch city lawyers just informed me that they fucked up.”

  Brooks glanced at Kline. “Told you she’d bring up the hourly fee,” he muttered.

  Kline ignored his partner and studied Eveline with an impassive expression. “Of course, we’ll be working to resolve this matter pro bono. The mistake is ours and we cannot apologize enough on behalf of the firm.”

  Eveline’s mouth went dry as she looked between the two men and realized they were serious. The first inkling that her day was going to turn out to be gloriously shitty began at six a.m., when the fire alarm in her apartment building went off. Having left Le Secret at two, Eveline wasn’t pleased that her much needed beauty sleep had been interrupted by some asshole who hadn’t figured out how to use his new waffle maker. Her ire rose tenfold when she went to collect her car from the underground garage and noticed the fresh scratch on her midnight blue Maserati. She’d made a note to ask the security guards to check the cameras covering the parking lot and had barreled out of the building and into the early morning Tokyo traffic at twice the allowed speed limit; she hated being late for an appointment and her nine o’clock meeting with Brooks & Kline was taking place on the other side of town. She’d made it to their office on the twelfth floor of the glass and steel high-rise housing their law firm with four minutes to spare and had waited impatiently in the conference room, curious as to why they’d requested the urgent face to face.

  It was Brooks who’d called her the day before to set up the meeting.

  “Something’s come up. We need to talk,” the lawyer said cryptically after Eveline’s assistant put his call through.

  Eveline paused and lowered her cup of coffee, her gaze shifting from the busy dual computer screens on the desk before her, to the glorious views beyond the panoramic windows to her right. Her office was located next to a small, private flat she kept above Le Secret and overlooked Ginza, the most famous and exclusive district in Tokyo.

  Eveline frowned as she studied the busy intersection outside, the first seed of unease stirring inside her.

  “What’s this about, Malcolm? It’s rare for you to call me yourself.”

  “I know. It would be best if we had this conversation face to face,” Brooks replied.

  He’d refused to answer Eveline’s questions and gave her the details of their appointment before disconnecting. Though she’d been troubled by her enigmatic conversation with the lawyer, Eveline soon forgot about the exchange, the daily demands of running her internationally renowned and incredibly successful chain of upscale escort clubs consuming all her attention and focus. Business was booming, especially since she’d opened the latest branch of Le Secret in Singapore.

  Eveline swallowed presently and leaned back in the sleek metal and leather chair of the conference room, her knuckles whitening where she gripped the arm rests. Maybe I should have thrown salt over my left shoulder before I left my apartment this morning. Or burned some incense or do whatever it is people do to ward off bad luck.

  She studied the two lawyers with narrowed eyes. “Explain to me exactly how this happened.”

  Brooks sighed and pinched the bridge of his nose while Kline slid a file across the table.

  “It seems Mr. Nagato forged the documents his lawyers provided to us five years ago, when he sold you the plot in Ginza as a freehold,” Brooks said bitterly. “What you actually bought off him was the right to lease. His son-in-law works for the local land registry office and we suspect he made the counterfeit papers. According to one of our contacts in the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department, the Nagatos have connections with an organized crime syndicate that specializes in land rights grabs.”

  Eveline tensed, her gaze skimming the folder before her distractedly. “You mean, they’re part of the Yakuza?”

  Kline grimaced. “They are linked to them in a distant, convoluted fashion, yes.”

  Eveline’s heart pounded as she digested the implication of the lawyers’ words. The Yakuza were the Japanese equivalent of the Italian Mafia. Having witnessed secondhand what the mob did to their business rivals in New York, Eveline had no desire to associate with the local criminal organizations here in Japan, even if she suspected several of the clients who had visited the Tokyo branch of Le Secret over the last five years had some kind of connection to them.

  Eveline clenched her jaw. “What can we do about this? I paid Nagato a hefty sum of money for that land. We’re talking seven figures here, as you both well know.” She paused, an unwelcome thought bringing a bitter taste to her mouth. “Wait. Did he even own that plot? Don’t tell me the asshole sold me someone else’s—”

  “He does,” Kline said. “Or he did.”

  “We’ve already lodged an appeal in court to contest the new owner’s claim to the freehold,” Brooks said. He ran a hand through his hair. “It’s going to take some time to—”

  “New owner?” Eveline scowled. “What the hell do you mean, new owner?” She jumped to her feet and leaned her hands on the table. “Are you telling me that conniving bastard sold my land to someone else?
!”

  “Yes,” Brooks said quietly. “And this time, the documents he provided were the legitimate ones.”

  Eveline took a shuddering breath and closed her eyes briefly, her nails biting into her palms where she’d fisted her fingers.

  “I’m gonna kill him,” she hissed. Eveline grabbed her bag and stormed toward the conference room exit. “I’m gonna strangle that lowlife with my bare hands and dump his body in Tokyo Bay! What’s his address?”

  “Sit down, Eveline,” Kline said with a sigh.

  Eveline stopped by the door and whirled around. “I’m not kidding, Victor! I hope you guys know a good criminal lawyer ‘cause I’m going to need—”

  “Nagato is dead,” Brooks said.

  Eveline froze. She opened and closed her mouth soundlessly, her eyes rounding as she gaped at the two lawyers.

  “What?!” she shrieked.

  “Nagato died three weeks ago,” Kline stated. “It was a heart attack, apparently.”

  A light-headed feeling swept over Eveline. She made her way back to the table on unsteady legs and flopped down in the chair she had just vacated.

  “He completed the sale of the freehold a few days before his death,” Brooks added.

  Kline leaned across the table and opened the file in front of Eveline. “This is the letter we received yesterday from the new owner’s law firm.”

  Eveline blinked before focusing on the top sheet of the paperwork before her.

  “The land in Ginza is now the property of Lincoln Hudson, the President and CEO of the Hudson Group,” Kline continued. “His lawyers have given us formal notice that Le Secret’s leasehold rights will be revoked in thirty days.”

  Eveline’s hands trembled as she picked up the letter and read it over, the words blurring in front of her eyes. Her heart sank as she finally absorbed its content.

  It was just as Kline had said.

  The new owner of the plot on which Le Secret stood had given her thirty days to dissolve her business and vacate his land.

  “Wouldn’t a leasehold be for fifty years?” Eveline mumbled. “Can he even do this?”

  “The new leasehold law that came into effect twenty-five years ago gives the landowner the right to refuse the leaseholder permission to run a business on his property,” Kline said. “Hudson is completely within his rights to issue a revocation order.”

  Blood thundered in Eveline’s ears, the sound matching the emotions storming through her as she stared blindly at the printed text. She put the letter down, inhaled shakily, and stared at the men opposite her.

  When it rains, it fucking pours.

  “How long will the court appeal take?” she said, her voice growing steely as cogwheels started turning in her brain. She had not come this far in life without learning how to roll with some punches. Eveline frowned. Or how to get back up and knock the enemy right out of the ring.

  “Six weeks,” Brooks said.

  Eveline drummed the fingers of her right hand on the table, her polished, red-lacquered nails rapping an impatient tempo.

  “Can we do anything to expedite it?”

  “We’ve got a meeting with one of the judges this afternoon,” Kline said. “As to whether he will be willing to bring the case forward is not something I’d want to bet money on.”

  Eveline gritted her teeth. “Do the Hudson Group President and his lawyers know the details of this affair? As in Nagato swindling me out of—”

  “They know,” Brooks said. “We spoke to Lincoln Hudson’s lawyers and his secretary yesterday after we received the letter. Hudson’s secretary got back to us thirty minutes ago.”

  Eveline leaned forward in her chair, her heart pounding against her ribs. “And? Is he willing to negotiate something?”

  “Hudson said that it ain’t his problem,” Kline muttered.

  Eveline stilled. “What?”

  Brooks rubbed his eyes tiredly. “According to his secretary, Lincoln Hudson’s exact words were ‘I don’t give a flying fuck’.”

  CHAPTER 2

  “I WOULD RATHER STAB myself in the eye with a pitchfork,” Lincoln Hudson groaned into his cell phone.

  A bark of female laughter echoed from the other end of the line.

  “Seriously, Linc,” his sister Julia berated in an amused voice, “it’s just a charity ball. You probably won’t even see them if you come early. You know what they’re like for putting on a late show.”

  Lincoln sighed and dragged a hand down his face. “I’ve done my damnedest to make sure the Hudson Group isn’t linked to any of his campaigns since I started the business, and I’m sure as hell not about to change that habit now.”

  A weary silence filled the connection.

  “I know how you feel about being even remotely associated with him, Linc,” Julia said quietly. “Trust me, I do. If it wasn’t for Adam’s job, I wouldn’t be in his social circle either.” She paused. “But nothing you do will ever change the fact that you’re his son. Or that he’s a U.S. senator.”

  Lincoln clamped his jaw shut to stop the automatic outburst threatening to erupt from him. Even though it had been twelve years since he’d last spoken to his father, he could still recall the rage he’d felt that day and the ugly words they’d exchanged.

  As far as Lincoln was concerned, his relationship with Harry Hudson ended the day Lincoln and Julia’s mother Madeleine died in a tragic car accident, a month before Lincoln turned twenty-five. Although the police report stated Madeleine Hudson had lost control of her vehicle while traveling at twice the speed limit, Lincoln knew it was news of Harry Hudson’s latest affair that had caused her to get behind the wheel that night.

  Everyone in the Hudson household was aware of Harry Hudson’s long history of infidelity, including the servants and even the Hudsons’ closest friends. Lincoln was fifteen when he first discovered his father’s adultery, after he walked in on the senator with his hand up the new maid’s skirt in the kitchen pantry. Although the man mumbled something about losing a personal item and stumbled past Lincoln on his way out of the room, all it took was one look at the maid’s flushed face and the terror in her eyes for Lincoln to understand exactly what his father had been doing.

  From that day forth, Lincoln lost all respect for the man who had sired him and could only grit his teeth in the decade that followed as he watched his father bed conquest after conquest. His so-called friends eagerly fed him the details of the senator’s extramarital affairs even after he went to Yale to do his business degree.

  Like nearly everyone he and his sister had associated with since their high school days, Lincoln knew the men and women who hung around him at college did so because of who his father was. There were only a handful of people he and Julia could call true friends, even now.

  But it wasn’t someone from Lincoln’s fake entourage who brought him news of Harry Hudson’s most recent affair on the day Madeleine Hudson died. Instead, it was one of Madeleine’s closest friends who happened to have been a bridesmaid in Madeleine and Harry’s wedding and was the mother of Madeleine’s only goddaughter. She’d stormed into the Hudson family mansion during the week that Lincoln had come home for fall recess and screamed at Madeleine at the top of her head that she was a failure as a woman for not satisfying Harry in bed.

  Because this time, Harry Hudson had done the truly unforgivable. Not only had he slept with the daughter of Madeleine’s friend, a girl thirty years his junior, he’d gotten her pregnant and forced her to have an abortion.

  Even though Lincoln knew Harry Hudson was not directly responsible for the death of his and Julia’s mother, he might as well have been the one who caused the accident that took her life. True to form, Harry Hudson had used his wife’s death to garner support for his political campaigns and remarried eighteen months later, this time to a woman barely older than Lincoln. That was the final twist of the knife which had forever severed Lincoln’s connection with his father.

  “So, what do you say, Linc?” Julia said, bringing h
im back to the present. “It’s a cause close to your heart. Besides, it’s in Honolulu, just a skip and a hop from where you are right now.”

  Lincoln smiled wryly. Trust his sister to call four thousand miles of open sea a skip and a hop.

  “Let me think about it,” he muttered.

  “So, that’s a yes?” Julia said excitedly.

  “That’s a maybe, Flame Foot,” Lincoln said tersely.

  Julia muttered something rude at her old nickname. She’d hated her protruding second toes with a passion since she turned ten.

  “Talk to you later, Monster Meat,” she retorted.

  Lincoln grinned at his own nickname from his college days. The size of his dick had been the stuff of urban legends even before he started his first term at Yale. A snort left his lips when a high-pitched voice started singing “Monsta Beat! Monsta Beat!” in the background behind his sister.

  “Oh God,” Julia groaned. “No, Lucas. We don’t say Monster Meat—shit—I mean Monsta Beat—”

  Lincoln bit the inside of his cheek as Julia’s two-year-old son and Lincoln’s favorite person in the whole world shouted, “Shit Monsta Meat! Shit Monsta Meat!” while Julia groveled at him to shut up.

  “I’m gonna go, Linc,” Julia said in a harassed voice. “Adam’s gonna kill me if his darling son and the apple of his eye is still saying Monster Meat tonight. His boss is coming over for dinner.”

  Lincoln grinned. “Have fun explaining to your husband why your son keeps talking about his uncle’s dick.”

  “Trust me, no one was more overwhelmed by your, er, package than Adam the one time he accidentally saw it in the tennis court changing rooms at Yale,” Julia said with a grunt. “I swear he wanted to pen a poem about the damn thing for days after.”

  Lincoln chuckled and ended the call, cutting off the sound of his nephew hollering “Shit Monsta Meat!” at the top of his voice while his sister desperately tried to hush him. He’d just placed his cell phone on his desk when his secretary buzzed him.

 

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