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Live Ammo

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by Joanna Wayne




  A desperate mother...

  Alexis Beranger never could have anticipated the shock of being carjacked with her son still in the backseat. Or that Tague Lambert, part of the rich and famous Lamberts of Dallas, would be there to help. But most earthshattering of all was learning that the attack wasn’t random—only a prelude to the danger stalking her every move.

  And the cowboy who came to her rescue...

  While their chance meeting occurred under the gravest of circumstances, Tague felt an instant attraction with Alexis that he just couldn’t shake. Through with playing it safe, Tague vowed to protect this beautiful stranger and her vulnerable little boy, no matter how high the stakes. After all, a cowboy never ignored an innocent in distress—especially a cowboy who carried the Lambert name.

  “Are you even for real, cowboy?”

  He tugged her to her feet and pulled her into his arms. “I’m as real as it gets.”

  She knew he was going to kiss her. Knew she should stop him. Instead she melted into the thrill and the taste of him. Passion claimed her so completely that she literally lost her breath.

  When Tague pulled away, she felt a burning in her lungs and a hunger deep inside her that she had little chance of ever satisfying.

  She lay back down, turned off the light and stared at the ceiling. She needed to put what had just transpired into some kind of perspective. All she could come up with was that she was being forced to put her trust in the rugged cowboy with the boyish charm and the determination of a mad bull.

  Heaven help them all.

  Joanna Wayne

  Live Ammo

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Joanna Wayne was born and raised in Shreveport, Louisiana, and received her undergraduate and graduate degrees from LSU-Shreveport. She moved to New Orleans in 1984, and it was there that she attended her first writing class and joined her first professional writing organization. Her debut novel, Deep in the Bayou, was published in 1994.

  Now, dozens of published books later, Joanna has made a name for herself as being on the cutting edge of romantic suspense in both series and single-title novels. She has been on the Waldenbooks bestseller list for romance and has won many industry awards. She is also a popular speaker at writing organizations and local community functions and has taught creative writing at the University of New Orleans Metropolitan College.

  Joanna currently resides in a small community forty miles north of Houston, Texas, with her husband. Though she still has many family and emotional ties to Louisiana, she loves living in the Lone Star State. You may write Joanna at P.O. Box 852, Montgomery, Texas 77356.

  Books by Joanna Wayne

  HARLEQUIN INTRIGUE

  955—MAVERICK CHRISTMAS

  975—24/7

  1001—24 KARAT AMMUNITION*

  1019—TEXAS GUN SMOKE*

  1041—POINT BLANK PROTECTOR*

  1065—LOADED*

  1096—MIRACLE AT COLTS RUN CROSS*

  1123—COWBOY COMMANDO‡

  1152—COWBOY TO THE CORE‡

  1167—BRAVO, TANGO, COWBOY‡

  1195—COWBOY DELIRIUM

  1228—COWBOY SWAGGER†

  1249—GENUINE COWBOY†

  1264—AK-COWBOY†

  1289—COWBOY FEVER†

  1308—STRANGER, SEDUCER, PROTECTOR

  1325—COWBOY CONSPIRACY†

  1341—SON OF A GUN**

  1361—LIVE AMMO**

  *Four Brothers of Colts Run Cross

  ‡Special Ops Texas

  †Sons of Troy Ledger

  **Big “D” Dads

  CAST OF CHARACTERS

  Tague Lambert—Youngest of the Lambert brothers. Born into a wealthy ranching and oil family, he’s a cowboy at heart with no interest in settling down—until he meets Alexis Beranger.

  Alexis Beranger—She’s running scared, but determined to keep Tommy safe at any price.

  Tommy—The precocious two-year-old loves horses and chocolate.

  Carolina Lambert—Tague’s mother is a woman who loves her family above all.

  Durk Lambert—Tague’s brother offers advice from a business trip in the Middle East.

  Emma and Damien Lambert—Tague’s brother and sister-in-law cut their honeymoon short to be there for Tague and Alexis.

  Booker Dell Collins—Carjacker.

  Detective Gerald Hampton—Dallas Police Department detective investigating the carjacking.

  Scott Jeffery Hayden—Legendary detective and Alexis’s ex-husband.

  Lena Fox Hayden—Third wife of Scott Hayden.

  Meghan Sinclair—The private detective may have shared a past with Durk Lambert.

  Jackson Phelps—A retired NCIS agent, now private detective hired by Tague Lambert to help clear Alexis’s name.

  Bronco—Loyal bodyguard to Scott Jeffery Hayden.

  Thanks to all my readers who believe in love and cowboys. And to my family, who taught me that family

  is important to every aspect of our lives.

  Contents

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Epilogue

  Excerpt

  Chapter One

  “Hand over those keys.”

  Alexis Beranger spun around and stared into a pair of glassy eyes that looked as if they were popping out of the man’s head.

  Her heart slammed against her chest as he pushed his fetid, sweaty body against her. The man was taller than her and burly. And judging from his dilated pupils, he was also stoned.

  She scanned the supermarket parking lot. The nearest people were a teenage worker herding a train of empty carts and a pregnant woman. Both were several yards away, walking in the opposite direction and oblivious to her situation.

  The man closed his hand over hers. She fought back, kicking and clawing with her free hand as she yelled for help. His strength was overpowering and he easily wrenched the keys from her grasp.

  He slapped her hard across the face and then silenced her with a meaty hand over her mouth.

  Tommy began to wail from the backseat. She went for the man’s eyeballs, clawing like a mother tiger. Her fingers missed their mark but dug bloody trenches into his face.

  His hand left her mouth. “Don’t make me use this, bitch. Get in the car.” His voice slurred, but his body had hardened to solid steel.

  That’s when she saw the pistol clutched in his right hand—pointed at her son’s head.

  Terror swept through her, and she struggled to breathe. “Take the car. Take my purse. Take whatever you want. Just don’t hurt my son.”

  “Want out, Mommy. Want out.”

  “Tell the brat to shut up.”

  “He’s afraid. He’s only two.” Her voice quivered. “Let me get him out of his seat and we’ll just walk away. I won’t even call the cops.”

  “Lying bitch. Get in the car now!”

  She heard footsteps and a woman’s voice. Surely this monster would run away. Instead he punched her in the face and sent her staggering backward so hard she careened against the car parked next to hers. The back of he
r skull collided with the rearview mirror, waves of black scrambling her vision, and she slumped almost to the pavement before regaining her balance.

  “Security! Security!” The woman’s calls for help were shrill and loud enough to be heard throughout the lot.

  The man jumped into Alexis’s car and slammed the door behind him.

  Reeling from the blow, Alexis lunged for the back door handle.

  Too late. He’d locked the doors. She pounded her fists against the vehicle as the car pulled out.

  The woman and a couple of young men came running over to help.

  “Don’t let him get away,” Alexis shouted. “He has my son in that car.”

  “I’m calling 911,” the woman said.

  One of the men muttered curses. The other put a hand on Alexis’s shoulder. “The cops will catch him. They won’t let him get away with the kid.”

  “He already did!”

  Alexis pushed them out of the way and took off after the car. Her only chance was for someone to see her, hear her cries, and cut off the fleeing car. No one did.

  Desperate, she cut through the maze of parked cars and raced toward the nearest lot exit. She made it just in time to see the car jump the curb and spin into the busy street.

  An SUV swerved to avoid crashing into her stolen sedan. Neither driver slowed down. Bordering on hysteria, she dashed into the thick of the traffic.

  Brakes squealed. Curses flew at her from passing cars. The driver of a black pickup truck that had just missed running over her skidded to a stop. He opened his door and started to get out.

  Before he could, she rushed to his passenger side door, yanked it open and slid into the truck. She pointed dead ahead.

  “Follow that car.”

  Chapter Two

  Tague Lambert stared at the shapely woman in the white shorts and cute little striped T-shirt who’d just jumped into his truck uninvited. Her right eye was swelling like biscuit dough in a hot oven and a nasty lump was forming on the back of her head.

  He felt as if he’d just been dropped into a B movie and he was damn sure he hadn’t made a casting call.

  “Step on it,” she ordered. “You’re letting him get away.”

  Bossy, but frantic and obviously scared out of her wits. She looked familiar, but he couldn’t place her. “Nice to meet you, too.” Tague yanked the car into gear and hit the accelerator. “Who am I following?”

  “That gray Honda sedan that just blew through the yellow light at the next corner.”

  Tague craned his neck to get a better view of the speeding car. “Who’s driving?”

  “The crackhead who just jumped me and stole my car.”

  So, she’d been carjacked. That explained a lot.

  “Maybe you should go to a hospital. That Honda is not worth our getting killed.”

  “It is to me. My son’s in that car.”

  “Then buckle up.” Adrenaline pumping, Tague darted around a black Buick, but then lost sight of the gray sedan altogether when a panel truck changed into his lane and blocked his view. He swerved into the left lane.

  A few seconds later, he caught a glimpse of the sedan a block and a half in front of them, taking the corner at breakneck speed. Another three minutes and the driver could access the interstate. Then he’d really have to stomp the pedal to the metal to keep up. It was too damn risky.

  He lay on his horn and sped through a yellow light.

  “Call 911,” Tague ordered. “Give them our location and explain the situation.”

  “My phone’s in the car.”

  “Use mine.” He yanked it from his pocket and tossed it to her.

  He turned the corner to the earsplitting sound of a collision. He spotted the gray sedan as it veered into a wild spin, finally winding up against the front of a vacant one-story building. The red Jeep Wrangler that it had crashed into fared little better, but at least it was still in the street.

  Traffic came to a screeching halt. Wary of what he might be rushing into, Tague grabbed his pistol from beneath his seat. He hit the ground running.

  From a distance, he saw the carjacker climb from the wreckage and race away from the scene. A white handbag was clutched in his right hand, doubtlessly not his.

  By the time Tague reached the scene, the thief had ducked into a nearby alley. Tague lingered long enough to see a tall guy in jeans and a blue sports shirt pull the kid from the backseat of the wrecked car.

  The kid wailed for his mother; there was no sign of blood. Tague took off after the thief, pistol in hand, his senses keen to avoid being ambushed. He was used to shooting snakes in the grass, not chasing criminals.

  The quick check of the alley was futile. The guy might have climbed through a broken window on one of the deserted warehouses or jumped the fence at the other end and escaped into the maze of side streets. Hunting him down was probably better left to the cops.

  He returned to the scene of the accident and quickly spotted his sexy hitchhiker. She was standing in a crowd of bystanders, holding the kid in her arms.

  “I don’t know how to thank you,” she said as Tague walked up and stopped at her elbow.

  “Not sure what you’d thank me for.”

  “Jumping into the fray.” She hugged her son tighter.

  “Has anyone checked on the driver of the Jeep? Is he okay?”

  “He seems to be,” a middle-aged brunette standing next to him chimed in. “But I called 911. I think some other people did, too. Ambulances and the police are on the way.”

  Approaching sirens were already screaming in the background. Gawkers scattered as a squad car arrived.

  “Be right back,” Tague said. He dashed over to his truck that he’d left in the middle of the street. It was blocked in tight, but he slid his pistol back into its scabbard beneath the seat and locked the vehicle. He was licensed to tote, but no need to waste time explaining all that to the cops.

  He’d give a statement to the officers and then clear out so that he could take care of the business that had brought him into Dallas in the first place.

  Two more squad cars rolled up, lights flashing. Four uniformed cops hit the streets.

  “I need the owners of the cars and any eye witnesses,” one of the other officers clipped loudly. “The rest of you need to move on so emergency personnel can go to work.”

  To his surprise, Tague spotted the woman, still carrying the kid, but striding away from the cops. Impulsively, he rushed to catch up with her.

  “Where do you think you’re going?”

  “Away from the chaos so that I can take care of my son.”

  The boy’s arms were locked tight around his mother’s neck.

  “Do you think he’s injured?” Tague asked.

  “I don’t think so, but he’s frightened and all the strangers and sirens aren’t helping.”

  Maybe he’d been rash in trying to avoid getting involved. The woman still looked a bit terrified. Her eye looked none too good, either. And the lump on her head was more pronounced than before.

  “You and the boy both need to be checked out by medical personnel,” Tague said. “There’s an ambulance on the way.”

  “We don’t need an ambulance.” She started walking away again.

  Obviously she was too upset or injured to think straight. He grabbed her arm and tugged her to a stop. “You can’t leave the scene of an accident without talking to the cops.”

  “I could if you would mind your own business.”

  “You didn’t feel that way a few minutes ago when you were ordering me to give chase. The least you can do is give the police a description of the carjacker.”

  She stopped walking and shifted the kid to her other hip. “Okay, you win. I’ll talk to the cops, but I don’t expect it to cha
nge anything.”

  The lady had an attitude problem. He’d have figured she’d be eager to describe the carjacker to the cops. It made him wonder if she didn’t have other reasons for avoiding the police.

  “I think it’s time we met officially,” he said. “I’m Tague Lambert.”

  “I’m Alexis.”

  “No last name?”

  “Beranger. This is Tommy.”

  Tommy began to squirm. “Go home, Mommy.”

  “Soon, sweetie.” She lowered him to the ground, but held on tight to his hand as a cop approached them.

  “I’ll stick around until you’re done,” Tague offered, his interest and curiosity piqued.

  She shot him a back off look. “I really appreciate all you’ve done, but I’m fine on my own now. And I’m sure you have better things to do than broil under the midday sun with strangers.”

  “No. A car chase and foiling a kidnapping pretty much tops anything I had planned.”

  Besides, this might not be a movie shoot, but it had all the elements of one. And he’d always been a sucker for a mystery starring a sexy female lead.

  * * *

  “OFFICER BILLY WHITFIELD,” the cop said as he stepped in front of Alexis. “One of the witnesses said that your son was in the gray Honda at the time of the collision.”

  “Yes.”

  No doubt everyone in hearing distance had figured that out from the frenzied state she’d been in when she’d rushed to the car and grabbed Tommy.

  Now it was the cop who incited her panic. She had to watch every word. Tell him only what he needed to know and make sure he didn’t feel the need to go digging into her background.

  “Can I have your name?”

  “Alexis Beranger.”

  “Were you driving the car?”

  “No, I wasn’t even in the car.”

  The cop turned his attention to Tommy. “Is this the boy who was involved in the collision?”

  “Yes. This is Tommy.”

  “Lucky kid to walk away from that wreck with no serious injuries.”

  “It was a miracle,” she agreed.

 

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