Table of Contents
Cover Page
Excerpt
Dear Reader
Title Page
Dedication
CAST OF CHARACTERS
Prologue
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
Epilogue
Copyright
All she needed was one opportunity to get away
Keeping one eye on her, Ben opened the driver’s side door of the rental car, clipped his gun into his belt and said, “Okay, get in.”
Monique slid under the wheel and across to the passenger’s side, watching him from the corner of her eye. He climbed in after her, then turned his head toward the door as he closed it.
Seizing the moment, she dived for her own door. She had her fingers on the handle when he caught her—one hand digging into her shoulder, the other grabbing her head.
As he jerked her backward, her glasses went flying and her wig came off in his hand. As her hair fell free around her shoulders, Ben DeCarlo’s eyes tuned to icy blue steel.
“Damnl” he muttered. “Of all the women in the world, I grabbed Monique LaRoquette. Witness for the prosecution.”
Dear Reader,
I’m so glad you’ve decided to pick up The Valentine Hostage, the last book of three in the exciting miniseries EYEWITNESS. If you missed them, I hope you’ll also look for A Christmas Kiss by Caroline Burnes, which was out in December, and A New Year’s Conviction by Cassie Miles, which was out in January.
The most common question readers ask me is, “Where do you get your ideas?” That’s sometimes difficult to say, because I don’t always know. For many of my books, it seemed as if the idea was just floating in the air and drifted into my brain osmosis-like.
In the case of The Valentine Hostage, though, I know exactly where the idea came from. I answered my phone one day and my editor said, “I’d like to see a miniseries featuring people in the Witness Protection Program. Are you interested?”
After playing a little “what if,” we decided it would be neat to do three stories about witnesses to the same double murder. They’ve been in the Witness Protection Program since they testified at the killer’s trial, and the EYEWITNESS books tell what happens when the murderer is granted a retrial and the witnesses are expected to testify again.
I really enjoyed writing a story set in romantic New Orleans and the Louisiana bayou country, so I hope you enjoy reading it.
Warmest regards, Dawn Stewardson
The Valentine Hostage
Dawn Stewardson
To Cheryl Smith, with thanks for the generosity of her ideas. To constables Sue MacDonell and Steven Charlton, who help with the “cop stuff"—and never really charge the $50 an hour they threaten me with.
And to John, always.
CAST OF CHARACTERS
Ben DeCarlo—Was he an innocent man or a psychopathic killer?
Monique LaRoquette—If she followed her heart would she be making the mistake of her life?
Maria DeCarlo—Ben’s sister claimed he was innocent.
Dezi Cooper—Ben’s friend and the manager of his wine bar, Dezi would do anything to help.
Dominick DeCarlo—Uncle Dominick was now in charge of the “family.”
The Nose—He’d hated Ben’s father enough to kill him, and he’d hated Ben enough to frame him, but who was he?
Sandor Rossi—He knew the truth, but where was he?
Danny Dupray—He also knew the truth, but he wasn’t telling.
Prologue
Wednesday, December 15, 1993
12:13 p.m.
The minute they walked into Augustine’s, Monique was glad she’d opted to have lunch with Frankie, rather than the other models. It was obvious he’d been right, that the café-bar was one of the must places to visit in New Orleans. The long, dim room, with its stone floor, murmuring ceiling fans and muted lighting, positively oozed atmosphere.
“That was a great shoot this morning,”Frankie said once they’d been shown to a table.”If they gave Pulitzers for fashion photography, I’d be clearing a space on my mantel when we get back to New York.”
Monique smiled. “You know, I’m tempted never to go back. Two days and I’ve fallen in love with this city.”
“You should see it at Mardi Gras. That’s enough to blow your mind. But the most you can hope for is a trip here now and then. You’re one of the lucky ones who look younger all the time, so you’ll be stuck working in New York for another twenty years.”
“Oh, you’re such a silver-tongued devil, Frankie.”
He laughed at that. Then, before he said anything more, a waitress arrived with menus.
While Frankie began to peruse his, Monique glanced slowly around the restaurant, thinking she really was one of the lucky ones.
Modeling was a tough business that saw a lot of women over the hill well before they hit thirty. But, at twenty-eight, she was still landing assignments with the major magazines. And older models were getting more and more work as the population aged, which augured well for at least her immediate future.
Yes, she had the world by the tail, as her mother was fond of pointing out. A successful career and a good man back home who wanted to marry her. So even though she wasn’t entirely sure that Craig was Mr. Right…
Her thoughts of him trailed off when the door opened, drawing her attention to the man who strode into Augustine’s. If he wasn’t somebody’s Mr. Right, she’d be awfully surprised. He was about thirty, tall and nicely built, with sun-streaked brown hair and a sexy cleft in his chin.
He had definite presence, his designer overcoat said money, and he’d be attractive as all get-out if it weren’t for the scowl on his face.
“Hey,” Frankie said quietly, “he sure looks like an unhappy camper, huh?”
The man surveyed the restaurant for another second, then started toward the back.
As he did, a woman said, “Why, there’s Ben.”
Glancing around to see who knew him, Monique discovered it was an older couple at a table in the back corner. The woman was elegance personified, wearing a Gianni Versace suit of winter white wool. The man bore a passing resemblance to Anthony Quinn.
“Ben,” he said, half rising. “Come and have lunch with us, son.”
The woman began to speak again, then her words faded and her expression grew uncertain.
Monique looked at the younger man once more. He’d stopped several feet from the couple, and just as she turned toward him he pulled a handgun from beneath his coat.
“Oh, jeez!” Frankie whispered. “Get down!”
He dove for the floor, but Monique sat frozen where she was. Above the pounding in her ears, she could hear the man with the gun angrily saying something about not running for the Senate, something about the older man interfering in his life.
Then two shots rang out and the man at the table fell backward. The woman slumped against the wall, hemorrhaging from her throat, the blood turning her winter white jacket scarlet.
For a horrified moment, Monique watched—until a wave of nausea and blood-black color swept in front of her eyes and total blackness engulfed her.
Chapter One
Monday, February 3, 1997
3:01 p.m.
When the news came on Monique was in the spare bedroom she used as a home office—checking her computer for the most recent house
listings and telling herself that sooner or later she’d turn up something to fit the Ramseys’ requirements.
“This hour’s top story comes from our sister station in New Orleans,” the announcer said.
Monique looked at the radio.
“One of the most publicized trials in that city’s history, the retrial of Ben DeCarlo on two counts of murder, has just ended.”
The words grabbed her complete attention. Ever since the witness protection people had flown her to New Orleans last month, to testify for the prosecution a second time, those murders had been almost constantly on her mind.
Aside from anything else, it was hard to stop thinking about something that seemed to be referred to on every newscast and in each day’s newspaper. So thank heavens the trial was over.
“Earlier today,” the announcer continued, “the defense team rested its case. And only minutes ago, the two sides completed their closing statements. The jury will be charged tomorrow morning.
“This brings to an end a retrial that many people feel should never have been granted. In late 1994, the original trial for the murder of alleged crime lord Antonio DeCarlo and his wife, five eyewitnesses testified to seeing Ben DeCarlo walk into a New Orleans restaurant and gun down his parents. Their testimonies convicted him.”
Alleged crime lord, Monique silently repeated. There was nothing alleged about it Antonio DeCarlo had been head of a major New Orleans crime family.
“But after spending two years in the Louisiana State Prison at Angola,” the announcer went on, “DeCarlo was granted a retrial on the basis of new evidence. Evidence which failed to materialize during the trial. Evidence some people doubt ever existed.
“Many of those same people believe DeCarlo was behind the recent murders of two of the five eyewitnesses, but only time will tell whether their killers have links to DeCarlo.”
Closing her eyes, Monique wondered how anyone could doubt Ben DeCarlo had arranged for those killings.
Oh, she knew some people in New Orleans claimed he’d never had anything to do with the Dixie Mafia. That despite his father’s activities, Ben had been a law-abiding businessman.
But she didn’t believe it for a minute. She’d seen him murder his parents, and no one went from law-abiding citizen to cold-blooded killer in the blink of an eye.
“So,” the announcer was saying, “the retrial is over except for the verdict. And it is expected to come quickly. Speculation has it the jury deliberations may set a record for brevity.
“Turning to other news…”
Monique exhaled slowly, only then aware she’d been holding her breath. She hadn’t realized quite how anxiously she’d been waiting to hear that the trial was finished.
But testifying again had brought back all her vivid images of those murders, and maybe now they’d begin to fade. Hopefully, the nightmares that had returned to plague her would gradually go away, as well.
Because unless something went dreadfully wrong in the jury room, Benjamin Wilson DeCarlo would be found guilty of those murders this time, too. And she knew it would do a lot to lower her anxiety level.
She looked at the phone—flirting with the idea of being in that courtroom when the verdict was read. Then she told herself to resist temptation.
If she wanted to remain in the witness protection program, she was supposed to do what she was told. And she’d been told to stay out of New Orleans for the rest of her life.
The Big Easy was where Ben DeCarlo’s friends were. The friends who’d already murdered two of the five eyewitnesses.
Thinking about the two men brought tears to her eyes—and sent a shiver through her. Both of them had been in the witness protection program, like her, but now they were dead. And that made her certain she’d never be truly safe. Even though the trial was over, Ben DeCarlo might still have her killed to prove he had connections, even from a prison cell. Or as revenge. Or simply because criminals lived in a different world which ran by its own rules.
But even though she knew that going to New Orleans wouldn’t be wise, she needed closure. Wanted to see firsthand that Ben DeCarlo was found guilty again.
Assuming he would be. Assuming something didn’t go wrong in the jury room.
Firmly, she assured herself nothing would. After the defense team’s key witness had mysteriously developed amnesia, the news pundits had been predicting that not only would the jurors find Ben DeCarlo guilty, they’d also take less than a full day to deliberate.
She thought about that for a minute, glancing at her date book to be certain she had no upcoming appointments she couldn’t reschedule.
Of course, real estate agents were supposed to be on call practically twenty-four hours a day. And there was no guarantee those jurors would set a record for brevity.
But she could pack enough clothes to get her through a few days—just in case. And she could leave word at her office that there was an emergency in her family. That she had to go to spend a few days with her parents and wasn’t sure exactly when she’d be back.
Looking at the photograph on her desk, she wished with all her heart that she could spend some time with them. And with her brother. Because of Ben DeCarlo, though, she was obliged to live a lie, cut off from her former life, calling herself Anne Gault rather than Monique LaRoquette.
But things were the way things were, and she’d learned not to sit around feeling sorry for herself. So she turned her thoughts back to the question at hand.
Her years of modeling had taught her how to drastically alter her appearance. And if no one could possibly recognize her, would a brief visit to New Orleans really be dangerous?
Making her decision, she picked up the phone.
Tuesday, February 4 11:24 a.m.
MONIQUE SAT WITH HER hands pressed tightly together as the jurors filed back into the courtroom. They’d taken scarcely two hours to deliberate Benjamin Wilson DeCarlo’s fate, and in another few moments she’d know for certain what it was.
If they’d voted to set him free, though, she didn’t know whether she could bear it.
Because of him, people were dead. His parents. The witnesses he’d had killed.
Because of him, she was living a lonely lie. He’d taken everything from her—her family, her career, even her husband And for all of that, she hated Ben DeCarlo from the depths of her soul.
“Ladies and gentlemen of the jury,” the judge said once they were seated, “have you reached a verdict?”
“We have, Your Honor,” the foreman told him, handing a folded sheet of paper to the court clerk.
The clerk delivered the verdict to the judge.
From the last row of the courtroom, Monique watched his face while he read it, searching for any trace of a reaction. There wasn’t a flicker.
As he began refolding the paper, she smoothed a few stray hairs on the Cleopatra-type wig she was wearing, and uneasily adjusted the eye glasses that added to her disguise. Then she focused on the jury once more.
The court officer had delivered the verdict back to the foreman, and the room was so quiet that even from where she was sitting she could hear the faint crackle as he unfolded the paper.
This was the moment she’d been waiting for, and she turned her gaze to the accused. To the man who’d gunned down his own parents in Augustine’s.
He was sitting with his cuffed hands on the table in front of him, looking intently at the jurors, which meant that from her aisle seat his profile was clearly visible. Fleetingly, she recalled how attractive she’d thought he was when he’d walked into the restaurant that day.
So much for first impressions. Now, watching him, she saw nothing but a cold, calculating murderer.
“Your Honor,” the foreman read, “we find the defendant guilty as charged.”
For all the apparent effect that verdict had on Ben DeCarlo, his handsome face might have been chiseled from stone.
But it was typical for a psychopath to show no emotion. And there was little doubt that’s what he was
. One of the prosecution’s expert witnesses had been an eminent psychiatrist, and he’d testified that only a psychopath could have killed his parents in cold blood the way Ben DeCarlo had.
She looked away from him and leaned back, feeling relieved that justice had been served a second time, that Ben DeCarlo would never be a free man. But she also felt strangely hollow. The sense of satisfaction she’d anticipated wasn’t there.
Perhaps that was because Ben DeCarlo was evil incarnate. Which meant he’d only gotten what he deserved.
She watched the two armed guards lead him from the courtroom, thinking that now the verdict was in, she wanted nothing more than to catch the next flight back to Hartford, Connecticut.
BEN DECARLO WALKED out of the courtroom between the guards, his adrenaline pumping like crazy. It was now or never. Prisoners didn’t escape from Angola, so if this plan failed…
If this plan failed, he’d rather be dead than back in prison. And he was sure he’d have no trouble getting either of these armed guards to grant that wish.
While one of them closed the courtroom door, Ben stared down the long hallway, wishing he could see around the corner at the end.
What if his guys weren’t waiting there? What if something had gone wrong or someone had doublecrossed him?
Nothing had gone wrong, he told himself as they started down the hall. The men they’d hired were pros who would do precisely what they’d been paid to do. They were the best money could buy.
As for his sister and his buddy, Dezi, he could only thank God they’d stuck by him through all this. And he’d trust them with his life. Hell, he was trusting them with it.
“Guess you’re lookin’ forward to seein’ all your convict friends again, huh, DeCarlo?” one of the guards said. “I hear Angola’s a real fun place to live. You musta missed it durin’ your trial.”
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