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Long before revolution will tear Vistaria apart,
Nicolas Escobedo discovers the first hint
of the Insurrectos’ existence.
Arctic Ambush is a prequel origins novelette setting up the events in the Vistaria Has Fallen series:
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Table of Contents
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About Prisoner of War
Praise for Tracy Cooper-Posey’s Romantic Suspense
Title Page
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
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
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About Prisoner of War
When love means more to you than your own life…
Everyone believes Duardo died on Vistaria, when the Insurrectos rampaged through the country. Minnie’s heart tells her otherwise. She risks everything to steal onto the war-torn island with the help of an unexpected ally.
Minnie is arrested and imprisoned as an enemy spy. The Insurrectos’ infamous intelligence officer, Zalaya, will stop at nothing to extract everything Minnie knows about the Loyalists.
Can Minnie escape? Even if she does, how will she find Duardo? The biggest question of them all--could Duardo have survived, after all?
Get your copy now of the second book in the Vistaria Has Fallen romantic suspense series reviewers are calling “original”, “compelling” and “a rollercoaster ride.”
1.0: Vistaria Has Fallen
2.0: Prisoner of War
3.0: Hostage Crisis
4.0: Freedom Fighters
5.0: Casualties of War
6.0: V-Day
[Reader Note: This series was previously published as erotic romance titles in the Vistaria Affair series. This new edition has been re-written for a general audience and re-titled.]
Praise for Tracy Cooper-Posey’s
Romantic Suspense
Suspense fans will find it difficult to put down.
The best…I’ve read in quite a while. I literally could not put it down.
Tracy Cooper-Posey creates a masterful suspense that will haunt you and linger in your thoughts. This is an author on the rise!
THIS WAS FABULOUS…yes, in shouty caps. I couldn’t read it fast enough. What a RIDE!
When you run the gamut of emotions while reading a book (including tears at one point), you know it’s good.
Fantastically written romantic suspense that will draw you in completely. Complex, hard-hitting, with gutsy characters so real you’ll want to meet them in person.
High adrenaline action-packed read that doesn’t quit.
I love when an author can keep you turning the pages furiously and trying to read ahead.
Everything from love, passion, and friendship to terror, fear and tragedy.
It has everything -- action, suspense, surprises, romance! I could really see the scenes unfolding on a screen.
Chapter One
“That’s it? You won’t do anything?” Minnie demanded.
Nick pushed a hand through his hair. “You have to understand, Minnie. We have nearly no army and no weapons. Vistaria has been held by the Insurrectos for three months. They’ve dug themselves into strongholds now. Even to go looking for Duardo would involve a massive operation to infiltrate Vistaria. I can’t authorize something like that. It’s not that I won’t. I cannot justify the risk and the expense, not for a single man. I’m sorrier about it than you can possibly imagine.” He smiled ruefully, “I truly wish I could give you a different answer.”
It was the understanding in his smile that did it. Nick’s smile and the model-perfect Miss Carmen, who wore designer jeans with a rip that revealed the bottom of her perfectly formed right ass cheek. She stood running her hands over the pecs and biceps of the college jock she’d dragged into the house. Minnie knew she did it to piss off Nick, yet it irritated her, too.
That, and the fact that Carmen had casually ripped out the sleeves of the Diane von Furstenberg shirt, which would have cost Minnie a month’s salary, and loosely tied it around her waist, unfastened, so that every breath and movement she made threatened to spill out her breasts.
It occurred to Minnie that it would be easy to hate Carmen Escobedo y Caballero. Yeah, she lost her father when the Insurrectos bulldozed their way across Vistaria overnight, only the whole time she undulated against the jock, Carmen wore a smug little smile as she watched Nicolás Escobedo tell Minnie to go to hell.
After weeks of nothing but a dull ache where her heart used to be, Minnie felt something.
Pure rage.
“You all think he’s dead, don’t you?” She curled her lip into a sneer. “None of you believe me.”
Calli rose from the lounger on the far side of the balcony. She and Nick and Minnie’s father, Josh, had been stealing a few moments of peace away from the chaotic, busy rooms of the big house perched on the cliffs on the north side of Acapulco. They’d been watching the sunset when Minnie found them.
Now Calli held her hands out, pleading, her face white. “Minnie, please, it’s not like that. We all miss Duardo.”
“Bullshit! How could you say you miss him and do nothing about getting him back?” The scream seemed to tear at her vocal cords. Tears sprang in her eyes. Tears of pain. Screw self-pity. She was done with pity. Enough was enough. These people were the key to getting Duardo back and she wasn’t moving until they did.
Nick touched Calli’s forearm, warning her. She lowered her hands and looked at Minnie, the same understanding patience on her face that Nick wore.
“Don’t look at me like that!” Minnie shouted. Her throat was raw. The shout made it hurt all over again. The tears came harder. Then she realized they weren’t tears of pain after all.
“Fuck!” She hated crying in front of people. Especially Carmen the Wonderful. She couldn’t think of anything else to say. They—all of them—would be horribly patient and understanding no matter what she said and in the end nothing would be done.
She whirled and hurried as fast as she could through the rambling, overcrowded house.
The big house on the road to Tecpan de Galeana was nearly a hundred years old and had always belonged to the Escobedoes. Three hundred acres of wild, private land surrounded the house. They included a private beach that featured a long jetty on a perfectly semi-circular bay. The empty acres guarded the house from adventurous tourists who actually made the trek to Tecpan and its beautiful silver factories.
For the last thirty years, the house had been provided as a stately residence to Vistaria’s Consul, who served Vistaria’s interests in Acapulco and the Guerrero State.
Since the Insurrectos had ripped thr
ough Vistaria, though, the three hundred acres had become Vistaria’s terra cognita. To this house came every refugee who found a way across the one hundred miles of open water between Vistaria and Mexico. They sought shelter and food.
The weaker refugees were kept in the house itself. There were others who advised Nick and his generals. Then there were dozens of people who voluntarily helped keep the house running smoothly and provided dozens of hungry mouths with hot food each day.
Privacy in such tight quarters was a luxury. Minnie had discovered a closet in the attic that was too small for sleeping quarters. She’d tipped an old galvanized steel bucket upside down and used it as a perch for those moments when she absolutely had to get away from people or go crazy.
She dodged and wove through the public rooms and up the rambling staircase, then the creaking attic stair. All the way she fought to hold the tears in, feeling them ripping at her throat and struggling to explode from her.
She reached the closet, shut the door and buried her head in her hands.
Shivers racked her, yet no more tears came. The effort to reach privacy had pushed them away. Instead she wrapped her arms around her knees and trembled, though it was not cold beneath the creaking, dusty rafters.
“Minnie?”
It was Calli’s voice. She sounded concerned. A small tap sounded on the warped door. “Are you in there?”
Minnie took a deep breath and pushed the door open a few inches. “Yeah, I’m here.”
Calli’s golden hair, even in the dim light, glowed. She glowed. Well, she was in love. Of course, she would glow. Yet her eyes were wide and full of the same endless patience.
“Just don’t give me any bullshit about how you know how I feel,” Minnie said.
“I’m trying to be a friend, to watch out for you.” Calli spread her hands. “Your mom isn’t here and under the circumstances...”
Minnie stared at her and waited her out.
Calli let her hands drop again. “What is it I’m not getting?”
“I’ll put up with all their political bullshit,” Minnie told her. “I won’t take it from you.”
Calli took a deep breath and let it out as a tired sigh. “Ah, dammit.” She slid down the outside of the closet wall until her knees were up against her chest, as Minnie’s were. Calli’s knees were higher from the floor than Minnie’s, despite the bucket.
Calli pressed her lips together, studying Minnie. “I have no idea what you’re going through,” she said frankly. “I’ve never lost anyone close. Although I can imagine, I think.”
“Pretend you’ve lost Nick,” Minnie shot back.
Calli flinched. “I don’t have to pretend. I live with the possibility every day.”
Minnie felt a touch of surprise. “He’s still going out on the boats to pick up refugees? Shouldn’t he be here, running things?”
Calli threaded her fingers together. “He knows his own boat better than anyone else and he knows the waters around Vistaria.” Her tone was calm. Monotone.
“You’ve said that way too often, lately.”
Calli’s gaze dropped. “Nick knows what he’s doing.”
Minnie strove for a gentle tone. “I sure hope so, honey.”
“You changed the subject on me. Don’t think I didn’t notice.”
“Because you don’t get it and I don’t want to hurt your feelings.”
Calli nodded. “All right, then. Explain it to me.”
“Okay. Nick’s dead. Think about that.”
Calli bit her lip. “Okay.”
“Now...you find out he’s alive. Near death but still alive.”
“Minnie, we’ve—”
“You want to understand, then just go with me,” Minnie snapped. “He’s alive, but it’s a close thing.”
She swallowed. “Okay.” Her voice was soft.
“You can’t get to him. You can’t reach him or communicate with him and what’s more, you’re not entirely sure where he is. Just that he’s alive and out of your reach.”
Calli nodded.
Minnie leaned forward. “You come to me and ask me for help and I don’t believe you.”
Calli held up her hand. “That’s the issue right there. Nick isn’t being deliberately cruel.”
“Bullshit. He has the resources. He could slip a small team over there to sniff around. He’s already done it twice himself.”
Calli’s eyes opened wide. “What?”
Minnie mentally winced. Oh shit. Talk about foot-in-mouth disease.
Calli wiped at her lips delicately, almost as though she was playing for time. “Nick has been on...missions? Into Vistaria? Into enemy territory?”
Minnie licked her lips. “I’m sorry, honey. I don’t think they wanted to worry you with it.”
“How long?” Calli murmured, her gaze turning inward and far, far away.
“How long what?”
“How long ago? When did he go?”
“I’m not sure. I just happened to overhear it. I think a long time ago. Right at the beginning, when we first made it here. Not lately. I don’t think anyone has risked going lately. The Insurrectos have things locked down too tight now.”
Calli’s gaze returned from wherever her mind had been. She pushed her hands through her hair slowly, as if she was stretching. Her hands trembled. “I think I understand now some of your frustration. The pat on your head—for your own good.”
The twist to her tone Minnie interpreted easily. “Don’t go ripping Nick to shreds, Calli. He needs you. Besides, I’ve done enough ripping for the day.”
Calli took a calming breath and rested the back of her head against the wall. Then she opened her eyes. “Mama Roseta was making coffee when I pushed through the kitchen. Come and have a cup.”
“Spiced?”
“American.”
“Thank god for that.”
* * * * *
Mama Roseta was a three-hundred-pound, five-foot-nothing rolling ball of soothing gentleness. Without discussion, she had taken over the kitchen and despite near silence, kept a dozen volunteers organized and productive.
With her usual uncanny instinct, she had two cups of normal coffee already poured when Minnie and Calli walked into the kitchen, stepping over and around children on the floor and workers at the long tables and benches. Mama Roseta pushed the cups toward them as they approached her, gave one of her smiles that made her small eyes twinkle, before moving off down the kitchen like a square rigger at full sail.
There was no room at the tables for sitting, so they took their coffees back to the narrow, small balcony overlooking the Pacific, which had been declared off limits to everyone except Nick’s immediate family and friends. Minnie’s escape had scattered everyone and they had the balcony to themselves. Night was falling. Nothing was left of the sun but a sliver of orange-red brilliance dropping into the sea.
Calli stirred her coffee carefully. “Have you considered the possibility that Duardo really is dead, Minnie? Have you thought it through?”
“Of course I have.” Irritation touched her. Minnie pushed it away. “God, I’m not stupid. Do you think this is me refusing to face the truth or something?”
Calli blushed and returned to stirring her coffee. “Well, not just a refusal to face the truth, but...” She looked Minnie square in the eyes. “There’s guilt there too.”
Something inside Minnie jumped.
“I’m sorry,” Calli said softly. “I know how your mind works.”
“You think I’m on a crusade to find Duardo so I won’t have to feel guilty?”
“Something like that.”
“Wrong.”
Calli nodded. “Okay.”
Only, the fury was there again. Huge. Towering. Minnie gripped the edge of the table, felt the solidness of the ancient wood against the trembling in her hand. The need to hit something! It was all she could think of.
She gripped until the pulsing need ebbed. Then she let go. “Here’s the thing,” she said and was relieved
when her voice came out evenly. She didn’t want to hurt Calli. Not Calli, for her cousin had gone through hell for her, had saved her life...and Duardo’s. Calli had defied an entire country in order to haul Minnie’s ass out of the ashes. She had twisted the arm of the second most powerful man in that country in order to do it. Minnie would scream at Nick but never at Calli.
“Duardo could be dead,” Minnie agreed. “I’ve thought of it.” Her hand cramped and she massaged it back to life. “I thought of it and I discounted it...because it’s just not something I think I have the strength to stand knowing. I will not accept that he’s dead.”
Calli pursed her lips together, holding in her comment. She was good at that and getting better from all the time she spent these days mixing with Nick’s generals and leaders. Minnie had never properly learned how to hold her tongue. She plowed on. “The other side of this lovely little coin life tossed me is, Duardo isn’t dead and I’m sitting here beating my chest and tearing out my hair. Sitting on my ass doing nothing.”
“This entire dilemma is based on a momentary impression that you only recall in hindsight,” Calli said softly.
“He was warm,” Minnie shot back. “He was warm when I let him go, when they lifted him down from the helicopter. Not just warm, but hot against my skin.”
“You didn’t notice it at the time.”
“We were all a bit busy saving our own necks, remember?” Minnie pointed out sweetly.
Calli nodded, her eyes taking on a faraway look. “I guess that’s something else I’ll never know either—what it was like for you on the ground. I’m still amazed that Duardo found you and got you to the campground in such a short time. What did he do, carry you?”
“Almost.” Minnie couldn’t help smiling as she remembered the moment that Duardo had appeared, like a superhero in a comic book, out of nowhere, unlooked for but arriving just when he was needed most.
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