by Juanita Kees
Under Cover of Dark
Juanita Kees
www.escapepublishing.com.au
Under Cover of Dark
Juanita Kees
New Australian romantic suspense follows Under the Hood, about a Western Australian drug gang, the teenagers they recruit, and the cop who wants to bring them down.
When Mark Johnson delves deeper into his investigation into the murder of Tiny Watts, and the involvement of a teenage gang with sleazy lawyer Gino Bennetti and his drug world ties, the last thing he expects is to be interviewing Gino’s widow, a woman in a world of trouble.
When her husband is shot and killed, it is both a relief and a disaster. Lily has her son to protect and secrets that run deeper than the scars she bears. Mark Johnson is the last person she wants uncovering those secrets, especially the truth about her son Luke’s involvement in Tiny Watts’s murder.
As the investigation continues and Lily’s wounds begin to heal, she finds the detective easy to trust and the friendship between them blossoms into more. But the secret Lily holds places everyone in very real danger. When it is finally revealed, Lily will lose everything: her son, the man she’s grown to love, her freedom and her life.
About the Author
Juanita achieved her dream of becoming a published author in 2012 with the release of her debut romantic suspense, Fly Away Peta. Under the Hood followed in 2013 as one of the first releases from Harlequin’s digital pioneer, Escape Publishing. Juanita escapes the real world to write stories starring spirited heroines who give the hero a run for his money before giving in.
When she’s not writing, Juanita is the cleaning fairy and mother to three boys — hubby included. Her not-so-miniature Daschund, Sam, is her critique partner and keeps her company while writing.
Juanita loves to hear from fans and would love for you to enjoy her writing journey with her at:
Author Site:
http://juanitakees.com/
Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Juanita-KeesAuthorPage/119574648138202
Twitter:
@juanitakees
Acknowledgements
I am blessed with an army of beta readers, critique partners and wonderful friends who support and guide me through each chapter I write. Without them, I’d be lost. So to Jennie Jones, Lily Malone, Kerrie Paterson, Suzanne Hamilton, Anna Jacobs, Claire Boston, Nora James, Nina Blake, and Teena Raffa-Mulligan, huge “thank you” hugs for everything.
To my friends Tracey H, Leah, Lina, Hazel, and Michelle H, you girls are the rock that keeps me steady and grounded. Liesl, Bev and Carol D, my life-long friends and “four around the three”, together we created a lifetime of happy memories and even though we’re so far apart in distance, we’ll always be close in our hearts.
Special thanks go to my friend James who was happy to spend hours on the phone with me, painstakingly answering all my questions about juveniles in detention and the legal process that takes place. Any errors in the legal context are mine and the situations in this story are purely a product of my imagination. James, you are a truly remarkable individual who believes in justice and who is dedicated to helping young offenders change and grow.
There’s no forgetting the members and volunteers at the Romance Writers of Australia, a wonderful group who are always willing to share knowledge and encouragement. May we continue to grow, together.
Kate at Escape Publishing, the cover designers and my lovely editor, Brooke — you guys rock romance!
Last but not least, thank you to my three heroes who cook and clean when I forget to and put up with the long hours I spend locked in my office with my characters. I love you guys!
This one is for Colleen Smith-Staines and Aunty Marita Smith to share, and when you’re done, please read it to God?
Contents
About the Author
Acknowledgements
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
Bestselling Titles by Escape Publishing…
Chapter 1
Lily Bennetti’s head swam. Red spots danced in her vision and an agonising throb beat at the top of her skull. She lifted a hand to touch the tender spot. Her fingers came away sticky with blood. Slowly, painfully, she lowered her hand to the cream, plush pile carpet. Her palm brushed across broken glass. The coffee table — she’d fallen when Gino had pushed her away, hit her head on it.
‘You dumb arse piece of shit!’ Gino’s voice pierced her thoughts, dark and threatening, somehow scarier than the yelling she vaguely remembered from earlier. Luke’s response was muffled. Through the haze of pain she focused on the figures standing in front of her — one big and bulky, the other a mere featherweight.
Gino stood, feet apart and menacing as he anchored Luke up against the far wall, his stance way meaner than the words he hissed through his teeth.
Luke gripped Gino’s wrists in an effort to force his meaty hands from his neck. The terror in her son’s body language sent fear barrelling through her. Bile rose in her throat. Dear God. Gino was going to kill Luke.
No. Lily stumbled to her feet. Blood rushed to her head, dizziness had her crashing to her knees. Desperation chased away the fear. She had to get to Luke. Her jaw ached where Gino had smacked her. She tasted the coppery tang of blood on her tongue where her teeth had sunk into the soft flesh of her lip. No more. She dragged her aching body up, using the sofa for support. As the little colour left in Luke’s face drained away, Lily drew on all the strength she had left. Saving her son was all that mattered.
‘Stop, Gino.’ Desperation rang in her voice as she raised it over her husband’s. Silence fell heavily on the lounge room. She staggered protectively towards Luke. Gino dropped his hands to his sides, fists clenched.
Lily gripped the torn sleeve of her son’s shirt. Angry red welts criss-crossed the pale teenage flesh underneath. Then she saw it. The gun in Luke’s hand pointed at his father’s heart. ‘Jesus, Luke. Don’t do it. It’s not worth it.’
‘No, Mum. I’m done. Done taking his crap.’ His voice was gritty. The purple marks at his throat evidence of the pressure his father had placed on his windpipe.
Lily placed a shaking hand over Luke’s equally unsteady one. ‘This isn’t the way.’
Gino snorted. ‘He doesn’t have the guts for it, Liliana. He’s weak. Takes after his mother. A no good, lazy sonofabitch. He doesn’t have the spine to pull the trigger.’
Gino lunged forward to grip his son’s wrist. It happened in slow motion, the way she’d seen it in movies. A shot rang out and surprise registered on Gino’s face before his body crumpled to the floor with a bullet in his chest. Dark red blood seeped into the cream carpet as his life drained away. Silence stretched as Lily and Luke stood, the sound of the shot reverberating in their ears. The gun slipped from Luke’s nerveless hands.
* * *
Detective Mark Johnson closed the notebook and turned it over in his hands, the words still clouding his mind.
GB came to work today, cornered me in the parking lot at M&M. I’m pissed off. I thought they’d leave me alone after the last bust. Someone’s going to get hurt. I think it could be me. How did I get into this? I want out but I know they won’t let me. I’m not scared to die. It’s the other boys in the gang I’m worried about. Luke, Marty and Connor. Luke is too close. He and
his mum are sporting shiners again. GB is getting crazier. I hate that he takes it out on his own family.
Cleverly concealed in the graffitied cover were clues that teenage gang leader, Tiny Watts, was murdered. All they had to do was prove it and find his killer. It should have been an open and shut case; a gang of troubled kids, a drug deal gone wrong. Instead, the more dirt he uncovered, the deeper the roots went.
Tiny had left a notebook of clues with keywords hidden in the bricks he’d drawn on the cover. Matching people to initials had created a jigsaw puzzle with too many missing pieces. At the same time, it connected the dots between three key players consistently. The initials SS, GB and NA appeared in almost every sketch, disguised by graffiti or imbedded in objects.
Having read a chunk of the notebook Tiny had left in his room at the shelter, Mark was convinced that GB was Gino Bennetti. The prominent gangland lawyer certainly didn’t have a squeaky-clean record. But how was he involved? Who was he protecting? The video evidence they’d gathered from the convention centre parking garage proved his car was there at the time Tiny disappeared. But there was no proof he’d snatched the boy.
‘Hey, Buddy, put your toys away.’ Mark’s partner, Harold Jones, stuck his head around the door. ‘We’ve got ourselves a murder in interview room one.’
Mark shoved the notebook into the evidence bag. ‘They’re bloody dropping like flies.’ Tired, he lowered his feet off the desk and straightened. The last few months had exhausted him. Trouble had struck way too close to home for his liking. His sister’s daughter was kidnapped and held for ransom by her stepfather, Paul Price. Paul had owed money to Gino Bennetti. The link between her kidnapping and Tiny’s gang had grown stronger with each piece of new evidence that came to light and he didn’t like the path it was taking.
‘Boy aged seventeen. Neighbours heard shouting, like a fight. Loads of thumping. They heard the woman crying, shouting at them to stop. A shot, a scream and…nothing. Neighbour called it in. She was too scared to go over there.’ Harold dropped the manila file on his desk. ‘It looks like the boy killed his father.’
Mark flicked through the scribbled case notes, his eyes coming to rest on the victim’s name. ‘Fuck!’
‘That’s what I thought you’d say.’
‘I guess that takes Gino Bennetti off our list of suspects to interview in the Watts murder. Tell me more.’
Harold shrugged. ‘The boy’s not talking. They’re both pretty messed up.’
‘They?’ Mark frowned at Harold as he closed the file and stood.
‘His mum’s in there with him. Boy’s name is Luke. He’s one of the Tag Raiders.’
Tiredness fled and Mark’s back stiffened. ‘The “Luke” Tiny mentioned in his notes is Gino Bennetti’s son?’
‘They don’t call you fuckin’ super sleuth for nothin’, do they?’ Harold mocked.
‘The lines are becoming very blurred, Harold.’ Mark waved the file at the door. ‘Let’s go talk to the kid.’
As he walked through the door of interview room one, his gaze fell on Gino Bennetti’s widow. Lily Bennetti looked like a bedraggled angel who’d been to Hell and back on a bumpy ride. Long, honey-blonde hair lay tangled around her shoulders. Even streaked with blood from the cut on her left cheek, it shone like a halo under the hot, industrial lighting. She turned to face him and his breath hitched in his throat. Watery blue eyes blazed red from under swollen lids, a dark bruise bloomed on her right cheek and her top lip swelled around a split in the middle.
Anger churned in his gut. If the man wasn’t already dead, he’d fucking kill him himself. No-one deserved to take a beating like this. He turned his gaze to the boy, watched him flinch as he pulled out a chair and it scraped against the concrete floor. Mark noticed the scars on his arms first, exposed by the ripped sleeves of his shirt, and made a mental note. Drugs, self-harm or abuse? Luke’s hands trembled on the table, bloodied and bruised, knuckles swollen and split. He’d given Gino a good bashing, but by the look of his left cheek and eye, he’d been dealt a few nasty blows too.
Mark sat in the chair and faced them. Lily Bennetti looked nothing at all like the photos he’d seen in Gino Bennetti’s file. Gone was the confident, smiling young woman on the arm of her good-looking Italian husband. In her place was a broken doll, her silky pale skin a patchwork of angry welts and bruises, her shoulders hunched as she hugged her arms tightly against her stomach. He ignored the tug at his heart, the urge to comfort her, to tell her it would be alright.
‘Mrs Bennetti, I’m Detective Mark Johnson,’ he began. ‘Do you have any objection to me asking your son a few questions?’ Lily shook her head but didn’t look up, so he tried again. ‘I’m sorry, but you have to answer the question for the record.’ He tried to keep his voice neutral, but gentleness crept in as her eyelids flickered.
The pain it caused her to speak was obvious. This time she raised her eyes to his.
‘No.’ She winced as she touched her lip below the split.
‘Thank you.’ He wanted to reach out to touch her hand reassuringly, but she’d clenched them tightly in her lap. He turned to the boy. ‘Luke, would you like to tell me what happened?’
Silence met his question and the boy continued to stare at his hands. Mark sighed. It was going to be like pulling teeth. Lily unclenched her hands and laid one over Luke’s with a squeeze. He pulled away with a jerk and sunk deeper into his seat.
‘It’s okay, tell him.’ She withdrew her hands and clenched them in her lap.
Luke’s jaw flexed as he fought his inner battle. Mark watched. Body language was a dead giveaway. What this boy would say came from deep beyond the physical injuries.
With a sigh, Luke sat up in his chair. He kept his eyes on the table but he unclenched his hands as he began to speak. ‘Dad and I got into a fight. He called me a dumb arse piece of shit.’
‘Why were you arguing?’
‘I told him I was done. I didn’t want to work for him anymore. He got mad.’
‘Done with what?’
‘Running his deliveries.’
Mark made a note. Gino Bennetti was a criminal lawyer. What deliveries could his son possibly do for him? A question for later, he thought as it raised a red flag in his gut. ‘What happened then?’
‘He grabbed me by the throat and pushed me up against the wall. Mum tried to stop him.’
Mark’s gaze flicked to Lily’s hands as she twisted them nervously. His eyes on her face, he asked Luke, ‘What did your dad do then?’
Luke looked at his mother for a long moment, his eyes glittering with tears he struggled to hold back. ‘He punched her in the face and she fell backwards onto the coffee table. He knocked her unconscious! He could have killed her. I’m not sorry the bastard’s dead.’
‘Luke.’ Lily’s voice broke over his name.
‘It’s true, Mum!’ He raised his voice and his mother flinched. ‘He treated us like shit! Made us do stuff that —’
‘What did he make you do?’ Mark encouraged when Luke’s words ended abruptly. If the boy clammed up now, it could be a while before they drew the truth out of him. Experience had taught him to strike while the adrenalin was high. ‘Luke, we’re here to help you. What work did you do for him?’
Luke paused and looked at his mother for a long moment. Silence spread in the interview room like a dark and gloomy cloud. At Lily’s nod, he continued, ‘I delivered parcels for him. I didn’t want to do it anymore, not after Tiny Watts…died.’
Mark straightened in his seat and narrowed his eyes at the hesitation in the boy’s voice. ‘So you and Tiny Watts were friends?’
‘We were in the same gang. The Tag Raiders.’
‘What was in the parcels you delivered for your father?’
As Luke took a breath to continue, the door to the interview room flew open and banged against the wall. ‘Shut up, you idiot. Detective Johnson, my client will not be answering any further questions.’
Mark was on his feet immediately. Th
e man reeked of slimy, no-good lawyering. His expensive suit and shoes, gold watch, dark looks and meaty fists screamed underworld as he thumped his Armani briefcase on the table next to Luke. Luke and Lily stood and backed away. Fear flashed across their faces. Lily gripped Luke’s upper arm, her knuckles white.
‘No!’ She squared her shoulders, her spine ramrod straight, fear in her eyes, determination in her voice. ‘No.’
‘Yes!’ He turned to Mark. ‘I’m Gino’s business partner from Albero and Bennetti lawyers. Nic Albero. I’d say it was a pleasure but I’d be lying. Is my client under arrest?’
‘He’s not your client.’ Lily’s quiet voice shook.
‘Don’t be a fool, Liliana!’ The big man took a step towards them. ‘The boy is not in a position to argue. Neither are you.’ He flashed them a warning look that fell just short of mean.
Harold stepped forward from where he’d stood, quietly observing the interruption. ‘Since there would appear to be a conflict of interest here, the court will assign a lawyer for Luke if you prefer, Mrs Bennetti.’
‘Conflict of interest?’ Albero’s outrage echoed off the concrete walls. He moved surprisingly fast for such a bulky man as he spun towards Mark and Harold.
Harold stepped between Albero and Lily, pushing him away a couple of steps. ‘As the victim’s business partner, I doubt the boy would get a fair defence. This is a murder case, Mr Albero, and you have too much to gain if the boy is found guilty.’
‘That’s bullshit and you know it,’ Albero sneered.
‘Come to think of it, how did you know we had him in custody?’ Mark asked.
Albero hesitated, his eyes shifting to the wall. ‘It’s on the news.’
Mark stepped forward, arms across the expanse of his chest. ‘There’s an embargo on the press releasing any details on the shooting because the suspect is under age. Try again.’
He’d spent enough years on the force to recognise Albero’s type, even if the lawyer’s reputation didn’t speak for itself. Bugging phones, tracing calls and intercepting police data were all part and parcel of his defence tactics.