A little girl taken...
And a murderer on the loose
Nothing will stop army ranger Grey Nighthorse from finding his abducted daughter—except maybe whoever is trying to kill him. Hiring former FBI agent Rachel Martin is his best shot at tracking down the kidnappers and staying alive. But Rachel failed to save a child before. Can she risk everything again to rescue Grey’s little girl...and perhaps become part of the family she’s trying to reunite?
“Hold on.”
Rachel grasped Grey’s wrist and pulled. She was plenty strong, but could she drag a man who outweighed her by more than eighty pounds up and over the roof’s ledge?
Pain burned through her arms and shoulders. She ignored it. Ignored everything but the man whose life was in her hands.
Sweat slicked her palms, causing her to lose her grip momentarily. She firmed up her hold on his wrist and dug in her heels.
“You can’t do it,” he yelled. “If you don’t let go, we’ll both go over.”
“Forget it.” On her belly, she braced her feet to gain traction, her calf muscles cramping with the pressure as she took more and more of Grey’s weight. Progress was measured in fractions of an inch. A few more inches and Grey would be able to pull himself the rest of the way.
You’ve got this. The words pounded in her head as she gained another precious inch. “We’re almost there. Trust me.” She didn’t know if she’d said the words to convince him or herself.
Jane M. Choate dreamed of writing from the time she was a small child when she entertained friends with outlandish stories complete with happily-ever-after endings. Writing for Love Inspired Suspense is a dream come true. Jane is the proud mother of five children, grandmother to seven grandchildren and staff to one cat who believes she is of royal descent.
Books by Jane M. Choate
Love Inspired Suspense
Keeping Watch
The Littlest Witness
Shattered Secrets
High-Risk Investigation
Inherited Threat
Stolen Child
Visit the Author Profile page at Harlequin.com.
Stolen Child
Jane M. Choate
Or what man is there of you, whom if his son ask bread, will he give him a stone? Or if he ask a fish, will he give him a serpent? If ye then, being evil, know how to give good gifts unto your children, how much more shall your Father which is in heaven give good things to them that ask him?
—Matthew 7:9–11
To all parents who have lost a child.
There are many ways to lose a child, through death, through divorce, through kidnapping, as our hero has temporarily lost his daughter. Sometimes we lose a child emotionally and spiritually when that child chooses a different path. The pain of losing a child is unbearable and yet we go on, knowing that the Lord will reunite us with that precious child in the eternities.
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
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighten
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Dear Readers
Excerpt from Justice Undercover by Connie Queen
ONE
Air hissed a scant inch from his temple. The bullet didn’t find a home there, but it came close. Too close.
Grey Nighthorse kept his head down.
No sense in giving the shooter another opportunity. If he hadn’t dropped the keys to the truck and bent over to pick them up, he’d be dead. That sobering knowledge only stressed why he was in Atlanta, Georgia, rather than on deployment in Afghanistan—the Stand in ranger-speak.
The heat that had been his constant companion there was worse in Atlanta’s nonstop humidity. Thick in his nose, a silent thief of energy, it sent an unrelenting stream of sweat across his brow before dripping in agonizingly slow motion down his nose, over his lips and finally settling at the base of his throat.
He didn’t dare move to wipe it away. Didn’t dare breathe. Patience was a soldier’s best friend. And so he waited.
Crouched behind the truck he’d rented, he reached for the AR15 normally strapped to his back, only to remember he didn’t carry it Stateside. A 9mm that he carried in a neoprene Sticky-brand holster tucked at the small of his back was his only weapon. It was an adequate tool, but puny when compared to the AR with its metal worn blue and kick-in-the-gut power.
Shots continued, hair-raisingly close. More than once, his ranger unit had been pinned down by enemy insurgents armed with RPGs, but the breath-stealing knowledge that a shooter had him in his sights was the same, whether in a bombed-out school in Afghanistan or here in Ansley Park, one of the city’s oldest and wealthiest neighborhoods.
Grey didn’t fool himself that he was invincible. He knew better. Too many of his brothers in arms had died from taking unnecessary chances. Bravado had cost more lives than enemy fire.
He knew he couldn’t remain where he was forever. He had to make a move. At a lull between shots, he duckwalked around the truck, opened the passenger-side door and climbed in, sliding over into the driver’s seat. Staying low, he started the truck and headed toward the shooter, praying he wasn’t too late, knowing that he was since the shooting had stopped.
The roar of a high-powered engine and the smell of exhaust confirmed his suspicion that the shooter had already hightailed it out of there, the acrid stench of peeling rubber and skid marks on the street the only remaining signs. But who knew Grey would be here, outside his mother-in-law’s house? The kidnapper?
Grey slapped his fist into his palm, the resulting sound only an echo of what he’d like to do to whoever took his baby girl.
Terror crawled up his spine like a flesh-eating parasite, stealing his strength. With a superhuman effort, he willed it away. Lily needed his resolve, not his weakness.
He squared his shoulders. He was a ranger. Rangers didn’t give up. Ever. Grey admitted what he hadn’t been able to when he’d first received the telegram telling him that Lily had been kidnapped. He needed help. He couldn’t do this on his own. Asking for help didn’t sit well with a ranger. They prided themselves on being able to power through a problem, whatever the circumstances.
Got a problem? Call a ranger.
If he’d had it in him to laugh, he would have done so at the arrogance of his thoughts. He was as vulnerable as the next guy when it came to his child.
Pride was the last thing on his mind right now. He’d trade all his training, all the spit-and-polish glory in making ranger, for Lily’s safe return.
The crumpled paper in his hands contained three short sentences. Lily taken. No ransom yet. Must return.
Grey rejected the idea that he would never see Lily again. He would find her. Somehow. He couldn’t bear to think about the alternative.
A litany of prayer and pleading ran through his mind.
Dear Lord, please... The prayer went no further. The Lord knew his heart, knew of his love for his baby daughter. God had never deserted him. He wouldn’t now.
Grey had one thing going for him. An old rangers buddy, Mace Ransom, now worked for S&J Security/Protection. The firm had gained
a reputation among the spec-ops community as it frequently employed ex-operatives such as deltas and rangers.
He punched in Ransom’s phone number, but the call went to a voice-mail message explaining that Mace was on his honeymoon and wouldn’t return for two weeks. It included the number for S&J.
Rangers didn’t accept defeat, he reminded himself and punched in the number for S&J.
Shelley Rabb Judd, co-owner and founder of S&J, took the call herself, and he gave a terse explanation. “You were right to call us. Get here as fast as you can.”
He held on to the lifeline she promised with everything he had and felt the metal clamp around his heart ease fractionally as he steered toward her office.
* * *
Rachel Martin listened as Grey Nighthorse told of receiving the telegram that his daughter had been kidnapped. He’d flown from Afghanistan to Atlanta on military transport, arriving early this morning.
She recognized the distraught father in him, just as she recognized the military bearing. She didn’t have to be told that he was an army ranger. It was there in the eyes that missed nothing, in the resolute set of his jaw, in the broad stance that said he wouldn’t be moved when it came to doing what was right. Ramrod posture and close-cropped hair added to the image.
After introductions had been made, he said, “There’s been no ransom demand. Maggie, my wife, came from money, so I thought...” He spread his hands helplessly.
“Came?” Rachel said.
“Maggie died of heart failure shortly after Lily was born. There’s a trust fund in Lily’s name, so paying a ransom wouldn’t be a problem.”
Rachel filed that away. “Maybe the kidnappers want something besides money.”
“That’s part of what we have to find out,” Shelley said.
Grey buried his head in his hands, then straightened, shoulders squared, eyes hard. “I’m flying blind on this. I need help.”
Rachel had some idea of what the last three words cost him. They seemed ripped from his very soul.
“I have to find Lily. If I don’t...” Grief deepened in his eyes, turning them almost black.
Her heart went out to him. At the same time, she resisted the urge to scratch as anxiety-produced ants crawled up her legs, down her arms. Her mouth turned dry, while her pulse picked up at an alarming rate. A ball of dread settled in her stomach and didn’t appear to be going anywhere anytime soon.
What was happening to her?
It’s okay. You’re okay.
Thanks to weekly sessions with a therapist, she ruled out a heart attack or stroke. It was a panic attack. Nothing more. Nothing to get so antsy about. She’d have smiled at the bad pun if she weren’t in the middle of a full-blown attack in front of her boss and a potential client.
She’d had them before and undoubtedly would again. When she’d described the sensation to her therapist, he had told her to count backward from a hundred by fives.
Still listening to Shelley and Grey, Rachel did the prescribed exercise, gratified when the ants went to someone else’s picnic and her heart resumed an almost normal pace.
“Rachel was part of the FBI’s task force on child abductions before she joined S&J,” Shelley said.
Rachel resisted the impulse to scratch. The ants were back. With a vengeance.
Her heart, which had leveled out only a moment ago, now resumed its frantic beat, playing leapfrog in her chest. She struggled to hide the war taking place within her, just as she struggled to mask the fear that had lodged in her throat, threatening her ability to breathe.
Though the temperature outside hovered in the high eighties with humidity to match, she was unbearably cold. She rubbed her arms, but to no avail. Gooseflesh puckered her skin.
She sent Shelley a beseeching look. Shelley knew why Rachel had resigned from the FBI, why she couldn’t work this case. Not with a child involved. She couldn’t risk it. It would tear the heart, the very soul, from her if another child died on her watch.
The sympathy in Shelley’s eyes warmed Rachel’s heart, but her boss’s next words erased any trace of the balm of Gilead Rachel so sorely needed. “We’ll help in any way we can. Won’t we?”
Rachel avoided answering. Instead, she dipped her head, studied her hands. The nails were ragged, the skin rough. At one point she’d kept her hands groomed. Now they were as unkempt as the rest of her.
Lanky blond hair, no makeup, mismatched clothes. It hadn’t taken therapy to understand that she had let herself go because she didn’t want to attract male attention, didn’t want to be reminded of her fiancé’s desertion at the most painful period of her life.
Before Nighthorse had arrived, Shelley had cornered Rachel and asked for her help. Rachel had promised to hear him out, but that was all. She couldn’t give what she didn’t have. She didn’t have it in her to work an abduction case.
Any abduction was bad enough, but when a child was the victim, her emotions ran off the chart.
She murmured something and excused herself to go to the restroom, where she splashed cold water on her face and worked to regain a measure of control. She glanced in the mirror and scarcely recognized the thin face in the reflection. Dark circles had taken up residence under her eyes. As if that weren’t enough, she had bags there, as well, bags large enough that she could pack a week’s worth of clothes in them—the result of not sleeping more than an hour or two a night.
Maybe she’d scared Nighthorse away. Problem solved. Only she knew the problem wasn’t going anywhere.
Not now. Not ever.
She returned to Shelley’s office to find her boss and an unsmiling client waiting for her.
Nighthorse stood, planted his hands on his hips and sent a hard stare her way. “Look, I need someone who will fight to get Lily back. If you don’t want the job, say so and I’ll find someone else.”
“Let’s all take a breath,” Shelley suggested. She waited for Rachel to sit before saying to Grey, “You said that your mother-in-law has been keeping Lily while you were deployed. How did that come about?”
“After Maggie died, I was in a fix. That’s when Roberta suggested Lily stay with her. I planned to pay for a nanny, but Roberta said she’d take care of it. She offered to keep Lily until I finished my deployment.”
Despite herself, Rachel was intrigued. “You must have a good relationship with your mother-in-law.”
“Not really. But I couldn’t turn down the offer. I still had a year left of deployment. I don’t have any other family, and Maggie was an only child. I was surprised at Roberta’s generosity, but relieved.” He paced to the other side of the office.
“Why were you surprised?” Rachel asked. Details mattered, even details that didn’t seem important. “Seems like something a grandmother would do.”
“Roberta isn’t a milk-and-cookies, come-sit-on-my-lap type of grandmother, but I knew Lily would be safe with her.” He paused, his face twisted in a heart-wrenching pain so palpable that it reached out to her across the room. “Or I thought she would.”
Rachel heard the crack in his voice. What could she do? She’d nearly lost herself in the last case she’d worked for the FBI; as it was, she’d lost her faith, both in herself and in the Lord. She couldn’t afford to lose any more.
How could she risk taking on a mission involving another child?
The answer was simple. She couldn’t.
But the despair in Grey’s face and the pain she read behind his eyes pulled at her in ways she hadn’t anticipated. If she were still a believer, she would beg the Lord for His blessings upon Grey and his daughter.
If.
She snuck a look at Shelley, saw that she, too, was moved by the man’s story.
The suffering in Grey’s face caused her own memories to bubble within her. The unspeakable loss. And the opportunity to prevent another similar one.
“W
hy don’t you tell us how you found out about the kidnapping?” Shelley prompted.
Grey returned to his earlier position. “The nanny called Roberta and told her that Lily had been taken. She sent a telegram. I’m on indefinite leave.”
“I suppose you’ve been to see your mother-in-law.”
His nod was brief. “First thing. She couldn’t tell me much. Lily’s nanny took her to the park. A man wearing a mask snatched Lily.” He frowned. “One more thing. Outside Roberta’s house, I was fired on.”
“Way to bury the lede,” Rachel said. “Did you see anything, hear anything?”
“From the sound of it, it was a .22 Hornet.”
“That’s serious firepower,” she said.
“Tell me about it. I tried to give chase, but whoever it was got away. All I saw were skid marks like someone had peeled out of there in a hurry.”
“Not much to go on,” Rachel commented.
“No.” The word was clipped to the point of rudeness.
She didn’t blame him. He was in the middle of every parent’s worst nightmare.
He turned to her, gaze pleading. Gone was the hard-eyed man of a moment ago. “Shelley said that you’re the best there is at finding abducted children. I need your help. I’m not much on begging, but I’m begging now. Please help me find my daughter. If I don’t...” The sentence went unfinished, but Rachel completed it in her mind. If I don’t, I won’t survive.
Rachel longed to tear her gaze from him, from the dark pain in his eyes. But she couldn’t. “I’ll help in any way I can.” The words took her by surprise. What had she just said? But she couldn’t take them back.
The relief in his eyes lashed her conscience with stinging stripes. How could she have ever thought of turning him away? She set her shoulders. Whatever the cost to herself, she’d see this through. She had no other choice.
If she could have prayed, she’d have asked for Lily’s safe return. As it was, she could only promise that she would give her best.
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