Secrets She Knew: A Secrets and Lies Suspense Novel

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by D. L. Wood


  She lowered the window, allowing the robust scent of cut grass and the hot, sticky wind preceding the storm to flow through the cabin. It whipped her hair across her face and she snatched at it, tucking the loose ends securely behind her ears. The air-conditioner would have been more comfortable, but she wanted it like this. She was leaving Skye—at least the Skye that had always had a chokehold on her—and she wanted to feel it blow by as she left it behind. The storm might be chasing her out of town, but this time, unlike every other exit from this place, it would be the only thing chasing her. The ghosts had been laid to rest. The questions answered. The secrets unearthed.

  Justice done.

  For the first time in her life, Dani was leaving Skye unburdened by the belief that she owed it or Jennifer Cartwright or Dr. Beecher anything. She finally had shed the chains she didn’t even know were binding her. And now…now she was a free woman.

  Dani felt a smile blossom on her face. She was starting over. It was exhilarating and terrifying all at the same time—like a diver, standing on the high board, toes on the edge, ready to leap. And there was a lot to sort out. But there were a couple of things she knew for certain.

  The first was that she would continue on as a detective, no question about it—that was in her blood. But as Sasha had pointed out, though that might be what she did, it couldn’t be who she was. Defining herself by that job would only lead to heartache and burnout. There would be no peace found in defining herself by what she did or accomplished, any more than she had found peace rooting her identity in a twisted sense of responsibility and guilt, or her relationship with a person. For years Dani had allowed herself to be defined by all of those—a responsibility to bring Jennifer’s murderer to justice, her guilt over setting the wheels in motion that resulted in Dr. Beecher’s tragic conviction, and her failed marriage to Finn. But no more. That kind of identity was the very opposite of freedom.

  Which led to the second thing. Danielle Lake needed to figure out who she really was—and what should define her. The next time the world disappointed, betrayed, fell apart around her—which it inevitably would at some point, because, well, it always does—what of her would be left? At the end of all things, what would define her in such a way that she could stand, survive intact—no matter what, come what may?

  To figure that out, she needed to go back to the beginning—examine the person she was before Jennifer Cartwright, and the truths her parents had trusted and see how they might resonate with her now. Sasha seemed to believe these things held the key to unlocking the answers she was seeking, and though the woman was terrible at match-making, she understood Dani better than anyone, even Peter. And if Sasha found that much contentment, that much fulfillment in those same truths—

  Then they’re worth considering.

  The new Danielle Lake could remember the events of her past, but it was time to stop living in and for them. She refused to allow them to steal one more moment of her present or future. She had too much to look forward to—a new career as a detective, hopeful possibilities with Bailey King, and becoming the person she was truly meant to be, instead of the person she had defaulted into.

  On her right, a green-and-white sign atop a white wooden post proclaimed, “You are now leaving Skye. Thanks for visiting!” She glanced at it quickly, smiling warmly as it rolled by, then faced forward again, gripping the steering wheel and settling back into her seat.

  “Goodbye, Jennifer. Goodbye, Dr. Beecher. You can rest now,” she whispered beneath her breath, peace settling over her like a warm blanket. “We all can.”

  TO THE READERS

  I hope you enjoyed SECRETS SHE KNEW. If you did, please leave a review on Amazon, Goodreads, Bookbub, and whatever other social media platforms you enjoy. You can also like, follow and share my pages on Facebook and Twitter found at @dlwoodonline. Reviews and word of mouth are what keep a novelist’s work alive, and I would be extremely grateful for yours.

  Would you like a free, award-winning short story?

  Visit my website at www.dlwoodonline.com to subscribe to my newsletter, which will keep you updated (usually once a month) on my work, new releases, promotions, advance review team opportunities and free goodies. The short story is my free gift to you for subscribing. While you’re there check out my other CleanCaptivingFiction™, including The Unintended Series and The Criminal Collection.

  WANT MORE SECRETS AND LIES NOVELS?

  Quinn Bello isn’t lying or losing her mind. But when the disbarred attorney discovers a dead body that inexplicably vanishes, no one in her seaside town believes her—no one, that is, except newcomer Ian Wolfe, who for his own mysterious reasons, refuses to hold Quinn’s past against her. As they work together to uncover the truth and redeem Quinn’s reputation, the danger escalates, along with doubts about Quinn’s story, sanity, and ultimately, her innocence. Will Ian and Quinn expose the lies at the heart of the deception before Quinn becomes the next victim?

  Watch for LIAR LIKE HER: A Secrets and Lies Suspense Novel releasing in October 2020, preorders available in April 2020. For information, visit my website at dlwoodonline.com and stay tuned through my newsletter and by following me on Amazon, Bookbub, Goodreads, Facebook and Twitter.

  BONUS EXCERPT FROM

  UNINTENDED TARGET

  You don’t have to wait until October 2020 to read another D.L. Wood novel. On the following pages is an excerpt from UNINTENDED TARGET, the first novel in The Unintended Series, a series with over 2 million pages read on Kindle Unlimited.

  These stories follow Chloe McConnaughey, an unsuspecting travel photojournalist, thrust into harrowing and mysterious circumstances ripe with murder, mayhem, and more. And by more, I mean a handsome man or two that seem too good to be true—and just might be. Turn the page to get started.

  CHAPTER ONE

  “He’s done it again,” groaned Chloe McConnaughey, her cell held to her ear by her shoulder as she pulled one final pair of shorts out of her dresser. “Tate knew that I had to leave by 3:30 at the latest. I sent him a text. I know he got it,” she said, crossing her bedroom to the duffel bag sitting on her four-poster bed and tossing in the shorts.

  Her best friend’s voice rang sympathetically out of the phone. “There’s another flight out tomorrow,” offered Izzie Morales hesitantly.

  Chloe zipped up the bag. “I know,” she said sadly. “But, that isn’t the point. As usual, it’s all about Tate. It doesn’t matter to him that I’m supposed to be landing on St. Gideon in six hours. What does an assignment in the Caribbean matter when your estranged brother decides it’s time to finally get together?”

  “Estranged is a bit of a stretch, don’t you think?” Izzie asked.

  “It’s been three months. No texts. No calls. Nothing,” Chloe replied, turning to sit on the bed.

  “You know Tate. He gets like this. He doesn’t mean anything by it. He just got . . . distracted,” Izzie offered.

  “For three months?”

  Izzie changed gears. “Well, it’s only 3:00—maybe he’ll show.”

  “And we’ll have, what, like thirty minutes before I have to go?” Chloe grunted in frustration. “What’s the point?”

  “Come on,” Izzie said, “The point is, maybe this gets repaired.”

  Chloe sighed. “I know. I know,” she said resignedly. “That’s why I’m waiting it out.” She paused. “He said he had news he didn’t want to share over the phone. Seriously, what kind of news can’t you share over the phone?”

  “Maybe it’s so good that he just has to tell you in person,” Izzie suggested hopefully.

  “Or maybe it’s—‘I’ve been fired again, and I need a place to crash.’”

  “Think positively,” Izzie encouraged, and Chloe heard a faint tap-tapping in the receiver. She pictured her friend on the other side of Atlanta, drumming a perfectly manicured, red-tipped finger on a nearby surface, her long, pitch-colored hair hanging in straight, silky swaths on either side of her face.

  “He’ll
probably pull up any minute, dying to see you,” Izzie urged. “And if he’s late, you can reschedule your flight for tomorrow. Perk of having your boss as your best friend. I’ll authorize the magazine to pay for the ticket change. Unavoidable family emergency, right?”

  Chloe sighed again, picked up the duffel bag and started down the hall of her two-bedroom rental. “I just wish it wasn’t this hard.” The distance between them hadn’t been her choice and she hated it. “Ten to one he calls to say he’s had a change of plans, too busy with work, can’t make it.”

  “He won’t,” replied Izzie.

  With a thud, Chloe dropped the bag onto the kitchen floor by the door to the garage, trading it for half a glass of merlot perched on the counter. She took a small sip. “Don’t underestimate him. His over-achievement extends to every part of his life, including his ability to disappoint.”

  “Ouch.” Izzie paused. “You know, Chlo, it’s just the job.”

  “I have a job. And somehow I manage to answer my calls.”

  “But your schedule’s a little more your own, right? Pressure-wise I think he’s got a little bit more to worry about.”

  Chloe rolled her eyes. “Nice try. But he manages tech security at an investment firm, not the White House. It’s the same thing every time. He’s totally consumed.”

  “Well, speaking as your editor, being a little consumed by your job is not always a bad thing.”

  “Ha-ha.”

  “What’s important is that he’s trying to reconnect now.”

  Chloe brushed at a dust bunny clinging to her white tee shirt, flicking it to the floor. “What if he really has lost this job? It took him two years after the lawsuit to find this one.”

  “Look, maybe it’s a promotion. Maybe he got a bonus, and he’s finally setting you up. Hey, maybe he’s already bought you that mansion in Ansley Park . . .”

  “I don’t need him to set me up—I’m not eight years old anymore. I’m fine now. I wish he’d just drop the ‘big-brother-takes-care-of-wounded-little-sister’ thing. He’s the wounded one.”

  “You know, if you don’t lighten up a bit, it may be another three months before he comes back to see you.”

  “One more day and he wouldn’t have caught me at all.”

  Izzie groaned jealously. “It’s not fair that you get to go and I have to stay. It’s supposed to be thirty-nine and rainy in Atlanta for, like, the next month.”

  “So come along.”

  “If only. You know I can’t. Zach’s got his school play next weekend. And Dan would kill me if I left him with Anna for more than a couple days right now.” A squeal sounded on Izzie’s end. “Uggggh. I think Anna just bit Zach again. I’ve gotta go. Don’t forget to call me tomorrow and let me know how it went with big brother.”

  “Bigger by just three minutes,” she quickly pointed out. “And I’ll try to text you between massages in the beach-side cabana.”

  Izzie groaned again, drowning out another squeal in the background. “You’re sick.”

  “It’s a gift,” Chloe retorted impishly before hanging up.

  Chloe stared down at the duffel and, next to it, the special backpack holding her photography equipment. She double-checked the Terra Traveler I.D. tags on both and found all her information still legible and secure. “Now what?” she muttered.

  Her stomach rumbled, reminding her that, with all the packing and preparation for leaving the house for two weeks, she had forgotten to eat. Rummaging through the fridge, she found a two-day old container of Chinese take-out. Tate absolutely hated Chinese food. She loved it. Her mouth curved at the edges as she shut the refrigerator door. And that’s the least of our differences.

  Leaning against the counter, she cracked open the container and used her chopsticks to pluck julienne carrots out of her sweet and sour chicken. Too bad Jonah’s not here, she thought, dropping the orange slivers distastefully into the sink. Crazy dog eats anything. Would’ve scarfed them down in half a second. But the golden retriever that was her only roommate was bunking at the kennel now. She missed him already. She felt bad about leaving him for two whole weeks. Usually her trips as a travel journalist for Terra Traveler were much shorter, but she’d tacked on some vacation time to this one in order to do some work on her personal book project. She wished she had someone she could leave him with, but Izzie was her only close friend, and she had her hands full with her kids.

  Jonah would definitely be easier than those two, she thought with a smile. He definitely had been the easiest and most dependable roommate she’d ever had—and the only male that had never let her down. A loyal friend through a bad patch of three lousy boyfriends. The last of them consumed twelve months of her life before taking her “ring-shopping,” only to announce the next day that he was leaving her for his ex. It had taken six months, dozens of amateur therapy sessions with Izzie and exceeding the limit on her VISA more than once to get over that one. After that she’d sworn off men for the foreseeable future, except for Jonah of course, which, actually, he seemed quite pleased about.

  She shoveled in the last few bites of fried rice, then tossed the box into the trash. Come to think of it, she considered as she headed for the living room, Tate’ll be the first man to step inside this house in almost a year. She wasn’t sure whether that was empowering or pathetic.

  “Not going there,” she told herself, forcing her train of thought instead to the sunny beaches of St. Gideon. The all-expenses paid jaunts were the only real perks of her job as a staff journalist with Terra Traveler, an online travel magazine based out of Atlanta. They were also the only reason she’d stayed on for the last four years despite her abysmal pay. Photography, her real passion, had never even paid the grocery bill, much less the rent. Often times the trips offered some truly unique spots to shoot in. Odd little places like the “World’s Largest Tree House,” tucked away in the Smoky Mountains, or the home of the largest outdoor collection of ice sculptures in a tiny town in Iceland. And sometimes she caught a real gem, like this trip to the Caribbean. Sun, sand, and separation from everything stressful. For two whole weeks.

  The thought of being stress-free reminded her that at this particular moment, she wasn’t. Frustration flared as she thought of Tate’s text just an hour before:

  Flying in tonite. Ur place @ 2. Big news. See u then.

  Typical Tate. No advance warning. No, “I’m sorry I haven’t returned a single call in three months” or “Surprise, I haven’t fallen off the face of the earth. Wanna get together?” Just a demand.

  A familiar knot of resentment tightened in her chest as she took her wine into the living room, turned up Adele on the stereo and plopped onto a slipcovered couch facing the fire. Several dog-eared books were stacked near the armrest, and she pushed them aside to make room as she sank into the loosely stuffed cushions. She drew her favorite quilt around her, a mismatched pink and beige patchwork that melded perfectly with the hodgepodge of antique and shabby chic furnishings that filled the room.

  What do you say to a brother who by all appearances has intentionally ignored you for months? It’s one thing for two friends to become engrossed in their own lives and lose track of each other for a while. It’s something else altogether when your twin brother doesn’t return your calls. He hadn’t been ill, although that had been her first thought. After the first few weeks she got a text from him saying, sorry, so busy, talk to u ltr. So she had called his office just to make sure he was still going in. He was. He didn’t take her call that day either.

  She tried to remember how many times she’d heard “big news” from Tate before, but quickly realized she’d lost count years ago. A pang of pity slipped in beside the frustration, wearing away at its edges.

  She set her goblet down on the end table beside a framed picture of Tate. In many respects it might as well have been a mirror. They shared the same large amber eyes and tawny hair, though she let her loose curls grow to just below her narrow shoulders. Their oval faces and fair skin could’ve bee
n photocopied they were so similar. But he was taller and stockier, significantly out-sizing her petite, five foot four frame. She ran a finger along the faint, half-inch scar just below her chin that also differentiated them. He’d given her that in a particularly fierce game of keep-away when they were six. Later, disappointed that she had an identifying mark he didn’t, he had unsuccessfully tried duplicating the scar by giving himself a nasty paper cut. In her teenage years she’d detested the thin, raised line, but now she rubbed it fondly, feeling that in some small, strange way it linked her to him.

  He had broken her heart more than a little, the way he’d shut her out since taking the position at Inverse Financial nearly a year ago. He’d always been the type to throw himself completely into what he was doing, but this time he’d taken his devotion to a new high, allowing it to alienate everyone and everything in his life.

  It hadn’t always been that way. At least not with her. They’d grown up close, always each other’s best friend and champion. Each other’s only champion, really. It was how they survived the day after their eighth birthday when their father, a small-time attorney, ran off to North Carolina with the office copy lady. That was when Tate had snuck into their mother’s bedroom, found a half-used box of Kleenex and brought it to Chloe as she hid behind the winter clothes in her closet. I’ll always take care of you, Chlo. Don’t cry. I’m big enough to take care of both of us. He’d said it with so much conviction that she’d believed him.

 

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