Excerpt
Friday, 11:55 p.m.
It was a perfect night to
catch a killer. A warm breeze blew out of the south at about six
miles per hour. Rain-heavy clouds covered the half-moon, plunging the
cliff where Special Agent Kade Quinn stood into darkness. He was
betting on the old cliché, third time’s a charm. And also betting
on the numbers—that his six, shiny new special agents could take
down one highly skilled, remarkably cunning, experienced assassin.
Not the kind of odds to go
to Vegas over. But he had to work with what he had. If things went as
planned, Bailey Stark would soon be in custody like the dozens of
other EXIT Inc. Enforcers that his team had managed to capture. The
now-defunct company could never again fool the public into believing
that all it did was offer vacation packages, so-called “EXtreme
International Tours.” The clandestine organization’s true legacy
as a corrupt front for government-sanctioned murder would end with
the capture of the last few Enforcers. By the time his mission was
over, every last one functioning members of society.
And innocents like Abby
would never again become the victims of killers like Bailey.
Between the nightmare of
his wife’s death and the near-constant ache in his ruined left leg,
Kade had his own, very personal, debt with EXIT. And he planned on
collecting. He scanned the tree line. Past the red oak and Ponderosa
pines, the Colorado Rockies squatted like dark sentinels watching
over tonight’s operation. Below him, in the middle of a wide,
nearly treeless valley, was ground zero, the two-story cottage that
Bailey believed would be her sanctuary. Instead, it would become her
last stand. A quarter-mile-long driveway connected a two-lane highway
to this remote property. At close to midnight and an hour’s drive
from Boulder, the road was essentially deserted. Kade couldn’t have
asked for a better place to launch an ambush. And if his intel was
correct, Bailey should arrive within the next half hour.
Only a few minutes later
the two-way radio on his belt crackled to life. “Big Bear to Lone
Wolf. Come in.”
Kade rolled his eyes and
pressed the transmit button. “Kade here. What’s the situation
report, Nichols?”
“You’re ruining my
fun, boss.” He shook his head but played along. He had to pick his
battles. “Lone Wolf to Big Bear. What’s the sitrep?”
“Much better.” A
chuckle sounded through the radio. “A beat-up, dark blue Camaro
just turned off the highway. One occupant. Looks to be our target.
She’s heading toward the cottage.”
“Use the SUV to block
the road behind her. If she gets spooked, I don’t want her doing a
one-eighty and making it to the highway.”
“Affirmative. Big Bear
out.”
Kade clicked off the mic
and belatedly wished he’d downed a handful of antacids before
driving out here. Being assigned these eager, raw newbies had to be
his penance for his breakdown after the accident. They were also the
reason he was here in person rather than monitoring the mission
remotely per the usual protocol. Tonight’s target had already
tricked his team and gotten away—twice. Kade was here to make sure
that didn’t happen again.
“Cord,” he said
through the two-way. “Sitrep.”
“You mean you aren’t
going to call me Little Bear?”
“Do you want me to?”
He was half-afraid of the answer.
“Hell no. I’m not in
junior high.”
“You guys know I can
hear you, right?” Nichols chimed in.
“Sitrep,” Kade
growled.
“She just passed my ten
o’clock,” Cord announced. “Dom should have her in his sights in
a few seconds.”
“Already do,” Dominic
confirmed. “The car is pulling up to the house. We’re all set.”
“Radio silence in three,
two, one.” Kade clicked off the transmitter.
They couldn’t risk the
sound of static or a mistimed transmission alerting their target. Or
at least, that was the official reason for breaking communications.
Unofficially, he needed a few moments of silence to get his
impatience under control. What had happened to the bureau’s
standards? Big Bear, Little Bear? Hell, two of his agents—Dom and
Jack—had tattoos. Since when had the FBI allowed tats? Quantico was
going soft.
He looked through the
binoculars. Instead of driving into the attached garage as expected,
Bailey did a three-point turn and parked the Camaro pointing down the
driveway. Was she suspicious? Had she purposely positioned her
vehicle for a quick getaway? His hands tightened around the
binoculars. The driver’s door opened. A petite woman in
dark-colored shorts and a white T-shirt emerged. A pistol was
holstered at her waist and her shoulder-length, curly red hair
reflected like flames in the soft glow of the porch light. Even at
this distance she had the kinds of curves that made men pay
attention—including Kade, much to his chagrin.
He had more reason than
most to despise Enforcers, and yet his breath caught every time he
looked at one of her photographs in the case file. He couldn’t
imagine the effect she’d have on him if he ever got within a few
feet of her in person. It was bad enough that his pulse quickened
whenever those deep green eyes gazed back at him from her pictures.
But what he hated the most was the odd feeling of kinship he felt
toward her, a tug of empathy when he saw the shadows in her eyes, the
same shadows he saw every time he looked in a mirror. He couldn’t
help wondering what had happened to harden her and make her look so
lost, so sad, so incredibly . . . alone.


Originally from Kentucky, romantic suspense author Lena Diaz also lived in California and Louisiana before settling in Northeast Florida with her husband, two children, and a Shetland Sheepdog named Sparky. A Romance Writers of America Golden Heart® finalist, she's won the prestigious Daphne du Maurier Award for Excellence in Mystery/Suspense and has been a finalist for the National Excellence in Romance Fiction Award. She loves to watch action movies, garden, and hike in the beautiful Tennessee Smoky Mountains.