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Hostage At Hawk's Landing
DANGER BROUGHT THEM TOGETHER.
Will the truth tear them apart?
Desperate to learn what caused his estranged father’s death, Dexter Hawk finds himself drawn to a woman from his past. Melissa Gentry lost her family years ago. Now a shoot-out at work has put her own life in danger. With Dex suddenly back, asking for her help, Melissa realizes once again she has everything to lose. Because a man like Dex cannot be replaced...or forgotten.
Badge of Justice
USA TODAY bestselling author RITA HERRON wrote her first book when she was twelve but didn’t think real people grew up to be writers. Now she writes so she doesn’t have to get a real job. A former kindergarten teacher and workshop leader, she traded storytelling to kids for writing romance, and now she writes romantic comedies and romantic suspense. Rita lives in Georgia with her family. She loves to hear from readers, so please visit her website, ritaherron.com.
Also by Rita Herron
Redemption at Hawk’s Landing
Safe at Hawk’s Landing
Hideaway at Hawk’s Landing
Lock, Stock and McCullen
McCullen’s Secret Son
Roping Ray McCullen
Warrior Son
The Missing McCullen
The Last McCullen
Cold Case at Camden Crossing
Discover more at millsandboon.co.uk
Hostage at Hawk’s Landing
Rita Herron
www.millsandboon.co.uk
ISBN: 978-1-474-09367-5
HOSTAGE AT HAWK’S LANDING
© 2019 Rita B. Herron
Published in Great Britain 2019
by Mills & Boon, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers 1 London Bridge Street, London, SE1 9GF
All rights reserved including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form. This edition is published by arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, locations and incidents are purely fictional and bear no relationship to any real life individuals, living or dead, or to any actual places, business establishments, locations, events or incidents. Any resemblance is entirely coincidental.
By payment of the required fees, you are granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right and licence to download and install this e-book on your personal computer, tablet computer, smart phone or other electronic reading device only (each a “Licensed Device”) and to access, display and read the text of this e-book on-screen on your Licensed Device. Except to the extent any of these acts shall be permitted pursuant to any mandatory provision of applicable law but no further, no part of this e-book or its text or images may be reproduced, transmitted, distributed, translated, converted or adapted for use on another file format, communicated to the public, downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of publisher.
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Version: 2020-03-02
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To my fabulous daughter Elizabeth for always loving and helping others.
Love you, girl.
Mom
Contents
Cover
Back Cover Text
About the Author
Booklist
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
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
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
About the Publisher
Chapter One
“I found your father.”
Dexter Hawk tensed. Detective Frank Lamar’s words echoed over the phone line as if boomeranging off the mountains.
Steven Hawk had left the family ranch and abandoned Dex and his family eighteen years ago, shortly after they’d lost their sister, Chrissy. No one had heard from him since.
Dex had taken advantage of his PI skills to search for him, and asked his friend Detective Lamar to help. Lamar was several years older than him, but had taken Dex under his wing a long time ago, becoming his mentor.
“Dex?” Detective Lamar asked. “You there?”
Dexter released the breath he was holding. He’d waited a long damn time for this phone call. But judging from the tone of Lamar’s voice, the news wasn’t what he wanted to hear.
“Yeah. Where is he?” Dex finally asked.
“Briar Creek,” Lamar said.
Briar Creek? Only thirty miles from Hawk’s Landing. Had he been nearby all this time? Or had he moved around, then decided to finally come home? “Did you talk to him?”
“He’s not talking, Dex.” A tense second passed, filling Dex’s head with dread.
“I’m sorry,” Lamar said gruffly.
Sweat beaded on Dex’s forehead. His father was dead. Lamar didn’t have to say the words. His apology said it all.
Dex heaved a breath, his chest straining for air. “I have to see him.”
“You can do that at the morgue,” Lamar said. “I’ve already called an ambulance.”
“No, don’t move him. I’m coming there.” He snagged his keys from the end table and rushed outside to the SUV he’d bought when he’d donated his pickup to the ranch for the hands.
“What happened?” Dex asked as he climbed in and started the engine.
“Looks like an accident. Pickup truck ran off the road.” A hesitant pause. “Dex, there’s really no reason—”
“I mean it, Lamar. Do not move him,” Dex said between clenched teeth. “I’ll be there ASAP.” He had to see him for himself. Had to know exactly what had happened to the man who he’d once ridden piggyback and who taught him to ride and fish. Had to know why he’d just up and left and never even called. Birthdays and holidays had passed. Years of worry and wondering and...grief.
His phone vibrated from the console. He gave a quick glance. Harrison, his oldest brother. For a brief second he wondered if Lamar had called him, but he’d sworn Lamar to secrecy about his desire to find their father, so he let the call go to voice mail. He wouldn’t destroy the peace and happiness his mother and brothers had recently found until he knew for certain that this dead man was his father.
His family had no idea he’d made it his mission to find him. Not that he had some wild fantasy about a happy reunion with their long-lost patriarch, but Dex’s anger had festered for years. He’d practiced what he’d say to his old man for so long that disappointment swamped him.
Now he wouldn’t even get the pleasure of telling him off.
Memories of his childhood bombarded him as he drove. His father playing horseshoes with him and his brothers in the backyard. The camping trip where they’d told ghost stories while they huddled in their tent to escape the rain. His father teaching him how to tie knots and rope cattle.
He turned onto a side road that wove past farmland and neared the small town of Briarwood. Briar Creek was known for flooding during heavy storms, but the land looked dry now, and the water low.
He spotted Lamar’s unmarked police car on the side of the road around a curve, an ambulance behind it. He parked a few feet behind the ambulance, then climbed out, the summer heat oppressive. Dusk was settling in, the sun was fading and gray clouds were adding a dismal feel.
A drop-off on the left side led from the shoulder of the road to the creek. A black, rusted pickup had nosedived into the water.
Gravel skittered beneath his boots as he descended the hill and approached it. Lamar was speaking to the medics, his craggy face beaded with perspiration. When he looked up at Dex, his expression was grim.
“We’re ready to move him,” Lamar said.
Dex held up a hand. “Just give me a minute.” He swallowed hard. ‘‘Please.”
A heartbeat passed before Lamar replied. “All right. Just don’t touch anything.”
Dex hiked over to the truck with Lamar on his heels. The front of the pickup was submerged in about six inches of water, the passenger door ajar. The driver was slumped forward, his head against the steering wheel. The scent of whiskey assaulted Dex, obviously from the empty liquor bottle on the seat.
Disgust slammed into Dex. Had his father turned into a drunk?
With gloved hands, Lamar lifted the man’s head away from the steering wheel. Blood streaked his face and arms, his nose was crushed, and a jagged scar ran along the upper right side of his forehead. Gray streaked the man’s shaggy hair and beard.
Dex inhaled a deep breath. He hadn’t seen his father in eighteen years. Anger and resentment had obliterated memories and images of him until he had a hard time picturing him in his mind.
He remembered that he was a big man, and this man was big. Was he looking at him now?
He cleared his throat, forcing back emotions. He was a PI; he had answers to find. “What made you certain this is my father?”
Lamar rubbed a hand over his sweaty face, then lifted a bag holding an ID. Dexter peered at the ID through the plastic. The name on the driver’s license was Steven Hawk.
“I found these in the dash, too.” Lamar held up another evidence bag, and Dex’s chest tightened. Photos. One of him and his brothers and sister when they were little, then another of his father and mother on their wedding day. His mother still kept the same picture on her dresser in her bedroom.
“I’m sorry, Dex,” Lamar said.
Dex blinked hard. He damn well would not cry, not in front of Lamar. And not for the man who’d walked out on him and his family and never looked back.
But denial also reared its ugly head. “I want DNA for confirmation.”
“Of course,” Lamar said.
Dex studied the dead man’s features, struggling to make this bloody face belong to the man he’d loved and idolized.
But an image of his father laughing when Dex had fallen from his horse into a mud puddle surfaced and moisture blurred his eyes. A second later, he saw his father’s strained expression as he searched the woods for Chrissy, then the anger in his eyes when the sheriff had treated him like a suspect. But it was his mother’s tearstained cheeks the morning after his father hadn’t come home that still haunted him.
That was the final blow that had nearly crushed her.
Lamar waved the medics down the hill to remove the body from the truck. Dex noticed a business card on the floor by the seat, snatched the card and jammed it in his pocket. Maybe something on the card would lead him to answer the questions that kept him awake at night. Like where his father had been all this time.
Had he forgotten about his family? Found happiness with another woman?
Had he even thought about them?
Emotions pummeling him, he turned and strode back up the hill. Lamar would let him know when the DNA results were in. Then he’d have to break the news to his family.
Not tonight, though. Tonight he’d grieve alone.
He fingered the card in his pocket as he climbed in his SUV and pulled out the wooden nickel he always carried.
His father’s voice echoed in his head. “Don’t take any wooden nickels, son.”
Dex had taken that meaning to heart. He’d never accepted anything at face value and always investigated things himself.
The name of a homeless shelter had been scrawled on the card.
Maybe someone there could tell him more about his father.
Six weeks later
MELISSA GENTRY SIPPED HER evening tea as she ducked into her small office at the Lend-A-Hand Shelter outside Austin. The evening meal was complete. Tonight the volunteers had served over a hundred dinners, shared stories and camaraderie with the transients who’d wandered in and passed out personal hygienic supplies and water bottles to everyone who’d shown up. The summer heat was stifling, the danger of heat stroke and dehydration always high during the summer months.
The staff was busy clearing the dishes and cleaning the kitchen, while a few of the short-term residents who’d committed to a plan to get back on their feet gathered in the common room for a game of cards.
She glanced at the newspaper as she took her break, her heart clenching. The Hawk family was back in the news. Last year, they’d found their long-lost sister’s body, tying up the mystery of what had happened to Chrissy Hawk nearly two decades ago.
Then a few months ago, a human trafficking ring had struck Tumbleweed, drawing the attention of the FBI and brother Lucas Hawk. The head of the ring had forced a local plastic surgeon to change his face so he could create a new identity, and lawyer brother Brayden Hawk had helped the feds take down the trafficking ring.
But her attention was focused on the photograph and current headline. Dexter Hawk, the third brother, and the man who’d stolen her heart her first year of college, stood by a grave with his family as they said goodbye to Steven Hawk, his father who’d disappeared shortly after his daughter had.
Some had speculated that he’d run off because he’d hurt Chrissy, but that theory had been rectified when the family learned that Chrissy had been killed by a man with a developmental disability. The more likely scenario for the father’s abandonment was that guilt and grief had eaten at him until he’d left. Couples rarely survived the loss of a child.
Sympathy and envy swelled in her chest. That family had suffered so much, yet they stood together in loving support by Mr. Hawk’s grave.
All her life, she’d craved a family like that. But working at the shelter had taught her that you had to play the cards you’d been dealt in life. So she’d made a family with the volunteers and the drifters who wandered in for food and comfort and a helping hand.
Voices and noises echoed from the front, the sound of arguing forcing her to leave the privacy of the office. She walked down the hall, then poked her head into the doorway of the gathering room to assess the situation.
While she empathized with those in need, instincts warned her to stay alert for trouble. Some people fell on hard times and were humble and wanted help. Others suffered from mental issues, drug addictions and PTSD. There were also criminals who took refuge in shelters and on the streets to escape the law.
She stole a look at the man who’d joined them a few days ago. Jim Smith. He was quiet and secretive, and kept to himself. The dark intensity in his expression suggested something was wrong, that he was on the run from something—or somebody.
She and April Stewart, the director of the shelter, had discussed consulting the local police, but Smith had given them no reason to. If they called the cops on everyone who made them nervous, they might as well shut down.
On the surface, Smith looked rough. He had a long scar on the side of his face, walked with a limp and he was missing the end of the third finger on his left hand. But he’d been polite and respectful to her and April. They’d encouraged him to share his story, but so far he hadn’t opened up.
He didn’t appear to be mentally ill or an addict. Perhaps he’d recently lost a loved one or his family. Deep grief often forced people to retreat into depression to the point of losing their homes.
Two of the men at the card table were squabbling, one of them accusing the other of stealing his King of Hearts. Smith stepped in, calming them both by clarifying that the card was on the floor.
Melissa smiled. Sometimes Jim surprised her by showing a softer side. It made her even more curious about his background and how he’d ended up at Lend-A-Hand.
She cradled her tea mug in her hands as she bypassed the kitchen and made her way to the common room.
The card game ended, and a few of the men headed outside to wherever they wanted to go for the night, while others retreated to the bunk room. The kitchen volunteers waved good-night and hurried out the back door. Smith grabbed a cup of coffee, sat down at the table and started scribbling something in a small notepad, which, she’d noticed, he did a lot. She wondered what he was writing.
She locked the front door, but a noise from the back made her jerk around, and she rushed to make sure one of the volunteers hadn’t returned and needed her. Or it could be Samuel, the night volunteer arriving.
But just as she reached the hallway, the door to the back burst open. Melissa startled and called out Samuel’s name, but a man in dark clothes and a mask grabbed her and shoved a gun to her head.
She opened her mouth to scream, but the man tightened his hold around her throat. “We don’t have money or drugs,” she managed to say in a choked whisper.
“Shut up.” He shoved her forward, and she stumbled and bumped the corner of the wall. He pushed her harder, his voice a growl in her ear. “Where is he?”
Fear clawed at Melissa. “Who?”
“Smith,” the man snapped.
“I’m right here.”
Melissa’s eyes widened as Smith stepped into the doorway, his hands held up in surrender. His dark brown eyes met hers, worry and an apology that she didn’t understand etched in the depths.
Then Smith shot an angry look at the gunman. “Let her go and I’ll do whatever you want.”
Chapter Two
Melissa clenched her jaw. She didn’t know why this gunman wanted Jim, but her protective instincts for the drifters at the shelter kicked in. She’d taken self-defense classes, and was tempted to jab her elbow into the man’s stomach, then jerk his arm up so hopefully he’d drop the gun. But common sense warned her that if she made a mistake, she’d end up dead and so might Jim Smith.
She couldn’t live with his death on her conscience.
The brute with the gun tightened his hold, the gun barrel pressing against her temple. “You’d better back off, Smith, or the little lady gets it.”
Tension radiated from Jim’s body as he went ramrod still. “It’s me you want. Let her go and we’ll take this outside.”
The man shook his head and shoved her toward a chair in the corner. “Tie her up, then we talk.”
Melissa bit her lip to keep from crying out as she sank into the metal folding chair. As much as she wanted to fight, she had to consider the other men in the back. The intruder pulled a rope from his pocket and tossed it toward Jim. He snatched it, then shocked her by swinging it like a cowboy and throwing it toward the gunman like a lasso. The movement caught the gunman off guard, and Jim charged the brute.
The man grunted and the two of them slammed against the wall as they wrestled for the gun. Footsteps sounded from the back, and two of the homeless men, Gunther and Dwayne, rushed into the doorway. She shouted for them to stay back.
Jim threw the intruder to the floor and jerked the man’s arm up. The weapon went off, the bullet hitting the ceiling. Jim knocked the gun from the man’s hand, and it skidded across the floor. Melissa ran for the weapon, but the shooter snagged her leg as she passed him. She tripped and went down hard, her knee slamming into the wood floor.
Jim rolled twice, then reached the gun and snatched it. The brute jumped him, and they struggled, but the gun went off again. Melissa covered her mouth to stifle a scream as the gunman collapsed on top of Jim.
Was Jim hurt?
A second later, he shoved his attacker off him. Blood oozed from the gunman’s chest, and he made a choking sound, then gurgled blood.
Jim pushed himself to stand, the gun in his hands, the other man’s blood soaking his shirt. The shooter’s body jerked and spasmed, then he suddenly stilled, eyes wide and blank.
Jim looked over at her, his jaw clenched. “Are you all right?”
She nodded, too stunned to speak. He gestured toward Gunther. “Call 9-1-1.”
Gunther nodded and rushed toward the phone the men were allowed to use on the counter in the corner. Melissa swallowed, and struggled to stand on shaky legs. She had to know why the man wanted Jim.
But he jammed the pistol into the back of his jeans and ran for the side door. “I’m sorry, Melissa,” he murmured, then he unlocked the door and disappeared.
Outside, a siren wailed. The police. Jim had left just in time to avoid them. Why? She would have vouched that he’d acted in self-defense.
And that he’d saved her life.
* * *
DEX CLIMBED IN his SUV and flipped on the radio as he left the homeless shelter near Tumbleweed. Damn. Another drifter had gone missing. That was three in recent months.
The director had reiterated what he’d heard at the two other places he’d visited: the homeless who took refuge at the shelters didn’t stay long. The center had no control over where the men went and rarely was informed of their destinations when they left.
Worse, none of the men wanted to talk to him. They seemed wary, even suspicious of his intentions. He’d tried to assure them that he was concerned that someone might be preying on transients, but the only thing he’d accomplished was planting fear in the men’s eyes.
Grief still made his chest ache. The damn DNA had confirmed that the man found at Briar Creek was his father. He and his family had mourned and buried him beside Chrissy.
But questions over where his father had been and what he’d been doing for eighteen years gnawed at him. What had happened to drive him to alcohol and the streets? Chrissy’s disappearance had been horrible for all of them. But his mother hadn’t walked out on her sons or buried herself in a bottle.