Don't Say a Word. Rita Herron

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Don't Say a Word - Rita Herron


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Dubois glared at the reporter. “Antwaun Dubois is innocent. The NOPD is doing everything in their power to expedite this investigation and will bring Miss Yates’s killer to justice.”

      Another reporter cornered a third man, this one even taller and more intimidating. Crystal’s pulse jumped in her throat. He seemed familiar as well….

      “Special Agent Dubois, were your brother and Miss Yates personally involved?”

      “Was he on the take?” another reporter shouted.

      “As Detective Dubois said, my brother is innocent,” Special Agent Dubois stated. “Now, please move out of the way so we can do our jobs and find the real killer.”

      Crystal stared at the men as they rushed into the precinct. Something about Antwaun Dubois and the last man, Special Agent Dubois, triggered a memory. And the agent—his voice, she’d heard it before, she knew it, but she couldn’t place it….

      In fact, she was almost certain that she’d met both Antwaun and the agent.

      But how would she know a cop or a federal agent?

      DR. REGINALD PACE COULD HARDLY stand the anticipation of knowing that he would unveil Crystal’s new face in the morning. He had sketched versions of each step in the rebuilding process on a specially designed medical computer program to craft her transition. She was going to be beautiful.

      He wanted to show her off to the world. Let them know that he was the first in his state to perform such an intricate surgery and that he was a genius in his field.

      The only problem was that he couldn’t reveal his work yet.

      Because he hadn’t exactly followed the book on this one.

      He wiped at a drop of perspiration trickling from his scalp into his hair. Didn’t matter. Crystal was his now. He had made her.

      He had stood by her side when others had been repulsed. He’d soothed her in the darkest of hours and held her hand to his chest just to let her know that a breathing, living man cared for her.

      Soon he would tell her that he loved her as well.

      Then she would return the sentiment, and they would make love and all would be right with the world. When he’d won her completely over as his wife, then she’d sign the papers stating that she’d agreed to the face transplant, and that he was the man who had given her back her life.

      Then he would be famous.

      He tapped a series of keys that brought up the image of what his Crystal would look like when he finally unveiled her face, and blood surged through his cock. Exhilarated, he unzipped his pants, freed himself and slid his hand around his length. Soon he would give her the present of his seed. Then they could breed more Paces who would lend their genius to the world.

      For now, he’d content himself with the image of her face as he gave himself release. But even as he did, he closed his eyes and envisioned himself pouring his come into her mouth.

      In the images, he reveled in the blissful smile on her exquisite new face. And he silently thanked the dead woman for her part in it all.

      DAMON CURSED. They were officially arresting Antwaun. Arguing that they had no body didn’t help. The lieutenant must have evidence he wasn’t sharing.

      Even with Damon being a federal agent and Jean-Paul a detective with the NOPD, they had to push to see their brother.

      Lieutenant Phelps was worried about how a private meeting would look to Internal Affairs. The mayor had called, the chief of police, even the governor of the state, ordering that justice be served for the vicious way in which the young woman had died. A screwup with the brothers, and the Dubois men would be pulled off the case.

      And neither Damon nor Jean-Paul trusted their brother’s destiny to the fates.

      Or the local police, who might have a crooked cop in their midst.

      Had Kendra Yates discovered a cop on the take? Was her work related to her death, or had she been murdered by some kind of deranged sicko like the Swamp Devil?

      Who had Antwaun pissed off so badly they’d frame him for murder?

      Jean-Paul had phoned Jason Dryer, an attorney, who joined him and Damon in the small room. Dryer grilled Antwaun for the truth, while Damon and Jean-Paul watched silently.

      “All right, Antwaun.” Damon braced his legs apart, then leaned over with his elbows on them, hands clasped. “Come on, tell us what you’ve been leaving out.”

      Antwaun’s cobalt eyes turned a smoky-gray as he ran a hand through his overly long hair. Damon zeroed in on the scars on his hand. He tried to remember where his brother had gotten the jagged marks but couldn’t place the cause. Not that he knew each incident in his brother’s life. Both of them had been in the military, had been to hell and back.

      “I’ve told you everything. If I’d known Kendra was a fucking reporter, I sure as hell wouldn’t have gotten involved with her.”

      Damon hissed. The lieutenant didn’t want the FBI involved, but with Swafford’s connection to Kendra, they already were. “I’ll talk to her boss tomorrow and get a warrant for her files.”

      “Someone I know is setting me up,” Antwaun growled. “You have to get me released so I can track them down.”

      The last thing they needed was to have Antwaun on the streets, out of control, exacting his own brand of justice—revenge.

      “I’ll see what I can do,” Dryer said. “But you know it will be morning before I can get a judge and bail hearing set.”

      Antwaun nodded.

      “Do you have any idea who would frame you?” Damon asked.

      Antwaun frowned. “I can think of a few names.”

      “Make a list,” Jean-Paul said. “We’ll check out the names for you.”

      “What was your cover with Swafford?” Damon asked.

      Antwaun spoke in a low, gravelly tone. “I played the drug trafficking angle to get in with his organization.”

      “Do you think Swafford discovered her identity and killed her?” Damon asked.

      Antwaun shrugged. “It’s possible. When they both disappeared last year, I thought she might have run off with him. I went to her apartment and searched for clues as to where she might have gone but came up empty.”

      “What about her computer?”

      “It wasn’t there. But hell, I didn’t think she had one. I thought she was a dancer.”

      “She might have left willingly with him at first,”

      Damon said. “He could have found out her identity afterwards and killed her.”

      Antwaun scrubbed his hand over the dark stubble on his jaw. “Swafford wouldn’t have done the deed himself. He has hired minions.”

      Another reason for the feds to be on the case. “We’ll check into Swafford’s organization. I’ll need everything you have on him.”

      Antwaun nodded. “And don’t forget my buddies on the force.”

      Damon grimaced. Antwaun didn’t make buddies.

      If there was corruption in the department, who knew how deep it went, or how far it reached. And Swafford was a slick businessman who said all the right things in public, a smarmy bastard the locals and feds had both been watching for months. A man some citizens protected because he’d helped the economy.

      A man who’d disappeared without a trace.

      But his money might be dirty, might be part of a money-laundering scheme. Men like Swafford thrived on power and would go to any lengths to protect themselves and their investments.

      But


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