Murder on Prescott Mountain, page 1

“I’m risking my job by doing this,” Willow said.
“I can let you look at what’s in this satchel, but only as long as I’m with you. And you can never tell anyone about this or I’ll be fired. I’m crossing a huge line by even sneaking this out.”
“What are you talking about?” Grayson asked.
“Your meeting tonight, and other nights. At the police station. You said you go there several times a year…so you could pump them for information on an old case.” She unclipped the satchel and reached inside.
He stared at her, afraid to hope, as she pulled out a thick three-ring binder.
His gaze flew to hers, his throat so tight he could barely force out the words. “Is that what I think it is?”
“It’s the official case file, the murder book, the one you’ve never been allowed to see. It contains the details about the investigation into the murder of your wife seven years ago, and the disappearance of your infant daughter.”
MURDER ON PRESCOTT MOUNTAIN
Lena Diaz
Lena Diaz was born in Kentucky and has also lived in California, Louisiana and Florida, where she now resides with her husband and two children. Before becoming a romantic suspense author, she was a computer programmer. A Romance Writers of America Golden Heart® Award finalist, she has also won the prestigious Daphne du Maurier Award for Excellence in Mystery/Suspense. To get the latest news about Lena, please visit her website, lenadiaz.com.
Books by Lena Diaz
Harlequin Intrigue
A Tennessee Cold Case Story
Murder on Prescott Mountain
The Justice Seekers
Cowboy Under Fire
Agent Under Siege
Killer Conspiracy
Deadly Double-Cross
The Mighty McKenzies
Smoky Mountains Ranger
Smokies Special Agent
Conflicting Evidence
Undercover Rebel
Tennessee SWAT
Mountain Witness
Secret Stalker
Stranded with the Detective
SWAT Standoff
Visit the Author Profile page at Harlequin.com.
CAST OF CHARACTERS
Grayson Prescott—This former army ranger and successful businessman’s last hope at solving the seven-year-old cold case of his wife’s murder may be rookie detective Willow McCray.
Willow McCray—This Gatlinburg, Tennessee, detective is frustrated at her boss’s lack of support. When she meets Grayson, she quits her job and helps him create a private cold case company.
Jacob Frost—The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation director may be the key to Grayson getting his cold case company off the ground and finding out the truth about the past.
Mike Jeffries—Willow’s boss lets all the detectives work a serial killer case, except Willow. Does he have an ulterior motive for not wanting her on the case? What is he afraid she’ll find?
Brian Nelson—Jeffries’s nephew is a police officer, too. Having been rebuffed by Willow, he’s now eager to take her place as detective. Because he wants the job? Or because he has something to hide?
Chad Russo—The chief of police has been stringing Grayson along for years about his family’s cold case. Is he just lazy? Or is there a more sinister reason for him to have been lying all this time?
This book, and series, is dedicated to the professionals who work tirelessly to solve cold cases and provide victims’ families with the answers they need and the justice they deserve.
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 Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Epilogue
Excerpt from Conspiracy in the Rockies by Cindi Myers
Chapter One
Grayson Prescott had been spoiling for a fight for over seven years. Tonight, he was going to get one. At least if his rusty instincts were right and the man he’d glimpsed moments earlier, skulking after a woman toward this back alley, had evil on his mind.
Not that it took much of an instinct to arrive at that conclusion.
The man was dressed in dark clothing, from the baseball cap obscuring his hair and face to the jeans and bulky hip-length jacket on a muggy night that didn’t call for one. Even his dark-colored shoes helped him blend in with the shadows cast by the buildings one block back from Gatlinburg’s tourist mecca, River Road.
But the most worrisome thing was that his right hand was buried deep in his pocket, possibly clutching a weapon as he slowly closed the distance between him and the oblivious woman engrossed in whatever was on her phone’s screen.
Stop texting and pay attention to what’s around you.
Hadn’t she noticed the faded flyers still clinging to some of the community boards around town touting the four-year-old cold case, the unsolved disappearance of Erin Speck? The single mom had left her kids with her niece and went out for groceries, never to be seen again. Equally alarming, nightly news reports warned of a potential serial rapist working this area.
He clutched his hands into fists, belatedly wishing he’d brought a gun on yet another of his useless pilgrimages downtown. It was only by chance that he’d finished another pointless meeting and had been heading toward his car when the suspicious-acting man had darted between two buildings where a woman had just gone.
Grayson had been concerned enough to follow. Once in the alley, he realized his fears were right. The man was definitely shadowing the petite curvy woman in a short skirt and high heels, probably no more than ten feet behind her. Unfortunately, Grayson was a good fifty feet behind both of them, struggling to catch up without making any noise.
If he’d been closer, he would have shouted a warning to the potential victim. But knowing human nature, he’d only startle her, make her pause, turn around. That would be all her pursuer needed to close the remaining gap between them. And Grayson would arrive seconds too late to save her from whatever mayhem was planned. Too risky. All he could do was work to close the distance as quickly and as quietly as possible. And pray.
If he even remembered how.
The woman’s purse, carelessly slung over one shoulder, bounced and swayed along with her long brown hair like a beacon for the man following her. Wasn’t she concerned about her safety? Maybe she was a tourist who hadn’t heard about Speck’s disappearance or the handful of unsolved rapes in the area. Or maybe she was a local, someone who knew Gatlinburg so well they’d grown complacent, thinking themselves immune to the dangers in their own backyard.
She must not realize the brutal lesson Grayson had learned long ago, that the potential for evil lurked around every corner. One door accidentally left unlocked, one moment of inattention could become a death sentence. Life was so fragile, a precarious, precious gift. It could end in a second, dooming the surviving loved ones to a life of devastation, a void that could never be filled.
He clenched his fists again. He was much closer now, almost close enough to actually do something. Almost. And their ragtag trio was about to pass through a particularly dark section of the street, where most of the lights over the service doors at the backs of the businesses were burned out, or no one had bothered to turn them on in the first place. It was the perfect spot for an ambush. And from the way the other man was tensing, angling his body like a predator ready to strike, he agreed.
The woman hesitated, wobbling on her high heels as if finally sensing the danger. Grayson shouted and took off running, the need for stealth gone as the other man lunged toward his prey.
A shout echoed through the alley. Long hair twirled as the woman dodged to the side, narrowly avoiding the deadly arc of her attacker’s arm. Weak moonlight glinted off metal as he raised the knife again.
Grayson made a desperate leap, arms outstretched. The woman shouted again, clawing at her purse as she fell back against the nearest building. Grayson’s arms closed around the man’s waist, jerking him to the side as his knife slashed toward the woman.
Hot fiery pain seared Grayson’s arm, but he held on tight. The two of them fell to the ground in a flurry of flailing limbs and guttural yells. Metal flashed again. The knife bit into his other arm. Grayson swore and grabbed the man’s wrist, giving it a vicious twist.
A sickening crack was followed by an agonized scream. Metal clanged and scraped as the knife skittered across the pavement.
Shouts of alarm sounded down the alley, along with the rhythmic pounding of shoes on pavement.
“Freez
He jerked around in surprise. The woman he’d been trying to protect was now holding a pistol, both hands wrapped around the grip, her no-longer wobbling legs spread in a fighter’s stance. A good twenty yards behind her, two uniformed policemen were running toward her. Behind them, a heavyset man in a business suit struggled to keep up. All three were pointing guns.
White-hot pain slammed into Grayson’s jaw. He stumbled back, his head cracking against the side of the building. Nausea roiled in his stomach. His vision blurred. Shoving to his feet, he whirled around to face the threat he’d foolishly ignored.
No one was there.
Or at least no one he could see since the whole world was rolling and pitching around him. Staggering, he shook his head, desperately trying to clear his vision and locate his attacker.
“Freeze,” the woman yelled again.
The alley came into focus. He spotted the other man in the shadows, oddly hunched and cradling one arm. He was running away. He flew around the corner and was gone.
“Go, go, go,” the woman yelled. “I’ve got this.”
Grayson turned around, his world tilting and pitching again. He drew a steadying breath, shaking his head in disgust. He couldn’t believe how many mistakes he’d just made, allowing himself to get distracted, letting the bad guy get away. Apparently, it wasn’t just his instincts that were rusty. If his old team could see him now, they’d be ashamed of him.
The two uniformed policemen raced past him, presumably to catch the woman’s attacker.
“Police,” she yelled again. “On the ground. Hands and legs outstretched.”
Was she talking to him? He glanced at her in surprise, fighting the urge to retch. Slamming his head against the building had done a number on him. His pulse rushed in his ears, a blooming headache throbbing with every beat of his heart.
Pathetic, Soldier. Inexcusable.
“On the ground,” she said again, her pistol aimed squarely at his chest.
He stared at her in disbelief. “You’re kidding me. I was trying to help—”
“Do it. Now.” Her knuckles whitened around the grip of her gun.
The man in the business suit finally reached them, his lungs bellowing with his labored breaths as he too aimed a pistol at Grayson with deadly intent. “Get down, like the lady said, arms and legs out to the side, dirtbag,” he rasped.
Grayson gritted his teeth and lowered himself to the ground.
Chapter Two
Detective Willow McCray adjusted her uncomfortably short skirt, then leaned against the wall, half inside the curtained doorway to the emergency room enclosure. Inside, a female nurse was stitching up the three-inch gash on the suspect’s left forearm.
Willow itched to ask him questions, the most pressing being the name of his coconspirator. But other than a heaving sigh after proclaiming his innocence earlier, he’d gone silent. The pained look he’d sent her as she’d put him in handcuffs had somehow triggered a flash of guilt. Which was ridiculous, of course. She was just doing her job, while he and the man he’d been with had been stalking her, trying to make her their victim.
Hopefully, once the suspect was at the station in an interrogation room, Detective Wagner would get a full confession from him. Willow would have loved to conduct the interview herself, or at least sit in. But she wasn’t even officially assigned to the serial rapist case. As a relatively new detective, she was a glorified gopher, doing whatever the other detectives needed until she was deemed worthy enough to take a lead role. The only reason she was involved tonight was because Wagner had put out the call for volunteers, half a dozen police women to act as bait on River Road.
“He’s still not talking?”
She straightened, surprised to see her boss pushing back the curtain to join her in the opening. “Sergeant Jeffries. I didn’t expect to see you at the hospital.”
He arched a salt-and-pepper brow. “You made a collar in the River Road Rapist case and you didn’t think I’d bother to show up?”
Her face heated. “I thought you’d wait until we brought him in.” She motioned toward the two uniformed officers lounging against the nurses’ station counter, waiting to take custody of their suspect.
Jeffries shoved his hands in his pants pockets and rocked back on his heels. Across the room, her prisoner spoke in low tones, answering whatever questions the nurse was asking. Both of his wrists were handcuffed to the bedrails so he couldn’t hurt her. The nurse must have finished stitching the first cut because she moved to the other side of the bed to begin working on the gash on his right biceps.
Jeffries stiffened beside her. “That’s the man you arrested?”
His incredulous tone put her on alert. “Is that a problem?”
“I thought you arrested the River Road Rapist.”
“One of them, yes. Apparently, they’re working in tandem together. The other one got away. But we’ve got uniforms canvassing the area, searching for his partner.”
“His partner,” he scoffed, motioning for her to move with him into the hallway. Then he faced her, hands on his hips. “Don’t you realize who that guy is?” He kept his voice low so it wouldn’t carry, but made no attempt to hide the censure in his tone.
Her face flamed hotter even though she had no idea what she’d done wrong, in his eyes at least. “I verified his name from his driver’s license—Grayson Prescott. But I haven’t been able to get any other information. He’s exercising his right to remain silent. And since we arrived in the ER, they’ve been busy treating him. CT scan first because he bumped his head. Now the nurse is stitching his injuries.”
“And how did he come by these...injuries?”
“He and his partner got in each other’s way.”
“Explain that statement, Detective McCray.”
She cleared her throat, still not sure why he was upset. “They both tried to jump me at the same time and knocked into each other. Prescott hit his head against the side of the building. The other guy had his knife out and Prescott was cut when they both fell to the ground.”
He stared at her a long moment. “Did it occur to you that maybe the other guy was trying to attack you, but this guy—” he jerked his thumb toward the enclosure “—was trying to help you? Maybe that’s how he got hurt, jumping between you and the guy with a knife?”
She blinked, images of the scuffle in the alley flooding through her mind. “I, ah, I guess it’s possible. Things happened so fast. I just—”
“Assumed he was a rapist too?”
She raised her chin, determined not to let him shake her confidence. She knew what she’d seen. He hadn’t been there. “Sir, you didn’t see what happened.”
“And you did? Are you sure about that?”
She frowned. “Sir?”
He let out a slow deep breath. “I’ve no doubt you believe your version, that both men were trying to hurt you. But considering who the guy is that you’ve arrested, I’m inclined to think it might have been too dark, the attack too fast for your eyewitness account to be reliable. Especially—” he motioned again toward the room where her suspect was being treated “—since this man is Grayson Prescott.”
He watched her, as if waiting for some kind of bell to ring, some spark of recognition. She looked at Prescott, who was silently watching both of them now. She scanned his admittedly handsome face, tanned golden from the sun, the sharp angles and hard lines softened by a barely-there beard and mustache. Even with the slight bruise forming along his jawline, he was uncommonly attractive. He was muscular, but not overly so. Trim, fit, average height, not quite six feet tall and wearing a navy blue suit that made him look more like a CEO than a criminal. But none of that mattered. She still had no idea what Jeffries expected her to notice.
“Figured out who he is yet?” Jeffries prodded.
She tore her gaze from Prescott and looked up at her boss. “Obviously, you recognize him and know more about him than I do. So far, I only know his name.”
He sighed again as if disappointed in her.
I need this job. I need this job, she reminded herself as she struggled to maintain her respectful expression. Why was it that he always found fault with her? Was it because she was a woman? Or because she was the youngest to ever make the detective squad here in Gatlinburg and he was trying to prove she wasn’t ready? Or did he resent her because his boss had made the decision to hire her against Jeffries’s advice? Whatever the reason, it was no secret that he expected her to fail and found fault in nearly everything she did.












