After
years on the rodeo circuit, Gabe Bowden wants nothing more than land
of his own and a woman who will claim his heart for more than one
night. When he has the chance to buy the enormous Wolf Ranch spread,
he snaps up the incredible deal. Everything is set, until Gabe
rescues a woman on the deserted, snowy road leading to the property,
and the half-frozen beauty changes everything.
Ella Wolf rushes to her family’s abandoned Montana ranch after her twin sister is murdered. She knows she’s next…unless she can uncover a secret hidden somewhere at Wolf Ranch. The last thing Ella expects is to be rescued by a rugged rancher with his own agenda. A man who almost makes her forget how dangerous love can be…
As an unlikely partnership sparks into something so much more, and a killer closes in, can Ella and Gabe learn to trust one another before it’s too late?
Phillip Wolf is Ella and Lela's uncle, he has a very bad temper. He oversees that they make sure that they adhere to the conditions of the will. Ella is the party girl of the two, she worked in the company at all the different departments to see what was working and what needed to be changed. She got her MBA online. Lela got her MBA from Columbia. Found what she needed to put Phillip behind bars, thought Dectective Robbins was her friend. Detective Robbins helps cover up things, he is on Phillip's payroll. Gabe Bowden bought Wolf Ranch, he used to be a bull rider. He thought Ella was Lela, he is very protective of Ella. Blake Bowden is Gabe's brother, he trains horses. Travis was helping Ella get to Wolf Ranch, he wants her to pay him back with sex. Sam is an FBI Agent.
This is my first book by Jennifer Ryan and it will most definitely will not be my last. I was hooked from the first page. I had to know what what would happen next. I loved that the story was very well written and that the characters were very well developed. I highly recommend this book to anyone and everyone.
Ella Wolf rushes to her family’s abandoned Montana ranch after her twin sister is murdered. She knows she’s next…unless she can uncover a secret hidden somewhere at Wolf Ranch. The last thing Ella expects is to be rescued by a rugged rancher with his own agenda. A man who almost makes her forget how dangerous love can be…
As an unlikely partnership sparks into something so much more, and a killer closes in, can Ella and Gabe learn to trust one another before it’s too late?
Excerpt
Chapter
One
Three long
days without a word. No call. Not even a text. Ella stared at her
phone, willing it to ring. She tapped her finger on the screen and
stifled the urge to call Lela for the hundredth time that morning.
The coffee
shop buzzed with activity. People headed off to work with their
lattes and scones. She sipped at her caramel macchiato, reading over
the newest projections for the cosmetics line debuting in March on
her laptop. The numbers looked promising.
Ella jumped
when her phone vibrated on the table. She snatched it up and read the
caller ID.
“Finally.”
She swiped the screen to accept the call. “Lela—”
“Where
have you been?” Uncle Phillip’s demand surprised her.
Why did
Uncle Phillip have Lela's phone?
Ella opened
her mouth to answer her uncle's question, but he spoke first.
“I
oversee the estate. You answer to me.”
“Twisting
the truth again, Uncle. Ella and I sign off on everything,” Lela
said, her tone unusually sharp. “You’re just a watchdog, there to
ensure we adhere to the terms of the will. You have no real power,
but you’ll do anything to steal it away, won’t you?”
What? Ella
had never heard her sister talk to their uncle in such a
disrespectful and spiteful way, or anyone for that matter. Why did
her sister call and not say anything to her? Maybe she'd pocket
dialed?
“Lela,
it's me. What is going on?” Ella got no response. Uncle Phillip
continued to speak over her.
“You have
no idea what you’re talking about, my dear.” Uncle Phillip’s
soft voice belied the steel in his words. “Don’t make me ask
again. Be a good girl and tell me where you’ve been?”
This time,
her sister answered, but didn’t explain a damn thing. “Uncovering
your dirty secret. I know what you did,” her sister accused.
Secrets?
Butterflies
in Ella's stomach fluttered like a flock of birds taking flight. The
uneasy feeling she’d carried with her these last days intensified.
Ella
gathered up her laptop and notebook, stuffing them into her oversized
tote. She dumped the dregs of her coffee in the trash on her way out
the door. The apartment was only a block up from her favorite café
she had breakfast at every Tuesday when the house staff had
the day off. She kept the phone to her ear and headed home to find
out what the hell was going on.
“You
won’t get away with this,” Lela’s voice raised in pitch. It
took a lot to rile her sister. Whatever Uncle Phillip had done
touched a nerve.
“Whatever
you think you know doesn’t amount to anything without proof.” Her
uncle used that chilling, yet utterly calm voice.
Ella picked
up her pace, sensing the escalation of the situation into something
more than just an argument about company business. She pulled her bag
close to her side under her arm and ran for her building, knocking
elbows and shoulders with other pedestrians. No time to apologize,
she ignored their outraged remarks.
“Oh, I
have the proof.”
Proof of
what?
“You’re
lying.” Uncle Phillip let out a nervous laugh.
“You
wish.”
Ella past
her building's doorman and ran for the elevator, pushing the button
three times, frantic for the doors to open.
“Where is
it? Show me.”
Come on.
Come on. The
elevator doors finally opened and she rushed inside and pressed the
button for the penthouse. Ella prayed she didn't lose the cell signal
and drop the call. She only ever got one bar in the elevators.
“You
think I’d be fool enough to bring it here. To you? I’ll see you
in jail before this day is over.”
“I’ll
see you in a grave first.”
The ice in
her uncle’s tone frosted Ella’s heart. The evil laced there
erased all trace of the man she knew. He meant those ominous words.
Lela gasped
and let out a startled shriek. Ella didn't want to believe her uncle
actually struck Lela, but that’s what it sounded like.
“What.
Did. You. Find?”
“Everything,”
Lela sputtered.
What?
What are you talking about?
“If
you’re lying to me—”
“Let me
go. It’s over. There’s nothing you can do. I can prove you did
it.”
Did
what?
“Don’t
look at him,” Uncle Phillip snapped.
Him? Who
else is there?
“Please,
do some—”
“He’s
not here to help you, you stupid girl. He works for me. Everyone
works for me. You should have left well enough alone.”
Lela
shrieked again. Ella's heart dropped into her stomach.
“This is
your final chance. Tell me where it is and I’ll make this quick.
Refuse and I'll take my time. You'll know the meaning of the word
pain when I'm done with you.”
Touch
her and I will make you pay.
“Go to
hell.”
“Where is
it, you little bitch?”
“You will
pay for what you’ve done. I’ll never cave.”
“Tell me
what I want to know, and maybe, I’ll
show you mercy.”
“You
won’t...get...away...with this,” Lela stammered, something
choking off her words. “The truth will...roll out. Come out.”
Something
about the way she said it the first time struck Ella, but her mind
couldn’t process anything right now. She slammed her palm against
the elevator doors, wishing the damn thing would hurry up.
Please,
Lela, get out of there.
“Last
chance. Where did you hide it?”
The
intensity in his voice sent a shiver up Ella's spine.
The
elevator doors finally opened. She ran down the hall to her door,
shoved it open, and nearly tripped over Lela's suitcase. Where had
she been?
“If you
won't help me, I'll find someone who will.”
Who is
she talking to?
“Uncle
Phillip, please. Put the gun down.”
“Where.
Is. It?”
“I'll
never tell you where I hid it.”
Ella ran
across the living room. Her gaze locked on her uncle's outstretched
arm, the gun in his hand level with her sister's chest. Her father's
blood red ruby pinky ring winked in the morning light streaming
through the windows.
“Tell
me,” her uncle yelled.
“Never.”
“Then
you're of no use to me anymore.”
The crack
of the gunshot stopped Ella in her tracks. Her sister's eyes went
wide when the bullet plowed into her chest. Blood blossomed over her
cream colored sheath dress, like some gruesome poppy. Lela wilted in
slow motion into a heap on the floor. Her legs kicked in a quick
jerk, and she never moved again.
Ella stood
frozen, rooted to the spot just outside the library doors, her gaze
fastened on her sister's lifeless green eyes.
“Damnit,
we needed her alive.” A man she couldn’t see said from inside the
room. It took her a second to place the voice. Detective Robbins.
What is
he doing here? Why didn't he help?
Self
preservation kicked in and she scurried to the side of the door.
Hands shaking, her stomach in knots, a whirlwind of thoughts circled
her mind, but nothing explained why her uncle killed her beautiful
sister. It couldn't be, she denied the stark reality. She leaned over
and spied through the crack in the open door.
Uncle
Phillip kneeled next to Lela and touched his finger to her bloody
neck. “If I’d had more time, I could have gotten her to talk.”
“You mean
if you hadn't lost your temper.”
Ella’s
heart broke into a billion sharp pieces that slashed her soul to
shreds. Her other half — gone. The emptiness engulfed her. She
covered her mouth with both hands to hold back the scream of pain
rising up her aching throat. Her eyes filled with tears and Lela’s
face, the same one Ella saw in the mirror each morning, swam in front
of her.
Uncle
Phillip stood, tugged at one shirt cuff and then the other to
straighten his crisp white shirt. Her father’s ruby cuff links
sparked with a glint of light from the overhead chandelier. He ran a
hand over his more gray than dark brown hair, smoothing it back.
Composed again, he turned to the door. Her breath hitched and
stopped. She thought he saw her. His next words startled her even
more.
“The
stupid girl doesn’t know when to quit.” He pulled a handkerchief
from his gray slack’s pocket and wiped his sweaty face, devoid of
wrinkles thanks to his many trips to the dermatologist for Botox
injections.
“You’re
lucky she called me.”
“Did she
tell you what she found?”
“No. She
asked me to meet her here. Her confidence in whatever she had on you
convinced me to take her seriously. If she actually had something and
shared it with anyone, you’ll go down for everything.”
“Don’t
think you won’t fall with me,” her uncle threatened.
The
detective moved forward, blocking her view of her uncle, and stared
down at Lela. “What do you want to do with the body?”
Lela was a
body. Bile rose in Ella's throat.
Her uncle
clinked open a crystal decanter at the bar across the room, pouring
himself a drink of the expensive bourbon he preferred. She prayed he
choked on it.
“Give me
a minute to think.” The ice in his voice melted and turned less
definitive and more hesitant.
“We need
to find that evidence. If it falls into the wrong hands—”
“Shut
up.” Her uncle sounded as out of control as she felt. Her insides
in chaos, not a single thought of what to do taking shape in her
mind.
“We need
to retrace her steps over the last few days. Find out where she went.
Who she saw. We’d have the state attorney and FBI banging down the
door if she gave the evidence to anyone. She hid it somewhere. We
need to find out where and get it.”
“Easier
said than done. She was smart.”
“Not
smart enough to pull this off. She contacted you without ever
considering your association with me. She was naive.” He toed
Lela’s still body with his Italian leather shoe.
“Our
business arrangement has been mutually beneficial, but if you think
I’ll be your patsy, you’re wrong. So, think, damnit, where would
she hide the evidence?”
“I don’t
fucking know.” Her uncle slammed the empty glass down on the desk.
“But Ella might.”
“Do you
think Lela told her what she uncovered?” Detective Robbins asked.
“No. Ella
asked me and the staff several times if Lela came home or called. I’m
almost certain Lela worked this out on her own and left her
recalcitrant sister out of it.”
“Almost
certain isn’t good enough. Why the hell didn’t you cover your
tracks better?”
“I did.”
“If you
did, we wouldn’t be here right now.”
Ella needed
to call the police and have them arrest these two for killing her
sweet, gentle sister. But the police were standing right there,
helping destroy her life.
The room
was silent for a moment, and Ella was certain they’d hear her
ragged breathing. She jumped when her uncle spoke again.
“Detective,
let me tell you a story.” Uncle Phillip’s voice was eerily calm.
“Our studious, prim, Lela earned her master’s degree and worked
as an executive at the company to satisfy the terms of the will and
earn her place at Wolf Enterprises. Sadly, her Princess Party Girl
twin sister barely made an effort, working in the mailroom and every
other odd job at the company. While it satisfies the general terms of
the will, Lela's carried the weight and shouldered all the
responsibility for the business.
“Lela
finally had enough and confronted her sister right here in this room.
Ella, party girl that she is, had been out all night and was high,
not at all in her right mind. The fight escalated. Ella knows I keep
a gun in my desk drawer. She grabbed it and shot Lela. She panicked,
but somehow had the wherewithal to try to cover it up, making it look
like a robbery gone wrong. With Lela gone, she will inherit the
company and other Wolf assets.
“It’s
heartbreaking, isn’t it? Such a pity. Lela had such a promising
future. I couldn’t be more heartbroken.
“Set the
scene, Detective, and then find Ella. Take her to a hotel. Not a
dump, but not extravagant either. She's hiding out. Make the place
look like she's been on a bender, drinking, doing drugs. The pain and
grief send Ella over the edge and she ODs. No one will question it.
Use your contacts in the police department and morgue to prove what
happened...make the evidence show Ella murdered Lela.
“This is
more than I signed on for,” Detective Robbins said.
“Don’t
think you’re so indispensable. There are plenty of others on my
payroll in this town, higher up the food chain than you, that would
do my bidding without blinking.”
“I’ll
get it done. I’ll need to use some of those contacts to pull this
shit off.”
“You know
who to use to make this clean. I want all the evidence, reports, and
public perception to corroborate the scenario I’ve outlined.”
Uncle
Phillip kneeled by Lela and used his handkerchief to remove her
diamond stud earrings. The ones their mother always wore. He
unclasped Lela’s bloody necklace with the pendant of a heart made
out of roses that matched hers. Ella reached up and wrapped her
trembling fingers around the one against her chest and sighed. Lela’s
ring came next. Ella gave her the emerald encircled with diamonds for
their twenty-first birthday. The night they shared a quiet dinner in
an exclusive uptown restaurant and planned their future and
fulfilling their parents' wishes and dreams for them.
She took a
step forward to snatch the ring and everything else her uncle took
from them back. She wanted to claw his eyes out and see him in a
grave. Not her sister. Not Lela.
“What are
you going to do with that?” The detective indicated the handful of
gold and gems.
“Don’t
worry about it. Do your job. The one I pay you extremely well to do.”
Her uncle
went to the bar, grabbed a towel, and wiped down the gun. He wrapped
it in the towel and handed it to the detective. “The household
staff knows I keep this gun in the top drawer of my desk. Unlocked.
Easy enough for Ella to take it and use it on her sister. Plant it,
along with the drugs and alcohol at the hotel room. Make sure the
report shows Ella's prints are on the gun and it is a ballistic match
to the bullet in her. Tomorrow morning the staff will arrive for work
and discover the body. You've got until then to find Ella and kill
her.”
Ella had
wasted enough time. She needed to get away. Fast.
Her gaze
fell on her dead sister. Her soul pleaded with Lela to wake up and
make this all just a bad dream. But Lela remained motionless on the
floor.
Ella backed
away from the door, turned, rushed back to the foyer, and grabbed her
sister’s suitcase, coat, purse, her own tote, and walked out the
door, closing it with a quiet snick of the latch. Maybe she'd find a
clue in her sister's things.
She took
the elevator down and walked through the lobby and out the door in a
daze. The doorman took the coat draped over her arm. “Let me help
you with that, Miss Wolf.”
She
mechanically stuffed her arms in the sleeves of Lela's favorite
cobalt blue coat. Her sister's scent brought tears to her eyes. She
blinked to keep them at bay. The doorman hailed her a cab and she
tossed her stuff in the backseat and slid in.
“Where
to?”
Ella
couldn’t think past the fear and grief eating away at her insides.
She didn’t know where to go or who to turn to that she could
definitely say wasn’t in her uncle’s pocket. Detective Robbins
would check with all her friends. She couldn’t risk going to one of
them and putting them in danger.
Her gaze
fell on her sister’s suitcase and the baggage tag still on the
handle. She didn’t know the BZN airport code. The purse lay on her
lap, her fingers clutching it in a death grip. She made herself relax
and unzip the bag. She found the airline ticket voucher inside.
Bozeman.
Why did
you go to Montana?
They hadn’t
been back to the family ranch since her father died in a plane crash
when they were fourteen.
“Where
are we off to?” The driver asked again, pulling her out of her dark
thoughts. A plan started to form.
“Airport.”
She barely choked out the word.
She’d
retrace her sister’s steps, find out what she’d been doing the
last three days, where she went and who she saw. She’d find the
evidence Lela died for, and God help her uncle when she did.
Review
Rating: ☆☆☆☆☆
Witnessing her identical twin sister get murdered, sends Ella Wolf into a tail spin. She needs to find the evidence that Lela found and hidden, so she has to retrace her steps in the past several days. Her uncle Phillip wants control of Wolf Enterprises. Ella makes a promise to herself and to her sister Lela that she would make sure that Phillip will spend the rest of his life behind bars. She goes to Montana and was dropped on the side of the road by Travis. Gabe finds her half frozen on the side of the road. He takes her to the clinic but she doesn't want to go because then she would have to tell people her name and use her insurance card, then her uncle would find her.
Phillip Wolf is Ella and Lela's uncle, he has a very bad temper. He oversees that they make sure that they adhere to the conditions of the will. Ella is the party girl of the two, she worked in the company at all the different departments to see what was working and what needed to be changed. She got her MBA online. Lela got her MBA from Columbia. Found what she needed to put Phillip behind bars, thought Dectective Robbins was her friend. Detective Robbins helps cover up things, he is on Phillip's payroll. Gabe Bowden bought Wolf Ranch, he used to be a bull rider. He thought Ella was Lela, he is very protective of Ella. Blake Bowden is Gabe's brother, he trains horses. Travis was helping Ella get to Wolf Ranch, he wants her to pay him back with sex. Sam is an FBI Agent.
This is my first book by Jennifer Ryan and it will most definitely will not be my last. I was hooked from the first page. I had to know what what would happen next. I loved that the story was very well written and that the characters were very well developed. I highly recommend this book to anyone and everyone.
About
the Author
Jennifer
Ryan is the New York Times & USA Today bestselling author of The
Hunted Series and The McBrides Series. She writes romantic suspense
and contemporary small-town romances featuring strong men and equally
resilient women. Her stories are filled with love, family,
friendship, and the happily-ever-after we all hope to
find.
Jennifer lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with her husband and three children. When she isn’t writing a book, she’s reading one. Her obsession with both is often revealed in the state of her home and in how late dinner is to the table. When she finally leaves those fictional worlds, you’ll find her in the garden, playing in the dirt and daydreaming about people who live only in her head, until she puts them on paper.
Jennifer lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with her husband and three children. When she isn’t writing a book, she’s reading one. Her obsession with both is often revealed in the state of her home and in how late dinner is to the table. When she finally leaves those fictional worlds, you’ll find her in the garden, playing in the dirt and daydreaming about people who live only in her head, until she puts them on paper.
Connect
with the Author
Twitter:
https://twitter.com/JenRyan_author
Website:
http://www.jennifer-ryan.com/about.html
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