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KND Freebies: Bestselling legal thriller PRIVILEGED WITNESS by Rebecca Forster is featured in today’s Free Kindle Nation Shorts excerpt

***Kindle Store Bestseller***
in both Legal Thrillers & Mysteries

plus 4.5 stars out of 165 reviews! 

Don’t miss PRIVILEGED WITNESS
while it’s 50% off the regular price!

The verdict is in…
Book 3 in the acclaimed Witness Series by

USA Today bestselling author Rebecca Forster is captivating readers…and for good reason. Intricate plot twists, compelling characters and emotionally charged suspense make her legal thrillers a must read…
4.5 stars – 167 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Grace McCreary swears she tried to stop her sister-in-law from jumping from her penthouse balcony but the police have a different take on the situation. They arrest Grace for murder which puts her brother, Senatorial candidate Matthew McCreary, in an undesirable spotlight. Nor is he thrilled when Grace seeks out his former lover, Josie Baylor-Bates, to act as her defense attorney. Josie, who has sworn off rich clients, agrees to defend Grace but even she isn’t sure why. She swears she believes in the woman’s innocence but in her heart she wants to prove that Matthew made a mistake letting her go.

Stepping back into the world of privilege and power, forced to face her feelings for a man she once loved, Josie is determined to win this case – even if she loses everything she holds dear.

5-star praise from Amazon readers:

Oh what a tangled web her clients do weave
“…The mystery and suspense of each Forster whatwhywho-dunnit will keep you flipping the pages relentlessly, but it is the heart and realism of her complex, incredibly human characters (flaws and all) that make Forster such a special writer….”

The best one yet
“Thank you Rebecca Forster for these wonderful, entertaining, spine tingling legal thrillers! …”

Suspense at its best!
“If you haven’t read Rebecca Forster’s books yet – they are fantastic! If you like James Patterson – you will love her books too! Great characters!”

an excerpt from

Privileged Witness

by Rebecca Forster

Chapter 1

The half-naked woman had come from the penthouse— she just hadn’t bothered to use the elevator. Instead, she stepped off the balcony eleven stories up. Her theatrics kept Detective Babcock from a quiet evening with a good book, a glass of wine and some very fine music. Detective Babcock didn’t hold a grudge long, though. One look at the jumper made him regret that he hadn’t arrived in time to stop her.

Beautiful even in death, the woman lay on the hot concrete as if it were her bed. One arm was crooked at an angle so that the delicate fingers of her right hand curled toward her head; the other lay straight, the hand open-palmed at her hip. On her right wrist was a diamond and sapphire bracelet. A matching earring had come off at impact and was caught in her dark hair. Her slim legs were curved together. Her feet were small and bare. Her head was turned in profile. Her eyes were closed. The wedding ring she wore made Horace Babcock feel just a little guilty for admiring her. She carried her age well so that it was difficult to tell exactly how—

“Crap. I think I felt a raindrop.”

Babcock inclined his head. His eyes flickered toward Kurt Rippy, who was hunkered at the side of a pool of blood that haloed the jumper’s head. It was the only sign that something traumatic had occurred here. It would be different when the coroner’s people turned the body to take her away. When they cut off the yellow silk and lace teddy at the morgue and laid her face up, naked on a metal table, they would find half her head caved in, her ribs pulverized, her pelvis shattered. Her brain might fall out and that would be a sad sight, indeed. How glad Babcock was to see her this way.

Elegant.

Asleep.

An illusion.

Raising a hand toward the sky, he checked the weather. Even though the day was done it was still hot. He could see the thunderheads that had hovered over the San Bernardino Mountains for the last few days were now rolling toward Long Beach. Pity tonight would be wet when the other three hundred and sixty-four days of the year had been bone dry.

“Are you almost done?” Babcock asked, knowing the rain would wash away the blood and a thousand little pieces of grit and dust and things that Kurt needed to collect as a matter of course.

“Yeah. Not much to get here. I bagged her hands just in case, but she looks clean.”

Detective Babcock bridled at the adjective. It was too pedestrian for her. Hardly poetic.

She was pristine.

She was beautiful.

She was privileged.

She was a lady who was either going to or coming from something important. She was going or coming alone because no one had run screaming from the penthouse distraught that she had checked out of this world in such a manner. The traffic on Ocean Boulevard had slowed but not stopped as the paramedics converged on the site, sirens frantically wailing until they determined they were too late to help. With a huge grunt, Kurt stood up and rolled his latex gloves off with a delicate snap.

“That’s it for me. I’m going to let them bundle her before we all get wet. I hate when it’s this hot and it rains. Reminds me of Chicago. I hate Chicago . . .”

He took a deep breath and stood over the woman for a minute as his train of thought jumped the tracks. His hands were crossed at his crotch, his head was bent, and his eyes were on the victim. He seemed to be praying and his reverence surprised and impressed Detective Babcock. Finally, Kurt drew another huge breath into his equally big body, flipped at the tie that lay on top of his stomach instead of over it and angled his head toward Babcock.

“How much you think a thing like that costs?”

“What thing?”

“That thing she’s wearing?” Kurt wiggled a finger toward the body and Babcock closed his eyes. Lord, the indignity the dead suffered at the hands of the police.

“I believe that type of lingerie is quite expensive.”

“Figures. Guess her old man could afford it. Now me? I think Kim would look real good in something like that, but with what I take home . . .”

A sigh was the only sign of Babcock’s irritation as he moved away and left Kurt Rippy to lament the limitations of a cop’s salary. Then it began to rain. Just as the last vestiges of blood were being diluted and drained into the cracks of the sizzling sidewalk, Detective Babcock walked across the circular drive, past the exquisitely lit fountain of the jumper’s exclusive building, and went inside. There was still so much to do, not the least of which was to talk to one Mr. Jorgensen, the poor soul who had been making his way home just as the lady leapt. Old Mr. Jorgensen, surprised to find a scantily clad dead woman at his feet, made haste to leave the scene as soon as the emergency vehicles arrived. He probably couldn’t offer much, but a formal statement was necessary and Babcock would take it.

He rode the elevator, breathing in the scent of new: new construction, new rugs, new fittings and fastenings. Babcock preferred the Villa Riviera a few buildings down. The scrolled facade, the peaked copper roof, the age of it intrigued him in a way new never could. He got out on the third floor and knocked on the second door on the left. He waited. And waited. Eventually, the door opened and Babcock looked down at the wizened man with the walker.

“Mr. Jorgensen? I’m Detective Horace Babcock.” He held out his card. The old man snatched it.

“It’s about time you got here,” he complained and turned his back. The carpet swallowed the thumping of the walker but the acoustics of the spacious apartment were impeccable. Babcock heard the old man’s every mumble and word. “I should be in bed by now but I can’t sleep. Something like this is damn upsetting at my age. Have you told her husband? Bet you can’t even find him to tell him. Goddamn pictures of him everywhere. Can’t turn on the television without seeing him but is he ever home? No. Never home. Well, in and out. But not good enough for a woman like her. Nice. Quiet. Real pretty, that woman. So, have you told him yet?”

“Yes, sir. We have located her husband. He’ll be here soon.”

Deferentially slow, Babcock followed the old man but something in his voice seemed to amuse Mr. Jorgensen. The old man stopped just long enough to flash an impish smile over his shoulder.

“Bet he’s got a load in his pants now, huh?” Mr. Jorgensen wiggled his eyebrows, chuckled and walked on, telling Babcock something he already knew. “Yep, it’s a big, big mess for a man in his position.

Chapter 2

The last time Josie Baylor-Bates had seen Kevin O’Connel he was wearing prison issue that marked him as the criminal she knew him to be. Unfortunately, a jury of his peers hadn’t been convinced that he had beaten his wife Susan to within an inch of her life.

Though she swore it was Kevin, an expert defense witness testified that Susan’s head injuries had resulted in an odd type of amnesia. Her husband was the last person she saw on the day of the incident, ergo Susan O’Connel transferred guilt to him. When the DA failed to get a conviction Josie suggested another way to make Kevin O’Connel pay for what he’d done: a civil trial where the burden of proof was not as strict and the damages would be monetary.

Susan O’Connel had been partially paralyzed because of the attack. She was in hiding, in fear of her life since her husband hadn’t been put in jail. Josie had argued that Susan deserved every last dime Kevin O’Connel had ever—or would ever—make.

Now the civil trial was over and Kevin O’Connel was squirming as solemn-faced jurors filled the box. He shot Josie a nervous, hateful look that she didn’t bother to acknowledge. Instead, she watched the foreman hand the decision to the clerk, who read the settlement with all the passion of a potato growing:

“The jury finds Kevin O’Connel guilty of assault with intent to kill and awards Susan O’Connel special damages in the amount of one hundred and fifty thousand dollars and general damages in the amount of one and a half million dollars. We further find that the assault was committed with malice and award Susan O’Connel—”

“That’s crap! What the fuc—” Kevin O’Connel shot out of his seat. While his attorney grappled with him the spectators gasped and the judge gave warning.

“Go no further, Mr. O’Connel!”

Josie heard the scuffle, heard Kevin O’Connel curse his attorney and, finally, heard him fall silent as the judge threatened contempt and imprisonment. It was a scene that didn’t seem to interest Josie. She pushed her fountain pen through her fingers, and then did it again, concentrating on that so the court wouldn’t see an unseemly grin of satisfaction. Josie was pleased that she had come close to ruining Kevin O’Connel. He deserved worse. He got it a second later. Another five hundred thousand in punitive damages was awarded.

Finally, Josie smiled at the jury as they were dismissed with the court’s thanks. It was over. Susan O’Connel was a rich woman on paper and Josie would do everything she could to collect for her client. Wages would be garnisheed, the retirement account cleaned out and the house they had shared sold. Josie would make sure Kevin O’Connel surrendered his car, his boat—she’d take his toothbrush if she could. Every time Kevin got a little ahead. Josie would be there with her hand out on behalf of her client.

It had been a very good day and it was just past noon.

Picking up her briefcase, Josie reached for the little swinging gate, but Kevin O’Connel put his hand on it first. He looked Josie in the eye, then pushed it back with a cool loathing that was meant to intimidate. It didn’t. Josie walked past him, down the center aisle and toward the door. His hatred trailed after her and stuck like sweat.

From her height to her confidence to her power, Kevin O’Connel despised everything about Josie Baylor-Bates. He hated that she won. He hated that she stood taller than he did. Kevin O’Connel hated her intelligence. He hated that she dismissed him when she put her fancy little phone to her ear. He knew who she was calling and that pissed him off royally—enough that he just couldn’t stand watching it happen.

When Josie walked into the hall Kevin O’Connel was right behind her. It appeared he was trying to maneuver around her but stumbled instead and knocked her off balance. Her phone clattered to the floor, her arm went out and she steadied herself against the wall. Before she could pick it up, the phone was snatched away.

“Sorry. Guess I better look where I’m going,” O’Connel teased, seemingly pleased that he had hit her hard and disappointed that he hadn’t hurt her.

Josie reached for what was hers but he held it back like an evil little boy who had pinched a hair ribbon. Slowly he put the phone to his ear.

“Good news, Suzy. You got it all, babe. Everything and then some. Enjoy it while you can.” Kevin O’Connel must have liked what he was hearing. There was a glint in his eye that turned to a self-satisfied sparkle before fading to mock disappointment. “She hung up.”

“Are you stupid or just a glutton for punishment?” Josie asked, not bothering to try to wrestle the phone away from him.

“That’s funny, you calling me stupid. I got to her first, didn’t I?” Kevin twirled the little phone. It disappeared into his big hand and he looked at that fist as if he admired it. He looked at Josie as if he didn’t hold her in the same esteem.

“If the shoe fits,” Josie answered dryly and then gave warning. “Push me again and I’ll have you arrested for assault. Hand over the phone or I’ll have you arrested for robbery. Say one more word to your wife and you won’t believe the charges I’ll file. If you really are smart, you’ll quit while you’re ahead.”

“And you better think twice before you let me see your bitch face again,” he hissed. Josie could feel the warmth of his breath before she retreated a step, but he was still on her. “I don’t go down that easy. Tell Suzy she’s got one more chance. She can come home and everything will be fine. If she doesn’t, she won’t get a penny and I’ll take you both out. I swear I will.”

“The only way Susan will ever even look at you again is over my dead body, Mr. O’Connel.”

Josie had had enough. She put out her hand for her phone. Taken aback by her self-assuredness, Kevin O’Connel almost gave it to her. Then he thought again, held his fist high and, with a laugh, dropped it at her feet.

“Oops.” The mischievousness melted from his eyes.

Josie looked down, then up again. Kevin O’Connel was waiting for her to get it. The man could wait until hell froze over because Josie Bates wouldn’t spend one second at his feet.

“Think about what you said,” Kevin O’Connel warned. “That dead body thing—”

“Excuse me?”

Surprised to find that they weren’t the only two people in the universe, O’Connel stepped away and Josie looked at the lady who was retrieving the phone. There was a good two grand on the woman’s back, another couple hundred on her feet. Not the type you’d figure for a good deed, not exactly the kind of woman who usually prowled the San Pedro courthouse. When she righted herself Josie had the impression that she smiled.

“I think this belongs to you.”

She held Josie’s phone out on her palm like a peace offering. Josie took it with a barely audible “Thanks” as she kept an eye on Kevin O’Connel. With a cock of a finger he shot Josie an imaginary bullet filled with hatred, arrogance and warning. Then he dismissed her with a grunt, turned on his heel and sauntered away, leaving Josie and the lady to watch.

“He doesn’t seem very pleasant,” the woman noted.

“He isn’t,” Josie answered and walked on. She got Susan on the phone again, calming her as she opened the door and absentmindedly held it for the man directly behind her. Josie paused on the sidewalk and made her second call. Eleven rings and Hannah answered. Home from school on a half day, homework done, she was readying her last painting for her exhibit at Hermosa Beach’s Gallery C. The girl had come a long way since Josie had taken her in. A casualty of adult folly, Hannah was now legally under Josie’s guardianship and she was anxious that Josie would not only be home, but be home in time for the exhibit. Josie assured Hannah that only the end of the world could keep her away, then said goodbye. Dropping the phone in her purse Josie was giving a cursory thought to where she might grab a bite to eat, when she felt a hand on her arm.

“Josie Bates?”

“Yep.” She looked first at the obscenely large emerald ring that adorned that hand, then at the rich lady who had followed her from the courthouse.

“I wonder if I could take a few minutes of your time.” She offered a smile and followed up with an invitation. “Perhaps lunch? It’s already past noon.”

Josie inclined her head, peeved at the interruption, perplexed by the invitation and dismayed by the woman issuing it. Josie had sworn off this kind of client long ago: the kind with more money than good sense, the kind usually found in Beverly Hills or Hollywood, the kind who had a different take on justice than the rank and file. This one looked to be bad news. Like a high-priced car she was sleek, high maintenance and tuned to a powerful, itchy idle. If Josie let her, she would press the gas and Josie would have no choice but to go along for the ride. The trick was to get out of the way before the flag dropped.

“I have an office in Hermosa Beach.”

Josie reached for a card. When the woman put out her hand again Josie moved to avoid the contact and tried to shake off the sudden chill that crackled up the back of her neck. Something was amiss, but the sense of it was vague and Josie didn’t want to waste her time getting a handle on it. Still, the woman persisted.

“I’d like to talk to you today. It’s very important. There’s a place not too far from here where we could talk privately.” Her voice was deep, almost sultry.

“I’m sorry, I don’t work that way. Call my office. If you’ve got something I can help you with I’ll let you know; if I can’t, I’ll refer you.”

Josie started to leave but the woman’s fingers dug in hard on her arm. It took less than a second for Josie to note the change in the lady’s demeanor, to see the flash of anger behind her dark eyes. It took even less time for Josie to break the hold and make herself clear.

“You better find someone else to help you.”

“No. I need to talk to you,” she whispered, refusing to be dismissed. “It’s about Matthew. Matthew McCreary.”

The woman smiled sweetly, triumphantly as Josie’s outrage turned to surprise. The lady’s abracadabra had conjured up a past that left Josie Baylor-Bates mesmerized, almost hypnotized. She came close again. This time both hands reached out and took Josie by the shoulders as if relieved a long search was over.

“I’m Grace McCreary. Matthew’s sister.”

Josie shook her head hard. She stumbled as she tried to free herself and that made the woman in blue hold tighter still. That was enough to bring Josie around. She pulled back, narrowed her eyes and said:

“You’re dead.

Chapter 3

Josie threw cold water on her face and looked at herself in the mirror. Then she did it all over again but this time she skipped the mirror. She knew what she looked like: pale under her tan, the blue of her eyes almost black, her cheekbones too prominent because shock had drained her. She was shaken by Grace McCreary’s appearance, unsure how she felt about it, and she resented having to figure it out standing in the bathroom of Fistonich’s Piano Bar and Restaurant two blocks down from the courthouse.

From the third stall there was a flush. Josie yanked at the paper towels stuck in the dispenser. When the door opened, a waitress came out adjusting a frilly white apron over her full black skirt. She looked like an aged showgirl: great legs and a face that had long ago lost its allure. She rinsed her hands and watched Josie pull harder until she was rewarded with a handful of coarse white paper. The waitress plucked two sheets from the pile in Josie’s hands.

“You okay, honey?” She sounded like a carnival barker.

“Yeah. Sure. I’m great.” Josie put the towels on top of the dispenser. There was nothing better than finding out that your soul mate didn’t have a soul at all.

Josie had lived with Matthew McCreary for three years, knew him a full year before that, had an intimate-as-hell relationship only to find out that he’d forgotten to mention one little thing: his sister was alive and well somewhere in the world. Family, the one thing Josie longed for, Matthew had treated cavalierly. She’d believed his sister died in the same accident that took his parents. How cruel to the memory of his parents, how unfair to Grace McCreary, how malicious to play on Josie’s emotional weakness.

Jesus.

She had skinny-dipped with Matthew McCreary in the ocean and made love on the floor of their house. She had told him about her mother’s abandonment, her father’s death. Josie had respected his pain, recognizing that he lived with tragedy the same way she did. Josie had taken Matthew McCreary’s shirts to the laundry because she wanted to, not because he expected it. He had allowed her to believe a lie; to live with a liar.

Christ.

Matthew had told her he was alone in the world. He said he felt complete with her and that made Josie feel whole. He was the first man she had loved. Josie admired Matthew. She believed in him. They parted like adults for all the adult reasons, but that didn’t keep the parting from hurting or the memory of him from lingering.

Damn him.

Josie had been happy when she heard Matthew was married. She was so proud when he threw his hat in the ring in a bid for the Senate nomination. Josie thought he was close to perfect, just that she wasn’t perfect for him. She didn’t want to find her identity subservient to his political ambition or his money. Josie believed that was her failure and she had lived with that regret all these years. But what really made her angry was that the mere idea that Matthew McCreary was in her world again made her heart race.

Damn it all, Matthew, and your sister, too.

Crumpling the paper towel, Josie tossed it in the trash, left the ladies’ room and paused in the small dark hall by the pay phone. Fistonich’s was a restaurant without windows; a throwback to the fifties. At night the piano bar filled with ancient people decked out in cocktail finery any vintage collector would kill for. The women shaded their eyes in blue and tinted their silver hair pink. The men wore toupees that had seen better days and polyester pants in shades the rainbow had never heard of. The place served a decent steak and management watched out for the old folks who got drunk and wept as they sang the old songs and danced cheek to cheek. But that was night and this was noon. The place looked shabby, smelled like smoke and was nearly deserted except for Grace McCreary, who waited patiently at a corner table for Josie to return. When Josie slid onto the black leather banquette, she put her purse by her side and gave Grace McCreary the once-over.

She had seen a picture of Grace as a gawky youngster, so it was no surprise that she didn’t recognize the woman upon whom God had played a cosmic joke. He had given Grace everything Matthew had: a high-bridged straight nose; quick, dark eyes protected by lush lashes; high cheekbones and artistically shaped lips. Unfortunately, where the sum of the parts made Matthew look intellectual and intensely handsome, his sister appeared untrustworthy and tough. In short, Grace McCreary looked like Matthew in drag—except Matthew would have been prettier.

To make matters worse, Grace made no attempt to soften her features, choosing instead to accentuate them with a short slash of dark hair that she swept behind ears decorated with moons of mabe pearls. Grace was pulled together with frightening precision and spoke with an East Coast accent so slight Josie might have missed it if she hadn’t been hanging on every curious word that came out of Grace McCreary’s mouth.

“I ordered you a beer. Matthew said you liked beer.” Grace tipped her head back and a plume of smoke seeped from between her rose-colored lips.

“That’s illegal in California. You can’t smoke in restaurants.” Josie gave a nod to the cigarette.

“The waitress smokes. She brought me her ashtray from the back room. You won’t turn us in to the police, will you?”

Grace cut her eyes slyly toward Josie, inviting her to share a giggle at this bit of naughtiness. It would have seemed a little girl trick if the glint in her eye wasn’t so sharp, if a dare to bend the rules didn’t lurk in her tone. When Josie didn’t react, the smile faded, the cigarette was extinguished. Ground out. Pushed down until the accordioned filter was half buried in a bed of shredded tobacco. Josie stayed silent. Grace’s brow furrowed as she rubbed the bits of the brown stuff from her fingers.

“Then again maybe you would tell on me. Matthew said you were a letter-of-the-law woman. He said you could be counted on to always do the right thing.”

“Do you believe everything Matthew says?”

Josie pushed the beer away, insulted by everything about this woman: her odd small talk, her ladies-who-lunch suit, her giant emerald ring and huge pearl earrings, her assumption that Josie would drink beer for lunch while she sipped ice tea. But her contempt went unnoticed.

“If someone is right, why not? He said you put yourself through college on a volleyball scholarship. He said you were smart and trustworthy. I’m not athletic myself and I know how much Matthew admires that. He told me you were as tall as he was, but I didn’t expect you to be so beautiful.”

“I’m not beautiful,” Josie said.

“Handsome, then.” Grace amended her comment seamlessly. Her gaze caught Josie’s as if she had studied the technique of eye contact but lost the art. “I saw you in the newspaper when you defended that man—the one they said killed the poor boy at the amusement park. The picture didn’t do you justice but it was the only one I’d seen. Matthew doesn’t have a picture of you.”

“I’m sure his wife wouldn’t have appreciated him keeping one around.”

“He wasn’t always married,” Grace reminded her and with the mention of Matthew’s dead wife the emerald ring turned ’round and ’round. Only the thumb of Grace’s left hand moved and she seemed oddly unaware of the motion. It was accompanied by a tic that made her well coiffed head pull up as if someone had bridled her and the bit was painful.

“But he always had a sister,” Josie reminded her, eager to shift the spotlight where it belonged. “Listen, Grace, is it just me or don’t you find it a little disturbing that Matthew led me to believe you were dead?”

“Matthew told me you always wanted to live at the beach. He told me you were a bleeding heart. . .” Grace talked over Josie as if she hadn’t spoken and that was the last straw.

“Okay. I don’t know why you’re here but this conversation is going nowhere. If Matthew wants to see me he can give me a call.” Josie reached for her purse. She was sliding out of the booth when Grace leaned over the table and stopped her as easily as if she’d erected a wall.

“Matthew didn’t stop thinking about you when he married Michelle,” she said quietly. “He would see you on the television or see a picture in the paper. I could tell what you meant to him. You should know that.”

Josie paused, confused by this piece of information. Grace’s own hands slipped beneath the table and Josie had no doubt the emerald was still whirly gigging. Wary of this woman’s liberties as the past was insinuating itself into the present, Josie pulled her lips together. Grace’s mere presence was rewriting Matthew’s history and Josie’s right along with it and that could threaten everything and everyone Josie loved.

“Matthew and me, that was a long time ago.” Josie looked away so that Grace McCreary wouldn’t see the flush in her cheeks. “Our history is private. Now, if there’s something you want, tell me. If you were just curious, you’ve seen me. And when you see Matthew, tell him to take care of his own business instead of sending a sister he was ashamed of to do it for him.”

Josie was about to leave, to forget she had ever met Grace McCreary, when she saw a fascinating play of expressions ripple across the woman’s beautifully made-up face. Grace’s shoulders broadened as if she were steeling herself for an assault; she tensed as if trying to absorb a possibly fatal blow and Josie was mesmerized.

“Oh, I see. Well, I suppose I never looked at it that way. I didn’t think he was asham—” Grace couldn’t bring herself to finish that sentence, so she shook back her hair and started another one. “I’ve made a terrible mistake. I thought he had told you something—enough that you would understand our relationship.”

“Christ.”

Josie shifted and pulled her purse close, uncomfortable with the turning of this particular tide. It seemed the truth was that a living sister was less important to Matthew than the memory of Josie and for Grace that was a devastating realization.

“Christ,” Josie muttered again, sympathetic to Grace’s plight. People erased other people from their lives all the time. Josie’s mother had done it, why not Matthew? That connection bought Grace some time.

“No, it’s all right.” Grace put up a hand to ward off sympathy. The emerald slipped to the wrong side of her finger, flashing like some alien sign of peace. “You mattered to him, I didn’t. That’s why I know so much about you and you know nothing about me. Please, don’t be angry with Matthew. He had his reasons. It isn’t important now.”

“Then what is important?” Josie asked. “Because it’s pretty clear you don’t just want to have a drink.”

“Matthew is in trouble. You have to help him.”

Grace leaned close. Her eyelids were dusted with silver and gray, black liner swept out at the corners. Grace McCreary’s skin was beautiful and her hair was luxuriously thick. Josie should have been able to admire her but the scrutiny of those dark, narrow eyes, too close together to be beautiful, made her uneasy. She was left with the feeling that she was being drawn into a conspiracy.

“Maybe you haven’t been listening to the news,” Josie said. “According to the pundits, if Matthew gets the nomination he’s favored in the general election. Why would he need anyone’s help?”

Grace’s face lit up like that of a lonely child thrilled to find someone who would play with her. She pulled a manila envelope from her purse and pushed it across the table.

“It’s not about his campaign,” Grace breathed. “It’s about the police. They don’t think Michelle committed suicide. They think Matthew killed his wife.”

PRIVILEGED WITNESS

(The Witness Series, #3)
by Rebecca Forster

4.5 stars – 165 reviews!!
Special Kindle Price: $2.99!
(Reg. price $5.99 –
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