Why should I provide my email address?

Start saving money today with our FREE daily newsletter packed with the best FREE and bargain Kindle book deals. We will never share your email address!
Sign Up Now!

KND Freebies: Compelling legal thriller SILENT WITNESS by bestselling Rebecca Forster is featured in this morning’s Free Kindle Nation Shorts excerpt

***Kindle Store Bestseller***
Legal Thrillers
plus 293 rave reviews!

Don’t miss SILENT WITNESS while it’s 60% off the regular price!

The verdict is in…
Book 2 in the acclaimed Witness Series by
USA Today bestselling author Rebecca Forster is dazzling readers…and for good reason.

4.5 stars – 324 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Or check out the Audible.com version of SILENT WITNESS (legal thriller, thriller) (The Witness Series,#2)
in its Audible Audio Edition, Unabridged!
Here’s the set-up:

Josie Baylor-Bates has a full plate caring for a troubled teen, but it’s about to get fuller when her ex-cop lover, Archer, is accused of murdering his disabled stepson — a son Josie never even knew he had. When Timothy Wren died at California’s oldest amusement park it appeared to be a tragic accident. But now Timothy’s biological father and the district attorney are out for blood. Is this a criminal action with merit, a vendetta or is there a big cash settlement in the offing?

For Josie the stakes are higher — it’s personal. Racing against time to prove someone is framing Archer, her faith in him is tested by his honesty regarding his feelings about his stepson. Finally, she finds the truth lies not in Archer’s words but with a long-forgotten silent witness.

5-star praise for Silent Witness:

Amazing, must read…
“…intricate attention to detail, perfection in development of character…this page-turning novel will keep you in suspense…”

Excellent sequel
“….shocking sucker-punch ending…and the ramifications…are discussed with a no-holds-barred honesty not often found in genre fiction. In other words, there are no easy answers and Rebecca Forster isn’t afraid to say so….”

an excerpt from

Silent Witness

by Rebecca Forster

 

Copyright © 2014 by Rebecca Forster and published here with her permission

Prologue

He shot the naked woman at nine thirty in the morning; the naked man was in his sights at nine forty-five.

Three more shots:  the front door and address, the woman’s car nestled in the shadows of an Acacia tree, the man’s car parked in front of the house – as subtle a statement as a dog pissing to mark its territory.  The camera started to whir. Archer decided he had enough to satisfy his client that the missus wasn’t exactly waiting with bated breath for him to high tail it home.

Archer reloaded and stashed the exposed film in his pocket then let his head fall back against the Hummer’s seat. Cradling the camera in his lap, Archer felt his body go heavy as his eyes closed.  He was tired to the bone and not because he had another couple of hours to wait before Don Juan decided to pack up his piece and take his leave.  This tired was in Archer’s soul; this tired crept way deep into that heart muscle and made it hard to pump enough blood to keep him going.

He moved in the seat, put one leg up and tried to stretch it out. There wasn’t a comfortable place for a man his size even in this hunk of Hummer metal; there wasn’t a comfortable place in his mind for the thoughts that had been dogging him for days.

He hated this gig, spying on wayward wives.  No self-respecting cop would be doing this kind of work even if the wronged husband were paying big bucks.  But then Archer wasn’t a self-respecting cop anymore.  He was a part-time photographer, a retired detective, a freelance investigator and a man who was running on empty when it came to making ends meet this month. And then there was the anniversary.

He didn’t want to think about that either, but it was impossible to clear his mind when California autumn had come again, a carbon copy of a day Archer would just as soon not remember. It had been sunny like today: bright sky blue up high, navy in the deep sea. A nip in the day air. Cold at night.  Lexi, his wife, was sick. And then there was Tim. God, he hated thinking about it. But on a day like this, with too much time on his hands, it couldn’t be helped.

Archer stirred and held the camera in the crook of one arm like a child.  His other one was bent against the door so he could rest his head in his upturned hand.  He moved his mind like he moved his body, adjusting, settling in with another thought until he found a good place where it could rest.

Josie.

Always Josie. The woman who saved him from insanity after Lexi died. They’d hit a little rough patch lately but even that didn’t keep the thought of her from putting his mind in a good place.  Sleep was coming. What was happening in the house was just a job.  The other was just a memory.  Josie was real.  Josie was . . .

Archer didn’t have the next second to put a word to what Josie meant to him. The door of the Hummer was ripped open, almost off its hinges.  Archer fell out first, the camera right after. Off balance already, he was defenseless against the huge hands that grappled and grasped at his shoulders and the ferocity of the man who threw him onto the asphalt and knelt on his back.

“Jesus Christ. . .” Archer barked just before the breath was knocked out of him.

“Shut up.” The man atop him growled, dug his knee into Archer’s back, and took hold of his hair.

Archer grunted. Shit, he was getting old. The guy in the house not only made him, he got the drop on him. Archer ran through what he knew: the guy was a suit, one seventy tops, didn’t work out. He should be able to flick this little shit off with a deep breath.

Hands flat on the ground, Archer tried to do just that but as he pushed himself off the pavement he had another surprise. It wasn’t the guy in the house at all. The man on his back was big, he was heavy and he wasn’t alone. There were two of them.

While the first ground Archer’s face into the blacktop, the second found a home for the toe of his boot in Archer’s midsection. Archer bellowed. He curled. He tried to roll but that opened him up and this time that boot clipped the side of his face, catching the corner of his eye. The blow sent him into the arms of the first man who embraced him with an arm around his throat. Archer’s eyes rolled back in his head. Jesus that hurt. His eyelids fluttered. One still worked right. He looked up and stopped struggling.

The guy who had him in a headlock knew what he was doing.  If Archer moved another inch and the man adjusted his grip, Archer’s neck would snap. As it was, the guy was doing a fine job of making sure Archer was finding it damn hard to breathe.

His eyes rolled again as a pain shot straight through his temple and embedded itself behind his ear.  He tried to focus, needing to see at least one of them if he was going to identify them when – if – he got out of this mess. They could have the car. No car was worth dying for.  But he couldn’t tell them to take it if he couldn’t speak and he couldn’t identify them if he could barely see. There was just the vaguest impression of blue eyes, a clean-shaven face, and a checked shirt.  Archer’s thoughts undulated with each new wave of pain. Connections were made then broken and made again like a faulty wire. The one that stuck made sense: these guys didn’t want his car but they sure as hell wanted something. Just as the chokehold king tightened his grip, and his friend took another swipe at Archer’s ribs, one of them offered a clue.

“You asshole. Thought you got away with it, didn’t you?”

That was not a helpful hint.

Roger McEntyre took the call at ten thirty-five without benefit of a secretary. Didn’t need one; didn’t want one. The kind of work he did wasn’t dependent on memos and messages. He kept important information in his head.  If he shared that information, it was because he wanted to. If Roger wasn’t in his office, couldn’t be raised on his cell, had not told his colleagues where to contact him then he meant not to be found. That’s what a company guy did.  He delivered what the company needed and was rewarded with the knowledge that he was the best in the business.  Everyone had tried to hire him away: Disneyland, Magic Mountain, Knott’s Berry Farm but a company man was loyal. Roger was loyal to Pacific Park, the oldest amusement park in California, loyal to the man who had given his father a job when no one else would, loyal to the man who treated him like a son.

Now he was about to deliver a piece of good news the company needed bad.  He was delivering it before schedule and that made him proud, though it was difficult to tell.  Roger’s smile was hidden by the walrus mustache he had grown the minute he left the service. That was a pity because he actually had a nice, almost boyish grin when he thought to use it.

So he left his office – a small, spare space off a long corridor – and passed the two offices where his colleagues worked. One ex-FBI, the other a product of New York’s finest. Roger, himself, was Special Forces. Honorable discharge.  Fine training.

He walked through the reception area of building three and gave the girl at the desk an almost imperceptible nod as he passed. She was a cute kid and Roger doubted she knew his name. Given her expression, he imagined she wasn’t even sure he worked there. That’s the kind of man he was. He walked like he knew where he was going and didn’t mess where he wasn’t supposed to. If he had been another kind of man that little girl would have been open season. She didn’t know how lucky she was.

Roger pushed through the smoke glass doors and snapped his sunglasses on before the first ray of light had a chance to make him wince. Thanks to the year ‘round school schedules the park was still busy even at the end of October. Halloween decorations were everywhere. On the 31st the park would be wall-to-wall kids causing all sorts of problems. Today there were none.

Roger dodged a couple of teenagers who weren’t looking where they were going, stopped long enough to oblige a woman who asked him to take a picture of her family, and noted that the paint was peeling on the door of the men’s bathroom near the park entrance.

He took a sharp right, ducked under a velvet rope and walked through a real door hidden in a fake rock.  The air-conditioning hit him hard with an annoyingly prickly cold. Isaac liked it that way. That was strange for an old guy. Usually old guys liked things warm.   Down a small hallway he went, through another glass door, across another reception area and into the executive suite. The receptionist there was of a different caliber all together. She was slick. Expensive haircut. Older. Had too much style to be stuck behind the scenes.

“Mary.” Roger nodded as he went by her.

“He’s waiting,” she said.

“Yes.”

Roger opened one of the double doors just far enough to slip through then stood inside the office, arms at his side, posture perfect as always. Isaac’s office was nice. Very adult, very sophisticated considering the kind of business they were in.

The silver haired man behind the mahogany desk was on the phone. That call wasn’t as important as Roger. The receiver went to the cradle, and Isaac Hawkins’ hand held onto it as if he were bracing for bad news.  Roger’s mustache twitched. He didn’t want to get the old man’s hopes up so he made his report without elaboration.

“They got him. Everything’s moving forward.”

“Then it was true.”

Isaac’s shoulders slumped ever so slightly in his relief. Roger moved closer to the desk just in case he was needed. Isaac looked ten years younger than his years but even that would have been old.

“The District Attorney made the decision,” Roger answered as Isaac got up from his desk. “We just gave them what we had.”

Isaac Hawkins walked up to Roger. He took him by the shoulders, looked into his face and then drew him forward.

“Your father would have been proud. Thank you, Roger.”

“Don’t worry, Isaac.”

“I’m glad we did the right thing,” the old man said before he sat down again. “Let me know how it goes. You’ll do that, won’t you?”

“I will.”

Roger turned away; satisfied he had done his work well. At least that was one monkey off the old guy’s back – one that should never have been there in the first place. Not after all these years.

Of the five attorneys, five secretaries, two paralegals, receptionist, mailroom boy, suite of offices in Brentwood and shark tank, Jude Getts was proudest of the shark tank. It was a cliché, sure, but in his case it was a cliché that worked.  Getts & Associates was not the largest law firm but it was the leanest, most voracious personal injury firm in Los Angeles. Lose a leg? A lung? A life?  Jude’s associates put a price tag on everything and collected with amazing regularity.  They didn’t as much negotiate with defendants as hold them hostage until they coughed up the big bucks; they didn’t try a case as much as flay it, peeling back the skin of it slowly, painfully, exquisitely. And, of all the attorneys in the firm, Jude Getts was the best.

Bright eyed, boyish, his blond tipped hair waved back from a wide, clear brow. Jude was tall but not too tall, dramatic without being theatrical, a master of the touch, the look, the smile.  He had timing whether it was offered during closing arguments or a rare intimate moment with a woman chosen for the length of her legs or the look of her face. But what made Jude a really, really good personal injury attorney was that he loved a challenge more than anything else. He rejoiced in it. A challenge made his heart flutter, made him smile wider, laugh heartier, and made his work even more impeccable. What he was hearing on the radio as he drove to meet his client was making that heart of his feel like an aviary just before an earthquake.

Jude passed the keys to his car to the valet and said ‘keep it close’ before he bounded into the foyer of the Napa Valley Grill, past the hostess who was gorgeous but rated only his most radiant, thoughtless, everyday smile.  He gave his drink order to his favorite waiter with a touch to the man’s arm, a tip of his head that indicated Jude really didn’t think of him as a waiter at all but as a friend. The drink arrived at the table just as Jude was sliding onto the chair, giving his very best professional smile to the man across the table.

“Colin,” Jude said as he snapped the heavy white napkin and laid it across his lap.

“Jude,” the other man nodded. He already had a drink. It was almost gone.

“They make a good drink here, Colin. Damn good drink.”

“I’ve had two,” the client noted.

Colin Wren was not a man who really enjoyed life, and insisting he take time to smell the roses, gave Jude an unprecedented kick in the ass.  But while he was laughing on the inside, the outside was always respectful. Colin was, after all, the client.

“I’m sorry I kept you waiting but something came to my attention. It’s definitely going to change the course of our business, Colin.”

“I don’t want anything to change the course of our business,” Colin said quietly and finished his second drink.  “I’ve waited too long.”

The eyes that looked at Jude from behind wire rim glasses were soft brown, gentle looking. They were the eyes of a priest.  Colin Wren was not a priest, nor was he particularly kindly or likeable. An opportunity brought him to Jude, but every once in a while Jude had the sneaking suspicion the matter at hand was more than business.

“Well, Colin, I’m not sure you’ve got a choice. It seems our friends at Pacific Park have made a brilliant move.” Jude took a drink, put his glass down and crossed his arms on the table. “They handed the problem off to the district attorney and suddenly we’re talking a criminal matter here. Until John Cooper does what he’s going to do, we don’t have a snowball’s chance in hell of collecting on a civil action.”  Jude picked up his glass again. “How’s that for a surprise, Colin?”

Chapter 1

“Ms. Bates,” Mrs. Crawford said. “I’m going to have to be brutally honest with you.   Some parents are concerned about Hannah enrolling at Mira Costa High School. Ms. Bates?”

Startled, Josie shifted in her seat. She’d been watching Hannah through the little window in the door of the principal’s office. Hannah’s head was down as she dutifully filled out registration forms. She was already behind, starting more than a month late because of the trial. There was so much against her, not the least of which was the problems in her gorgeous head, that Josie couldn’t have felt more anxious if she was Hannah’s mother. Now she forced herself to look away, giving her attention to the principal, Mrs. Crawford.

“I don’t know why they would be concerned. Hannah didn’t kill Justice Rayburn,” Josie said.

“But they remember the trial. There was a great deal of publicity.”

“And there was even more when Hannah’s mother was convicted of the crime. Now her mother is in jail and all ties to her have been severed.  If anyone is unaware of the outcome of that trial, I’ll be more than happy to fill them in.”

“Lawyers and educators both know that facts have nothing to do with emotional reality.”  Mrs. Crawford smiled. “I doubt the reality of gossip, innuendo and curiosity on the part of the students or their parents is going to surprise you. What may surprise you are the consequences of all that.  You don’t have children, do you?”

Josie shook her head, “I’m not married.”

Mrs. Crawford nodded. The world was a different place for someone without children. For those with children the world was a lunar landscape without gravity, full of potholes and insurmountable mountain rises in the distance. Even those born to be parents had a tough time navigating the terrain. Mrs. Crawford gave Josie Baylor-Bates a fifty-fifty chance of surviving unscathed.

“Then you haven’t had the pleasure of dealing,” she chuckled before sliding into seriousness. “Parents will be wary of friendships formed with Hannah.  They won’t want her at their houses ‘just in case’ she’s a bad influence.  Other students may try to take her on to see how tough she is. They’ll want to see how far they can push her. . . .” Mrs. Crawford hesitated. “They may want to see if she really doesn’t feel pain the way the papers reported.”

“Since you are aware of what might happen, I assume you’ll take every precaution to see that Hannah’s safe,” Josie suggested coolly, not unaware that Mrs. Crawford was trying to help.

“I’d like to be able to promise you that, but I can’t.”  Mrs. Crawford sat back. “We have a lot of children who are targets of their peers for any number of reasons. Things have changed since you were in high school. Kids can be targeted because of their sexual orientation, their IQ or just the way they look. We do the best we can, but Hannah is a little different. She’s been to jail, she pled guilty to a murder. People will wonder; kids will get in her face.”

“I’m assuming this is leading somewhere, so why don’t we get to the bottom line,” Josie suggested, trying not to worry that the morning was flying by and she still had work to do. How real parents did this – sometimes with more than one kid – was beyond her.

Mrs. Crawford took a minute to gaze through the small window. She lifted her chin toward Hannah. When she spoke, her tone had softened and her eyes were back on Josie.

“Off the record, I think Hannah is a beautiful, smart, well-spoken young woman. On top of that, I think she’s incredibly brave and bizarrely selfless. I don’t think my kids would have gone to jail for me.” She tipped her head and held up her hands as if helpless. “But this is a big school, Ms. Bates, and we draw from three different districts. Hannah might do better in a smaller venue, a place where the student body is more easily monitored and the administration could better control the reaction to Hannah’s notoriety. Chadwick might be an option.”

“No, Chadwick isn’t an option. I’ve spoken to Hannah about that. She doesn’t want to go to a rich school. She’s had enough of rich people.  She just wants to get back to school.” Josie glanced at her charge quickly. “As for the administration, I don’t think you’re going to have to control anything. Hannah is capable of doing that all by herself.”

Mrs. Crawford nodded. She picked up a pen and pulled a sheet of paper toward her.

“Okay, then. You’ve made your decision.  I just wanted to make sure we were on the same page.  Funding cuts have left us with only one psychologist on this campus. If Hannah needs help, she’ll have to understand she isn’t the only one who does.”

“No problem. Hannah’s trial isn’t going to be the talk forever. She’ll deal with things and, if she can’t, we’ll know sooner than later.”

“I hope so.”

“Take my word for it, we will” Josie said, thinking one look at Hannah’s arms was all it would take to know if Hannah was heading off the deep end. Josie shivered, remembering the first time she had seen the ugly roadmap of scars on Hannah’s arms. It was one thing for a child to be tortured by an adult, another to know that child had so much pain she cut herself to be rid of it.

“All right. I guess we’re clear.” Mrs. Crawford put on her glasses, sat up and pulled a file toward her.  Josie paid attention. “You’re Hannah’s legal guardian?”

“I am. Her mother signed the papers last week.”

“And will Hannah need a parking permit?”

Josie shook her head. “Not yet. Her license was revoked. We’re going to be getting it back, but for now I’ll be picking her up. I’d like to keep a close eye on her for at least the first couple of months.”

Mrs. Crawford made a note, nodding her appreciation of Josie’s concern.

“I see that Hannah will have to miss sixth period every other Tuesday?” The principal’s eyes flickered up.

“She has an appointment with her psychologist. I figured since that was the PE period it would be better than missing math,” Josie answered.

“I imagine she’ll be making up her exercise since you live on the Strand.  Does she run?”

Josie laughed, “No. Hannah’s artistic not athletic. I don’t think I’ll get her running anytime soon.”

“Too bad, I’d give anything to live down there. I’d walk every spare minute. Are you a runner?” Mrs. Crawford made small talk as she filled in forms and pushed them toward Josie for a signature.

“Some. Volleyball mostly.”  Josie scribbled her name.

“That should have been my first guess,” Mrs. Crawford laughed. “My next guess was going to be basketball.

Josie signed the emergency contact card and pushed it back, grateful that there wasn’t going to be an extended conversation about her height.

“Well,” she said as she stacked the forms. “I think that does it. And don’t worry. We have a fine art department.  I think Hannah will be a great asset.”

“Thanks.” Josie checked her watch. A bell rang. Even in the principal’s office Josie could hear the thunderous sound a couple of thousand kids made as they changed classes. It was time for her to go. She had a hearing at the pier courthouse in forty-five minutes. She got up. “So, do you need anything else?”

“Nope.”  Mrs. Crawford stood up. “I’ll take Hannah around to the classrooms. I’ve arranged for one of our students to help her out for the next few days.”

“I appreciate that.”

Josie took the hand Mrs. Crawford offered. She hitched her purse and glanced at Hannah. Finished with her own paperwork, Hannah was looking right back at Josie with those clear, spring green eyes of hers. Josie smiled. Hannah was even more beautiful than the first day she saw her. The nose ring was gone. The tongue stud was gone. Her hair had grown back where the hospital had shaved it. Today she had wrapped a sky blue scarf across her brow, her long black hair fell in curls past her shoulders and her dark skin gleamed under the light that came through a high window. And Hannah’s fingers were busy. They gently touched the arm of her chair. Josie could count along with her – one, five, ten, twenty times. The doctors called her behavior obsessive/compulsive.  Josie had another name for it: heartbreaking. It would end. It was already better. Hannah didn’t cut herself up any more and that was a big step in the right direction. All Josie needed to do was hang in there with that girl.  Josie had saved her once. It was time to finish the job. Josie dug in her purse, turned around again and handed the principal a piece of paper.

 “Look, I know this is a lot to ask, but Hannah’s terrified of being left or forgotten.  If there’s ever a problem, that’s a list of friends you can call. Family really.  If I ever get hung up and can’t get to a phone to call, I’d appreciate you calling anyone on that list. One of them will come get her. I’ll talk to Hannah tonight and tell her to come straight to you if I’m late.”

Mrs. Crawford looked at the list and then put it under the picture of her own family. It wouldn’t be forgotten.

“That’s something I can personally promise. So,” she put her hands together. “I guess we both better get to work.”

Hannah didn’t look back as she walked down the now quiet halls with Mrs. Crawford but Josie couldn’t take her eyes off the girl. She wanted to go with Hannah just to make sure she was fine. That was something a mother would do – just not something Hannah or Josie’s mothers had done.  But Josie wasn’t a mother. She had taken in Hannah because there was no one else. That decision had changed Josie’s life and she wasn’t quite sure it was for the better. Archer would say it was for the worse and Josie thought about that as she walked across the campus, looked both ways before she crossed the street and tossed her purse and jacket in the back of her Jeep Wrangler.  She swung herself into the seat and a second later her cell phone rang.

She checked her watch. Too early for the court to be calling to find out where she was on that settlement hearing, and the new client didn’t have her cell number. She was freelancing for Faye so no one expected her at the office. Burt wasn’t in the restaurant that day. Billy Zuni? Hopefully he’d be in school. Whoever it was, it couldn’t be all that important.  It kept ringing as Josie rolled up her shirtsleeves and reached in back for her baseball cap.

“Oh, hell,” she muttered. Curiosity got the better of her. She grabbed for the phone, pushed the button. “Bates.”

Less than a minute later Josie was peeling down the street laying rubber as she headed to the freeway that would take her downtown to Parker Center and the detention cell where Archer was being held on suspicion of murder.

Chapter 2

Josie was twenty-seven when the call came that her father was ill. No, that wasn’t exactly right. A hospital administrator called and said her father had a heart attack. There was a difference between saying someone’s ill and saying they’ve had a heart attack.  Josie didn’t care what the difference was. Her dad was hurting. He needed her. She took off in the middle of a trial and it almost ruined her career. The judicial system had ways to deal with personal emergencies in order to side-step sanctions. Josie didn’t have time to screw around with protocol.

She left Los Angeles on the next flight out to Hawaii. It was two a.m. For five hours Josie looked out the window onto a very dark night. She didn’t read or eat; she didn’t watch the movie or sleep. Above all, Josie Baylor-Bates did not speculate about what she was going to find when she reached her destination.  Her Marine father had taught her better than that.  She knew the basics. When she arrived in Hawaii Josie would kick into high gear and gather information, assess the situation, speak to the experts and make decisions to insure her father’s survival. Tears, fears, hope and prayers – those emotions were always kept behind the lines. They were an indulgence that Josie seldom allowed herself – until she arrived too late to help him. But that was the last time she had cried, the last time she had prayed.  She knew he wouldn’t have minded. It was forgivable when a good soldier passed. But that was a long time ago and she didn’t allow herself to succumb to fears or tears now as she parked in the lot next to the fortress that was Parker Center, headquarters of the LAPD.

No stranger to the place, she pushed through the doors, handed over her purse to be inspected, stated her business and waited for the officer who had given her a head’s up about Archer. She didn’t wait long.

“Josie Bates?”

“Yep.”

She twirled around. Josie had two inches on him, but the officer had a hundred and fifty pounds on Josie easy. He still wore the uniform despite his age and his girth. If he had more than a year to retirement Josie would be amazed.

“Newell,” he said and they shook hands. “I saw them bring Archer in. Didn’t get a chance to talk to him, but I know you two worked on the Rayburn thing together so I thought I’d give you a call.”

Newell steered her toward a corner. He wasn’t talking out of school but he didn’t exactly want to broadcast his involvement in this matter either.

“Why didn’t he call himself?” Josie asked quietly, respecting his position.

“I don’t know exactly what’s going down because we didn’t pop him. It would have taken an act of God to make anyone of us make the collar like that on one of our own,” Newell assured her.  “DA investigators made the arrest and brought him here for booking.”

“Did they refuse him a call?”

Newell shrugged.

“Don’t know. I’m sitting the desk.  They walked him right by me.  It’s all pretty hush-hush, but I recognized Archer right away. We were in the academy together a hundred years ago. Never got close, but you don’t forget a guy like Archer.”

“The District Attorney’s investigators?” Josie prodded.

“Oh, yeah. I don’t know if they refused him. You know John Cooper? He’s one DA that plays things close to the vest. If he didn’t let us in on this then he’s looking for the glory – or something else. . .”

“Like what?” Josie pushed for information. But he took her arm and pulled her further aside as two officers lingered in the lobby.

“Maybe they wanted to clean him up. What I saw didn’t look good. Either Archer put up a hell of a fight or these guys have it in for him, if you know what I’m saying.”

Josie nodded. She knew exactly what he was talking about.  What she couldn’t fathom was what had brought Archer to this place and put him in such a condition; Archer who never ran a red light, who lived and breathed the law. Newell put his hand on her arm. She had swayed without realizing it. Her father would have narrowed his eyes at her just enough to let her know it wasn’t time to get girlie. She put her hand over his.

“Thanks for the call. I’ll take it from here,” Josie said.

“No problem. I figured he needed some help. I’d sure appreciate someone stepping in if it was me.”

“I’ll keep it to myself,” Josie assured him.

“No skin off my nose. I retire in three months.”

Josie smiled.

”Still, you went out on a limb,” she said.

“Yeah, well, Archer did a friend of mine a good turn a few years ago. My buddy never got the chance to pay him back. This will square things.”

Newell left it at that.  He paced off a few steps, assuming she’d follow but Josie had one more question.

“Newell.” She went close to him again. “Who’s the alleged victim?”

“Don’t have a name. Some kid. That’s all I know.” He shrugged. His shoulders swiveled. “So, now that you’re here, guess you want to see him.”

“Guess I do,” she muttered and followed him down the hall and to a room where Archer was sitting behind a closed door.  The man standing outside that door looked less than friendly; she could only guess who was inside.

“I’m Archer’s attorney,” Josie announced. The man seemed unimpressed until she went for the door.

“We’re not done,” he said quietly, his hand clamping over hers. Josie looked at him, her blue eyes cold.

“Yeah, you are. I don’t care if the Pope sent you. You’re history until I talk to my client.”  Josie took her hand from under his and pulled up to her full height.

“He didn’t call an attorney.”

“I don’t know what they teach you at the DA’s office, but you’re supposed to ask him if he wanted one before you questioned him. It’s kind of basic. Keeps your cases from being thrown out of court on a technicality.”

“And I don’t know what law school you slipped through, but you should know better than to assume. We offered. He declined,” the man shot back.

Josie stepped back, glancing through the small window in the door of the interrogation room. You didn’t have to be on top of Archer to see that this had not been an easy arrest.

“I would imagine my client didn’t have the wherewithal to understand that right. He might not have understood anything at all considering the shape he’s in. Now, unless your boss wants some very pointed, very public questions about how the District Attorney’s investigative unit does its job, I would suggest you let me in that room.”

They shared a moment, the big man and the extraordinarily tall woman with the exceedingly short hair. It wasn’t a pleasant one.  When it ended Josie got her way. The man knocked with one knuckle, opened the door. His partner slipped out. Slimmer but no less arrogant, he gave Josie the once over as his friend announced ‘attorney’ with the kind of effort it took to hurl.

The two men left, sliding along the testosterone slicked hall until they were swallowed up by the bowels of Parker Center. Josie watched them go, her jaw tight, her eyes narrowed.  She wasn’t concerned that they would come back. Those two would melt into the bureaucratic soup only to be fished out later and spoon-fed to a jury hungry for the particulars of this day. Those men would remember everything; Archer would remember next to nothing. Josie would have to sort it out for him.

She turned. She put one hand on the knob, the other flat against the door as she took a minute to look hard at Archer. She needed to ground herself before she spoke to him. At this instant she was an attorney, nothing more. Not a lover. Not a friend. She could not be a woman who adored – never worshipped – the ground he walked on.  Josie catalogued everything she saw.  The blank room. The dark table. The four chairs. Archer sitting with his legs splayed on either side of one. One arm crooked and his forehead cupped in his upturned hand. His shoulders were slumped, his other arm dangled between his legs. He was hurt, possibly broken and probably afraid.

A tremor of fear spidered out from Josie’s center, creeping into her arms, her legs, and up through her neck until her jaw was locked but her knees and hands shook uncontrollably, almost imperceptibly. Two shallow breaths through her nose and the vise around her lungs weakened. Another deep one filled them and she was ready.  She pushed open the door, slipped inside and stood against it.

Archer didn’t move and he didn’t look up when he said:

“I don’t want you here, Jo.”

… Continued…

Download the entire book now to continue reading on Kindle!

SILENT WITNESS 
(The Witness Series,#2)
by Rebecca Forster
4.5 stars – 324 reviews!!
SPECIAL KINDLE PRICE:
Just $1.99!

(Regular price: $5.99)

Free Kindle Nation Shorts: Get the Kindle Store #1 bestselling legal thriller HOSTILE WITNESS while the entire book is TOTALLY FREE

#1 Bestselling Legal Thriller
in the Kindle Store!!
*****940 5-star reviews*****
Discover Rebecca Forster’s exciting series of legal thrillers while Book 1 is totally FREE!
The verdict is in…
Readers are testifying that
that the intricate plot twists, compelling characters and emotionally charged suspense of her Witness Series make them an absolute must read.
4.3 stars – 1,913 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Or check out the Audible.com version of HOSTILE WITNESS (legal thriller, thriller) (The Witness Series,#1)
in its Audible Audio Edition, Unabridged!
Here’s the set-up:

When sixteen-year-old Hannah Sheraton is arrested for the murder of her stepgrandfather, the chief justice of the California Supreme court, her distraught mother turns to her old college roommate, Josie Baylor-Bates, for help. Josie, once a hot-shot criminal defense attorney, left the fast track behind for a small practice in Hermosa Beach, California. But Hannah Sheraton intrigues her and, when the girl is charged as an adult, Josie cannot turn her back.

But the deeper she digs the more Josie realizes that politics, the law and family relationships create a combustible and dangerous situation. When the horrible truth is uncovered it can save Hannah Sheraton or destroy them both.

High praise from reviewers and readers:

“An enthralling read, with colorful, well-developed characters and the unique atmosphere of the California beach communities.”
                                 – author Nancy Taylor RosenbergAbsolutely riveting from start to finish

“…a fantastic, completely absorbing read, the kind of book that makes you hate your job because having to get up early for work means having to set the novel aside in the wee hours of the morning just so you can get a few hours of sleep….”

An exciting legal thriller
“… the launch of a new series with an intriguing protagonist…The story sucks you in immediately, and the ending is full of thrills and surprises….”

an excerpt fromHostile Witness

by Rebecca Forster

 

Copyright © 2013 by Rebecca Forster and published here with her permission

Today California buried Supreme Court Justice, Fritz Rayburn. Governor Joe Davidson delivered the eulogy calling the judge a friend, a confidant, and his brother in service to the great state of California. The governor cited Fritz Rayburn as a man of extraordinary integrity who relentlessly pursued justice, continually uplifted those in need and, above all, protected those who were powerless.

It was a week ago today that Judge Rayburn died in a fire that swept through his Pacific Palisades home in the early morning hours.

No formal announcement has been made regarding who will be appointed to fill Justice Rayburn’s position, but it is speculated that Governor Davidson will appoint Rayburn’s son, Kip, to this pivotal seat on the California Supreme Court.

KABC News at 9

1

“Strip.”

“No.”

Hannah kept her eyes forward, trained on two rows of rusted showerheads stuck in facing walls.  Sixteen in all.  The room was paved with white tile, chipped and discolored by age and use. Ceiling.  Floor. Walls. All sluiced with disinfectant. Soiled twice a day by filth and fear. The fluorescent lights cast a yellow shadow over everything. The air was wet.  The shower room smelled of mold and misery.  It echoed with the cries of lost souls.

Hannah had come in with a bus full of women. She had a name, now she was a number. The others were taking off their clothes. Their bodies were ugly, their faces worn. They flaunted their ugliness as if it were a cruel joke, not on them but on those who watched.  Hannah was everything they were not. Beautiful. Young. She wouldn’t stand naked in this room with these women. She blinked and wrapped her arms around herself. Her breath came short. A step back and she fooled herself that it was possible to turn and leave.  Behind her Hannah thought she heard the guard laugh.

“Take it off, Sheraton, or I’ll do it for you.”

Hannah tensed, hating to be ordered. She kept her eyes forward. She had already learned to do that.

“There’s a man back there. I saw him,” she said.

“We’re an equal opportunity employer, sweetie,” the woman drawled. “If women can guard male prisoners then men can guard the women. Now, who’s it going to be? Me or him?”

The guard touched her. Hannah shrank away.  Her head went up and down, the slightest movement, the only way she could control her dread. She counted the number of times her chin went up. Ten counts. Her shirt was off. Her chin went down. Ten more counts and she dropped the jeans that had cost a fortune.

“All of it, baby cakes,” the guard prodded.

Hannah closed her eyes. The thong. White lace. That was the last. Quickly she stepped under a showerhead and closed her eyes. A tear seeped from beneath her lashes only to be washed away by a sudden, hard, stinging spray of water. Her head jerked back as if she’d been slapped then Hannah lost herself in the wet and warm. She turned her face up, kept her arms closed over her breasts, pretended the sheet of water hid her like a cloak. As suddenly as it had been turned on the water went off.  She had hidden from nothing. The ugly women were looking back, looking her over.  Hannah went from focus to fade, drying off with the small towel, pulling on the too-big jumpsuit. She was drowning in it, tripping over it. Her clothes – her beautiful clothes – were gone. She didn’t ask where.

The other women talked and moved as if they had been in this place so often it felt like home. Hannah was cut from the pack and herded down the hall, hurried past big rooms with glass walls and cots lined up military style. She slid her eyes toward them. Each was occupied. Some women slept under blankets, oblivious to their surroundings. Others were shadows that rose up like specters, propping themselves on an elbow, silently watching Hannah pass.

Clutching her bedding, Hannah put one foot in front of the other, eyes down, counting her steps so she wouldn’t be tempted to look at all those women. There were too many steps.  Hannah lost track and began again. One. Two. . .

“Here.”

A word stopped her. The guard rounded wide to the right as if Hannah was dangerous. That was a joke. She couldn’t hurt anyone – not really. The woman pushed open a door.  The cock of her head said this was Hannah’s place. A room, six by eight. A metal-framed bed and stained mattress. A metal toilette without a lid.  A metal sink. No mirror.  Hannah hugged her bedding tighter and twirled around just as the woman put her hands on the door to close it.

“Wait!  You have to let me call my mom. Take me to a phone right now so I can check on her. ”

Hannah talked in staccato. A water droplet fell from her hair and hit her chest.  It coursed down her bare skin and made her shiver. It was so cold. This was all so cold and so awful. The guard was unmoved.

“Bed down, Sheraton,” she said flatly.

Hannah took another step. “I told you I just want to check on her. Just let me check on her. I won’t talk long.”

“And I told you to bed down.” The guard stepped out. The door was closing. Hannah was about to call again when the woman in blue with the thick wooden club on her belt decided to give her piece of advice. “I wouldn’t count on any favors, Sheraton. Judge Rayburn was one of us, if you get my meaning. It won’t matter if you’re here or anywhere else. Everyone will know who you are. Now make your bed up.”

The door closed. Hannah hiccoughed a sob as she spread her sheet on the thin mattress.  She tucked it under only to pull it out over and over again. Finally satisfied she put the blanket on, lay down and listened. The sound of slow footsteps echoed through the complex. Someone was crying. Another woman shouted. She shouted again and then she screamed. Hannah stayed quiet, barely breathing. They had taken away her clothes. They had touched her where no one had ever touched her before. They had moved her, stopped her, pointed her, and ordered her, but at this point Hannah couldn’t remember who had done any of those things. Everyone who wasn’t dressed in orange was dressed in blue. The blue people had guns and belts filled with bullets and clubs that they caressed as if they were treasured pets.  These people seemed at once bored with their duty and thrilled with their power. They hated Hannah and she didn’t even know their names.

Hannah wanted her mother. She wanted to be in her room. She wanted to be anywhere but here. Hannah even wished Fritz wouldn’t be dead if that would get her home. She was going crazy. Maybe she was there already.

Hannah got up. She looked at the floor and made a plan.  She would ask to call her mother again. She would ask politely because the way she said it before didn’t get her anything. Hannah went to the door of her – cell. A hard enough word to think, she doubted she could ever say it. She went to the door and put her hands against it. It was cold, too. Metal. There was a window in the center. Flat white light slid through it.  Hannah raised her fist and tapped the glass. Once, twice, three, ten times. Someone would hear. Fifteen. Twenty. Someone would come and she would tell them she didn’t just want to check on her mother; she would tell them she needed to do that. This time she would say please.

Suddenly something hit up against the glass. Hannah fell back. Stumbling over the cot, she landed near the toilette in the corner. This wasn’t her room in the Palisades. This was a small, cramped place. Hannah clutched at the rough blanket and pulled it off the bed as she sank to the floor. Her heart beat wildly. Huddled in the dark corner, she could almost feel her eyes glowing like some nocturnal animal.  She was transfixed by what she saw.   A man was looking in, staring at her as if she were nothing. Oh God, he could see her even in the dark. Hannah pulled her knees up to her chest and peeked from behind them at the man who watched.

His skin was pasty, his eyes plain. A red birthmark spilled across his right temple and half his eyelid until it seeped into the corner of his nose.  He raised his stick, black and blunt, and tapped on the glass.  He pointed toward the bed. She would do as he wanted. Hannah opened her mouth to scream at him. Instead, she crawled up on to the cot.  Her feet were still on the floor. The blanket was pulled over her chest and up into her chin. The guard looked at her – all of her. He didn’t see many like this. So young. So pretty.  He stared at Hannah as if he owned her. Voices were raised somewhere else. The man didn’t seem to notice. He just looked at Hannah until she yelled ‘go away’ and threw the small, hard pillow at him.

He didn’t even laugh at that ridiculous gesture. He just disappeared.  When Hannah was sure he was gone she began to pace. Holding her right hand in her left she walked up and down her cell and counted the minutes until her mother would come to get her.

Counting. Counting. Counting again.

Behind the darkened windows of the Lexus, the woman checked her rearview mirror.  Fucking freeways.  It was nine-fucking-o’clock at night and she still had to slalom around a steady stream of cars. She stepped on the gas – half out of her mind with worry.

A hundred.

Hannah should be with her.

A hundred and ten.

Hannah must be terrified.

The Lexus shimmied under the strain of the speed.

She let up and dropped to ninety-five.

They wouldn’t even let her see her daughter. She didn’t have a chance to tell Hannah not to talk to anyone. But Hannah was smart. She’d wait for help. Wouldn’t she be smart? Oh, God, Hannah.  Please, please be smart.

Ahead a pod of cars pooled as they approached Martin Luther King Boulevard. Crazily she thought they looked like a pin set-up at the bowling alley.  Not that she visited bowling alleys anymore but she made the connection. It would be so easy to end it all right here – just keep going like a bowling ball and take ‘em all down in one fabulous strike.  It sure as hell would solve all her problems. Maybe even Hannah would be better off.  Then again, the people in those cars might not want to end theirs so definitely.

Never one to like collateral damage if she could avoid it, the woman went for the gutter, swinging onto the shoulder of the freeway, narrowly missing the concrete divider that kept her from veering into oncoming traffic. She was clear again, leaving terror in her wake, flying toward her destination.

The Lexus transitioned to the 105. It was clear sailing all the way to Imperial Highway where the freeway came to an abrupt end, spitting her out onto a wide intersection before she was ready. The tires squealed amid the acrid smell of burning rubber.  The Lexus shivered, the rear end fishtailing as she fought for control.  Finally, the car came to a stop angled across two lanes.

The woman breathed hard. She sniffled and blinked and listened to her heartbeat.  She hadn’t realized how fast she’d been going until just this minute. Her head whipped around. No traffic. A dead spot in the fuckin’ maze of LA freeways, surface streets, transitions and exits. Her hands were fused to the steering wheel. Thank God. No cops. Cops were the last thing she wanted to see tonight; the last people she ever wanted to see.

Suddenly her phone rang. She jumped and scrambled, forgetting where she had put it. Her purse? The console? The console.  She ripped it open and punched the button to stop the happy little song that usually signaled a call from her hairdresser, an invitation to lunch.

“What?”

“This is Lexus Link checking to see if you need assistance.”

“What?”

“Are you all right, ma’am? Our tracking service indicated that you had been in an accident.”

Her head fell onto the steering wheel; the phone was still at her ear. She almost laughed. Some minimum wage idiot was worried about her.

“No, I’m fine. Everything’s fine,” she whispered and turned off the phone. Her arm fell to her side. The phone fell to the floor. A few minutes later she sat up and pushed back her hair. She’d been through tough times before. Everything would be fine if she just kept her wits about her and got where she was going. Taking a deep breath she put both hands back on the wheel.  She’d fuckin’ finish what she started the way she always did. As long as Hannah was smart they’d all be okay.

Easing her foot off the brake she pulled the Lexus around until she was in the right lane and started to drive. She had the address, now all she had to do was to find fuckin’ Hermosa Beach.

… Continued…

Download the entire book now to continue reading on Kindle!

HOSTILE WITNESS
 (The Witness Series, #1)
by Rebecca Forster
4.3 stars – 1,911 reviews!!!

Special Kindle Price: FREE!

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 –
reduced for limited time only!)

KND Freebies: The compelling legal thriller SILENT WITNESS by Rebecca Forster is featured in this morning’s Free Kindle Nation Shorts excerpt

Amazon bestseller in
Legal Thrillers & Mystery Romance***4.5 stars – 264 reviews***

Don’t miss SILENT WITNESS while it’s 50% off the regular price for today only!

The verdict is in…
Book 2 in the acclaimed Witness Series by
USA Today bestselling author Rebecca Forster is dazzling readers…and for good reason.

4.5 stars – 264 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Or check out the Audible.com version of SILENT WITNESS (legal thriller, thriller) (The Witness Series,#2)
in its Audible Audio Edition, Unabridged!
Here’s the set-up:

Josie Baylor-Bates has a full plate caring for a troubled teen, but it’s about to get fuller when her ex-cop lover, Archer, is accused of murdering his disabled stepson — a son Josie never even knew he had. When Timothy Wren died at California’s oldest amusement park it appeared to be a tragic accident. But now Timothy’s biological father and the district attorney are out for blood. Is this a criminal action with merit, a vendetta or is there a big cash settlement in the offing?

For Josie the stakes are higher — it’s personal. Racing against time to prove someone is framing Archer, her faith in him is tested by his honesty regarding his feelings about his stepson. Finally, she finds the truth lies not in Archer’s words but with a long-forgotten silent witness.

5-star praise for Silent Witness:

Amazing, must read…
“…intricate attention to detail, perfection in development of character…this page-turning novel will keep you in suspense…”

Excellent sequel
“….shocking sucker-punch ending…and the ramifications…are discussed with a no-holds-barred honesty not often found in genre fiction. In other words, there are no easy answers and Rebecca Forster isn’t afraid to say so….”

an excerpt from

Silent Witness

by Rebecca Forster

Prologue

He shot the naked woman at nine thirty in the morning; the naked man was in his sights at nine forty-five.

Three more shots:  the front door and address, the woman’s car nestled in the shadows of an Acacia tree, the man’s car parked in front of the house – as subtle a statement as a dog pissing to mark its territory.  The camera started to whir. Archer decided he had enough to satisfy his client that the missus wasn’t exactly waiting with bated breath for him to high tail it home.

Archer reloaded and stashed the exposed film in his pocket then let his head fall back against the Hummer’s seat. Cradling the camera in his lap, Archer felt his body go heavy as his eyes closed.  He was tired to the bone and not because he had another couple of hours to wait before Don Juan decided to pack up his piece and take his leave.  This tired was in Archer’s soul; this tired crept way deep into that heart muscle and made it hard to pump enough blood to keep him going.

He moved in the seat, put one leg up and tried to stretch it out. There wasn’t a comfortable place for a man his size even in this hunk of Hummer metal; there wasn’t a comfortable place in his mind for the thoughts that had been dogging him for days.

He hated this gig, spying on wayward wives.  No self-respecting cop would be doing this kind of work even if the wronged husband were paying big bucks.  But then Archer wasn’t a self-respecting cop anymore.  He was a part-time photographer, a retired detective, a freelance investigator and a man who was running on empty when it came to making ends meet this month. And then there was the anniversary.

He didn’t want to think about that either, but it was impossible to clear his mind when California autumn had come again, a carbon copy of a day Archer would just as soon not remember. It had been sunny like today: bright sky blue up high, navy in the deep sea. A nip in the day air. Cold at night.  Lexi, his wife, was sick. And then there was Tim. God, he hated thinking about it. But on a day like this, with too much time on his hands, it couldn’t be helped.

Archer stirred and held the camera in the crook of one arm like a child.  His other one was bent against the door so he could rest his head in his upturned hand.  He moved his mind like he moved his body, adjusting, settling in with another thought until he found a good place where it could rest.

Josie.

Always Josie. The woman who saved him from insanity after Lexi died. They’d hit a little rough patch lately but even that didn’t keep the thought of her from putting his mind in a good place.  Sleep was coming. What was happening in the house was just a job.  The other was just a memory.  Josie was real.  Josie was . . .

Archer didn’t have the next second to put a word to what Josie meant to him. The door of the Hummer was ripped open, almost off its hinges.  Archer fell out first, the camera right after. Off balance already, he was defenseless against the huge hands that grappled and grasped at his shoulders and the ferocity of the man who threw him onto the asphalt and knelt on his back.

“Jesus Christ. . .” Archer barked just before the breath was knocked out of him.

“Shut up.” The man atop him growled, dug his knee into Archer’s back, and took hold of his hair.

Archer grunted. Shit, he was getting old. The guy in the house not only made him, he got the drop on him. Archer ran through what he knew: the guy was a suit, one seventy tops, didn’t work out. He should be able to flick this little shit off with a deep breath.

Hands flat on the ground, Archer tried to do just that but as he pushed himself off the pavement he had another surprise. It wasn’t the guy in the house at all. The man on his back was big, he was heavy and he wasn’t alone. There were two of them.

While the first ground Archer’s face into the blacktop, the second found a home for the toe of his boot in Archer’s midsection. Archer bellowed. He curled. He tried to roll but that opened him up and this time that boot clipped the side of his face, catching the corner of his eye. The blow sent him into the arms of the first man who embraced him with an arm around his throat. Archer’s eyes rolled back in his head. Jesus that hurt. His eyelids fluttered. One still worked right. He looked up and stopped struggling.

The guy who had him in a headlock knew what he was doing.  If Archer moved another inch and the man adjusted his grip, Archer’s neck would snap. As it was, the guy was doing a fine job of making sure Archer was finding it damn hard to breathe.

His eyes rolled again as a pain shot straight through his temple and embedded itself behind his ear.  He tried to focus, needing to see at least one of them if he was going to identify them when – if – he got out of this mess. They could have the car. No car was worth dying for.  But he couldn’t tell them to take it if he couldn’t speak and he couldn’t identify them if he could barely see. There was just the vaguest impression of blue eyes, a clean-shaven face, and a checked shirt.  Archer’s thoughts undulated with each new wave of pain. Connections were made then broken and made again like a faulty wire. The one that stuck made sense: these guys didn’t want his car but they sure as hell wanted something. Just as the chokehold king tightened his grip, and his friend took another swipe at Archer’s ribs, one of them offered a clue.

“You asshole. Thought you got away with it, didn’t you?”

That was not a helpful hint.

Roger McEntyre took the call at ten thirty-five without benefit of a secretary. Didn’t need one; didn’t want one. The kind of work he did wasn’t dependent on memos and messages. He kept important information in his head.  If he shared that information, it was because he wanted to. If Roger wasn’t in his office, couldn’t be raised on his cell, had not told his colleagues where to contact him then he meant not to be found. That’s what a company guy did.  He delivered what the company needed and was rewarded with the knowledge that he was the best in the business.  Everyone had tried to hire him away: Disneyland, Magic Mountain, Knott’s Berry Farm but a company man was loyal. Roger was loyal to Pacific Park, the oldest amusement park in California, loyal to the man who had given his father a job when no one else would, loyal to the man who treated him like a son.

Now he was about to deliver a piece of good news the company needed bad.  He was delivering it before schedule and that made him proud, though it was difficult to tell.  Roger’s smile was hidden by the walrus mustache he had grown the minute he left the service. That was a pity because he actually had a nice, almost boyish grin when he thought to use it.

So he left his office – a small, spare space off a long corridor – and passed the two offices where his colleagues worked. One ex-FBI, the other a product of New York’s finest. Roger, himself, was Special Forces. Honorable discharge.  Fine training.

He walked through the reception area of building three and gave the girl at the desk an almost imperceptible nod as he passed. She was a cute kid and Roger doubted she knew his name. Given her expression, he imagined she wasn’t even sure he worked there. That’s the kind of man he was. He walked like he knew where he was going and didn’t mess where he wasn’t supposed to. If he had been another kind of man that little girl would have been open season. She didn’t know how lucky she was.

Roger pushed through the smoke glass doors and snapped his sunglasses on before the first ray of light had a chance to make him wince. Thanks to the year ‘round school schedules the park was still busy even at the end of October. Halloween decorations were everywhere. On the 31st the park would be wall-to-wall kids causing all sorts of problems. Today there were none.

Roger dodged a couple of teenagers who weren’t looking where they were going, stopped long enough to oblige a woman who asked him to take a picture of her family, and noted that the paint was peeling on the door of the men’s bathroom near the park entrance.

He took a sharp right, ducked under a velvet rope and walked through a real door hidden in a fake rock.  The air-conditioning hit him hard with an annoyingly prickly cold. Isaac liked it that way. That was strange for an old guy. Usually old guys liked things warm.   Down a small hallway he went, through another glass door, across another reception area and into the executive suite. The receptionist there was of a different caliber all together. She was slick. Expensive haircut. Older. Had too much style to be stuck behind the scenes.

“Mary.” Roger nodded as he went by her.

“He’s waiting,” she said.

“Yes.”

Roger opened one of the double doors just far enough to slip through then stood inside the office, arms at his side, posture perfect as always. Isaac’s office was nice. Very adult, very sophisticated considering the kind of business they were in.

The silver haired man behind the mahogany desk was on the phone. That call wasn’t as important as Roger. The receiver went to the cradle, and Isaac Hawkins’ hand held onto it as if he were bracing for bad news.  Roger’s mustache twitched. He didn’t want to get the old man’s hopes up so he made his report without elaboration.

“They got him. Everything’s moving forward.”

“Then it was true.”

Isaac’s shoulders slumped ever so slightly in his relief. Roger moved closer to the desk just in case he was needed. Isaac looked ten years younger than his years but even that would have been old.

“The District Attorney made the decision,” Roger answered as Isaac got up from his desk. “We just gave them what we had.”

Isaac Hawkins walked up to Roger. He took him by the shoulders, looked into his face and then drew him forward.

“Your father would have been proud. Thank you, Roger.”

“Don’t worry, Isaac.”

“I’m glad we did the right thing,” the old man said before he sat down again. “Let me know how it goes. You’ll do that, won’t you?”

“I will.”

Roger turned away; satisfied he had done his work well. At least that was one monkey off the old guy’s back – one that should never have been there in the first place. Not after all these years.

Of the five attorneys, five secretaries, two paralegals, receptionist, mailroom boy, suite of offices in Brentwood and shark tank, Jude Getts was proudest of the shark tank. It was a cliché, sure, but in his case it was a cliché that worked.  Getts & Associates was not the largest law firm but it was the leanest, most voracious personal injury firm in Los Angeles. Lose a leg? A lung? A life?  Jude’s associates put a price tag on everything and collected with amazing regularity.  They didn’t as much negotiate with defendants as hold them hostage until they coughed up the big bucks; they didn’t try a case as much as flay it, peeling back the skin of it slowly, painfully, exquisitely. And, of all the attorneys in the firm, Jude Getts was the best.

Bright eyed, boyish, his blond tipped hair waved back from a wide, clear brow. Jude was tall but not too tall, dramatic without being theatrical, a master of the touch, the look, the smile.  He had timing whether it was offered during closing arguments or a rare intimate moment with a woman chosen for the length of her legs or the look of her face. But what made Jude a really, really good personal injury attorney was that he loved a challenge more than anything else. He rejoiced in it. A challenge made his heart flutter, made him smile wider, laugh heartier, and made his work even more impeccable. What he was hearing on the radio as he drove to meet his client was making that heart of his feel like an aviary just before an earthquake.

Jude passed the keys to his car to the valet and said ‘keep it close’ before he bounded into the foyer of the Napa Valley Grill, past the hostess who was gorgeous but rated only his most radiant, thoughtless, everyday smile.  He gave his drink order to his favorite waiter with a touch to the man’s arm, a tip of his head that indicated Jude really didn’t think of him as a waiter at all but as a friend. The drink arrived at the table just as Jude was sliding onto the chair, giving his very best professional smile to the man across the table.

“Colin,” Jude said as he snapped the heavy white napkin and laid it across his lap.

“Jude,” the other man nodded. He already had a drink. It was almost gone.

“They make a good drink here, Colin. Damn good drink.”

“I’ve had two,” the client noted.

Colin Wren was not a man who really enjoyed life, and insisting he take time to smell the roses, gave Jude an unprecedented kick in the ass.  But while he was laughing on the inside, the outside was always respectful. Colin was, after all, the client.

“I’m sorry I kept you waiting but something came to my attention. It’s definitely going to change the course of our business, Colin.”

“I don’t want anything to change the course of our business,” Colin said quietly and finished his second drink.  “I’ve waited too long.”

The eyes that looked at Jude from behind wire rim glasses were soft brown, gentle looking. They were the eyes of a priest.  Colin Wren was not a priest, nor was he particularly kindly or likeable. An opportunity brought him to Jude, but every once in a while Jude had the sneaking suspicion the matter at hand was more than business.

“Well, Colin, I’m not sure you’ve got a choice. It seems our friends at Pacific Park have made a brilliant move.” Jude took a drink, put his glass down and crossed his arms on the table. “They handed the problem off to the district attorney and suddenly we’re talking a criminal matter here. Until John Cooper does what he’s going to do, we don’t have a snowball’s chance in hell of collecting on a civil action.”  Jude picked up his glass again. “How’s that for a surprise, Colin?”

Chapter 1

“Ms. Bates,” Mrs. Crawford said. “I’m going to have to be brutally honest with you.   Some parents are concerned about Hannah enrolling at Mira Costa High School. Ms. Bates?”

Startled, Josie shifted in her seat. She’d been watching Hannah through the little window in the door of the principal’s office. Hannah’s head was down as she dutifully filled out registration forms. She was already behind, starting more than a month late because of the trial. There was so much against her, not the least of which was the problems in her gorgeous head, that Josie couldn’t have felt more anxious if she was Hannah’s mother. Now she forced herself to look away, giving her attention to the principal, Mrs. Crawford.

“I don’t know why they would be concerned. Hannah didn’t kill Justice Rayburn,” Josie said.

“But they remember the trial. There was a great deal of publicity.”

“And there was even more when Hannah’s mother was convicted of the crime. Now her mother is in jail and all ties to her have been severed.  If anyone is unaware of the outcome of that trial, I’ll be more than happy to fill them in.”

“Lawyers and educators both know that facts have nothing to do with emotional reality.”  Mrs. Crawford smiled. “I doubt the reality of gossip, innuendo and curiosity on the part of the students or their parents is going to surprise you. What may surprise you are the consequences of all that.  You don’t have children, do you?”

Josie shook her head, “I’m not married.”

Mrs. Crawford nodded. The world was a different place for someone without children. For those with children the world was a lunar landscape without gravity, full of potholes and insurmountable mountain rises in the distance. Even those born to be parents had a tough time navigating the terrain. Mrs. Crawford gave Josie Baylor-Bates a fifty-fifty chance of surviving unscathed.

“Then you haven’t had the pleasure of dealing,” she chuckled before sliding into seriousness. “Parents will be wary of friendships formed with Hannah.  They won’t want her at their houses ‘just in case’ she’s a bad influence.  Other students may try to take her on to see how tough she is. They’ll want to see how far they can push her. . . .” Mrs. Crawford hesitated. “They may want to see if she really doesn’t feel pain the way the papers reported.”

“Since you are aware of what might happen, I assume you’ll take every precaution to see that Hannah’s safe,” Josie suggested coolly, not unaware that Mrs. Crawford was trying to help.

“I’d like to be able to promise you that, but I can’t.”  Mrs. Crawford sat back. “We have a lot of children who are targets of their peers for any number of reasons. Things have changed since you were in high school. Kids can be targeted because of their sexual orientation, their IQ or just the way they look. We do the best we can, but Hannah is a little different. She’s been to jail, she pled guilty to a murder. People will wonder; kids will get in her face.”

“I’m assuming this is leading somewhere, so why don’t we get to the bottom line,” Josie suggested, trying not to worry that the morning was flying by and she still had work to do. How real parents did this – sometimes with more than one kid – was beyond her.

Mrs. Crawford took a minute to gaze through the small window. She lifted her chin toward Hannah. When she spoke, her tone had softened and her eyes were back on Josie.

“Off the record, I think Hannah is a beautiful, smart, well-spoken young woman. On top of that, I think she’s incredibly brave and bizarrely selfless. I don’t think my kids would have gone to jail for me.” She tipped her head and held up her hands as if helpless. “But this is a big school, Ms. Bates, and we draw from three different districts. Hannah might do better in a smaller venue, a place where the student body is more easily monitored and the administration could better control the reaction to Hannah’s notoriety. Chadwick might be an option.”

“No, Chadwick isn’t an option. I’ve spoken to Hannah about that. She doesn’t want to go to a rich school. She’s had enough of rich people.  She just wants to get back to school.” Josie glanced at her charge quickly. “As for the administration, I don’t think you’re going to have to control anything. Hannah is capable of doing that all by herself.”

Mrs. Crawford nodded. She picked up a pen and pulled a sheet of paper toward her.

“Okay, then. You’ve made your decision.  I just wanted to make sure we were on the same page.  Funding cuts have left us with only one psychologist on this campus. If Hannah needs help, she’ll have to understand she isn’t the only one who does.”

“No problem. Hannah’s trial isn’t going to be the talk forever. She’ll deal with things and, if she can’t, we’ll know sooner than later.”

“I hope so.”

“Take my word for it, we will” Josie said, thinking one look at Hannah’s arms was all it would take to know if Hannah was heading off the deep end. Josie shivered, remembering the first time she had seen the ugly roadmap of scars on Hannah’s arms. It was one thing for a child to be tortured by an adult, another to know that child had so much pain she cut herself to be rid of it.

“All right. I guess we’re clear.” Mrs. Crawford put on her glasses, sat up and pulled a file toward her.  Josie paid attention. “You’re Hannah’s legal guardian?”

“I am. Her mother signed the papers last week.”

“And will Hannah need a parking permit?”

Josie shook her head. “Not yet. Her license was revoked. We’re going to be getting it back, but for now I’ll be picking her up. I’d like to keep a close eye on her for at least the first couple of months.”

Mrs. Crawford made a note, nodding her appreciation of Josie’s concern.

“I see that Hannah will have to miss sixth period every other Tuesday?” The principal’s eyes flickered up.

“She has an appointment with her psychologist. I figured since that was the PE period it would be better than missing math,” Josie answered.

“I imagine she’ll be making up her exercise since you live on the Strand.  Does she run?”

Josie laughed, “No. Hannah’s artistic not athletic. I don’t think I’ll get her running anytime soon.”

“Too bad, I’d give anything to live down there. I’d walk every spare minute. Are you a runner?” Mrs. Crawford made small talk as she filled in forms and pushed them toward Josie for a signature.

“Some. Volleyball mostly.”  Josie scribbled her name.

“That should have been my first guess,” Mrs. Crawford laughed. “My next guess was going to be basketball.

Josie signed the emergency contact card and pushed it back, grateful that there wasn’t going to be an extended conversation about her height.

“Well,” she said as she stacked the forms. “I think that does it. And don’t worry. We have a fine art department.  I think Hannah will be a great asset.”

“Thanks.” Josie checked her watch. A bell rang. Even in the principal’s office Josie could hear the thunderous sound a couple of thousand kids made as they changed classes. It was time for her to go. She had a hearing at the pier courthouse in forty-five minutes. She got up. “So, do you need anything else?”

“Nope.”  Mrs. Crawford stood up. “I’ll take Hannah around to the classrooms. I’ve arranged for one of our students to help her out for the next few days.”

“I appreciate that.”

Josie took the hand Mrs. Crawford offered. She hitched her purse and glanced at Hannah. Finished with her own paperwork, Hannah was looking right back at Josie with those clear, spring green eyes of hers. Josie smiled. Hannah was even more beautiful than the first day she saw her. The nose ring was gone. The tongue stud was gone. Her hair had grown back where the hospital had shaved it. Today she had wrapped a sky blue scarf across her brow, her long black hair fell in curls past her shoulders and her dark skin gleamed under the light that came through a high window. And Hannah’s fingers were busy. They gently touched the arm of her chair. Josie could count along with her – one, five, ten, twenty times. The doctors called her behavior obsessive/compulsive.  Josie had another name for it: heartbreaking. It would end. It was already better. Hannah didn’t cut herself up any more and that was a big step in the right direction. All Josie needed to do was hang in there with that girl.  Josie had saved her once. It was time to finish the job. Josie dug in her purse, turned around again and handed the principal a piece of paper.

 “Look, I know this is a lot to ask, but Hannah’s terrified of being left or forgotten.  If there’s ever a problem, that’s a list of friends you can call. Family really.  If I ever get hung up and can’t get to a phone to call, I’d appreciate you calling anyone on that list. One of them will come get her. I’ll talk to Hannah tonight and tell her to come straight to you if I’m late.”

Mrs. Crawford looked at the list and then put it under the picture of her own family. It wouldn’t be forgotten.

“That’s something I can personally promise. So,” she put her hands together. “I guess we both better get to work.”

Hannah didn’t look back as she walked down the now quiet halls with Mrs. Crawford but Josie couldn’t take her eyes off the girl. She wanted to go with Hannah just to make sure she was fine. That was something a mother would do – just not something Hannah or Josie’s mothers had done.  But Josie wasn’t a mother. She had taken in Hannah because there was no one else. That decision had changed Josie’s life and she wasn’t quite sure it was for the better. Archer would say it was for the worse and Josie thought about that as she walked across the campus, looked both ways before she crossed the street and tossed her purse and jacket in the back of her Jeep Wrangler.  She swung herself into the seat and a second later her cell phone rang.

She checked her watch. Too early for the court to be calling to find out where she was on that settlement hearing, and the new client didn’t have her cell number. She was freelancing for Faye so no one expected her at the office. Burt wasn’t in the restaurant that day. Billy Zuni? Hopefully he’d be in school. Whoever it was, it couldn’t be all that important.  It kept ringing as Josie rolled up her shirtsleeves and reached in back for her baseball cap.

“Oh, hell,” she muttered. Curiosity got the better of her. She grabbed for the phone, pushed the button. “Bates.”

Less than a minute later Josie was peeling down the street laying rubber as she headed to the freeway that would take her downtown to Parker Center and the detention cell where Archer was being held on suspicion of murder.

Chapter 2

Josie was twenty-seven when the call came that her father was ill. No, that wasn’t exactly right. A hospital administrator called and said her father had a heart attack. There was a difference between saying someone’s ill and saying they’ve had a heart attack.  Josie didn’t care what the difference was. Her dad was hurting. He needed her. She took off in the middle of a trial and it almost ruined her career. The judicial system had ways to deal with personal emergencies in order to side-step sanctions. Josie didn’t have time to screw around with protocol.

She left Los Angeles on the next flight out to Hawaii. It was two a.m. For five hours Josie looked out the window onto a very dark night. She didn’t read or eat; she didn’t watch the movie or sleep. Above all, Josie Baylor-Bates did not speculate about what she was going to find when she reached her destination.  Her Marine father had taught her better than that.  She knew the basics. When she arrived in Hawaii Josie would kick into high gear and gather information, assess the situation, speak to the experts and make decisions to insure her father’s survival. Tears, fears, hope and prayers – those emotions were always kept behind the lines. They were an indulgence that Josie seldom allowed herself – until she arrived too late to help him. But that was the last time she had cried, the last time she had prayed.  She knew he wouldn’t have minded. It was forgivable when a good soldier passed. But that was a long time ago and she didn’t allow herself to succumb to fears or tears now as she parked in the lot next to the fortress that was Parker Center, headquarters of the LAPD.

No stranger to the place, she pushed through the doors, handed over her purse to be inspected, stated her business and waited for the officer who had given her a head’s up about Archer. She didn’t wait long.

“Josie Bates?”

“Yep.”

She twirled around. Josie had two inches on him, but the officer had a hundred and fifty pounds on Josie easy. He still wore the uniform despite his age and his girth. If he had more than a year to retirement Josie would be amazed.

“Newell,” he said and they shook hands. “I saw them bring Archer in. Didn’t get a chance to talk to him, but I know you two worked on the Rayburn thing together so I thought I’d give you a call.”

Newell steered her toward a corner. He wasn’t talking out of school but he didn’t exactly want to broadcast his involvement in this matter either.

“Why didn’t he call himself?” Josie asked quietly, respecting his position.

“I don’t know exactly what’s going down because we didn’t pop him. It would have taken an act of God to make anyone of us make the collar like that on one of our own,” Newell assured her.  “DA investigators made the arrest and brought him here for booking.”

“Did they refuse him a call?”

Newell shrugged.

“Don’t know. I’m sitting the desk.  They walked him right by me.  It’s all pretty hush-hush, but I recognized Archer right away. We were in the academy together a hundred years ago. Never got close, but you don’t forget a guy like Archer.”

“The District Attorney’s investigators?” Josie prodded.

“Oh, yeah. I don’t know if they refused him. You know John Cooper? He’s one DA that plays things close to the vest. If he didn’t let us in on this then he’s looking for the glory – or something else. . .”

“Like what?” Josie pushed for information. But he took her arm and pulled her further aside as two officers lingered in the lobby.

“Maybe they wanted to clean him up. What I saw didn’t look good. Either Archer put up a hell of a fight or these guys have it in for him, if you know what I’m saying.”

Josie nodded. She knew exactly what he was talking about.  What she couldn’t fathom was what had brought Archer to this place and put him in such a condition; Archer who never ran a red light, who lived and breathed the law. Newell put his hand on her arm. She had swayed without realizing it. Her father would have narrowed his eyes at her just enough to let her know it wasn’t time to get girlie. She put her hand over his.

“Thanks for the call. I’ll take it from here,” Josie said.

“No problem. I figured he needed some help. I’d sure appreciate someone stepping in if it was me.”

“I’ll keep it to myself,” Josie assured him.

“No skin off my nose. I retire in three months.”

Josie smiled.

”Still, you went out on a limb,” she said.

“Yeah, well, Archer did a friend of mine a good turn a few years ago. My buddy never got the chance to pay him back. This will square things.”

Newell left it at that.  He paced off a few steps, assuming she’d follow but Josie had one more question.

“Newell.” She went close to him again. “Who’s the alleged victim?”

“Don’t have a name. Some kid. That’s all I know.” He shrugged. His shoulders swiveled. “So, now that you’re here, guess you want to see him.”

“Guess I do,” she muttered and followed him down the hall and to a room where Archer was sitting behind a closed door.  The man standing outside that door looked less than friendly; she could only guess who was inside.

“I’m Archer’s attorney,” Josie announced. The man seemed unimpressed until she went for the door.

“We’re not done,” he said quietly, his hand clamping over hers. Josie looked at him, her blue eyes cold.

“Yeah, you are. I don’t care if the Pope sent you. You’re history until I talk to my client.”  Josie took her hand from under his and pulled up to her full height.

“He didn’t call an attorney.”

“I don’t know what they teach you at the DA’s office, but you’re supposed to ask him if he wanted one before you questioned him. It’s kind of basic. Keeps your cases from being thrown out of court on a technicality.”

“And I don’t know what law school you slipped through, but you should know better than to assume. We offered. He declined,” the man shot back.

Josie stepped back, glancing through the small window in the door of the interrogation room. You didn’t have to be on top of Archer to see that this had not been an easy arrest.

“I would imagine my client didn’t have the wherewithal to understand that right. He might not have understood anything at all considering the shape he’s in. Now, unless your boss wants some very pointed, very public questions about how the District Attorney’s investigative unit does its job, I would suggest you let me in that room.”

They shared a moment, the big man and the extraordinarily tall woman with the exceedingly short hair. It wasn’t a pleasant one.  When it ended Josie got her way. The man knocked with one knuckle, opened the door. His partner slipped out. Slimmer but no less arrogant, he gave Josie the once over as his friend announced ‘attorney’ with the kind of effort it took to hurl.

The two men left, sliding along the testosterone slicked hall until they were swallowed up by the bowels of Parker Center. Josie watched them go, her jaw tight, her eyes narrowed.  She wasn’t concerned that they would come back. Those two would melt into the bureaucratic soup only to be fished out later and spoon-fed to a jury hungry for the particulars of this day. Those men would remember everything; Archer would remember next to nothing. Josie would have to sort it out for him.

She turned. She put one hand on the knob, the other flat against the door as she took a minute to look hard at Archer. She needed to ground herself before she spoke to him. At this instant she was an attorney, nothing more. Not a lover. Not a friend. She could not be a woman who adored – never worshipped – the ground he walked on.  Josie catalogued everything she saw.  The blank room. The dark table. The four chairs. Archer sitting with his legs splayed on either side of one. One arm crooked and his forehead cupped in his upturned hand. His shoulders were slumped, his other arm dangled between his legs. He was hurt, possibly broken and probably afraid.

A tremor of fear spidered out from Josie’s center, creeping into her arms, her legs, and up through her neck until her jaw was locked but her knees and hands shook uncontrollably, almost imperceptibly. Two shallow breaths through her nose and the vise around her lungs weakened. Another deep one filled them and she was ready.  She pushed open the door, slipped inside and stood against it.

Archer didn’t move and he didn’t look up when he said:

“I don’t want you here, Jo.”

… Continued…

Download the entire book now to continue reading on Kindle!

SILENT WITNESS 
(The Witness Series,#2)
by Rebecca Forster
4.5 stars – 264 reviews!!SPECIAL KINDLE PRICE:
$2.99 today only!

(Regular price: $5.99)

Check Out This Free Excerpt From Thriller of The Week Hostile Witness by Rebecca Forster – Then Download The Book Totally Free! Over 925 Rave Reviews

On Friday we announced that Rebecca Forster’s Hostile Witness is our Thriller of the Week and the sponsor of thousands of great bargains in the thriller, mystery, and suspense categories: over 200 free titles, over 600 quality 99-centers, and thousands more that you can read for free through the Kindle Lending Library if you have Amazon Prime!

Now we’re back to offer our weekly free Thriller excerpt:

4.3 stars – 1,098 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Or check out the Audible.com version of HOSTILE WITNESS (legal thriller, thriller) (The Witness Series,#1)
in its Audible Audio Edition, Unabridged!
Here’s the set-up:

When sixteen-year-old Hannah Sheraton is arrested for the murder of her stepgrandfather, the chief justice of the California Supreme court, her distraught mother turns to her old college roommate, Josie Baylor-Bates, for help. Josie, once a hot-shot criminal defense attorney, left the fast track behind for a small practice in Hermosa Beach, California. But Hannah Sheraton intrigues her and, when the girl is charged as an adult, Josie cannot turn her back. But the deeper she digs the more Josie realizes that politics, the law and family relationships create a combustible and dangerous situation. When the horrible truth is uncovered it can save Hannah Sheraton or destroy them both.

“This story was inspired by a case my husband handled. As a superior court judge he had to sentence a minor to life in prison. It made me wonder how I felt about minors arrested for violent crimes. Are they most vulnerable among us – capable or horrible violence, perceived as adults and yet emotionally still children?” Rebecca Forster

Swear us in and we’ll testify that you’ll want to keep right on going to Silent Witness, Privileged Witness, Expert Witness and Eyewitness!

And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free excerpt:

Today California buried Supreme Court Justice, Fritz Rayburn. Governor Joe Davidson delivered the eulogy calling the judge a friend, a confidant, and his brother in service to the great state of California. The governor cited Fritz Rayburn as a man of extraordinary integrity who relentlessly pursued justice, continually uplifted those in need and, above all, protected those who were powerless.

It was a week ago today that Judge Rayburn died in a fire that swept through his Pacific Palisades home in the early morning hours.

No formal announcement has been made regarding who will be appointed to fill Justice Rayburn’s position, but it is speculated that Governor Davidson will appoint Rayburn’s son, Kip, to this pivotal seat on the California Supreme Court.

KABC News at 9 O’clock

 

1

“Strip.”

“No.”

Hannah kept her eyes forward, trained on two rows of rusted showerheads stuck in facing walls.  Sixteen in all.  The room was paved with white tile, chipped and discolored by age and use. Ceiling.  Floor. Walls. All sluiced with disinfectant. Soiled twice a day by filth and fear. The fluorescent lights cast a yellow shadow over everything. The air was wet.  The shower room smelled of mold and misery.  It echoed with the cries of lost souls.

Hannah had come in with a bus full of women. She had a name, now she was a number. The others were taking off their clothes. Their bodies were ugly, their faces worn. They flaunted their ugliness as if it were a cruel joke, not on them but on those who watched.  Hannah was everything they were not. Beautiful. Young. She wouldn’t stand naked in this room with these women. She blinked and wrapped her arms around herself. Her breath came short. A step back and she fooled herself that it was possible to turn and leave.  Behind her Hannah thought she heard the guard laugh.

“Take it off, Sheraton, or I’ll do it for you.”

Hannah tensed, hating to be ordered. She kept her eyes forward. She had already learned to do that.

“There’s a man back there. I saw him,” she said.

“We’re an equal opportunity employer, sweetie,” the woman drawled. “If women can guard male prisoners then men can guard the women. Now, who’s it going to be? Me or him?”

The guard touched her. Hannah shrank away.  Her head went up and down, the slightest movement, the only way she could control her dread. She counted the number of times her chin went up. Ten counts. Her shirt was off. Her chin went down. Ten more counts and she dropped the jeans that had cost a fortune.

“All of it, baby cakes,” the guard prodded.

Hannah closed her eyes. The thong. White lace. That was the last. Quickly she stepped under a showerhead and closed her eyes. A tear seeped from beneath her lashes only to be washed away by a sudden, hard, stinging spray of water. Her head jerked back as if she’d been slapped then Hannah lost herself in the wet and warm. She turned her face up, kept her arms closed over her breasts, pretended the sheet of water hid her like a cloak. As suddenly as it had been turned on the water went off.  She had hidden from nothing. The ugly women were looking back, looking her over.  Hannah went from focus to fade, drying off with the small towel, pulling on the too-big jumpsuit. She was drowning in it, tripping over it. Her clothes – her beautiful clothes – were gone. She didn’t ask where.

The other women talked and moved as if they had been in this place so often it felt like home. Hannah was cut from the pack and herded down the hall, hurried past big rooms with glass walls and cots lined up military style. She slid her eyes toward them. Each was occupied. Some women slept under blankets, oblivious to their surroundings. Others were shadows that rose up like specters, propping themselves on an elbow, silently watching Hannah pass.

Clutching her bedding, Hannah put one foot in front of the other, eyes down, counting her steps so she wouldn’t be tempted to look at all those women. There were too many steps.  Hannah lost track and began again. One. Two. . .

“Here.”

A word stopped her. The guard rounded wide to the right as if Hannah was dangerous. That was a joke. She couldn’t hurt anyone – not really. The woman pushed open a door.  The cock of her head said this was Hannah’s place. A room, six by eight. A metal-framed bed and stained mattress. A metal toilette without a lid.  A metal sink. No mirror.  Hannah hugged her bedding tighter and twirled around just as the woman put her hands on the door to close it.

“Wait!  You have to let me call my mom. Take me to a phone right now so I can check on her. ”

Hannah talked in staccato. A water droplet fell from her hair and hit her chest.  It coursed down her bare skin and made her shiver. It was so cold. This was all so cold and so awful. The guard was unmoved.

“Bed down, Sheraton,” she said flatly.

Hannah took another step. “I told you I just want to check on her. Just let me check on her. I won’t talk long.”

“And I told you to bed down.” The guard stepped out. The door was closing. Hannah was about to call again when the woman in blue with the thick wooden club on her belt decided to give her piece of advice. “I wouldn’t count on any favors, Sheraton. Judge Rayburn was one of us, if you get my meaning. It won’t matter if you’re here or anywhere else. Everyone will know who you are. Now make your bed up.”

The door closed. Hannah hiccoughed a sob as she spread her sheet on the thin mattress.  She tucked it under only to pull it out over and over again. Finally satisfied she put the blanket on, lay down and listened. The sound of slow footsteps echoed through the complex. Someone was crying. Another woman shouted. She shouted again and then she screamed. Hannah stayed quiet, barely breathing. They had taken away her clothes. They had touched her where no one had ever touched her before. They had moved her, stopped her, pointed her, and ordered her, but at this point Hannah couldn’t remember who had done any of those things. Everyone who wasn’t dressed in orange was dressed in blue. The blue people had guns and belts filled with bullets and clubs that they caressed as if they were treasured pets.  These people seemed at once bored with their duty and thrilled with their power. They hated Hannah and she didn’t even know their names.

Hannah wanted her mother. She wanted to be in her room. She wanted to be anywhere but here. Hannah even wished Fritz wouldn’t be dead if that would get her home. She was going crazy. Maybe she was there already.

Hannah got up. She looked at the floor and made a plan.  She would ask to call her mother again. She would ask politely because the way she said it before didn’t get her anything. Hannah went to the door of her – cell. A hard enough word to think, she doubted she could ever say it. She went to the door and put her hands against it. It was cold, too. Metal. There was a window in the center. Flat white light slid through it.  Hannah raised her fist and tapped the glass. Once, twice, three, ten times. Someone would hear. Fifteen. Twenty. Someone would come and she would tell them she didn’t just want to check on her mother; she would tell them she needed to do that. This time she would say please.

Suddenly something hit up against the glass. Hannah fell back. Stumbling over the cot, she landed near the toilette in the corner. This wasn’t her room in the Palisades. This was a small, cramped place. Hannah clutched at the rough blanket and pulled it off the bed as she sank to the floor. Her heart beat wildly. Huddled in the dark corner, she could almost feel her eyes glowing like some nocturnal animal.  She was transfixed by what she saw.   A man was looking in, staring at her as if she were nothing. Oh God, he could see her even in the dark. Hannah pulled her knees up to her chest and peeked from behind them at the man who watched.

His skin was pasty, his eyes plain. A red birthmark spilled across his right temple and half his eyelid until it seeped into the corner of his nose.  He raised his stick, black and blunt, and tapped on the glass.  He pointed toward the bed. She would do as he wanted. Hannah opened her mouth to scream at him. Instead, she crawled up on to the cot.  Her feet were still on the floor. The blanket was pulled over her chest and up into her chin. The guard looked at her – all of her. He didn’t see many like this. So young. So pretty.  He stared at Hannah as if he owned her. Voices were raised somewhere else. The man didn’t seem to notice. He just looked at Hannah until she yelled ‘go away’ and threw the small, hard pillow at him.

He didn’t even laugh at that ridiculous gesture. He just disappeared.  When Hannah was sure he was gone she began to pace. Holding her right hand in her left she walked up and down her cell and counted the minutes until her mother would come to get her.

Counting. Counting. Counting again.

 

 

Behind the darkened windows of the Lexus, the woman checked her rearview mirror.  Fucking freeways.  It was nine-fucking-o’clock at night and she still had to slalom around a steady stream of cars. She stepped on the gas – half out of her mind with worry.

A hundred.

Hannah should be with her.

A hundred and ten.

Hannah must be terrified.

The Lexus shimmied under the strain of the speed.

She let up and dropped to ninety-five.

They wouldn’t even let her see her daughter. She didn’t have a chance to tell Hannah not to talk to anyone. But Hannah was smart. She’d wait for help. Wouldn’t she be smart? Oh, God, Hannah.  Please, please be smart.

Ahead a pod of cars pooled as they approached Martin Luther King Boulevard. Crazily she thought they looked like a pin set-up at the bowling alley.  Not that she visited bowling alleys anymore but she made the connection. It would be so easy to end it all right here – just keep going like a bowling ball and take ‘em all down in one fabulous strike.  It sure as hell would solve all her problems. Maybe even Hannah would be better off.  Then again, the people in those cars might not want to end theirs so definitely.

Never one to like collateral damage if she could avoid it, the woman went for the gutter, swinging onto the shoulder of the freeway, narrowly missing the concrete divider that kept her from veering into oncoming traffic. She was clear again, leaving terror in her wake, flying toward her destination.

The Lexus transitioned to the 105. It was clear sailing all the way to Imperial Highway where the freeway came to an abrupt end, spitting her out onto a wide intersection before she was ready. The tires squealed amid the acrid smell of burning rubber.  The Lexus shivered, the rear end fishtailing as she fought for control.  Finally, the car came to a stop angled across two lanes.

The woman breathed hard. She sniffled and blinked and listened to her heartbeat.  She hadn’t realized how fast she’d been going until just this minute. Her head whipped around. No traffic. A dead spot in the fuckin’ maze of LA freeways, surface streets, transitions and exits. Her hands were fused to the steering wheel. Thank God. No cops. Cops were the last thing she wanted to see tonight; the last people she ever wanted to see.

Suddenly her phone rang. She jumped and scrambled, forgetting where she had put it. Her purse? The console? The console.  She ripped it open and punched the button to stop the happy little song that usually signaled a call from her hairdresser, an invitation to lunch.

“What?”

“This is Lexus Link checking to see if you need assistance.”

“What?”

“Are you all right, ma’am? Our tracking service indicated that you had been in an accident.”

Her head fell onto the steering wheel; the phone was still at her ear. She almost laughed. Some minimum wage idiot was worried about her.

“No, I’m fine. Everything’s fine,” she whispered and turned off the phone. Her arm fell to her side. The phone fell to the floor. A few minutes later she sat up and pushed back her hair. She’d been through tough times before. Everything would be fine if she just kept her wits about her and got where she was going. Taking a deep breath she put both hands back on the wheel.  She’d fuckin’ finish what she started the way she always did. As long as Hannah was smart they’d all be okay.

Easing her foot off the brake she pulled the Lexus around until she was in the right lane and started to drive. She had the address, now all she had to do was to find fuckin’ Hermosa Beach.

 

 

 Continued….

Click on the title below to download the entire book and keep reading

Rebecca Forster’s Hostile Witness>>>>