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CHRISTMAS CAPTIVE (Decorah Security Series): A Paranormal Romantic Suspense Novella
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CHRISTMAS CAPTIVE (Decorah Security Series)
A Paranormal Romantic Suspense Novella
By Rebecca York
Ruth Glick writing as Rebecca York
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Decorah Security Series by Rebecca York
More Romantic Suspense Books
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Chapter One
Intent on his covert mission, Jordan Campbell ducked his head against the wind blowing salt spray into his face. Swiping his dark hair back from his forehead, he glanced up to the mansion perched on the cliffs above the ocean. From this vantage point it looked like a fortress, but he’d come to realize that stone walls might be no defense against the danger lurking there.
The 150-year-old house was called Campbell’s Reach, built by his great-grandfather on a stretch of Northern California coastline that had once been desolate. Now civilization was creeping toward the estate, but it would never overtake the property as long as he had any say in the matter.
He loved this house and the surrounding park, laid out to look like a natural part of the scenery. He and his sisters had come here in the summers when they were kids. They had inherited the estate on his father’s death. June had needed money, and he’d bought her out. A few years later, Stephanie had sold her share to him because she was too absorbed in her city life to come here often.
Until recently, he had taken his ownership for granted. Well, that and a lot more.
Now he understood that he’d been deluding himself for months. But he was going to remedy that situation today. He cut the engine speed of the powerboat and steered the small craft home, finding the calm channel that led to the sea-level landing.
At the cliff side, he pulled up at the ring anchored to the rock. On the crest of a swell, he tied up the boat, then waited for the right moment to step off onto the landing platform. It was wet and slippery, and he was careful of his footing as he made for the rough-hewn steps carved into the towering cliff face.
Knowing he was invisible from the house, he stopped at the entrance to one of the secret tunnels carved through the stone. Probably his grandfather had done some smuggling here, but Jordan was only smuggling himself back inside.
At breakfast he’d made sure everyone knew he was taking the speedboat. But they all thought he wouldn’t be back so soon.
A stout wooden door barred the entrance to the tunnel. He pulled it open and slipped into a dark passage, where a flashlight was hanging from the wall. With the beam switched on, he followed more steps up into the heart of the cliff.
Once inside the house, he could get the evidence he needed—because he wouldn’t act without proof.
His hand clenched around the barrel of the flashlight as he fought his suspicions—and his own guilt. He hadn’t paid attention to warning signs, and now his trusted estate manager, Brian Lowell, was dead. Still, he kept hoping against hope that his suspicions were all wrong.
He stopped at another wooden door and listened. When he heard nothing from the other side, he opened the barrier and stepped into the basement of the mansion. Another set of stairs led upward, to the rooms at the back of the house overlooking the ocean. Before leaving on his boating expedition, he’d laid a trap for anyone who planned to take advantage of his absence.
Now he would see if someone had taken the bait.
After switching off the flashlight, he opened a hidden doorway and stepped into the back of the storage closet in his office. On hinges he’d recently oiled, he opened the door just enough to see into the room. Relief washed over him when he saw no one.
He waited several moments to make sure he was alone, then entered the office and headed for his computer, reassured that the screen was as blank as when he left it. Before he reached it, something slammed down on the back of his head, and the world went dark.
Chapter Two
Hannah Andrews fiddled nervously with the tall latte on the table in front of her. Although she’d agreed to meet a man named Frank Decorah in this downtown San Francisco coffee shop, she was having second thoughts.
She glanced around at the cheery Christmas gifts displayed on the shelves near the counter and at the ten other patrons enjoying coffee drinks, some working at computers, others getting e-mail on tablets. Safety in numbers, she thought. But not even Bing Crosby, singing White Christmas over the sound system, could make her relax.
When the door opened, she glanced up and saw a tall man in the doorway. He appeared to be in his fifties with salt and pepper hair.
Frank Decorah. She recognized him because she’d looked up his security agency on the Web and seen his picture, and she knew from his bio that he was an ex-Navy SEAL. He’d looked tough and capable on the screen. In person he seemed even more formidable, and she wondered again why she’d agreed to meet him when he’d been so secretive about the job he was offering.
Yet two factors had swayed her. He was based in Maryland, and he’d offered to fly all the way across the country to meet her.And he’d made the meeting sound urgent—a matter of life and death.
He took a step inside the shop, scanning the patrons. When his gaze zeroed in on her, she saw him relax a little. Had he been afraid she wouldn’t show up?
As he walked toward the quiet corner where she was sitting, she caught something slightly awkward in his gait. Not many people would notice; but as a trained nurse, she picked up on the subtle signs that he had an artificial limb. Had that ended his Navy-SEAL career?
Previously he’d simply been a voice over the phone. Now she wondered about his story.
He smiled as he came toward her, transforming his serious features.
“Ms. Andrews, thanks so much for agreeing to meet me.”
“Well, I don’t usually take mystery jobs, but you were willing to come a long way; and I thought I should at least hear you out.”
He pulled up a chair across from her and sat down.
“And now you’re finally going to tell me what this is about?”
“I want to hire you as a private-duty nurse for a man who desperately needs your help.”
“Who?”
“Jordan Campbell.”
The name rang a bell. “I’ve heard of him. Isn’t he a stock market tycoon who had an accident at his isolated estate? That was a few weeks ago, right?”
Decorah lowered his voice. “It wasn’t an accident. Someone tried to kill him.”
“You’re sure about that?”
“Ninety-nine percent sure.”
She winced. “And now he’s in the hospital?”
“That would be the best place for him. But his relatives are keeping him at his home, Campbell’s Reach, above Mendocino. He was found at the bottom of the steps where his boat was moored, with a gash on the back of his head. They claimed that he must have fallen on the slippery stones on his way back to the house.”
“Maybe that did happen.”
“His grandmother doesn’t think so. She’s the one who contacted me. She says that she’d been e-mailing him for months about one of his relatives trying to get him out of the way so they could take over his estate and his financial interests. He didn’t want to believe it—or accuse anyone—even after his estate manager was killed by a faulty generator. But finally he seemed to come around. Before he could prove anything, he was left for dead.”
“How did he
survive?”
“His sister, Stephanie, got worried when he didn’t come back from taking his boat out. She went looking for him and found him on the stairs. She called 911 and saved his life. But he’s been in a coma ever since. He hasn’t opened his eyes or said a word since the accident.”
Hannah nodded, finally getting it. “And that’s why you want me for this job.”
“Exactly. If anyone can communicate with him in his current state, you can.”
“You know . . .”
Frank waved her to silence. “I know you gave up your position at San Francisco General and went into private-duty nursing because you couldn’t deal with the mental images you were getting from so many patients at once. And I know you’re between assignments.”
She answered with a tight nod, wishing he hadn’t researched her so thoroughly.
“But you’ve handled it in a one-on-one situation. And now, it’s vital that you get into Jordan Campbell’s mind and talk to him about what happened.”
“If he even knows.”
“That’s the first question. If you accept the job, you’ll be taking one of the nursing shifts.”
If she accepted the assignment.
Did she have a choice? The more Frank Decorah talked about the case, the more she thought she’d be making a mistake by walking away. Not just for Jordan Campbell. For herself.
She wasn’t sure what that last part meant, but she was certain she’d find out.
Chapter Three
Hannah slowed her rental car on the slick road, thinking that if she plunged into the ocean along this rugged stretch of California Highway One, it would be her own damn fault.
December fog rolled in from the west, blotting out the darkened landscape. And as she listened to the sound of waves crashing on the rocks below the highway, she wondered what had possessed her to agree.
She wasn’t only concerned about the awful driving conditions up here, three hours from San Francisco. The closer she got to Campbell’s Reach, the more she realized she had a good chance of getting herself and Jordan Campbell killed—if she didn’t play her part perfectly. After all, someone had bumped off the estate manager. Then they’d put the home’s owner into a coma. How was she going to figure out who that was?
When a shaft of lightning forked across the darkening sky, followed by an ear-splitting clap of thunder, she couldn’t hold back a jittery laugh. It suddenly struck her that this could have been the start of a gothic novel with a nervous young heroine, driving through a storm toward an eerie old mansion. Except that this wasn’t a scene out of a novel. It was real life, and she had let Frank Decorah’s persuasive personality convince her to walk into a very posh and very dangerous lion’s den.
After she’d agreed, Frank had done his best to prepare her, and some of his background sessions came to her as she drove.
“The other nurse is Ava Fahrenhold.”
“Only one other?”
“Yes.”
“There should be at least three, so the shifts won’t be so long.”
“Yes,” Frank agreed.
“It’s not like Jordan Campbell can’t afford to do it right.”
“He’s not making the decisions.”
She was brought back to her immediate reality as another fork of lightning split the sky directly in front of her. In the sudden brightness, she spotted the small sign announcing Campbell’s Reach. The lamp above it was off, and she realized that if the lightning hadn’t illuminated her surroundings, she would have missed the entrance to the property and ended up at a town called Fort Bragg, another fifteen miles up the coast.
Apparently someone had forgotten to turn on the light, or they’d deliberately left it off. But she wasn’t exactly surprised.
“Decorah Agent Andrews reporting for duty,” she muttered under her breath as she turned in at the access road to the estate.
“It’s an isolated location,” Frank had told her. “The only large privately owned property left along this stretch of coast. All of the other big estates have been turned into hotels, subdivided into plots for tract mansions, or converted to state parks. But Jordan had the funds to hang on to the house and grounds.”
Hannah clenched the wheel as she drove up the winding access road. She’d seen pictures of the plantings, and she knew they were gorgeous, but they were only blobs in the darkness now. Taking this job had made sense when Frank had talked to her in San Francisco. And to be truthful, something about Jordan Campbell had compelled her to accept. It wasn’t his background. Really, he could be characterized as a ruthless businessman. But every time she looked at a picture or video of him, something in his eyes drew her. He might be smiling, but there was something below the surface that made her think of a little boy who had never gotten what he really wanted for Christmas.
She made a dismissive sound. That was certainly taking the holiday season and weaving a fantasy around Mr. Campbell.
She’d seen Frank breathe a sigh of relief when she’d accepted the job and realized that the assignment meant more to him than the client’s fee. But she hadn’t asked about that because she sensed that Frank was a very private person, and he wasn’t going to reveal more than he wanted her to know about himself.
Once she was on board, Frank had called in two other Decorah agents, and she’d realized they’d come to San Francisco with him, waiting on standby for her decision. One was Rafe Gascon who was based in New Orleans. The other was Ben Walker, from the Maryland office. She was surprised to find out that, like her, each of them had paranormal powers. Ben could focus in on the last memories of a dead person. And Rafe could hold an object belonging to someone and go back to an important scene in that individual’s life.
But they didn’t rely exclusively on those abilities. They and Frank had given her an intensive three-day course in covert operations which had also included shooting lessons at a local range. She’d felt a lot more confident when the training was completed, and Frank had given her a Glock model 19 that was now in her luggage.
This evening she wondered if she’d been fooling herself. Was she really ready for this?
When she came to a gate across the road, she rolled down her window, and reached to press the button on an intercom. The hairs on the back of her neck prickled as she felt herself being studied through the camera lens above the speaker, but nobody acknowledged that she’d rung. After several moments, she was about to try again when a woman’s voice finally asked, “Yes? Who is it?”
Probably the housekeeper, Anabel Estes, an older woman who had been taking care of the estate for more than ten years.
“I’m Hannah Andrews,” she answered, “The nurse Mrs. Campbell hired.” She kept her gaze steady, hoping her carefully calculated image would disarm Mrs. Estes and the other people in the mansion. She had pulled back her shoulder-length blond hair into a no-nonsense bun, and she wore no makeup. Probably the frumpy woman in the camera lens looked ten years older than her real age—twenty-eight.
“I’ll need some identification,” the voice over the intercom answered.
Hannah held up her driver’s license, glad that the picture was less than flattering, trying to calm the pounding of her heart.
“All right,” came the grudging response. As the woman spoke, the gate creaked open.
This was it. There was no turning back now. And once she drove inside, she would be a virtual prisoner at Campbell’s Reach. She knew that there was no cell-phone service out here. And there was only so much she could say to Frank in a coded e-mail. With a sigh that was part trepidation and part relief at getting past the dragon at the gate, Hannah drove through. As the barrier clanked shut behind her, she couldn’t help thinking of a maximum security facility. Which this was, as far as Jordan Campbell was concerned.
The moon had come out from behind a cloud, letting her see pine trees dripping with green moss that fluttered in the wind blowing off the ocean.
As she rounded a curve in the drive, lightning illuminated the outl
ine of what looked like a stone castle—perhaps conceived by J. K. Rowling. Probably it had been built as a monument to the Campbell family fortune which had originally been made in mining, railroads, and illegal imports from China. But the illegal part was in the past. Frank had investigated Jordan and found that his business dealings were compulsively honest.
Fog swirled across the pavement, adding to the eerie quality of setting, and the Bing Crosby song Hannah had heard in the coffee shop came back to her. This wasn’t what Bing meant by a white Christmas. As she reached the front of the building, the rain finally broke with a burst of hail crashing onto the car roof.
Pulling forward, she was relieved to discover that she could get out of the elements under a covered porte cochere. As she stepped out, a blast of cold air whipped at her hair, pulling strands from her tidy bun. And the trees swaying in the wind moaned as the rain struck them.
“Hang on Jordan; I’m here,” she said as she walked around to the rear of the car. Unlocking the trunk, she reached in to get her suitcase and felt a wave of cold hit her neck, sending a shiver over her skin.
It was an unexpected welcome, almost like the castle ghost wanted to scare her off before she even started the job, and she took a moment to regain her composure.
Shaking off the fanciful notion, she turned toward the solid oak door, where an evergreen Christmas wreath with a big red bow looked out of place in the fog-shrouded surroundings. Before she could locate the bell, the door was flung open, making the wreath flap against the polished wood.
Hannah found herself facing a short, heavy woman wearing a black skirt and a white blouse. Like her body, her face was rounded, with short salt-and-pepper hair. The effect made her look like a prison matron.
She stood with her lips pressed together, her eyes unnerving as they remained pinned on Hannah.
“You’re Mrs. Estes?”
The woman’s eyes narrowed. “How do you know my name?”
“From Mrs. Campbell. I mean Ethel Campbell.”
The woman snorted. “She’s interfering again.”