(The Hunted, #4)
By: Jennifer Ryan
By: Jennifer Ryan
Expected Publication: October 8th, 2013
Publisher: Avon Impulse
Genre(s): Adult Romance/Suspense
Excerpt:
By: Jennifer Ryan
Expected Publication: October 8th, 2013
Publisher: Avon Impulse
Genre(s): Adult Romance/Suspense
Excerpt:
CHASING MORGAN
Chapter One
One year ago…
Morgan’s
fingers flew across the laptop keyboard propped on her knees. She took a
deep breath, cleared her
mind, and looked out past her pink-painted toes propped on the railing
and across her yard to the densely wooded area at the edge of her
property. Her mind’s eye found her guest winding his way through the
trees. She still had time before Jack stepped out
of the woods separating her land from his. She couldn’t wait to meet
him.
Images, knowings, they just came to her. She’d accepted that part of herself a long time ago. As she got
older, she’d learned to use her gift to seek out answers.
She
finished her buy and sell orders and switched from her day trading page
to check her psychic website
and read the questions submitted by customers. She answered several
quickly, letting the others settle in her mind until the answers came to
her.
One stood out. The innocuous question about getting a job held an eerie vibe.
The
familiar strange pulsation came over her. The world disappeared like a
door slamming on reality. The
images came to her like hammer blows, one right after the other, and
she took the onslaught, knowing something important needed to be seen
and understood.
An older woman lying in a bed, hooked up to a machine feeding her medication. Frail and ill, she had translucent
skin and dark circles marring her pain-filled eyes. Her pain washed over Morgan like a tsunami.
The woman yelled at someone, her face contorted into something mean and hateful. An unhappy woman – one who’d
spent her whole life blaming others and trying to make them as miserable as her.
A pristine white pillow floating down, inciting panic, amplified to terror when it covered the woman’s face,
her frail body swallowed by the sheets.
Morgan had an overwhelming feeling of suffocating.
The woman tried desperately to suck in a breath, but couldn’t. Unable to move her lethargic limbs, she lay
terrified and helpless under his unyielding hands. Lights flashed on her closed eyelids.
Death came calling.
A
man stood next to the bed holding the pillow like a shield. His mouth
opened on a contorted, evil, hysterical
laugh that rang in her ears and made her skin crawl. She squeezed her
eyes closed to blot out his malevolent image and thoughts.
Murderer!
The word rang in her head as the terrifying emotions overtook her.
Morgan
threw up a wall in her mind, blocking the onslaught of disturbing
pictures and feelings. She took
several deep breaths and concentrated on the white roses growing in
profusion just below the porch railing. Their sweet fragrance filled the
air. With every breath, she centered herself and found her inner calm,
pushing out the anger and rage left over from
the vision. Her body felt like a lead weight, and lightened as her
energy came back. The drowsiness faded with each new breath. She’d be
fine in a few minutes.
The man on horseback emerged from the trees, coming toward her home. Her guest had arrived.
Focused on the computer screen, she slowly and meticulously typed her answer to the man who had asked about
a job and inadvertently opened himself up to telling her who he really was at the heart.
She replied simply.
You’ll get the job, but you can’t hide from what you did.
You need help. Turn yourself in to the police.
None of her personal information appeared on the website, and she’d put a lot of time and effort into keeping
her identity and location a secret for reasons of her own. He’d never find her.
A chill ran over her, despite the warm sun on her skin.
She
put through the charge and tried to erase the vision from her mind.
She’d told him to go to the police.
Nothing more she could do. She didn’t have any proof a crime had been
committed. You couldn’t make accusations against people based on a
vision. Even if she went to the police with what she knew, they wouldn’t
take her seriously. She’d learned that the hard
way.
The
help she provided Tyler and the FBI was different. Her unique link with
Tyler allowed her to assist him
with some of his cases. Tyler had nothing to do with this man. She
could ask him to investigate, but why would he? He had a hard enough
time believing what she told him about the cases he was working on. She
didn’t want to have to convince him all over again
that what she saw was real and true. It hurt to have to convince him
every time, despite the ample proof she’d given him on multiple cases.
After all this time, he should believe her - believe in her.
She didn’t want to think about Tyler right now. He’d be in Colorado today. Close. Their connection that much
stronger, and the harder he’d ignore it and push her away. Maybe she should give in and go see him.
Why couldn’t he stay in San Francisco?
It wasn’t time for them to meet again. She sighed and tried to put him out of her mind. Not possible. They
were connected on an elemental level, and had been for a long time.
Why did things between them have to be so complicated and difficult?
Dealing
with her customers was simple. They went to her website and clicked on
the link to ask a question.
She charged fifteen dollars for requests she answered. If she couldn’t
answer the question, or wouldn’t answer, she didn’t charge and sent a
standard reply, telling the person she couldn’t help.
Either the person believed in her enough to pay the fifteen dollars, or they didn’t.
Sure, they had to accept her Terms and Conditions. After all, what she “saw“ was open to interpretation and
the result may not be what the customer expected. In short, if they didn’t like the answer, they couldn’t shoot the messenger.
She specifically informed customers to beware what they ask, and how they ask it. You may get the answer
to a question you hadn’t intended.
If you suspected your spouse of cheating on you, don’t be surprised if she confirmed it, and that the other
person is your best friend. She wouldn’t lie, or tell you only what you wanted to hear.
In
a few cases, she simply refused to answer. People often wanted to know
when they were going to die and
how. Her opinion, this kind of information did more harm than good. It
usually altered the course of a person’s life, and she didn’t want to be
responsible for changing one’s fate and destiny.
One
thing she knew for certain, life had a pattern. Mistakes are repeated
until the lesson is learned. Knowing
something ahead of time didn’t necessarily mean you could change the
outcome. Some things were meant to be and nothing could stop them from
ending the same way she saw them, even if the path that led to that end
took a detour first. That wasn’t to say the
course of the future couldn’t be altered. It could. She’d done it
several times. For Tyler’s family, she’d do it again.
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