Code Of Silence. Heather Woodhaven

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Code Of Silence - Heather Woodhaven Mills & Boon Love Inspired Suspense

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to let Gabriella make the first move. He shifted his feet, ready to pounce if Rodrigo got too close.

      “Slide it over, princess.”

      Gabriella pressed her lips together as she kicked the phone in Rodrigo’s direction. So much for that plan.

      Rodrigo put the keys in his pocket and picked up the phones as well. “Lead the way.”

      The moment they stepped onto the driveway, their phones soared above their heads and landed with a plop in the lake.

      There went three hundred bucks. He knew he should’ve waited before upgrading.

      “Take me to your mom’s favorite spots,” Rodrigo growled.

      Gabriella made a sharp turn to the right, her flats slapping on the concrete and her hands in fists. Luke matched his step with hers.

      “I should’ve gone with my gut and called the police while I had a chance,” Luke whispered. “Any landline or other cell phone inside?”

      “No. And calling the police isn’t an option.”

      Luke put a hand on her arm. “Care to fill me in?”

      She kept her face forward as she spoke. “Those men you saw me with earlier—in the driveway—are from the mafia, as well. They’ve got my aunt Freddie and will kill her if I don’t get them this mysterious evidence.”

      “The same evidence Rodrigo wants?”

      She nodded. “He acts like he’s in the same group as them, but he clearly doesn’t know or care about my aunt. We have to get away from him.”

      Luke replayed the events of the past few minutes. Ah, it had to be the reason for her careful wording: I received some bad news about my great-aunt. Rodrigo was still far enough away he wouldn’t be able to hear his whispers. “The police are more capable of saving her than you are.”

      Her dark eyes flashed. “The police can’t get involved. You can’t trust them.”

      “Says who?” Luke frowned. His own mother had been a police detective before she retired, and he’d trust her with his life. Okay, so maybe he was a little biased.

      “Too much corruption. I was taught never—” Her eyebrows shot up. “That’s not normal, is it? At school they want us to tell the kids to find an officer when they’re in danger. It would be just like a mafia family to teach you not to trust law enforcement.” She shook her head as if flinging the thoughts away. “Still, not worth the risk. Benito said he had connections. He said he’d know. Besides, it’s a moot point.”

      “You better be talking about possible places for my evidence,” Rodrigo barked. “Otherwise, shut your yaps.”

      Rodrigo was ten paces behind them, looking around but keeping the gun trained on Luke’s back.

      Luke reached for Gabriella’s hand and squeezed it. “Thanks for selling my worth back there.”

      Her eyes widened. “I meant every word. You said you did your homework on this property, and I need all the help I can get to stay alive...and somehow save my aunt.”

      Luke tried to picture the topographical map he’d studied that morning. “That’s a tall order.”

      “We have to get away from Rodrigo. Benito will kill my aunt in twenty-four hours if I don’t cooperate. I can’t waste a single minute.” She kicked at a pebble and watched it soar across the lush grass. “Who knew a math-tutoring program would bring mobsters to my door?” She laughed, but it came out garbled like a choked cry.

      A heavy weight settled in the pit of Luke’s stomach. “Wh-what do you mean, your program brought them to your door?”

      “The national attention from the media...my picture. That’s how these men said they found me.”

      Luke’s insides turned to lava. This was his fault? He tried to do something nice for her, and instead he’d brought danger to her doorstep? “Uh, Gabriella—”

      “I want some answers,” Rodrigo shouted.

      “My mom liked to walk around the lake,” she said loudly. “Maybe we’ll see something on the beach portion.”

      Rodrigo grunted and jutted his chin out as a sign to continue.

      “You have almost two hundred acres,” Luke said.

      “Yes, but water accounts for more than half of it. We’ve got the lake and three tributaries.”

      “Basically an urban island, I’m aware. Do you know how long it would take to check out all the land on foot? He’s asking us to go on a wild-goose chase—” he stepped over a spattering of goose droppings “—of which the property clearly has no shortage. But you get my point.”

      Her head dropped. “I...I can’t think of a single spot that would be obvious as a place she’d hide something, let alone a place for evidence. They think she would’ve kept it close to her.”

      Rodrigo seemed to have no trouble letting them talk as long as they were discussing the property.

      “He said he already searched the house.” Gabriella lowered her voice. “But she kept a gun and a journal in her nightstand. Those have to help us.”

      Luke didn’t think finding a journal was a high priority, but he didn’t want to argue with Gabriella in this state. The gun was worth going after, and their only hope. “So we’re agreed the first thing we do is get away from this guy and get back to the house.”

      She didn’t reply, but Luke took that as agreement. He’d noticed when he pulled up in the driveway that there was a second driveway leading to the back of the house where a shed was built. A shed usually meant tools.

      Luke waved toward the lake that wrapped around the south and west sides of the house—providing an almost three-hundred-degree view. The steady breeze sloshed miniature waves up on the shore. “You said it was a man-made lake. Did your mother have it built?” Luke stopped for a moment, allowing Rodrigo to catch up enough to hear his words.

      Gabriella squinted. “Yes. She mined the whole property for sand and gravel, then had it built back up to create the water features.”

      Rodrigo’s forehead wrinkled, but he said nothing.

      Luke addressed him. “What are you going to do if it turns out her mom buried something underneath this lake? Or one of the creeks?”

      “Just keep walking,” Rodrigo spat back, but his eyes were on the lake.

      Luke tried to keep his smug grin to himself. He’d accomplished his mission to get the guy thinking and worrying over something so he’d be less focused. Luke put a hand on his chest and made a small gesture with his thumb for only Gabriella to see. “Let’s make a sharp turn there,” he whispered, “and make a run for it.”

      Her eyes widened. “But he has a gun.”

      Luke glanced over his shoulder and gauged the man’s fitness level. His sizeable mass meant he probably didn’t

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