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Desiree Holt and I have had such fun with European set thrillers for our erotic suspense series, NEMESIS.
This time out in UNTIL NOON, we start with a murder and an investigator called to the scene high on a hill top in Montserrat, northwest of beautiful Barcelona. (Ever been there?)
Oh. You must.
I do describe the monastery atop this extraordinary mountain range in western Catalonia. But nothing is so breath-taking as going there. And if you can't go soon, why not read about the sights, sounds, delectable foods and museums in our 4th novel in this series?
Nemesis centers around a security company executives, all women, who run investigations and protection services for people all around the world.
In this one, Raul Cordona arrives at a murder scene near the famous Benedictine monastery of Montserrat. He's received a call from Nemesis's home office to look into the suspicious death of a friend of theirs.
When Raul arrives, he meets one of his best friends who happens to be the homicide detective on the case…but Raul also spies a woman he knew intimately for hours two years ago. Sadly, he never knew her name though indeed he knew every marvelous curve of her body. Raul must learn not only why she is at the crime scene but also what happened to the murdered man.
The two challenges combine into a fast paced tale of UNTIL NOON.
Need a nibble??? OF course you do!
Copyright 2014, Cerise DeLand and Desiree Holt. All rights reserved.
(By the way, these are all my own photos in this blog!)
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Interior done in gold leaf of Monastery Church at Montserrat |
Montserrat,
Spain
Raul
Cordona eased up on the gas pedal of his rental to climb the winding road to
the monastery near the summit of the mountain. He had visited this famous site
as a boy twice, once with his class and the last time with his mother.
Remembering how she’d gasped in delight when she’d entered the sanctuary, he
smiled. He loved the interior of the church, gilded with gold leaf that blinded
the eyes. Inside, he always felt at peace.
Today he
would feel none. True, Raul had been surprised by the phone call from his boss
Adam Malloy in Texas, asking him to end his vacation and seek clues to the
death of one of his friends. Adam was like all the other principals in the
security firm of Nemesis—they respected their employees’ downtime and Raul had
just helped finish a case with two other associates. He deserved a break. But
he understood Adam’s concern.
Adam had
told him the regional Catalan police, the Mossos d'Esquadra, had been called to the scene. They
suspected his friend’s death on this jagged mountainside might not have been an
accident. Raul was not only within driving distance of the monastery just
outside of Barcelona but was also an expert in homicide detection. As a former
detective for Houston PD, Raul had seen scores of murders, analyzed them and
occasionally unraveled others’ plans for it. He’d even stopped one Mexican drug
cartel henchman from killing his own jefe.
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Exterior of Church at Montserrat |
He pulled
his SUV into the parking lot, killed the engine and allowed himself a second to
appreciate the stark beauty of the serrated mountains that spilled thousands of
feet down to the rolling plain leading to the coast and Barcelona. Buttoning up
his jacket, he noted one car surrounded by police tape. The victim’s perhaps?
One SmartCar stood in the last space to the right. The only other vehicles were
four police cars and an ambulance parked at odd angles. Scanning the ridge of
the mountain, he saw a few people in police uniforms and got out of his car.
A brisk
wind blew, chilling him to the bone. He hurried up the sidewalk, past the candy
factory, the souvenir shop and the church. No tourists wandered about, most
likely sent home by the police. At the end of the walkway, a policewoman
stopped him to ask for credentials.
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Summit of Montserrat with funicular building in foreground |
He dug
from his wallet his employee card for Nemesis but told her that her boss,
Homicide Detective Enrique Petron, had put his name on the list of those to be
admitted to the cordoned-off area. She didn’t bother to check any paperwork,
just waved him toward a rock-strewn path.
He hurried
on. Atop one ridge uniformed men stood in groups, talking. Another man took
pictures. A group of emergency medical techs stood on a different outcrop,
conferring, holding a stretcher between them. Climbing became more difficult
with each step. More weeds and stones obscured the path. Terrain like this made
Raul glad he’d worn hiking boots.
At the top
of the ridge, the two stretcher-bearers saw him and pointed him down the
opposite side. He nodded in thanks and took the steep drop at a more careful
pace. At a small clearing, he paused. Below, three men assessed the position of
the dead body at their feet. One of them was his boyhood friend Enrique Petron,
the Spanish police detective and the other two looked like they might be his
assistants, Raul took one good, hard look at the dead man. Sprawled in an
ungainly pose, he looked like a rag doll who’d been throw over the edge. Raul’s
gut wrenched, the man’s broken corpse tearing his sense of justice that a human
being had died so violently.
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Rough terrain of Montserrat. You would not want to fall down here! |
His gaze
caught on a sharp movement to the far right of the body. An attractive brunette
scrambled down the rock-strewn path, her long curls glistening in the dying
rays of the sun. The shimmer blinded him but revived visions of that same
chocolate-and-caramel-colored hair drifting through his fingers, sliding over
his skin, teasing his cock.
No. Folly to think that she would
be here.
He stepped
forward, teetered on a slippery stone, then righted himself to stare at her.
She picked
her way down the gulley beneath the funicular with a catlike grace that knocked
his breath from his chest. He squinted. She couldn’t be his phantom lover. Yet
she seemed the right height. Five-five or five-six. The right build. Ample breasts.
Lithe figure. One that fit his own with a precision that had shocked him the
one night he had enjoyed her over and over again. He wanted to shout at her,
make her turn to face him so that he could consign her to his long list of
women who never turned out to be his long-lost lover.
But she
paused, tipped her head. As if she heard his unspoken demand, she spun and he
had to grab a tree branch to keep from yelling at her. Her perfect oval face,
her luminous dark eyes, her lips were all the right shape, color, size. No. This can’t be. His cock hardened,
lengthened. Oh yes, every part of his body knew this woman. Remembered the
hours she had surrendered every bit of herself to him. Recalled how he fit
inside her hot creamy folds. In his thirty-four years, only this woman had made
him instantly hard—and instantly brain dead. Stifling a curse of frustration,
Raul clenched his fist.
After one night with her—and two
years hungering for her—this attraction should not occur, Cordona. She stepped out of your bed and your life without a word. Not goodbye.
Not thanks. Not even a good “fuck you”.
But of
course, he had fucked her. Thoroughly. Three times in the space of the few
hours when she had graced his bed in Brussels. And she had loved every
mind-blowing second of their encounter.
Just like I did.
“Señor Cordona,” Enrique Petron called to him from the bottom of the crevasse
where the body of Tony Graham lay like a mangled heap of trash. “Por favor.” He beckoned as if the two of
them had only recently become acquainted. “Come here, let me ask you your
opinion about this.”
Enrique
and Raul had known each other for two decades, vacationed together often, even
partied with women together back in their teens when they were young, loco and stupid. They had met at school
in Switzerland. A finishing secondary school for young men, the Citadel of Bern
was an elite private institution catering to the brightest offspring of
Europe’s diplomatic corps. Raul’s father had been the charge d’affair in the Argentine Embassy to the Vatican, while
Enrique’s served in the similar post for the Spanish Embassy. Both older men
were security experts, married to American women and their sons had followed in
their footsteps. Enrique was the senior detective on the regional Guardia Civil police force, while Raul had left
his job three years ago in Houston homicide to track international killers for
one of the most renowned global security firms, Nemesis.
Flipping
up his collar against the biting wind, Raul made his way down from the craggy
trail and praised his own foresight to wear warm clothes. The temperature at
this elevation could be twenty or more degrees cooler than along the sunny
coast. When Adam Molloy had called him two hours ago from Houston to tell him
about this death, Raul had grabbed all his clothes and donned layers to keep
him toasty.
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View of mountains surrounding monastery facing east toward Mediterranean and Barcelona. |
“Tony
Graham is…was a good friend of mine,”
Adam had told Raul. “I just got a call from his wife that a few tourists
spotted Tony’s body on a hillside in Montserrat. We don’t know much yet but I’d
like you to take a look at this for me. Nothing official for Nemesis. And I
know you’re on vacation after that Paris job with Lane and Isabella, but you
are the closest of our operatives to the scene.”
Raul had
jumped on the opportunity to help Adam. Over the past few years, Adam and his
wife Nicole, one of the partners in Nemesis, had pulled quite a few strings for
Raul. So before he hung up, he had asked Adam to send any info on Graham to his
phone. “A bio. Employment records. Anything you can tell me about his
character. And by the way, any idea what he was doing up in Montserrat in
October?”
“Not much.
His wife, Serena, just told me that he was on a job there in Barcelona. Tony is
a private investigator. Owns his own company headquartered in London. Two partners.
That’s all I know for now, but I’ll send over whatever I can get my hands on.
Thanks for this.”
“No problemo.” Minutes later, Raul had
checked out of his beachside hotel north on the Costa Brava and sped south in
his rental car to the mountaintop tourist attraction.
The tiny
town approximately thirty miles outside Barcelona
had only a thousand residents. But high on the treacherous side of the serrated
mountains, monks operated a one-thousand-year-old church, a school for boys, a
printing press, a candy manufacturing plant and one of the finest, highest
net-worth art galleries in Europe.
Now in the
thirty-degree chill factor, Raul shivered as he descended the slope. Feigning
indifference to the brunette who spoke with one of Enrique’s team, Raul wondered
what in god’s name she did for a living that she was allowed to poke around at
the crime scene of a murdered private investigator. So much for bedding women whose name you do not know.
At Raul’s
approach, Enrique walked over to Graham’s body. When he spoke, his voice was at
a low pitch. “Notice anything odd about his position?”
“The head
is turned at an odd angle.”
“Sí. That’s what I thought too. Even
though he fell the distance from the top up there of say forty or fifty feet,
would he die?”
“The terrain
on this side is not as steep as on the north face. From up there, he would have
rolled. I think that means he would break a few bones. But a man so young and
fit could stop his fall. Don’t you agree?”
Enrique
huffed, bending to examine the body and clucking his tongue.
Raul stole
another glimpse of the woman who fascinated him. Dios, she was luscious.
Enrique
rose. “Sí, sí. I agree. How then
would he break his neck that severely?”
“Where is
your forensic analyst?” Raul asked, angry at himself for allowing the woman to
steal his attentions from business. “What does he say?”
Enrique
bit off a Spanish epithet. “Not here yet. Still in bed with his new wife.”
“Ah, good
for him,” Raul offered with sarcasm. “So you think Graham’s neck was broken
before he fell?“
“I’ll let
my forensics man tell me. But whatever the answer on his neck, I do question if
he fell or if he was pushed.”
Raul
flared his nostrils.
Enrique
frowned as he studied the body again. “Anything else seem out of sorts about
his position?”
“Looks like
his trouser pockets are turned out.”
Enrique
winced. “True. We’ve searched his coat. He has no wallet.”
Raul’s
mind snapped on a sequence of deductions. Raul wanted to laugh. “This is a robbery? Ridiculous.”
Enrique
crossed his arms. “That is my thought, but we haven’t found it.”
“How did
you ID him?”
“His
rental car in the parking lot near the visitors center.” Enrique pointed toward
the lot and the auto with police tape around it. “Rental agreement proves it is
his.”
“And the
rental company re-confirms this?” Raul pressed.
Enrique
nodded. “Sí. That car is not stolen.
We asked for the fax of the rental company’s copy of his driver’s license. This
is the same man. Anthony Graham, age forty. Resident of London, England.”
“Neck
broken before he was thrown over the hill. Wallet taken to make it appear like
a robbery.” Raul squinted back up the hill, forcing himself to ignore the
brunette several paces below. “I’ll look around at the top. See if there are
any signs of a scuffle. Better have one of your boys come with me, just in
case.”
“Right. I
want no problems with chain of evidence—or you being here.” Enrique’s eyes
danced.
“You can
cover for me. I know your turn with me in Houston PD did you a lot of good.”
A brief
smile flashed on Enrique’s face. “Taught by the best. Go look at the top of the
cliff and tell me what you find.” Enrique tipped his head toward the path.
“That way you will stop eyeing the candy.”
“Candy?”
Irritated that he hadn’t been cool about his interest in the svelte brunette,
Raul wanted to ignore any affirmation that he might be attracted to the
woman—but couldn’t summon the lie. “How can you tell?”
“Mi amigo, I can smell the way she singes
your heart.”
“Hell with
that.” Raul chuckled. “Never my heart.”
Enrique
waved a hand at him. “No. Your cojones.
Did she reject you?”
Reject me? He’d assumed that at first, but as
the days marched on, Raul knew she had another reason to run. He’d wondered
what it had been. “No, not that.”
“Hmm. If
she did, she was the only one to ever do so. Interesting. I will send her up to
you.”
Don’t. “Why?”
“She must
learn what you know about him.”
“And who
is she?” he asked. Damn his soul. It was his eagerness to fuck her again that
was not a good idea.
“So. You
need an introduction?”
“I do.” Wish to Christ I didn’t.
Enrique
teased. “What am I? Your social secretary?”
“Tell me, Petron.
You know that you probably have a murder on your hands here. And I have
information from my employers about the dead man that can save all of you time
and heartache. How can she be here? Why did you allow her?” Raul insisted.
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View of Barcelona's Las Ramblas at night from a roof-top restaurant! |
“She is a
criminal investigator for the European Union.”
Alarms
went off in Raul’s head. Whatever her name or her proclivity to fuck a man
blind within hours of meeting him, she had the same kind of profession as he
did. Any coincidence that might have occurred to him about their meeting two
years ago melted away. Until he reviewed what he’d been working on that night
he’d pushed between her legs and lost himself, he would be very careful
renewing his acquaintance with her. Had she worked for the EU then? Was her
interest in him purely personal or had there been another method to her
madness? He drove a hand through his hair. Damn if he could recall what he had
worked on the night he lost his mind with her in his arms. “You have known her
before today?”
“No. I saw
her badge. She is, as you say in the States, good to go.”
“Good to
be here. Why?”
“She’s
investigating the work Graham was doing for a major oil company.”
“Which
one?” Raul asked, his gaze devouring the willowy figure of the woman who had
lived in his memory for far too long and whose raw sexuality had spoiled him
for so damn many other females.
As if she
too recalled the abandon of their lovemaking, she looked straight into his
eyes.
He might
never be certain, but at that moment, he felt her tremble in recognition. And enjoy the memory too?
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4 Cats Restaurant where Picasso ate, drank and created logo for restaurant owners! |
Scenes of
how she had laughed with him in the bar where they’d met ripped through him.
Memories of her warm mouth, ravenous for his. Her body, elegant in her passion,
long and reedlike, her breasts, firm mounds. Her pussy, tight as sin, glossed
with dark brown hair, fat labia, soaking wet with cream, all for him. The way
she came with abandon. The delight in sucking him off as if she’d never tasted
any other man. The way she let him have her, on the bed, against the wall. In
his shower. Every time, she had come, crying her joy as her sweet cunt milked
him dry.
“Did you
hear me?” Enrique taunted him.
“No,” Raul
admitted, knowing he sounded like a sleepwalker. “Tell me again.”
“Roca Oil.
Their main refineries are down on the Barcelona waterfront.”
“Gracias.”
“De nada, my
friend. Now go look at
that path and stop ogling Señorita
Terrasona.”
“That’s
her name?” Raul asked, steeling himself to sound indifferent.
“Pilar.”
Pilar. Pilar Terrasona. You and I
are going to get to know each other again. This time, I need to know not just
your name but what you do for a living and why you are here. That means that
this time,
lady, you and I are looking at no sex. All business.
Amazon http://amzn.to/1a0QHFP
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Statue to Christopher Columbus in Barcelona on waterfront! Don't you want to go there now? |