You never know when I might play a wild card on you!
Today's Wild Card author is:
and the book:
Harvest House Publishers (FEB 1st 2014)
***Special thanks to Ginger Chen of Harvest House Publishers for sending me a review copy.***
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Bestselling author Kathleen Y’Barbo is a multiple Carol Award and RITA nominee of fifty novels with almost two million copies of her books in print in the US and abroad and nominations including a Career Achievement Award, Reader’s Choice Awards, Romantic Times Book of the Year, and several Romantic Times Top Picks. A proud military wife and tenth-generation Texan, she now cheers on her beloved Aggies from north of the Red River.Visit the author's website.
SHORT BOOK DESCRIPTION:
Sadie Callum is a master of disguise. Undercover agent William Jefferson Tucker is not looking for marriage—pretend or otherwise—but he needs the cover of a wife to clear his name and solve the art forgery case that has eluded him for years. But what will happen to his heart?- Series: The Secret Lives of Will Tucker (Book 3)
- Paperback: 352 pages
- Publisher: Harvest House Publishers (February 1, 2014)
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: 0736952152
- ISBN-13: 978-0736952156
AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:
May 10,
1889
Louisiana
State Penitentiary
Angola,
Louisiana
Detective
William Jefferson Tucker of the Criminal Investigations Division,
London Metropolitan Police, stepped across the threshold of the sewer
pit known as the Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola with one
purpose in mind. To see his brother, also named William.
William
John Tucker.
His twin.
His polar opposite.
With his
first order of business being an explanation of exactly what John had
done this time, he turned toward Major Samuel James’s office. When
in doubt, go to the top, that was his motto. And Major James was the
top dog around here.
“Hold on
there,” someone called. Jefferson turned to see a uniformed guard
coming toward him, one hand on his holster and the other pointing in
his direction.
“Just
paying a visit to the warden,” he said with all the charm his
mother had taught him. “Nothing to get upset about.”
“We’ll
just see about that,” the guard said as he nodded toward the other
end of the dimly lit hall. “Just come on back here and sign in, and
then we will see if the warden’s interested in visiting today.”
Shaking his
head, Jefferson tried not to show amusement at the man’s pompous
behavior. While he had seen the other side of a jail cell on many
occasions, it had always been in the position of arresting officer
and not prison guard. To spend day after day in this place would
cause anyone to own an ill temper.
When the
papers were produced, Jefferson signed them. “Anything else you
need?” he asked as politely as he could manage.
“Any kind
of proof you are who you say you are would be appreciated,” he said
in a tone that just barely toed the line between polite and
sarcastic.
“Gladly.”
“And I
will be needing your weapon.”
Routine
procedure in prisons, and yet Jefferson hated it. Reluctantly, he
removed his revolver and handed it to the guard.
“That all
you got?” He gave Jefferson a sweeping look. “Nothing else you
can hurt anybody with?”
“Just a
folding knife.”
“Hand
that over too.”
Jefferson
offered up his knife and then reached for his identification,
carefully selecting the papers that would not give away his current
undercover role in London. Placing what he had on the rough slab of
wood that served as a desk between them, he stood back and waited
while the guard examined the documents.
“And what
brings you here?” The guard took in an exaggerated breath and then
pretended to cough. “Sure can’t be the fresh air and sunshine.”
Jefferson
played along, pretending to find the gag amusing. “I am here to see
my brother.”
“Your
brother?” The guard clutched the papers as he looked up at
Jefferson. “And just who would your brother be?”
“John
Tucker.”
“John
Tucker,” the guard echoed as he opened an oversized leather book
that sent a cloud of dust into the already rancid air.
The odd
idea that this process was beginning to feel very much like checking
into a hotel occurred. Jefferson decided he would keep that thought
to himself.
“Don’t
see any John…”
“William
John,” he amended, irritated not for the first time that his father
had insisted on giving both his sons the same first name and then
calling them by their middle name.
The guard’s
grimy finger paused below a line of scribbling. “Tucker. Well, here
we go. William J. Tucker.” He looked up at Jefferson, his face now
unreadable. “Wait here.”
Without
another word of explanation, he hurried off down the hall,
Jefferson’s credentials still clutched in his hand. A door shut
somewhere off in the distance and then opened again.
“Initial
for your property here,” he said when he returned.
Jefferson
noted the date and the items he had just surrendered and then placed
his initials on the line beside them to indicate agreement.
“All
right. Come with me, Mr. Tucker,” the guard said, not quite making
eye contact.
Detective
Tucker,
he almost said. Instead, Jefferson kept silent. Better not to make
enemies of anyone in this place. “Yes, of course.” He followed
the guard past the warden’s office and around the corner, stopping
at an unmarked door.
“Right in
there,” the guard said as he used a key from his vest pocket to
open the door.
The room
was dark, but a lamp in the passageway sent a weak shaft of light
across what appeared to be a table and a bench. “I would be much
obliged if you would turn on a light in here,” Jefferson said, the
last of his patience with the ridiculous situation disappearing fast.
“Just go
on in and a light will come on.”
He was
about to protest when the guard shoved him inside and turned the
lock.
“Open
this door!” Jefferson demanded. “This is not funny. I demand to
see either my brother or the warden immediately.”
“You just
wait right there, Tucker. You will see the warden for sure.”
Jefferson
felt along the edge of the wall, his fingers sliding across a
combination of dirt and slime held together by something so foul
smelling he refused to contemplate its source. A moment later he
found the bench and managed to sit.
Outside the
door footsteps approached and then halted. He heard voices arguing,
their words indistinguishable through the thick walls.
Finally,
the door opened and a man whose attire told Jefferson he might be the
warden stepped inside. The guard shadowed Major James, as did another
underling of some sort.
“Look,”
Jefferson said, “all I wanted was to see my brother. Is this how
you treat all your visitors, Major?”
“The
major isn’t here today, but I am the man in charge. You can call me
Butler. Won’t need any name other than that. And as to your
question, no. This is the way we treat those who belong inside a
cell.”
“Inside a
cell? What are you talking about?”
Butler
thumped Jefferson’s credentials with his free hand. “These here
papers say you are Jefferson Tucker. Is that correct?”
He gave the
man a curt nod. “It is.”
“So what
you’re saying is that you are indeed the man whose name you have
given to the guard?”
“Yes,”
he said, this time with far less respect.
“And that
you have a brother currently incarcerated in our fine facility.”
When Jefferson nodded, he continued. “And what is that inmate’s
name?”
“His name
is John Tucker,” Jefferson snapped as he sensed a shakedown of some
sort in the offing. It was time to tell them who he really was.
“William John Tucker. Look, I know how these things work, and I am
not someone you can play around with. I have credentials that prove I
am a detective with the London Metropolitan Police.”
The man’s
eyes narrowed. “I’m not sure I would believe that. You certainly
don’t sound like no foreigner, so I suggest you change your tune
and own up to the truth.”
“Here’s
the truth for you. Either let me see my brother or the warden, or you
can give me the reason why.”
Butler
chuckled. “Oh, we will do better than that.” He nodded to the two
men, who approached Jefferson. Though he tried to resist, they
slapped handcuffs on him. “We are going to put you in his cell.”
“What are
you doing?” he demanded as the two men jerked him out into the
passageway.
“Taking
you to where you belong, Jefferson Tucker,” said the guard who was
still in possession of his revolver and the folding knife.
“I do not
belong in a cell!” Jefferson protested even as he was being dragged
through the doors into a cellblock that smelled worse than it looked.
And that was saying something.
Instantly a
deafening noise began as prisoners shouted and banged whatever they
could grab against the iron cell bars. The guard took out his pistol
and fired one shot.
Silence
quickly reigned.
Up ahead a
door swung open. “Looky here, Tucker,” the other guard sneered.
“Your room is ready. Welcome home.”
“Wait,”
the man in charge said. “Let’s let these boys say their howdys
first.”
A prisoner
stepped out of the cell. He was dressed in clothing so dirty that
Jefferson could not discern a color or what kept it from shredding
into rags. Legs shackled, the prisoner shuffled toward them. And then
Jefferson knew him.
“John? Is
that you?”
His brother
heaved himself against Jefferson. Though the smell caused Jefferson’s
eyes to water, he stood his ground as John held him tight.
“What
have you done, John?” he said to the man who, under different
circumstances, would be nearly a mirror image of him.
“Just
what I had to,” was John’s quiet reply. “I hope someday you
will forgive me, Jeff, but I wasn’t built for a place like this.”
“Neither
of us were. And rest assured Mother has no idea her boy’s in
trouble. It would kill her if she knew.”
“She
always did see the good in me,” John said.
“She
still does.”
“Even
though she never could see to give me Father’s gold pocket watch
when I asked for it first.” John looked down at Jefferson’s vest.
“I see you’re wearing it now.”
He glanced
over at the man calling the shots. It took Butler only a moment to
reach down and rip the watch from Jefferson’s pocket.
“Neither
of you’ll get it now.”
“The
major will hear about this,” Jefferson said, earning him a punch in
the gut that took his breath away.
The
warden’s underling fixed John with a glare that shut him up quick.
“All right, Will Tucker,” he said to Jefferson. “Are you
verifying that this man is your brother, John Tucker? And that he is
your twin?”
“I am,”
Jefferson said through the pain in his gut as he took in the sight of
his always well-groomed brother with streaks of dirt on his face, his
hair coated with grease and, from the look of this place, thick with
lice.
“Well, I
believe that is proof enough for me.” Butler tapped John on the
shoulder. “You were right in saying you were not Will Tucker, John.
On behalf of the state of Louisiana, I hereby declare you to be a
free man.”
John
grinned like a fool and then nudged the bully. “Does that mean I
get the watch that is rightfully mine?”
“Don’t
press your luck, son. Just get yourself out of here while I am still
in a mood to let you. Major James might insist on a trial to settle
the facts, and you know how long those things take.”
“I know
when I’ve been bested, so you can keep the watch.” John shuffled
off behind the guards without so much as a backward glance.
A moment
later, the cell door clanged shut behind Detective Jefferson Tucker
of the London Metropolitan Police, leaving him once again in the
middle of a mess his brother had created.
*Review to come! ~ASC
No comments:
Post a Comment