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Read this exclusive preview of The Missing now.

March 4, 2024 By Lou

The Missing arrives next week. I hope you are as excited as I am about this next chapter in the DSA series. Be sure to snag your copy during the $0.99 launch deal, which ends on March 16th. Enjoy a preview of the book below!

Exclusive preview chapter of The Missing

The US-Mexico border after sunset was a wasteland. Nothing but open sky and rough terrain marked the separation between the two countries. It was a harsh landscape, filled with terrors both natural and manufactured.

Crossings occurred frequently. There was no denying it. Whether there was a wall, fence, or armed detail, people continued to travel into the deserts of New Mexico with reckless abandon. They fled violence and political strife, or because they simply needed a change.

None of it was safe. People died on the journey. Even the survivors fared no better in some regards. Their lives did not always stay their own. Too many interested parties profited off the trafficking from country to country.

Lizzy Doyle wasn’t one of them. Out of the dozen shadows that flitted through the truck depot west of the Santa Teresa crossing, she was the only one trying to do something to help people.

It was no surprise to find several trucks at the depot. The closest town along the route near the border was over sixty miles away, and even then, there were few places to settle in for the night. The depot made sure truckers rested for a bit before heading to their next destination.

Some weren’t traveling with commercial goods. They bore a product of a different sort. Few spoke out against the lack of regulations in the area. This was a free zone, the last true remnant of the Wild West as American’s always envisioned. They rejected all government interference. They fought against anything that sought to upset their lifestyles.

That resistance led to quite a few troubling situations. It also opened the door for those willing to take advantage of their hospitality to keep the “big brothers of the border” out of their hair.

Lizzy kept low to the ground. Her camera hung from her neck, dangling in the air before her as she made her way across the crowded depot. Most of the truckers had already called it a night. One crew, however, remained on high alert. Sweeps ran along the fringes of the depot and around the gas station in the center. They moved in opposite directions, yet stayed close to the same pair of trucks at the back of the complex.

The trucks weren’t registered to a company. Neither were they listed with the depot or contained a detailed manifest. The only clue to their purpose lay in the firearms at the disposal of the sentries circling the property.

Lizzy had caught wind of their arrival two days earlier. Word had come through an email from a friend down south, one she hadn’t seen in years yet remembered from a brief stint in the trenches for an assignment. Her friend had barely survived an encounter with a grenade in their path, and only then, thanks to the timely intervention of Lizzy.

That had been how Lizzy made most of her contacts: through circumstances of violence and devastation. It didn’t matter the danger, Lizzy had been in the thick of a number of dangerous situations to snap the relevant photo to share with the world. The friendships that developed from those moments had been merely a bonus in her eyes—but a handy one.

Lizzy left the safety of the truck on her right. She tucked tight to the front end, then shifted into the deeper shadows near the rear. The passing guards cared more for their cigarettes than any potential trouble. Lizzy was thankful for that much.

With the back of the depot cleared of personnel for the moment, Lizzy raced for the shipping container. Even through the thick steel of the chassis, voices erupted from inside. Sobs and curses sounded alike, muted by the container.

“Ayuda!” cried a young woman’s voice. “Ayuda! Por favor!”

All hesitation left Lizzy. She reached the back of the container. The gate was locked; a thick padlock tied to some chains barred any entry. Lizzy shifted her camera around to her back. With her hands free, she pulled loose the hairpin she never used properly. It was more useful as a tool than a simple decoration. Lizzy jammed the pin into the lock. Sweat pooled against her palms. Mentally ticking off the seconds between patrols, Lizzy sighed in relief when the padlock fell open and the chains slipped to the ground.

She lifted the gate to see the occupants inside. The metal squeaked from the strain, and a soft prayer slipped from her lips that the guards would not hear the movement. Dozens of men, women, and children filled the space. They were gaunt from malnourishment. Bruises decorated their arms and legs in various shades. Some hid their eyes from her, no longer used to any light, even the dim moonlight of the desert.

Lizzy held out her hand. “Estoy aqui para ayudarte.”

None moved for her. She waved them on, her efforts interrupted by twin beams of light.

Company arrived in the form of a dozen men. Most remained in shadow, while the light from the flashlights almost blinded Lizzy. One stood taller than the rest. He wore a black bandanna, and snake tattoos adorned his arms that trailed down to his fingertips.

She recognized him from her research: Manny Guerra. He was well known in trafficking circles to be as slippery as the creatures who decorated his flesh. There were quite a few outstanding warrants for the man’s arrest. Finding him, though, was the tricky part. He called nowhere home and held no human possessions. His work was all that mattered to him. In that regard, Lizzy understood the man.

“Looking for help?” Manny asked. His eyes were pinpricks in the dark, yet they appeared ravenous. “We’d be happy to lend you a hand.”

A light dropped. The man holding the flashlight reached out for Lizzy. With his arm extended, Lizzy grabbed the man’s wrist and snapped it back. He cried out in pain, but she held tight. Leaning forward with her left fist, Lizzy punched the bastard against the bridge of his nose. At the moment of impact, she let go of the man’s wrist, and he fell to the dirt.

“My, oh my,” Manny said. “We have a fighter here. I like that.”

More hands shot out. Lizzy swatted at them, backpedaling to stay out of their reach. One leaped at her. His arms shot out, and his palms slammed into her chest. Lizzy twisted to her side as she fell. Rock dug into her arm from the impact. It was the least of her worries. She spun her camera away from the ground and held it tight.

As she stood, Manny stepped forward. His boys understood the gesture and retreated behind their leader. Manny reached out for her. She batted the hand away. His other hand shot out. When she moved to intercept, Manny grabbed her wrist and pulled her close.

“See? Two can play at that game,” he said. She could smell the onions on his breath, and feel the heat rising from his chest. His yellow, twisted smile filled her view. “What do you say, boys? Should I add her to my collection?”

They cheered as one. They held no human decency and felt nothing for their fellow man. All that mattered to them was the promise of cold, hard cash to gamble or piss away on booze. This was their life. There was no desire for a future. They weren’t building for their retirement. There was just the hope for a big payday at the expense of the innocent.

The cheers faded at the rise of another sound. All threw a questioning look at Manny, who mirrored their reaction. They were confused by the sound of laughter coming from Lizzy.

“What?” Manny shook at the girl in his grasp. “What’s so funny?”

“‘Add her to my collection?’” Lizzy asked. “I was going to say the same thing.”

With her free hand, Lizzy lifted her camera in front of Manny’s eyes. She snapped a photo. He reeled at the bright light, the flash temporarily blinding him. The moment his grip slackened along her wrist, Lizzy pulled free. She shoved Manny and raced for her freedom.

“Grab her!” Manny shouted.

The men gave chase. Shots rang out. They split the air around Lizzy. She cut sharply along the front of the trucks to the far side of the complex.

Cocking her head for a quick peek at her pursuers, she noticed Manny in the middle of the pack. Every last one had joined the chase. Her smile grew, and her pace quickened.

At the gas station, Lizzy ducked between the pumps. No more shots followed. The shouts of Manny and the others silenced their weapons. From the safety of the pumps, she proceeded to another group of trucks on the opposite side. Hands closed in on her. Her pursuers were everywhere. They moved faster, and more desperately, with each passing moment.

Lizzy fought ahead. Rounding the back of the trucks, she slid into the dirt. Manny and his crew scurried in pursuit. Each skidded to a halt at the sight before them.

Dozens of officers took aim at the criminals. In the center, wearing a wide-brim hat, was Sheriff Hector Ortega.

“Lower your weapons!” the sheriff yelled. “Then put your hands in the air!”

Manny shifted forward. He reached for Lizzy, who backed away for the line of cops. A single shot split the silence of the night. Manny glanced up to see a wisp of smoke rising from the barrel of Hector’s gun.

“Not. Another. Step.”

Manny grimaced, his balled-up fists slowly opening. He raised his hands into the air to surrender.

Lizzy lifted her camera to snap another photo.

 

Hector threw her an ice pack. Lizzy caught it with her left hand, then placed the pack along her right arm. Relief immediately spread in waves throughout her body.

She knew the pain would last a few days. She didn’t care. Just the sight of Manny in the back of a police cruiser, and the dozens rescued from the twin trucks, was enough to make her forget about her injuries. Her actions saved lives, not that Hector would ever agree.

“You’re an idiot, Doyle,” he said. He joined her near the front entrance of the complex.

“Is that any way to thank me?”

Hector’s hands fell on his hips. He was a cop through and through. There was no getting him to play a different tune—especially with her. “You’re lucky I can talk to you, let alone thank you. They would have killed you, probably done worse for what you did to their leader.”

“He had it coming.”

“I told you we would handle this,” Hector said. He always said the same thing. When she’d received the message from her contact about the transfer, Lizzy had passed it along to Hector. Sure, she should have done that the second it came into her inbox and not two hours before she’d infiltrated the truck depot, but where was the fun in that?

Lizzy lifted her camera and took a picture of Hector’s grimace. It was not appreciated. “You got your collar, Hector.”

“And you got to appease your death wish for the day,” Hector snapped back at her. “What about tomorrow, Lizzy?”

She rolled her eyes at the accusation. Coming home was a common practice for her. She tried to make the trip at least once every other month. There were bills to pay, and plants that needed to be replaced due to neglect.

It wasn’t her fault work always crept up during her visits.

“Can we skip the speech this time?”

“Not a chance,” he said. She turned from him. His hand settled on hers to hold her back. “Until you actually listen, I’m going to say it again and again. What you did here? It doesn’t change what happened.”

“It might, and you know it.”

Frustration filled the sheriff’s face. “Patrick’s gone. He wouldn’t have wanted this life for you.”

Lizzy ripped her hand away from him. “Yeah, well, I’ll be sure to ask him when I find him.”

She made a beeline across the dirt road. Patrol cars exited the complex, causing her to stop and wait for the road to clear before she crossed. Hector followed close, but she refused to look in his direction. Instead, she focused on the shadow looming on the other side of the well-worn path.

The passenger van carried more rust than paint in certain areas. The blacked-out windows kept the contents within safe from any onlookers, and the vanity plates that read PHOTO1 always brought a smile to her face. It was her home, the piece of herself she always carried wherever she went. Unfortunately, it was another part of her life Hector failed to understand.

“How is this thing still running?”

“Duct tape and prayer,” Lizzy replied. She headed for the driver’s-side door. It creaked under her hand; the hinges threatened to snap loose from the body of the van. “I get your concern, Hector. I do, but—”

Her phone chirped in her pocket. Without a glance at her colleague, Lizzy dropped her camera into the van and pulled out the phone.

“Every time I hear that thing go off, I worry I won’t see you again.”

She read the name listed on the incoming notification, then tucked the device away. “I have to go.”

Hector reached for her once more as she climbed inside the van. “Who is it this time? Who do you have to find?”

Lizzy tossed him the ice pack. Settling into her seat, she tried to get comfortable, though the padding had long since been worn out. The key turned in the ignition, and the engine struggled to turn over before roaring to life.

“A woman,” she called out to her friend. “Someone named Emily Wright.”

The hunt for Emily Wright continues in The Missing!

Grab your copy today.

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Filed Under: The Missing Tagged With: preview chapter, The Missing

The Wellspring Preview Chapter

September 5, 2023 By Lou

The Wellspring arrives next week! I can’t believe it is finally here. I’m so proud of how this season turned out. Some of my favorite DSA moments are in these six books.

Be sure to pre-order your digital copy of The Wellspring before the $0.99 sale ends on 9/15.

You can also order your paperback edition now!

To prepare for the launch next Wednesday, here is an exclusive preview chapter. Enjoy!

The Wellspring Preview Chapter

Glass shattered, scattering along the inside of the clinic. Morgan Dunleavy swiped at the remaining shards of the small window on the door to clear her path. Unfurling her hand from the inside of her sleeve, she reached inside to click the lock.

No alarms sounded as the door opened. No lights flashed at her arrival to signal local law enforcement of the break-in. Instead, silence greeted her. She scrambled back to the green compact. Desperate hands slipped from the handle on the first attempt before successfully opening the door. All breath left her at the sight of Ben Riley on the back seat.

Blood caked to his skin and seeped from open wounds. Crimson ran in thin streams along the upholstery. His chest rose with short, shallow breaths. His cheeks paled; everything about him faded to a ghostly white—like he was being erased.

“Come on, Ben,” Morgan muttered. She reached inside and pulled him to the edge of the seat before lifting him up. His arm draped over her shoulder, his feet dragged along the concrete, as she shuffled out of the rain and back into the shop.

She hadn’t been sure of his chances when she found him in the abandoned school. He’d been shot and beaten severely—hunted because of their association with the DSA. Greg Sullivan had perpetrated a coup and was cleaning up loose ends.

Morgan barely survived her own encounter. Jacob Grissom, the man who had recruited her—who’d given her a second chance at life—had betrayed them. He had been serving the enemy all along, forcing her to question every choice since.

With Ben, however, everything was crystal clear. She had resisted him early on, his constant need for conversation bordering on inane. Over time, he won her over—through his deeds and his unwavering perseverance to do the right thing.

She couldn’t lose him, not after he’d gone behind her back to protect her from harm. She wouldn’t let him go that easily. Not until she got in the last word with him, at the very least.

The Blairwood Pet Clinic was a last resort. Morgan had noticed the shop a dozen times in her travels of downtown Bethesda. Had she ever considered owning a pet, it might have been a place she would have visited. Just the thought of a pet, though, made her laugh. Like her life wasn’t complicated enough already.

The back room was little more than a supply closet. Cabinets of medications lined the right-hand wall. A double sink sat in the center of a counter to the left. Baskets hung on either side of the door, filled with combs, brushes and gloves, among other miscellaneous needs, depending on the day.

The cramped room opened to a narrow corridor. Three doors lined the left-hand wall. She stepped inside the first and saw the table within an examination room.

Carefully, Morgan lifted the dying man onto the table. Tremors shook Ben’s body with each movement. She had no choice. The timer had been ticking down the moment she’d found him, and she sensed the end approaching rapidly.

“You hang on, Ben,” she said. Her hand grazed his cheek and ran along his forehead. His fever was pronounced; heat coursed up her fingers at the merest touch. “I need you to hang on just a little longer for me. Please.”

She raced back to the supply closet. Cabinets ripped open without a care and bottles crashed to the floor to find what she needed. She grabbed at scissors and gauze, forceps, water, and alcohol. Her panicked thoughts tried to hold a mental list, but it was shunted aside with each ragged breath of the man in the examination room. Morgan filled a basket and tore it from the wall before hurrying back to her patient.

The basket clattered at her side. Snatching a pair of scissors, Morgan set about cutting loose Ben’s shirt. She peeled it back slowly to keep any pain to a minimum. There was no time for anesthetic, no time to even clean her instruments properly. Ben no longer had the luxury.

“No,” Morgan said, struggling through her own jaded perspective. Ben was a fighter and had been fighting ever since she’d met him. He made her better by standing at her side. She could do no less for him now. “You can do this, Ben. We can do this.”

The shirt pulled away to clear her view of the bullet wound along his right side. She pinched at the skin. Blood bubbled with each tweak. Lifting him for a look at his back, Morgan realized there was no exit wound.

“Dammit.” She tossed the scissors back into the basket and retrieved the forceps. “The bullet is still in there, Ben. This… this isn’t going to be pleasant. For either of us.”

The forceps wavered in her grip. Her fingers tightened along the handle, but hesitated to act. She had left her medical career behind long ago, lost because of a choice she’d made. Three men had died to save the life of her brother. Nothing could make her want to live that moment again, to make those choices between life and death with the consequences that followed. The pressure was too much. Ben’s condition, however, took all choice out of the matter.

She splashed alcohol on the instrument. Grabbing the painkillers found in the supply room, Morgan force fed them to her patient to bring down his fever. Ben’s arms and legs kicked out in violent spasms. Morgan did her best to lock him in position. Her hand rested on his chest. The soft beat of his heart comforted her in no small degree, like he was in the room with her to guide her hand.

The forceps slipped inside the open wound. Blood clouded everything, but she did her best to navigate within. Every movement was cautious and deliberately so. Adding further damage to any vital organs would end the man’s life in an instant.

Sweat ran in thick globs down her forehead and into her eyes. Her teeth dug into her lip, and her hand around the forceps tightened up instead of staying loose. Her body resisted her wishes with each rising doubt. This wasn’t who she was anymore. She had failed in that endeavor like she would Ben and everyone else.

Then she felt metal. Eyes widened in surprise, and all doubt vanished in an instant. Digging deep, maneuvering through the thick blood streaming from the open wound, Morgan snatched the bullet with the forceps and pulled it free.

It clattered to the ground.

“I did it,” she whispered, a smile on her lips. She dropped the tool in her grasp and reached for some hydrogen peroxide to disinfect the wound. “I did it, Ben. The bullet is out. I’m going to clean you up now. You have to do the rest, though. Come back to me, Ben.”

Her deed, however, wasn’t by any means a solution. Ben required more drugs to break the fever, as well as a transfusion from the blood loss. Both were out of her hands. All she could do was sew up the wound and cover it with gauze.

Finished, she wiped his brow with a towel. A sad smile grew upon her lips as she pictured Ben’s reaction to everything she had done. He was always quick with a joke. Morgan imagined it would be about her ratty hair or the bags under her eyes. Something meant to be complimentary, yet at the same time completely inappropriate. She needed to hear that from him now.

Settling at his side, she continued to run her hand through his hair. “I… I don’t have anything else to offer you but some damn prayers, and they’ve never been real good ones at that. Never worked for me. Not with my brother, my career, nothing. But you have them, partner, so you come back and stop being an ass about it.”

“Morgan.”

She fell back a step at the sound of her name. Optimism filled her at the prospect of where it came from, but quickly dissipated. Ben remained unconscious, dying before her. No, the name came from behind her from a shadow standing in the doorway.

Susan Metcalf waited with arms across her chest. She appeared soaked and exhausted. That happened when you spent hours burying the dead.

“How did you find us?” Morgan asked. The words were sharp with anger, something that always sparked with the woman who had been her boss.

“I followed you. I—” Metcalf stopped at the sight of Ben on the table. Her approach was hesitant, her hands falling to his side. “Is he—”

“I got the bullet out,” Morgan said. “Stemmed the bleeding, but his fever is still spiking. He’s dying.”

Metcalf’s hand fell on Morgan’s. “There’s nothing you can do for him now.”

Morgan pulled away. Her eyes thinned. “I have to try. I have to do something.” Morgan paced the length of the room, unable to look at the man who had wanted nothing more than her friendship—who wanted nothing more than to help people.

“You can,” Metcalf said. “Morgan, I need you to do something for me.”

Morgan stopped at the door. “What? What the hell are you talking about?”

“There’s a reason why everything has happened today.” Metcalf caught her thin gaze. “She’s called The Wellspring, and I need you to find her.”

The Wellspring arrives September 13th!

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Filed Under: The Wellspring Tagged With: DSA, DSA Season Two, preview chapter, The Wellspring

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