Susan
Stoker
Justice
for Corrie
Badge of Honor: Texas Heroes Book Three
Badge of Honor: Texas Heroes Book Three
Release
Date: March 8, 2016
Blurb:
**
Justice for Corrie is the 3rd book in the Badge of Honor: Texas
Heroes Series. Each book is a stand-alone, with no cliffhanger
endings. **
Blind
since birth, Corrie Madison relies on her other sharpened senses in
her job as a chiropractor. Never did she imagine she'd have to depend
on them to identify a killer. But when a man enters her practice,
murdering everyone in his path, Corrie is the only witness—putting
her directly in the killer's crosshairs.
Officer
Quint Axton wasn't looking for love, or even a relationship, until he
meets Corrie. Beautiful and brave, resilient and intelligent, she's
everything Quint wants—if he can keep her alive long enough to
explore their mutual attraction. The threats on Corrie's life are
escalating. Surely a blind person is helpless against a ruthless
killer?
Hardly.
Corrie is about to prove that disabled does not equal defenseless.
Buy links:
B&N
Nook: http://bit.ly/1NB9UNy
iBooks:
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Kobo: http://bit.ly/1PBn9PF
Kobo: http://bit.ly/1PBn9PF
About
the Author:
New
York Times, USA Today, and Wall Street Journal Bestselling Author,
Susan Stoker has a heart as big as the state of Texas where she
lives, but this all American girl has also spent the last fourteen
years living in Missouri, California, Colorado, and Indiana. She's
married to a retired Army man who now gets to follow her around the
country.
She
debuted her first series in 2014 and quickly followed that up with
the SEAL of Protection Series, which solidified her love of writing
and creating stories readers can get lost in.
Website: http://www.stokeraces.com/
Newsletter: http://www.stokeraces.com/contact.html
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Susan_Stoker
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/authorsusanstoker/
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/8247140.Susan_Stoker
Website: http://www.stokeraces.com/
Newsletter: http://www.stokeraces.com/contact.html
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Susan_Stoker
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/authorsusanstoker/
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/8247140.Susan_Stoker
Excerpt:Just as Corrie reached for the doorknob to see if she could find Shaun—he usually hung out in the makeshift break room toward the back of the clinic—she heard angry voices in the reception area, followed by a weird popping noise. She froze in her tracks and tilted her head to the side, trying to figure out what was going on.
It wasn’t
until she heard Cayley’s scream cut short that Corrie figured out
something horrible was happening.
Knowing
better than to open her door and try to stop whatever was going on,
Corrie stepped quickly away from the door and imagined her office
layout in her head. As the popping noises and the screams
continued—and got closer to her office—she frantically thought
about where she could hide.
Her desk
was large, and sat perpendicular to the doorway. She could walk from
the door straight to the chair at her desk without having to swerve
around any furniture. She kept her office purposely free of
extraneous chairs and tables so she didn’t have to worry about
tripping over them. She could hide under the desk, but wasn’t that
where everyone always hid—and died doing it? If she was a crazy
person hell-bent on killing everyone around her, that’s the first
place she’d look for stragglers who might be hiding.
The exam
door down the hall was opened and Corrie heard Mr. Treadaway ask,
“Who are you?” before the awful popping sound came again.
Knowing
time was running out, the gunman would be at her office within
moments, Corrie made the split-second decision to see if she could
fit in the small area under the sink. There was no other place she
could hide.
When she’d
been hired, there hadn’t been any extra space for her to have an
office in the small clinic. A small break room had been converted for
her, and the sink and cabinets still lined one wall. It would be a
tight fit, an extremely tight
fit, but Corrie didn’t hesitate.
Hearing
the unsteady gait of someone walking down the hall, Corrie raced over
to the sink and opened the cabinet underneath. She shoved her butt in
first and wiggled it around, knocking over a few odds and ends that
were stored under there in the process. She drew her knees up as
close to her chest as she could get them and sighed in relief as she
realized she fit, barely. Her neck was bent down at an awkward angle
and she couldn’t breathe very well, but Corrie quickly, and
quietly, closed one door, then the other, praying whoever was
shooting wouldn’t think to look under the sink for anyone.
At the
same moment Corrie heard the soft click of the cabinet door to her
hiding place engage with the small magnet that kept it shut, she
heard her office door burst open.
Because
Corrie was blind, her other senses had always been more acute than a
sighted person’s. She seemed to hear, smell, and taste what people
with no disabilities couldn’t. The man who’d entered her office
walked straight to her desk. Corrie heard her desk chair being pulled
away. Yup, he’d immediately checked under there to see if someone
was hiding from him. She heard him walk to the small window and held
her breath.
Corrie
nearly jumped out of her skin when she heard the man’s cell phone
ring. He answered it and paced around her office as he spoke to
whomever was on the other end.
“Yeah?
Just about. No trouble whatsoever. Easiest job I’ve had in a long
time. Haven’t seen the asshole yet. Yeah, he was supposed to be
here. I’ve got one more room to check. No, no witnesses. Yes, I’m
fucking sure. He’ll wish he paid what he owes us once he sees what
happened to his coworkers. Fuck off. You’ll hear from me when you
hear from me.”
Corrie
breathed shallowly, trying not to make a sound. She knew she was one
cough, one muscle twitch, one wrong move away from death.
The
shooter sounded mean. She couldn’t tell what he looked like, of
course, but his voice had a unique accent. She couldn’t place it,
but Corrie was pretty sure if she ever heard it again, she’d
recognize it. She listened as he walked around the room one more
time. It sounded as if he was limping; there was a light pause
between his footsteps, as if he dragged one leg a bit more than the
other.
She almost
had a heart attack when he came over to the sink and turned on the
water above her. Corrie heard it gurgling through the pipes her knees
were jammed against and even felt the pipe warm as the liquid coming
out of the faucet heated up. The water turned off and she heard the
killer grab a paper towel from the stack next to the sink.
As she sat
under the sink, wondering if the man would somehow realize she was
there and shoot her in the head, Corrie could smell the cologne he
was wearing. She’d never smelled anything like it before. If she’d
met a man out at a party or a club, she might find the scent
attractive, but because of her circumstance, and the knowledge that
she was two inches away from death, she almost gagged at the stench
of him. The smell of gunpowder also clung to the man, as if he were
cloaked in it. Corrie knew she’d never forget the scent of his
cologne mixed with that horrible smell of gunpowder.
Finally
the man limped to the end of the row of cabinets and must’ve thrown
away the wet paper towel he’d used to dry his hands. Such a polite
murderer, not leaving any trash around. She heard him open the first
upper cabinet and rummage through it.
What in
God’s name was he doing? Shouldn’t he want to get away? He’d
just shot and probably killed people—was he looking for condiments
now? Why wouldn’t he just leave
already?
She almost
whimpered in relief when she heard the faint sound of sirens. Either
someone in the clinic must’ve called 911 before they were killed or
someone nearby heard the shots. It took the man another few beats to
hear them and he’d opened another cabinet in the meantime. When he
finally heard the wailing of the police sirens, he turned away from
the cabinets and walked quickly to the door to the office with his
uneven gait.
Corrie
didn’t hear the door to her office close, and listened as the man
walked to the last room he hadn’t checked yet. It was the small
break room. Shaun obviously wasn’t there, because Corrie didn’t
hear any more gunshots. The mystery man then walked back up the hall
the way he’d arrived, and not too much later, Corrie heard nothing
but silence.
The
quietness rang in her ears. It wasn’t normal for her workplace.
Usually she heard the sounds of keyboard keys clacking as Cayley
worked on her computer. She’d hear Shaun talking with Cayley, or on
the phone, or with a client. Clients sometimes spoke on their phones
while they waited for their appointments, or talked to each other.
Hiding under the sink, Corrie couldn’t even hear the hum of the air
conditioner that usually drove her crazy by the end of each day. It
had a high-pitched squeak that no one but her seemed able to hear.
Corrie’s
legs were cramping, but she was too scared to move. She couldn’t
see what was going on, if the man was really and truly gone, or if he
had an accomplice. Maybe he was waiting to see if any witnesses, like
herself, crawled out of their hidey-holes, so he could blow them away
as well. She’d never been so scared in her entire life, and that
was saying something.
Growing up
blind hadn’t been a walk in the park. She’d made it through too
many terrifying situations to count, including being lost in the
middle of a large shopping mall. Or the time she went out with
friends in college and got separated from them when a fight broke out
in the bar they were in. Corrie could hear grunting and fists hitting
bodies, but had no idea which way to go to escape the danger all
around her.
But
this—this was a whole new kind of scary.
Corrie
stayed huddled under the sink, listening as several people finally
entered the clinic area. They didn’t say a word, but Corrie could
hear them methodically making their way through each room, saying
“clear” as they entered each one. It was obviously the police,
and she’d never been so glad to hear anything in her entire life.
Not
wanting to get shot, she didn’t dare pop open the cabinet doors to
crawl out. When she heard two people enter her office, she took a
chance and tentatively called out, “Don’t shoot! I’m a
chiropractor. I’m hiding under the sink.”
“Come
out with your hands up.”
“Okay,
I’m coming, but please, don’t shoot me.” Corrie’s voice
wobbled as she answered. She leaned against the cabinet door with her
shoulder and as she expected, the small magnet holding it shut popped
open easily. She tried to keep her hands in full view of whoever was
in the room. She stuck them out first and swung her legs out.
“Slowly.”
She nodded
at the terse order. Corrie heard a shuffling sound to her right and
to her left. There were at least two officers in the room. She ducked
her head and emerged from the small space with a relieved sigh,
staying on the ground, knowing
her legs wouldn’t be able to hold her up just yet anyway.
“Put
your hands on your head and don’t move.”
She did as
instructed, intertwining her fingers together on the back of her
head, knowing the officers were probably jacked-up on adrenaline, and
she didn’t want to survive the workplace shooting only to make a
wrong move and be accidently shot by the good guys. She felt her
wrists being forcibly grasped and held in place. She stayed sitting,
waiting for more instructions. She felt another pair of hands patting
down her sides, obviously looking for a weapon. After they found
nothing, Corrie felt her hands being released.
“Who are
you? What’s your name?”
“Can you
tell us what happened?”
“I can
tell you what I know, but please…is Cayley okay? What about Mr.
Treadaway? I think there were others waiting for their appointments…”
Her voice drifted off as she waited for reassurance that wouldn’t
ever come.
“I’m
sorry, Ms. Madison, they didn’t make it. Now, what can you tell us?
What did you see?”
Corrie
turned toward the demanding voice. Sometimes she forgot people
couldn’t tell she was blind. It was refreshing, usually,
but she’d give anything, absolutely anything at
this point, to be able to tell this officer that she could identify
who had killed her coworkers. She tried to hold back her tears. This
was no time to lose it.
“I’m
blind, officer. I didn’t see anything.”
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