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Engaged In Danger (Jamie Quinn Cozy Mysteries Book 4)

Engaged In Danger (Jamie Quinn Cozy Mysteries Book 4)

Book summary

"Engaged In Danger" follows the turbulent life of James Quinn, a growing family law attorney. While her personal life shows promise with her father's impending visa and a flourishing relationship, her professional life takes a perilous turn. Accepting a high-profile divorce case, she unknowingly steps into a lethal trap. The case, meant to be a lucrative venture with her friend Grace, spirals into a dangerous game, threatening their friendship and the peace of their town. This gripping tale questions the cost of ambition and the dangers lurking behind seemingly golden opportunities.

Excerpt from Engaged In Danger (Jamie Quinn Cozy Mysteries Book 4)

Chapter 1

"What do you mean you're going to Australia for three months? If this is a joke, Kip, I don't think it's funny." I pointed my chopsticks at my boyfriend for emphasis.

When I'm upset I get loud, which could explain why everyone in the restaurant was looking at us. For them, it was dinner and a show, but, for me, it was like being in a sit-com with a live studio audience--minus the laugh track. We had been enjoying a romantic dinner at Heart Rock Sushi (the one in Fort Lauderdale) and drinking enough sake to feel warm and fuzzy when Kip dropped this bombshell on me.

"I thought you'd be happy for me, Jamie." Kip looked puzzled. His warm brown eyes held my gaze and I couldn't turn away. "I have this incredible opportunity to work with an environmental scientist and save a species from extinction, all expenses paid. And I need a change of scenery--you know better than anyone that being Director of Broward County Parks hasn't been my dream job."

I smiled. "Oh, right, just because you had to deal with three hundred disgruntled employees, a smart-ass vandal, and a psychopath, it's not your dream job? Anyway, that was six months ago, it's been quiet since then."

"That's the problem," he said, wedging a piece of tuna roll in his mouth. The wasabi made his eyes water but he didn't seem to notice. "It's too quiet. It's dull, monotonous and predictable. In a word, bo-ring! I can't stand doing budgets and employee reviews--I want to be outside, doing something real. Know what I mean?"

I'd suddenly lost my appetite. I knew I was being selfish, but I had my reasons. What if Kip loved Australia so much he never came back? Or what if he came back hating his job more than ever? It was a no-win situation, but I could see I'd lost this battle before it began. I resigned myself to the inevitable.

"The County's okay with you leaving for three months?" I asked, forcing a smile.

"Hell, yeah," Kip said with a grin. "They're so glad I didn't sue them after all I went through that they would've given me anything. They even offered me paid leave but I turned it down. It didn't feel right."

I shook my head in amazement. "That's a nice chunk of change you're walking away from, buddy, and I'd say you earned it--like combat pay. Look, I know Florida is flat and overdeveloped and could never be mistaken for the great outdoors, but we have endangered species, too. In fact, I was just reading about some creeps who were turtle-poaching. Why don't you stay here and save the turtles? They need you, Kip! I don't think the turtles can survive without you."

He laughed and reached across the table to take my hand, "I'm sorry, Jamie, I can't pass this up, but I promise that the three months will fly by. We'll talk and Skype every day and you can come visit me. Wouldn't that be fantastic?"

I refused to look at him, afraid I'd cry. I picked up a chopstick and poked listlessly at the stir-fry congealing on my plate.

"Babe?"

I had to stop fighting this and do the right thing. I'd lost Kip once before, when we were dating in high school and he'd gone off to college. We did wind up back together, eventually, but it had taken fifteen years. This time, I'd just have to have faith. Then there was the other problem…

"I can't visit you, Kip," I said. "I'm going to Nicaragua next month to see my dad--finally--and since I'm the one sponsoring him I can't go to Australia and risk missing the immigration interview."

No matter how tightly I squeezed my eyes shut, tears were starting to leak out. One was hanging off my nose and I didn't even care. Kip came around the table and sat down next to me. After gently wiping my tears, he put his arm around my shoulders and pulled me close. I leaned into his chest, my wet face staining his shirt.

"It'll be fine, Jamie, and who knows? Maybe your dad's situation will straighten out early and you can come over. That might happen, right?"

I couldn't resist that teasing half-smile, those laugh lines on his tan face. I squeezed his hand.

"Sure it could," I said, sitting up straight, trying to shake it off. "Now, tell me what you'll be doing out there. What poor creature needs your help so desperately? And I'm not talking about me this time." I mustered a genuine smile and then polished off the last of the sake. It was stone cold, but still burned all the way down.

Kip's eyes lit up and he became more animated than I'd seen him in a long time. Pulling his phone from his pocket, he showed me photos of a strange-looking animal with gray fur and a short stubby tail. It looked like a combination Koala, housecat, and pig. I had to admit it was very cute. It reminded me of a stuffed animal I'd won at a carnival years ago that I still kept on my bed because my cat liked to snuggle with it. Okay, I'll admit it, I liked to snuggle with it.

'What do you think this little critter is?" Kip asked, playing teacher.

"No clue."

"Meet the endangered Northern Hairy-Nosed Wombat," he said. "There are only a hundred and sixty-three of them left."

"Let me guess," I said. "There's also a Southern Hairy-Nosed Wombat?"

"Yup, and there's a third one called the Common Wombat. The Northern is the largest and can weigh up to eighty pounds. I'll be tracking them and exploring locations to start a new population. It has to be somewhere safe because they breed slowly and are preyed on by dingoes and Tasmanian devils."

"Now if I only knew what a dingo and a Tasmanian devil looked like, I'd have the big picture," I joked.

Kip spent the next twenty minutes describing the project and the Epping Forest in Queensland where he'd be spending most of his time. I tried to look excited for Kip's sake, but all I could think about was how he'd be gone so long, making friends and having adventures, all without me. Right in the middle of my pity party I thought of something that made me laugh. Other girls might worry about losing their guy to another woman, but not me. I'd already lost mine--to a Hairy-Nosed Wombat. Excuse me, a Northern Hairy-Nosed wombat.

Chapter Two

Allow me to introduce myself. I'm Jamie Quinn and I practice family law in my hometown of Hollywood, Florida. As you may have guessed, I don't like change much. Happily, I live in a town that feels the same way. Back in 1925, the city's founders had high hopes for Hollywood and in a burst of pride and optimism named the streets for presidents, admirals, and generals. Although the streets retain their illustrious names today, the founders would be disappointed to see how the rest of it turned out. Modern-day Hollywood is still a small city of just thirty square miles with only one major employer, Hollywood Memorial Hospital, where my mom worked as a nurse for twenty-five years. Point of fact, the hospital employs more people than the city's next ten employers combined. I imagine if the hospital ever closed its doors, the City of Hollywood wouldn't be far behind.

As one of the few people not employed by the hospital, I have to take work where I can find it which can be as far south as Miami, as far north as Palm Beach, or as far west (shudder!) as Weston. Like any good eastsider, I hate driving west of I-95 if I can help it, not because it's the boondocks, but because it's the burbs. Honestly, when I hear those smug Westonians boasting about how 'west is best', it irks me. Sure, they have big houses with modern floor plans, but who has all the beaches? That would be us. Besides, our weird little houses have a lot of 'character' (not to mention tiny bathrooms and closets). Although I pretend that unlimited sun and surf make up for all the driving I do, I can't complain. My work keeps me busy and while I’ll never be rich, I won't go hungry and neither will anyone else, not on my account at least. That's because the 'Law Office of Jamie Quinn, P.A.' is a one-woman operation, which is how I like it. I have flexibility and freedom and the best part is that I don't have to babysit (a/k/a supervise) anybody. Of course, when the work piles up, which happens fairly often, I have no one to blame but myself. Being the boss and sole employee can be awkward at times, like when I order myself to get to work and then tell myself to go to hell, but what can I say? I'm the worst employee ever. We who are self-employed say we hate working for other people, but the truth is we just hate working, period.

Although I've been practicing law for a dozen years or so (practice makes perfect), I'm sure you've never heard of me as I'm not the type of lawyer who makes the news. I don't even advertise, all of my business comes from referrals. I handle domestic matters for middle-class people with an occasional freebie thrown in because I'm a sucker for a sad story. I've never turned down a high-profile case, mainly because I've never been offered one, but that's okay. Those cases can drag on for years, nurtured by high-priced lawyers with a scorched-earth mentality and a copy of "Bleak House" in their briefcases. When the money runs out, the lawyers hit the road. I don't blame them for wanting to be paid, I blame them for fueling the fire in the first place. As for me, I don't have the manpower (or the willpower) to tackle a complex case. Plowing through acres of paperwork, deposing hostile witnesses, anticipating an opponent's every move, it's like a game of chess with people as pawns. I love chess, but I hate conflict and I'll do anything to avoid it. Yes, I know, I'm in the wrong profession. Too late to change.

Monday morning found me at my desk, unable to focus on work with all the chatter in my brain. Had it been only three days since my world had fallen apart? I told myself I'd never return to Heart Rock Sushi, never eat Japanese food or drink sake again (although I may have to rethink that last part). I couldn't stop asking how had this happened? How had a bunch of walking teddy bears ruined my life, leaving me only ten days to spend with Kip? It was like 'the butterfly effect'--a butterfly flapping its wings alters the weather on the other side of the world--only this was 'the wombat effect'. Don't laugh, it's a real thing, and one day someone will make a movie about it, especially when they see how adorable those damn wombats are.

Obsessing wasn't helping, so I opened my calendar to see what excitement awaited me.

That couldn't be right.

I had a consultation at 9:30 and it was already 9:25. The problem was that I schedule my own appointments and I knew I hadn't scheduled this one. For starters, I wouldn't have written 'Nan G.', I'd have written out the full name, along with a phone number and the reason she was coming in. Wow, I missed Lisa! She had been a great receptionist even if she did burst into tears at odd moments. Ever since she'd gone back to school, our shared office had fallen apart; it had been one temp after another and none of them could follow instructions. There was a reason I screened potential clients--I hated wasting time, specifically my time. Unfortunately, it was too late to do anything about it this time and I had bigger problems: my boyfriend was going to Australia. It's funny how a crisis changes your perspective. Just then, the intercom buzzed and the receptionist (who may or may not have been the guilty party) announced my appointment.

I straightened the files on my desk, fluffed my hair, and stood up to greet the woman walking through my door. She was tallish, medium build, maybe late fifties, dressed casually in a lavender ensemble. Anyone else that fair-skinned would've looked washed-out, but not her; the lavender perfectly highlighted her stunning silver hair which looked natural. Having hair like that would almost make it worth going gray. She took my outstretched hand in a brief handshake, gave me a timid smile and waited until I invited her to take a seat.

"Hello, Nan," I said. "I'm Jamie Quinn. What can I do for you today?"

She fiddled nervously with the clasp of the designer purse perched on her lap and then peered inside as if searching for something, maybe the right words to say and the nerve to say them. She finally looked up, took a deep breath and blurted out:

"Someone is trying to kill my husband, but I don't care anymore. I just want a divorce."

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