Jo Robertson
The Traitor
A Romantic Thriller
The third book in the Bigler County series, 2011
Acknowledgements
Thanks to the many women who've enriched my life and supported me on my writing journey: my daughters Shannon, Kennan, and Megan; to the extraordinary women at Romance Bandits. Thanks also to the writers who've helped me along the independent publishing trail.
And gratitude to the men in my life. They balance out my overwhelming estrogen moments: Boyd, my husband, and my sons, Lance, Robb, Tyler, and Rand.
I love hearing from my readers. After all, you're the folks I write for!
If you enjoy 'The Traitor,' I'd love you to leave a review at http://www.amazon.com. To express my appreciation for your support, I'd enjoy sending you a free download of any one of other of my books.
You can contact me at [email protected].
Life-time readers, life-time learners!
This book is dedicated to the lovely boy, the chuckling baby who entered our lives and left five months later. Baby Tyler, I knew you for forty minutes, but I'll miss you forever.
Chapter One
Gabriel Santos was not a man to cross.
His name among the Mexicans was
Stepping from behind the industrial waste bin, Santos emerged from the shadows and caught Jose off guard.
Jose trembled like a leaf in the wind even though the drug runners had also told him to show no fear around Santos. With his long black hair tied at the neck, his lean hard form, and his dark scowl, he looked like
But Jose knew the man was no angel.
'A good
The warning was clear, and Jose worked to control the shaking of his body.
When Santos motioned toward the opposite side of the alley, Jose stationed himself at the brick corner of the building. Then he followed Santos' lead and crouched down to wait in the shadows. In this way as their target approached them, he would be flanked on both sides of the alley's narrow end.
There would be no escape.
Long minutes crawled by and the muscles of Jose's thighs began to cramp. He longed for a cigarette, but did not dare risk lighting one. He wondered, not for the first time, why Santos had chosen him for the job tonight.
Jose did not mind smacking the girls around. He was very good at controlling
He shifted position, dislodging minute chunks of debris under his feet. The small plink of gravel sounded like thunder to his taut nerves. Seconds later, the scratch of a match being struck preceded a tiny flare of light, and the rich, smoky odor of a cigarillo wafted across the alley.
Jose had no doubts the man they now prepared to kill would be dead long before his nostrils detected the scent of the cigarillo.
In the brief moment of the lighted match, Jose glimpsed Santos' battled face, the vicious scar that carved its length from brow to chin, the thick black hair, the hollow eyes. Not for the first time, he wondered how so stone- hearted a man had won the trust of Diego Vargas.
And the greater mystery – how he had won the affection of the beautiful Magdalena Vargas. Wife of Diego,
The clink of steel-toed boots striking gravel at the street end of the alley attracted Jose's attention. He saw Santos rise, reach for his weapon at the small of his back, and draw the silencer from his jacket pocket. Unhurriedly, he fitted silencer to gun barrel, his gloved hands steady, his damaged face impassive.
Preferring the deadly quiet slice of the knife, Jose had his long blade in hand by the time the man reached ten feet of where they lurked in the shadows.
Santos waited until the man passed between the two of them.
The man seemed unsurprised. Without turning, he lifted his arms out from his sides, parallel to the ground as if to show that he was unarmed. At a nod from Santos, Jose stepped forward, knife swinging loosely from his left hand. Carefully, he patted the man between the legs and around the chest.
'He is not armed,' he said.
'Ah,
'I have important information for Diego Vargas,' the man said, arms still extended. 'Information concerning
Jose knew by the look on
'The Arab,
Jose knew that the man he spoke of, this Hashemi, was not really a terrorist. It was the name the Nortenos