Chapter 1
Prologue
Twenty-Five Years Earlier
Jimena tried to keep up with Emma, but Jimena’s short, stout stature was no match for Emma’s long legs. Everything about her best friend was the polar opposite. Jimena sighed and watched her best friend’s golden hair blow in the wind. Unlike Jimena’s long, dark hair, Em always kept her hair too short for a ponytail. Pumping harder on her pedals, she narrowed the gap and skidded to a stop shortly after Em jumped from her bike and started locking it against the bike rack.
Em squinted against the sun, smiling broadly at Jimena, still huffing from the exertion. Today, Em’s eyes were almost sky blue. That meant she was happy. After spending so much time with Em, Jimena could tell when she was having a good day. When they turned a stormy gray or the color of her father’s gun, Jimena knew things at home had gotten out of control. She loved how Em’s eyes changed color with her moods, unlike her own eyes, which were the color of poo. Em would tell Jimena to stop being a ninny because brown was the best eye color in the universe and everyone knew that. Em always told her how much she loved Jimena’s eyes, and she wished she had eyes the color of milk chocolate, warm and comforting.
“Dad said you aren’t supposed to ride to the beach anymore,” Karl, Em’s younger brother, said between breaths. He puffed even more than Jimena after coming to a stop in front of his sister.
“Shut up, you little twerp. If you tell Dad, I’m gonna pound you harder than he beats me.”
“Let me play with you, and I won’t tell,” he offered.
Em rolled her eyes. “Fine. We’re playing cops and robbers. I’ll be the cop.”
“I don’t wanna be the robber. You always get to be the cop,” he whined.
Jimena didn’t want to be the robber, either. She hated being the robber. She wanted to be a cop like her papa, even though people said that Border Patrol weren’t real police.
“Tough. Jimena and I are always the cops. If you wanna play, you gotta be the robber.” Em folded her arms across her chest, and her eyes turned a stormy gray.
Karl placed his hands on his hips and glared at his sister. “Dad says that only dirty Mexicans are robbers, so Jimena has to be the robber.”
Em pushed Karl hard, and he landed on the sidewalk. “Don’t you ever say that again, or I’ll make you pay.”
Karl began crying and, through his tears, yelled, “I’m telling Dad.”
“I’ll be the robber,” Jimena said, her voice barely a whisper, but apparently, Em heard her offer.
“You don’t have to. Karl is just a baby. I’m not scared of him telling. I’ll take my whipping. It’s okay.” Em shrugged like it wasn’t a big deal, but Jimena had seen the marks before, and they looked awful.
“I’ll tell about you playing with Jimena, too. Then you’ll surely get a whipping. He told you not to play with Jimena anymore cause she’s a dirty Mexican who will rob you the first chance she gets.” Karl stopped crying, narrowing his eyes as he made the threat.
Em smirked. “I thought you wanted Jimena to play with us and be the robber. You’ll just be telling on yourself, then.” Leaning in, Em whispered in Jimena’s ear, “You can pretend to be a robber, but really be like undercover or something, and then we’ll make Karl be a dirty cop.”
Jimena giggled. She liked when Em came up with a good plan. “If you promise not to tell, I’ll be the robber.”
Chapter One
Present Day
The incessant buzzing on her nightstand finally woke Emma Schmidt. She picked up the phone with the blue case, registering it was her boss since the phone with the red case remained silent. She chanced a glance at her girlfriend. Yeah, clearly pissed. Those stormy hazel eyes were a telltale sign. Grabbing her phone, she offered an apologetic shrug. The end was near. She was sure of it. Everyone claimed to understand her work meant she might have to leave for several weeks at a moment’s notice. Her to-go bag was always ready in the corner of her bedroom. She still had high hopes for Gabriel. After all, they both worked for the FBI. Gaby was in communications, but she knew everything about the missions that Em would take on because she had the highest clearance. Of course, that didn’t stop Gaby’s irritation every time Em volunteered for another undercover assignment. This one was particularly perilous because this group was full-on bat-shit fringe.
Gaby had lost her passion for medicine several years ago and made a surprising pivot to an entirely different career path. Em never got the complete story of why she’d left healthcare, and Em never bothered to push for details. Nevertheless, it seemed to suit both of them.
“Schmidt,” she answered.
“Chatter on the web is loud. What have you learned?” Adam Carter, her boss, asked.
“Nothing yet,” Em growled. “Apparently, having an in because of my asshole father doesn’t replace the lack of a dick.”
“So graphic.” Carter sighed on the other end of the line. “Well, shit, maybe we should pack it in and try another agent.”
“Just give me a little more time. I think I’m gaining their trust. I want to throw up in my mouth every time I spout all that neo-Nazi shit, but I’m managing. Thanks for the newest conspiracy crap. I believe that’s been the ticket to a friendlier reaction. It’s either that or they like looking at my tits.”
“You need to find out their plans before they take out the governor. And I want the name of the top guy,” Carter instructed.
“Understood. Give me a week.”
“You may not have a week. Two days or we’re sending in a special team and breaking up their little coffee klatch. I’d rather wait to get the top dog, but I’m not willing to risk the governor’s life to get my man. She’s tight with the president, and if they succeed, all our careers go up in a puff of smoke.”
“It’s a lot more than a little coffee klatch. They’re armed to the teeth. They have enough firepower to take out the entire state of California.”
“Don’t you lecture me, Schmidt.”
“Sorry, sir.” Em glanced at her nightstand when the red phone rang. “Hey, gotta run. My other phone is ringing. Maybe we caught a break, and they’re finally going to let me inside.”
Without saying goodbye, Em pressed the end call button and picked up her other phone. She rearranged her body on the bed and tried to readjust her voice to sound like the call had just awoken her. “Hello.”
“We caught one, Schmidt. Get down to the warehouse because we’re giving you the honor of taking care of the dirty wetback.”
Em cringed. This recent development wasn’t good. No, not at all good. She knew the group was capable of a lot, including cold-blooded murder. How in the hell would she navigate the situation without breaking her cover? Shit, fuck, and every other swear word she could think of rolled around in her head. “I’ll be there in thirty. Don’t do anything. I want in on whatever you have planned.”
“Your dad would be so proud. Okay, we’ll hold off on the other stuff, but we might get a head start on things that wouldn’t interest you. She’s a pretty little thing.”
Em’s stomach twisted into knots as her adrenaline kicked in. She needed to get there pronto before they gang-raped the poor woman. If she blew through all the lights, she could make it in ten minutes. Em would have to take the chance because knowing what they were about to do spurred her to action.
Quickly slipping into her clothes, Em grabbed her keys and raced out the door, calling over her shoulder, “Emergency, don’t wait up.”
“I’m not planning to,” Gaby answered with venom.
†
Em strode into the dingy warehouse, scanning the scene and quickly assessing the situation. She probably should have called for backup because she wasn’t sure how to talk her way out of this one. A woman with long dark hair sat in the folding metal chair left over from whatever business had occupied the abandoned warehouse. Someone had ripped her olive-green T-shirt. Em’s bet was on Petey, who held his crotch. Good, the woman had fought back. Darnell wiped at the blood on his nose. The red liquid streamed freely down his face and was probably due to a well-placed head butt since they had secured the woman’s arms behind her back with zip ties. The dumbasses hadn’t thought to bind her legs, which was probably why Petey held his nuts and grimaced in pain. That would have interfered with the fun they had planned for her.
Squinting her eyes at the woman, a sudden realization came to her. Aw shit. The woman wore a Border Patrol field uniform. Before she approached the two men and their kidnapped victim, she pulled her phone from her pocket and quickly hit the record button. If things went down the way she suspected they would, she’d need proof of the force required to subdue the situation and save the Border Patrol Field Agent.
Gathering all the bravado she could muster for this ticking time bomb, she approached. Glaring at the two men, she stated with surprising calm, “You dumb shits, that’s a Border Patrol Agent you have tied to that chair.”
“No, she’s not,” Petey declared. “The dirty Mexican probably stole it off a real agent. It doesn’t even fit her right. Besides, I ain’t ever seen no woman Border Patrol Agent. She’s here to have babies so they can suck our system dry. We can’t send back babies born in the US.” Petey spat on the ground.
“Did you check her pockets for any kind of identification?” Em asked, failing to mask the iciness of her voice.
Both men hung their heads and shook, indicating they hadn’t. Darnell brightened and offered, “We’ll just torch the bitch like everyone else and remove any evidence. They shouldn’t let Mexicans become Border Patrol Agents, especially girls. That’s like having the fox watch the henhouse. You wanna light the match? I’ll get the gas from my truck and be right back.”
Em had suspected that Petey, Darnell, and the rest of the collection of former military vets and disgraced cops were behind the string of burned bodies, but now she had verification. Em came close to the two men and whispered, “Why don’t you both go? I want to interrogate her. I think I’ll have better luck getting her to talk. First, we need to make sure no one followed you or anything else that might get us caught.”
“Good thinking. You sure are a chip off the old block. Smart as a whip, just like your daddy,” Petey said.
After the men left, Em squatted in front of the woman, ensuring she looked her in the eye. Those eyes looked so familiar, even with the considerable swelling. The woman’s eyes widened as they locked on her own gray eyes. Was that fear or recognition? But Em could not for the life of her pinpoint where she’d seen this woman. She hadn’t worked with Border Patrol before, so it couldn’t be from work.
“Em?” the woman whispered through her battered mouth. The full, naturally red lips were mesmerizing despite the considerable damage Petey and Darnell had already done to them. She’d taken a beating.
Em shook her head at the sudden realization. Trying to make sense of everything, she quickly pulled the data together in her head. “Jimena?”
Tears escaped from Jimena’s eyes. “I don’t want to die.”
“Ssh. You’re not going to die. Listen carefully. We don’t have a lot of time. I’m undercover. Follow my lead. I’m going to cut your ties, but keep your hands behind your back until the right moment presents itself.”
Jimena nodded.
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