Fierce, p.1

FIERCE, page 1

 

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FIERCE


  Fierce

  A Curvy Girl Romantic Suspense

  F-BOMB: Curvy Vigilantes

  Book 4

  Mary E Thompson

  Fierce

  F-BOMB: Curvy Vigilantes, book four

  Copyright © 2023 Mary E Thompson

  Cover Copyright © 2022 Mary E Thompson

  Cover Photo from depositphotos, Copyright © ArturVerkhovetskiy

  Break (Mask) from depositphotos, Copyright © K3star

  Published by BluEyed Press, All Rights Reserved

  No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

  This is a work of fiction. All characters, businesses, locations, and events are either products of the author’s creative imagination or are used in a fictitious sense. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

  Ebook ISBN: 978-1-953879-35-6

  Print ISBN: 978-1-953879-36-3

  Audiobook ISBN: 978-1-953879-37-0

  Created with Vellum

  F-BOMB: Curvy Vigilantes

  Say hello to the Curvy Vigilantes, a group of plus-size women who protect their city. They have no training, but they don’t need it. All they need is the desire to right wrongs and to protect the ones they love… and maybe some help from the men strong (and smart) enough to fall for these kick-ass curvy women.

  * * *

  F-BOMB: CURVY VIGILANTES

  Forsaken (subscriber exclusive)

  Fury

  Framed

  Feign

  Fierce

  Fatal

  Fear

  Flee

  Fracture

  Faith

  SUBSCRIBE NOW AT MARYETHOMPSON.COM

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  FATAL

  About the Author

  To every woman who has ever doubted her own strength… you can do anything and you are powerful beyond your imagination.

  Never give up.

  1

  Mackenzie Chambers shook as she hung up the phone. It was happening again. No. It couldn’t. A woman was dead, and her killer was trying to get away with it.

  She couldn’t believe she answered both calls. After the man called, she immediately dispatched police. When he hung up, the line rang again. What were the odds Mackenzie would be the one to speak to both of them?

  She knew she shouldn’t have said anything to Jessica German. She should have listened and done her job. But her head spun and her heart broke and she couldn’t keep her mouth shut. Not when she knew what the woman was trying to do.

  Mackenzie logged off and walked away from her desk. She needed a minute. She jammed two dollars into the machine and selected a pop. It dropped to the bottom, where she grabbed it. She twisted off the top and tipped the bottle to her lips, enjoying the sweet fizziness.

  “Hey, Mackenzie. How are you?”

  Holden Cross. A paramedic and consummate nice guy. He was always talking to Mackenzie and asking how her day was. They ran into each other almost daily since he worked on the other side of the building. He was cute, if Mackenzie could bring herself to be attracted to him. She usually couldn’t bring herself to be open to being attracted to anyone.

  “Hey, Holden.”

  “Whoa, what’s wrong?”

  Mackenzie shook her head, hating that he could see through her so easily. She couldn’t say the words, though. Not when she knew the look she’d get. The look she always got. She loved her job because no one judged her. Not when the only reason they called was because they needed her help. It didn’t matter to them that she’d been wrongfully accused of killing her best friend.

  But her coworkers were a different story. They knew her story. They knew what she’d been through. And some of them thought she was guilty.

  “Rough call?” Holden asked, assessing her with his endless brown eyes. His dark hair was pushed back from his forehead in a stylish way she was surprised hadn’t been messed up while he was on duty. He looked put together and perfect, counter to the disaster Mackenzie always was.

  Mackenzie nodded and bit her lip.

  “I’m sorry, Mack. Is there anything I can do?”

  The nickname threw her. Jaclyn was the only person who’d ever called her Mack. Jack and Mack. They were a team. It had been years since she’d heard the nickname. Years since she had anyone in her life she was close to.

  Mackenzie shook her head. “I’ll be okay. Thanks, Holden.”

  “You sure?”

  Mackenzie forced a smile and made a move to go around him. “I’m sure. Thanks, though.”

  Holden grabbed her hand and squeezed before she could get past him. His eyes were soft and kind. Understanding. It would be so easy to lean on him for a minute. Just a minute.

  Mackenzie pushed away the fantasy of having someone else, anyone, to lean on. She couldn’t. She had no idea who she could trust so it was better to not try.

  “Thanks, Holden.”

  He released her, his gaze locked on her as she backed out of the room.

  It would be so easy. But she couldn’t give in.

  Every call for the next three weeks put Mackenzie on high alert. She was determined to find Jessica German. To make sure she didn’t get away with killing her friend. Mackenzie knew she was guilty. Innocent people didn’t run.

  She got home after another long night with no leads on where the killer was. Mackenzie was getting frustrated. Someone had to be helping Jessica German. It wasn’t right.

  Mackenzie turned on the news and stopped cold at the reporter’s words.

  “Jessica German, the woman accused of killing local art therapist, Karli Sloane, was brought into the police station last night. Another man was brought in with her, a man police are now saying was the lead suspect. Ms. German had no connection to the man, and she was released from police custody after being questioned last night. The suspect, Silver James, died before he was police were able to question him. His death is currently under investigation.”

  There was no way. It was not possible. Mackenzie watched the report through her tears. She couldn’t believe Jessica German was going to get away with it.

  Mackenzie hated that a woman died, but even more, that the woman’s own friend was to blame. When she got the first call, from the neighbor, her heart stopped. But when the killer called and tried to pretend she was innocent, Mackenzie was furious.

  Karli Sloane deserved better than to be forgotten. Better than having her killer go free. Jessica German deserved justice. And Mackenzie was going to make sure she got it.

  Mackenzie sat in her car outside Braden Wright’s house for the third night in a row. She’d watched him and Jessica German come and go for days, smiling and laughing and acting like nothing was wrong. He was living with a woman who was cold and evil. A woman who killed her friend. He could be next.

  He was a firefighter, a good man. He saved people. Mackenzie couldn’t sit back and let Jessica German kill him. Or anyone else. One thing she knew was people didn’t stop with one. Not unless they were caught.

  Mackenzie waited until the lights went out behind the drawn curtains, then sighed and accepted she wasn’t going to get anything new. She drove home, hating that she hadn’t been able to prove Jessica German killed Karli Sloane yet.

  Mackenzie was off the next day. With any luck, she would find something. Prove something. If nothing else, she could claim it was a citizen’s arrest and force the police to look into the case.

  The next day, Mackenzie drove the now familiar roads back to Braden Wright’s house. There were more vehicles in the driveway than usual. It looked like he was having a party in the middle of a Friday afternoon. It was the perfect time to tell them all what she knew about Jessica German.

  Mackenzie snuck to the door, praying she didn’t have to use the pepper spray she kept tucked in her handbag. She wrapped her hand around it just in case. Then she twisted the doorknob gently. It turned. It was unlocked.

  Mackenzie didn’t stop to think about what she was doing, she just acted. She burst into the house, finding the living room full of people. “Stop! This is a citizen’s arrest. Jessica German, you are guilty of killing… you.”

  Karli Sloane sat on a couch across the room. Mackenzie knew her face, right down to the birthmark on her neck. How was she alive? What was going on?

  “Who are you?” Braden Wright demanded, putting himself between Mackenzie and Jessica.

  “I’m Mackenzie Chambers. I came to arrest her.” Mackenzie pointed at the woman she was there for.

  Jessica stood and moved around Braden. “I recognize your voice. You were the nine-one-one operator. You’re the one who thought I killed Karli.”

  “You did. I know you did. But how…” Mackenzie’s gaze shifted to Karli Sloane. “You’re not dead. How are you not dead?”

  “I’m not, but another woman was killed in my apartment that day.” Karli’s vo

ice was even and solid.

  “How is this not public knowledge? The police—”

  “Are aware of the situation,” another man said, stepping toward Mackenzie. “I’m Captain Marcus Patrick. This is Adam Johnson with the FBI. His partner is Lorelei Sloane, sitting next to her cousin.”

  The police captain and FBI agent blocked Mackenzie’s view of Karli and her cousin. Mackenzie stared back at the men. “Who was the woman who died?” Panic filled her. Something wasn’t right. The whole thing wasn’t right.

  “Her name was Tonya Warren. She came here because her cousin was missing.”

  “Why was she killed?”

  The police captain and FBI agent exchanged a glance. After a second, Captain Patrick stepped forward. “Ms. Chambers, I know your story. I read your personnel file after Jessica’s call. I know about your roommate.”

  There it was. The look Mackenzie hated. The assurance that she’d been the real killer. Her argument got stuck in her throat. “I didn’t kill her.”

  “Marcus,” Karli said from behind the men. “May I?”

  Karli moved past Captain Patrick and took Mackenzie’s hand. Karli led Mackenzie to a seat and sat next to her.

  Mackenzie swallowed her fear and emotions, both sticking in her throat as she looked at the woman she’d believed was dead.

  Karli smiled kindly at her, then spoke. “I was in my apartment when Tonya broke in. I was scared, so I left through the fire escape. I didn’t have my phone or ID, so when Jessica found her, and my personal items were there, the assumption was she was me. We look enough alike that it was reasonable, even I saw it when I saw her. I didn’t believe it was an accident, which left me to think they thought she was me, and someone wanted me dead. The man who had her killed is Damon Street.”

  “Who?” Mackenzie asked.

  “We believe he runs a criminal organization in the area. He moves guns, people, drugs, anything he can through legal organizations that may or may not know what he’s doing,” the FBI agent explained.

  “Why would he care about you?” Mackenzie asked Karli.

  “He didn’t. He was after my roommate. She dated him without knowing who he was. She left when he almost killed her one night. He wants her back because he believes she belongs to him.”

  “What? No. She doesn’t deserve that.” No person belonged to another. No one had a claim over another.

  “Thank you,” a brown-haired woman Mackenzie hadn’t noticed before said. “Damon is evil. I didn’t realize it until it was almost too late for me. But I’d gladly sacrifice myself if it means no one else is hurt.”

  “You can’t do that. A man like that will never stop hurting people. I can’t tell you how many calls I get every day like that. Many times it’s the same woman over and over again, but they always go back. Until they can’t.” Mackenzie couldn’t bear to think of the woman across from her going back to a man who would surely kill her. Not when he was clearly not afraid to kill people.

  The woman hugged herself, running her hands up and down her arms. Karli reached out to her, taking her friend’s hand.

  “Damon thought I was dead,” Karli explained to Mackenzie. “When he thought that, Raina was safer. But he knows I’m alive. And he’s on the run. He also knows where Tonya’s cousin is. She’s alive, and we believe he can tell us where. Marcus, Adam, and Lorelei are planning a press conference for this afternoon. That’s why we’re all here. We’re discussing what we’re going to say and how we’re going to get the public’s help to bring Damon in.”

  “I promise you, I will make sure he pays. I will do whatever I can to help. I hear things. I might be able to help find Tonya’s cousin. The calls I take… Let me help. Please.” Mackenzie looked around the room at the group gathered there. She wasn’t sure she was wrong about the situation, but if she was, she was not going to let a man like that go free.

  “We’re asking everyone to help,” the FBI agent said. “But not all of what we’re going to tell you is public information. If you’re willing—”

  “I’m willing. Tell me what I can do. I won’t stop until he’s brought to justice. I promise you.” Mackenzie met Karli’s gaze and nodded.

  “Good. Then let’s get started,” the FBI agent said.

  Mackenzie listened as they detailed what they knew so far. Damon Street was a sick man who preyed on innocent people. Mackenzie wondered how many calls she’d taken from people who were victims of his.

  As they laid out their plans for the press conference, she kept her gaze on Jessica German. The woman looked ordinary. Her expressions fit what was expected when talking about a man like Damon Street, but Mackenzie wasn’t convinced Jessica German was innocent. A woman was still dead, and just because it wasn’t the woman they all thought, didn’t mean Jessica German had nothing to do with it.

  “Are you going to be able to keep all of this to yourself?” Captain Patrick asked Mackenzie.

  She nodded and smiled at him. She’d never met the man before, but she knew of him. He seemed to be a man of integrity and honor. It was the only reason Mackenzie was willing to put a pin in her suspicions and let things play out.

  “How is it no one knows who this man is?” Mackenzie asked. It was the question she was most curious about. If Damon Street was so bad, how had he evaded police custody for so long?

  “Damon is smart,” an older woman said. “He’s been working the city for decades. He knows everything there is to know about how things operate here. We believe he has a network that extends into the police department, which has allowed him to stay undetected.”

  “Into the police department?” Mackenzie asked.

  Captain Patrick nodded. “Unfortunately, yes. We’re not sure who his contact, or contacts, is, but it’s unlikely he doesn’t have at least one. We think that’s how Silver James was killed. He was given water that had been poisoned. The officer who gave it to him has been cleared of all wrongdoing, but someone put drugs in the bottle. Someone who knew it would end up in the hands of the man who could tell us everything about Damon Street.”

  “Wow,” Mackenzie breathed. If she didn’t have trust issues before, she definitely had them after that. The police couldn’t even be trusted? How would she know who to go to? What if she heard something?

  “Are we all clear on the plan for today?” the FBI agent asked. He looked beyond Mackenzie to Raina, still standing in the doorway.

  Raina nodded, as did everyone else.

  “What plan are you talking about?” Mackenzie asked.

  The others exchanged a glance. They weren’t sure if they wanted to tell her the rest. She knew about the press conference, but there was more. More that she didn’t know about.

  “Never mind. I get it. None of you know me, and you have no way of knowing if I’m involved in this somehow. If I find out something I think could help, who should I be in touch with?” Mackenzie asked, moving on before they could make excuses for why they didn’t want her to know everything.

  “Me,” Captain Patrick said. He stepped forward and pulled out his phone. “Put your number in here so I know it’s you. I’ll give you mine, too. I always have my phone with me. You can call me anytime, day or night. Please don’t call anyone else on the police force. Not until we know who we can trust.”

  “I won’t trust any of them,” Mackenzie said, knowing none of them understood how true that statement was.

  “We need to go,” another man said, holding hands with a woman who’d been more comforting to Raina than talkative the entire time. “We have to get the boys from school.”

  The woman hugged the others while the man nodded to everyone.

  “Thanks for your help, Wray and Stacey,” Captain Patrick said. “And thanks for bringing lunch.”

  “The least we could do. We’ll see everyone soon,” Stacey said.

  The others moved around, but they all seemed to be staying put. Waiting. Mackenzie realized they were waiting for her to leave.

 

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