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  Table of Contents

  Get Tracy’s Free Starter Library

  About Hunting The Kobra

  Praise for Tracy’s Romantic Thrillers

  Title Page

  [1] Maryland, Four Months Ago

  [2] Saturday, October 19th

  [3] Saturday, November 9th

  [4] Sunday, November 10th

  [5] One Hour Later.

  [6] Thursday, November 14th

  [7] Saturday, November 16th

  [8] Monday, November 25th

  [9] That Evening

  [10] Friday, November 29th

  [11] Saturday, November 30th

  [12] That afternoon

  [13] Sunday, December 1st

  [14] Wednesday, December 4th

  [15] Sometime later

  [16] Monday, December 9th

  [17] Lunch.

  [18] Saturday, December 21st

  [19] Sunday, December 22nd

  [20] Monday, December 23rd

  [21] Later that Morning

  [22] That Evening

  [23] Thursday, December 26th

  [24] Friday, December 27th

  [25] 11 a.m.

  [26] And after…

  [27] 11:46 a.m.

  [28] Saturday, February 22nd

  [29] Tuesday, February 26th

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  The next book in the Project Kobra series.

  About the Author

  Other books by Tracy Cooper-Posey

  Copyright Information

  About Hunting The Kobra

  No one is who they seem to be. No one at all…

  When her lover and partner, Denis, dies in a random terrorist bombing, Quinn craves answers no one can give her.

  An international businessman, Elijah Aslan, who says he once knew Denis well, seems to need the same answers. He alone understands Quinn’s pain.

  Yet Aslan is not the simple businessman he appears to be. Flagged by the CIA, Aslan’s contact with Quinn sends up alarms and thrusts Quinn into the middle of an affair with unseen roots in Denis’ past, and with world-shaking consequences if Quinn doesn’t play her part perfectly…

  This romantic thriller is the first book in the Project Kobra series.

  Praise for Tracy’s Romantic Thrillers

  If you love a suspense filled romance, then definitely grab a copy.

  It’s a great read that will keep you in your toes and wanting to read more from the author.

  Breathless,intoxicating,wonderful! Fulfills its promise! Read it in one sitting.

  Non-stop adventure/suspense and a great love story, and as always, her secondary characters are well-drawn and memorable. I was truly sorry to come to the end, even though the story's tension had kept me reading as quickly as possible.

  I love when an author can keep you turning the pages furiously and trying to read ahead, LOL!

  Once again Ms. Cooper-Posey pulls the reader in immediately with her fast-paced romantic suspense.

  A delightful blend of romance and suspense that with each page turned seems to hurtle along at full throttle holding the reader captive and with each twist and depth of emotion turns something ordinary into the unforgettable and impossible to put down.

  It has everything -- action, suspense, surprises, romance! I could really see the scenes unfolding on a screen.

  [1]

  Maryland, Four Months Ago

  “I dunno, Mom…for a genius, you sure don’t know much about computers.” Dima’s son, Harry, leaned back in the chair and blew out his breath. “Didn’t anyone tell you not to open emails from strangers?” He looked at her over the top of his glasses.

  Dima gave him a wide smile. “I believe they’ve mentioned it once or twice.”

  “You downloaded a virus. A nasty one I’ve never seen before.” Harry tapped the enter key a few times. “I’ve deleted it now. If you’ve lost any data, you should probably chalk it up as a small price to pay. Far as I can tell, there’s no other damage, and no break in security.”

  Dima rested her hand on Harry’s shoulder, for she had put the kitchen chair beside her office chair to watch what he was doing. “Thank you, darling one. Now, it’s late. You should be home with Melissa and the kids.”

  Harry glanced at his watch then leapt to his feet. “Damn, it’s past ten. The twins will be in bed and…I didn’t realize.” He bent and kissed her cheek. “I gotta go.”

  “Yes.” She stood and let him shuffle past her. He had his father’s height and his big shoulders, which Jack would have liked—had he lived to see Harry reach adulthood. Dima followed Harry down to the front door, where she handed him his car keys. He had no coat. It was June and even this late at night, the air was still and warm.

  Dima kissed Harry’s cheek twice, once for Melissa and once for the children, then pushed him out the door. She trudged upstairs, her mind working.

  She settled herself behind the laptop, frowning at the screen. It was a perfectly innocent screen, the same one she gazed at every day. It was her personal computer and severed from her work. The laptop had only the most basic security protocols, for she kept nothing on it but her social network accounts and photos of her children and their children.

  With a dexterity and speed which would have astonished Harry, had he seen it, Dima pulled up the command prompt and ran a file list. She sorted the list so the most recent files appeared first.

  “Well, hello…” she murmured, staring at the list.

  The very top file was new. The timestamp was after she had opened the interesting email which had caused her to ask Harry to use his tech tools to wrest back control of her laptop.

  Dima shut off the network, Bluetooth and the Wi-Fi card, then opened the file. She stared at the image. Several men and one woman cavorted in shallow seawater. The waves were small, the beach sand white. Everyone in the background wore as little as possible.

  Then she spotted it. Dima leaned forward, as if getting closer to the screen would refine the resolution and give her more detail. “No…!”

  She opened the photo in an editor application, then scaled the image until all she could see was one tiny section. She re-sampled the image, to clean it up.

  The details were still blurry. With a hiss, she got to her feet. She took three steps away, steaming. Then she turned back. Her breath caught. Standing on the other side of the room from her desk gave her a long view. She stared at the section of photo she had enlarged. Her heart beat harder with rare excitement.

  “Allah save us…” Dima whispered.

  She glanced at the time read-out at the bottom of the screen and frowned. She reached for her cellphone and hesitated with her hand hovering over it. She decided quickly, snatched the phone up and pushed it into her jeans pocket. She closed the laptop with a snap and tucked it under her elbow, then hurried downstairs and picked up her car keys.

  She flipped on the security, turned on the lights and locked both deadbolts as she left. She didn’t bother taking the Glock with her. There was another one in the car and besides, this wasn’t that sort of occasion.<
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  [2]

  Saturday, October 19th

  When they sneaked to the jazz bar, Quinn and Denis concentrated on the music to give the musicians their due. It would dismay their colleagues and Denis’ students to learn they enjoyed jazz. Their guilt made them appreciate every single note, extracting as much pleasure as possible before returning to the hallowed halls of classical music.

  Tonight though, they barely heard the music. It had been a stressful day for both. Denis spent the first set telling Quinn about the political machinations involved in gaining a permanent position at the Conservatory. He was only a visiting professor, yet everyone loved him. The students adored him, he got along with all the professors and he loved his work. It should have been simple.

  “Has this anything to do with the fact that you are Austrian?” Quinn asked him. It was the obvious conclusion. He wasn’t a visible minority, he wasn’t female, and he wasn’t American.

  As usual, when she mentioned his background, Denis closed down. He didn’t talk about Austria much.

  Instead, he shifted the conversation to her problems. She was only a music librarian for the Boston Symphony, yet somehow, she had become entangled in the potentially explosive issue of beta-blockers and who was supplying them to the orchestra members. Today, the lead viola had collapsed during rehearsal, after screaming at Quinn for giving him the wrong score.

  Quinn had supplied the viola reduction, as usual, while he insisted he must work from the full conductor’s score.

  As she spoke, Denis tucked behind her ear the long locks of hair which always came free of her messy bun. He picked up her hand and held it. His blue eyes were steady upon her face and he nodded in all the right places.

  By the time she was done, she felt like the world’s most ungrateful woman. Quinn gave him a rueful smile. “Listen to me rattle on.”

  Denis shook his head. “At least you got to listen to Mahler today,” he said. “I love how the Symphony plays the Seventh. My students slaughter it.”

  The jazz band finished their tune. There were perhaps two hundred people in the bar and everyone clapped and cheered and whistled.

  Quinn grimaced. “I don’t think I heard a single note.”

  “Let me get you another glass of wine,” Denis said. “Then we can sit back and enjoy the next set. It won’t be a wasted night, then, no?”

  Quinn pushed her fingers through his thick hair, where it shadowed his forehead. “I can think of something which will make sure it’s not a wasted night. In fact…” She looked around, then leaned closer, for there was no music to mask their conversation. “Maybe we should skip the next set?”

  The corner of Denis’ mouth twitched. He didn’t leer or raise his brow, yet she recognized the heat in his eyes. “I don’t know…” He managed to look reluctant. “I have been looking forward to hearing this trio for a week.”

  Quinn sat back. She kept her gaze steady. “One five-foot-nine redhead with breasts and perfect pitch, or three sweaty, overweight musicians, including one who empties his spit valve onto the floor. Take your pick, Denis Fabian, and pick wisely.”

  He actually sat for thirty seconds more without moving a muscle. Not even his expression changed.

  Quinn rolled her eyes. “You know, when you tease like that, you’re supposed to give at least a hint you’re not serious.”

  “Who says I’m not serious?”

  She laughed.

  The horn player hit a sour note and Denis winced. “That does it.” He stood and picked up her hand.

  Happily, she followed him through the tables toward the exit. They were only three feet from the door when the world lit up and the earth shifted beneath her.

  Quinn wasn’t afraid. Not yet.

  That would come later.

  When she next opened her eyes, Quinn found the world had stopped moving. The sounds were different. The soft beeping to her right was off-key.

  Then she recognized the beeping and her heart fluttered. The beeping picked up speed.

  Quinn blinked until she could make sense of what she was seeing. Everything was taupe and bland. Or white. She had never been here before, yet she knew exactly where she was.

  The glass door of the ward slid open. A nurse in dark green scrubs hurried in. She came up right up to Quinn and smiled. “You’re awake. How do you feel?”

  “What happened?” Quinn’s heart hurried even harder.

  “What do you remember?” The nurse flicked her fingernail at the IV tube and glanced at the monitor, her gaze not meeting Quinn’s.

  “Jazz,” Quinn said. “We were listening to jazz. No, wait… We were going home. We were going home.”

  The nurse nodded. Her expression was warm, but sober. “No one is entirely sure what happened yet. The building you were in collapsed.”

  “Collapsed?” Quinn felt starched sheets beneath her fingers and gripped them. “Denis! Where is Denis?”

  “Denis is a friend of yours?”

  “My boyfriend. More than that…” Quinn swallowed. Her dry throat clicked. “Is Denis here? Is he all right?”

  The nurse smoothed the sheets over Quinn’s knees. She picked up her wrist and took her pulse, even though a perfectly good electronic monitor was doing the same job.

  The evasion made Quinn’s heart screech. Fear gripped her throat. “Please… Tell me what happened.”

  The nurse shook her head. “There were many people in the club,” she murmured. “They’re still trying to figure out who everyone is.”

  Quinn stared at her. A soft shriek sounded in the back of her mind, getting louder. “They’re still trying to identify the bodies,” she interpreted.

  The nurse put her wrist down gently. “Someone will come and get your details, then you can tell them about your Denis. Don’t worry, the answers will come. You must give everyone time to recover and get themselves sorted out.”

  As it turned out, it took three days for them to identify Denis’s body. He was just one of twenty-five victims.

  Quinn disobeyed her nurse’s orders. She worried the entire time. Once she knew the truth, though, she wished she could go back to worrying again. Only, no one was left to worry about, anymore.

  [3]

  Saturday, November 9th

  Like Quinn, Denis had no family. It was one factor which had brought them together, although it had nothing to do with why they stayed together. It gave them common ground. That, and music.

  Because Denis had no family, the preparations for the funeral and the wake fell to Quinn. She focused fiercely on the arrangements for they gave her something to do, and something to think about other than the yawning emptiness in her life.

  The day of the simple graveside ceremony was the first freezing day of the season. The overcast sky fit her mood.

  Quinn managed to not break down while the priest said his few words. Nor did she cry on the way back to their small apartment on the edge of Mission Hill. Even though she couldn’t smile, she managed to be polite to the surprising number of people who stopped by the apartment to pay their respects. Most of them were University staff, or members of the Symphony and the orchestra’s administration members. They knew Denis from the numerous times he attended orchestra social events with her.

  Everyone spoke in soft voices. People she barely knew took her hand and squeezed her fingers. They all murmured about how much they had liked Denis.

  After two hours, Quinn couldn’t stand another moment. She hurried up the stairs and paused with her hand on the bedroom door handle. This would be the first place people would look for her.

  She whirled about and stepped across the corridor to the opposite door and pushed it open. The tiny apartment came with two bedrooms, although the second room was so small, squeezing a bed into it would be problematic. However, it was big enough to hold a desk with Denis’s music editing equipment.

  A music stand sat under the mean little window. His violin was propped on the chair as usual. It should be tucked away in its environment
ally secure case. Only Denis could treat a Stradivarius with such disrespect.

  Quinn stared at the gleaming wood of the violin. All the usual rebukes and admonitions which rose to her lips whenever she saw the violin leaning or lying about came to her now. She even opened her mouth to speak them.

  She ground her teeth together. Her eyes ached. For a moment the ground moved, just as it had when the jazz club exploded.

  Quinn sank to the carpet, shuddering. She couldn’t catch her breath. The sobs jammed in her chest, squeezing her ribs, creating a unique pain. Quinn put her back against the wall and pulled her knees up against her chest to ease the agony. It didn’t help. She still couldn’t draw her breath, except in shallow panting gasps which made her sound as though she was on the verge of hysteria.

  I am hysterical. The thought came to her, sounding like the voice of the stranger. A cold voice. I lost the man I loved because some asshole terrorist blew up a jazz club. Where is the sense in that?

  There was no sense. None of it made sense.

  The realization let Quinn draw a breath. It released her tears. She covered her face with her hands and gave into them.

  Sometime later—she didn’t know how long—when the ache in her chest eased enough for her to make sense of where she was, the bedroom door opened with a fast thrust.

  The man who looked in opened his eyes wide. Clearly, he was not where he thought he should be.

  His dark honey blonde hair was swept back neatly. A square, solid jaw. He was in his late thirties or early forties, perhaps even older. He was a big man. His head was only a few inches below the top of the door lintel. His hand on the door was big, too.

  His eyes were a soft blue, an unexpected color in such a large and powerful man.

  Behind him, voices lifted. “She’s been gone far too long. I just want to check on her and make sure she’s okay.”