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      Christmas Confessions

      Kathleen Long

       www.millsandboon.co.uk

      Table of Contents

       Cover

       Title Page

       About the Author

       Dedication

       Chapter Five

       Chapter Six

       Chapter Seven

       Chapter Eight

       Chapter Nine

       Chapter Ten

       Chapter Eleven

       Chapter Twelve

       Chapter Thirteen

       Chapter Fourteen

       Chapter Fifteen

       Chapter Sixteen

       Chapter Seventeen

       Epilogue

       Copyright

      After a career spent spinning words for clients ranging from corporate CEOs to talking fruits and vegetables, KATHLEEN LONG now finds great joy spinning a world of fictional characters, places and plots. A RIO and gayle Wilson Award of Excellence winner, and a National Readers’ choice, Booksellers’ Best and Holt Medallion nominee, her greatest reward can be found in the letters and e-mails she receives from her readers. Nothing makes her happier than knowing one of her stories has provided a few hours of escape and enjoyment, offering a chance to forget about life for a little while. Please visit her at www.kathleenlong.com or drop her a line at PO Box 3864, cherry Hill, NJ 08034, USA.

      For Writers At Play with love and thanks for

      your friendship, encouragement, cheers and commiserations. Unconditional love with an endless supply of laughter. What more could a girl ask for? This one’s for you.

       Unknown number.

      Detective Jack Grant frowned at his phone’s caller ID and swore softly. He put down his case notes and took the call.

      “If you’re about to read from a script, you can save your breath by hanging up,” Jack growled into the receiver, his throat tight and dry from too many hours without sleep or food.

      He glanced at the clock over his kitchen table. Eightfifteen in the morning. He’d been working nonstop since he got home from the precinct the night before.

      The caller hesitated before speaking, and for a split second Jack thought he might get lucky and avoid conversation completely. He thought wrong.

      “I wondered if you’d seen the latest blog at Don’t Say a Word?”

      Don’t Say a Word? The name rang a bell, but Jack couldn’t pry a connection loose from the jumble of facts and evidence his current case had planted in his mind.

      “The confession site?” the caller continued.

      The caller’s voice indicated he was male, older, and either a heavy smoker or someone with a serious bronchial condition.

      “Buddy,” Jack said, “I think you’ve got the wrong number.”

      The caller began to cough—a sputtering, choking sound that made Jack feel as though he was violating the man’s privacy by listening.

      He thought about asking if the man was all right, but that would indicate concern on his part, and concern was something Jack offered to no one, not if he could avoid it. Concern indicated vulnerability, and vulnerability indicated weakness.

      Jack hated weakness.

      He held the phone away from his ear until the sound of coughing subsided.

      “It’s about Melinda,” the caller ground out as if struggling for air between choking spasms.

      Melinda.

      Jack had no doubt there were millions of Melindas in the world, but the combination of the caller’s voice and the name Melinda shifted Jack’s thoughts from the present to the past—eleven years past, to be exact.

      “How have you been, Mr. Simmons?”

      “Have you seen it?” the man asked, ignoring Jack’s question.

      Melinda Simmons had gone missing from a New Mexico university campus not long after Jack’s sister, Emma, had vanished from a college fifty miles to the east.

      Unlike Emma, Melinda’s body had never been found.

      Her case had joined a handful of others—unsolved, their connection suspected, but never proved. The man Jack had thought responsible for the rash of college coed abductions and murders had been a self-proclaimed photographer who’d been in possession of photos of Emma, as well as of Melinda and the others upon his arrest.

      Boone Shaw had walked free after a trial that had blown up in the prosecution’s face. The press had blamed the acquittal on a lack of evidence and an airtight alibi the defense attorney had presented immediately before closing arguments.

      Life for Jack had tilted on its axis the day his sister’s lifeless body had been found.

      Life for the Simmons family hadn’t fared much better.

      Melinda Simmons’s mother had succumbed to her lung cancer not long after the trial.

      Her father, Herb, had dropped out of society instead of facing his daughter’s tragic

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