Whispers from the Lighthouse (Westerly Cove #1) Read Online Heidi McLaughlin

Categories Genre: Alpha Male Tags Authors: Series: Westerly Cove Series by Heidi McLaughlin
Advertisement1

Total pages in book: 108
Estimated words: 102280 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 511(@200wpm)___ 409(@250wpm)___ 341(@300wpm)
<<<<243442434445465464>108
Advertisement2


“Something doesn’t feel right about this,” Traci had said, leaning back in her desk chair and studying the informant file. They’d been partners for two years, long enough for Brooks to know that when Traci Washington got that look on her face, she was processing information in ways that had nothing to do with proof.

“Define ‘doesn’t feel right,’” Brooks had replied, not looking up from the financial records they’d subpoenaed. “Because the money trail is solid. Twenty-seven shell companies, offshore accounts, transaction patterns that match everything our informant described.”

Traci tapped her pen against her teeth—a nervous habit that preceded her most accurate hunches. “Miguel Santos walks into our station after two years of hunting him, offers to hand us the biggest trafficking ring in East Austin, and asks for nothing in return except witness protection.”

“Maybe he grew a conscience.”

“Or maybe someone’s playing us.” Traci stood and walked to their case board, covered in surveillance photos and financial charts. “His story’s too clean, Brooks. Real criminal operations are messy. This feels rehearsed.”

Brooks looked up from the documents. His partner stood five-foot-four in her sensible flats, her dark hair pulled back in the bun she wore on duty. Traci Washington was the mother of two teenage boys, married to a high school football coach, and had never fired her weapon in twelve years of police work. She was also the best detective he’d ever worked with, because she trusted instincts that went beyond normal investigative procedures.

“You’ve closed more cases with gut feelings than most detectives close with proof,” Brooks admitted. “But we can’t ignore solid intel because of intuition.”

“One day you’ll have to trust instincts without proof, Harrington.” Traci’s smile was tired but genuine. “Hopefully that day won’t be the one that gets us killed.”

Two weeks later, their informant Miguel Santos provided detailed intelligence about a warehouse operation on Austin’s east side. Shipping schedules, security protocols, the exact number of guards and their rotation patterns. Information so precise it could only come from someone with inside access.

Traci had paced their office while Brooks reviewed the operational plan with their captain. “The timing feels forced,” she’d said when they were alone again. “Why now? Why this warehouse? Santos has been off the grid for two years—how does he know operational details down to the minute?”

“Because he’s been planning this,” Brooks replied, spreading architectural drawings across his desk. “He wants revenge on his former partners. Criminals turn on each other all the time.”

“Or someone wanted us to have this information. Someone who knows how we’ll respond.” Traci studied the warehouse blueprints with the expression she wore when pieces weren’t fitting together. “Santos knows too much and asks for too little. That’s not how desperate criminals behave.”

Brooks had looked at his partner—really looked at her—and seen the exhaustion around her eyes, the tension in her shoulders. They’d been working the trafficking case for eight months, following leads that led nowhere, watching proof disappear, losing witnesses to intimidation or worse. The Santos intelligence was their first real break.

“We can’t pass up the biggest bust of our careers because of feelings, Trace.”

The words hung between them, and Brooks watched something shift in his partner’s expression. Not hurt, but disappointment. The same look she gave her teenage sons when they made choices she’d warned them against.

“It’s not feelings,” Traci said. “It’s pattern recognition. It’s experience. It’s the same instinct that told me the Henderson case was domestic violence before we found the insurance policy, that warned me about Officer Garrett before Internal Affairs discovered he was selling drugs from the locker.”

“And you were right about both those cases. But you also had proof to support your hunches.”

“Because you helped me find it. You trusted me enough to look for what I already knew.” Traci gathered the files from Brooks’s desk, her movements sharp with frustration. “This time, I’m asking you to trust me without the proof. Just this once.”

Brooks had stared at the warehouse blueprints, at the operational timeline that promised to end eight months of dead ends and pressure from above. The captain wanted results. The mayor wanted headlines. The families of the missing wanted justice.

“We follow the lead,” he’d decided. “But we do it carefully. Extra backup, extended surveillance, every precaution in the book.”

The warehouse raid began at eleven-forty-seven p.m. on a Tuesday in March. Brooks remembered the time because he’d checked his watch when they received the go signal, thinking about how Traci would tease him later for being obsessive about details.

The entry went smooth. SWAT breached the main entrance while Brooks and Traci covered the loading dock. No resistance, no return fire, nothing but empty shipping containers and abandoned equipment. Too easy, Brooks thought, but pushed the concern aside.

Then everything shifted.

Gunfire came from positions that weren’t supposed to exist, from shooters who’d had time to establish ambush points. The warehouse blueprints had been wrong—not slightly wrong, but deliberately falsified. Walls that should have been solid contained hidden firing ports. Corridors that appeared on the plans didn’t exist.


Advertisement3

<<<<243442434445465464>108

Advertisement4