Terror Stash

Read Terror Stash Online

Authors: Tracy Cooper-Posey

Tags: #romantic suspense action thriller, #drama romantic, #country romance novels, #australia romance, #australian authors, #terrorism novels

 

 

About
Terror Stash

A stash of terrorists in a tiny town? No one believes her.
American diplomat Montana Dela Vega, posted to laid-back Western Australia, discovers a band of known terrorists hiding deep in the bush. Laughed at by superiors, she must find courage and her own resources to expose the ruthless zealots.
The only people who believe her wild story are Caden Rawn, the mysterious and physically intimidating man with a terrifying reputation, and a bloody history that dogs his every step; and Steve Scarborough, a local police officer with an instinct for the truth and a secret of his own.
Caden and Montana’s private investigation entwines them in tragedy and fear, and teaches them the meaning of friendship...and love. They must face
the cost of truth and the courage of their convictions for Montana’s terrorists are very real and very deadly indeed—and they want Montana for themselves....

 

Dedication

For John Maxwell Cooper:
Emu Bitter drinker, the man with the answer to everything when
there was no Internet, Tour Guide Extraordinaire and last, but not least,
my father.
You showed me this country. It’s all your fault.

 

 

 

Contents

About
Terror Stash

Dedication

Contents

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

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

Chapter Eighteen

Chapter Nineteen

Chapter Twenty

Chapter Twenty-One

Chapter Twenty-Two

Chapter Twenty-Three

Chapter Twenty-Four

Chapter Twenty-Five

Chapter Twenty-Six

Chapter Twenty-Seven

Chapter Twenty-Eight

Chapter Twenty-Nine

More Romantic Thrillers by Tracy Cooper-Posey

About the Author

Other books by Tracy Cooper-Posey

Copyright Information

 

Chapter One

Yallingup, Western Australia

If Montana had known the surfers milling about on the white beach thought her to be both brave and totally insane, she would have been puzzled, but right at that moment, she was too busy to care.

Today, the Bommie was living up to its reputation. The twenty-foot waves on offer could easily dump a rider on his ass right on top of shards of reef. They were keeping even the most dedicated surfer with his feet planted firmly in the baking white sand. Most of the surfers stood in the shade, staring out at the heaving green peaks and troughs, wishing they had the guts to take a run at it. At the very least they would be hailed for their courage while they recuperated in hospital.

“So when are you humping that bloody great lump of board of yours out there, Jacko?” The loud question came from one of the surfers lined up along the edge of the only available shade, cast by a patch of prickly acacias gasping for life in the arid sand. They were thigh-high bushes which were useless for anything but providing relief to bare feet from the burning white sand. The rutty bantam of a man was speaking to the tanned, bleached surfer at the end of the ragged audience.

Jacko had planted one of the long, traditional Malibu boards heel down in the sand and was propping himself up with it. “Get knotted,” he offered, not bothering to look around. His accent was a rich Afrikaans.

“Hey, no problems,” Bruce shot back. “You don’t have the balls for it. I get ya, mate.” The cocky bantam gave Jacko a great, easy grin.

“It isn’t balls you need to go out there,” Jacko announced. “It’s a healthy dose of insanity.”

Bruce pushed his bare toes through the fine white sand. A few paces beyond the bushes it was too hot to stand on but just here it warmed their feet and tickled between their toes. “Crazy prob’ly explains what Greg is doing out there, then.”

They both turned to study the waves with a hand shading their eyes against the dazzling Morse code blinking off the green walls of water rolling in toward them. The waves were so high the horizon was hidden. The front wave curled over itself into a cap of foam, then behind it the next swell built up into a breaker and behind that yet another big peak of green.

Endless waves. Each of them was a killer, if you didn’t approach them
just right. Less than a month ago, Jacko had hauled the mangled, bleeding body of an Argentinean surfer out of the water when he’d read the wave wrong. He’d failed to turn into it so he could slip over the top edge and down the long, easy back slope to safety.

The Argentinean had won the
Puerto Escondido International in Mexico
just five days before.

“There he is,” Jacko said, pointing to Greg, out on his board. “
He’s at the lineup, going for
a run.”

“He’s fucking crazy!” the small Australian declared.

“No balls, huh?” Jacko shot a sideways glance at him.

The Australian grinned and spread his hands in a “Hey, so shoot me,” gesture.

Then they both turned back to watch crazy Greg take on the Bommie at its deadliest.

“Bloody hell, there’s a girl out there!” Bruce declared in an outraged voice, “and she’s
windsurfing
!”

There was a strong southerly wind blowing across the face of the waves, which made them choppy and unpredictable. It was dangerous for a surfer, so a windsurfer was guaranteed to be in trouble. A strong cross wind on flat water was tough enough. It could rip the sail out of your hands and knock you right off your board. Add monster waves to that and you had to keep the windsurfing board pointed toward the beach or get wiped out by the many tons of seawater building in a wall behind you
and
fight the cross wind.

Bruce shook his head. “Fuckin’ crazy.”

Jacko’s far-seeing, Aryan blue eyes narrowed. “It’s Montana,” he declared.

“Well, that explains it,” Bruce said, throwing up his hands.

After a long, thoughtful moment, Jacko dropped his board to the sand and settled his rear on it. “Could be a good show.”

“A
girl
?” Bruce curled his lip in disgust, but he sat down, too.

* * * * *

Caden Rawn hovered twenty-five feet above the surface of the earth, taking stock before he plunged downward.

Every hunter’s instinct he had—both inherited and learned at a cost—were screaming at him. He was not the only hunter here...but where was the other?

A shadow flittered over the rippled sand below him and he cursed silently. The hammerhead shark above him had zeroed in on the distressed dolphin, too, but the shark’s intentions were deadly.

A jumble of fishing line that someone had tossed overboard had snagged the dolphin’s tail. The line was hooked around an outcrop of reef, anchoring the dolphin.

The hammerhead was cruising backward and forward above the dolphin, assessing the situation, its muddy brown eyes rolling in ancient, instinctive delight.

Caden was nearly out of air. Time to make a decision. He’d be better off letting nature take its course. He should go back to the surface and get the hell away from the hammerhead while the dolphin was there to distract it. But, dammit, he hadn’t flown thousands of miles just to have his nose rubbed into the harsh facts of life one more time.

He pulled his knife out of its calf sheath and realized he’d made his decision.

With a powerful jackknife, he kicked his way down to the dolphin, pushing through the water with broad strokes. He had to move fast. The shark would figure out fast that his easy pickings were getting away on him. Sharks were cantankerous assholes that normally he would avoid pissing off.

Caden went deeper than the dolphin, touched the rippled floor of the seabed, then pushed off with his foot. As he clawed his way over the knoll of reef, he sliced through the fishing line with one pass of the blade. The dolphin immediately shot to the surface. He’d need oxygen, too.

By now, Caden’s temples were thudding from the need for air and he forced himself to ascend at the same rate as his bubbles to avoid decompression issues. He emerged just enough to gulp three deep breaths of delicious air, then jackknifed and headed for the reef knoll again. He had to stay hunkered by the protection the reef offered until the hammerhead gave up on dinner. Best-case scenario would be if it trailed after the dolphin to check if it was weakened or stressed. That was the only way the shark would be able to take advantage of it.

Caden gripped the reef, anchoring himself, and located the shark. It was cruising by the reef again. Back and forth with irritated flicks of its tail.

Not good.

He was going to have to go up for air again very soon...would it take advantage of him splashing about on the surface?

As the seconds ticked by the hammerhead slowly cruised closer. He had been marked.

Shit
.

He knew he was going to have to make a decision in a few seconds. His temples were starting to pound again.

Suddenly, the sleek grey dolphin bulleted past him with barely an inch to spare. Caden rocked in its wake, barely hanging on to the reef. He watched, awed, as the dolphin rammed its snout into the hammerhead’s gills. The shark roiled in the water, stressed.

The dolphin turned a tight circle and rammed into him again. Then again.

The hammerhead bowed out with another huge swipe of its tail, turned and streamed away, trailing bubbles.

Caden didn’t linger to see more. He was out of air. He stroked to the surface, too desperate to stay level with his bubbles, and burst through with a huge gasping breath.

The dolphin surfaced close by him and chattered happily.

Caden grinned. “I know I came to Yallingup to look up old friends, but you’re a friend I really didn’t expect to run into.”

More chatter. His voice didn’t seem to bother the dolphin at all. That wasn’t unusual around here. Dolphins up and down the Western Australian coast were used to humans talking to them, feeding them and sometimes even handling them if they allowed it.

Caden looked around one last time for any sign of unwelcome dorsal fins cutting through the water, then struck out for the beach. The dolphin kept him company all the way to the first breaker line.

As Caden waded out of the surf and up onto the baking white sand, he realized that the dolphin had reassured him that it
had
been a good decision to head to Margaret River for Christmas.

When he reached his borrowed car on the hard-packed gravel that made up the informal parking area, seawater still dripped steadily from his snorkeling gear and from him, so he reached in far enough to snag his beach towel and mop off the excess. In this heat, he’d dry in about fifteen minutes and he’d prefer to return Ria’s car in the same state he acquired it. He could afford fifteen minutes, so he carefully spread the damp towel on the hood, parked his butt on it and a heel on the bumper and watched the endlessly fascinating surf.

Sometimes, although it was rare, Caden would find that within the first forty-eight hours of arriving in a country he would have moments of disorientation. He’d have to deliberately recall where he was—and why. That never happened here at Marg’s. There were too many ties and too much history here. Perhaps that was why he kept returning.

There was no way to mistake where he was—an Australian beach on a Sunday morning. It was getting late in the morning for surfers and the surf here was a choppy mess, but there were already a good thirty or so people swimming in the shallow surf. By eleven-thirty everyone would be gone. Most would head back indoors to while away the throbbing heat before emerging around sunset. Often they came straight back to the beach for a dip and to feel the coolness of the unfailing afternoon sea breeze.

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