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“Sure. But do me a favor and keep the work a secret. No sense letting anyone know about this.”

“Sure.”

He picked up a manila envelope from his desk and handed it to her. “Copies for you.”

A delicate brow arched. “You were that sure I’d come and help you.”

“I’m mighty persistent.”

“You haven’t met stubborn until now.”

A smile curved the edges of his lips. “You keep telling yourself that.”

Chapter 3

Friday, December 19, 11:30P.M.

Marisa was far too wired to sleep after Lucas Cooper dropped her off. The toys balanced in her hands, she pushed open the front door to her tiny Hyde Park home with her foot. The house had been built in the twenties and her mother had bought it shortly after her parents’ divorce. What little time her mother spared from her work went to Marisa and so the house remained ignored. Marisa knew she’d soon have to sell the place, fix it up, or risk having it disintegrate around her.

Renovation, she’d discovered during her sole meeting with an architect last fall, took time and creativity and she had little in reserve after she pushed aside her work at the end of the day.

And so her home remained a dark and dingy space. She’d sold most of her furniture before leaving for Mexico. Yesterday, she’d bought a clearance lawn chaise at the hardware store as well as a patio table and chair that would serve as a stopgap for dining, work, and general tasks until she figured out what to do with the house.

She dropped the toy bags and glanced at the boxes stacked in her living room. As luck would have it, the box on top was marked CHRISTMAS. The thick block lettering had been her mother’s, and Marisa guessed after the divorce she’d boxed up what few decorations she chose to keep and put them away forever. Marisa had glanced in the box but closed it immediately. She just didn’t have the courage to see what about the dreaded holiday had been so important to her mother.

Kicking off her shoes, Marisa moved into the kitchen, where she snagged a carton of takeout rice from the fridge that she’d not finished last night. She popped it in the microwave and set a pot of coffee to brew.

She’d barely eaten with Lucas Cooper. She was too stunned and off-kilter to really think. She’d never been nervous when she’d met Bradley. When he’d first approached her, he’d not come bearing sweet words, flowers, or chocolates. No, he’d known her too well for that. He’d brought her a word puzzle. Granted, she’d solved the puzzle in under thirty seconds, but the gift had shown her that he’d been paying attention to her thirst to unravel mysteries. His schoolboy-ish attempt had charmed her. Later she would figure out his charms had hidden motives.

Lucas Cooper had come bearing a far more interesting puzzle and a history of their shared night that still made her blush. As she sat at the kitchen table and thumbed through the copies of his documents, she thought back to the person she’d been the night they met. Unguarded and happy, she’d been in her element, still buzzed from a consultation with experts in the local university’s ancient studies department.

She’d thought she’d almost moved on from Lucas, and then he’d appeared and unsteadied her with a glance and a puzzle that couldn’t be solved in under a minute.

Despite his controlled manners tonight, his flinty warrior’s gaze suggested a very dangerous man. Born into a different time, the tall, broad-shouldered Ranger could easily have worn a warrior’s mantle, wielded a battle-ax, and sported a shield bearing the likeness of a fierce spirit god.

The image coupled with this very intriguing puzzle flooded restless energy into her veins. She rose and moved to a drawer to dig out a rubber band and tie back her hair, which suddenly now annoyed her with its weight.

She changed out of her jeans into sweats and an oversized T-shirt. She moved back into the kitchen, pulled out her steaming bowl of rice, and sat in the chair in front of this new mystery.

Major drug shipment, Lucas had said. This was no whim on his part but a mission. As she scooped a ladleful of rice, she bent over the first page and studied the symbols. Their origins were clearly rooted in the Mayan culture, though some symbols reminded her of the Aztec.

Whoever had strung the symbols into words was clever. To the untrained eye, the Mayan and Aztec symbols were similar and few understood the differences. Much like the United States Army had used the Navajo code talkers during World War II, this cryptographer had drawn upon history to create a modern message. And it made perfect sense. Why invent a new code when a look to the past gave you the perfect solution?

As she studied the glyphs and the dots and dashes, her heart beat a little faster. Yes, this demanding puzzle was quite intriguing.

As she allowed the symbols to swirl in her mind, she knew she would decipher this code. It might take a day or two, but she would crack it.

The shrill tone of her phone had her raising her head and glancing around for her cell, which was always a little lost or misplaced. She found the cell on the fourth ring and by the time she said hello she sounded breathless and a bit annoyed.

“Marisa?”

Her father’s voice sounded relaxed and happy. Not the clipped, perpetually angry man who’d shared the house with her mother. No, this man was a man right with the world thanks to her stepmother, who had given him the life, and the sons, he’d always craved.

“Dad.”

“Just checking to make sure you’re still coming tomorrow. Susan’s been cooking for days. You know how she loves Christmas.”

Susan, her stepmother, was eighteen years younger than her father. Blond and lovely, she never stepped outside without donning makeup and designer clothes. To her credit, she was not a bad woman. She’d not been behind her parents’ divorce and had, in fact, not come into her father’s life until four or five years after the final decree. She went out of her way to make Marisa feel welcome whenever she visited. Marisa, out of politeness, had done her best to play her part as the dutiful daughter. But no matter how many presents Susan bought or how many smiles and thank-yous they exchanged, she never felt comfortable in their home. She was the outsider and no time of year made her more attuned to her outlier status than Christmas.