Twisted Shadows
In Patricia Potter's high-octane romantic thriller, a young woman discovers she is not only the daughter of a notorious crime boss but a person of interest to a steely FBI agent



Clutching her babies, a mother flees through the streets of Boston, desperate to escape the monster she married. Thirty-four years later, two men enter Samantha Carroll's Colorado art gallery, and her safe, secure world explodes. Now Sam is en route back to Boston to meet her twin brother, Nick, and Paul Merritta, the crime boss whose blood runs through her veins. Merritta is dying, and he wants to clear up some unfinished business with his daughter.



Nathan McLean won't rest until he brings down Merritta and his entire family. For the determined FBI agent, it's also personal-payback for what Merritta did to his own loved ones. But there's a wild card in the stacked deck-Samantha Carroll. Now Sam's on the FBI's radar, and she's falling for the one man who could destroy her newfound family. But Nathan isn't the only danger. There's someone else out there too-someone who wants her dead.
"1005395854"
Twisted Shadows
In Patricia Potter's high-octane romantic thriller, a young woman discovers she is not only the daughter of a notorious crime boss but a person of interest to a steely FBI agent



Clutching her babies, a mother flees through the streets of Boston, desperate to escape the monster she married. Thirty-four years later, two men enter Samantha Carroll's Colorado art gallery, and her safe, secure world explodes. Now Sam is en route back to Boston to meet her twin brother, Nick, and Paul Merritta, the crime boss whose blood runs through her veins. Merritta is dying, and he wants to clear up some unfinished business with his daughter.



Nathan McLean won't rest until he brings down Merritta and his entire family. For the determined FBI agent, it's also personal-payback for what Merritta did to his own loved ones. But there's a wild card in the stacked deck-Samantha Carroll. Now Sam's on the FBI's radar, and she's falling for the one man who could destroy her newfound family. But Nathan isn't the only danger. There's someone else out there too-someone who wants her dead.
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Twisted Shadows

Twisted Shadows

by Patricia Potter

Narrated by Emily Durante

Unabridged — 11 hours, 50 minutes

Twisted Shadows

Twisted Shadows

by Patricia Potter

Narrated by Emily Durante

Unabridged — 11 hours, 50 minutes

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Overview

In Patricia Potter's high-octane romantic thriller, a young woman discovers she is not only the daughter of a notorious crime boss but a person of interest to a steely FBI agent



Clutching her babies, a mother flees through the streets of Boston, desperate to escape the monster she married. Thirty-four years later, two men enter Samantha Carroll's Colorado art gallery, and her safe, secure world explodes. Now Sam is en route back to Boston to meet her twin brother, Nick, and Paul Merritta, the crime boss whose blood runs through her veins. Merritta is dying, and he wants to clear up some unfinished business with his daughter.



Nathan McLean won't rest until he brings down Merritta and his entire family. For the determined FBI agent, it's also personal-payback for what Merritta did to his own loved ones. But there's a wild card in the stacked deck-Samantha Carroll. Now Sam's on the FBI's radar, and she's falling for the one man who could destroy her newfound family. But Nathan isn't the only danger. There's someone else out there too-someone who wants her dead.

Editorial Reviews

Library Journal

Stunned by the news that she is actually the biological daughter of a notorious mob boss who is dying and now wants to see her, Samantha Carroll warily heads for Boston, determined both to get some answers and to meet the twin brother she never knew she had. But her arrival sparks deep-seated resentments and fears, unleashing past secrets and threatening current plans. Suddenly, Samantha is swept into a corrupt, violent world where people will do anything to get what they want or protect what they already have. A suspicious FBI agent seeking vengeance, a strong, resourceful heroine who comes into her own, and a few exceptionally well-developed secondary characters enliven this chilling tale of murder, ambition, and greed. Although she is noted for her historical romances (e.g., Broken Honor), Potter's recent foray into the contemporary romantic suspense arena has been a dazzling success. With the romantic flair and emotional intensity that is classic Potter, Twisted Shadows ensures that her success is likely to continue. She lives in Cordova, TN. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940159968791
Publisher: Tantor Audio
Publication date: 08/29/2023
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

Prologue
Boston, 1968

She was running for her life. And the lives of her children.

She clutched the twins, one in each arm, her purse slung over her shoulder. A cab. She had to reach a cab.

She knew she would soon hear footsteps behind her. Heavy. Hurried. Her guard—her husband's guard—would discover she'd left the doctor's office through another door. His life would be as much at risk as her own if he failed. If he lost her.

This would be her one and only chance to escape her husband. She knew that. If she failed, he would kill her. He would find out what she knew—and to whom she had given information—and then dispose of her as his family had disposed of irritants before her. Fear eddied in her stomach. Her breath was short from both terror and the exertion of carrying two eight-month-old babies, their necessities and the largest purse she owned. It contained everything she could carry without giving away her intention. Unfortunately, her possessions did not include a weapon.

Nick squirmed, protesting her protective hold. For a moment, feared she would lose her grip. She stopped, balancing him on her hip, getting a stronger hold on him. In a moment he would start wailing. That would probably inspire Nicole to do the same. Each always followed the other's lead. They reached out for each other when separated. They seemed to take comfort in each other's company.

A loud wail now would be disastrous. She cooed quietly to him, frantically balancing the two heavy babies.

She started down the steps again, trying to run without dislodging the two children. She feared the elevator. She could be trapped in an elevator. No, the stairs aresafer. She'd spent days considering her options, the best escape route. And, hopefully, preparing safeguards.

But her husband was unpredictable. He would be so angry, he wouldn't care that his actions could send him to prison. Or send the policeman who served the family to the electric chair.

She heard a door slam above her.

Joey. Such an innocuous name. But he was not an innocuous man. He was a made man, a man who had killed before. That she was a woman would mean little to him, particularly since his own life might well depend on his stopping her.

One more floor.

She was wearing tennis shoes that made no noise. She had purposely been hitting tennis balls just minutes before returning to the side of her twins. Then she'd used a heating pad on Nick's and Nicole's faces to simulate a fever.

Her husband was out of town. So was her father-in-law. When she'd screamed that the children were sick with high temperatures, she'd finally won permission to go to the doctor. She'd been to the pediatrician before. She knew the offices. She knew a way out that avoided her so-called bodyguard in the waiting room.

"Bitch!" Joey's voice roared down the stairwell.

She could see the door below her. She moved faster than she thought possible, shifting, Nick again as she grabbed for the knob and jerked the door open.

Nick wailed loudly.

Another curse echoed from the stairwell as she ran across the lobby. Please, God, let the cab be there.

She'd called from the nurses' station, ordering a cab, promising an extra fifty if it waited outside the professional offices for a woman with two babies. If it wasn't there...

She darted between people, bumping one. "Taxi waiting," she muttered, then made the door. She turned to see Joey bursting out from the stairwell door.

Nicole started wailing, too. Tracy knew that every eye was on her. She'd already started thinking about what she would do if Joey caught her. She would yell "Kidnap." If some brave good Samaritan...

And if there was gunfire? If she caused an innocent's death...?

Someone entered the revolving doors, and she jumped inside one of the partitions. Then she saw the taxi. Waiting in front of the building.

She ran for it. Nick almost fell as she pulled the door open and lurched inside, dropping her son on the seat and locking the door.

"Go," she screamed.

She heard Joey's voice behind. "Stop, dammit!"

The cabbie turned to her.

"Go," she said again, even as she heard the waver in her voice, even as she clutched the babies closer to her. "For God's sake, go."

He hesitated, then stepped on the pedal and darted in front of an oncoming car.

A horn blew long and hard.

The cabbie swore.

Tracy Edwards Merritta sat back and tried to calm a screaming Nick.

She struggled to take a normal breath, then looked back. Joey was frantically trying to wave down another cab.

"Where to, lady?"

"Filene's, please. Side entrance." The department store wasn't far from a Boston MTA station. She would go in one door of the store, depart through another and disappear.

Nicole stared at her, thumb in her mouth. Nick complained loudly.

But they were safe.

For the moment.

One

Steamboat Springs, 2002

Samantha Carroll didn't frighten easily.

Still, apprehension rippled through her as two men walked into the western art gallery she owned with her mother.

She could tell at a glance they weren't ordinary tourists or typical art lovers. They wore expensive dark suits and highly polished shoes rather than casual slacks or shorts and trendy T-shirts. Yet one look at their faces told her they weren't salesmen, either.

The one in his mid-twenties wore his hair slicked back, a gold chain around his neck and a flashy watch that looked like a Rolex on his wrist. The other one had well-groomed graying hair and face. Their eyes were hard. Without humor. Without friendliness. They looked like hunters, but not the kind who were after deer or elk.

Western Wonders was unusually empty in the midst of the summer tourist season. The last customers had just left. Had the two men waited until the customers departed? She moved toward the panic button that was linked to the police dispatcher.

She didn't know why all the bells in her head were ringing. No one would rob her small gallery. Nearly everyone paid with credit cards, and the bulk of the store's business came through the web site she'd designed. She kept the finest pieces locked in secure storage, bringing them out only when she knew she had a viable buyer.

Sure, she had some ready cash, but not enough to attract a daylight robbery. The gallery had some nice western art, but no one would drag armloads of paintings or heavy sculptures out the front door and onto the main street. At least, she'd never believed so. Not in Steamboat Springs, where major crime was nonexistent.

Her apprehension deepened as the two men browsed among the paintings but seemed to have little real interest in them. Their gazes continued to roam back to her, studying her as a collector might before pinning a butterfly to a board.

She resented it. She resented anyone who diminished her. And these men were doing just that.

Sarsaparilla wandered in from the storeroom, swishing her great bushy tail. The once stray cat who now believed herself queen of all she surveyed investigated the two strangers and rubbed against the trouser leg of the older man.

He immediately jumped back, his right hand going to the inside of his suit jacket.

Her heart leaped into her throat. "Sarsy," she scolded, forcing herself to stand fast and not show the reaction her cat's behavior prompted. Sarsy sensed people who disliked cats and went out of her way to irritate them.

Sarsaparilla gave her an indignant look, then slunk back into the other room.

"Is there anything I can help you with?" she finally asked the men. "A particular artist? Or style?"

The older man nodded toward one with a thousand-dollar price tag. "This any good?"

If she'd any doubts about his interest before, she didn't now. The painting was very good. Anyone with even the faintest interest in art would know the lighting was exceptional. The moonlight depicted in oil seemed to glow.

She looked toward the door again, willing someone else to come in. "It's the work of a local artist who is becoming very popular," she said, unable to keep the edge from her voice.

"I'll take it," the man said.

She didn't want to sell it to him. The painting was one of her favorites, an oil of a snow-covered mountain at night. A wolf peered out from the shadows of a stand of trees, as if ready to begin a night's prowl.

The men reminded her of that wolf. Prowling after prey. "I'm sorry," she said. "It was sold earlier today. I haven't put the sold sign on it yet." Now she would have to purchase it herself. It was in Western Wonders on consignment, and she'd just cost the artist a sale.

His cold dark eyes studied her. He didn't believe her.

The hair on the nape of her neck stood up; a shiver ran down her back. "If there's anything else," she said, "I'll be glad to help you. Otherwise, I'm going to close for lunch."

"It's three," the man noted skeptically.

"I was busy at lunchtime."

"Are you the owner?"

"My mother and myself," she said.

"Mrs. Carroll?"

"She's my mother, yes," Sam said, growing even more wary.

"And your father?"

"I don't think that's any of your business."

The speaker looked surprised, as if he'd never been corrected before. He glared at her.

The younger man glanced out the door, as if keeping watch.

"He's not dead," the older man finally said.

"I beg your pardon?" She felt the bite of anger. She had always been slow to anger, slow to allow any emotion to take control. But when she removed the leash, she could be a holy terror. That was one reason she disciplined herself.

"Your papa ain't dead." The younger man joined the conversation. "Not yet."

The older man gave him a warning glance but didn't correct him.

Both were obviously crazy. "I think you'd better go," she said, her hand once more moving toward the panic button. "I do want to close."

"I wouldn't do that," the younger man said. "Keep your hands on top of the table."

How could he know about the button?

"Or?" she asked.

His eyes glittered.

The older man broke in. "I don't think your mother would appreciate it," he said softly. Somehow he was more menacing than the other.

"Why?" she challenged him. She felt trapped and afraid, and she was furious with them for causing it. She hated the feeling. Hated the fear that was growing. She'd always prided herself on conquering fear. Or ignoring it.

"She has some secrets," the man said. "Secrets she might not want to share with this town." The words were poisonous. Cold. Deadly.

Her mother? Her protective, good-citizen mother? Her best friend? Since her father's death, the one person she trusted above all others.

"You must have me confused with someone else," she said. "I asked you to leave. Now I am telling you."

"Your mother's been lying to you," the older man said. "She committed bigamy years ago. David Carroll was not your father."

She shook her head, denying his words rather than questioning them. David Carroll had been her father. In every way. She'd seen her birth certificate when she entered college.

Yet the older man had planted the smallest seed of doubt with his quiet certainty.

"Now I know I want you out of here," Sam said, feeling a desperate need to disconnect from this situation before it became too real. She went to the door and held it open. Neither man moved.

She wasn't quite sure what to do. She could continue to stand there, looking like a fool, or go outside and yell for help. The younger man moved in front of her, neatly herding her back toward the interior while the older one closed the door, turned the sign to CLOSED and stood in front of it, arms crossed, feet apart.

"I'll call the police," Sam said through clenched teeth, her doubt being drowned by their arrogance. She hated personal conflicts, but she'd never been timid. She'd sailed down mountains on skis, spent days alone in the deep woods, climbed mountains. She knew how to fire a pistol. It completely went against the grain to let these men intimidate her.

Still, they did. They reeked of...violence.

They made no move to back away. The younger man stepped between her and the phone. She tried to weave around him.

He blocked her.

She turned to the older man, who seemed to be in charge. "What exactly do you want?"

"Your papa is dying. He wants to see you."

"My father died two years ago."

"Carroll wasn't your real father."

Despite the softness of his voice, his statement was like a boulder dropping. The absolute conviction made her feel it was dropping on her.

"No," she denied, her voice not quite as strong as before.

She flinched as the older man reached in his pocket, pulled out an envelope and placed it in her hand. "Open it," he commanded.

From the corner of her eye, she saw a couple pause in front of the shop, looking at some of the paintings in the windows. "I have customers," she said, the envelope burning her fingers.

"Hell with them," the man said. "This is more important."

"To whom?"

"To you. To your real papa."

"Who are you?"

"Just messengers."

As much as she didn't want to give them the satisfaction of acceding to their demands, it seemed the only way to get them to leave. She opened the manila envelope. A photo fell out.

She stooped, picked it up and looked at it. A new shock jolted her. A pretty young woman sat in a chair holding two babies. A darkly handsome young man stood behind her. It was an old-fashioned pose. The man protecting his family.

The woman was her mother. She was at least thirty years younger and her hair was long rather than short, but the wide cornflower blue eyes were unmistakable. She was also wearing a bracelet Sam immediately recognized. Her mother always wore it.

Sam found herself compelled by that photo, by the two children. One was dressed in pink. One in blue. They sat in their mother's lap. The girl beamed at the camera; the boy stared impatiently. His eyes were the same blue as those of the little girl beside him. And of the man standing behind them.

From the snapshots of her own early years, she knew she was one of those babies. The other...

"Your brother," the man said. "Your twin brother."

Her legs started to crumple under her. The younger man reached out to steady her. She shook him off and stumbled past him to the desk, and this time he let her. She studied the photo again, then looked farther into the envelope. Three more items. Copies of two birth certificates. She chose the top one.

None of the names was familiar. Mother: Tracy Edwards Merritta. Father: Paul Merritta. Baby girl: Nicole.

Date of birth: August 15, 1967. Place of birth: Boston. Weight: four pounds, three ounces.

She looked at the second one. Same mother and father. Baby boy: Nicholas. Born four minutes earlier than the girl. Weight: four pounds, nine ounces.

The fourth item was a photo of a well-dressed man with dark hair and dark blue eyes just like her own. She could tell the photo was more recent than the family portrait. The cut of the casual sports jacket gave it away.

"Your brother," the older man said again.

She was too stunned to move, to speak, to react. She wanted to deny it. Accepting the pronouncement meant her entire life was a lie. Her mother had lied to her. And her father. He would have lied as well.

But these men said he had not been her father after all. At least, not her biological father. Though she knew he certainly had been her father in every important way.

This was some really twisted joke. It would be easy enough to create phony birth certificates. Computers could do anything these days.

Yet something clicked inside her head. She'd always had an odd feeling that something was missing from her life, as if she were not quite whole. She'd dismissed it as her longing for siblings and an extended family.

Her mother had said she had been orphaned and raised in a foster family. Her father's mother and father had died in an accident before Sam was born. No uncles. No aunts. No grandparents.

A flash of recognition leaped in her heart when she looked at the boy in the family photo. But that was because they looked alike, she told herself. Remember what a computer can do.

But who would possibly attempt such an elaborate and cruel hoax?

She touched the birth certificate. "I have a copy of my own. It's different. It says David Carroll is my father."

The man smiled. "They can be forged."

"My point exactly," she said. "One of them has been."

"Granted," he said. "But the picture doesn't lie."

"I know what computers can do. Anyone could take my mother's photo, make her younger, doctor photos of the children."

"But why make the effort?"

"You tell me," she said, trying to keep her voice steady.

The door rattled. She jumped, her nerves jangled. All three of them looked toward it, but the tall man blocked her view. Someone was not taking the closed sign seriously.

Her mother? But her mother was on a buying trip to Taos. Sam wouldn't be able to reach her. Possibly not until tomorrow.

The door rattled again, and she managed to slip around the two men. Terri. Her best friend who helped with the books at Wonders.

"Get rid of whoever it is," the older man ordered.

"It's a friend of mine. She knows I'm here alone. She can see you two. She won't leave now, not without knowing I'm all right. You look...intimidating. If I don't open the door, she'll go down the street to police headquarters."

"Then tell her you're all right and get rid of her."

"No." She felt more in control now. Terri would do exactly what she'd said. Her friend would be as suspicious of the two men as Sam had been when they first entered.

The older man gave her an odd look of approval. "Your papa doesn't have much time left. He's real sick."

She forced her gaze away from him and back to Terri. Her friend had capped her eyes against the sun and was peering inside. In seconds, she would be running down to the police station.

Did Sam want that?

No. Not until she talked to her mother. Not until she made some sense of something that made no sense.

She knew she had to find out whether there was even a thread of truth to their tale. She had to know whether she had a birth father she hadn't known existed. And a brother. Not only a brother but a twin.

How many years had she dreamed of having a big brother?

No, it's impossible.

Ignoring the two men, she went to the door and opened it. Terri had been leaning against the door so hard she stumbled, then caught herself. Her gaze shot to the two men, then she turned back to Sam.

"What's wrong?" Terri asked, starting to back out the door.

"Miss Carroll was giving us a..." The younger one said, glancing at Sam, obviously expecting her to supply the rest of the excuse, as if there were no doubt that she would.

"Private viewing," Sam said, hating to give him even that much.

"A private viewing," her visitor concurred. "We're just leaving." He turned to Sam.

"We'll get back to you about that picture tomorrow."

The two politely passed Terri but left an aura of menace behind them.

The tension in the shop dissipated noticeably, and for a brief moment Sam wondered whether the visit had happened at all.

—from Twisted Shadows by Patricia Potter, Copyright © January 2003, Jove Publications, a member of Penguin Putnam, Inc., used by permission.

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