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THE DIRECTOR
ACT ONE
[FADE IN: EXTERIOR: PALM BEACH
EQUESTRIAN CENTER--SUNSET]
Flat, open fields of scrub stretching to the west. A dirt road running north onto equestrian center property and south toward small horse farms some distance away. No one around.The fields are empty. No people, no horses. Sunday night: everyone has gone home.
ERIN stands at the back gate. She’s waiting for someone. She’s nervous. She thinks she’s here for a secret purpose. She thinks her life will change tonight.
It will.
She looks at her watch. Impatient. Afraid he won’t show. She’s not aware of the camera filming her. She thinks she’s alone.
She’s thinking: maybe he won’t come, maybe she’s wrong about him.
A rusted white van approaches from the south. She watches it come toward her. She looks annoyed. No one uses this back road this time of day.The gate to the show grounds has already been chained shut for the night.
The van stops.The side door opens. A masked ASSAILANT leapsout.
ERIN
No!
She starts to run toward the gate.He catches her arm from behind and spins her around. She kicks him. He backhands her across the face, knocking her sideways. She wrenches free of his grasp as she stumbles, and she tries to run again but can’t get her feet under her.The assailant knocks her down from behind, coming down on top of her, his knee in her back.
ASSAILANT
Stupid cunt!
He pulls a hypodermic needle from the pocket of his jacket and rams the needle into her arm. She makes a sound of pain and starts to cry.
He pulls herto her feet and shoves her into the van.The door slams shut.The van turns around and drives away.
Life changes in a heartbeat.
[FADE OUT]
Chapter 1
ELENA
Life can change in a heartbeat. I’ve always known that. I’ve lived the truth of that statement literally from the day I was born. I sometimes see those moments coming, sense them, anticipate them. I see one coming now. Adrenaline runs through my bloodstream like rocket fuel. My heart pounds like a piston. I’m ready to launch.
I’ve been told to stay put, to wait, but I know that’s not the right decision. If I go in first, if I go in now, I’ve got the Golam brothers dead-bang.They think they know me.Their guard will be down. I’ve worked this case three months. I know what I’m doing. I know that I’m right. I know the Golam brothers are already twitching. I know I want this bust and deserve it. I know Sikes is here for the show, to put a feather in his cap when the news vans arrive and make the public think they should vote for him in the next election for sheriff.
He stuck me on the side of the trailer and told me to wait. He doesn’t know his ass. He doesn’t even know the side door is the door the brothers use most. While Sikes and Ramirez are watching the front, the brothers are dumping their money into duffel bags and getting ready to bolt out the side. Billy Golam’s 4 X 4 is parked ten feet away, covered in mud. If they run, they’ll take the truck, not the Corvette parked in front.The truck can go off-road.
Sikes is wasting precious time.The Golam brothers have two girls in the trailer with them.This could easily turn into a hostage situation. But if I go in now, while their guard is down . . .
Screw Sikes. I’m going in before these twitches freak. It’s my case. I know what I’m doing. I hit the button on my radio. “This is stupid. They’re going to break for the truck. I’m going in.”
“Goddamnit, Estes--” Sikes.
I click the radio off and drop it into the weeds growing beside the trailer. It’s my case. It’s my bust. I know what I’m doing.
I go to the side door and knock the way all the Golam brothers’ customers knock: two knocks, one knock, two knocks.“Hey, Billy, it’s El. I need some.”
Billy Golam jerks open the door, wild-eyed, high on his own home cooking--crystal meth. He’s breathing hard. He’s got a gun in his hand.
Shit.
The front door explodes inward. One of the girls screams.
Buddy Golam shouts:“Cops!”
Billy Golam swings the .357 up in my face. I suck in my last breath.
He turns abruptly and fires. The sound is deafening and yet I hear someone shout:“Officer down!”
Billy Golam knocks me aside, bolts down the stairs and runs forthe truck.
I scramble to get my feet under me. I pull my weapon. I try to run before I’m upright, stumble and hit the ground with one knee. Gunfire pops at the front of the trailer.The truck engine roars to life.
“Billy!” I scream, running for the truck, my only thought that I can’t let him get away.
The truck lurches forward. I leap at it, grabbing the side mirror with my free hand. One foot hits the running board and skids out from under me. Golam hits the gas hard. He’s shooting out the passenger window, screaming:“Fuck! Fuck! Fuck!”
I try to bring my gun up as the truck hits the pavement and makes a hard left. I’m like a rag doll clinging to the door.
Billy Golam screams like a madman. He looks right at me, mouth wide open, eyes bugging from his head. He cranks the wheel hard left again and kicks the door open as the truck squeals into a U-turn. Horns are honking, tires screeching. I’m hanging in space. I can’t hold on. I hit the pavement and darkness sweeps over me in the form of a three-quarter-ton truck.
Life can change in a heartbeat. In a heartbeat I’m dead.
And then I opened my eyes and felt sick at the knowledge that I was still alive. This was the way I had greeted every day for the past two years. I had relived that memory so many times, it was like replaying a movie over and over and over. No part of it changed, not a word, not an image. I wouldn’t allow it.
I lay in the bed and thought about slitting my wrists. Not in an abstract way. Specifically. I looked at my wrists in the soft lamplight--delicate, as fine-boned as the wing of a bird, skin as thin as tissue, blue-lined with veins--and thought about how I would do it. I looked at those thin blue lines and thought of them as lines of demarcation. Guidelines. Cut here. I pictured the needle-nose point of a boning knife. The lamplight would catch on the blade. Blood would rise to the surface in its wake as the blade skated along the vein. Red. My favorite color.
The image didn’t frighten me. That truth frightened me most of all.
I looked at the clock. 4:38 A.M. Rise and whine. I’d had my usual fitful four and a half hours of sleep. Trying for more was an exercise in futility.
Trembling, I forced my legs over the edge of the bed and got up, pulling a deep blue chenille throw around my shoulders. The fabric was soft, luxurious, warm. I made special note of the sensations. You’re always more intensely alive the closer you come to looking death in the face.
I wondered if Hector Ramirez had realized that the split second before I got him killed.
I wondered that every day.
I dropped the throw and went into the bathroom.
“Good morning, Elena. You look like shit.”
Too thin. Hair a wild black tangle. Eyes too large, too dark, as if there was nothing within to shine outward. The crux of my problem: lack of substance. There was---is--a vague asymmetry to my face, like a porcelain vase that has been broken, then painstakingly restored. The same vase it was before, and yet not the same. The same face I was born with, yet not the same. Slightly skewed and strangely expressionless. I was beautiful once.
I reached for a comb on the counter, knocked it to the floor, grabbed a brush instead. Start at the bottom, work upward. Like combing a horse’s tail. Work the knots out gently. But I had already tired of looking at myself. Anger and resentment bubbled up through me, and I tore the brush through the hair, shoving the snarls together and tangling the brush in the midst of the mess. I tried maybe forty-five seconds to extricate the thing, yanking at the brush, tearing at the hair above the snarl, not caring that I was pulling hairs out of my head by the roots. I swore aloud, swatted at my image in the mirror, swept the tumbler and soap dish off the counter in a tantrum, and they smashed on the tile floor. Then I jerked open a drawer in the vanity and pulled out a scissors.
Furious, shaking, breathing hard, I cut the brush free. It dropped to the floor with a mass of black hair wrapped around it. The pressure in my chest eased. Numbness trickled down through me like rain. Calm.
Without emotion, I proceeded to hack away at the rest of my mane, cutting it boy-short in ten minutes. The end result was ragged, with a finger-in-the-light-socket quality. Still, I’d seen worse in Vogue.
I swept up the mess---the discarded hair, the broken glass--tossed it in the trash and walked out of the room.
I’d worn my hair long as long as I could remember.
From the Audio Cassette (Unabridged) edition.
Anonymous
Posted May 6, 2007
i spent one day flipping through this gripping page turner.the unmentionable romance, the twists in the plot, they keep you wondering till the very last page. 569645 thumbs up
2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.LynnMI
Posted October 14, 2008
I usually don't read mysteries. Ever. I picked this up because of the tie-in to the horse world. It was captivating and held my interest page after page. I usually "speed read" and skip the unimportant trivial words in some novels but I loved Tami Hoag's style of writing so much, I read every single word. I found myself sneaking in time to read more of the book when I should have been doing other things! Just couldn't put it down! I highly recommend.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted June 1, 2006
This is by far the best story I have read by Tami Hoag. The main character had such a personality that will forever be memorable, she should write a series about Elana Estes. A recommended read for everyone.
1 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
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Posted May 15, 2005
As a Tami Hoag fan, I was thrilled by this book. It follows the equestrian life closely and gives wonderful insight into that world. The plot was good and the characters even better. The main character is someone that I would like to read more about. Don't miss this book.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted October 26, 2004
This was my first book by her and I was so looking forward to it But I have to say that I was disappointed greatly The plot kept repeating itself over and over and there were so many bad people and then a quick final twist that left you thinking what?? It could have been a good short story but to waste all that time reading a book that just doesnt draw you in was a disappointment I will read another and give her another try but couldnt recommend this one
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted February 12, 2013
This ebook looks like a poor quality scan. DO Not BUY the ebook format. I'm requesting a credit.
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Posted April 21, 2012
I AM SO MAD IT SEEMED LIKR A REALY GOOD BOOK+I LPVE HORSES SO MUCH -sorry for the capitalization ;)
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Posted May 4, 2011
Could not stop laughing. Took few month to finish up
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted March 27, 2010
This is my favorite Tami Hoag book!
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Posted July 14, 2005
I usually rip voraciously through Hoag's books and enjoy every minute, but this one was a chore to get through. Her love of the equestrian world is obvious, but much too cumbersomely emphasized in this book. The horsey details got in the way of the plot and seriously slowed down her normally fast-paced story-telling. Sadly, her worst effort to date.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted September 19, 2004
I love Tami Hoag's writing. This book was a little different than her others like Ashes to Ashes, Night sins, Guilty of Sins, Dark thin line. This book starts telling you a little bit about equestrian, dressage and the competition between riders and grooms getting involved. Anyway, this was something i got to learn as I had no clue what goes on in the equestrain competitions. Elena, who is an ex-cop, ends up taking this case when a 12 year old Molly hires her to find her sister, Erin who was a groom to Jade. When Det. Landry gets into the picture, Elena who is not suppose to be involved in police investigation because of her past, refuses to back away as she feels an obligation to Molly to help find her sister. Landry and Elena try to solve the kidnapping case of Erin and find who killed Jill who is also another groom to Jade. A few suspects but who done it? Good Suspense and the ending was interesting.
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Posted June 28, 2004
Dark Horse is one of my favorite Hoag novels, and with good reason. The plot sucks you in, as does the characterization of protagonist Elena Estes. She's one of the more interesting of Hoag's creations. Full of twists and turns, this book will keep you guessing up until the hair-raising finish!
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Posted July 22, 2004
Someone recommended this book. It's the first I have read of hers. I lived in Wellington, FL for 15 years and it's fun to read about my old stomping grounds!
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Posted June 16, 2004
This was the first of Hoag's books that I read and I found it very interesting. It keeps you guessing. I am looking forward to reading her others! The author has a great style of writing.
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Posted June 17, 2004
Like another reviewer said, I was stunned by all the negative things said about this book. Elena is someone I found to be intriguing, and even more so since she was flawed. I guess maybe I liked her because she is strong and sassy, like my best friend, who also happens to be in law enforcement. The first person thing can bug me if used in some instances, but it seemed right for Elena. I think that any potential readers might not buy this book due to the early reviews, which is why I never bought it right away, but when I started reading it, I knew I had been wrong to wait. Tami Hoag has never had a bad book yet, and I eagerly await the next one!
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Posted July 4, 2004
NOT A GOOD BOOK VERY DISAPPOINTING. THE STORIES IN THE BOOK IS REPEATING ITSELF. I LIKE HER OTHERS BOOKS BETTERS I WISH YOU CAN GO BACK TO THE MINNEAPOLIS POLICE STORY.
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Posted December 10, 2003
I totally enjoyed this book, it was so good,just like her other ones, kept my interest totally!!!!!!!
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Posted August 31, 2003
I'VE READ ALL HOAG'S BOOKS,THIS IS THE FIRST TIME I WAS DISAPPOINTED. THE STORY AND CHARACTERS NEVER PULL YOU IN. AFTER WAITING TWO YEARS FOR HOAG TO WRITE A NEW BOOK, DARK HORSE WAS A TRUE LET DOWN.
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Posted August 5, 2003
Like watching a movie. This was the firs book I read by Tami Hoag, and now I am deturmined to get through most of her novels. She writes beautifully; tightly weaving characters that are life-like and believable.
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Posted July 6, 2003
The book will suck you in on the beginning, takes you through a lot and then spit you out at the end in a way that will ready get you. There is no romance, no passion - in contrary: there is a lot of running away, hiding and being hero against your own will... But the thrill didn't let go until you got to the last page. This was the first Tami Hoag's novel I've read and it made me read more!!!
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