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Dangerous Minds

Janet Evanovich




  Dangerous Minds is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Copyright © 2017 by The Gus Group LLC

  All rights reserved.

  Published in the United States by Bantam Books, an imprint of Random House, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York.

  BANTAM BOOKS and the HOUSE colophon are registered trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.

  Hardback ISBN 9780553392746

  International edition ISBN 9781101966068

  Ebook ISBN 9780553392753

  randomhousebooks.com

  Cover design: Carlos Beltrán

  v4.1

  ep

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  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

  Chapter Thirty

  By Janet Evanovich

  About the Author

  ONE

  It was a little after one in the morning when Riley Moon stopped struggling to make sense of the spreadsheet in front of her. She scraped her chair back from her desk, stood, and gave up a sigh. She was in a small room in a large mansion in Washington, D.C., and was surrounded by boxes, laundry hampers, and black garbage bags filled with official papers. She’d been hired to untangle the complicated financial affairs of the Knight family, who for generations had been brilliant at making money and pathetic at keeping records. Riley had been on the job for almost two months, and she’d reached the conclusion that it would be best for everyone if she just set fire to the office and destroyed every available document.

  Her curly red hair was a rat’s nest from a recently acquired habit of raking her fingers through it. Her brown eyes felt bloodshot. She thought a martini would fix everything, but she didn’t have the energy to make one. She had two degrees from Harvard, a cute nose, a nice family back in Texas, and no social life. The closest she came to having a guy in her life was her boss, Emerson Knight, a man known far and wide as an “odd duck.” True, he was rich, brilliant, and totally hot-looking, but that didn’t alter the fact that he was quackers.

  Emerson was the latest heir to the Knight fortune, and he had no interest in either making more money or keeping better records. He simply wanted to get his family’s affairs in order so he could keep their many charitable trusts operating while he pursued a life of investigation.

  Their backgrounds were worlds apart, Riley thought. Her father was the sheriff of a small, dusty county in north Texas. Her mother was a second grade teacher. Her modest childhood home had unfashionable, comfortable furniture, a small backyard that was fenced for the family dog, a kitchen table that seated seven, and a dining room table that could fit a tight ten but was only used for Thanksgiving dinner. Growing up she had to compete with her four brothers, so she knew how to shoot, throw a punch, hit a hardball, and cuss.

  Riley glanced out her office’s small window and considered her options. She could traipse downstairs, get into her black-and-white Mini Cooper, and drive home to her Georgetown apartment, or she could select one of the many guest bedrooms just down the hall and sleep here at the Knight mansion, Mysterioso Manor.

  “The answer is obvious,” Emerson said, standing in shadow on the far side of the room. “It would be more efficient for you to stay here.”

  “Crap on a cracker!” Riley said, whipping around, hand over her heart. “You just scared the heck out of me. How long have you been standing there?”

  “That’s an interesting question. On a quantum level, either always or never.”

  “And on the level we all live on except you?”

  “About twenty seconds. I was checking the security monitors and I saw that your office light was still on.”

  “I can’t reconcile money spent through your animal rights charitable trust with money received. You seem to have too much money, but I don’t know where it came from.”

  “Is that a dilemma?”

  “Yes!”

  Only one of many, Riley thought, looking at her boss. Emerson had a peculiar intelligence that set him apart from other brilliant people she’d met. He was good at connecting the dots even when half the dots were missing. Unfortunately, he was also a charmingly annoying enigma with the right combination of charisma and resourcefulness to convince her of just about anything. And if that wasn’t enough of a problem, he looked like a model for a romance novel cover. He was six feet two inches tall, with a lot of wavy black hair, smoldering dark eyes, and a hard-muscled, lean body. The dark hair and eyes were inherited from his Spanish mother. The muscle was the result of years of martial arts practice.

  Riley agreed with Emerson that it would be more efficient for her to spend the night here. Problem was, the guest rooms were creepy. In fact, the whole mansion was creepy. It was a massive gray stone Gothic-Victorian architectural disaster with a wraparound porch, multiple chimneys, hidden passages, gargoyles, turrets, and lancet windows. It was filled with priceless bric-a-brac, elaborate woodwork, uncomfortable antique furniture, and heavy velvet drapes with gold tassels. Previous generations of eccentric Knights had lived in the mansion and filled it with their collected treasures, wives, and mistresses.

  Riley was about to choose comfort over efficiency when Emerson’s house security alarm screamed out, “Intrusion, intrusion, intrusion.”

  “What the heck?” Riley said, clapping her hands over her ears.

  Emerson tapped a code into his smartphone. The noise stopped, and images from the house’s security cameras appeared on the phone’s screen.

  “Follow me,” Emerson said. “The game is afoot.”

  “Really?” Riley said. “Someone just broke into your house and you’re quoting Sherlock Holmes?”

  “It popped into my head. It seemed appropriate.”

  “Hiding in the closet and waiting for the police seems more appropriate.”

  “We would have a very long wait. The alarm system isn’t connected to the police. I have my own top men who handle these sorts of problems.”

  “Who?”

  “Vernon.”

  Vernon was Emerson’s cousin from Virginia who’d taken up semi-permanent residence in a monster RV he kept parked behind the mansion. He was a big, good-natured guy who had a way with the ladies and preferred fishing to thinking.

  “If there was any danger, Vernon would be here,” Emerson said. “He has unagi.”

  “ ‘Unagi’?”

  “It’s a state of total awareness. Only by achieving true unagi can you be prepared for any danger that might befall you.”

  Riley followed Emerson to the stairs, arming herself with a massive two-handed sword she’d appropriated from a suit of armor guarding a bedroom.

  “First, Vernon doesn’t have unagi,”
Riley said. “And second, there’s no such thing as unagi. You heard about it on an episode of Friends.”

  “If there is an intruder I’ll use my powers to cloud his mind so he won’t see me,” Emerson said.

  “Awesome. Great plan. And what about me?”

  “You have a big sword.”

  Riley mentally acknowledged that she did indeed have a big sword and that Emerson did have an uncanny talent for sneaking up on people.

  They stopped on the second-floor landing and looked over the railing at a little man standing in the foyer below them. Bald head. Short. Asian ancestry. Orange monk’s robe. Jesus sandals.

  “Hello, Wayan,” Emerson called down to the little man.

  The man raised his eyes and smiled. He put his palms together, fingers up, and bowed his head slightly in greeting. Emerson repeated the palms-together greeting and went down the stairs to meet him.

  “This is Wayan Bagus,” Emerson said to Riley. “He’s the Buddhist monk I studied with during my voyage of discovery.”

  “I thought your mentor was Thiru Kuthambai Siddhar.”

  “There are many paths to enlightenment,” Emerson said. “The Siddhar was also a mentor.” Emerson turned to the little monk. “How did you get here?”

  “I walked,” Wayan Bagus said.

  “From Samoa?”

  “I walked onto a boat. Then I walked onto a plane. Then, when the plane landed in Virginia, I walked some more.”

  “How long did it take you?” Riley asked.

  Wayan Bagus smiled politely. “Buddha tells the story of a granite mountain that reached many miles into the sky. Every hundred years it was wiped with a silk cloth held in the mouth of a bird until the mountain was worn away to nothing. So, not so long.”

  Riley suppressed a grimace and managed a tight smile. She didn’t want to be rude, but, criminy, wasn’t it bad enough she had to endure this philosophical baloney from Emerson?

  “I suppose everything is relative,” Riley said to Wayan Bagus. “Still, it had to have been a long, difficult trip. And how did you manage to get into the house once you found it?”

  “The universe provided a way. Also, the door was unlocked.” He turned to Emerson. “I need your help. The island I was using as a hermitage is missing. I think it was stolen.”

  “Define ‘missing,’ ” Emerson said.

  “Gone,” Wayan Bagus said. “Vanished without a trace.”

  “Islands normally don’t go missing,” Emerson said.

  “Nevertheless, it is missing just the same,” Wayan Bagus said.

  “Fascinating,” Emerson said. “Where exactly did you see it last?”

  “It was right where I’d left it. About two hundred miles north of Samoa.”

  “And what makes you suspect it’s stolen and not just lost?”

  “For the love of Mike, Emerson,” Riley said. “You can’t steal—or lose, for that matter—a whole island.”

  “That’s exactly what makes it so intriguing,” Emerson said.

  “Last month some men appeared on my island and told me I had to leave,” Wayan Bagus said. “When I objected they forcibly removed me and placed me on a different island. By the time I found my way back, my island was gone.”

  “What did these men look like?” Emerson asked. “Did you know any of them? Were they Samoans?”

  “They were wearing khaki shorts and funny hats. Only one man spoke to me, and he spoke in English. Another man gave me an injection, and I woke up hours later in the cargo hold of a boat.”

  “Was there anything special about your island?” Emerson asked.

  “I know of nothing that would be of extraordinary value. It was typical of the hundreds of uninhabited, unmapped islands around Samoa. It had a mountain and beaches and rain forests. It was a very nice place for a hermitage, except for the volcano.”

  “I’m quite fond of volcanoes,” Emerson said.

  “They are interesting,” Wayan Bagus said, “but I find the energy can be disruptive to meditation.”

  —

  When Wayan Bagus was comfortably settled in a third-floor guest room, Emerson and Riley made their way to the cavernous library, with its intricate parquet floor, hand-carved oak bookshelves, and a second-level balcony. Newspapers and magazines were neatly stacked on the floor, and half a dozen whiteboards were scattered about, covered with Emerson’s cryptic notes. Some of the notes were devoted to the tangled estate left behind when Emerson’s father had died under mysterious circumstances the previous year. Most were simply concerned with whatever sparked Emerson’s imagination, ranging from quantum physics to tarantula crossings. A weather-beaten Coleman tent had been erected in front of the massive stone fireplace. Buddhist prayer flags hung from a line stretched between the tent and the fireplace mantel.

  Emerson crossed the room, climbed a rolling ladder, and inched his way along, looking for a specific book in the science section.

  “It’s almost two in the morning, and the crazy little monk is asleep in bed,” Riley said. “Why are we here in the library?”

  “Wayan Bagus is many things,” Emerson said. “Crazy isn’t one of them. His mental and emotional acuity are exceptional. If he says his island is missing, then it is most certainly missing.”

  “And?”

  “And we’re going to help him find it.”

  “ ‘We’?”

  “I’m changing your job description to ‘amanuensis’ so you can assist me in the search. You served as my amanuensis once before, and the results were excellent.”

  “We were almost killed!”

  “The key word is ‘almost.’ We survived, and, you have to admit, it was exhilarating. This will give us an opportunity to once again marry our abilities.”

  “It wasn’t exhilarating. It was terrifying. And I don’t know about the marry thing.”

  “I’m using the term ‘marry’ in the broad sense of the word, as in ‘join together.’ I’m brilliant and intuitive, and you’re practical and have a driver’s license. We’re the perfect team.”

  “Of course.”

  Emerson continued his search. “I thought I should clarify,” he said over his shoulder, “because I recently read a book about body language and nonverbal cues, and I decided you find me irresistible.”

  “What? I don’t think so. If anyone is irresistible here it’s me.”

  Emerson paused, seeming to have found what he was looking for. “The two aren’t mutually exclusive, but we need to maintain the sanctity of the amanuensis-client relationship despite our deepening physical attraction.”

  “Aha! So you do find me irresistible.”

  “Not at all. ‘Irresistible’ would indicate a lack of control, and I have control in spades.”

  Emerson reached for a book, his shirt rode up, and Riley sneaked a look at the bared skin and perfectly toned abs. She narrowed her eyes slightly and thought that she had pretty good control too. Otherwise her hands would be all over those abs.

  “Look through this book for the section on Samoa,” Emerson said, passing Riley a copy of National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration Nautical Maps of the Pacific. “I’ll be right down.”

  By the time Emerson joined Riley at the desk, Riley had found the chapter. It was page after page of detailed maps, with information about water depths, latitudes and longitudes, natural and man-made hazards, currents, and anything else you would need to know if you wanted to navigate by boat through the Samoan island chain.

  “As your amanuensis, I have to tell you this is insane. A bunch of men wearing khaki clothes stole an island? I mean, who’s your prime suspect? UPS?”

  Emerson flipped through the pages. “We would have to consider UPS. They’re always losing things.”

  “What of yours have they lost?”

  “Ice skates. A volleyball. A sculpture I’d created.”

  “And they never found any of it?”

  “To be honest, Tom Hanks did personally deliver the sculpture to my house
, but that was several years later.”

  Riley smacked her forehead. “You couldn’t possibly be confusing your life with the movie Cast Away, could you? And if you are, Tom Hanks worked for FedEx, not UPS.”

  Emerson stopped flipping. “That explains a lot. I always thought it was weird that Tom Hanks would just randomly show up at my front door and give me a package.”

  “You’re a very strange man.”

  “My Match.com profile says I have a quirky sense of humor.”

  “You have a Match.com profile?”

  “Actually, no,” Emerson said. “I just have a quirky sense of humor.”

  Riley stared at him for a couple beats thinking it was a good thing he had great abs because he wasn’t going to get far with the quirky humor. She turned her attention to the book in front of Emerson. It was opened to a map of the Pacific Ocean, showing an area about two hundred miles north of Samoa.

  “There must be at least a hundred islands,” Riley said. “Any one of them could be your monk’s island.”

  “And those are just the mapped islands. There are probably a hundred more that nobody’s ever bothered to survey.”

  “It’s like trying to find a needle in a haystack,” Riley said.

  “Then let’s find the needle.”

  “You don’t find the needle,” Riley said. “It’s a metaphor for an unsolvable problem.”

  “Ah, but the problem isn’t unsolvable,” Emerson said. “When Wayan Bagus told me he was going to spend a couple years living in solitude on a deserted island, I sent him an emergency satellite transponder. Fortunately he brought the transponder back with him, and he gave it to me before he went to bed.”

  Emerson pulled from his pocket a small orange device that looked a little like a walkie-talkie.

  Riley turned the transponder to the ON position. This one had more bells and whistles than the ones she’d used hiking the Texas backcountry with her father and brothers, but it operated on the same basic principle: to send out a beacon signal with GPS coordinates so that first responders could locate you.