Code blue, p.1

Code Blue, page 1

 

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  Books by Fern Michaels

  Smuggler’s Cove

  Fight or Flight

  The Wild Side

  On the Line

  Fear Thy Neighbor

  No Way Out

  Fearless

  Deep Harbor

  Fate & Fortune

  Sweet Vengeance

  Fancy Dancer

  No Safe Secret

  About Face

  Perfect Match

  A Family Affair

  Forget Me Not

  The Blossom Sisters

  Balancing Act

  Tuesday’s Child

  Betrayal

  Southern Comfort

  To Taste the Wine

  Sins of the Flesh

  Sins of Omission

  Return to Sender

  Mr. and Miss Anonymous

  Up Close and Personal

  Fool Me Once

  Picture Perfect

  The Future Scrolls

  Kentucky Sunrise

  Kentucky Heat

  Kentucky Rich

  Plain Jane

  Charming Lily

  What You Wish For

  The Guest List

  Listen to Your Heart

  Celebration

  Yesterday

  Finders Keepers

  Annie’s Rainbow

  Sara’s Song

  Vegas Sunrise

  Vegas Heat

  Vegas Rich

  Whitefire

  Wish List

  Dear Emily

  The Lost and Found Novels:

  Secrets

  Hidden

  Liar!

  Proof

  The Sisterhood Novels:

  Code Blue

  Backwater Justice

  Rock Bottom

  Tick Tock

  19 Yellow Moon Road

  Bitter Pill

  Truth and Justice

  Cut and Run

  Safe and Sound

  Need to Know

  Crash and Burn

  Point Blank

  In Plain Sight

  Eyes Only

  Kiss and Tell

  Blindsided

  Gotcha!

  Home Free

  Déjà Vu

  Cross Roads

  Game Over

  Deadly Deals

  Vanishing Act

  Razor Sharp

  Under the Radar

  Final Justice

  Collateral Damage

  Fast Track

  Hokus Pokus

  Hide and Seek

  Free Fall

  Lethal Justice

  Sweet Revenge

  The Jury

  Vendetta

  Payback

  Weekend Warriors

  The Men of the Sisterhood Novels:

  Hot Shot

  Truth or Dare

  High Stakes

  Fast and Loose

  Double Down

  The Godmothers Series:

  Far and Away

  Classified

  Breaking News

  Deadline

  Late Edition

  Exclusive

  The Scoop

  E-Book Exclusives:

  Desperate Measures

  Seasons of Her Life

  To Have and To Hold

  Serendipity

  Captive Innocence

  Captive Embraces

  Captive Passions

  Captive Secrets

  Captive Splendors

  Cinders to Satin

  For All Their Lives

  Texas Heat

  Texas Rich

  Texas Fury

  Texas Sunrise

  Anthologies:

  Lilac Time

  Tiny Blessings

  In Bloom

  Home Sweet Home

  Holiday Novels:

  Santa’s Holiday Spectacular

  Santa’s Secret

  Santa & Company

  Santa Cruise

  The Brightest Star

  Spirit of the Season

  Holly and Ivy

  Wishes for Christmas

  Christmas at Timberwoods

  Christmas Anthologies:

  A Snowy Little Christmas

  Coming Home for Christmas

  A Season to Celebrate

  Mistletoe Magic

  Winter Wishes

  The Most Wonderful Time

  When the Snow Falls

  Secret Santa

  A Winter Wonderland

  I’ll Be Home for Christmas

  Making Spirits Bright

  Holiday Magic

  Snow Angels

  Silver Bells

  Comfort and Joy

  Sugar and Spice

  Let it Snow

  A Gift of Joy

  Five Golden Rings

  Deck the Halls

  Jingle All the Way

  To the extent that the image or images on the cover of this book depict a person or persons, such person or persons are merely models and are not intended to portray any character or characters featured in the book.

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, organizations, places, events, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  KENSINGTON BOOKS are published by

  Kensington Publishing Corp.

  900 Third Avenue

  New York, NY 10022

  Copyright © 2025 by Fern Michaels

  Fern Michaels is a registered trademark of KAP 5, Inc.

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the Publisher, excepting brief quotes used in reviews.

  Without limiting the author’s and publisher’s exclusive rights, any unauthorized use of this publication to train generative artificial intelligence (AI) technologies is expressly prohibited.

  All Kensington titles, imprints, and distributed lines are available at special quantity discounts for bulk purchases for sales promotion, premiums, fund-raising, and educational or institutional use. Special book excerpts or customized printings can also be created to fit specific needs. For details, write or phone the office of the Kensington Sales Manager: Kensington Publishing Corp., 900 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10022. Attn. Sales Department. Phone: 1-800-221-2647.

  KENSINGTON and the K with book logo Reg US Pat. & TM Off.

  First Kensington Hardcover Edition: November 2025

  ISBN: 978-1-4967-6051-7

  First Trade Paperback Edition: January 2026

  ISBN: 978-1-4201-5719-2 (e-book)

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  Printed in the United States of America

  The authorized representative in the EU for product safety and compliance is eucomply OU, Parnu mnt 139b-14, Apt 123

  Tallinn, Berlin 11317, hello@eucompliancepartner.com

  CONTENTS

  Books by Fern Michaels

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Chapter One: Aunt Dottie

  Chapter Two: Welcome to Sunnydale

  Chapter Three: Sunnydale Do-Over

  Chapter Four: Sunnydale Do-Over-Again

  Chapter Five: Making New Friends

  Chapter Six: Sunnydale, Florida

  Chapter Seven: Pinewood

  Chapter Eight: The Art of the Scam

  Chapter Nine: Late Night Tomfoolery

  Chapter Ten: A New Mission

  Chapter Eleven: Fitting the Pieces Together

  Chapter Twelve: On the Move

  Chapter Thirteen: “Places, Everyone!”

  Chapter Fourteen: More Pieces of the Puzzle

  Chapter Fifteen: “We’ve Got a Problem”

  Chapter Sixteen: The Next Phase

  Chapter Seventeen: Panic Mode

  Chapter Eighteen: More Revelations

  Chapter Nineteen: Scamming the Scammers

  Chapter Twenty: Ready, Set, Go!

  Chapter Twenty-one: And Justice for All

  Epilogue

  Chapter One

  Aunt Dottie

  Theresa Gallagher peered at the registered letter the postal worker handed her. She did not recognize the return address, nor did she know anyone in Tempe, Arizona. As she scribbled her signature on the green card, her fuzzy memory clicked in. She recalled her mother telling her and her sister Margaret about their Aunt Dottie, who left home at seventeen “and moved out west.” Dottie had been the rebel of the family, and trouble hung around her like a humid day in July.

  Dottie had been caught shoplifting on more than one occasion. Smoking in the girl’s bathroom in high school was another one of her “stunts,” as her father liked to call them. Truancy was also one of Dottie’s specialties. Her parents tried pleading, then bargaining, and eventually moved on to threats. Their father was growing more impatient by the day and swore if Dottie got into trouble one more time, he was going to send her away. But Dottie didn’t wait for trouble to find her again. At sixteen going on seventeen and looking like she was twenty, Dottie packed her bags and left home with no forwarding address. A short note was left on the kitchen table: Heading out to find myself, since no one seems to like who I am here.

  Dottie’s mother Agnes was undoubtedly horrified. Her husband, Floyd, was relieved. As far as he was concerned, Dottie was going to ruin his marriage. He and Agnes would be up until all hours of the night arguing about what to do with their oldest daughter. Her father wanted to send her to a juvenile facility, but Dot tie never got into the kind of trouble that would cause a judge to send her to a detention center. She never harmed anyone or committed a felony. Agnes insisted it was simply a matter of rebellion and wanting attention. The situation put enormous pressure on the family. It was inevitable that sooner or later someone, or something, would blow a valve.

  It wasn’t that her father didn’t love her, but he grew to resent her—something that could eventually turn to hatred if she kept it up. He had had enough of leaving work to fetch her from the security guards at the local department store. What made matters worse was the gossip. Floyd Carpenter was attempting to build his plumbing business and knew his customers were developing their opinion of him as a father. She was always getting in trouble; Floyd worried that the next thing would be her getting pregnant. She didn’t have a regular boyfriend, but hung around a few unseemly types, the types that would surely end up in jail. Floyd truly believed Dottie’s departure was for the best. He hoped that she would find a better circle of friends and turn her life around. If not, the family wouldn’t have to suffer through her shenanigans.

  Agnes blamed her husband for Dottie’s exit. He blamed her for Dottie’s bad behavior.

  Months passed before they got word from her via a postcard from New Mexico. It said little except how beautiful the scenery was. She signed it with a capital D. No Love, Dottie, no Miss you, no nothing except a scribbled letter of the alphabet. Life in the Carpenter family went on, but Dottie’s absence didn’t bring the peace that Floyd anticipated. The tension between Agnes and Floyd remained. It was thick. You could cut it with a knife.

  Agnes didn’t pretend that Dottie was coming back. She knew in her heart she might never see her daughter again. She went to church every week and prayed her child would be safe, but that was all she could do. She peeled the posters off Dottie’s bedroom walls, painted the walls a bright shade of yellow, and took the room for herself. She and Floyd never slept in the same room ever again, and rarely spoke to each other.

  JoAnne was grateful she only had one more year of high school before she could leave for college. She had hopes to go someplace not too close to home, but not on the other side of the country. She worried about her mother. She believed her mother would die of a broken heart, and at the age of fifty-five, Agnes passed away from a pulmonary embolism. By that time, JoAnne was married with two daughters, Theresa, and Margaret, and lived fifty miles away.

  When Theresa and Margaret were growing up, JoAnne rarely spoke about her long-lost sister, especially in front of other relatives. JoAnne thought it was a blemish on the family. As far as she was concerned, Dottie abandoned her, leaving the family torn to pieces. An occasional Christmas card would arrive, leaving a vague and dead-end trail. JoAnne saved the cards and the envelopes to try to determine Dottie’s whereabouts, according to the postal mark. They were always from somewhere out west. Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona. It was JoAnne’s private secret, and a souvenir from her sister.

  Theresa hadn’t heard Aunt Dottie’s name in years … until now. The letter was from a neighbor of Dottie’s, informing Theresa that their aunt was now in a nursing home in Tempe, Arizona. The neighbor said she was able to track down Dottie’s last known relatives, and thought the family should be made aware of the situation.

  Theresa immediately phoned her sister Margaret, and they debated what to do. “We don’t know her,” Margaret said.

  “But now that Mom is gone, we’re her only family,” Theresa responded.

  “What do you think we should do?” Margaret asked, but truthfully, she was inclined to do nothing.

  “We should go to Tempe to see her. Make sure she’s okay.”

  “Are you crazy? I can’t just drop everything to fly to Arizona,” Margaret protested.

  Theresa argued that if their mother were still alive, she would want to know. To help.

  “Okay, fine. I’m still not going, but if you want to go, I’ll pay for half of your airfare.”

  Theresa knew that was the best she was going to get and booked a flight to Phoenix for the following week. In the meantime, she hoped she could find a few missing pieces to this puzzle.

  Theresa recalled there were some of her mother’s belongings in the attic. They had been sitting there for decades, ever since her mother died. She had meant to go through them but would always put it off. She pulled down the disappearing staircase that led to the area she rarely visited. If she needed something, she usually asked her husband, Brian, to fetch it, but this was a personal mission.

  She gingerly climbed the ladder-type steps and grabbed the pull chain that turned on the exposed light bulb. There were dozens of bankers boxes marked with names and dates, an old wooden rocking chair, and more hastily marked boxes of various sizes. A colonial-style maple headboard and footboard from decades ago were resting against a small nightstand. Theresa spotted an old steamer trunk that belonged to her mother. Inside were boxes of photos. She cleared a space on the attic floor and began to go through them. There had to be over a hundred of them. Some were black and white; others were from Polaroid cameras, many of which were faded. All of the photos were of people she didn’t recognize, except for one attached to a few postcards with a rubber band. It was a photo of her mother when she was in her early teens, standing next to a young woman, two or three years older. Theresa was able to make out a scribble on the back of the photo that read Ditzy Dottie and Me. The postmarks on the postcards were smudged, but she could make out one of the dates: 1971. It wasn’t much, but it was something.

  As Theresa squinted at the photo, she noticed the woman next to her mother was wearing a small, art deco style ring on her left hand, and remembered her mother telling her that Dottie swore she would never take it off. It had been a gift from their grandmother when Dottie had turned sixteen. Theresa continued to sift through the memorabilia, but the photo was the only thing that contained a clue. When she was convinced there was nothing left to find, Theresa tossed everything back into the chest. Something for another day. Maybe. Maybe never.

  Theresa had a lot to do before she left for Arizona. Part of her preparations included checking the website of the care facility. See what kind of place it was. When she searched Sunnydale, an impressive website appeared touting the many services the facility offered, from Senior Living to Assisted Living to Long-Term Care. They also had a rehabilitation center for post-operative “clients.” She noticed they didn’t use the word “patients” when describing the multi-tiered accommodations.

  Theresa continued to peruse the site. The company had three Sunnydale complexes, one in Arizona, one in New Mexico, and one in Florida, all with similar lodging. She clicked on the Tempe, Arizona location. The photos were impressive, as was the virtual tour. The place was luxurious. It looked like a five-star resort or a well-appointed gated community.

  A long circular driveway ran from the security checkpoint to an impressive building called Manor House. The lobby resembled that of an upscale hotel, with a wood and slate front desk. The video led her down a hallway to the left of the welcome counter to an exquisite restaurant with an adjacent patio. The smooth disembodied voice listed some of the many activities they provided for their “guests.” The patio was lined with tall vegetation that obscured any view of the other buildings, and the tennis, pickleball, and shuffleboard courts. There was even a putting green within the outdoor activity area. Theresa leaned into the back of her chair and wondered: Did she have the right place? She then clicked on an aerial view that exposed several other buildings separated by a long line of foliage and landscaping, and another wide drive. There was a small clinic, rehab, and long-term care on the opposite side of the roadway. They were distinctly separated from the senior living and assisted living quarters.

  The camera drone took her above the duplexes that lined the roads, which were dotted with golf carts.

  Theresa continued to read the multitude of positive reviews and the company’s mission statement: Life is a series of transitions. We are here to guide you through them with ease. Make the most of your journey with us. She smirked. That surely didn’t say much, but she supposed a picture is worth ten thousand words. She then speculated how Dottie could afford to live in a place like that. What she did know was that she knew nothing about her aunt or her life. But that was about to change.

  The following week, Theresa arrived in Phoenix, rented a car, and checked into her hotel located close to Sunnydale. It was late in the afternoon, and Theresa was still on Eastern time and decided to shower, order room service, and call it a day. Her plan was to get up early, get a few steps in, and then drive to Sunnydale. It was time to close the familial gap.

  The next day she typed the address into the GPS and drove toward Sunnydale. The trip took a little longer than she expected. The place could almost be considered off the grid. That would explain why they had a mini-clinic on site.

 

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