Just Over The Mountain

Praise for the novels of
New York Times
and
USA TODAY
bestselling author ROBYN CARR

“The Virgin River books are so compelling—I connected instantly with the characters and just wanted more and more and more.”

—#1
New York Times
bestselling author Debbie Macomber


Virgin River
is sexy, tense, emotional and satisfying. I can’t wait for more!”


New York Times
bestselling author Carla Neggers

“A thrilling debut of a series that promises much to come.”


New York Times
bestselling author Clive Cussler

The American Library Association’s
Booklist
names
Virgin River
one of 2007’s top ten romances.

“Jennifer is a beautifully drawn character whose interior journey is wonderful to behold.”


RT Book Reviews
on
Runaway Mistress

“This is one author who proves a Carr can fly.”


Book Reviewer
on
Blue Skies

“Robyn Carr provides readers [with] a powerful, thought-provoking work of contemporary fiction.”


Midwest Book Review
on
Deep in the Valley

“A remarkable storyteller.”


Library Journal

“A warm, wonderful book about women’s friendships, love and family. I adored it!”

—Susan Elizabeth Phillips on
The House on Olive Street

“A delightfully funny novel.”


Midwest Book Review
on
The Wedding Party

Also available from
New York Times
and
USA TODAY
bestselling author ROBYN CARR and MIRA Books

Virgin River, Series One

VIRGIN RIVER

SHELTER MOUNTAIN

WHISPERING ROCK

Virgin River, Series Two

SECOND CHANCE PASS

TEMPTATION RIDGE

PARADISE VALLEY

Virgin River, Series Three

FORBIDDEN FALLS

ANGEL’S PEAK

MOONLIGHT ROAD

A VIRGIN RIVER CHRISTMAS

Grace Valley Series

DEEP IN THE VALLEY

JUST OVER THE MOUNTAIN

DOWN BY THE RIVER

Novels

NEVER TOO LATE

RUNAWAY MISTRESS

BLUE SKIES

THE WEDDING PARTY

THE HOUSE ON OLIVE STREET
*

Coming Soon

THE HOUSE ON OLIVE STREET

A SUMMER IN SONOMA

(available July 2010)

ROBYN CARR
JUST OVER THE MOUNTAIN

For Carla Neggers, with affection.

One

J
une Hudson had nerves of steel. She was thirty-seven years old, had been the town doctor in Grace Valley, California, for over ten years and the things she’d been called upon to do were not for the faint of heart. June had delivered a baby in the back of a pickup truck, kept a logger’s severed limb on ice waiting for the emergency helicopter and had given calm, intelligent medical advice while looking down the barrel of a marijuana farmer’s gun. Oh, she was feminine enough, but tough. Strong. Fearless.

Maybe not fearless, but she had certainly learned how to
appear
fearless. She had learned this in Omnipotent Physician 101.

Then came an early morning phone call bearing portentous news that caused her heart to race and her brow and upper lip to bead with sweat. All the strength bled out of her legs as she sank helplessly to the kitchen stool.

The conversation started out innocently enough with
her friend Birdie reporting, “Chris is coming home with the boys.” Chris was Birdie’s son, the boys her twin fourteen-year-old grandsons.

“For a visit?” June half asked, half assumed.

“For good, he says. He and Nancy are divorcing.”

June was silent. Shocked. Dismayed.
Divorcing?

“He asked if you were still single,” Birdie went on, a lilt to her chipper voice. A hopeful little lilt.

That was when June the Fearless began to tremble and quake. Chris was an old boyfriend. In fact, her first love. Also her first and most terrible broken heart. Chris Forrest was the man June always vowed she would tie up and torture for the agony he had brought to her youth.

The only son of Birdie and Judge Forrest, Chris had lived in southern California for eighteen or so years, married to another high-school friend—or rival—Nancy Cruise. He had only returned to Grace Valley for visits a few times; his parents enjoyed their trips to his home in San Diego. During his rare appearances, June did her best to avoid him. When she did happen upon him, she was as cool as a cucumber, aloof and detached. Her posture and expression said that bygones were bygones, that she rarely even thought about him.

It was partly true. She didn’t spend a great deal of time mooning over a twenty-year-old romance gone awry. On the other hand, whenever she saw him, she was instantly reminded of two things: right after high school he had dumped her for Nancy without explanation or apology, and his boyish good looks had not deserted him. She hated him on both counts.

And now, divorced, he wondered if she was available? Hah! In your dreams, Chris Forrest, she thought with the long-lasting venom of a lover scorned.

She made a little small talk with Birdie, who was quite naturally excited by this turn of events. After hanging up the phone June remained on the kitchen stool, dazed, her thoughts concentrated mainly on planning Chris’s slow death. Then the phone rang again.

“Chris Forrest is moving back to Grace Valley,” her father, Elmer, reported.

“Really?” she faked. “Birdie and Judge must be delighted.”

“Seems he split with Nancy and has custody of his kids, which I suppose makes sense, them being boys and all.”

“How nice.”

“Divorced,” Elmer clarified.

“I didn’t mean that part was nice,” June said. “Him coming back here with sons. That’s nice. Especially for Birdie and Judge.”

“Does that put a little flush in your cheeks?” Elmer wanted to know. “Him being single again?”

She felt her cheeks, which were aflame, but not with the heat of passion. Could her father actually imagine she’d welcome the lout back into her arms? “Certainly not. That was a childhood thing. I’ve been over that for a couple of decades now.”

“That so?” Elmer wanted to know. “Meatloaf tonight at your place?”

“Dad? Did you happen to hear when they’re coming back?”

“I believe Judge said right away, as Chris wants to get his boys signed up for school. So…meat loaf? It’s Tuesday again already.”

“Right away?” She absently touched her hair, still damp from the shower. She’d never been good at things like hair. She could get an inflamed appendix out in no time and leave a scar that would be the envy of a plastic surgeon, but her dark blond, shoulder-length hair—or dishwater blond, as her mother used to call it—was beyond her understanding.

Nancy had always had great hair: thick, richly brown, long, shiny.

June looked at her hands. Doctor’s hands. Short nails, pink knuckles from scrubbing them dozens of times a day, and…what was that? An
age
spot?

She had heard that Chris, Nancy and their boys belonged to a country club.

“I’ll see you here at about six, Dad.”

“You okay, June? You sound awfully tired. You go out on calls last night?”

She heard a familiar alarm from her bedroom when her pager, set to vibrate, began dancing around on top of the bedside stand. Grrrr. With the cordless phone at her ear, she dashed to get it. “No, I wasn’t called out at all. It was a quiet night. Oops, gotta go, Dad. I’ve got a page. See you later?”

“Later,” he agreed.

The pager revealed the number for the police depart
ment, with a 911 attached to indicate an emergency. Chris Forrest disappeared as June went into a different mind-set and dialed. “June here,” she said.

Deputy Ricky Rios had paged her. “Chief Toopeek responded to a call about a shooting at the Culley stables, June. Said he needs you out there as soon as possible.”

“Is Tom calling for the paramedics or a helicopter?” she asked while slipping on her shoes.

“He just asked for you,” Ricky said.

June grabbed her bag and a clip for her damp hair, whistled for her collie, Sadie, and was out the door in under fifteen seconds. She was on call, a service she shared with John Stone, the other Grace Valley physician, and therefore drove the town’s new ambulance. It was so new that it still intimidated her, and though she turned on the lights and siren, she didn’t drive any faster than usual. It was early morning; she didn’t want to hit an animal or round a curve in the road and slam into slow-moving farm equipment.

Even though June now had a radio at her disposal, she didn’t use it to contact Tom Toopeek to ask about the shooting, because many of the citizens in Grace Valley also had radios. It was like a big party line. Of course, with the way everyone minded everyone else’s business in the town, she might as well get on the radio and give them a heads up. They’d have all the details by lunchtime anyway.

Daniel and Blythe Culley lived in a medium-size, ordinary ranch house on acreage large enough to
support two stables that were by no means ordinary, five corrals, and still provide plentiful grazing land at the foothills of the Coast Ranges mountains. Horse people from Kentucky, they had started out small but a decade or so back they’d had great success with a stallion racing in San Francisco and San Diego, and the reputation of the stable had soared. Boarders, breeders, trainers and sometimes racers, they employed as many as twenty hands, depending on how many horses they had in residence. Clients came from everywhere and the Culleys were kept busy year-round.

June didn’t speculate much on what might have happened. Nearly everyone in the valley had guns, especially if they lived in the country and had to contend with wildlife. One of the hands might have had a mishap or, less likely, a disagreement that led to a showdown. Rushing to the stables, she thought abstractedly about the Culleys and the kind of people they were—salt of the earth. It came to mind how happy and devoted a couple they had always been. Quiet, but friendly and helpful. They kept to themselves, since building up a stable of some repute required backbreaking commitment. Farmers, ranchers, vintners, loggers and the like worked from dawn to dusk, slept hard and worked more. A strong partnership, a strong marriage, like what the Culleys had, was required. June thought it such a pity that they hadn’t had children to raise on their land. They’d have made admirable parents.

Although it was now 7:00 a.m., the tall trees caused the sun to slant weakly into the yard and an eerie cloud
of fog lingered in front of the house. Tom’s Range Rover was parked about a hundred yards from the house and he stood beside it, his rifle balanced in a non-threatening way upon his right shoulder. A barrel had been tipped onto its side and Daniel lay over it, his pants pulled unceremoniously down to his thighs, his buttocks, freckled with buckshot, catching the cool morning breeze.

“Daniel, what the heck…?” she began, getting out of the ambulance with her bag in hand.

“That old woman’s lost her mind,” he said.


Blythe
did this to you?”

“You know any other crazy old woman out here?” he wanted to know.

“Well, I—” First of all, she thought, they’re not old. Blythe was around fifty-five, Daniel maybe a little bit older. It was hard to tell. They were a young couple when they’d moved to Grace Valley, and June hadn’t had occasion to treat either one of them. That in itself had never been curious to her until that moment. Why would they travel to another town for their medical needs? Had they not trusted her father, Elmer, the town doctor before her? They were quite friendly with Elmer. Perhaps, unlike most of the townsfolk, they didn’t
want
a doctor with whom they were well acquainted.

“Where is Blythe?” she finally asked.

Tom, not uttering a word, tipped his rifle slightly in the direction of the house. There, through the morning mist, June could see Blythe sitting in a rocking chair on the porch, the gun lying comfortably across her lap.

“Have you talked to her?” she asked Tom.

“Just from a safe distance. It appears she needs a little time to think about things.”

“You let that woman think much longer,” Daniel said, “she’s likely to stomp down here and put the muzzle to my head, which I should have had examined about thirty years ago for getting into this bargain.”

June looked at his pocked, inflamed backside. “I’m going to have to take you to the clinic, Daniel. We’ll need some antiseptic and bandages…and nice, fine tweezers. But you’ll be all right.” She coughed lightly and behind her hand she said, “Perhaps scarred.”

“There’s only one way I’m going to that clinic, Doc. And that’s lyin’ facedown.”

“I can understand that. If I pull the stretcher out of the back of the ambulance, you think you can get yourself on it?”

“I can give it a try.”

“Meanwhile, I do think someone needs to see if there’s anything we can do for Blythe.”


Do
for Blythe?” he asked, incredulous.

“You think I ought to lock her up?” Tom inquired.

“What do you usually do when someone shoots someone?” Daniel said. “Throw a little jamboree?”

“Come on, Daniel,” June said patiently. “Let’s see if we can stand you up and get you to the ambulance. I can’t imagine what you must have done to upset Blythe to this degree, as sweet-natured as I’ve always known her to be.”

“Shows what you know,” he grumbled, easing
himself off the barrel, grabbing his pants in the front so they wouldn’t drift any lower, and finally taking tiny, painful steps toward the back of the vehicle while leaning on June.

“I do know her to be softhearted and sweet,” June said. “Try not to bleed all over my new ambulance, Daniel. I’m just breaking it in.” He stopped in his tracks, turned his head and glowered at her. “Well…” She shrugged, apologetic. They moved on, tenderly.

Although the driver’s door stood open, Sadie continued to sit rather majestically in the passenger seat. She never presumed. She thought of herself as a working dog. “Sadie, come on, girl. Have a grass break. That’s my girl.” The dog appeared to smile as she made her way elegantly over the console and out the door.

“I can’t imagine what you must have done,” June said again.

“That’s right, you can’t,” he snapped back.

 

The butt of Tom’s rifle was pointed forward as he walked slowly toward the porch. With Daniel and June behind the ambulance, he felt a little more confident about approaching Blythe. As he drew in on her, he could see that she looked exhausted and aggrieved. He knew one or two things about domestic discord. They’d probably been up arguing late, maybe even all night. This could’ve been heating up for days, or even weeks.

Blythe Culley wasn’t exactly pretty, though she had a round face and rosy cheeks that lit up like Christmas when she smiled. But it sure wasn’t Christmas now.
Middle age had put a few pounds on her and her once-pitch hair was now lightened by gray streaks. Usually, when she didn’t have dark circles under red eyes, Tom thought of her as handsome.

“You’ve had yourself a stressful morning,” he said to her.

“I might’ve been a bit testy.”

He lifted his dark eyebrows. Tom Toopeek was of the Cherokee Nation, transplanted from Oklahoma as a small boy. He hadn’t been raised on the reservation, but he
was
raised in Native ways by his parents, Philana and Lincoln, who lived with Tom’s family still. It was natural for Tom to listen more than speak, to watch rather than act. The time to act and speak always seemed to come a little sooner than he expected.

“I think we’ve got it all straightened out now,” she said, and a large tear spilled over and ran down her cheek.

Tom slowly lowered his rifle and leaned it against the porch railing. Then he took two slow steps up to the porch, helped himself to the gun that lay across her lap and made sure there was no more shot in the chamber. He leaned the rifle against the railing beside his. “No, Blythe, it isn’t straightened out. I spoke to Daniel.”

“What did he tell you?” Her eyes looked a little startled, as if she feared having all the secrets of their quarrel aired in public.

“He thinks you’re crazy. To put it simply.”

The fear drained quickly away and was replaced by a look of anger. “Hmm. He would.”

“You going to tell me what possessed you to shoot your husband in the butt?”

“He said some things to me he shouldn’t ever have said.”

“Like?”

“I don’t believe we have to get into all that.”

“Maybe we should,” Tom said. “I’d like to know what a man could say to a woman that would make her shoot him. Now, Daniel, he’s not a drinking man, so I know he didn’t go out and get drunk and break up the furniture. He’s not a violent man. In fact, I’d call him gentle, though he’s strong enough to hold back a stallion at breeding. If I had to guess, I’d say he’s one of the better husbands in the valley…and I’d say you’re lucky to have him.”

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