Authors: Carla Neggers
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Romance, #Adult, #Suspense, #American Light Romantic Fiction, #Fiction - Romance, #Romance: Modern, #Ex-convicts, #revenge, #Romance - Suspense, #Separated people, #Romance - General
sive ice formations and rush of clear, cold water. It was
a natural waterfall, not one of the dams left over from
the industrial revolution that still choked rivers and
streams all over the northeast. Here, the river tumbled
freely out of the mountains, carving its way through
rock and earth.
She didn’t feel the cold. As Iris maintained, the air
was different in the High Peaks. Susanna had bundled
up in her north country layers. Moisture-resistant long
underwear and leggings, wind pants, fleece vest, heavy
duty anorak, hat, gloves, socks, boots. The high-tech
fabrics and design kept everything from weighing a ton.
Gran still preferred wool.
On the day Beau McGarrity had walked into her
kitchen, Susanna would never have imagined herself
here in the mountains of upstate New York, in the dead
of winter.
She remembered how absorbed she’d been in her tai
chi tape, doing the movements, the breathing, the con-
centration and balance. She’d knocked off work early,
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Carla Neggers
the girls were at school and Jack was out on an investi-
gation. Police corruption. He hated corruption cases,
and she knew few of the details about this one. He had
been more silent and uncommunicative than usual in re-
cent weeks. She was preoccupied with how she’d tell
him about their growing net worth, not with stories of
the terrible murder of a woman in a small town not far
from San Antonio.
While she’d practiced her tai chi—she wasn’t very
good—she didn’t think about anything that bothered
her. She didn’t worry about how money could change
her relationship with her husband, if he’d resent her be-
cause the millions were her doing—if the money might
affect his work when word got out. He was a Texas
Ranger. It was all he’d ever wanted to be.
Oddly enough, it was her parents who’d helped her
make her first big investment, when they’d introduced
her to a woman who’d just bought artwork from their
gallery and owned an Austin computer firm. Jack knew
about that investment. But Susanna hadn’t told him how
well it had done, providing the bulk of the ten million
they were now worth. She’d also timed her entrance into
and her exit out of technology stocks well. Not all luck,
but a lot of it.
None of that was on her mind while she was doing
her tai chi.
The sound of the patio door opening and shutting had
broken her concentration. She assumed it was Jack or
the girls coming in early and hit the pause button on the
VCR to go check.
The tall, gray-haired man she’d seen downtown and
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then again the other day at the high school was stand-
ing in her kitchen, on the other side of the table with its
vase of small sunflowers. She’d tried to tell herself he
hadn’t actually followed her. She hadn’t mentioned him
to Jack, because she knew she was just being paranoid.
Of
course,
he wasn’t following her. Who would follow
her? Now he was in her kitchen.
She’d managed a quick smile. “Just a sec,” she said,
as if he were a neighbor who’d stopped in for a chat,
and slipped into the family room. She spotted Maggie’s
tape recorder and set it on a bookcase on her way back
to the kitchen, hitting the record button. She’d consid-
ered running out the front door, but it, she knew, was
locked. She didn’t think she had enough time—she
needed to stay calm.
At least if this man did anything to her, her husband
would have it on tape.
“You don’t recognize me,” he said.
“No, I’m afraid I don’t. Look—”
“I’m not going to hurt you.” He had a twang to his
accent, making him seem folksier than he was. He ran
a finger over the back of a chair. “I didn’t knock because
I wasn’t sure you’d let me in, and I need to talk to you.”
“Why? What do you want?”
“Your husband has to know I didn’t kill my wife. I’m
being framed by an overzealous police officer.”
Suddenly Susanna knew who he was. Beau McGar-
rity, the wealthy real estate developer and political as-
pirant whose wife had just been shot to death in their
driveway.
No wonder she’d thought she’d seen him before.
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Carla Neggers
“You have to make him understand.”
“I’m sorry,” she told him carefully, “I don’t get in-
volved in my husband’s work.”
“Of course you do. You provide comfort to him. You
make it possible for him to give his work the focus and
attention it requires to be done well.” McGarrity stepped
around the table, coming toward her. “Your husband
couldn’t make the lives of the criminals in this state a
living hell without your cooperation.”
“Jack’s a Texas Ranger. He follows the law. He’s not
out to make anyone’s life a living hell. Mr. McGar-
rity—that’s who you are, isn’t it? Beau McGarrity? I
want you to leave. It’s really not a good idea for you to
be here.”
His gaze was steady, absolutely determined. “The
witness against me is lying. Your husband needs to un-
derstand that.”
“All right. I’ll give him your message—”
“As if dealing with Rachel’s death weren’t enough—
” Some of the fierceness went out of his expression, and
he ran a hand through his gray hair, as if he were sud-
denly tired. “Susanna, Susanna… you don’t believe I
killed my wife.”
Her instincts—her fear—told her not to make a move
for the knife rack or do anything that might provoke
him to violence. He had size and position on her. The
smartest course of action was to get rid of him as fast as
she could.
She remembered what she told her clients about
money. Listen to your fear. Your fear can protect you if
you let it.
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159
“I’ll talk to Jack. I promise.”
McGarrity smiled in approval, perhaps a touch of re-
lief. “I know I must sound desperate. There’s no need
for your husband to know I was here.” His tone was con-
trolled now, self-assured, that of a man convinced of his
rightful place in the world. “Do you understand?”
She nodded. “I do.”
He stood back on his heels, watching her through
half-closed eyes. He said casually, as if it were a non se-
quitur, “Your daughters finish up play practice in ten
minutes.”
Susanna stopped breathing. He knew their sched-
ules. He knew where they were.
Beau McGarrity touched her then, a feathery brush
across her chin. “You should be running along to pick
them up. You’re a good mother. That’s what good moth-
ers do. I know,” he added, “I’ve seen you.”
He slipped out the patio door, and Susanna popped
the DAT out of the recorder, her hands shaking. She was
reaching for the phone to call Jack when a police offi-
cer knocked on her front door. Alice Parker. She intro-
duced herself as the officer working on Rachel
McGarrity’s murder and asked if Jack was there.
Susanna told her about Beau McGarrity and gave her
the tape.
Then Maggie and Ellen came home, and Susanna
didn’t tell them anything. She decided to wait for Jack,
but he came home late, short-tempered and obviously
distressed. Alice Parker had been arrested for witness
tampering. She’d screwed up the crime scene. The Ra-
chel McGarrity murder investigation was a mess. There
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wasn’t a damn thing anyone could do about it now. His
role in the whole business was over.
When he didn’t mention the tape, Susanna assumed
it was worthless. Alice Parker wanted to nail Beau Mc-
Garrity for murder to the point of fabricating a witness.
If there’d been anything on that tape they could have
used against Beau, surely she’d have given it to Jack, at
least to prove to the world McGarrity was a threat and
she wasn’t so awful for having tried to make sure he was
caught for his wife’s murder.
Not that anyone would have believed anything, com-
ing from a corrupt police officer.
With or without the tape, prosecutors wouldn’t have
touched Susanna’s tale of possible stalking and veiled
threats. A good defense lawyer would say it only proved
Beau McGarrity had been so upset by Alice Parker’s
conduct that he’d inadvertently scared the hell out of the
wife of a Texas Ranger.
Even if Susanna couldn’t prove it, Beau McGarrity
had followed her
twice.
He’d walked into her
kitchen.
She didn’t know what Jack would do if he found out.
He was a professional, but his work had never come this
close to his family.
She’d never felt so completely paralyzed.
It was simpler to say nothing. Simpler for him, as
well, that she did nothing. So, that was what she did.
And for that and a thousand other reasons that seemed
to make sense at the time, she’d packed up and joined
her daughters heading north.
A few weeks to clear her head had turned into
months, and now she’d bought a cabin in the mountains.
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161
But it was beautiful here, she thought. Stunning and
invigorating, and she meant to enjoy her week here.
With any luck, Alice Parker had cleared out and last
night was just an innocent mistake, Jack stumbling
across a burglar or one of Iris’s legion of friends.
“Yeah, right,” she muttered, turning back to her car.
“Who do you think you’re kidding?”
��
Ten
It had been a very close call with Ranger Jack.
Alice tried not to think about how she’d almost hy-
perventilated into passing out when she’d sneaked up
behind him with Iris’s walking stick and whacked him.
He’d come within a hairsbreadth of grabbing her, and
his defensive move had kept her from knocking him out.
Once he had the walking stick, she’d grabbed Des-
tin and cleared out.
Now they were almost at Blackwater Lake, driving
right back into the lion’s mouth. Well, what else could
they do? Alice couldn’t think of anything that’d get Jack
Galway and Beau McGarrity off her tail, put her on the
road to Australia and stop Destin from whining about
his repossessed BMW and the lousy heat in her car. The
man needed a hundred grand. The world would be a hap-
pier place if Destin Wright had money in the bank again.
He’d panicked when she’d hit Jack Galway.
You at-
tacked a Texas Ranger? Shit!
He’d also wanted to go back and explain, tell Lieu-
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163
tenant Galway they’d just been checking on the house
for Iris and mistook him for a burglar. Alice had asked
him how they’d explain the papers he’d pulled out of Su-
sanna’s files and the directions they’d found to her place
in the Adirondacks. Jack would want to know what they
were doing with those. Destin had seen the light.
He was riding shotgun, navigating. He had a map
they’d picked up at a gas station in New Hampshire
spread out on his lap. Driving across New Hampshire
and Vermont had been his bright idea. They’d spent the
night in a fleabag roadside hotel, sharing a room but not
a bed. He had no interest, and Alice sure as hell didn’t.
The bright sun hitting the pristine snow and ice hurt
her eyes, but she had to admit the scenery was stunning.
Destin told her to turn down a steep, unpaved driveway
that led to the Blackwater Inn, a rambling old building
with slate gray clapboards, white trim and burgundy
doors. Iris Dunning had grown up here, fallen in love,
known tragedy. She’d told Alice about skinny-dipping
all alone on a hot summer night.
Alice didn’t want to think about how she’d betrayed
and manipulated an old woman and now was trying to fig-
ure out how to pry a hundred grand off her granddaughter.
The inn was owned by a young couple who intro-
duced themselves as Paul and Sarah Johnson and looked
as if they spent a lot of time trekking up and down
mountains. Alice asked for separate rooms. Destin mut-
tered something about money, but she shot him a look
and he shut up.
Both rooms were on the second floor overlooking the
lake. Alice’s was decorated with country quilts that re-
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Carla Neggers
minded her of her grandma’s house back in Texas, al-
though the four-poster bed and cherry dresser were
more expensive than anything her grandmother could
ever afford.
Destin lingered in the doorway. “We can get some
lunch and settle in, but I want to get this show on the road.”
“I’m not hungry. You go on.”
She dumped her battered suitcase on the floor and
looked back at him. He seemed to be waiting for her to
tell him what to do next. This was what she wanted, but
it was unnerving, too, because she wasn’t sure she knew
what to do next—and she didn’t want to screw up his