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
creep into her cheeks. “That’s not what I meant.”
“He loves you, Susanna.”
“And I love him.” She looked at her hands and ab-
sently touched her wedding ring, fighting back tears
she hoped Sam wouldn’t see. “There are times in a long
relationship when that’s not enough.”
“What else do you need? Clean socks?”
Jack entered the kitchen from the bedroom, where he
and Susanna had spent the night together, making love
silently, passionately. She could feel herself responding
to him all over again, physically, emotionally, as she
took in everything that had attracted her to him right
from the beginning. His dark eyes, his half smiles, his
taut body. His strength and no-nonsense style, and his
humor, his tolerance. She remembered how gentle he’d
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been with Maggie and Ellen as tots, how haunted he’d
been by his first murder investigation.
This time together, she knew, was restoring the phys-
ical and emotional bond between them—and messing
up her head all over again. Which, of course, wouldn’t
be the way he or Sam looked at it. They’d say she was
coming to her senses. Maybe they had a point.
“What’re you two up to?” Jack asked.
“We’re discussing laundry,” Sam said. “Clean socks.
I’d hate to hang out my shorts in this weather. Granny
Dunning says she can smell snow in the air.”
“You’ll see,” Gran said from the couch. She hadn’t
made any comments to Sam about Texas, but she’d
given his holstered .357 SIG Sauer a wary look.
“Gran’s a legend in these parts,” Susanna told him.
He grinned. “I don’t doubt it.”
Jack didn’t even try to follow their back-and-forth
conversation. He was all business. He grabbed his jacket.
“Sam, I’ll check in with the local police and let them
know you’re in town. I also want to talk with the people
at the Blackwater Inn. Unofficially.You’ll hang in here?”
“No problem.”
Susanna’s reaction was automatic, instinctive, vis-
ceral—it bypassed all her rational thought processes.
She shot to her feet, frustration rising in her throat as
she tightened her hands into fists and started for her hus-
band. “You mean you want him to be our protection.”
Jack shrugged, but she could see the heat in his eyes.
“It’s either Sam or me.”
“Forget it. We’ll pack up and head back to Boston.
Gran, the girls and me. We can be on our way in an hour.”
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Sam muttered, “Jesus, Susanna,” over the rim of his
coffee mug.
Jack clenched his teeth. “What will you do when
Alice Parker and Destin Wright show up in your rear-
view mirror? Or Beau McGarrity? He shot his wife in
the back. What do you think he’ll do to you?”
“I have a cell phone. I’ll call you and tell you where
they are. Then you and Sam can swoop in to the rescue.”
Jack took in a sharp breath, his eyes very dark on her
now. She knew she wasn’t making any sense. She just
wanted out of there with her children and her grand-
mother. She wanted them safe. She didn’t want them
hurt. Which was Jack’s motive, too. But he was includ-
ing her among those he didn’t want hurt, not among
those who would do the protecting, and it made her feel
helpless—and even more vulnerable.
Sam rocked back in his chair and said calmly, “I was
hoping I’d get to try snowshoeing while I was up here.
Maybe see a moose.”
“You go right ahead.” She was on a roll now, unable
to stop herself. “Snowshoe, track moose, track crimi-
nals. I’ll leave you the cabin keys. You and Jack can lock
up when you head back to San Antonio.”
“It wouldn’t work out that way,” Sam said calmly.
Susanna instantly knew what he was telling her. “You
mean you’d follow me
home?
”
“Sure, all the way back to San Antonio if that’s where
you want to go.” His reference to San Antonio instead
of Boston was deliberate, provocative, Sam Temple’s
way of warning her not to underestimate his resolve. It
was understood between the two Texas Rangers that
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Sam would look after Jack’s family, and look after them
he would. He took another sip of his coffee, his manner
unchanged. “Makes no difference to me.”
Jack stood behind Susanna, and she could feel his ab-
solute self-control when he touched her shoulder and
said tightly, “Susanna.”
She kept her gaze pinned on Sam. “You two cooked
this up last night.”
Sam shrugged, no sign of remorse. “You were
asleep.”
“No, I wasn’t. I was tossing and turning, trying to fig-
ure out how to keep you two from taking over my life.
If Beau McGarrity wanted to harm me, he’s had the
chance. He’s had over a year, for God’s sake. He had
me
alone
in my house, and he didn’t touch me. He
watched me prune my garden, and he didn’t touch me.”
But she could see she wasn’t getting through to either
man, maybe not even to herself. “What if he’s innocent?
What if Alice
is
trying to frame him?”
“Nobody’s taking over your life or telling you what
to do, Susanna.” Jack’s tone was still calm, if not gen-
tle. “We’re just telling you what we’re doing.”
“You’re not including me in the decision-making.”
But he’d had enough. “That’s because there are no
decisions here for you to make.” He started through the
kitchen and glanced back at Sam. “A couple hours.”
He left without another word, and Susanna kicked a
chair and debated picking it up and throwing it out the
window.
“I thought he might not wake up so crabby when I
got the sofa bed and he didn’t.” Sam got to his feet and
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walked to the kitchen, refilling his mug with stale cof-
fee. “What did you do, make him sleep on the floor?”
“Shut up, Sam.”
“He has a one-track mind. Right now, he’s focused
on Alice Parker, this Destin Wright character and Beau
McGarrity. He’s got me focused on them, and he’s going
to get local law enforcement focused on them.” Sam sat
back down with his coffee. “You’re just balking and
being a pain in the ass because you’re scared and pissed
off this has happened. That’s understandable.”
She watched out the window as her husband backed
Davey Ahearn’s truck out of the driveway. “That’s his
idea of communicating.
Damn
him.”
Sam shrugged. “Well, it’s not as if you met him
halfway.”
“Why should I?”
“Susanna,” he said softly, and she knew it was an ap-
peal for common sense.
But she wasn’t ready yet, and she swore under her
breath and stormed into her bedroom, slamming the
door and pacing hard to keep herself from breaking
something. Or starting to cry. Worry. Totally freak out.
She’d known last night. Even as she’d felt herself
drawn toward him, when Jack slipped into bed with her
after plotting her marching orders with Sam, she could
feel his remoteness. He was pulling back from her, shut-
ting her out of his worries, his fears, even as he’d slid
his hand up her leg. Instead of calling him on it then and
there, she’d made love to him, saying nothing.
She splashed her face with cold water and returned
to the kitchen. Sam was still drinking his coffee at the
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297
table. She dropped into her chair and sighed, if not con-
trite at least with a little self-awareness. “I know what
you’re saying, Sam. He’s going to be short-tempered
and focused until all this gets settled.”
“You two are something.”
She managed a small smile. “I suppose I don’t have
to be a horse’s ass about him going Texas Ranger on me.”
Sam smiled back. “I suppose you don’t.”
“You used to call me ma’am.”
“That was before you turned back into a Yankee.”
“I’m not a Yankee. I grew up all over the country, and
I’ve lived almost half my life in Texas—it’s home. I love
Texas.”
“Where were you born?”
“Boston.”
“I rest my case.” He leaned across the table toward
her, his expression intense, reminding her of his intel-
ligence and professionalism. He was not a man to un-
derestimate. “Stop fighting so hard, Susanna. Stop
putting all your fears and frustration onto Jack.”
“I hate this,” she said, her voice choked.
“Sure you do. It makes you feel vulnerable and out
of control. It forces you to think about what you usu-
ally take for granted. You’re mad at Jack because you
want it all to go away. Nobody blames you for that.”
“If McGarrity was stalking me before his wife’s
murder—”
“That’s not your fault. It’s not Jack’s fault.”
“I didn’t see him,” Susanna whispered. “Not until
that day in my kitchen.”
“Don’t get ahead of yourself. Alice could have lied
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about him looking you up before Rachel McGarrity’s
death.”
“You don’t think so.”
He shook his head, shrugged. “No.”
“I keep thinking about it,” Susanna said quietly.
“Then you should understand where Jack’s com-
ing from.”
She nodded. “I do.”
Sam settled back in his chair. “You going to cut him
some slack?”
“It’s not like he’s cutting me any—”
“You? Hell, woman, he’s cut you more slack than I
ever would. I told him. Handcuffs.”
“Sam.”
He slid to his feet and gave her one of his heart-stop-
ping smiles, adding as if she hadn’t spoken, “Ma’am.”
Paul and Sarah Johnson greeted Jack warmly, but
with a touch of wariness he could understand. The local
police had stopped by yesterday looking for Alice Par-
ker and Destin Wright and told them about the break-
in at the cabin. Now here he was, a Texas Ranger who
wanted to ask them questions. He made sure they un-
derstood talking to him was a courtesy.
“We’ll tell you anything we can, Lieutenant Gal-
way,” Paul Johnson said. They were in a wide hall to-
ward the back of the house, with a fireplace, a rolltop
desk, two love seats and a six-foot-tall chainsaw carv-
ing of a bear. Another shorter hall led to a back door and
out to Blackwater Lake. “Miss Parker checked herself
and Mr. Wright out after lunch sometime. I helped her
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299
with her luggage, and she paid in cash—and she thanked
us, said she loved the inn.”
Jack nodded, trying to help the couple relax. “I can
see why. It’s a nice place.”
Sarah Johnson fingered the cording on a love seat. “Mr.
Wright left earlier in the day, not long after your wife and
her grandmother were here. He was dressed for a hike, but
I didn’t actually see where he went. He didn’t say where
he was headed. He made a few comments comparing our
inn to other places he’s stayed, obviously more expensive.
He wasn’t obnoxious or rude. I think he just wanted us to
know he could afford better than we had to offer.”
Not anymore, Jack thought.
But she reddened, embarrassed. “Normally I
wouldn’t speak this way about a guest, but under the
circumstances—”
Her husband broke in. “If you’ve met him, I’m sure
you understand.”
“I’ve met him.” Jack stayed neutral. “Can you tell
me anything else he and Alice did or said while they
were here?”
“Destin was out a lot,” Paul Johnson said, dropping
his formality. “He said he was going to Lake Placid to
check out the Winter Olympic training facilities, but I
don’t know if he did. Alice seemed very pleased with
her room and spent a great deal of time there. She was
an undemanding guest.”
Compared to prison, Jack thought, the Blackwater
Inn was paradise. He withdrew Sam’s photo of Beau
McGarrity and laid it on the rolltop desk. “Have you by
any chance seen this man?”
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Paul picked up the photo and peered at it. His wife
came over and looked over his shoulder, gasping sud-
denly. “Yes!Yes, I’ve seen him. Paul, you remember, don’t
you? Not this past summer—the summer before—”
“That’s right,” Paul said. “Damn. You’re right, Sarah.
That’s the same guy.”
“It was August, a year ago this past August,” Sarah
said with conviction.
Jack remained silent, absorbing the couple’s words,
containing his reaction. Beau McGarrity had turned up
on Blackwater Lake in the Adirondack Mountains two
months before his wife’s murder in south Texas.
“I remember,” Sarah Johnson went on, “because he
was so interested in all the old stories about the lake and
the inn, which we just love ourselves. He only stayed
one night, as I recall. That’s unusual. Our guests gener-
ally stay for several days at a time.”
“Was he interested in any stories in particular?”
Jack asked.
The couple exchanged glances, and Sarah Johnson