Authors: Tami Hoag
Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Women Sleuths, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Crime, #Suspense, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Crime Fiction
J.D. saw the fire from a good distance up the hill.
Swearing, he
nudged Sarge into a gallop.
Lucy MacAdam was proving to be as much of a
nuisance in death as she had been in life. He cursed himself briefly for
taking on the task of looking after her place, but if Miller Daggrepont
hadn't come to him, he would have gone to Bryce, and J.D. didn't want
Bryce getting any kind of a foot in the door. He intended to have first
crack at buying the property. If that meant he had to put up with the
headache of looking after the animals and calling the sheriff after
vandals trashed the place, then that was a small enough price to pay.
The sight of orange flames through the curtain of the trees put
everything else out of his mind. Panic sparked instantly. If a fire
weren't contained immediately, there was every chance that it would
sweep across acres of forest and grassland, charring everything in its
path. He braced himself back in the saddle as the big gelding skidded
down the steep trail. Berry bushes and saplings slapped at him and
snatched at his clothes. Then they broke onto clear, flat ground and the
horse exploded beneath him, hurtling toward the MacAdam place with his
ears pinned and his neck stretched, his powerful body rolling beneath
J.D.
He lost sight of the flames as the ground dipped and the trail bent
around a thick copse of tamarack. His brain raced, leaving the business
of staying astride to reflexes developed almost from infancy. He had to
formulate a strategy to fight the blaze, wondered how he would summon
help, wondered if Bryce would still want the place if it burned to the
ground.
Marilee stood in the corral, watching the flames lick high into the air.
She felt a certain solemnity for the ceremony and a tickle of giddy
excitement that stemmed from exhaustion and cognac. She had used the
liquor to help start the blaze, then stood back and took a swig in honor
of Lucy's last wishes. It went down like liquid gold, burned in her
belly, and spread its own fire through her, numbing the raw feelings and
lending a certain romantic glow to the proceedings. She tossed the
bottle into the blaze and saluted, then jumped back with a shriek as the
glass popped and the remaining alcohol went up in a hot burst.
Sheepishly she glanced at the Mr. Peanut tin, which stood on a gatepost
and oversaw the bonfire from a safe distance, top hat tilted to a jaunty
angle. Through the wavy haze of heat it appeared to be moving, wiggling
like a hula dancer, dancing in celebration.
Lucy would have approved of the festivities wholeheartedly. In fact,
Marilee had planned on her friend standing beside her for the ceremonial
burning of the business suits. The bonfire signaled her change of
direction as she stood at this crossroads of her life. In one direction
lay the life her family had herded her down, a straight and narrow path
paved in concrete and stripped of scenery, a toll road that took
something essential out of her at each gate. In the other direction lay
the great unknown, all the mysteries of life, all the possibilities her
soul had yearned for. It was bumpy and hilly and wound through uncharted
territory that may be a little scary but promised never to be dull. On
the road less traveled there were no expectations, no standards to fall
short of, no boundaries, no burdens - except her own hesitancy.
She imagined her faintheartedness vaporizing in the flames. The funeral
pyre of the pinstripes and peplums was a symbol of her decision. No one
wore panty hose on the road less traveled.
Mr. Peanut seemed to wink at her from the other side of the heat waves.
Suddenly, a horse burst from the wooded slope beyond the gate, huge and
red, ears pinned, eyes rolling, mouth opening wide as it abruptly
changed gears from a dead run to a sliding stop. The head came up and
the powerful haunches angled beneath him, scraping the dirt of the ranch
yard, stirring an enormous, billowing cloud of dust. Marilee watched,
mouth agape, as the rider stepped down while the horse was still in
motion. He hit the ground running, his hat flying back off his head.
Rafferty.
He barreled toward her, his face set in furious lines.
Barely slowing down, he grabbed up a bucket, dunked it in the water
trough outside the gate, and kept on running in a beeline for her pyre.
"No!" Marilee launched into action, lunging toward him, arms
outstretched to try to push the bucket aside.
They collided ten feet from the fire, Marilee bouncing off J.D. like a
rag doll that had been hurled at the side of a moving bus. Crying out,
she stumbled and went down on her hands and knees in the dirt, only able
to watch in horror as he attacked her tribute.
The water splashed into the center of the blaze, dousing the magnificent
flames like a blanket. Rafferty kicked the edges of it, scooping the
powdery dirt of the corral into it with his boots and with his hands,
suffocating the peripheral flames and sending up mushroom clouds of
black smoke tinged with dust.
Marilee's heart sank with the dying flames. She sat back on her heels,
tears pooling in her eyes as he ran to the water tank and returned with
another sloshing bucket.
The fire hissed its last agonized breath as he doused it.
Her fire. The symbol of the death of her old life. Her tribute and send
off to her old friend. Ruined. Snuffed out, the way her old life had
tried to snuff out the fire inside her; snuffed out as Lucy had been
snuffed out. The anger and the frustration and the cognac swirled inside
her, rose up like a tide, and Marilee rose with it.
"You stupid son of a bitch!" she hollered, hurtling herself at him as
he backed away from the detritus of her grand gesture. "You stupid
shit-for-brains! That was mine!"
She hit him hard in the back, knocking him off balance, pummeling him
with her small fists. J.D. dropped the bucket and twisted around,
catching a knuckle in the mouth. Swearing, he stumbled sideways, trying
to fend off her blows with his hands and forearms. She came at him like
a wildcat, teeth bared, eyes narrowed, all hiss and claw, her tangled
hair tumbling into her face.
"Knock it off!" he bellowed, staggering back.
Marilee lunged at him again, half jumping on him, arms swinging wildly
as all rational thought burned away in the face of her temper. She
caught him leaning back, and they both tumbled into the dirt, coughing
and swearing at the dust that gagged and choked and blinded.
"That was mine!" she shouted again. "Mine!" Her first real act of
liberation, her homage to her friend, and he had ruined it. She lashed
out in retaliation in every way she could-hitting, kicking "Ouch!
You
bit me!" J.D. shouted, outraged, overwhelmed by the sheer force of her
fury.
His own anger kicked in as her kick came perilously close to ramming his
balls up to his tonsils. Grunting, he twisted and rolled, tumbling her
beneath him, pinning her with his weight. Gritting his teeth, he tried
to catch her fists as she rained blows on his head and shoulders,
grabbing one and then the other and pinning them to the ground beside
her head.
"Dammit, I said, quit!"
His voice boomed in her ears. Marilee strained and struggled in one
final burst, but to no avail. J.D. Rafferty outweighed her by eighty
pounds at least, every ounce of it muscle, and all of it pressed down on
her, stilling her against her will. They were nose to nose. His arms
pressed hers into the dust. An expanse of steel plate disguised as his
chest moved heavily against her breasts with every breath he sucked in.
His belly pressed against the most feminine part of her, the contact
unbearably intimate even through their clothes. His thighs, as heavy as
fallen logs, trapped hers and held her there.
Marilee glared up at him, too aware that she was powerless against him.
Powerless beneath him. The heat of his big body seared her through her
clothes in a way the fire hadn't managed. His breath came in ragged
pants, gusting against hers, his mouth no more than inches from hers.
Even through the static of her fury, the memory of his kiss came
back-carnal, possessive . . . insulting, insolent.
J.D. met the blue fire in her eyes and it triggered something primal in
him. Or maybe it was the way she felt beneath him. Or the memory of the
way she tasted in the moonlight. It didn't matter; his body responded
automatically, tightening, hardening. She shifted a little beneath him
and the feel of her sex against his belly damn near sent him over the
edge.
Damnation, he had gone too long without.
"You have a real way about you, Rafferty," she snarled. "Where'd you go
to charm school - the World Wrestling Federation?"
A growl was the only reply he gave her as he shoved himself to his feet.
Marilee scrambled up, trying to shake the dirt out of her clothes. It
had gone up her blouse and down the back of her jeans, working its way
into private cracks and crevices. It was in her hair and in her teeth.
And she had Rafferty to thank. Overgrown, macho bonehead.
"What the hell did you think you were doing?" J.D. demanded, swinging an
arm in the direction of the charred remains of her fire.
"None of your damn business."
She stalked past him, feeling the need to put herself between him and
the mess. The ceremony had been personal. She hadn't planned on
witnesses or conscientious objectors. The idea of Rafferty probing into
it made her feel exposed, vulnerable. Vulnerable didn't seem a very
smart thing to be around a man like him. He was too tough, too forceful
to show much in the way of understanding or compassion. She had seen
that firsthand.
Of course, it was impossible to hide the evidence. It spread out behind
her, a black, smoldering, oozing stain in the middle of the corral.
She
couldn't hope to keep him from it.
He walked around to the other side,
scowling down into the ashes.
"What the hell-?"
With the toe of his boot he dragged a magenta gabardine sleeve from the
cinders. He picked it up gingerly by the unburned end and dangled it
down, grimacing as if there were still an arm inside it.
"It was a suit, okay?" Marilee snapped, snatching it from him and
tossing it back into the embers.
"You were burning clothes?" His gaze traveled down her with undisguised
skepticism, taking in her old jeans and the baggy purple oxford
button-down she wore open over an old Stanford T-shirt.
Marilee ground her teeth. "I was cremating my past. It was symbolic."
He stared at her as if she had just claimed to be from the moon.
"Men. You wouldn't know symbolism if you sat in it. I'm at a life
crossroads. I needed to make a grand gesture."
"Yeah, well," he drawled, "burning half of Montana to the ground would
have been a gesture."
"I didn't burn anything that wasn't mine."
"What if the barn had caught fire?
Or the house? Or-"
"What's it to you?" Marilee challenged, sticking her chin out as
she glared up at him. "They're mine too, so-"
"They're what?" J.D. felt as if he'd just run blind into a brick wall.
He actually fell back a step from the force of the mental blow.
A relapse of guilt deflated Marilee's truculence. She felt unworthy,
undeserving. She couldn't remember the last time she had called Lucy
just to shoot the bull. She seemed to shrink as the fight went out of
her on a sigh.
Raking back a handful of hair, she looked away from Rafferty toward the
beautiful log house.
"It's
mine," she said quietly. "Lucy left it to me."
J.D. watched her carefully as he tried to digest the information. He