Authors: Tami Hoag
Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Women Sleuths, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Crime, #Suspense, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Crime Fiction
think what Lucy must have done. Nothing, of course. She had gotten
someone else to do it for her.
Kendall Morton, hired hand from the Outer Limits.
She wanted to ask Sheriff Quinn a question or two about Morton. If they
were in California, she could have called any one of half a dozen
friends in law enforcement and had the guy checked out for wants and
warrants or a prior record. But this was not California.
A hired hand, she mused. A ranch in a place where land was worth its
weight in gold. A herd of exotic animals. A new Range Rover in the
garage sitting beside Lucy's red Miata. Where the hell had all the money
come from?
A windfall, Lucy had told her. An inheritance from some remote relative.
But who would have left her that kind of money when no one had cared
enough about her to rescue her from the endless string of foster homes
she had endured growing up?
The questions raised an uneasiness in her that itched beneath her skin.
Stupid, Marilee, it doesn't matter anymore. Lucy's gone. Her killer's
been punished.
Punished. She sniffed in disgust. A suspended sentence and
thousand-dollar fine. Life came cheap when you were a plastic surgeon
from Beverly Hills and had influential friends. She tried to picture the
man, tried to imagine him crying all through the brief court proceedings
that were mere stage dressing for a guilty plea. He hadn't meant to
shoot Lucy. He hadn't known Lucy was there.
He had walked away and left her to rot.
No matter how Marilee replayed it, she couldn't muster much compassion
for Sheffield. It always came down to the same conclusion. He had
behaved irresponsibly, cost a human life, and the consequences of his
actions hadn't even put a dent in his wallet. She knew damn well if the
shooter had been some out-of-work cowboy, he'd be whiling away his days
at the expense of the state for a year or better. Lady justice may have
been blind, but she could smell money a mile off, and her scales tipped
accordingly.
But what if Sheffield hadn't shot her after all?
Stopping at the corral, Marilee hooked a sneaker over the bottom rail
and lay her arms on one higher up, the beer cans dangling down. She
wished fervently for a cigarette, but denied herself the pleasure.
Earlier in the day she had actually stooped to searching beneath her car
seats for strays, coming up with three. Two remained in the breast
pocket of her jacket.
She had vowed to start a new life. No more dead-end career. No more
living in the shadow of her parents' expectations. No more meaningless
relationships. Throwing out her cigarettes had been symbolic. She had
taken up smoking in the first place to appease the tension and tedium of
her job. She had chucked the job, so she had chucked the cigarettes. New
Eden had sounded like the perfect place to start that new life. A
sabbatical in paradise. No smoking, no stress allowed.
But her head was pounding and her mood was low.
Her nerves were jangling like a wind chime in a cyclone.
She fingered the flap of the jacket pocket. Just one . . .
Rafferty chose that moment to make his appearance, riding down out of
the wooded cover of the hillside on his big sorrel horse. The brim of
his black hat shaded his eyes, but his mouth was set in a grim line and
he held himself in a way that suggested he hurt all over but would never
display the weakness of slouching. Somehow that touched Marilee, and she
did her best to shake it off. She had never had time for bone-headed
mates who set their pride ahead of their common sense.
There shouldn't have been anything appealing about this one.
"Fixing to set the place on fire again?" J.D. drawled, nodding toward
the pile of dead plants and splintered furniture that crowned the
charred remains of her business suits in the center of the corral.
Marilee gave him a look. "Yeah, I wanted the chance to have you tackle
me again. I've got three or four ribs you somehow neglected to crack
yesterday."
He swung off his horse, swallowing the groan that threatened. He'd been
in one saddle or another since dawn. There had been a time when his body
hadn't protested that kind of abuse, but that time had passed a couple
of birthdays back. He narrowed his eyes at the woman before him. "Way I
recall, you jumped me."
"Yeah, well, I hate to disappoint you, but don't expect it to happen
again tonight," she grumbled, rolling a shoulder. "I'm beat."
She looked more tousled than usual, her wild hair escaping the bonds of
a ponytail in rippling waves. She had a smudge of dirt on her chin and
her eyes seemed deeper and larger, dominating a face that had a delicate
and strained quality to it. Her jacket swallowed her up, making her seem
tiny and fragile, in need of a man's strength.
J.D.'s libido nominated him for the job, but he turned it down for the
moment, scowling.
"Yeah, I hear those vacations can be hell on a person," he said dryly.
"I stopped calling it a vacation when I found out my friend was dead,"
Marilee said sharply.
"And for you?"
"For your information, I've been working all day, trying to set the
house to rights. I'm sure that doesn't compare to punching out cows or
whatever it is you do with your time, but it's hard work to me."
He growled at her a little and started toward the barn. Instantly,
Marilee wanted him back - not that she wanted him personally, she
assured herself. She just wanted the company. She wasn't used to so much
solitude. Even a conversation with Rafferty seemed preferable to the
tangle of thoughts and feelings that had been tumbling around inside her
all day.
"Hey, wait," she ordered, skipping to catch up with him. "You want a
beer?"
"Why?" he asked, turning back toward her. "Trying to ply me with liquor
again, Marilee?"
He smiled that slow, sardonic smile, a predatory-male gleam in his eye.
Marilee's pulse rate rose in automatic response, picking up another beat
as he cupped her chin in his hand and brushed his thumb across her lower
lip.
"I already told you that wasn't necessary," he said, his low voice
abrading her nerve endings like sandpaper.
"Just say the word. I could stand to ride something softer than a horse
tonight."
He marveled a little at the truth of that. Coming down the mountain, he
hadn't been able to think of anything better than falling into bed and
easing into a coma. The sight of Marilee - mussed hair, dirt on her chin,
and all - had him thinking more along the lines of falling into bed and
easing into her. It didn't make sense, but then, it was sex; it didn't
have to make sense.
She took a half-step back and tried to look annoyed.
"In your dreams, Rafferty. I offered you a beer, not my body."
J.D. chuckled wickedly. He reached out and settled a hand at the juncture
of her neck and shoulder, his thumb dipping into the shallow V above her
collarbone. "Your pulse is racing, Marilee," he murmured. "You always
get this worked up over a can of Miller?"
"Only when I'm contemplating bashing it over the head of an obnoxious
man. Do you want the beer or not?"
His throat felt like a gravel pit, his mouth tasted of dust and horses.
"Yeah, I guess I'd better disarm you."
Marilee rolled her eyes and headed for an old wooden buggy seat that had
been converted into a bench and sat along the end of the barn. She
plunked herself down, tossed him his beer, and popped the top on her
own.
Rafferty eyed the spot beside her but chose to stand, propping himself
up against the weathered siding of the barn. He looked exhausted. His
shirt was sweat-stained and dirty, his jeans limp and creased. He had
obviously splashed water on his face before riding down; she could see
the line on his neck where clean left off and the dirt began. The shadow
on his lean cheeks told her it had been a while since he'd taken the
time to shave.
"Truce, okay?" she offered, raising her can in salute. "I don't think
either of us could survive a sparring match tonight."
He tipped his head a little in concession, popped the top on his beer,
and drank half of it in one long swallow.
Marilee's gaze caught on the way the muscles of his throat worked. A
shower of sparks shot through her.
"Hard day at the office?" she asked, more to distract herself than
anything.
He shrugged. "The usual."
"What's 'the usual'?"
"Finished rounding up the breeding herd for branding and vaccinations.
Colts needed riding. Bulls had to be moved."
Marilee had a feeling the jobs entailed a great deal more than the few
spare words he boiled them down to. He had a talent for understatement,
Rafferty did. His compromise she thought, leaving out all words that
didn't seem absolutely necessary in his conversation. The trait was at
once endearing and infuriating. She was used to the enlightened
professional men of the nineties who, once they had learned it was okay
to open up, never shut up. Brad had always been a virtual font of
information about himself, his feelings, his interests, his career.
"Branding like in the cowboy movies?
Rope 'em, throw 'em, stick a hot
iron on their sides?"
He straightened almost imperceptibly, his jaw hardening. "It's done for
a reason," he said tightly, offended by the suggestion that he would
unnecessarily harm an animal. "You a vegetarian or something?"
"No. Just curious. Believe me, I seldom discriminate against anything
edible - except liver. I don't like liver. And I won't eat anything
people claim 'tastes just like chicken. That almost always means its
some kind of animal you wouldn't eat if you knew what it was."
"Rattlesnake," J.D. said, one side of his mouth tugging into a reluctant
smile. "Tastes just like chicken."
She made a face and held her hands up to ward off the idea, shuddering
visibly inside her gigantic jacket. "No thanks. I learned all about the
food groups in the fourth grade. Mrs. Kaplan never said a word about a
daily requirement of reptiles."
He laughed, a sound that was rusty from disuse. Marilee rewarded him
with a smile. He eyed the empty place on the bench beside her, fighting
with himself. He didn't want to be amused by her or charmed by her. He
wanted to bed her. He wanted to buy her land. Those things were simple,
straightforward, safe. The other edged into dangerous territory. He
pushed himself away from the barn, telling himself to back off, but his
feet were rooted to the spot. "There's chores need doing."
"They'll still need doing in ten minutes. Cut yourself some slack,
Rafferty."
"Slackers don't last long in these parts." His gaze strayed to the log
house as he eased himself down onto the far side of the bench. Weary
disillusionment crept into his eyes. His broad shoulders sagged a little
in defeat. "Least they never used to."
"How long has your family been here?" Marilee asked quietly, mesmerized
by the emotions playing in his gray eyes. She would have bet a dollar he
would never give them voice, certainly not to her. All he ever wanted to
show her was sexual aggression or orneriness - traits that made him easy
to dislike . . . or should have. The idea of that macho attitude being a
shield covering something more complex, even vulnerable, struck her as
being as dangerous to her as the man himself, and yet she couldn't keep
herself from trying to peek around it.
"Four generations," he said, his pride an unmistakable undercurrent in
his low, soft voice. He still stared off toward the house, though she
had a feeling he wasn't seeing it. His profile was rugged and handsome
in the last umber light of day, the face of a man who lived a hard life