Authors: Tami Hoag
Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Women Sleuths, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Crime, #Suspense, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Crime Fiction
"I just came looking for cigarettes," Marilee mumbled, turning away from
the puddle of light around the table.
Someone handed her a pack of French Gauloises. Instead of shaking one
out, she took the whole thing, stumbled over a thanks, and ducked out
the door into the dimly lit hallway.
MacDonald Townsend was one of the most highly respected men on the bench
in northern California. Rumors already had him placed on a seat in
superior court.
He had the governor's ear, a wealthy wife, and, apparently, an appetite
for Colombian snow.
And for one long, hot summer, MacDonald Townsend had been Lucy's lover.
The questions loomed larger, boomed louder with every beat of her pulse
in her temples. She hurried down a maze of halls, finding an exterior
door just when she was sure she was hopelessly lost. Desperate for fresh
air, she let herself out and stood a moment to get her bearings.
She was downhill from the parking area, nearer to the stables than the
cars. Still trembling a little, her heart still pounding, she walked
down a paved, landscaped path toward the dark barnyard. The smell of
horse manure and pine trees seemed a big improvement over the stench of
greed and power that hovered like smog around Bryce's crowd.
she wandered down along the end of the long building where a big sliding
door had been left rolled back. She leaned a shoulder against it and
stared in at the row of box stalls. Music from the party drifted down
the hill, diluted enough to be pleasant. More comforting were the sounds
of the horses eating and stamping flies, but not even that could loosen
the tension in her nerves.
Christ, what a party. Lawyers trolling like sharks in a swimming pool. A
pillar of the bench snorting coke. She felt like Alice down the rabbit
hole on LSD. The sinister quality of it all crept over her flesh like a
thousand worms. It grew and pressed in on her until it felt as if it had
taken a solid form and stood staring out at her from the shadows of the
stable.
Marilee straightened away from the building, unable and unwilling to
stop herself from overreacting. All she wanted was away from this place.
Wonderland had offered her all the revelations she could stand for one
night.
She hurried up the path for the parking area, headed for her Honda,
never thinking the feel of eyes on her back was real.
Judge Townsend paced the elegant confines of Bryce's private lair. He
was fifty-two and favored Charlton Heston. Many said he was a man with a
brilliant future ahead of him. At the moment, that future was going up
in flames in his imagination. His nerves were strung tighter than piano
wire.
"Dammit, Bryce, how could you invite her here?
She could be another
Lucy or worse." He stopped his pacing at the window that overlooked the
valley and stared out into the darkness for a moment. His thin mouth
quivered. He brought a hand up and pressed it against his forehead as if
he were feeling for a fever. "Jesus, I don't believe this is happening
to me."
Bryce watched him from a casual perch on the edge of his desk. He held
his expression calm and vaguely amused, but inwardly he sneered at
Townsend. Spineless.
The man didn't have the nerve to play in the big leagues.
He was weak - weak of mind, weak of spirit. He constantly succumbed to
temptation - women, cocaine, money. He succumbed, he did not indulge. The
difference was huge. Bryce might have admired Townsend if he had plunged
himself into his vices with joy and verve. But MacDonald Townsend was
like a tightrope walker afraid of heights. Every time he slipped from
his lofty position, he screamed and sweated and soiled himself. Bryce
despised him and enjoyed pushing him, shaking the wire, luring him over
the edge.
"We don't know what Lucy might have told her," Townsend said. "We don't
know what evidence she might have left."
"We searched the house," Bryce said calmly. "There was no videotape.
Lucy was playing games with you, taking your money and laughing at you
behind your back."
"That bitch." His whole body was trembling now. He squeezed his hands
into fists at his sides. "I never should have touched her."
"No," Bryce commented mildly. He slid off the desk and sauntered to the
window with his hands steepled before him like a priest. Ignoring the
view, he turned toward Townsend, his pale eyes glowing with contempt.
"No, my friend, you should never have touched Lucy. You didn't have the
nerve to play her kind of games. You are, however,very fortunate to have
me to look out for your well-being."
"You'll take care of the Jennings woman?"
"I'm keeping an eye on her. I'll take care of everything. I always do."
Bryce started for the door, eager to rejoin the party.
Townsend was tedious. He wanted to turn his attention over to Samantha.
Her innocence was genuine, her beauty fresh. He wanted to stand beside
her and watch the wonder in her eyes as she took in the experience of
meeting famous people and living the good life for the first time.
The judge's voice bit into him as he reached the door.
"Bryce, do you know who killed Lucy?"
Bryce gave him a hooded look. "Of course. Sheffield. It was an accident.
Wasn't it?"
Marilee sat on the deck, curled up in an Adirondack chair, covered with
the serape from the sofa. Staring down at the moon-silvered creek, she
let her mind tumble and race. She smoked the expensive French cigarettes
one after another, not tasting them, just grateful for the nicotine. She
would quit - just not tonight. She would have that fresh start - if her old
life would ever give up and let go.
God, Townsend snorting coke, Lucas representing the man who shot Lucy.
All of them slithering around in Bryce's den of vipers. Watch yourself
with Bryce, luv. . . . Lucy enjoyed playing with snakes, but then, she
had fangs of her own. . . .
Snakes in the Garden of Eden. The image sent shivers crawling down her
spine.
"What the hell were you into, Lucy?" she whispered, staring through
tears at the Mr. Peanut tin she had brought out and set on the table.
In one hand she clutched the letter her friend had left behind. She
didn't try to read it. She only held it, as if it were a talisman, as if
merely touching it might give her the power to see into its author's
past. But all that came was a sense of dread and a sense of confusion,
and she didn't know if she wanted to try to reach past either of them.
What she wanted was someone to confide in, a shoulder to lean on. She
felt so alone. She had cut herself free of her family, free of everyone
she had known. Somehow it only made her feel worse to think that no one
from that life would have understood or helped her anyway.
She could hear her mother's voice ringing with disapproval. Well,
Marilee, what do you expect?
The people you run with. Honestly, it
isn't any wonder one of them was shot dead. If you'd listened to your
father and me and gone to law school . . . if you'd married that nice
Enright boy . . . if you were more like your sisters . . .
In the private theater of her mind she could see Lisbeth and Annaliese
sitting primly, their legs crossed, arms folded, smug spite shining in
their eyes. It was a cinch no one Lisbeth or Annaliese knew had ever
been shot or had an affair with a married district court judge or
screwed a top trial attorney on his desk while his client waited in the
anteroom. They wouldn't understand or offer support. She thought of Brad
and knew his biggest concern would have been the possibility of her
getting him an introduction to Ben Lucas.
She thought of the people she knew here. Drew would listen to her, but
what would she say?
All she had were fragments and hunches and bad
feelings. Then there was the ugly possibility that he would tell her
something she didn't want to hear. What she wanted most was a pair of
arms around her, reassurance, and the awareness of strength. Someone
well-grounded in sanity. Someone there to catch her. Someone to hang on
to.
J.D. Rafferty came to mind. She didn't want him to, but he came anyway,
which was just like him. What a joke that she would want to turn to him,
she thought, trying in vain to muster up a sense of humor. He didn't
even want her in the state.
He wanted her only in his bed.
J.D. stood at the rail of the corral and watched the horses by
moonlight. They ignored him now that his supply of butter mints had run
out. The little palomino mare turned and looked at him every once in a
while, curious about him, but the others all stood with their hind legs
cocked and their ears back, dozing. For the horses that had worked, the
day had been long and hard. They weren't interested in losing any sleep
over J.D.'s presence.
J.D. knew how they felt. Physically, he was beat, his body aching,
muscles protesting even necessary movement. Mentally, he felt as though
someone had taken a lead pipe after his brain. Spiritually, he had a big
old stone tied around his neck, and he was going under in deep, deep
water.
The sight of Will's wife with Bryce's crowd had scared the hell out of
him. He had been able to fool himself up to then, believing he could
thumb his nose at Evan Bryce, play his game, and beat him. But Bryce had
just been toying with him, amusing himself. Now he was upping the ante
and J.D. was playing with a busted hand.
If Samantha divorced Will - and God knew she had grounds for it - she could
drag him to court and sue him for his part of the Stars and Bars. If she
won, Bryce would be standing right there beside her, ready to stick his
foot in the door. And once Bryce got a toehold, that would be the end.
Four generations of Rafferty stewardship would be over, and J.D. would
be the one who let it happen. The burden of guilt, the shame, would be
his to bear. Beyond that, if he didn't have the Stars and Bars, he had
nothing at all.
He looked out over the horses to the hills and trees beyond, and felt as
bleak as a sun-parched bone.
He would have nothing.
He had no one.
He thought of Marilee and couldn't quite steel his heart against the
insidious desire to pull her close and just hold her.
"Fool."
"You were mighty hard on the boy today."
J.D. glanced over as Tucker hobbled up to the fence and hooked a boot
over the bottom rail. The old man held his glare, unblinking, then
turned and spat a stream Red Man into the dirt.
"He's not a boy. He's a man," J.D. said. "It's time he acted like one."
"He's going through hard times, J.D."
"Aren't we all?
It's a hard life."
"You don't make it any easier - on yourself or anyone else."
"I don't want to hear it, Tuck," J.D. said wearily.
Hanging his head, he looked down at the hands he dangled between the
bars of the fence. Workingman's hands, thick, tough, callused. "I'm
hanging on by the skin of my fingertips. Like those idiot rock climbers
who come out here on the weekends."
Tucker was silent, working his chaw, thinking. The pharmacist's palomino
mare wandered over and sniffed at him, rubbing her nose against his
beard stubble. He pushed her away with a gentle hand. "You're not the
only one hanging on, son. We're right there with you me, Chaske, Will."
"What if he just lets go, Tuck?" J.D. said, for the first time giving
voice to a fear that went deep and well beyond thoughts of the Stars and