Authors: Tami Hoag
Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Women Sleuths, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Crime, #Suspense, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Crime Fiction
Bars. The thread that bound them as brothers had always been strained as
their parents had pulled them in opposite directions. What if it broke?
What would he feel?
Relief?
"He won't," Tucker said with more conviction than he felt. He stepped
back from the fence, spat, and wiped his chin on the sleeve of his
shirt. "He won't. He's a Rafferty.
"You oughta get some sleep, son," he ordered.
He moved off toward the house, his gait the pained shuffle of an old
cowboy. J.D. stayed at the fence, knowing he would feel more peace with
the horses than he would in his bed. In his bed his thoughts would drift
toward Marilee and dangerous longings for things he could never have.
He turned toward Bryce's place, imagining that he could catch snatches
of music on the wind. She was there tonight, drinking Bryce's champagne
and laughing at his jokes. She was one of them, which quite simply meant
she could never be anything more to him than temptation.
Too bad. On nights like this one it would have been nice to have someone
to rub his shoulders and share his concerns, warm his bed and ease his
needs. And the taste of Marilee Jennings lingered in his mouth, and the
feel of her lingered against him. On nights like this one, when dawn
seemed a long way off, temptation was damn hard to resist.
Will sat on the back steps of the little house he had once shared with
his wife. Ex-wife. Ex-wife. The word still pulsed in his brain. The moon
was up, shining down on the fenced backyard. Rascal had been busy
excavating.
The place looked like the site of a treasure hunt. The pup lay on the
steps beside him with his big head on his big clumsy paws, twitching as
he dreamed puppy dreams.
The house behind them was dark and empty. Sam had gone once. She'd
gotten a taste of life on Mount Olympus and abandoned it. Will wondered
if she would ever come
"What's she got to come back to, Willie-boy?" he asked, Jack Daniel's
turning his speech to a molasses drawl. The bottle stood between his
booted feet, empty.
He wasn't drunk. He couldn't seem to get drunk tonight.
The liquor couldn't penetrate the fear, it only slowed down time, an
ugly trick. He didn't want more time to think. His thoughts ran around
and around, like a pup chasing its tail.
He didn't want a wife. Marriage was a prison sentence.
He'd seen that growing up. His father had sentenced his mother to a life
she'd grown tired of, then held on to her anyway. Marriage was stupid.
He'd thought so all along.
People should be free to move in and out of relationships as the tides
of attraction dictated. No ties, no guilt, no hard feelings.
So why did you marry Sam in the first place, Willie boy?
And why did that word stab at his chest like a dagger?
Ex-wife. Ex-wife. Ex-wife.
And why did he sit there feeling so damn scared and so damn lonely when
the moon was bright and the night was fragrant with the perfume of other
women?
Because you love her, stupid.
"You screwed up again, Willie-boy," he whispered as two tears swam over
his lashes and streaked down his face.
Marilee woke in the Adirondack chair as the first hint of morning turned
the sky a pearly gray.
Every part of her hurt from sleeping out in the cool damp night in an
unnatural position. She struggled up out of the chair and slumped around
the deck like Quasimodo, trying to work the kinks out, snagging the feet
of her convenience store nylons on the wood planks of the deck.
Her head was pounding from the French cigarettes and from the dreams
that had wrecked what little sleep she'd gotten. The images had slammed
around inside her head, screaming to get out, never finding the door,
never lining up neatly the way she wanted them to so that she could make
sense of all the dark clues and sinister feelings.
She leaned against the back of the chair and groaned, bringing a fist up
to rub her eyes and push her hair back.
Still clutched in her fist was the letter Lucy had left behind for her.
Unable to face it before coffee, she tucked it under the base of the
dew-covered peanut tin and went inside.
While she heated water on the stove for instant caffeine, she went into
the powder room off the kitchen and went through an abbreviated version
of her usual morning routine, trying not to look at herself in the
mirror.
But like driving by a car wreck, morbid curiosity got the better of her
and she chanced a glance, gasping in horror at the reflection. Her eyes
were shot through with jagged bolts of red and underlined with raccoon
rings of mascara. Rummaging through the small medicine cabinet, she
found a bottle of Murine and a jar of petroleum jelly and did her best
to repair the damage.
In Lucy's bedroom, where the aftermath of the vandals had yet to be
cleared away, Marilee dug through the rubble for something fresh to
wear. The mattress had been torn off the bed and slit open. A table lamp
had apparently been hurled into the large beveled glass mirror that hung
above the dresser. Clothing spewed out of open dresser drawers and
trailed across the floor from the closet, blouses and dresses lying on
the carpet with sleeves bent at strange angles, looking like inanimate
casualties. The only piece of glass intact in the room was a goldfish
bowl on the nightstand that was half full of condom packets.
Marilee pretended there was no mess. She ignored the condoms and the
statement they made about Lucy's lifestyle and went in search of
something to wear, digging up clean underwear, jeans, a T-shirt from
Mazatlan, and a neon-orange sweatshirt with an enormous, raised hot pink
outline of a woman's lips slanting across the front.
Coffee in hand, she went back out to the deck and lit the last of the
Gauloises. As sweet smoke curled up from the end of it, she picked up
the letter and studied it again. We all have our calling in life. . . .
Mine was being a thorn in wealthy paws. . . . It got me where you are
today. Or did it get me where I am?
The lines had made no sense at all when she had first read the letter.
Now her attention horned in on two sentences: It got me where you are
today. Or did it get me where I am?
Where you are today - the ranch. Or did it get me where I am - dead.
Marilee bit her lip as she sifted through the possibilities, each one
uglier than the last. Her heart picked up a beat and then another.
Caffeine, she told herself. Nicotine. Or the chance that Lucy had
foreseen her own murder.
Murder. She couldn't think of the word without seeing blood, without
seeing the photos from Sheriff Quinn's file. Lucy's lifeless body lying
in the grass, a hole blown through her.
Lucy knew things she shouldn't have about people with power, people with
money. The summer she had been sleeping with judge Townsend, he had
brought her to Montana for a weekend. She told Marilee that was how she
found her little ranch. Her hideout.
Outlaws had hideouts. Outlaws got shot.
Dr. Sheffield claimed he hadn't seen her. What if he had?
What if Lucy
had known something she shouldn't have about him?
What if the tears
he'd spilled at the hearing hadn't been from abject grief, but abject
guilt?
She stared down at the peanut tin, acutely aware of the expensive log
house behind her and the priceless land that stretched out before her,
of the llamas and the Range Rover, the pricey clothes strewn across the
floor of the bedroom, and the lavish lifestyle.
Lucy knew things she shouldn't have known about people with money and
power. Lucy was dead.
Marilee folded the note and tapped it against her pursed lips. She had
to see where the shooting had happened, to see for herself if it could
have been an accident. And she had to talk to the man who had found the
body - Del Rafferty - J.D. or no J.D.
By noon Marilee and Clyde were headed up the mountain, map in hand, for
all the good it would do her. Sheriff Quinn had drawn it on the back of
an old Burger King wrapper, scrawling instructions such as "bear left at
the blue rock" and "head north at the dead cow." Marilee figured she
would be lucky if she didn't end up in Canada.
The sheriff's words regarding Del Rafferty had been less than
encouraging. "You won't find him unless he wants you to, which he won't.
He don't take to strangers."
Marilee tried not to dwell on J.D.'s claim that his uncle could shoot
the balls off a mouse at two hundred yards
The higher they climbed up the side of the mountain, the more nervous
she became. The terrain was rugged, the trail obscure. The scenery might
have taken her breath away if she hadn't been too preoccupied to notice
it. Fragrant, shaded pine forests gave way to beautiful meadows, which
gave way to more forest. All of it high up and up, hurling itself at the
huge Montana sky. All Marilee could think was that the Lucy she had
known would never have taken the time to bruise her butt in this
godforsaken saddle, riding a mule halfway up the side of a mountain.
Never - unless there was something major in it for her.
Maybe she had come to rendezvous with Sheffield for a liaison. But why
here, when there were a million easier private places to get to?
"Too bad you can't talk, Clyde," she said to the mule, stroking his
slick warm neck. "You could tell me exactly what happened. Maybe we
should get M.E. Fralick to help us. She could probably hang some
crystals on you and commune with you on a psychic plane."
Clyde glanced back at her, a cynical look in his eyes, long ears
wiggling as a deer fly buzzed around them.
They stood at the edge of a clearing, resting. Marilee had let the mule
take a drink from the stream they had pretty much followed up the
mountain. Now she let him bury his nose in the clover for a moment, the
reins sliding through her fingers. She longed to climb down and stretch
her legs, but she was already stiff and sore from her ride to the Stars
and Bars the day before, and she was afraid if she got off, she may not
be able to get back on.
Overhead, gray clouds were rumbling across the sky like bloated sponges,
filling up the blue bowl, shutting out the sun. Great. They were a
zillion miles from home, and now it was going to rain. Consulting the
map, she tried to discern where they were while ignoring her stomach's
growls at the aroma of cheeseburger that clung to the paper.
She was fairly confident about having passed the blue rock, but the dead
cow was another matter. They had come across a scattered pile of
bleached bones, but she wasn't exactly an expert on the skeletal remains
of farm animals.
"It might have been a cow," she muttered. "Or we might be totally lost."
Clyde's head came up suddenly and the mule jumped forward, gathering his
muscular body beneath him, ready to bolt and run. The map flew out of
Marilee's hands as she scrambled to keep her seat and haul in the reins,
and the rattling paper further served to frighten the mule, who leapt
ahead another ten feet. Across the clearing, a pair of whitetail deer
bolted in unison and glided away into the cover of the forest.
Marilee pulled the mule around in a galloping circle, her heart in her
throat, every muscle tensed. Stay on, stay on, stay on!
The words
chanted through her mind a hundred miles an hour as she fought for
control of her mount. If she fell and Clyde took off, it was a hell of a
long walk back. Of course, if she fell and broke her neck, she wouldn't
have to worry about walking.
The mule came in hand and stopped, his head still high, his body