Authors: Tami Hoag
Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Women Sleuths, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Crime, #Suspense, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Crime Fiction
she thought she would have given anything to sleep alone, in her own
bed, in her own house. Now she dreaded the idea. The bed was too empty.
The house was too quiet. Most nights she lay awake, staring in the dark
at the space beside her, where Will should have been. Tonight she would
lay awake and stare at Will's spot and wonder if the mystery bandit
might break in and attack her. And if he did, would Will even care when
he heard about it?
She had spent the night of the party in the guest room at Bryce's. Her
mind filled with the bright afterglow of excitement, sleep had been a
long time coming. She may have felt out of place during the evening, but
in the aftermath she relived every scene with enthusiasm, remembering
the people she had met and the conversations she had been a part of. It
was like a dream, like stepping into a whole other world the
celebrities, the beautiful clothes she had worn, the music, the
champagne, the pool glowing as darkness crept down the Mountainside.
A wry smile touched her mouth as she served a Falstaff and a Chivas to a
couple from Beverly Hills. A fairy tale.
Sam Rafferty as Cinderella with Evan Bryce as the fairy godfather. But
the clock had struck, the enchantment was over, and she was back
hustling for tips at the Moose, working the late shift until she could
go home to her dumpy little empty house to sleep alone.
The black mood swooped down on her like a vulture and dug its claws into
her stomach. Tears gathered behind her eyes and she blinked them back as
she made change for a fifty and gave service with a smile. Half an hour
to go, then she could cry all she wanted and there would be no one to
see her except Rascal.
When she turned to go back to the bar, Bryce caught her eye. He was at
his usual table, drinking Pellegrino with lime. The crowd around him was
small. Just Sharon, Ben Lucas, and another man she had seen briefly at
the party, a tall, stiff-looking man who might have been a television
news anchor or a leading man from the era of Kirk Douglas. Of the
foursome, only Bryce appeared to be having a good time. He flashed her a
grin and motioned for her.
"Hey there, beautiful, what time do you get off?"
Samantha gave him a crooked smile, not quite sure how she was supposed
to react. If she hadn't been stuck in New Eden, Montana, her whole life,
she might have come back with a witty remark, but she felt awkward
trying to pretend sophistication she didn't possess.
"They've kept you hopping tonight," he said. "I guess everyone is
charged up over that break-in we heard about."
"Yeah," she said, pulling her empty tray up in front of her, warming to
him. He went out of his way to include her, to make her feel more
important than she knew she was. She greedily soaked up his generosity
and tried not to worry about what the rest of his friends probably
thought about her.
"Did you hear whose room it was?" she asked, excited at the prospect of
sharing what little gossip she knew. "Marilee Jennings. She was at your party."
Ben Lucas raised his eyebrows and glanced across the table at the older
man - Townsend.
Bryce frowned and rubbed his chin. "Really?
That's terrible. Was she
hurt?"
"He hit her in the head. I heard she had a concussion, but she's not in
the hospital or anything. She was lucky."
He had a faraway look in his eyes, as if he were doing math in his head.
"Yes, I guess she was," he murmured.
"It's creepy," Samantha said, shivering a little, the fear showing
through. "That kind of thing doesn't happen here. People getting
attacked and robbed and stuff like that."
Bryce sharpened, his blue eyes narrowing. Concern creased his high
forehead as his brows pulled together.
"You're home alone. Will you be all right?"
"Sure," she said without much enthusiasm.
"No, no, no." He wagged his head. "I don't like that idea at all. Come
and stay at the ranch."
Samantha blinked at the offer and the temptation that hit hard on its
heels. A vision of the guest room played through her head like a
commercial for a luxury hotel.
"No, I couldn't," she said automatically.
"Of course you could. We'd be glad to have you, wouldn't we, Sharon?"
Samantha flicked a glance at the statuesque blonde.
Sharon didn't look glad to her. The smile that twisted the woman's thin
lips was the kind that usually comes as a reaction to sucking on
something unexpectedly bitter.
"No, thanks, really," Samantha said as her self-esteem sank. She
imagined she could hear the words behind Sharon Russell's flat
gaze - stupid little spick waitress.
"I'll be okay. I'm used to staying alone. Besides, I don't have anything
a thief would want."
"Maybe he wasn't a thief," Sharon pointed out calmly, running a finger
around the rim of her Margarita glass.
Samantha's eyes widened. Bryce shot his cousin a glower. "Way to go,
cuz, scare the poor girl to death."
Sharon licked the salt off her finger and shrugged, unrepentant. "Better
safe than sorry. A woman has to consider all the possibilities and act
accordingly. If you don't feel safe, Sam, by all means, come out to
Xanadu. You'll be safe with us."
Three tables over, a man cleared his throat noisily and raised an empty
glass when Samantha glanced his way.
She held up a hand to acknowledge him and turned back to Bryce. "I've
got to go. Thanks for the offer, but I'll be okay."
He reached up and gave her hand a squeeze, made eye contact, and gave
her a dose of sincere and fatherly concern.
"Think about it. We won't be leaving for a while yet."
He watched her walk away, her thick braid twitching across her slim back
as she went. Then he brought Drew Van Dellen's frown into focus at the
bar beyond.
"Bryce, we need to talk," MacDonald Townsend said in a harsh, low voice.
A dull throb started in behind Bryce's eyes. Townsend had been chanting
that phrase all evening. Bryce kept putting him off just to be perverse.
He was in no mood to listen to the judge's whining.
"In a minute, Townsend," he said irritably, his gaze never leaving Van
Dellen. Gracefully he pushed himself to his feet and sauntered away from
the table, smiling to himself as Townsend complained bitterly to Sharon
and Ben Lucas behind his back.
Drew set his pencil down atop the liquor inventory as Bryce approached
the bar. He didn't bother with a smile. "Mr. Bryce."
"Drew." Bryce flashed the Redford grin and dropped his elbows on the
bar. "I hear you had a little trouble last night."
"Nothing that will happen again if we can help it."
"How is Marilee?"
"Well enough, all things considered. She had a nasty scare."
"No sign of the culprit?"
"None."
"Hmm . . . Well, I imagine it was just a random burglary. Or someone got
wind of her inheritance and thought maybe she'd gotten something
valuable from our friend Lucy."
"Not the case," Drew said neutrally. "Not something small enough to keep
in her room, at any rate."
Bryce nodded as if he were conceding a point in a subtle debate. "One
could never tell with Lucy. She was full of surprises."
"People are. Not all of them pleasant." He cut a meaningful glance to
Bryce's table. "Take, for example, your friend the judge. In person he
doesn't seem quite the genial fellow the press would paint him."
"Yes, well, Townsend is under some personal strain these days," Bryce
said, smiling like a shark.
Drew arched a brow and looked supremely bored.
Bryce studied him intently for several moments, trying to read, trying
to gauge and calculate angles.
Drew went on, unperturbed by the scrutiny. "I wanted to have a word with
you about Samantha."
"Did you?"
The idea seemed to amuse him. Drew had done all he could do to keep his
expression bland. "Yes. She's very young, you know. Not terribly
sophisticated when it comes to the ways of the world outside Montana."
"And?" Bryce spread his hands and raised his eyebrows, feigning
ignorance. "Are you warning me off, Drew?" he asked with a chuckle.
"Merely pointing out that she's inexperienced. And married."
"You couldn't tell it by the way her husband treats her."
"They're having their problems."
"She deserves better," Bryce declared flatly. "She's a bright, lovely
girl. I'm just letting her have a taste, giving her a little fun, a
little attention."
And hoping to profit by it. Drew kept the opinion to himself. It would
do no good to get into a figurative shoving match. Bryce swung enough
weight to put a sizable dent in their business if he so chose, and
nothing would be accomplished other than boosting the man's ego another
notch toward the ionosphere.
"I just don't want to see her hurt, is all," he said diplomatically, his
gaze drifting to Samantha as she delivered a round to a table of
tourists from Florida. She smiled at them and listened thoughtfully as
they asked her a question about the history of the lodge. Pretty girl,
sweet girl, as unspoiled as the wilderness. Pity she had such poor luck
with men. Pity men had to be such bastards. The thought of her being
caught in a tug-of-war between Bryce and the Raffertys made his heart
ache. The knowledge that she wouldn't confide in him because of his own
orientation only added to the sadness and the sense of helplessness.
Bryce's eyes strayed to Samantha as well. Beautiful, exotic, innocent,
fresh, ripe to taste what the world could offer her. She was youth and
opportunity. With guidance and tutelage, her potential would have no
bounds. The thought was as seductive to him as it should have been to
her.
"I don't have any intention of hurting her," he murmured as plans
shifted and realigned in his head. "Get me a whiskey, will you, Drew?"
He took the drink back to the table, where Lucas was playing at
seduction games with Sharon, and Townsend sat stewing. Lucas was out of
his depth and didn't know it. Sharon's eyes gleamed with secret
amusement. Townsend finished off a Stolichnaya, his stare petulant as
Bryce sat back down into his chair at the head of the table.
"How much longer are you going to put me off?"
Bryce narrowed his eyes and made a pained face. "I'd say until you
became too annoying to stomach, but that moment is already a distant
memory."
Townsend ignored the insult. "Did you get the videotape?"
"No."
A fine sheen of sweat misted across the judge's face.
Even in the glow of firelight he looked abnormally pale, his skin
stretched tight against the bones of his face. His eyes had taken on a
haunted, paranoid quality. Bryce rubbed his chin and wondered just how
much coke his honor was doing these days. Too much, the fool. If the man
had ever possessed any nerve, it was gone now, burned away by excesses
his spineless conscience couldn't handle.
"Goddamn you, Bryce," he snarled. His hand was trembling as he curled it
tightly around his empty glass. "You never should have made it in the first
place!"
Bryce laid his elbows on the table and leaned forward, nonchalantly
scanning the room for curious onlookers.
Everyone was either engrossed in retelling a personal brush with crime
or in making a last trip to the bar.
Satisfied, he tilted his head in Townsend's direction, his lips