Authors: Tami Hoag
Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Women Sleuths, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Crime, #Suspense, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Crime Fiction
Sis?"
"Not."
She seemed to take an inordinate interest in picking up doughnut crumbs
from her napkin with the tip of her finger. Something about the tension
around her mouth struck a warning bell. Her eyes had been red when she
had first turned around and looked at him out there on the deck, as if
she had been crying. Way to go, J.D., so smooth with the ladies. About
as smooth as the business end of a porcupine. Poor Marilee.
"You drew a tough one, sweetheart," he said softly, never thinking that
she may not understand rodeo jargon, the dialect of the cowboy.
"He's
married to the job, you know, to the land. I guess he figured that would
be safest. Didn't think the land could duck out on him. 'Course, we have
since found out that the land is just a pretty whore that goes to the highest
bidder. Ain't that a kick in the butt?"
"Do you care?"
"Not the way he does. The ranch is a lot of things to J.D. - mother,
lover, duty. For me it was the thing that tied my mama to a marriage she
didn't want. I never had much of a taste for duty."
"But you stay anyway. Why?"
Why?
That was a question he asked himself on a regular basis. Why not
just leave?
Why not just cut the ties and run free?
He never came up
with an answer. He never wanted to dig deep enough to find it. Too
afraid of what he might unearth. What a coward you are, Willieboy.
He didn't answer. Marilee didn't press. She of all people respected the
confusion that tangled around the human heart. Why had she gone to
school instead of to seek her fortune as a songwriter?
Why had she
stayed on the job when she hated it?
Why had she tried to sell herself
on Brad Enright when she didn't really love him?
Why couldn't life be sunny and simple?
She sighed and dusted the powdered sugar off her hands. "You need
stitches for that cut. Come on, cowboy," she said, pushing to her feet.
"I'm driving you in to see Dr. Charm."
MacDonald Townsend paced back and forth along the length of the picture
window in his study. The view out that window, a panorama of wild
Montana beauty that included a spectacular slice of snow-capped Irish
Peak, had cost him a considerable chunk of money. He didn't so much as
glance at it that morning. He was beyond admiring scenery. He was beyond
enjoying much of anything about his getaway cabin, two thousand square
feet of pine logs and thermal-pane windows and fieldstone fireplaces. On
the other side of his study door Bruno, his German shorthair, whined and
scratched at the woodwork. Townsend didn't hear it.
His life was going to hell. It was as simple as that. He paused beside
the heavy antique oak desk to light a cigarette, but his hands were
shaking too badly to accomplish the task and he gave it up, too wired to
try again. He knew what he needed, what his nerves were screaming for.
There was a stash in the upper right-hand drawer of the desk, but he
fought the need, desperate to break free of it. Sweat filmed his face.
His nose was running. He pulled a damp, wadded-up handkerchief out of
his hip pocket and wiped it across his upper lip, resuming his pacing.
His heart was racing like a rabbit's, something that seemed to be
happening more and more often. He didn't know if it was the cocaine or
the stress or both. They seemed to feed off each other, chasing around
and around in a vicious circle that was taking him closer and closer to
the point of no return.
He stopped and stared out the window, seeing nothing. How had he ever
come to this?
He'd had the world at his fingertips. His career had been
poised perfectly on the ladder that would eventually take him to the
Supreme Court. He was respected and admired. He had a wife who was
respected and admired. There hadn't been so much as a speck of lint on
his record.
Then he met Lucy MacAdam. He dated the start of his decline into this
hell in which he was living to the night they met, as if her appearance
had been a portent sent from the netherworld. As if she had been a
familiar of the devil sent to destroy him by leading him down the paths
of degradation.
He still remembered that first meeting as if it had happened last night.
He had seen her across the room at a party in the elegant home of Ben
Lucas. Her gaze hit him like a laser beam. Then that patented smile
canted the corners of her mouth, wry and knowing, as if she were fully
aware of her evil power over men and delighted in it. His skin had
tightened from the scalp down, tingling with raw sexual awareness. At
the time her hair had been nearly platinum blond, cut in a jaw-length
bob that perpetually looked as if a lover had just run his hands through
it. She wore a simple gold metallic knit dress that began in a snug
collar around her throat and hugged her figure like a glove, ending high
on her slender thighs.
She wore nothing beneath it. He had discovered that fact later in the
evening, when she had led him by the necktie into a little-used guest
bathroom.
At the time he had been, if not a happily married man, a contented one.
Irene, his wife of thirty years, had lost interest in sex. All her time
and energy was taken up with her causes. He remembered thinking it was a
relief. One less obligation to distract him from his career plans. He
had been sliding comfortably along on the track that would take him to
the superior court bench and onward.
Everything changed in a heartbeat. He was astonished, looking back on
it, that he could have been so easily tempted, that temptation would
take him so deep, that it all could happen so quickly.
Madness, that was what it was. It had infected him and swept through him
like a cancer. First it was Lucy, then the cocaine, the parties, the
forays into the world of Evan Bryce and the people who sought him out.
He had been so smug at first, flattered and full of himself. He had
believed he could handle it, that he could keep his newfound vices
separate from his public image. But the task had grown increasingly
difficult, until he felt as if he were being asked to juggle bowling
balls while balancing on one foot on the head of a pin. His control had
slipped bit by bit, and now his life was spiraling downward like a plane
with all engines smoking. He could almost hear the wind roaring in his
ears.
His need for cocaine was out of control. Between the drugs and the
blackmail, his finances were eroding at an alarming rate. Irene was
leaving him. God only knew what would happen when her attorney started
demanding money and property that had long since gone to fund his secret
life. Bryce had him under his thumb and there was a very incriminating
videotape floating around that would end his career at the very least if
it fell into the wrong hands.
"I have to get that tape," he muttered.
He could scarcely hear above the thundering of his pulse in his ears.
The trembling that had been contained to his hands quaked up his arms
and down through his body. He felt as if he might explode. Panic choked
him.
On the brink of tears, he flung himself into the leather upholstered
desk chair and reached for the handle of the drawer. His fingers curled
around it and tightened and tightened until his knuckles were the color
of bone.
He had to stop. He had to, or the madness would never end. During the
night he had promised himself he would quit. He would extend his
vacation into a six month leave of absence from the bench and clean up
his act. He would go to another state, where no one would know him, and
check himself into a clinic. There was a place in Minnesota he'd heard
about. Top-notch, discreet. He would go there, and when he came back he
would be a new man, his old self, back on the straight and narrow.
The plan brought with it a kind of euphoria, a high not unlike that he
got from the drugs. For a moment he saw the future through a watery
white light, like something inside a free-floating soap bubble. He would
quit the drugs, get the stress under control, distance himself from the
people who had dragged him down into this muck.
Then the phone to his left shrilled a high, birdlike call and the bubble
burst.
He grabbed the receiver, his heart rate spiking upward again, expecting
to hear Bryce on the other end. "Townsend."
"Judge Townsend." The voice was unfamiliar, male, ringing with a quality
of false joviality. "I was a friend of a friend of yours. Lucy MacAdam."
Townsend said nothing. The silence vibrated against his ears. A hundred
thoughts raced through his mind, none of them pleasant.
"Are you there?"
He tried to swallow the bile that.rose up the back of his throat. His
mouth was dry as chalk dust. "Y-yes. I'm here."
"I happen to know you and Lucy had a little thing going. Thought maybe
we could discuss it."
The tape. Jesus, he had the tape! He thought of denying the charge, but
what was the point?
His nerves couldn't take a cat-and-mouse game.
Better to get it over with. "What do you want?"
"Not over the phone. I prefer to do business in person."
"Where, then?"
"Do you like to fish, judge?"
"What?
What the hell-"
"Of course you do. You're an outdoors type, or you wouldn't have come
here. There's a great spot I just discovered over on Little Snake. Meet
me at the Mine Road turnoff on old county nine in an hour and I'll lead
the way. Know where that is?"
"I'll be there."
"Good. Oh, and, judge?
Better bring your wallet."
He fumbled to re-cradle the receiver, his attention on the pressure that
was building inside his head. Maybe he would just have an aneurism and
die and that would be the end of all his troubles. The pressure pounded
behind his eyes like a pair of fists.
Would this nightmare never end?
If he could get the tape back, he thought desperately.
He'd pay whatever he had to. He'd sell this place to raise the money as
long as he could be assured of never being bothered again. That would be
best anyway. Get rid of this place. That would be part of the process of
turning himself around. The situation wasn't beyond damage control yet.
He would sell this place, get himself straightened out, get Irene back
before the divorce proceedings revealed his ravaged finances.
Having a plan calmed him somewhat, but he was still trembling. He pulled
his handkerchief out and wiped his nose again. He had to give the
appearance of being in control when he met this new blackmailer. It
wouldn't be wise to show fear.
His fingers curled into the handle of the drawer again and pulled it
open. Just one more time . . .
Marilee went into the emergency room with Will to make sure he actually
got himself on the list of patients to be seen, then left him there with
a promise to come back in an hour. As she drove through town, she made a
pass around the square to take in the progress on the sculpture.
Colleen Bentsen was going at it with torch in hand and an iron mask over
her face. The sculpture was still little more than scrap metal. A knot
of New Eden housewives with babies in strollers stood frowning at the
model, turning their heads sideways and back in an attempt to get a
perspective that made sense. M.E. Fralick stood beside the pedestal,
swinging her long arms in exaggerated gestures as she tried to explain
the scope of the project.
At the Moose, tourists were trooping through the main lobby in their
pseudo-western wear, heading for breakfast before a day in the great
outdoors. Marilee went up to her rooms and pried herself out of Lucy's