Authors: Tami Hoag
Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Women Sleuths, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Crime, #Suspense, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Crime Fiction
above the peaks. Star light star bright. She stared up at the blue-white
diamond points and wished for just one thing, knowing in her heart of
hearts it wouldn't be coming tonight.
Will lay in the bed of Tucker's old truck, staring up at the stars
through a sheen that might have been tears or the blur of too much
booze. He was beyond knowing.
Too bad he wasn't beyond remembering. Images rolled across the back of
his mind like a silent movie: sleeping out in the pickup bed when he was
a kid, J.D. slipping into the cab and taking the truck out of gear to
roll down through the yard, scaring the piss out of him. The two of them
staying out all night then down in the high grass beyond the pens, where
you couldn't make out the yard light because of the barn, and you could
pretend you were anywhere.
Then suddenly he was fifteen, sleeping off a bender in the back of
Tucker's truck, staring up at the spinning sky and cursing God for
giving him a stubborn son of a bitch for a father and a brother who made
Tom Rafferty look soft by comparison. Wishing he could be free and at
the same time wishing he could be more like J.D. He wanted to be
everything to everybody. Instead, he was nothing.
Not good enough to be a Rafferty. Not tough enough to run the Stars and
Bars. His mother's son - a crime that made him suspect in the eyes of
every rancher in the valley, a title that made him a prince among the
crowd his mother ran with. Prince of the do-nothings.
Then a few more years spun past and he was lying in a the back of his
own truck with Sam tucked in beside him. A silly grin on his face. A
big warm feeling in the middle of his chest. Feeling edgy and wild. On
the brink of something new, something he couldn't name.
And then he was alone, parked on Third Avenue in front of the house the
Jerry Masons had vacated in the dead of night six months before on
account of a little discrepancy with jerry's creditors. Alone and drunk,
listening to the airy purr of a Mercedes engine as it idled in front of
the house he used to share with his ex-wife, ex-wife, ex-wife . . .
You're gonna be free now, Willie-boy.
Free of the ranch. Free of J.D. Free of Sam.
Free to be me.
The fear of that started in his belly and swallowed him whole. And the
stars blurred together as tears ran down his face.
Sharon turned her face up to a heaven as black as pitch and studded with
pinpoints of light. She tried to imagine the heat of all the stars
flowing into her and feeding her, recharging her, but their light was
cold and white, and she felt nothing but emptiness.
She lay on a chaise on the balcony outside the bedroom, naked and alone,
her long, angular body stretched out, silicone-enlarged breasts
thrusting toward the sky like pyramids. She knew she was fully visible
to the ranch hands who lived in an apartment above the horses in the
stable. She knew one was watching her now, but she didn't care. On
another night she might have performed for him. On another night she
might have invited him to join her as she had on other occasions because
he shared her taste for the rough stuff and because the idea of that
kind of sex with a man who was dirty and ugly seemed only fitting to
her. But tonight she had other things on her mind.
Bryce had yet to come up to bed. He had sequestered himself in the inner
sanctum of his study to think.
Not an uncommon occurrence. Bryce's mind was like a Swiss
watch - precision cogs and wheels running perfectly, ideas spinning
through the workings. His mind and an absence of conscience had made him
a wealthy man. She respected that. But Sharon suspected tonight he
wasn't thinking of business, he was thinking of Samantha Rafferty, and
the idea pierced her like a skewer.
The obsession was deepening, as it had with Lucy MacAdam. With Lucy the
attraction had been her style and cunning and her self-professed power
over men.
Theirs had been a clash of wills, a mating of cobras. Samantha
Rafferty's appeal was opposite in every way guileless, clueless, unsure.
Sharon closed her eyes, blocking out the sky, filling her head with the
vision of Bryce and the girl together. Tormenting herself with the
vision. Fear slithered through her, twining around her heart, squeezing
like a python.
Arousal curled through it like a barbed vine. The images tilted and
shifted. The partners changed. Other faces came into view, other
bodies - her own among the tangle of arms and legs, light skin and dark.
Memories of degradations past, the things she would do for Bryce, to
Bryce, to herself. All of it for him.
The girl would never be a strong enough partner for Bryce. Her innocence
would bore him eventually. His tastes would repulse her. Sharon tried to
soothe herself with that promise. She closed her eyes and thought of
Bryce, and satisfied herself with her own touch as she visualized him.
She loved him. He was the only person in the world she loved - herself
included. When the end came and she was thinking of him, there were
stars behind her eyelids and heat rushing from within.
But when she opened her eyes she was alone. The stars were a million
miles away.
J.D. sat on the porch with his legs hanging over the edge and his
narrowed gaze on the night sky. Clear sky. Good weather. They would have
a good day to move the cattle tomorrow - only they wouldn't be moving the
cattle tomorrow. They were short a hand.
He should have been glad Will was gone. No more screwups. No more
questions of loyalty or duty. No more wondering when he would pick up
and leave to go rodeo, or when he would gamble away two months' worth of
bank payments. No more reminder of the long, sad history of the Rafferty
boys. He should have been glad. Instead, there was a yawning emptiness
inside him.
He could have attributed it to a lot of things - the supper he had missed
while tramping along the banks of the Little Snake with Dan Quinn and
his deputies, the specter of an uncertain future that loomed over the
ranch, the dead ends he'd run down in his attempts to stop Bryce from
buying out the Flying K. But those answers were untrue and he'd never
been a liar. He prided himself on that and other things that no one
seemed to care about in the world beyond his own. Integrity.
Accountability. Courage to do the right things, the hard things.
What did it matter if it mattered only to him?
What was any of it worth if he was the last of his kind?
I feel sorry for you, Rafferty. You'll end up with this land and nothing
else.
Christ, he hated irony, and he hated being wrong. He had never wanted
Will to be a part of him or a part of this place. Now Will was gone. The
relationship they had bent and twisted and abused was finally broken.
And he cared. A lot.
He had never wanted a woman to matter to him. Then along came Marilee
from a world he distrusted and despised, as wrong for him as she could
be. And she mattered. Finding Miller Daggrepont's body had sent a jolt
of fear through him. Fear for Marilee.
Can't be afraid for somebody you don't care anything about, can you,
J.D?
Never been a liar. What a lie that was.
He tried to tell himself he hadn't been affected by her tears or her
words outside the lounge at the Mystic Moose. That it didn't matter that
he'd hurt her or that he'd been the biggest son of a bitch this side of
Evan Bryce. They weren't suited. He didn't need the kind of woman she
was. And what would she need with a man like him?
She was a bright,
modern woman on the brink of a rich new life. He was an antique. His
life was obsolete. He was tied to a tradition that was dragging him
under like an anchor in high water. Skilled in ways that didn't matter.
A self-trained isolationist who had honed loneliness to perfection and
called it inner peace.
Never been a liar.
The hell you say, J.D.
"A fine night."
Chaske appeared from nowhere and lowered his lean old body to sit down
the porch from J.D. By starlight he looked like a Native American
version of Willie Nelson the long braids, the headband, faded jeans, and
a Waylon Jennings T-shirt. J.D. glanced at him sideways.
"You gonna tell me I'm a jackass too?" he challenged. "Tucker beat you to it."
Chaske shrugged as if to say, You win some, you lose some, and dug the
makings of a cigarette out of his hip pocket. The thin paper glowed
blue-white against the dark.
"I don't need to hear it," J.D. said.
"Mmmm."
"Will is who he is. I am who I am. This day was bound to come."
"Mmmm." The old man opened a cotton pouch and stretched a line of
tobacco down the crease in the paper.
He tightened the pouch string, using his teeth, then rolled the paper
and licked the edge in a movement that had been perfected over a great
many years.
"Will's gone," J.D. said, essentially talking to himself.
"We'll just have to deal with that. I'll get on the phone tomorrow and
find us a hand. We can still have the cattle up the mountain by
Wednesday."
Chaske struck a match against the porch boards and cupped his hands
around his smoke, creating a glowing ball of warm light. He took his
time, concentrating on the moment, savoring that first lungful of smoke.
When he finally exhaled he said, "The cattle can wait. The grass will be
better in a week or two. Now that we got rain."
J.D. studied the weathered old face, an impassive face that gave nothing
away and at the same time hinted at many deeper truths than those on the
surface of his words.
"He won't be coming back, Chaske. Not this time."
Chaske grunted a little, still staring out at the night.
Pinching his little cigarette between his thumb and forefinger, he took
another long drag and held it deep. When he exhaled, the smell of
burning hemp sweetened the air.
"The cattle can wait. You got a lotta cattle. You got one brother." He
took another toke, inhaling until it looked as if he were pinching
nothing more than a real hot spark. He ground the butt out on the porch
floor and dropped it over the edge into the dirt. Slowly and gracefully,
he rose, stretching like a cat. "Gotta go. Got a date."
J.D. raised his brows. "It's after one in the morning."
"She's a night owl. A man has to appreciate each woman for her own
qualities. This one's got some pretty good qualities," he said nodding.
Willie Nelson as Chief Dan George. Wisdom in a Waylon Jennings T-shirt.
"That little blonde - bet she's got some good qualities too. She's got a
look about her. Maybe you oughta find out."
J.D. worked his jaw a little, chewing back the desire to tell Chaske to
mind his own business. The usual rules had never applied to Chaske. He
claimed his ties to the ancient mystics let him live on a different
plane. That or what he put in those little cigarettes.
"She's just passing through, Chaske. Anyway, I got no time. Someone's
gotta keep this place hanging together. Near as I can figure out, that's
the only reason I was hired," he said, wincing a little at the bitterness
that crept around the edges of his voice. "To keep the Rafferty name on the deed."
"Kinda hard to do if there's no Raffertys after you," he pointed out. He
turned his profile to J.D. once again and stared off across the ranch
yard and beyond, his gaze seeming to encompass the whole of Montana.
J.D.'s thoughts drifted to the hazy image of a darkhaired baby nursing
at his mother's plump breast. A son he had yet to sire and a woman he