Authors: Tami Hoag
Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Women Sleuths, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Crime, #Suspense, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Crime Fiction
There was the rattlesnake.
Of course, she knew the snake wasn't a real threat. It was in a cage.
Obviously, it was too large to crawl through the double layers of
chicken wire, or it would have done so. It couldn't actually bite her.
Unless the force of its striking body ripped the flimsy wire, in which
case it would probably land on her shoulder and bite her in the neck.
She swallowed hard and grimaced at the taste and grit of dust.
"Del Rafferty goes through that door every day and doesn't worry about
getting bit," she mumbled. "Of course, Del Rafferty is insane."
Her tongue stuck to the roof of her mouth. A roan gelding stuck his
muzzle in the water trough and splashed himself and Clyde on the other
side of the fence. Clyde cracked an eye open and gave the horse a dirty
look.
Marilee checked her watch again and tried to sigh, but her throat closed
up and stuck to itself like a wad of plastic wrap.
Mustering her nerve, she set off across the yard toward the cabin at a
brisk, no-nonsense pace. The rattlesnake lay in its cage like a coiled
length of hose. Its head came up when she was twenty feet away. Its
tongue flicked the air experimentally. Fifteen feet away and its early
warning system came on, the sound of the rattle skating over her skin
like skeletal fingers. Ten feet away from the cage, she dropped down on
her hands and knees, praying she was out of sight of the watching snake
and praying the door wouldn't be locked.
She scrambled across the packed dirt, her heart sounding like the
snake's rattle. Then her hand was turning the
knob.
The shot came as she pushed the door in, and she lunged instinctively
for the shelter of the cabin just as the bullet struck the snake box and
smashed into the side of the building. Its latch sheered off, the door
of the snake box and flopped down and the rattler dropped to the ground
six inches behind Marilee's right foot.
Marilee screamed and hurled herself forward into the main room of the
cabin, scuttling to get her feet under her. The snake collected itself
and followed her in, winding its way across the floor. Marilee stared at
it, her eyes burning from not blinking. Sweat beaded on her forehead,
ran into her eyebrows, and dripped down. She could stay in a crackerbox
cabin with a venomous snake or run outside and be shot by a madman.
Wonderful options.
"You couldn't just become a tax attorney, could you, Marilee?" she
muttered, backing toward the kitchen as the snake slithered its way
across the pine floor, displaying a body that had to be in excess of
four feet in length and as thick around as her forearm. "You've never
seen any tax attorneys scrambling to get away from rattlesnakes, have
you?
"Stupid question, Marilee. All the attorneys you know are snakes."
She saw too late that she had backed herself into a corner. There was no
escape from the small galley area without going over the snake that was
snuggling up to a pair of cowboy boots on a mat beside the stove.
Marilee pulled out a kitchen chair and stood on the seat, trying to
recall if any of her Montana studies had mentioned rattler's abilities
to scale chrome chair legs. Her legs were shaking visibly. As she stared
down at the snake, she could see her heart fluttering beneath her
lavender T-shirt. Her tongue felt like a dead gerbil in her mouth.
This wasn't going at all the way she had envisioned.
She had expected to approach Del Rafferty cautiously, beaming good
intentions and trustworthiness. She would open with an overture of
friendship and segway into an apology for intruding on his privacy. He
would sense her innate goodness and tell her everything.
But the man who stepped into the doorway of the bin didn't look ready to
confide in anyone. He held an ugly black rifle at the ready and wore a
black baseball cap backward on his head, presumably so the bill wouldn't
interfere with the scope when he was taking aim. His eyes were slits
beneath his heavy brow. His mouth pulled down at the corner, evilly down
on the side with the scar. Saliva leaked across his lower lip and ran in
a thin trail to the knot of flesh and down his jaw.
Marilee tried to put together a coherent sentence as she raised her
hands in surrender. They were shaking like a palsy victim's. "P-please
don't shoot."
"I don't want you here," Del growled. He squared his shoulders to her
and brought the rifle up. "You maybe fooled J.D. You don't fool me.
You're one of them blondes."
What was she supposed to say to that?
She couldn't deny being blonde.
"Y-yes, but I'm the good blonde," she improvised. "Remember?
I'm not
Lucy. I'm not the dead blonde."
He squinted at her until his eyes looked like pencil lines across his
face. "I know that," he grumbled defensively. "I don't want you in my
place. Nobody walks into my place."
"I'm sorry. My mother tried to raise me right, but I missed out on the
gene for etiquette. It probably skipped a generation with me. My
children will undoubtedly have impeccable manners - provided I live to
bear them," she added under her breath.
On the mat beside the stove, the rattlesnake had coiled itself and
reared up, drawing a head on Del. Its tail buzzed ominously. Its mouth
flashed pink as it hissed at him. Del flicked a glance at it, backed
across the small room to the hearth, and came back with the rifle
cradled in his right arm and a fire tongs in his left hand. He moved
close enough to entice the snake to strike, then stepped gingerly on its
head and took hold of it by the neck with the tongs. All this as if it
were the most ordinary of household chores.
Marilee shuddered as he lifted the writhing creature off the floor and
carried it to the door, where he dropped it into the woodbox outside and
flipped the lid down with the nose of the rifle barrel. She climbed down
off the chair, but kept her arms up.
Del swung the rifle toward her as he stepped back inside. "What do you
want?
What did you come here for?"
To taunt him, he thought. To seduce him, maybe, the way she had seduced
J.D. Then he would be under the spell too, and the ranch would be lost.
He would have to stay alert if he was to redeem himself. His fingers
flexed on the stock of the rifle.
Marilee's gaze darted from the business end of the rifle to his face.
The suspicion in his eyes boded ill. He wouldn't talk if he didn't trust
her. Trust did not appear imminent.
"I need to talk with you, Del," she said as calmly as she could. "I need
to talk to you about the tigers."
He jolted as if he had been hit with a cattle prod. The tigers. She knew
about the tigers. "Is this a trick?"
"No."
"Do you dance with the dog-boys?"
"No," she whispered, tears crowding her throat. "Did Lucy?
The dead
blonde-did she?"
Del didn't answer. His brain was cooking beneath the metal plate,
bubbling and throbbing. Throbbing so hard he thought it might pop his
eyeballs right out of his head.
He stared at the little blonde. Her eyes were deep-set and clear as
colored glass. She looked right at him. Most people didn't. Most people
looked at the deformed part of his face or looked past him as if he
didn't have a head at all.
"It's important, Del," she said softly. "I know you saw the tigers. I
know they're real."
Del just stared at her.
It's a trick. She'll put you under the spell too.
He didn't know what to do. He backed away a step, then turned to pace
the width of the cabin, the 700 pointed at the floor. He paced hard,
making military turns, as if the precise, purposeful motion would
somehow direct his thoughts into some kind of order. He couldn't trust
her. She was an outsider. She was a blonde, had come into his home
uninvited. Come to take what was left of his mind, no doubt. She would
lure him with talk of the tigers and pull him over the edge.
He couldn't allow that. He had to stop the blondes and make the dog-boys
go away. There couldn't be tigers on the mountain. It was up to him. He
could be a hero.
He mumbled some of this out loud, not aware that he was speaking, never
thinking that the woman could hear him.
"I saw the tiger too," she said. "I know they shot it. Bryce's people. I
think one of them might have shot Lucy too.
His eyes cut hard to her. He did not slow his pacing.
"She's the dead one. You're not the dead one; you're the talker. Stop
talking."
"But, Del, we need to talk. You need to tell me-"
"Stop talking!" he roared. He wheeled on her, bringing the rifle up, and
charged her, screaming at the top of his lungs. "Stop talking! Stop!
I
told you to stop!"
Marilee stumbled backward and crashed into the counter.
The back of her head smacked against a shelf, and three cans of Dr.
Pepper tumbled off, bouncing onto the floor.
There was nowhere to go. She was leaning back as far as she could, the
thin edge of the countertop biting into her back. The muzzle of Del
Rafferty's ugly black rifle bit into her right cheek in the hollow just
below the bone. At the other end of the gun, Del was trembling as if he
were standing on the epicenter of an earthquake. His eyes were wild,
the irises swirling like liquid pewter, the pupils expanding outward
like ink dropped into the mix. The muscles of his face pulled taut
against the bone. His mouth tore open as if the mutilated side had been
caught with an invisible fishhook.
The face of death. Somehow she had expected death to be calm and sane,
as if there were some logic to the scheme. She wondered if she would
feel the bullet. She wondered if she would see that same revelation that
had stricken MacDonald Townsend in the instant of his death. She didn't
want to find out. The will to live pumped inside her. Her mind spun like
the wheels of a Swiss watch, scanning for a plan, a way out.
Jesus, Marilee, if you survive this, J.D. will kill you.
"Don't do it, Del," she said softly. The charged air seemed to magnify
the sound a hundred times. He made an animal-like growl in his throat
and the muscles of his forearm contracted as he prepared to pull the
trigger.
Marilee fought the urge to close her eyes. Her lips barely moved. The
words were a breath between them. "A hero wouldn't."
Hero. The word pierced his pounding brain like a lance. He could be a
hero. Make the family proud. Redeem himself. If he pulled the trigger?
If he didn't?
The questions wrestled inside him, slamming against his
ribs, jostling his aching mind. His hands were shaking on the gun, the
palms sweating. He could end it and kill her. But that wouldn't be it.
The dead didn't go away. He knew. She would haunt him, and he would have
to pretend she didn't, or J.D. would be ashamed of him.
Marilee watched the battle wage within him, watched his brow tighten and
furrow, watched the moisture come up in his eyes and his mouth quiver.
It broke her heart. Even with his gun in her face, it broke her heart.
His mind was fractured. He wanted so badly to do the right thing, but he
didn't seem to know what the right thing was.
"You can be a hero, Del," she murmured, fighting her own tears. "Help
me, Del. J.D. will be so proud of you."
She was offering everything he wanted. Small things to most men, but
small things were all he dared ask for. To do the right thing. To make
J.D. proud. He didn't ask to be made whole. He didn't ask for the kind
of life other men had. Just to be a help and not a burden. To be a hero
to his family, not the world. It didn't seem too much to ask, but all
the prayers had gone unanswered.