Authors: Tami Hoag
Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Women Sleuths, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Crime, #Suspense, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Crime Fiction
any use to her. J.D. himself didn't come, he didn't call. Nor did she go
to him. As much as she ached to see him, to touch him, to have him hold
her, she wasn't so sure they weren't better off apart. She had a new
life to begin. J.D. had an old way of life that was shifting and
changing, leaving him on uncertain ground. It was probably for the best
that they let lie what had tried to take root between them. Or so she
told herself.
Maybe in time . . . or not. She had to keep reminding herself that J.D.
Rafferty was not the reason she had come to Montana in the first place.
She had come for a break. To clear her mind. To get in touch with her
soul. She intended to do just that. Permanently. There would be no going
back to California. There would be no more living in limbo at the Moose.
She felt as if the Marilee Jennings who had first piled her business
suits in the back of her Honda and set out from Sacramento had ceased to
exist. The false shell of that woman had been shed and the real Marilee
was just beginning to emerge. What a wonderful feeling that was.
A little frightening, a little painful, but so right.
Kevin kissed her cheek and gave her right hand a squeeze. "Promise me
you'll come to dinner Wednesday."
"Scout's honor."
She climbed into the passenger seat in the front of the van and Spike
promptly launched himself into her lap and propped his feet on the
dashboard, ready for adventure.
"You're certain you can manage-" Drew began as he buckled himself into
the driver's seat.
"Yes, Drew," Marilee said in a tone that was both patient and
patronizing as if she were answering a two-year-old.
"I manage very well with one arm. juggling is a trick, but the
day-to-day stuff?
No sweat."
He frowned and made a humming noise, as if his brain were stuck in
neutral.
They made their way through town at a leisurely pace.
The usual wave of summer tourists had swelled with the ranks of the
morbidly curious who had seen the town spot lighted on national network
news. The sidewalks were busy. All parking spaces were full. The traffic
on Main Street was enough to drive the locals to alternate routes.
The ranch dogs stayed in the backs of their pickups, guarding their
territory and leaving the sidewalks to the strangers.
The businesses were prospering. Still, Marilee couldn't help but wonder
what J.D. would make of it. She could almost hear his growl of disdain
as they passed the Feed and Read, where tourists were emerging licking
stick candy and carrying an odd assortment of souvenirs, seed packets and
bottles of horse liniment and stacks of western novels and cookbooks
from the Lutheran church ladies' auxiliary. Outsiders. Outsiders were
becoming the life's blood of his hometown, with or without the
permission of J.D. Rafferty. The town would change or the town would
die, and Rafferty would stay on his mountain until God or the bankers
drove him down.
Stubborn. Unyielding. Uncompromising. Those weren't supposed to be
compliments, but she could imagine the hard gleam of pride in his
granite-gray eyes when those words were applied to him.
In front of the courthouse Colleen Bentsen had herself an audience as
she worked on her pile of twisted metal. M.E. Fralick was giving a
one-woman performance of Evita under the shade of the bandshell. Her
rendition of "Don't Cry for Me, Argentina" carried across the park to
clash with strains of Joe Diffie coming from a boom box.
They drove out the ridge road past the Paradise Motel in silence. Since
the incident on the mountain, Drew had had little to say about the
revelation of Bryce's private game reserve. He had kept their
conversations focused on Marilee, fussing over her well-being and her
state of mind.
An obvious diversion, but she had allowed it, too tired and too fresh
from the ordeal to want to talk about it any more than she had to. The
questions came to mind now, but she didn't ask them. She just sat there,
scratching Spike's ears.
Drew glanced at her sideways, trying twice to find the right words.
Finally he just plunged in like a penitent in the confessional. "I knew
about Bryce's hunts. I pieced it all together from odd bits of
conversation I picked up, rumors, that sort of thing. Hints Lucy
dropped. She was a great one for leaving a trail of bread crumbs, then
standing back to watch who followed it and what they did. I didn't do a
bloody thing," he said, his voice sharp with self-loathing.
"Why?" Marilee asked evenly.
"Fear, I'm ashamed to say. At first there was the fear of what Bryce
might do to our business if we meddled in his. Then the fear that what
happened to Lucy might happen to anyone."
"That wasn't an unreasonable fear," she said, trying to convince herself
as much as Drew. She was disappointed in him. She felt let down,
betrayed.
"No, but somehow that doesn't make me feel any more a hero," he said.
"Perhaps if I'd spoken up earlier, you and Samantha would have been
spared your ordeal. Perhaps Lucy would still be alive."
"Sharon killed Lucy out of jealousy. She was after Sam for the same
reason. She didn't want another woman getting close to Bryce."
"Still, if Bryce's activities had been revealed sooner, she may never
have had the opportunity."
"There's no way of knowing that."
"No, and that's something that will haunt me the rest of my life," He
took his eyes off the road long enough to give her his most sincere look
of apology. "I'm so sorry, luv."
"This is what you and Kevin were fighting about, isn't it?" Marilee
said.
He sighed as he let off the gas to negotiate a curve.
"Yes. He wanted me to go to the sheriff. I refused. He accused me of
condoning what Bryce was doing. In a way, I suppose I was. But I was
also trying to keep my friends from getting hurt. Hear no evil, see no
evil, and all that."
"Will you work it out?"
"I don't know," he said softly, staring out at the road, then he shot
another glance across the cab at her. "Will you and I?"
Marilee said nothing for a moment, thinking about the value of
friendship and forgiveness. She had nearly lost her life, but Drew's
intent had been to save her.
"Let's not be sorry," she said quietly as they started up the
switchbacks. "Let's just start over. That's what I came here for."
Drew carried her bags in for her, then headed back to town.
Marilee
didn't invite him to stay.
After two weeks of media madness, she wanted
some time alone. Time apart from Drew to let the raw feelings fade
seemed a good idea as well. They could start over with their friendship
in a few days, start fresh.
The house was exactly as she had left it - half restored, half disaster
area. Marilee walked through, making a mental list of the things she
would do in the coming weeks, of the things she would change to make the
house her own. Everything that had been Lucy's would go. She couldn't
bear to look at a chair or a painting and wonder whose secrets had been
used to buy it. She would scavenge through antique shops and flea
markets for things of her own. The expensive artwork would go. She would
replace it with local folk art. She had already made arrangements for a
plumber and a carpenter to come out and repair the damages made by
Bryce's people during the search that had passed for vandalism. The cars
would be sold and the proceeds, along with the cash Lucy had left
behind, would go to pay the inheritance taxes.
When all was said and done, she would have an empty house and an empty
bank account, but her new life would not be tainted by the old.
In the great room her eyes landed on the Mr. Peanut tin on the mantel
above the fireplace. The peanut regarded her with a cynical, knowing
look, as if it had foreseen everything that had happened and was amused
with her response to the challenges. With a heavy heart she took it
down and packed it in a box.
"You're outta here, Luce," she whispered, blinking back tears.
With Spike scouting the way ahead of her, she walked out to the barn
with the box tucked under her bad arm and checked on Clyde. The mule was
unimpressed by her return and went on eating grass. The gash in his side
was healing nicely. The vet had told her he would be ready to ride
before she would be ready to ride him.
Spade in hand, she wandered out into the llama pasture. The llamas had
all gone down to the other side of creek to graze and to lie in the
shade of the cottonwood trees. Spike caught sight of them and sent up an
alarm that caused the whole herd to raise their heads. He charged toward
them, ready to do battle. Marilee called him back and explained to him
that the llamas were cool and he didn't need to worry about them. The
little dog cocked his head and listened to her with perked ears.
When the lecture was over, he picked a shady spot and curled up to watch
her dig a grave for Mr. Peanut.
The task was awkward and time-consuming because of her temporary
handicap, but Marilee dug steadily, pushing the spade into the ground
with her foot and levering it up with her good arm. The spot she had
chosen was far away from the house, on a little knoll of land that
overlooked the creek and was shaded by a clump of young aspen trees. An
exile of sorts, but a peaceful one.
She buried the box with the peanut tin inside and transplanted wild
bitteroot on the grave. When the task was finished, she stood back,
leaning on the spade, and stared down at the vibrant pink flowers.
Bright, pretty, tough with bitter roots. Like Lucy.
The flood of feelings that came with thoughts of her friend were a muddy
mix of loss and hurt and disappointment and gratitude. She longed to
grab her guitar and try to pick through the tangle with the divining rod
of her music. But she couldn't play with one hand, and so she packed the
feelings away in her heart to be sorted through another day when time
may have given her the gift of perspective.
Turning back toward the house, she looked up the mountain and wondered
if time had given J.D. any perspective.
She missed him. Damned ornery cowboy. She missed his toughness and the
tenderness beneath it. She missed his hard opinions and the
vulnerability behind them. She missed his arrogance and the rare
glimpses of humor that tempered it. She missed his touch. She missed his
kiss.
"So what are you gonna do about it, Marilee?" she asked out loud.
In her past life she would have done nothing but make excuses. They were
wrong for each other. It wasn't meant to be. Just this morning she had
tried to tell herself it was best to do nothing. To accept. To settle.
The hell it was.
"Come on, Spike," she said, starting back toward the ranch buildings.
"We need a plan."
J.D. slapped his catch rope against the leg of his chaps and shooed the
two calves that had wandered back toward their mamas. The youngsters
darted to the herd with their skinny tails lifted high. His horse fell
out of the canter and dropped to a walk.
He had come up the mountain with the herd three days after the "Incident
at Bald Knob," as the newspapers had labeled it, and stayed on. He
needed to spend some time with Del, to decide what to do about him.
Beyond that, he needed some time to decide what to do about himself.
A lot of things had turned around on him and shifted beneath him in the
past few weeks - perspectives, philosophies, long-held beliefs. He
needed some time to let it all settle into place.
He needed this - long days in the saddle, trailing after cows and calves,
days on the Mountainside and in the lush meadows with nothing but time