Authors: Tami Hoag
Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Women Sleuths, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Crime, #Suspense, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Crime Fiction
yourself. I know you value integrity and honesty and fair play, and I
know you think you violated your own code of honor. I know you're a
chauvinist and you'll probably never say the things a woman would like
to hear from you.
"I know exactly who you are, Rafferty. And I've
managed to fall in love with you anyway."
The word struck him like a ballpeen hammer between the eyes. Love. The
thing he had avoided as judiciously as outsiders. The emotion that had
run his father into an early grave. He had grown up believing it
couldn't be trusted. It would leave or turn on a man or swallow him
whole. He had never wanted it. Liar.
He had lain awake nights wanting it, aching for it, never ever naming
it. It scared the hell out of him. It scared the hell out of him to want
it now, to want it from this woman. She wasn't from his world, a world
that was disintegrating around him. He couldn't offer her anything but
debt and a hard life. That didn't seem like an enticement to make a
woman stay. He had already seen that it wouldn't make a woman happy. His
mind raced ahead to envision her dissatisfaction, then raced back to see
his father growing weak as Sondra drained all the pride out of him. He
had sworn he wouldn't go through that, not for anyone. He had
obligations and responsibilities. He had the land.
Martyr.
The words jabbed him like knives - love, liar, martyr poking at his
conscience and his temper. Christ, why couldn't he just be left alone?
Why couldn't the world outside his own just keep away?
And why did this
woman have to complicate something as simple as sex with emotions as
volatile as dynamite?
"I can see you're overjoyed," Marilee said, channeling her hurt into
sarcasm. "You look like you'd rather have jock itch. Thanks, Rafferty,
you're a real jerk. And I still love you - how's that for masochism?"
Disgusted, she turned and started for the truck. J.D. reached out and
caught her by her good shoulder. "Marilee, it couldn't work. Don't you
see that?"
"Why?" she challenged.
"We're too different. We don't want the same things-"
"How dare you presume to know what I want," she said angrily. "You don't
know anything. You don't know anything about what I want or who I am
because you're so damn busy trying to fit me into one of your little
pigeonholes - outsider, seductress, troublemaker. Well, here's a news
flash for you, Rafferty: I'm more than the sum of your stupid labels.
I'm a woman and I love you, and when you decide you can handle that, you
know where to find me."
Once again she started for the truck, her feet heavy, her heart
squeezing the life out of her pride.
J.D.'s voice stopped her. "You're staying?"
She looked back at him and sighed at the suspicion in his narrowed eyes.
"I'm staying. For good. Forever. I know I'm not from this place, but
that doesn't mean I can't belong here. You may not like that, but it's
how this land was settled. Those Raffertys who came here from Georgia
weren't natives either. They managed to fit in eventually. I will too,
on my own terms, in my own way."
She climbed into the cab of the truck and slammed the door just as
Tucker walked out of the cabin. The old cowboy looked from the woman to
J.D., spat a stream of Red Man into the dirt, and shook his head. He had
gladly joined in Marilee's conspiracy, but he had hoped for a better
outcome than this.
"They don't make steel any harder than your noggin," he muttered
irritably as he hobbled across the darkening yard.
J.D. scowled at him. "Stay out of it, Tuck."
"I'll not stay out of it," he snarled. "I stood back and watched your
daddy make some big mistakes that you and Will have paid for all your
lives. Damned if I'll do it again."
"I'm just avoiding the same mistake."
"No. Your daddy's mistake was looking at Sondra and seeing only what he
wanted to see, and what he wanted to see was good things. What you want
to see is trouble. Your daddy took a hard road because he loved foolishly.
You'd rather take the easy road and avoid it altogether."
J.D. gaped at him, his pride stinging at the accusation.
Tucker didn't bat an eye at his outrage. "You can love the land all you
want, J.D., and when you die, they'll bury you in it. But it won't give
you comfort and it won't give you children, and it won't stick by you
when you're being a mule-headed, mean-tempered son of a bitch. It can't
give you tenderness and it can't give you love, and I ought to know
because I've given my whole life to it and I don't have a damn thing to
show for it but rheumatism. I had hoped you might have more sense than
to do the same."
He turned on his heel and doddered off toward the pickup on his bandy
legs, muttering to himself every step of the way. He clambered into the
cab and fired the engine. J.D. turned back to his view and refused to
watch as they drove out of the yard.
His appetite had gone. Restless, he climbed back on Sarge and rode down
the trail to Bald Knob, where he sat alone and listened to the coyotes
sing as the moon came up behind him over the Absarokas.
He had kneeled on this ground and held Marilee, knowing that he loved
her, knowing that she might die in his arms. Now she offered him her
love and he pushed it away.
Because it was best. Because it was smartest.
Because it's easiest and you're a damn coward.
He used to think he knew who he was and what he stood for, what he
believed in and what he didn't. He used to pride himself on doing what
was right, not what was easiest.
Was it right to cloister himself on this mountain?
Was it easier to
endure the loneliness of his self-exile than risk the heart he had
guarded so jealously since boyhood?
He thought of Marilee, risking her life to find the truth because she
thought it was the right thing to do, standing up to him because she
thought he was wrong.
She'd had the courage to abandon the life she knew in order to reach for
her dreams. He didn't even have the guts to admit he had dreams.
But he did. When the nights were long and lonely and the days ran
together with their endless monotony of duty and labor. Deep, deep
inside, where no one could see them or touch them or break them. The
dreams had always been there, so secret, they were little more than
shadows, even to him. But he never reached for them or spoke of them or
thought of them in the light of day.
Now Marilee was holding one out to him. A dream.
A gift. Her heart. Her love. And he just stood back and waited for her
to snatch it away.
What do you have without her, J.D.?
The land.
He looked out across it, moon-silvered and cloaked in shadow, beautiful
and wild, rugged and fragile. His first love. His whole life.
His whole empty, lonely life.
The days found a pleasant, monotonous rhythm. Marilee watched the sunrise
and ate saltines to fend off nausea.
She worked on stripping the house down to its bare essentials and
scrubbing away all hints of its former owner. Afternoons were spent on
the deck, working on songs and soaking up the beauty of her
surroundings. She napped in the Adirondack chair and spent most evenings
at the Moose, singing in the lounge.
Once a week she spoke with either Sheriff Quinn or one of the attorneys
who were chomping at the bit to take Bryce to court. They couldn't stick
him with any thing related to Lucy's death, but they were eager to make
an example of him on the wildlife charges twenty-nine counts worth. Ben
Lucas was pushing for a plea bargain that involved fines and community
service.
The U.S. attorney was talking about bigger fines, probation time, and
forfeiture of the ranch. Bryce had moved back to his home in L.A. in a
show of disdain for the prosecuting attorneys. It was Marilee's fondest
wish that they throw him in prison for the rest of his unnatural life,
but she knew that would never happen. The wheels of justice seldom ran
over men like Evan Bryce.
A month had passed since she had challenged J.D. to come find her when
he was ready. He had yet to take her up on it. She wondered ten times a
day when and how she should tell him that while they had not managed to
make their relationship work, they had managed to make a baby. She put
it off, thinking that maybe tomorrow he would show up and tell her he
loved her.
Foolish hope, but it was better than no hope at all. It was better than
thinking about what would happen if he never came back. She would have
to go to him, because he had a right to know, but what transpired in her
imagination after she made the announcement was most often the fight of
the century. He would insist on "doing right by her" because that was
the way he thought, and she would tell him to go do the anatomically
impossible because she was not about to settle for a marriage based on
obligation.
"Here's another fine mess you've got yourself into, Marilee," she
muttered on a long, weary sigh. She rubbed a hand absently over her
tummy, a gesture that was fast becoming habit. The life inside her was
far too small to be felt, but just the knowledge that it was there made
her feel less alone. Often she would close her eyes and try to imagine
their child - a dark-haired little boy with his daddy's stubborn jaw, a
little girl with an unruly mop of hair. Then she would think of raising
that child alone and her heart would ache until she cried. And then she
would think of J.D., living his life of emotional celibacy, his life
pledged to the ranch, his heart pledged to no one because he was afraid
of having it broken.
Or so she thought. Romanticizing again, Marilee . . .
"Well, at least I'll get a song out of it," she murmured, and jotted
down two lines in her court reporter's notebook.
She sat in the Adirondack chair, staring out at the magnificent beauty
all around her and pretending to smoke with cut-off lengths of striped
plastic drinking straws. The motion was soothing. The deep
breathing relaxed her. The beauty of the place healed her and offered a
kind of nameless comfort that soothed her heart.
In the background, Mary-Chapin Carpenter sang softly through the
speakers of a boom box, a voice as familiar and low and smooth and smoky
as her own.
The mountains in the distance were deep blue beneath the sky. That big
Montana sky, as blue as cobalt in this late part of the day, streaked
with mare's-tail clouds. A gentle breeze swept the valley, swirling the
tassels of the beargrass and needlegrass and red Indian paintbrush.
The heads of the globe flowers along the creek bobbed and swayed.
Overhead, an eagle circled lazily for a long while. A pair of antelope
wandered out from behind a copse of aspen trees and came down to the
creek to drink, casting curious looks at the llamas down the way.
Marilee absorbed it all, her mind processing the images into words,
snatches of melodies coming to her on the wind. She wrote down desultory
lines in the notebook with a felt-tipped pen that leaked. The afternoon
slipped away with the slow descent of the sun. From time to time she
heard Spike barking, then he would come check on her as if to let her
know he had things under control. When he tired of his reconnaissance
missions, he curled up beneath her chair and went to sleep.
And so it was he missed his opportunity to prove himself as a watchdog,
not rousing until the heavy footfall of boots sounded on the side porch.
He darted out from under the chair, then threw his head back and barked
so hard, his front paws came up off the deck.
Rafferty stepped around the corner of the house, planted his hands at
the waist of his jeans, and scowled down at the terrier. "What the hell