Texas Lawman (16 page)

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Authors: Ginger Chambers

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BOOK: Texas Lawman
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morning and were still proving now—were willing to lay their lives on the line to protect her. And how was she repaying them? By harboring a suspected criminal. A man who, from the beginning, they’d warned her to stay away from.

A whisper of panic moved through her. What if Rio had made up the story? What if he truly was responsible for Crystal Hammond’s death? And now she’d involved Tate in what could easily prove to be a lie!

She jerked her hand to her mouth to keep from crying out.

Shannon, who’d continued to watch her, came over to brace her shoulders. “Whatever’s going on,” she said quietly, “I have to tell you, it’ll work out. I’m the all-time expert on that, remember? Things can look pretty bleak for a while” — she was obviously referring to the tragedy in her past, the plane crash she’d spent long months recovering from “–then when you least expect it, sometimes from a source you’d never ever expect, the bad is replaced by good. I love the life I have now with Rafe and the boys. I wouldn’t trade it for the world. And at one time I thought my life was over. I wanted it to be over.”

Jodie said huskily, “I’m not so sure this can work out. It’s all such a…” She shook her head, unable to go on.

“Just give it time,” Shannon urged.

Jodie nodded, but she knew that time was a commodity she didn’t have. If Tate’s search went past Wednesday, she’d have to admit everything—and then suffer the consequences.

 

TATE’S SENSE of urgency increased as the day wore on. His mother and Rose had received the same negative responses as Jodie. So far, no one they’d spoken to had hired a person’ fitting this Joe-Bob’s description in Briggs County. Their only hope, it seemed, would lie with the sheriffs of the other counties.

Tate pulled a couple of his deputies from their accustomed routes to patrol the public roads near the Parker Ranch. He wanted to be sure, in case Rio Walsh decided to leave whatever hiding place Jodie had devised for him and make a break for town or beyond, they’d catch him before he got very far. Tate also had asked Chief Lovell to help him keep an eye on the Hammonds. At last report they’d yet to leave the town limits, and Tate had given instructions that he be notified the second they did.

Their stubborn determination to talk to Jodie worried him. Would she be able to keep quiet about everything she knew? Or would that feisty redheaded Parker temper get the better of her and she’d tell them exactly what she thought—and in the process divulge information she could have received only from Rio? Then they’d’know, and press even harder.

She’d looked frightened this morning standing on the porch. His heart had twisted at the sight of her and he’d wanted to do something—anything—to take her fear away. Then again, maybe a healthy dose of fear was a good thing if it kept her on the ranch and kept her quiet if accosted.

Tate smiled weakly. Jodie Parker keeping quiet. That had the proverbial snowball’s chance in hell!

 

CHIEF/LOVELL called a cguple of hours later. thought you’d wanna know. They’re still at the Watering Hole, orderin’ beer alter beer. Jimmy says they’re holdin’ it pretty well, not stumblin’ around or causin’ any trouble. But if they get in that truck of theirs and try to drive off, I own ‘em! Not a doubt in the world they’re over the legal limit. You got a spot for ‘em to sleep it off, right? “

“You bet. I’ll tell the deputy on duty to fluff up a few pillows just in case.”

Chief Lovell hooted with laughter. “You do that!” Tate cleared the remaining administrative work from the day before by meeting With several citizens. Two were officials of his mother’s women’s club who were there to request a contingent of deputies be on hand during the fund-raising fair they were holding the following weekend. They’d used the county park for the past two summers, but this year they were worried about adequate protection.

“The world seems to have gone crazy lately,” club president Marybeth Hardy said. “Troublemakers everywhere. Even here! There are so many people we just don’t know anymore.”

“When I was a child we never had to worry about something terrible happening,” vice president Wanda Brinks, an energetic sixty-year-old like Marybeth, contributed. “It’s those drugs everybody’s putting up their noses or into their arms or swallowing like there’s no tomorrow. It makes them do crazy things. Decent people can hardly step out of their homes anymore!”

Tate listened patiently, then said, “Our drug problem’s pretty low. It’s around, but limited. If I believed

 

what the people on TV said about how awful everything is everywhere, I’d be afraid to come out of my house. ” The women tittered. ” So don’t worry. Have your fair. One’uniformed deputy will be plenty. You never had trouble in the past and you won’t this year, either. ” He shook each woman’s hand as he saw them out.

The next citizen was far harder to deal with. Harvey Stevens seemed to think that owning the town’s largest car dealership gave him special rights. “Dammit!” he exploded, pounding his fist into his hand. “It’s just not right! I pay my taxes—more than my share in fact. So when I need a policeman, I expect to find one, not have him off doing double duty to help the county! You have deputies. You have a budget. Use them! Stop poaching from Del Norte!”

Tate sighed inwardly. This wasn’t the first time the car dealer had come to complain. “The last time you were here, Mr. Stevens, I explained how our mutual-assistance pact works. Is there something about it you still don’t understand?”

“The whole damned thing actually!” Stevens shot back.

Tate launched into a replay of his previous explanation.

The car dealer listened, then at the end, after Tate had outlined all the advantages, he stubbornly maintained, “I still don’t see where it’s to my benefit.”

Tate’s temper snapped. “It benefits both the county and the town, Mr. Stevens. It’s not about poaching money or personnel. It’s about stopping crime while being chronically under funded and understaffed. My

 

deputies and I help Chief Love! l, and he and his cers help us. “

“There! See? That’s hat I’m talking about. whole sordid affair isn’t balanced. I’m sure you help much more often than Chief Lovell calls you.” “The jail is a county lockup.”

“Which I helped pay for with my county taxes!” Harvey Stevens was a stupid and argumentative man, who seemed to like nothing better than a good fight. Tate wished he could just deck him and get it over with. Instead, he dug deep inside himself for a wellspring of icy calm and said levelly, “I’ll tell you what, Mr. Stevens. I’m going to make you a promise. if we get a call that someone’s causing trouble out at your car lot and the town police need our help, we won’t respond. I’ll cite everything you told me just now. Then everyone can be happy. Does that sound good to you?”

The car dealer sputtered.

“In fact,” Tate continued, dragging out a sheet of paper and a pen. “Why don’t we formalize it? Your town tax money is to be used exclusively in town, and your county tax money in the county. It’s not to be co mingled Of course if the need arises at either your home or your business, you’re forfeiting your right to have the town police call the county for assistance. And you’ll in no way hold either agency responsible.”

He slid the paper and pen across the desk and dared the other man to use them.

Anger flashed in the car dealer’s eyes as he scrunched the paper into a tight ball and threw it into the wastepaper basket on his way out.

 

“Do I take it, then, you do want us to respond?” Tate asked as the door slammed shut.

Tate chuckled dryly, then indulged in a few moments of high uncharitable thought.

It was at times like this that the task-force job looked mighty appealing. He loved police work, not politics. Not dealing with ill-tempered boors who caused almost as much irritation with their complaints as the criminals they employed him to arrest.

He went home, changed out of his uniform, heated a frozen dinner and ate it watching a sitcom on TV—all the while trying to relax. But the tension he’d lived with for the past day and a half wouldn’t let him. He kept thinking of Jodie and the Hammonds—and what would happen to her if they ever learned she knew where Rio was.

He muttered a curse, collected his off-duty gun, clipped the short holster to the belt looped through his jeans and hid it under the cotton shirt he wore loose over a black T-shirt. Then he climbed into his own Ford sedan and headed for the Watering Hole on the outskirts of town.

The place was relatively quiet on Monday nights, as if trying to recover from the weekends, when cowboys from the surrounding ranches and workers from town converged to let off a little steam. Chief Lovell never let things get too far out of hand, though, and for the most part the participants respected his rules.

A juke box was playing an old Patsy Cline tune as Tate strode in through the old-fashioned swing doors. He was immediately hit by the scents of perspiration and stale beer.

 

Theionly lighting came from naked bulbs hanging here and there, bit it was enough for him to wealdy spot the Hammonds sittin at a table near the far end of the bar. A few other patrons were scattered about, and when one recognized him, he waved him over.

“Hey, Tate! Long time no see! C’monmlemme buy ya a beer!”

Tate slid into a chair with the best available view of the Hammonds and smiled at his table mate “It’s been a long time, Dale. What you been doin’ with yourself?.”

“Oh, this and that … this and that.”

Tate was on speaking terms with everyone in town—from oldest resident to freshest newcomer. He knew their names, where they worked, how many kids they had or didn’t have. Dale Travers was a hard-luck kind of guy he’d gone to high school with. Over the years he’d never seemed to get anything in his life together for long enough to make it count. Still, he had a good heart.

Tate spent the next hour nursing a lone beer and commiserating with Dale, while the Hammonds continued to drink steadily. From time to time other people joined Dale and him at their table, and from time to time Rufus Hammond looked over and frowned, as if their loud laughter annoyed him. But he didn’t recognize Tate. And why should he? Out of uniform Tare knew he looked very different.

He heard only bits and pieces of the Hammonds’ conversation, but it was enough to confirm what he’d suspected—they’d spent the better part of the day working themselves up into an even finer fury. Their

 

anger was now all-inclusive, aimed not only at Rio Walsh, but at the Parkers, himself and anyone in town who they thought had gotten in their way.

Only when’ they began to make threats did Tate decide to intervene. He got slowly to his feet and walked to their table.

Considering the number of empty bottles littering it, none of them appeared any worse for wear. They looked just as mean and just as determined as they had that morning.

“Whaddaya want?” Tom Hammond, the older son, snarled.

“I couldn’t help overhearing,” Tate said evenly. “And it seems to me that maybe you boys should hang it up for the night. Before some of these good o1’ boys behind me hear what you’re sayin’ and take exception. You’re way outta your territory, in case you’ve forgotten.”

Tom Hammond jerked to his feet and in the process knocked over his chair. “Just who the hell do you think you are, comin’ over here to tell us”

His words were cut off by his father’s sharp order.

“Right your chair and sit down, Tom!”

Tom stared at him.

Rufus Hammond hooked a foot around his son’s leg and swept it out from under him. Tom crashed to the floor, and as he struggled to fight his way back up, his father murmured to Tate, “Where do we know you from? You look familiar.”

“We met this morning. At the Parker Ranch. I’m the sheriff.”

 

A whisper of a smile touched Rufus’s mouth. “Yeah. That’s it, I remenber.”

Tom Hammond needechelp from his brother. Tate was fully aware of what each man was doing, where his hands were, what his eyes were Saying. “Like I said,” he repeated quietly. “I think you boys should call it a night.”

The younger son’s round face was flushed from alcohol and outrage. “No one tells us what to do!”

“And just in case you’re thinkin’ of driving, don’t!” Tare added. “Motel’s not that far from here and the walk’ Il do you good. Maybe it’ll help sober you up.”

“Like I said” — the younger son growled.

His father lifted a silencing hand. “You think you’re really something’, don’t you, Sheriff” he said to Tate. “When all you are is a…” He used a string of words that would have provoked a less disciplined man.

The other voices in the bar grew quiet as one by one the occupants realized what had been said and to whom. Their narrowed gazes moved from Tare to Ru-f-us and back to Tate.

Dale was instantly at Tate’s side. “Did he just say what I think he said?” he demanded, his whipcord body taut as he bounced on his toes, ready for battle. “Look-a-here, you! This is my friend.t And nobody talks to one ‘a my friends that way!”

Tate put a restraining arm across Dale’s midsection. “I’ll overlook what you said this time, Mr. Hammond. Takin’ into account the circumstances. Just remember what I said earlier. You mess with anybody in my county and you’re gonna Pay for it. You’re not in Colorado now. Sheriff Preston isn’t in charge.”

 

His over shirt moved during the restraining action and revealed that he was armed. A smile pulled at Rufus Hammond’s lips as he slowly got to his feet. Then without saying another word, he walked away, not seeming to care whether his sons came or not. Like trained dogs they quickly followed.

The music played on, a wailing voice lamenting the duplicity of a one-time lover.

Once the show was over, the other occupants of the dimly lit room went back to their conversations and their drinks.

“Way to go, Tare!” Dale cheered. “If you ever need help with those SOBs, you just let me know. I’ll be ready.”

Tate patted him on the back, told him to take care and followed the Hammonds outside.

 

!

CHAPTER ELEVEN

BY THE NEXT DAY waiting had become intolerable for Jodie. She had to know what was happening. But when she placed the call to the Briggs County Sheriff’s Department and it was answered by Tate’s mother, her first instinct was to hang up.

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