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the hot current racing through her blood.
Oh yeah. I’m in
trouble.
24
Dead Heat
His lips curved into a knowing smile.
Move Jenna. You're not naïve. You know damn well
where this is heading.
Rye dropped the pencil, reached over and traced her
mouth with his thumb. “I've wanted to do this again since
the day we left the hospital.”
She wrenched her gaze from him and backed away,
shaking her head. “I've been down that road. I'm not
interested in traveling it again.”
He tilted back in his chair and chuckled. “A trip down
the same road in a nicer vehicle makes all the difference.”
She tried to scowl, but laughed instead at the
absurdity of his statement. It was damn near impossible
to stay angry at this man. “Not interested, Cameron.
Even in a Mercedes.” Before he could make a comeback,
she changed the subject. “You need to fire Jamal.”
An astute businessman replaced the laid-back flirt.
He stiffened in the chair. “Why? He's the best groom in
this barn.”
“He won't let me near Tsunami. I wouldn't be
surprised if he sleeps in the damn stall.”
His brow wrinkled as he frowned. “I'll talk to him.
Jamal keeps to himself. Always has, although I thought
he and Dimitri were close.” He paused and picked up the
pencil. Tap, tap, tap. “Any other groom, I'd say fire him
yourself. No need to check with me. But Jamal's been
with Tsunami since he was a yearling. I'll talk to him
today. Let me know if he's still uncooperative tomorrow.”
“Fair enough.” Jenna reached over, grabbed the
pencil out of his fingers and snapped it in half. “That
tapping drives me crazy.”
Heavy silence filled the room. Their gazes locked.
The wanton in her ached to reach over, take his hand,
lead him to the small bedroom and strip off his clothes.
Beads of sweat trickled slowly between her breasts. She
was suffocating. “I've got to get back to...”
His gaze dropped to her breasts before returning to
her face. One finger caressed her cheek. “Jenna—”
A knock at the door and Sergeant Hills' booming
voice interrupted the moment. “Hello? Anyone here?”
“Back here,” Rye answered, his eyes still on Jenna.
Hills lumbered through the door. He studied both of
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Pam Champagne
them before doing a visual sweep of the room. “Never
been on the backside of a racetrack before.”
“Sit down.” Rye waved toward an empty chair. “I
doubt you're here for a tour.”
“I heard some disturbing news this morning.”
Panic welled in Jenna's throat. The cop's face was too
serious. She snuck a look at Rye. He leaned back in the
chair, his face a mask of serenity, waiting for the cop to
continue.
“The preliminary autopsy report came back on
Dimitri Manos.”
“And?” Rye prompted.
“He was dead long before someone hung him from the
ceiling of Ms. Green's tack room. Died from an overdose of
Ketamine.” Hills watched their reactions, like an eagle
would eye a dying fish flopping on the shore.
Jenna rubbed her forehead to ease the pain behind
her eyes.
Rye's voice came from far away. “Jenna?” He rose,
took her arm and pushed her into his chair. “Are you all
right?”
“Yes. Just a headache.” She raised her gaze and
looked at Hills. She leaned her head into the warmth of
Rye’s body behind her. His hands rested on her shoulders.
“Are either of you familiar with Ketamine?” Hills
asked.
“Of course,” Rye responded. “It's a horse tranquilizer.
And since we're on a racetrack full of horses...” he trailed
off. The Sergeant pulled out his ever ready notebook and
started writing. “Yeah, on the street it's known as Special
K or Vitamin K. Some people take it to get high.”
Rye's fingers dug into her shoulders, communicating
his anger. “Then they’re fools.”
“Dimitri was murdered?” Jenna asked.
Sergeant Hills gave a disgusted snort. “Unless he
injected the stuff into himself, then decided to make it
look like he’d hung himself.”
Jenna's temper spiked, along with the pain in her
head. “There's no need for sarcasm.”
The Sergeant rose and walked around the room. “Do
you by chance keep any of that tranquilizer around here?”
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Dead Heat
“No. It's dispensed by a veterinarian.”
“What's the name of your vet, Mr. Cameron?”
“Dr. Goodwin.” Each time he spoke, Rye's fingers
squeezed Jenna harder. Surely, she’d have bruises.
“And where can I find him? Does he have an office on
the track?”
“’He’ is a ‘she’. Valerie Goodwin. She makes rounds
every morning, goes from barn to barn.” Rye glanced at
the clock on the wall. “She'll probably be here within the
hour. You're welcome to wait in the other room. Jenna
and I have work to do.”
Rye took Jenna’s hand and walked toward the tack
room. Jenna had to run to keep up. “I'm taking Rising
Sun out to the track,” she whispered. Her eyes pleaded
with him to understand her need to be alone.
He inclined his head, his thoughts obviously
elsewhere. She grabbed the needed tack and almost ran
down the shed row.
Rising Sun spied the tack she carried and bobbed his
head up and down, whinnying his excitement. Once
saddled, Casey gave her a leg up. “A trainer who exercises
their own horses. I think that’s great.”
Jenna smiled at Casey’s compliment, but made no
comment.
The early morning frenzy had subsided, leaving the
track nearly deserted. In an hour it would close, and the
tractor crews would prepare the surface for the afternoon
races.
The wind whipping through her hair while she
galloped a horse always made life's troubles seem small.
She willed the wind to blow all her problems away. But
this ride didn't get Dimitri out of her head. Why did she
and Rye seem to be in the middle of whatever was
happening? Who'd want to kill Dimitri? And why hang
him where she'd be the one to find him? Even though Rye
disagreed, her gut said that his firing Dimitri had to be
part of the equation.
Could her old flame, Charles Kincaid, be involved?
He and Dimitri had been friends when she and Charles
were an item.
Christ. Her face grew hot, remembering how naïve
she'd been a year ago. She'd believed Charles had loved
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Pam Champagne
her. For six months she'd waltzed around in a daze. Until
the morning she'd stopped by his barn when he hadn't
been expecting her.
The grooms hanging out in the shed row told her he
was in the tack room — that he was busy. She'd laughed.
Charles would never be too busy for her. She'd opened the
door and walked in, a smile on her face. Oh, he'd been
busy for sure. Busy screwing a young hotwalker.
Good thing for him that her hurt had been greater
than her anger. Without a word, she'd bolted out the door.
Later that same night, Charles had stopped by her
apartment, demanding to know why she was pissed. It
hadn’t meant anything he’d said. The girl threw herself at
him, and he obliged. Jenna had told him to go screw
whoever he wanted. The relationship was over. Never
again would she wear blinders when it came to a man.
Nope. She wouldn't make that mistake again. With
anyone, including Rye Cameron. She loved the racetrack,
but not the lifestyles that prevailed. Too many boots
under the wrong beds. Infidelity was an accepted way of
life for many people in the world of racing.
The relationship with Charles hadn't been a total
loss. In the initial heat of their love affair, they'd gone to
the Keeneland Yearling Sales. Charles had basked in the
role of the suave trainer, and told her to pick out a long-
shot yearling she thought had potential.
Rising Sun had caught her eye, and Charles had
bought him for a mere seven thousand dollars. Every
horseman there had laughed. A large, gangly colt, Rising
Sun didn't have the breeding to amount to anything. Or
so they all said.
Two days later, on her birthday, a horse van pulled
up at her dad's barn. The driver unloaded Rising Sun
with a red ribbon around his neck, along with a note from
Charles. Happy Birthday, sweetheart. He's yours.
After the breakup she'd heard nothing from Charles
until a few months ago, right before her Dad’s death. He'd
stopped by the barn one morning and demanded she turn
Rising Sun over. She'd told him to suck it up and get lost.
The horse was hers.
A voice on the loud speaker announced the track
would close in five minutes. Jenna slowed Rising Sun to a
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Dead Heat
walk. With reluctance, she turned the horse towards the
barn, back to the real world.
Casey stood ready to grab the reins and Jenna
dismounted. “I'll cool him out.”
“Thanks, Casey. I'll take care of him. You have
enough to do.”
“I don't mind, Jenna. Honest. He's a beautiful horse,
and you being a trainer and all...well you shouldn't be
grooming horses.”
Jenna removed the bridle, and hid her face in Rising
Sun’s sweaty neck to hide her smile. “That's nice of you,
but...”
“Let the kid take the horse. You and I have to talk.”
The hair on Jenna's arms stood at attention. Charles.
Had her thoughts conjured his presence?
With deliberate motions she continued removing tack
from the horse. “We've said all that needs to be said.
Rising Sun's not for sale. And I'm sure as hell not giving
him away.”
She unhooked the saddle, pulled it off and hung it on
the rail. As she removed the bridle, Casey slipped the
halter over the horse's head, clipped the shank in place
and led him away.
Only after Casey had rounded the corner of the barn
did she give her full attention to Charles Kincaid, the
man she once thought to be the love of her life.
Some of her anger faded. He looked ill. The last time
she'd seen him, he'd been robust, full of energy. Today, his
eyes sunk into a thin, pale face. But nothing, not even
sickness, would get him what he wanted.
“Come for a ride with me. Please, Jenna. We have to
talk.”
“I have work to do. And I've told you before. We've
nothing to talk about.” She turned to walk away, but he
grabbed her arm, swinging her around to face him.
His eyes narrowed and his face was pinched in anger.
He spoke through clenched teeth. “You know what I want,
Jenna. I don't just want it. I need it.”
She jerked her arm away, and rested her hands on
her hips. “I've told you before, and I'm damn sick of
repeating it. The horse is legally mine. You gave him to
me. I have the papers.”
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Pam Champagne
He reached out and clutched a handful of her hair,
yanking her closer. “You don't understand...”
Disbelief that Charles would lay a hand on her dulled
the pain. Suddenly, she was free. Rye held Charles by his
jacket collar. “You heard the lady, Kincaid. Get lost.”
The fierce look on Rye's face, along with the nerve
pulsating next to his mouth, said he meant business. She
watched the interchange between the two men.
Charles stood his ground. “This is none of your
business, Cameron.”
“I'm making it my business. Get the hell away from
my barn and stop harassing my trainer.”
Charles pulled away from Rye's hold and
straightened. “I'm leaving. For now.” He cast a desperate
look in Jenna's direction. “You and I are going to talk
sooner or later. For everyone's sake, make it sooner.” He
spun on his heel and left.
Jenna focused on Rye. “You didn't need to ride to the
rescue. I could have handled the situation.”
“What's going on? I thought you broke it off with him
a long time ago.”
Jenna checked out the area to make sure no one was
listening. Jamal lounged in front of Tsunami's stall, his
arms hanging at sides, fists clenched, and a sullen
expression on his face. “Let's talk elsewhere.”
Jenna's long-legged stride brought her to the end of
the shed row a few steps ahead of Rye. Once inside, she
grabbed a broom and began sweeping the floor with a
vengeance.
“Put down the damn broom.”
She kept sweeping until he wrestled the broom away
and hung it on the wall.
He pulled over two five gallon pails and tipped them
upside down. “Sit.”
Jenna complied, refusing to look at him.
He tilted her chin, forcing her to look at him. “Come
clean. What's going on between you and Kincaid?”
She leaned forward, elbows on her knees. “Not that
it's any of your damn business, but nothing's going on.”
“What did he want?”
She took a deep breath and released it, blowing away
loose strands of her hair from her face. “Rising Sun.”
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Dead Heat
Rye's eyes narrowed. “Didn't he buy the horse for
you?” “He did. I have legal ownership papers, but several