Authors: Carla Neggers
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Romance, #Adult, #Suspense, #American Light Romantic Fiction, #Fiction - Romance, #Romance: Modern, #Ex-convicts, #revenge, #Romance - Suspense, #Separated people, #Romance - General
wanted to be more of an
über
-girl. She almost didn’t
make it as a police officer because of her size. People
liked to tell her she was cute. She didn’t have Susanna
Galway’s dramatic good looks.
“If you wanted a fresh start,” Susanna went on
tightly, “you wouldn’t be here in Boston, in my neigh-
borhood. That just doesn’t wash, Miss Parker.”
“I know.” She spoke quietly, respectfully, aware of
Jim Haviland and Davey Ahearn watching her, listen-
ing, ready to act if she did anything stupid. She had re-
hearsed this moment a thousand times in the past few
weeks. “I came up here because I wanted to make up
for any damage I’d done. I heard you’d left your hus-
band after I got arrested—”
“That had nothing to do with you,” Susanna said
stonily.
Alice wasn’t so sure about that, but she nodded any-
way. “I can see that now. I probably knew it even be-
fore I got here.”
“But you stayed.”
“Where else was I supposed to go? I’m saving for
Australia. Did Iris tell you that? I like her a lot, Mrs. Gal-
way. I’d never do anything to hurt her. I mean, if I were
up here to get revenge, I’ve had weeks.”
Susanna went slightly pale at Alice’s last words.
“Please believe me,” Alice said quietly, earnestly.
“It doesn’t matter what I believe or don’t believe.”
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89
Susanna stuffed her hands into her coat pockets, every-
thing about her rigid, serious, determined. And scared,
Alice thought. Susanna Galway wasn’t one who liked
admitting she was scared. “I don’t want you anywhere
near my grandmother or my daughters.”
Alice nodded. “All right. I understand.”
But her tone didn’t come out quite right, and she
could see that Susanna had read her words the way Alice
had really meant them—defiant and in-your-face de-
fensive. She didn’t have to stay away from anybody. She
was a free woman. She hadn’t threatened Iris or Mag-
gie and Ellen Galway. She hadn’t stalked them. She
hadn’t broken the law. Her presence in Susanna’s neigh-
borhood was provocative, yes. But it wasn’t illegal.
“Stay away from my family,” Susanna said.
Alice didn’t argue, although she couldn’t imagine not
seeing Iris again—at least to explain who she was, why
she’d lied to her. She didn’t want Iris to think badly of
her. She didn’t know why, but the old woman’s opinion
mattered to her.
Susanna swept out of the bar, and Alice looked up at
Jim Haviland, feeling her eyes fill with tears. “I suppose
you think I’m pretty awful.”
“I think you’re scaring the shit out of Susanna Gal-
way and used an innocent old woman—”
“I’d never hurt Iris. Never. I consider her a friend.”
But she could see she wasn’t getting anywhere with
him, and down the bar, Davey Ahearn looked ready to
take her out and shove her face into a snowbank. She
jumped off her stool and tossed money on the bar, next
to her barely touched bowl of chowder. She mostly
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Carla Neggers
choked down the clams, anyway. She couldn’t understand
why New Englanders had clam chowder contests. It
wasn’t even in the same universe as a good bowl of chili.
She sniffled, knowing she wasn’t eliciting an ounce
of sympathy from either man. “I’m a free woman,” she
said. “I can come and go as I please.”
“Then go,” Davey Ahearn said with an edge of sar-
casm. “Please.”
She did, grabbing her parka but not bothering to put
it on. One of them would call Jack Galway. Jim, Davey,
Susanna. Jack wouldn’t stand by while a woman he’d
put in prison, a corrupt fellow officer of the law, slipped
into the neighborhood where his wife and daughters
were living. It didn’t matter what was going on between
him and Susanna. He’d be on the next plane out of San
Antonio the minute he found out.
Alice pushed out the door into the cold night. There
was a time when she’d wanted to stick it to Jack Gal-
way for what he’d done to her, when she’d have been
happy to think he was worried sick about his family be-
cause of her.
That wasn’t what this was about, she told herself. Re-
venge was pointless. This was about money for Aus-
tralia and her new beginning.
Not that it’d make any difference to Jack Galway,
Texas Ranger, but it did to her. She had a higher pur-
pose in mind.
If he was about to find out she was up here with his
wife and daughters, Alice couldn’t fool herself. There
were no two ways about it. The squeeze was on, and she
was running out of time.
��
Six
On the drive to the San Antonio airport, Sam Temple
tried to talk Jack into calling Susanna and telling her he
was on his way. “She’s the crack of dawn type,” Sam
said. “She’ll be up.”
Jack shook his head. “I’m not arguing with her.”
They were in Sam’s slick car, the beautiful early
morning doing nothing to improve either man’s mood.
“You don’t argue,” Sam said. “You say, ‘Suze, babe, I’m
coming to Boston whether you like it or not.’”
“That’d work,” Jack said dryly.
“I’m not talking about going Neanderthal on her.”
Sam was driving fast, as alert at six o’clock in the morn-
ing as any other time of the day or night. Nothing
seemed to affect him. “Women don’t like men popping
up out of nowhere.”
“Susanna’s my wife. I’ve known her since she was a
skinny college kid with a calculator brain.”
Sam grinned at him. He was dressed for work, wear-
ing a suit and the white cowboy hat that was customary
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among Texas Rangers. His Oakley sunglasses were not.
“It wasn’t her calculator brain that caught your attention.”
Jack said nothing. He’d been thinking about his wife
since he’d checked his voice mail an hour ago and got
her message. It had taken him exactly fifteen minutes to
book a flight to Boston, call Sam and pack his bag. He’d
been up early for his run, which meant he could catch one
of the first flights out of town and be in Massachusetts
before it would occur to Susanna that she’d pushed the
wrong buttons with him and he might just be on his way.
She knew what she was doing last night when she’d left
that message. Susanna always knew what she was doing.
“Jack? I thought I’d catch you.”
That was bullshit.
She’d deliberately called his cell phone number because
she knew it was midnight and he was home in bed, next
to their home phone.
“I wanted to let you know that
Alice Parker has turned up in Boston. Well, in Somer-
ville. She and Gran have become pretty good friends
over the past few weeks, which is unnerving, I know, but
I spoke to her tonight—Alice, I mean.”
This last comment had gone right up his spine, be-
cause it meant Susanna had jumped in and confronted
Alice Parker without first calling him and asking his ad-
vice on how to handle her. Or, more specifically, on
what in hell not to do.
“She’s changed her name to Audrey Melbourne. She
assured me she means us no harm. She came up here to
make amends and basically ended up sticking around
longer than she meant to. The situation’s under control.
I’m just telling you because I know you were concerned
about her. If you have any questions, call me. Bye.”
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93
If he had any questions. Hell, he had no questions at
all. He knew what he was going to do—fly to Boston
and throttle his wife. Then he’d see about Alice Parker,
aka Audrey Melbourne.
“You’re going unarmed?” Sam asked.
Jack nodded. He wasn’t on official business. This
was strictly personal. He had to follow Massachusetts
gun laws just like anyone else. He wasn’t a law en-
forcement officer anywhere but Texas.
“Not me,” Sam said. “I’d go armed to the teeth.”
“And you’d be fired.”
They arrived at the airport. Jack got his bag from the
back seat and started out, but Sam tried one more time.
“You want me to call her?”
“Sure. You call her.”
Sam grinned. “She can’t hurt me over the phone.”
But he added in a more serious tone, “I’ll keep an eye
on things down here, maybe take a ride out and see
what Beau McGarrity’s been up to.”
“Thanks.”
“Alice Parker isn’t in your wife’s neighborhood to
make amends or any damn thing. You know that, don’t
you, Jack?” Sam gripped the wheel with both hands.
“She thinks it’s your fault Beau’s still a free man. Su-
sanna has a point—if Alice planned to hurt any of them,
she’d have done it by now. She’s got something else up
her sleeve.”
Jack agreed. Alice had careened into committing a
felony and landing herself in prison for a year—he could
see her careening into revenge, getting in over her head
again, with the law, or, even worse, with Beau McGar-
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rity. She’d risked everything to nail McGarrity for mur-
der and lost. What was to stop her from trying again?
“I should have bought her a damn ticket to Australia the
day she was at my house. If I hit on anything up north—
anything at all—I’ll notify the local police and bring her
in. Keep me posted on what’s going on down here.”
“Will do.”
Jack climbed out and shut the door. His stomach
tightened at the thought of seeing Susanna again. None
of the intensity of his feelings for her had lessened in
twenty years, whether he was loving her or so mad at
her he couldn’t see straight—like now.
“Hey, Lieutenant.”
Sam Temple had gotten out of his car and was look-
ing out over the roof. Jack could feel the warm morn-
ing sun on his back. “What is it?”
Sam grinned. “They have telephones on planes now-
adays. You can still call her.”
Susanna treated herself to professionally brewed cof-
fee and a fresh almond biscotti at Fanueil Hall Market-
place. It was the sort of mid-February day that made
Bostonians rhapsodic—highs in the forties, bright sun,
melting snow. Even the potholes forming in the streets
didn’t sour their mood. As far as they were concerned,
there was a whiff of spring in the air. But Susanna had
lived in south Texas too long to consider forty-four de-
grees spring, especially when she knew it wouldn’t last.
There was already talk of more snow that weekend, but
not before she and the girls were on their way to the
mountains. Gran was leaning toward joining them. The
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95
revelation that her new friend was an ex-convict Su-
sanna’s husband had put in prison didn’t sit well with her.
“I feel like an old fool,” she’d told Susanna the pre-
vious night.
“Don’t, Gran. Alice has been here for weeks, and
none of us had any idea. Come up to the mountains with
us. The change of scenery will do us all some good.”
Iris admitted it probably would, but her ambivalence
about the trip surprised Susanna. She was beginning to
wonder if there was more to Gran’s past on Blackwater
Lake than she’d ever let on. Going back was obviously
harder for her than Susanna had anticipated, not the ad-
venture she’d wanted it to be.
She’d sell the cabin and never set foot near Black-
water Lake again if that was what Gran wanted.
Maggie and Ellen had taken the news about Alice in
stride, much more so than Susanna had. They had grown
up with a Texas Ranger as their father and were deter-
mined not to overreact now that his work had spilled
over into their lives.
When they found out their mother had left him a
message on his voice mail, they saw right through her.
Maggie had grinned. “Gee, Mom, why don’t you just
poke him with a sharp stick?”
Ellen was appalled. “I don’t know, Mom, you might
have really stepped in it this time. You haven’t seen Dad
in a while. You don’t know what he’s like these days.”
“Ellen’s right,” Maggie said. “He’s a lot edgier.”
But Susanna didn’t need her daughters telling her
what her husband was like. She knew. Edgier or not, he
wouldn’t take well to her midnight voice mail—he’d
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take even less well to Alice Parker cozying up to Gran
and the girls. He would see dire motives, conspiracies,
all the awful, deadly, nasty possibilities, because that
was his training and his nature.
No, she thought, because that was what circum-
stances would lead anyone to think. She was thinking
the same thing, and she hated it. If nothing else, it meant
that fleeing to Boston with her daughters hadn’t made
her safe—Alice Parker was
here.
She’d tossed and turned most of last night, consid-
ering the same motives, conspiracies and possibilities