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
think I have ten million?”
He gave her a sheepish smile. “It’s what everybody
says at Jimmy’s.”
She didn’t believe him.
“I don’t know what happened,” he said. “I had buck-
ets of money. Buckets. And people crawling all over me,
wanting to invest in anything I came up with. Now it’s
all disappeared.” He lowered his gaze to her, the edge
still there. “What would you do if you lost everything?”
“By ‘everything’ I assume you mean all my money.
Well, for starters I’d hope I wouldn’t alienate everyone
who cares about me. I’d look to the constants in my life
for emotional support—family, friends.” She thought of
Jack, who’d been there in the lean times when they were
first starting out, at her side when she delivered twin
babies—through everything she’d done since she was
nineteen years old. But she pushed the thought aside,
focusing instead on Destin. “You have to get a grip, Des-
tin. Money isn’t who I am. It’s not who you are.”
“Easy to say when you’re sitting at the end of the
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rainbow with your pot of gold. I’m in the red zone. I
liked me better when I had dough. Shit, I’m lucky they
haven’t come for the fillings in my teeth.”
Susanna had started to shiver from the cold. “Did you
break into Gran’s house last night?”
“Hell, no. Jesus—Susanna, you don’t think I—”
“You know Audrey Melbourne, the new woman
who’s been hanging around at Jim’s Place, don’t you?
Redhead, small, Texas accent.”
“Maybe I should go.”
She heard Davey Ahearn’s truck rattle into her drive-
way. Destin turned, going pale at the sight of Jack climb-
ing out. Susanna said, “Audrey is actually a former
police officer from south Texas named Alice Parker.
Jack investigated her for official misconduct, and she
ended up serving a year in prison. She got out on New
Year’s Eve.”
“I wouldn’t know anything about that.”
“That’s why Jack’s up here.” She tilted her head back,
feeling less anxious, either because her husband was
here or she had Destin on the defensive. Or both. “He
ran into an intruder at Gran’s last night. He’s not happy
about it.”
Destin licked his lips, glancing outside. “Holy shit,”
he said with a fake laugh, “he just gets bigger and
meaner looking, doesn’t he?” But his gaze shifted back
to Susanna, his blue eyes intense as he added in a low
voice, “Suze, you have to help me. This is my last shot.
I can’t—it’s only a hundred grand. I’ll never bother you
again. Promise.”
Jack walked into the mud room, and Destin flew
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around, grinning awkwardly. “Hey, there. Jack, right?
The Texas Ranger? I’m Destin Wright, a friend of your
wife’s. I’m up here doing some bobsledding, thought I’d
drop by and say hi.”
“You hiked in?” Jack asked, tight-lipped.
“Yeah, I went down the wrong driveway, decided I’d
just tromp along the lake. Wish I’d brought my snow-
shoes with me. The ones I have back home, I could
climb Everest in them.”
Jack unbuttoned the top button of his suede jacket.
“Do you want a ride back to your car?”
Destin quickly shook his head. “No, no, that’s okay.
I don’t want to interrupt your vacation. It’s nice out—
kind of cold, but that’s what we’re up here for, right?
The snow and the cold?” He grinned uneasily, taking a
step toward the door, which Jack was still blocking. He
looked back at Susanna. “I’ll see you around.”
Jack stepped out of the way, deliberately, and Des-
tin shot past him. Jack shut the door and turned to Su-
sanna. “You want to tell me about this guy?”
“He’s a pest.” She was shivering, her socks soaked,
her feet half-frozen. “He wants me to invest in a new
company he’s starting. I said no, and he thinks if he
keeps asking me, I’ll change my mind.”
“What about coming up here?”
“It’s vintage Destin. He has no sense of boundaries.”
Jack unbuttoned the last of his coat, and it fell open,
his broad chest reminding her of last night. But he was
still on Destin. “He’s broke?”
Susanna nodded. “He made a fortune in a dot-com
company he cooked up a few years ago, then lost it all.
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He’s even had his car repossessed. I’m not getting in-
volved. He’s a black hole. He has a huge sense of enti-
tlement—” She stopped, shaking her head. “He’s not
getting a dime out of me.”
But Jack was frowning at her, and suddenly he took
two long steps over to her and grabbed her by the waist
with both hands, lifting her off her feet.
“Jack? What are you doing?”
He sat her on the wooden bench in the middle of the
mud room. “Your lips are blue.” He squatted down in
front of her and pulled off her wet socks one at a time.
Then he took one foot in each of his hands and mas-
saged them, easing his thumbs over the sensitive skin
of her arches. He looked up at her, a spark in his dark
eyes. “You don’t want to get hypothermia.”
That was impossible now. “Jack…”
“This guy, Destin,” he said, caressing her ankles,
sending heat up through her calves, higher, deeper.
“How desperate is he?”
“As desperate as he thinks he is. Um, Jack…”
He smiled innocently, although he couldn’t quite
manage to make his eyes look even remotely innocent.
“What, Susanna?”
She loved him then. At that moment she wanted to
melt into him and stay with him forever. But there were
her secrets, her fears, her questions and the dangers that
came with loving a man like Jack Galway as much as
she did. He was hard, strong, protective, kind and com-
pletely relentless in everything he did.
“I should go in and change clothes,” she said quietly,
a little hoarse.
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“Do you want me to carry you over the puddles?”
She groaned, then laughed. “You don’t let up for a
second, do you?”
He eased to his feet. “Not my style.”
She jumped up, right into an icy blob of snow from
his boot. She managed to stifle a yell at the shock of the
cold water on her now warm feet and navigated the rest
of the pools, the clumps of unmelted snow, the wet
socks, the wet gloves. When she was at the kitchen, she
glanced back at the mess. “I’ll tell Maggie and Ellen to
get in here with the mop.”
But he said nothing, his jaw set hard, his body rigid,
and her own body responded almost automatically. Last
night hadn’t been enough, and not just for him.
She turned quickly, making a beeline for her bed-
room and warm, dry clothes.
��
Eleven
Jack dumped his winter gear on the kitchen table and
cut off the tags with his pocket knife. Maggie and Ellen
had finished mopping the mud room and joined Iris at
a card table in front of the fire to work on an old jigsaw
puzzle she’d found. He knew he was here for the dura-
tion today, but he had no intention of putting together
an English countryside castle. At least the lump on his
head had gone down.
He’d bought insulated wind pants, insulated boots,
insulated gloves and a knit hat the girls said was cool.
He figured he’d hang in with his jacket, socks and shirts
and didn’t need long underwear. How cold could it get?
He wasn’t sure how long he’d stay. Right now, through
the night at least—perhaps until he learned more about
this Destin Wright character.
A lot depended on Susanna.
He’d also bought snowshoes. Having learned from his
daughters’ machinations, he had opted for spring-loaded
bindings. They were more expensive, but he didn’t care.
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He’d put everything on his own damn card. By the
time he got to town, he was frustrated he was picking
out wind pants instead of finding out what Alice Parker
was up to, why she’d moved to Boston and befriended
his wife’s grandmother.
And he was pissed as hell at his wife and all her
millions.
Then he spotted Destin Wright in her damn cabin in
the woods, and all he could think about was making sure
no one touched her.
Hell of a thing, being married to Susanna. But even
after their months of living apart, he couldn’t imagine
life without her. If only roses and lavender sachets
would do the trick. He suspected, however, it was going
to take more—like confronting her about what she was
hiding from him.
Talking
to her. He’d let his work pre-
occupy him in the months before she’d left. He knew it.
Maggie and Ellen had a point about the fire wall he’d
put up between his home life and his work. It extended
to Susanna’s work, too.
He scooped up his snowshoes. “You girls want to go
out and help me break in my new snowshoes?”
They were unenthusiastic. “Do you hear the wind
howling?” Maggie asked, shuddering. “The wind chill
must be below zero.”
“But it’s a dry cold,” her great-grandmother said.
“It doesn’t penetrate into your bones the way a damp
cold does.”
Maggie sighed at her. “Frozen solid is frozen solid,
Gran. I don’t care if it’s a dry or damp cold.”
Ellen had about twenty puzzle pieces laid out on the
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palm of her hand and up her wrist. She was deep into her
puzzle-building, staring at a stretch of rose garden she
was putting together. “Maybe Mom will go with you.”
Jack doubted it. Susanna was still hiding in her bed-
room after her foot massage. Maybe she was dreading
the long hours of silence and darkness that lay ahead of
them. There was no television, no VCR, no computer,
no regular telephone, spotty cellular reception. Maggie
and Ellen each had a Walkman, and there was an old
radio on top of the refrigerator. There were no neigh-
bors. No city lights. With snow in the forecast, they
wouldn’t want to head into town and find a movie the-
ater or a restaurant.
If not for his presence, it’d be Susanna’s idea of
heaven. But he liked complicating her life. He needed
to complicate it more often, the way he had last night.
“We’re starting a Scrabble tournament after we put
in a few more pieces of this puzzle,” Maggie said. “Do
you want us to wait for you, Dad?”
Scrabble.
“No,” Jack said. “Don’t wait.”
He didn’t know how he’d last until morning. He
headed out through the mud room and dumped his
snowshoes on the driveway. Clouds had moved in from
the west. The landscape was soft grays and whites now,
making everything seem closer, more intimate.
He put on his snowshoes without a hitch and tramped
down to the lake. Easy. Just like walking with Bozo
shoes. He left the trail and broke through the fresh snow,
moving along the edge of several fir trees above the
lake, toward a granite outcropping. Darkness came early
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this far north, but it wasn’t here yet, the last of the day-
light slowly easing out. Snow flurries seemed to hover
midair.
When he came to the outcropping, he started up a
short, steep incline, hit rock and ice and fell on his ass.
No warning, just down he went.
Behind him, Susanna sputtered into laughter.
He leaned against the boulder and untangled his
snowshoes, an awkward maneuver that she seemed to
enjoy watching. She was about two yards from him, up
to her knees in snow. She wasn’t wearing snowshoes,
which gave him a definite advantage if he decided to go
after her.
He didn’t move to get up. “What if I broke an ankle?”
“You’d swear louder.” She walked up to him, lifting
her legs high in the deep snow. She had on a headband,
not a hat, her dark hair hanging down her back, dotted
with melting snow. She had on close-fitting pants that
emphasized her long, slim legs, even with her coat cov-
ering her hips and upper thighs. She settled her green
eyes on him. “Need a hand?”
“Nope. Just thought I’d sit here and watch you won-
der if I’m going to pull you down into the snow.” But
he got to his feet, his lower half covered in fluffy snow.
“You want to help me brush off?”
“No.”
He grinned at her. “You’re blushing.”
“You think so, huh?”
“Why else would your cheeks be red?”
She bit back a smile. “Because it’s eleven degrees out.”
“I don’t think so.” He pulled off a glove and touched
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his fingers to her cheek, lingering on the warm, smooth
skin. “Doesn’t feel cold to me.” He leaned in close, let-
ting his fingers trail across her mouth. “You blushed the
first time I saw you naked.”
Her eyes sparked, and this time there was no way she
could deny what she was thinking, feeling. “I don’t care
where all you grew up, I think you still have a little re-