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
Susanna gave a small shiver, he pulled the comforter
over them. She could feel herself drifting to sleep, her
head on his shoulder. For that moment, it was if she’d
never left him and had told him long ago about Beau
McGarrity and Alice—and wasn’t still keeping any se-
crets from him.
��
Thirteen
Jack awoke at dawn, reached over and switched on the
electric blanket. He wasn’t cold. He was taking the
down comforter and thought it’d be decent to make sure
Susanna didn’t get cold. He grabbed the comforter off
the bed, pulled on his pants and gathered up the rest of
his clothes, heading for the bedroom door.
He knew Susanna. Never mind that she was his wife
and Iris, Maggie and Ellen had all seen them wake up
in bed together—this was different. Easier for Susanna
to have him wake up in the loft. Less complicated, less
explaining, less trying to pretend she didn’t care that
they all knew what she’d been up to in the dead of night.
He glanced back at her, asleep in the gray light. He
felt a rush of emotion, a tightness in his chest. He knew
her love for him had enriched her life, and there was no
question his love for her was soul deep. But this was his
breaking point. He wasn’t going back to San Antonio
with matters between them unresolved. There’d be no
more status quo.
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Carla Neggers
He crept through the kitchen and past the fireplace
in the living room, over to the stairs and up them as qui-
etly as he could. The sofa bed in the loft was still made
up with its scrawny blankets. He climbed in, pulling the
comforter over him and shivering for a few minutes
until the bed warmed up.
In the morning, he discovered it was Iris who kept
turning down the heat. If an old lady could take it, so
could he. She said it was because of tuberculosis. She
was drinking coffee at the table while the girls were
making whole-grain pancakes.
“Tuberculosis was the scourge of the late nineteenth
and early twentieth century,” she said. “We forget now-
adays. They called it the White Plague. In the 1870s, a
doctor by the name of Edward Livingston Trudeau came
to Saranac Lake when he thought he was dying of tu-
berculosis, but he ended up being ‘cured.’ He credited
a strict regimen of mountain air, rest, good food, light
exercise and a lack of stress. He was convinced it would
cure other sufferers, and he helped turn Saranac Lake
into a health resort. Thousands upon thousands came
until antibiotics were discovered in the late 1940s and
1950s. They’d stay weeks, months, even years, until
they were well enough to leave. They called it ‘curing,’
although the disease didn’t actually go away—it went
into a kind of remission, as I understand.”
Jack poured himself a mug of coffee, said good-
morning to the girls and sat at the table across from their
great-grandmother. “This cure involved a cold house?”
Iris ignored his teasing tone. “Patients were required
to spend eight to ten hours outside. It didn’t matter the
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209
time of year. When you drive into Saranac, you’ll see
many of the older homes have porches—upstairs, down-
stairs, the front of the house, the back. Wherever they
could stick one. The porches gave the patients a place
to sit or lie down while they did their outdoor curing.
They call them ‘cure cottages.’”
“Amazing,” Jack said, meaning it.
“My mother was a nurse at a cure cottage when she was
young. My father took her away from that life and brought
her up here to Blackwater Lake. But she never lost her be-
lief in the restorative powers of the mountain air.”
Jack drank some of his coffee. “Iris, it’s ten de-
grees out.”
She smiled, not too sweetly. “It’s supposed to get into
the upper twenties today. That’s not bad for the Adiron-
dacks this time of year.” She adjusted her shawl, and if
she was cold, Jack knew she’d never admit it. “The Tru-
deau cure was remarkably effective. Tuberculosis tends
to run in cycles of wellness and sickness—patients often
had to return for another round of curing.”
Maggie swung over with a platter of hot pancakes.
She was wearing a brightly striped top from about 1976.
“Yuck. I’m never taking antibiotics for granted again.”
“They ended Saranac’s days as a health resort. For
years,
everyone
came up here. Actors, writers, politicians,
bankers, war veterans, European royalty, circus people.
There were curing places for the rich and the poor. But I
don’t remember it as a sad place at all. People had hope—
they didn’t come to die. They came to cure.”
“Then why are you going to the cemetery?” Ellen
asked, setting a pitcher of hot syrup on the table.
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Carla Neggers
Jack grimaced at her frank question, but Iris took it
in stride. “Because I’m an old woman,” she said. “Most
of the people I knew when I was a girl are dead.”
“Oh,” Ellen said. “
Duh.
Sorry, Gran.”
Jack helped get plates, forks and napkins on the
table, making no comment about Susanna’s absence.
He remembered the taste of her, and almost spilled the
hot syrup.
While he was distracted, Maggie and Ellen cooked up
a plan for him to take them cross-country skiing while
their mother and Iris went and looked at old tombstones.
Many of their friends in Texas skied in Colorado and
Utah, but he’d never been big on winter sports. He pre-
ferred his ten-mile runs, the weight room and his heavy
bag. But he was cornered, and he knew it. Cross-coun-
try skiing. He’d gone a few times when he was at Har-
vard. Fell a lot.
He’d planned to check out Destin Wright, then track
down Alice Parker and figure out who’d slipped into
Iris’s house the other night and hit him on the head. Des-
tin was a possibility. It wasn’t as if he was after Susanna
for pizza money.
But he said, “Sure, I’ll take you cross-country skiing.”
Susanna finally wandered out of her bedroom, look-
ing as if she’d done some lovemaking last night—but
Jack thought only he would notice. She was dressed for
tramping in a northern cemetery in the winter cold. A
heavy, expensive Norwegian sweater in a black-and-
white geometric print and slim black pants. Hair pulled
back. Very sexy.
She didn’t say good-morning to anyone until she’d
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211
got a mug from the cabinet and poured herself coffee.
Then she turned, leaning against the counter, her eyes
meeting his for an instant before she smiled. “Gran,
you ready?” she asked.
Maggie frowned. “Aren’t you going to eat? Ellen
and I made pancakes.”
“They smell wonderful. I’ll take a couple and eat
them on my way.”
“Cold? With no butter and syrup?” Ellen shuddered.
“Yuck.”
She and her sister headed upstairs, Gran behind
them, to get ready for their excursions. Jack cleared the
table, aware that Susanna was on edge, maybe a little
tired and testy. He came up next to her, touched the hair
at her ear. “Mad I climbed into bed with you—or mad
I climbed out?”
A smile tried to develop. “You stole my down com-
forter.”
“Ah.”
“And I’m not mad. Preoccupied.”
Probably because she still had to tell him about the
ten million. He’d told her he always knew everything,
but she hadn’t seemed to take that as an indication he
knew about the money. Well, he was in a fine mood. His
head didn’t hurt anymore, and he’d made love to his
wife last night. Find Alice Parker and figure out who got
the jump on him the other night, and he’d be a charmed
man. He didn’t even mind cross-country skiing for a
couple of hours.
“We can talk at lunch,” he said. “I need to make a
couple of calls.”
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She nodded, but he could see she had a lot on her
mind.
And
she was tired. He could have gone easier on
her last night, but she hadn’t seemed to want that—and
their second bout of lovemaking had been at her insti-
gation. Not that he objected.
He started for the mud room, but she caught the tips
of his fingers. “Jack—no regrets about last night?” she
asked softly. “That’s not why you left?”
“No, that was to spare you the knowing looks this
morning.”
But she didn’t smile. “It wasn’t the fire we let go out,
you know. It was the light.”
“What?”
Now she did smile, shaking her head. “Nothing. Go
make your calls. We’ll talk later.”
To get a better signal, he went outside and stood in
the driveway in half a foot of fresh snow. The sun was
out, sparkling on the white drifts, and it was very cold.
Fortunately, Sam Temple picked up on the first ring.
“I’ve got two minutes before hypothermia sets in,”
Jack said. “Any news?”
“Yes.” Sam was all business. “I tried to get through
to you last night—I left a message on your voice mail.
McGarrity took off.”
Jack went very still, focusing on a nearby pine tree,
its branches arced almost to the ground with snow. Wind
gusted suddenly up from the lake, dumping some of the
snow off a branch, spraying it in his face. “Where?”
“His cleaning lady said hunting. I don’t believe it. He
took his truck.”
“Have you checked with the airport and airlines?”
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213
“Nothing yet. There’s more, Jack. The cleaning
woman overheard McGarrity talking to Alice Parker
way the hell back in January. Her English isn’t great, but
it’s better than McGarrity thinks.”
Jack’s Spanish was decent, but Sam was fluent, mov-
ing between Spanish and English with ease. “What’s
your schedule like?” Jack asked him.
“Already talked to the captain. I’m on my way to the
airport now. My flight leaves for Boston in an hour.”
“How much time does McGarrity have on us?”
“A day. The cleaning woman said he went alone. No
hunting buddies.”
“I’m missing something,” Jack said. “I’ve been miss-
ing it all along.”
“I’ll call you when I get to Boston.” Sam’s tone
lightened, static creeping into their cell signal. “What
about you and Susanna? Has she come clean about
being rich?”
“No.”
“Just going to let her agonize and think you don’t
have a clue?”
“Susanna doesn’t agonize.”
“You know, if I had a rich wife, I’d be happier than
you are.”
“If you had a rich wife, you’d turn in your badge and
run for governor.” Jack could feel his jaw set hard, the
cold seeping into him. Sam had found out about Su-
sanna’s money on his own, from coming around the
house and talking to her. Jack hadn’t told him. “We
need to find McGarrity.”
Jack didn’t need to tell Sam Temple to watch his
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back. He knew. He was a professional, but he’d also
seen the crime scene pictures of Rachel McGarrity.
He turned to head back into the cabin, but Maggie
was there, shivering in the snow, her arms crossed on
her chest. She wasn’t wearing a coat. “I came out to ask
you what time you want to leave.” Her dark eyes lev-
eled on him, wide and scared, with a touch of her
mother’s grit. “Dad….do you mean Beau McGarrity,
the man they think shot his wife?”
“Maggie—”
“Is he after Mom?” she asked quietly.
Jack settled back on his heels. When she was a little
girl, Maggie had wanted to be a Texas Ranger. Now she
was talking about anthropology. He moved toward her,
noticed she hadn’t changed into a warm high-tech shirt.
She still had on that one from the 1970s. “Why would
McGarrity be after your mother?”
She shook her head. “I don’t know anything, if that’s
what you’re thinking. God forbid anybody tells me any-
thing. You were talking to Sam, right?”
Jack didn’t like one thing about this conversation.
“Sergeant Temple, yes.”
“Dad. I’m not stupid. If you’re here and this guy Mc-
Garrity has disappeared—”
“No one said he’s disappeared.”
She snorted. “You asked if Sam—Sergeant Tem-
ple—checked the airports and airlines. That sounds like
disappearing.”
“He said he went hunting.”
Maggie’s teeth were chattering now, partly with the
cold, but also anger. “Why don’t you just tell me to
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215
mind my own business? I wouldn’t mind that as much
as you acting as if you’re telling me something when
you’re really not telling me anything.”
Jack tried to keep himself from glaring at her. Why
the hell couldn’t his wife and daughters be
easier?
“I
don’t want you or your sister to worry about Beau Mc-
Garrity or Alice Parker.”