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
you know where you are.”
Susanna gave up. “Okay.”
Her grandmother cast her a sideways glance. “You’re
a smart-mouth, Susanna Dunning Galway. I can see
how you give that husband of yours a run for his money.”
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Carla Neggers
“Most of the time he deserves it, you know.”
“I imagine that’s a two-way street.” They came to the
car, and Gran paused, looking out at the cemetery, the
snow, the evergreens, the blue sky. “It’s lovely here,
isn’t it?”
“Yes, it is.”
“But I don’t want you burying me here. I’ll have to
put it in my will. I want to be incinerated and my ashes
scattered in Florida.”
“Florida?” Susanna shook her head in disbelief.
“You’ve never even been to Florida!”
“Yes, I have. I went with Muriel in 1963. I remem-
ber, because it was right after JFK was assassinated. Her
family stuck her in a cold grave in Malden.”
“Gran, are you serious?”
She smiled then, breathing in the cold, dry Adiron-
dack winter air. “Yes, by God, I think I want my ashes
scattered on Miami Beach.”
��
Fifteen
Jack fell three times cross-country skiing before he fig-
ured out he was leaning too far back and throwing off
his center of balance. Maggie and Ellen thought it was
hysterical to watch him fall. They were on a groomed
trail at a cross-country ski center a few miles from the
cabin. No lesson. He thought he’d remember enough,
and the girls said they could show him what to do. Over-
reach on both counts. They weren’t much better on
skinny skis than he was.
They rounded a curve, Maggie and Ellen ahead of
him. “I don’t laugh when you fall,” he commented.
Ellen glanced back at him and grinned. “That’s be-
cause it’s not as funny when it’s us.”
Probably not.
Their beginner trail looped through an evergreen for-
est on a rare stretch of flat land. They had to stay far enough
apart to keep from crashing into each other, which created
a sense of separateness and allowed them to experience
their surroundings without having to be out there all alone.
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Carla Neggers
The rhythmic gliding over the snow helped his
thoughts settle, simmer, refocus.
The call from Sam Temple had flipped this situation
into a higher gear. Alice Parker contacted Beau McGar-
rity before she moved to Boston, and now he’d left
town. Jack had already learned that Alice was a mix of
good intentions, guile, loyalty, strong survival instincts
and romantic ideas about herself—all of which, to-
gether, had landed her in prison.
This was no longer about a nonviolent ex-convict
showing up in his wife’s neighborhood. However pro-
vocative, it wasn’t illegal. It was also about an open, if
cold, murder investigation.
Beau wouldn’t want the tape of him coercing a Texas
Ranger’s wife to intervene on his behalf to go public. If
it wouldn’t convict him of murdering Rachel McGar-
rity, it would certainly reveal him as a desperate man
who’d stepped over the line. Public opinion would shift
right back against him. He could kiss his social and po-
litical comeback goodbye.
Was Alice trying to blackmail him with the tape? Ex-
tort money from him to finance her dream of a new life
in Australia?
Where the hell did Destin Wright fit in, if anywhere?
And his wife. Where did Susanna fit in? The tape
would be more valuable if she’d kept it. It wouldn’t be
tainted by Alice’s misconduct in the Rachel McGarrity
investigation. Was Alice trying to make it look as if Su-
sanna had never given her the damn thing?
Shaking down a murder suspect was just the kind of
complicated, dramatic, dumb-ass scheme that would
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243
appeal to Alice Parker. Jack had investigated her—she
was dedicated and well-liked, but law enforcement
wasn’t a good fit for her personality and abilities. An-
other woman on the town force described her as drawn
to the idea of law enforcement, not its reality.
Jack tucked his poles under his arms and coasted
down a long, gentle slope, not feeling the cold after
ninety minutes of cross-country skiing. He, Maggie and
Ellen made their way to the warming hut, leaning their
skis against a rail fence and heading inside for hot cider.
The cider was in a big pot on a woodstove, and Jack
filled three mugs and brought them back to the small,
rickety table where the girls had plopped down, flushed
from the exercise and the cold.
“Mom would love this place,” Maggie said, blowing
on her steaming cider. “She told us we could forget any
notions of sitting in the cabin all week, reading books
and watching the fire—we were to get out and ski,
snowshoe, enjoy the great outdoors.”
Jack leaned back in his wooden chair, smiling. “Is
that a note of sarcasm I hear?”
She smiled back. “Dad, she bought us
snowshoes.
”
He shrugged. “This vacation means a lot to her.”
“I think she fell in love with it up here,” Ellen says.
“What if she moves up here? I know it’s beautiful and
everything, but, Dad, she’d go bonkers.”
Not with the kind of money she had in the bank,
Jack thought. If she got bored, she could afford to do
something else—like rent a villa in the south of France
for a month. Although he had strong opinions on where
his wife should live, he decided a measured response
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was called for. “Your mother will figure out what she
wants to do. We can have our opinions, but we can’t do
it for her, anymore than she and I can decide for you
what college you ought to attend.”
“But she’s almost forty,” Ellen said.
Jack smiled. “And?”
“She should already have her life figured out.”
“Maybe it needs refiguring.”
Maggie stretched out one leg, wincing as she ran her
hand along an obviously stiff muscle. “Do you think
Mom’s having a midlife crisis?” she asked. “Maybe she
got herself in a panic about Ellen and me not being
around. Our guidance counselor at school talked to us
about how our parents might have problems of their
own with us leaving for college. We’re not the only
ones experiencing change.”
“I thought guidance counselors were supposed to
talk to you about grades and colleges and not screwing
around in the lunch room.”
“They do,” Maggie said, “but that’s not all.”
Jack drank some of his hot cider while he debated
how to get off this subject. If he said the wrong thing,
Susanna would hear about it. If he said the right thing,
she’d hear. And this was about Maggie and Ellen’s re-
lationship with their mother, not with him, not with
both of them. “So what do they do, tell you to keep an
eye on your parents in case they get depressed when you
go off to school?”
Maggie nodded, stretching her other leg. “It can hap-
pen even before we leave. Pre-empty nest syndrome.”
He stared at her. “You’re serious?”
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245
She and Ellen both nodded.
“Do they do this in Texas, too?” he asked, teasing.
They laughed, but Ellen’s laughter didn’t last.
“Dad,” she said, avoiding his eye, “maybe if you’d
tell her what you want—if you said you wanted her
back—” She let it go at that, leaving the rest to her fa-
ther to interpret.
His first instinct was to tell Ellen that she’d stepped
into territory that was none of her business, but her con-
cern was palpable. Maggie was drinking her cider, pre-
tending not to care as much as her sister did. Jack knew
he was on tricky ground. Whatever happened with his
marriage, he and Susanna were these girls’ parents. This
was their immediate family, the four of them. They de-
served his care and attention in addressing their concerns.
But he’d rather go through the whole business about
Beau McGarrity and Sam Temple heading to Boston
than to negotiate this emotional minefield.
“Ellen, I never wanted Susanna to leave.” He spoke
carefully, thoughtfully. “But it’s not her fault she did. It
took both of us. Relationships are complicated, and right
now ours is probably more complicated than most.”
Ellen seemed relieved that he’d treated her question
seriously. “Because you’re a Texas Ranger and she’s a
financial planner?”
“That’s one reason.”
“She’s rich, you know,” Maggie said.
Ellen nodded. “She won’t tell us how much she’s
worth. She says we have no concept of money.”
“She’s right,” Jack said.
Maggie, who felt she was entitled to know every-
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thing, made a face at him. “Do
you
know how much
she’s worth?”
He’d had enough cider and pushed his mug away.
The one-room warming hut was filling up with people,
not the best place to have a heart-to-heart family discus-
sion. “We’re off the subject.”
“You should have called instead of just turning up in
Boston,” Ellen blurted.
That he didn’t regret. His life with Susanna had al-
ways had its sparks. He shook his head. “She’s still
paying for the time she let the air out of my tires when
we were in college.”
Maggie’s eyes lit up. “She
didn’t.
”
“Why would she do that?” Ellen asked.
Because she’d lost her virginity to him the night be-
fore, and when he put it that way to her, she got pissed,
said it was old-fashioned and male to say something like
that. Which was beside the point. She was in love with
him. She knew he’d be a force in her life forever. It
scared the hell out of her. So, she let the air out of his
tires. He saw it as her way of asserting to him that she
was smart, strong, independent and not incapable of
sneak attacks.
The minute he saw his tires, he knew she was the guilty
party, but it took him months to drag the truth out of her.
No shrinking violet, this love of his life. And now she
was rich.
They
were rich.
But he told their teenage daughters, “I guess it
seemed like the thing to do at the time.”
“Gee, Dad,” Ellen said, “Mom’s always had guts,
hasn’t she?”
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247
“Don’t you two get any ideas. I could have had her
arrested.” Except she’d covered her tracks well. But he
knew he wasn’t finished with this conversation, and after
they returned their skis to the rental counter and started
back to Davey Ahearn’s truck, Jack made himself go on.
“Your mother got caught up in one of my cases through
no fault of her own, and she ended up fearing for your
safety—for her own. It rattled her down deep.”
Maggie nodded with understanding. “The classic
fight or flight impulse. Normally Mom’d fight—that’s
always her first impulse. Or she’d resist either impulse
and think things through, analyze, choose her next
move. That’s what she’s always telling us what to do.
But this time, she fled.” She gave her father a small
smile. “I took psychology last semester.”
“You could be right, Mag, I don’t know. But I might
have handled things differently if she’d run up to Bos-
ton just because she was bored with me—”
“Mom’s never bored with you,” Ellen said. “She tells
us that all the time—
your father’s never boring.
But,
Dad, be honest, it’s not just this Alice Parker thing. It
wouldn’t hurt if you—well, you know you’re about as
romantic as a rock.”
“Aren’t you two being old-fashioned? All this talk of
wooing, flowers, fancy soaps—”
Maggie shook her head. “If you needed a break from
Mom because
she
was an uncommunicative lunkhead,
we’d tell
her
to be more romantic.”
“I’d get flowers and fancy soaps?”
“Dad.”
Ellen smothered a laugh, trying to be serious.
“We know Mom’s a hardheaded businesswoman. We’ve
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had her go MBA on us, just like you go Texas Ranger
on us.”
Her sister nodded in agreement, and Jack saw their
pride in their mother’s accomplishments. Ellen said,
“We’re not being retro. We’re just—I mean, who doesn’t
like to be romanced? You and Mom need more flowers
and silk nighties and jewelry and stuff like that going on.”
“Less murder and money,” Maggie added.
Jack knew he was beat. There was nothing to do now
but concede and get the hell off this subject. He was sup-
posed to give Susanna flowers, silk nighties, fancy soaps
and jewelry—and he couldn’t even get a decent blan-
ket off her.
“Point well taken,” he said, neutral.
“If it’s any consolation,” Maggie said, “whenever
Mom calls you a rock-headed son of a bitch, she always
apologizes and says she didn’t mean it that way.”
He cast his daughter a look. “What way do you sup-