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
pose she did mean it?”
But they all laughed, and he knew it was tough treat-
ing Maggie and Ellen like adults—damn tough. Proba-
bly would take him a few more years to get used to it.
They piled back into Davey’s truck. Maggie made
exaggerated gagging noises at the stale smell of ciga-
rettes, as she had when she’d climbed in the first time.
Ellen brought up Davey Ahearn, Tess Haviland and the
dead body in Tess’s dirt cellar last spring, another re-
minder of Susanna’s life without him. Jack remembered
she’d called and checked with him about how long it
took a body to decompose. He should have known
something was up.
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249
When they got back to the cabin, Susanna’s car was
still gone. All in all, Jack preferred taking Maggie and
Ellen cross-country skiing to escorting Iris to a cemetery.
As they charged into the cabin, nestled cozily amidst the
trees and lake, he could feel the ache, knew he wanted to
stay here and break in his new snowshoes, maybe try a
little ice-fishing. He wanted to spend time with his fam-
ily. But he had to check with Sam and see about Beau
McGarrity, Alice Parker and, perhaps, Destin Wright.
“Dad! Oh, my God!”
Maggie. Jack ran for the cabin. Ellen was yelling
now, panic raising the pitch of her voice. “Dad, Dad—
no, Maggie, don’t!
What if they’re still here?”
He grabbed a ski pole in the mud room. Ellen, white-
faced, burst from the kitchen. She was hyperventilating.
“Dad, Maggie went upstairs. Someone—someone’s—”
He reached into his pocket for his cell phone. “Call
the police.”
She was blinking rapidly, gulping in air. Purple and
white blotches had broken out on her face. “They took
the place apart. Maggie…” Suddenly she was a little girl
again, hanging on to his hand.
“Daddy.”
Jack curled her stiff fingers around the cell phone.
“911. Go.”
She nodded, damn near passing out, and headed
outside.
The kitchen was tossed. Cupboards opened, drawers
pulled out, towels, food and utensils thrown on the floor.
In the living room, the couch cushions were off, the
throw blankets scattered, the bookshelves dumped. Half
the castle puzzle had ended up on the floor.
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Carla Neggers
“Maggie, where the hell are you?”
“It’s okay, Dad.” She appeared at the top of the stairs,
as pale as her sister, but glaring down at him with a greater,
more immediate sense of indignation. She clenched the
handrail. “Whatever
bastard
did this is gone.”
“Maggie.” Jack started up the stairs with his ski pole.
“Go outside with Ellen. She’s calling the police. Then
call your mother. Wait for me.” He thrust the truck keys
at her. “If anyone but me comes out of this cabin, get
out of here.”
“Dad, I checked up here—there’s no one—”
“Downstairs. Outside. Now, Maggie.”
Her mouth snapped shut, and she complied, her feet
barely touching the steps as she slid past him. No ski
pole for her. She’d done her checking unarmed, which
Jack knew was just as well given her inexperience.
Whoever had tossed the place had lost steam by the
time they reached the second floor. Given his daughters’
level of neatness, Jack couldn’t tell what all had been
dumped and gone through in their shared bedroom and
what they’d done themselves.
In Iris’s room, the mattress was askew, and her
clothes were hanging out of her dresser drawers, her
empty suitcase upended.
The sofa bed in the loft was similarly roughed up.
An amateur. Someone who wanted to make it look
as if he’d done a thorough job.
Jack checked Susanna’s bedroom downstairs. The
same thing.
He went back outside and found the girls in the truck,
both doors wide open. Ellen was behind the wheel,
The Cabin
251
calmer now but still shaken. “I got through to the po-
lice,” she told him. “It took a couple of tries. They’re on
their way. Dad…”
“Are you two okay?” he asked, standing at the open
driver’s door.
They nodded. Maggie looked at him, her dark eyes
serious, angry and scared, even if she’d never admit to
being afraid. She was like her mother in that. “This is
about Alice Parker and that murder investigation, why
you and Sam are here, isn’t it?”
“I don’t know what it’s about,” Jack said. “We can
guess, but that won’t do any good. It could be a coinci-
dence for all we know.”
“Is that what you believe?” Maggie asked.
He shook his head. “No.”
Ellen started gulping for air again. “Dad, what about
Mom? What if whoever was here went after her?”
“Let’s not get ahead of herself. Your mom’s with Iris.
They’re looking at old tombstones. I’m sure they’re fine.”
Maggie hunched her shoulders. She’d taken off her
coat and had to be cold. “Mom and Gran’ll be pissed at
the mess we have to clean up.”
Jack knew both girls would be all right. “Do you two
mind if I take a look around out here?”
They shook their heads. Ellen managed a wan smile.
“No, Dad, go ahead. Go be a Texas Ranger.”
When she arrived at the cabin and found Jack build-
ing a snowman, Susanna knew something was wrong.
He had the bottom done and was working on the mid-
dle, and he didn’t stop when she and Gran got out of the
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Carla Neggers
car and he told them about the break-in. The local po-
lice had been and gone. He’d told them about Alice Par-
ker and Beau McGarrity. And Destin Wright. They were
nonetheless inclined to believe it had been a local
scrounging for cash, probably thinking the cabin, only
recently sold, was still on the market.
Iris, her blood up, retreated inside to help the girls
with the cleanup.
Susanna scooped up a handful of snow, which was
just wet enough to hold together. “Alice Parker is stay-
ing with Destin at the Blackwater Inn,” she said. “Gran
and I just talked to her. I should have come straight here
and told you, but I’d promised to take Gran to the cem-
etery. It’s just as well, I suppose. We could have walked
in on this guy tossing the cabin.”
Jack remained silent as he carefully patted more
snow onto the middle section of his snowman.
“She said Beau McGarrity checked me out before his
wife was killed.”
Jack stopped then, his dark eyes boring into her.
“Jesus, Susanna.”
“She never told the detectives. I don’t know if she
didn’t think it mattered—he parked across the street
and watched me in the front garden. One day he fol-
lowed me out to the school.”
“And this was before his wife was murdered?”
“That’s what Alice said. Jack, I don’t know what to
believe. I don’t know if she’s up here to get under my
skin, or if she’s after McGarrity somehow, thinks I can
help convict him of murder.
I don’t know.
”
“You don’t have to know. It’s not your job.”
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253
His tone wasn’t antagonistic, which somehow only
made Susanna feel worse. “And Destin—who knows
what he and Alice have cooked up?” She watched a
chickadee perch on the very top branch of a spruce tree,
then swoop off into the woods. “If I did anything to
cause that woman’s death—if she died in any way be-
cause of me—”
“Tell me everything Alice told you,” Jack said.
Susanna nodded. “Gran was there, too. She can help
fill in any blanks. Jack—” She added her snow to his
snowman-in-progress. “There’s something else I
haven’t told you. I don’t know if it has any role in what’s
been going on—I’ve told myself a million times that it
can’t possibly, but…my God, Jack, that man followed
me
before
his wife’s death.”
He slid that hot, dark-eyed gaze at her.
She jumped back, as if she’d been seared. “You al-
ready know?”
“I told you. I always know.”
“
Damn
it, Jack. You
know?
”
He lifted his snowman’s middle off its base, adjust-
ing it, patting the snow smooth. He focused on his work,
as if the damn snowman had his full attention. “Ten mil-
lion dollars isn’t that easy to hide.”
“I wasn’t hiding it—I was just not telling you about it.”
“Sam’s been guessing five million. I think he has a
pool going.”
“But you knew?”
He scooped up a palmful of snow and dumped it into
a crack in the middle section. “It’s an educated guess. I
take it I’m not far off?”
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Carla Neggers
“No.”
His eyes lifted to her. “Miffed?”
“Miffed. What kind of word is that?” Her throat was
tight, and she could feel tears welling. Not this time. She
was
not
going to cry this time, not when someone had
just ransacked her cabin and scared the hell out of her
daughters. She had to stay focused, like Jack on a case.
“It trivializes the importance of how I feel.”
“Sort of like saying I’d taken your virginity.”
“What? Where did
that
come from? We’re talking
about money—” She took all of him in, this tall, dark-
haired, dark-eyed man in his western-cut suede jacket
and his new insulated gloves and boots. No hat. He was
the only man who’d ever made love to her, the only man
she’d ever wanted in bed with her. She didn’t know
what she’d have done if she’d lost him at nineteen, if
he’d gone home to south Texas without her. But she
shook off the thought, because he was here, twenty
years later. “Forget it, Jack. You’re not going to distract
me by talking about sex. Why didn’t you say something
if you knew?”
“You’re the one who made this fortune.” He took a
step back and admired his handiwork, still as if his
snowman were all he had on his mind. “You’re the one
who turned it into a problem for yourself. So, I figured
you could be the one to decide when you were ready to
tell me about it.”
“But you knew—”
“That’s beside the point.”
“Jack, that
is
the point. Damn it, you left me to ago-
nize over how to tell you—”
The Cabin
255
“As I told Sam this morning, you don’t agonize, Su-
sanna.” He scooped up more snow, building a head for
his snowman. “You strategize. You were waiting for the
right strategic moment to tell me, and this was it.”
“Oh, it is, is it? When my cabin’s just been ransacked?”
“Apparently so.”
Susanna felt blood rushing to her cheeks. He was
being deliberately maddening. “It’s our money. It’s not
just my money. I invested a chunk of your paycheck
every month.You signed things. And we’re still married.”
“Yes, we are.”
“Once it started happening, it happened fast.”
He shrugged. “You’re good at what you do.”
She stood still in the snow, aware of the silence
around her. She needed to go into the cabin and see what
had been done to it, talk to Maggie and Ellen. She didn’t
know what she and Jack could accomplish now, with the
pressure of a break-in and Beau McGarrity’s disappear-
ance on them. “Money’s never been the most important
thing in my life. I enjoy investing, and I enjoy working
with my clients, helping them figure out their relation-
ship with money, what they want it to do for them. Peo-
ple always come first.” She glanced at her cabin. It was
the first big thing she’d done with her money, and the
police had just been here. “I didn’t follow my own ad-
vice. I amassed a fortune without knowing why, what I
wanted to do with it. What we wanted.”
“Not having money was never a problem for us,” he
said. “Why should having money be a problem?”
“I don’t know.” Her eyes connected with his. “You
tell me.”
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Carla Neggers
“No, ma’am.” He held his oversized snowball—his
snowman’s head—at arm’s length in one hand, assess-
ing it. “I’m not the one with the problem. You are. That’s
why I haven’t said anything. I decided you needed the
space to work this out for yourself.”
“Oh, I see. You were being
nice.
”
“Damn nice, I think.”
“You know what I think? I think you just didn’t want
to say out loud that you have a rich wife. I think you
didn’t want to have to think about what having money
might mean to you. I was wrong not to ask you if you
wanted to get rich, it was easier for you to ignore what
I was up to—”
“You’re not the easiest woman to ignore, Miss Su-
sanna.” He added more snow to his snowman’s head, but
the way he patted it suddenly struck her as remarkably
sexual. No doubt he intended it that way. He went on,
his voice steady, “My life hasn’t changed because of the
ten million. Yours has. You moved north, you bought a
cabin. It wasn’t all Beau McGarrity and the tape. It was