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
“Liar. It’s in the fifties and raining.”
“Ah. You checked.”
“Only because we’re tracking a nor’easter. Thank
God it didn’t blow in last week when the girls were fly-
ing. What’s up?”
“I wanted you to know Alice Parker is out of prison.
She took a room in San Antonio for a few days. Now
she’s gone. Her friends in prison say she was obsessed
with Australia. Maybe she’s headed in that direction.”
His voice was businesslike, but not matter-of-fact.
Susanna glanced at the girls, both pretending not to be
listening. Maggie was frowning over her math home-
work, Ellen tapping keys on her laptop.
“She’d need a passport, money—” Susanna took a
breath, noticing that Maggie and Ellen were no longer
making any pretense of studying. “Jack, are you wor-
ried she’ll come after you? You investigated her. She
thinks it’s your fault no one’s ever been charged in Ra-
chel McGarrity’s murder.”
“Alice Parker isn’t required to tell me or anyone else
where she is or what she’s doing. Provided she doesn’t
break the law, she can do whatever she wants.”
Susanna frowned. “Then why tell me she was re-
leased from prison?”
He didn’t answer at once. “No particular reason.”
What was that supposed to mean? Jack Galway
didn’t do anything for no reason. Everything he did and
said had a purpose. He was the most deliberate man Su-
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sanna knew. She felt hot, jittery, as if he had her in an
interrogation room and she was lying to a Texas Ran-
ger, not just having an ordinary conversation with her
husband. “Well, I hope Alice Parker gets her life back
on track. Do you want to talk to the girls?”
“Sure,” he said, his tone impossible to read. “Put
them on.”
She handed the phone to Ellen and ran into the
kitchen, diving into the half-bathroom. She splashed
her face with cold water. Her eyes were hot with tears.
She was shaking, her reflection pale in the small oval
mirror. She touched her lips with wet fingers and could
almost imagine it was Jack touching her. She’d loved
him so hard, so long. What had happened?
Susanna, Susanna…you don’t believe I killed my wife.
Beau McGarrity. She could still hear his cajoling,
hurt voice that day in her kitchen. He’d never made an
overt threat against her or her children. It was in his ges-
ture, his tone, the fact that he had walked into her
kitchen from her patio, without knocking. She’d been
doing a tai chi tape in the family room. The girls were
at theater and soccer practice. She hadn’t thought to lock
the patio door.
She’d started the recorder, not knowing what he
meant to do or say. At first, she didn’t even know who
he was, except that she’d spotted him twice before that
week, once in town, once at the school. Susanna had told
herself it was coincidence and chided herself for start-
ing to think like a jaded law enforcement officer, tak-
ing the routine oddities of life and turning them into
something potentially sinister.
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Carla Neggers
She hadn’t known Alice Parker was being investi-
gated—or that Jack would arrest her that afternoon.
Giving her the tape when she showed up at her front
door had made sense at the time.
Saying nothing to Jack about Beau McGarrity’s visit
had, too.
When he came home that evening and told her about
Alice’s arrest and never mentioned the tape, Susanna as-
sumed the tape was no good, completely irrelevant—
and that Alice hadn’t mentioned it to him. Why should
she? She was on her way to prison, her career ruined.
If there’d been anything useful on the tape, she’d have
turned it over, if only to nail Beau McGarrity and prove
herself right.
Jack had been so taciturn that night, even more un-
communicative than usual. He was glad to have the
Alice Parker investigation over with. The local police
department would continue with the investigation into
Rachel McGarrity’s murder. He’d opened a beer, took
a long drink and laid back his head, shutting his eyes.
All Susanna could think about was how he’d react if
she’d told him Beau McGarrity had been to their house.
His work had never touched his family this way. Never.
They were both accustomed to her being afraid for him.
But not for herself, not for their daughters.
She’d found herself unable to tell him what had hap-
pened. She didn’t know what he’d do.
Her own fear was irrational, visceral. Just pretend ev-
erything was okay and go to Boston with the girls, let
the dust settle, clear her head…then tell him.
Now Alice Parker was out of prison, and Susanna still
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57
hadn’t told her husband what had happened on that hot,
confused day over a year ago.
But she loved him.
Oh, God, she loved him.
“Mom!”
It was Ellen yelling. “Dad wants to talk
to you!”
Susanna dried her face and hands and slipped out of
the bathroom. The girls were in the kitchen, and Ellen
handed her the phone, whispering, “We told him about
the cabin. We thought he knew.”
“He’s
pissed,
” Maggie added, more as a point of fact
than a warning.
Susanna nodded and ducked back into the halfbath.
She wanted total privacy for this conversation. “A cabin
in the Adirondacks,” she said cheerfully. “Sounds won-
derful, doesn’t it?”
“When were you going to tell me?”
There was nothing calm, professional or deliberate
about him now. This was Jack Galway at his stoniest.
“I don’t know. I hadn’t even thought about it.” But that
was an outright lie, and when she caught her reflection
in the mirror, she saw the guilt. “I’m sorry. It was a spur
of the moment thing, but I should have told you—”
“Don’t be sorry. I don’t give a damn what you do.”
He hung up.
Susanna stared at the dead phone. Then she hit re-
dial. He let his voice mail take the call. She hit redial
again. More voice mail. On her third redial, he picked
up, but didn’t speak. She did. “Damn it, Jack, did you
hang up on me?”
“Yes, and I’m going to hang up on you again.”
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Carla Neggers
“And I’m going to keep calling you until you knock
it off!”
“That’s harassment. I’ll have you arrested, even up
in Boston.”
No one could get under her skin the way he could.
“Just try.” She took a quick breath, decided not to fight
fire with fire. This once, she could be reasonable. “I can
see how you’d look at the cabin as a thumb in your eye,
but that’s not what I was thinking when I bought it.
Truthfully, I wasn’t thinking—it was like it was meant
to be. I couldn’t resist. It’s in the most beautiful spot,
right on Blackwater Lake. Gran grew up there. You’ll
have to see it.”
“Why?”
“Why?” she repeated dumbly. The man drove her mad.
He knew the worst, most awkward, most difficult and
probing questions to ask her. But he was a trained inter-
rogator. He could get people to confess to murder, never
mind to why they’d bought a cabin in the Adirondacks.
“Yes. Why do I have to see it?”
“I don’t know—it makes sense. You’re my husband.”
“It’s an open invitation?”
She licked her lips. He had her off-balance, and he
knew it. “I suppose so. Sure.”
“You know what Sam says, don’t you?” His voice
lowered, deepened. “He says I should go up there, cuff
you and haul you back to Texas.”
Susanna nearly dropped the damn phone in the sink.
“I knew that’d leave you speechless,” her husband
said. “Good night, darlin’. Enjoy your cabin.”
He hung up on her again.
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59
This time, she didn’t call him back.
When she returned to the kitchen, Gran was back,
heating up a quart of Jim Haviland’s famous clam chow-
der on the stove. The girls were setting the table. It was
a comfortable scene, three generations of women in
Gran’s simple, clean kitchen with its tall ceilings, old
painted cabinets and framed samplers from her cross-
stitch craze fifteen years ago. Even at eighty-two, Iris
Dunning retained her tall, graceful build. Susanna could
picture her grandmother as an Adirondack guide in her
youth. People assumed she was a widow when she
moved to Boston, but that wasn’t true. She’d never mar-
ried. Now she was in her sunset years, her hair white and
wispy, her skin translucent and wrinkled. But her mind
was sharp, and she stayed active and socially engaged—
she was taking tai chi at her senior center. Before her
granddaughter and great-granddaughters had moved in,
she’d rented rooms in the house to university students
to supplement her income and give her company.
Susanna sank onto a chair at the table. Her knees
were wobbly from her talk with her husband.
Gran glanced back at her from the stove. “Jimmy
Haviland says you’re avoiding him.”
“I’ve been busy,” Susanna said. But that wasn’t en-
tirely true. Busy, yes, but the last two times she’d stopped
at Jim’s Place, its opinionated owner had asked her if
she’d told Jack about her stalker. He would keep asking
her until she said yes. He wouldn’t squeal to Gran. That
wasn’t Jim Haviland’s style. He might to Jack, though.
Ellen set a sturdy white bowl in front of her. “Mom,
we’re sorry we told Dad about the cabin—”
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Carla Neggers
“No, no, that’s not your fault. I was going to tell him.
It just slipped my mind.”
Maggie shot her mother a dubious frown, but said noth-
ing. Ellen sighed. “We tried to talk to him while we were
home. We told him he should try to be more romantic.”
“Romantic? Your father?” Susanna smiled, shaking
her head with affection for her two clueless daughters.
“He just threatened to handcuff me and drag me back
to Texas.”
Gran set the steaming soup tourine of chowder in the
middle of the table. “I don’t know,” she said, a mischie-
vous gleam in her very green eyes. “I think it’s a start.”
��
Four
After thirty years of running a neighborhood pub, Jim
Haviland considered himself a good judge of character.
It came down to experience and survival—they’d honed
his instincts about people. Still, he had to admit that the
woman at the bar had him stumped. He guessed she was
in her late twenties. Slightly built, short, curly, dyed red
hair and pale skin, almost pasty looking. She wore a lot
of makeup and about a half ton of gold jewelry. Dan-
gling earrings, rings on both hands, bracelets, a thin
gold necklace with a tiny heart pendant and a thicker
chain necklace. He wouldn’t want all that metal on him
in a nor’easter. But the snow had finally stopped, and
the cleanup was in full force. The plow guys would be
showing up later for the beef stew special.
The woman’s clothes made her stick out in this neigh-
borhood, too. She had on a close-fitting baby blue ribbed
V-neck sweater, tight western-cut jeans and leather
boots that would land her on her ass on an icy sidewalk.
She played up her femininity, but there was a hardness
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Carla Neggers
to her, a toughness that Jim couldn’t reconcile with the
jewelry, the clothes, the painted nails. He wouldn’t be
surprised if she had a .22 strapped to her ankle.
After making sure he didn’t use a mix, she’d ordered
a margarita. Her accent wasn’t local, but Jim was no
good at placing accents outside of New England. He
drew a couple of drafts for two firefighters who’d come
in, complaining about the hazards of space heaters and
overtaxed extension cords. Davey Ahearn, on his stool
at the end of the bar, was listening in, nursing a beer and
keeping an eye on the woman with the makeup and the
margarita.
“New in town?” Jim asked her.
“Two days. It’s that easy to tell?”
“With that accent?” Jim smiled at her. “Where you
from?”
“Texas. A little bitty town outside Houston.”
“Hope you brought a good winter coat with you.”
She gestured toward the coat rack next to the door,
gold bangles sliding down her slender wrist. “No, sir,
but I bought one on sale this morning. They said it’s a
basic parka. I never knew there was anything but. I
bought a winter hat and gloves, too. I think mittens
would drive me batty.” She raised her gray eyes at him.
“I’m holding off on the long underwear.”
She had an engaging manner, whoever she was.
“That’s one thing about owning a bar,” Jim said. “I can
get through a Boston winter without long underwear.
You’ll like it here in the spring. Are you planning to stick
around that long?”
“I’m hoping to relocate here, but have you checked
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