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
out the rents lately? Whoa. They’re sky-high.” She
sipped more of her margarita, looking as if she relished
every drop. “I don’t know why you put up with it. Aren’t
you the folks who dumped the tea in the harbor?”
“That we are. You have a job lined up?”
“More or less, yes, sir.”
“What’s your name?”
“Audrey,” she said. “Audrey Melbourne.”
Jim studied her a moment, noticing she didn’t flinch
under his frank scrutiny. Definitely a tough streak.
“What are you running from, Audrey Melbourne?”
She shrugged. “What do any of us run from?”
“The law and husbands,” Jim said. Davey Ahearn
glanced down the bar, not saying a word, but Jim knew
his friend’s suspicions were on full alert.
“No, sir, I don’t believe that’s the case at all.” Audrey
Melbourne slid off her stool, looking even smaller.
“Mostly we run from ourselves.”
She walked over to the coatrack and put on her new
parka, hat and gloves as if they might have been a space
suit. She left without looking back.
Davey breathed out a long sigh. “Sure. I hope she
comes back real soon. That pretty little number is trouble.”
One of the firefighters snorted. “All women are
trouble.”
Two female Tufts graduate students took exception
to this comment, and the argument was on. Jim didn’t
intervene. The Bruins and the Celtics were having a
lousy year, the Patriots hadn’t made the playoffs, and
pitchers and catchers didn’t report for weeks yet. Peo-
ple needed something to do. Maybe he needed to won-
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der about a redheaded Texan coming into his bar. It
happened now and again, a stranger popping in for a
drink. He doubted Audrey Melbourne would be back.
An icy gust bit at Alice Parker’s face as she climbed
over a blackened, frozen, eighteen-inch snowbank to get
to her car. The Texas tags were a dead giveaway, but
what the hell—so was her Texas accent. She’d arrived
in Boston in the middle of a damn blizzard, and now it
was so cold her cheeks ached and her eyeballs felt as if
they were frozen in their sockets. Her chest hurt from
breathing in the dry, frigid air.
“I should have bought the damn Everest parka,” she
muttered, picking her way over an ice patch. Even
sanded, it was slippery. She supposed she’d need new
boots if she ended up staying more than a few days.
Damned if she’d move up here on a permanent basis.
She’d rather sit in prison.
She did not understand why Susanna Galway was
living here on an old, crowded street in a working-class
neighborhood, with the salt and sand and soot making
everything even uglier. She had a nice house in San An-
tonio. A Texas Ranger husband. What the hell was
wrong with her?
Alice tried fishing her keys out of her pocket with
a gloved hand, decided that wouldn’t work and peeled
off the glove. Winter was complicated. She couldn’t
believe she’d driven a couple thousand miles in her
crappy car to track down Susanna, just so Beau could
think she still had the tape. Not that he was biting—
he kept telling her she could go to hell and threaten-
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ing to turn her in for blackmail and extortion. She was
calling his bluff. He’d pay her to steal the tape and
hush up about it. She knew he would. Things worked
on his nerves. He was paranoid and dramatic. She’d
made that one little remark about Rachel smothering
him in his sleep, and less than a day later, her friend
was dead.
Alice was confident he’d come around. He deserved
to pay for something.
Of course, he could decide to shoot her in the back
and go after the tape himself, but that was extreme.
Even Beau couldn’t think he’d get away with two mur-
ders. He’d let her do his dirty work for him. And pay her.
If he did end up shooting her, Jack Galway and Sam
Temple could catch him. At least he’d go to prison for
her murder, if not Rachel’s.
An old woman pushed open the porch door to the
stucco house just up the street. She had on pants stuffed
into fur-trimmed ankle boots, a dark wool car coat, a red
scarf, a red knit hat and red knit gloves.
It had to be Iris Dunning. Susanna’s grandmother.
Alice had found out from Beau that Susanna Galway
was living up north with her daughters and grandmother.
He’d obviously expected this information would make
Alice give up on her plan. She’d thought about it. It was
kind of nuts, traveling two thousand miles, taking the
risk of breaking into Susanna’s house to steal something
that wasn’t there.
But what else was she supposed to do? She had the
tape. Beau would not be pleased if he found out she’d
had it all along—for one, he’d never pay her the fifty
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grand. For another, he’d probably shoot her. He was
balking as it was. If this was going to work, Alice knew
she had to go through the motions.
She climbed back over the snowbank. “Mrs. Dun-
ning?” Alice stepped carefully onto the sidewalk, not
wanting to slip. “Excuse me, ma’am, I didn’t mean to
startle you. My name’s Audrey Melbourne—I’m new in
town. Someone mentioned you might have a room for
rent.” No one had, but Alice decided it was a good way
to launch a conversation.
The old woman’s clear green eyes cinched it for
Alice. They were just like Susanna’s. She had to be Iris
Dunning. “I’m sorry, I’m not renting rooms at the mo-
ment. Are you a student?”
Alice shook her head. “No, I’m in the process of mov-
ing to Boston. This seems like a nice neighborhood.”
“It is,” Iris said. “I’ve lived here for years and have
never been robbed.”
That would probably change, Alice thought, if she
had to stage a robbery to convince Beau she’d gotten the
tape off Susanna. “Well, ma’am, I don’t want to keep
you out in the cold—”
“Have you had supper yet? Jimmy Haviland makes
good, hearty food. His clam chowder’s the best in the
city, but tonight’s not chowder night.”
Alice hated even the thought of clams. They had to
be slimy. “I know—I was just in there. I think he’s serv-
ing beef stew tonight.”
“Come on, then, I’ll buy you a bowl.” Iris Dunning
seemed ready to take Alice by the arm and walk her into
the pub. “I was new in town and all alone once. My
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granddaughter and daughters are out for the evening. I’d
like the company.”
“Ma’am, I don’t want to impose—”
“You’re not imposing, and you can stop calling me
‘ma’am.’ Iris will be fine.”
Alice was taken aback. No wonder Susanna had
ended up here—her grandmother was a good soul
who’d take in anyone. “I’d love a bowl of stew, Iris, but
I’ll pay my way.”
They entered the bar together, and Alice immedi-
ately noticed the obvious suspicion of the owner and his
friend with the handlebar mustache. If Iris noticed, she
didn’t care. She headed to a back table. Alice smiled
self-consciously at the two men, who continued to
frown at her. Well, that was a good sign. At least Iris
Dunning had people who looked after her. She was the
sort of person people could easily take advantage of.
“Now, Jimmy,” she said when the owner came over
to take their order, “don’t start lecturing me about stran-
gers. I can have stew with anyone I want. Miss Mel-
bourne is new in town.”
“Audrey,” Alice corrected with a smile.
“I’d never lecture you, Iris,” Jimmy said. “What are
you drinking with your stew?”
“I think I’ll have merlot tonight. I haven’t had wine
in ages. Alice, what about you?”
“Oh, no, ma’am, I don’t drink. I’ll just have a Coke.”
“And don’t skimp on the beef when you dip up my
stew, Jimmy. I had a low-fat lunch.”
He still didn’t seem too happy.
Iris sighed at him, her green eyes vibrant. “Jimmy, I
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know about women on their own. They’re either wid-
owed, divorced, broke, on the run or ex-cons.” She
turned her bright gaze to her new friend. “Am I right,
Audrey?”
Alice laughed. “One or more of the above.”
“
There.
I knew it. I guess that’s better than ‘all of the
above.’”
Tess Haviland sank into the soft leather couch that
Susanna had bought when Tess had moved out of their
shared office space the summer before. She still had the
remnants of her tan from her holiday in Disney World
with Andrew Thorne, her architect husband, and seven-
year-old Dolly. Harley Beckett, Dolly’s reclusive baby-
sitter, had stayed home and worked on Tess’s
nineteenth-century carriage house. She took possession
of it last May and promptly found a skeleton in the cel-
lar—something that hadn’t sat well with Jack Galway,
Texas Ranger. Not that Susanna had told him about her
involvement. The girls had let it slip. She remembered
his call. “You and Tess Haviland crawled around in a dirt
cellar looking for a body?”
“We didn’t find it.”
Small consolation.
Tess’s move to the North Shore, her marriage and new
family seemed to agree with her. Her blond hair was
longer these days, her dedication to her graphic design
work still high but not as all-consuming. She’d hired an
assistant. She had balance in her life. She also had strong
opinions, which made her more like her pub-owner fa-
ther and plumber godfather than she would ever admit to.
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69
She’d brought her own latte, Susanna’s coffeemak-
ing abilities the only source of conflict between them.
She had on her business-in-the-city clothes. “I like the
leather,” she said, sweeping a critical glance over the
conversation area Susanna had set up in Tess’s vacated
half of the office. A contemporary leather couch and
chairs, an antique coffee table and three orchids pains-
takingly chosen for their forgiving natures. Tess
smoothed one hand over the soft leather. “I didn’t think
I would. I really wanted you to go with a Texas theme.
At least it’s not stuffy.”
Given that her office was on the fourth floor of a late
nineteenth-century building overlooking Boston’s old-
est cemetery, Susanna had rejected a Texas theme. She
hadn’t bothered to confront her friend on her ideas of
what a Texas theme would entail—all spurs and Lone
Stars, probably.
“Susanna, do you mind if I speak frankly?”
Susanna sat on one of the chairs, the sky outside her
tall windows gray and gloomy. She’d worked at her
computer most of the day. She smiled at Tess. “Since
when would it make any difference if I minded?”
Tess didn’t return her smile. “Your computer’s
dusty,” she said.
“That’s what you wanted to tell me?”
“It’s part of a larger pattern.” Tess leaned forward,
holding her latte in both hands. “It’s like your brain’s
gone inside your computer and won’t come out. It can’t.
It’s all filled up with numbers and money things.”
“Money things?”
“Investments, annual reports, interest rates, bond
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prices—God only knows what. I’ll bet you know to the
penny what each of your clients is worth.”
Susanna took no offense. “That is my job, Tess.”
She shook her head, adamant. “You go beyond what
the average financial planner would do.”
“Good. I’d hate to be an ‘average’ financial planner.”
Susanna glanced over at her desk, her monitor filled
with numbers, which was probably what had unnerved
Tess. “I want to be very above average.”
“You see? You’re driven. You’re a perfectionist. It’s
causing you to lose perspective on the rest of your life.”
Tess set her jaw, aggravated now. “Damn it, I’m mak-
ing a good point here. Your life is out of balance.”
Susanna slid to her feet and walked over to the table
where she had her coffeemaker, a tin of butter cookies,
pretty little napkins and real pottery mugs for herself
and her clients. “I’ve hired a part-time assistant,” she
said. “She comes in two mornings a week.”
“You should have at least two people working full-
time for you. You told me so yourself last fall.”
“Did I?”
“Yes, you did.”
Susanna poured herself a half cup of stale, grayish
coffee and turned back to her friend. “All right, I’ll dust
my computer. Promise.”
Tess groaned. “You are so
thick.
”
“Hey, that’s my line. That’s what I tell Jack—”
“There. Jack.” Tess set her latte on an antique table
Susanna had picked up at an auction, a nice contrast
with the more contemporary pieces. Balance, she
thought. If Tess approved, she didn’t say. She narrowed
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her blue eyes on Susanna. “You haven’t told him how