Witness (33 page)

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Authors: Beverly Barton

BOOK: Witness
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He had never expected her to go wild in his arms, had never imagined that sweet, innocent Jeannie possessed the power to bring him to his knees with nothing more than a smoldering kiss.

He looked down at her face, flushed with arousal, her lips red, damp and slightly swollen. “Jeannie?” He wanted to take her and make her his. He wanted to remove her clothes and
cover her naked body with his own. He wanted to bury himself deep inside her and find the ecstasy he knew awaited them. But he could not, would not, take advantage of her. He sensed that she had never before felt this way, that she was experiencing sexual desire for the first time in her life.

Suddenly the truth hit him, like a bullet between the eyes. This really
was
the first time for her. The first time she'd ever been kissed. The first time she'd ever been aroused.

“Sam? Is it…is it always like this?” Was it possible that what they were feeling was what normally took place when a man and a woman shared a passionate kiss?

“You can feel what I'm feeling, can't you?” Suddenly he pulled away from her, easing her arms from around his neck as he stood up beside the bed. “Your empathic powers obviously include sharing your partner's arousal.”

Jeannie sat up on the bed, looking at Sam, a mixture of wonder and uncertainty in her eyes. “Does it bother you that I—”

“That you're not only inside my head, but my body, as well, when I'm making love to you? Yeah, it bothers me. You actually felt everything I felt!” Sam loosened his tie, then ripped it off his neck and clutched it in his big hand.

She had not only known how much he wanted her and how out of control he'd been, but had felt those exact same emotions. But how could that be?

Jeannie Alverson really was an empath, Sam admitted to himself. To what degree, he wasn't sure, but he knew for certain that she'd somehow felt exactly what he had felt.

“You sensed what I was feeling, too, didn't you?” she asked, scooting slowly toward the edge of the bed. “Has that ever happened to you?”

“Hell, no! And it didn't happen this time, either.” Sam crammed his silk tie into his pocket. “When I have sex with a woman, the only way I know what she's feeling is in the way
she responds. And no woman has ever been able to experience what I'm feeling.”

Jeannie slid her legs over the side of the bed. Sam stepped out of her reach. “Then what just happened between us was very special, wasn't it?”

“All we did was kiss!” Sam raked his hand through his hair, disheveling it.

She held out her hand to him, bidding him to come to her. “Yes, all we did was kiss.”

He stared at her hand. Small, soft, delicate. Did he have the courage to accept what she was offering? All Sam had ever wanted, all he'd ever expected, from a woman was a mutually satisfying, uncommitted relationship.

Jeannie Alverson was a forever kind of woman, a woman who'd want to know everything about a man, a woman who'd want to save his soul.

“I'm in your life again because I want to repay a debt,” Sam said. “I'm not here because I want anything from you. I don't want your healing. I don't want your sympathy. And I sure as hell don't want your love.”

“You're afraid of me.” Her voice held a breathless tremor. “You don't want to share yourself with anyone. You think you deserve to be unhappy and alone for the rest of your life. You see it as your punishment. And you're afraid I have the power to change all that.”

“I told you that I'm no good for you. I am the wrong man for you. You deserve—”

“I deserve a man who will truly love me.”

“That man isn't me. Not now. Not ever.”

Tilting her chin defiantly, Jeannie looked directly at Sam, her bottom lip quivering slightly. Sam glared at her, wishing he'd never kissed her, wishing he wasn't obligated to stay in Biloxi and guard her.

Several sharp taps on the door snapped Jeannie and Sam out of their silent confrontation. Ollie rushed into the room,
oblivious to Jeannie's position on the bed. “You gotta come downstairs right now, Mr. Dundee. And hurry!”

“What's wrong, Ollie? You're white as a sheet,” Jeannie said.

“I found a package on the front porch. It's a small brown-paper-wrapped package. I don't know where it came from, but it's addressed to Jeannie.”

“No one delivered the package?” Sam asked. “You just found it lying on the porch?”

“It could be a present for her, you know.” Ollie wrung her hands together. “But what if it's… I mean, there could be something dangerous inside. A snake, or a—”

“A bomb,” Jeannie said.

Ollie gasped.

“Where did you put the package?” Sam asked.

“Where did I—? I didn't put it anywhere. I left the thing on the porch.”

“Good girl.” Sam patted Ollie on the back. “You stay up here with Jeannie. I'll go take a look at our little gift.”

Jeannie called out to him. “Sam?”

Halting in the doorway, he turned and looked at her.

“Please, be careful,” she said.

“I always am,” he told her, then walked out into the hall.

The minute Sam was out of sight, Jeannie turned to Ollie. “Get my cane for me.”

“Why do you need your cane? Mr. Dundee said we were to wait up here.”

“Ollie, don't ask questions. Just get me a cane. Please.”

Obeying, Ollie handed Jeannie a walking stick, then grabbed her by the arm when Jeannie stood and headed straight out the bedroom door. “He'll be furious if you go downstairs.”

“I won't get near the package,” Jeannie said. “I promise. But I can't sit up here not knowing what's happening.”

“Oh, all right. I'll go with you. But I won't take the blame for this. If Mr. Dundee gets all fired up—”

“I take full responsibility.”

 

T
HE PACKAGE WAS
just as Ollie had described it. Small, brown-paper-wrapped and lying on the front veranda, only a few inches from the steps. Well, it might be nothing more than a gift from an admirer of Jeannie Alverson. But then again, it might be a bomb. No use taking any chances, Sam decided.

He went back into the house and phoned Lieutenant Painter. “I'll keep an eye on the package until your boys get here,” Sam said. “Tell them to make it quick. I don't know how long this thing has been out here, and if it's a bomb, it could be timed.” Sam replaced the receiver.

“You really do think it's a bomb, don't you?” Jeannie stood in the library doorway, Ollie at her side.

Sam jerked around, glaring at her. “What the hell are you doing down here? Didn't I tell you and Ollie to stay upstairs?”

“I would have gone crazy staying up there, wondering what was happening, not knowing if you were all right or not.”

“Ollie, take her out the back door and keep her there, even if you have to sit on her.”

“Come on, Jeannie.” Ollie tugged on Jeannie's arm. “Mr. Dundee's right. If it's a bomb, it could explode any minute now.”

“Sam, please come and tell me the minute you know for sure.” Her warm brown eyes pleaded with him. “Be very careful. Let the police handle things.”

“That's just what I intend to do,” Sam said.

After he'd made certain Jeannie and Ollie were out back, he returned to the front porch to wait on the Biloxi police. The wait was short; Lieutenant Painter arrived with the bomb squad in ten minutes flat.

“You think someone left a little present for Ms. Alverson?” Lieutenant Painter asked, stepping around the square-shaped object lying so innocently on the veranda.

“I have no idea, but my gut instincts are scaring the hell out of me.” Sam leaned back against the closed front door, bending
his knee and bracing the tip of his left foot on the floor. “If this package is from Reeves, then it's obvious the man means business. But what do you want to bet that there will be no way to trace the package and whatever's inside to the good reverend, or anyone else?”

Sam and Rufus Painter watched from afar while the bomb squad took every precaution unwrapping the package and then opening the box within.

One of the policeman laughed, another grunted and cursed. Sam and Lieutenant Painter walked off the porch and down the sidewalk.

“What have you got there, Ivey?” the lieutenant asked.

“You're not going to believe this one,” Ivey said. “Come take a look, Lieutenant. This is a new one on me.”

When they approached the policemen hovering around the opened package, Ivey turned around and held out a brand new white Bible.

“What the hell?” Painter shook his head.

“A Bible,” Sam said. “A white Bible. Maynard Reeves's trademark. But my guess is there isn't a fingerprint on it, other than your men's.”

“Yeah, if it is from Reeves, he's too smart to leave fingerprints,” Painter said. “Besides, there's no law against someone sending someone else a Bible, is there?”

“Take a look inside,” Ivey said. “Just flip it open where the bookmark is.”

Painter eased the pages back. “Hell! Take a look, Dundee.”

“I wish I didn't have to show this to Jeannie, but she won't give us any peace until she knows,” Sam said. “Any reason why she shouldn't be shown the Bible?”

“No reason I can think of. We can go ahead and show it to her.” Lieutenant Painter clasped the Bible in his hand. “I'll go with you and reassure Ms. Alverson that everything's all right. Then we'll take the Bible downtown and have the lab run some tests.”

Jeannie met them at the door leading into the kitchen. “Was it a bomb?”

“No bomb,” Sam said.

Sam moved out of the way as Jeannie entered the kitchen, Ollie following. “What was it?”

The lieutenant held out the white Bible. “I believe this is yours.”

Jeannie stared at the Bible.

“Why, it's the good book,” Ollie said. “And you were worried somebody sent Jeannie something to harm her.”

“Do you want to see this?” Sam asked Jeannie.

She looked at him, realizing the import of his question. There was more to the gift than the obvious. She nodded. He handed the Bible to her. A white satin ribbon marked a page near the beginning. Jeannie opened the Bible to the specified page and noticed that the white ribbon was dotted with dark red spots. One short verse had been smeared with the same red liquid that dotted the marker.

Jeannie read the verse silently. She swallowed hard, then read it aloud. “Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live.”

“Who'd send such a thing?” Ollie jerked her head around in Sam's direction, and when he didn't respond, she looked back at Jeannie.

“It's a warning, isn't it?” Jeannie asked.

“What do you think?” Sam lifted the open Bible out of her unsteady hands. Placing the marker and the page to his nose, he sniffed, and then he scratched at the red spots on the marker with his fingernail.

“What are you doing?” Ollie stared at him, perplexed by his actions.

“The stains are blood, aren't they?” A knot of fear formed in Jeannie's throat, threatening to cut off her breathing.

“Yeah, they're blood,” Sam said. “But not necessarily human blood.”

“Just what are the police going to do about this?” Ollie
asked. “Folks don't have the right to be sending bloodstained Bibles to other folks and as good as accusing them of being a witch.”

“Ollie, there's nothing you can do about this,” Jeannie said. “Lieutenant Painter will handle the matter—won't you, Lieutenant?”

“I'll be glad when all this business with the reporters and the sick folks and that crazy preacher comes to an end.” Ollie continued mumbling to herself as she walked over to the kitchen cabinet. “I'll fix us all some coffee. I doubt we'll be getting any sleep tonight.”

“I'll give y'all a call if we find out anything,” Lieutenant Painter said.

“Please let me know if the blood is human or animal,” Jeannie said.

Sam grabbed the Bible out of her hands. “There's no way we'll be able to prove Maynard Reeves is the gift-giver, but I don't have a doubt that this—” he snapped the Bible shut “—is the good reverend's handiwork.”

“He's doing more than accusing me of being a witch.” Jeannie shivered, the reality of the warning hitting her full force.
Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live.

“He's threatening your life.” Sam handed the Bible to Lieutenant Painter. “We have to find some sort of evidence against Reeves and put a stop to him before—”

“I know Maynard Reeves wants me dead,” Jeannie said. “He's going to try to kill me.”

“We'll do everything we can to help.” Painter held the white Bible securely in both hands. “But without some hard evidence, our hands are tied.” He nodded, smiling sadly at Jeannie, who returned his smile, then he left the kitchen.

“Coffee is nearly ready,” Ollie said. “Dr. Howell will be home soon, and when he finds out what happened tonight, he's going to be terribly upset.”

Jeannie sat down at the kitchen table. “There's no need to
worry Julian about this until tomorrow.” She looked up at Sam. “Maynard Reeves
is
going to try to kill me, isn't he?”

Sam knelt down in front of Jeannie. Taking her face in his hands, he looked her directly in the eye. “The truth?” he asked.

“Between us, always,” she said.

“Since you refused to join his ministry, Reeves has convinced himself that your empathic powers came from the devil. He sees it as his duty to destroy the evil, and the only way he can do that is to kill you.”

Jeannie gasped several times, repeatedly sucking in gulps of air. Sam put his arm around her. She laid her head on his shoulder, accepting his comforting caress.

“I won't let him succeed, Jeannie. I promise. I'll keep you safe. I'll guard you with my life.”

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