Against the Sky (34 page)

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Authors: Kat Martin

BOOK: Against the Sky
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Epilogue
Seattle, Washington
Two months later
 
It was mid-January, the dead of winter, but in Seattle the sun had broken through the cloudy skies and the temperatures had risen into the fifties. In Anchorage this time of year, a good day would reach the mid-twenties.
Nick smiled. The home they had found south of Bellevue in the suburbs of Seattle had been vacant, making it easy for them to close escrow and move in. The four bedroom, three-bath house sat on an oversize lot with plenty of trees, in a forested area near the Cougar Mountain Wildlands between Bellevue and Issaquah.
Since Brodie Operations wasn't that far away, the commute wasn't bad. Nick would be working freelance for his cousin's company, which meant he could be his own boss, specialize in P.I. cases and also take personal security details.
He could work in the office or out of his house. Which Samantha would also be doing. Her friend, Abby, had convinced her to start searching for locations for two new Perfect Pup dog-grooming parlors. Samantha was looking forward to the challenge.
And of course, she had already badgered Nick into agreeing to let her help with his cases. Nick hadn't told her he actually liked the idea, though he was sure her father wouldn't. They'd agreed to a don't-ask, don't-tell policy where her dad was concerned.
And since they had left Anchorage, an interesting thing had happened. After a review of recent events, Raymond Taggart had gotten so much grief from his superiors, he had taken a job in Minnesota. He'd been replaced with a woman. Nick had worked with the lady, who was a great choice for the job.
Nick was looking forward to getting back to work himself, but he wasn't working today and neither was Samantha. Today was their wedding day.
Wearing a black tuxedo and crisp white pleated shirt, he stood next to Rafe and Dylan, along with Samantha's brother, Peter, all of them decked out like penguins and, in Nick's estimation, looking extremely fine.
In the end, he'd agreed with Samantha's mother that her daughter deserved a full-blown church wedding with all the trimmings. Besides, he wanted to see her walking toward him in one of those long white gowns.
Later, he wanted to be the man who stripped her out of it.
Rafe leaned over and whispered, “Get ready. Here she comes.”
The tempo of the organ music changed and the guests in the lovely little white chapel came to their feet. The organ player began the bridal march, and Samantha appeared in the doorway on her father's arm.
She was all white lace, a tiny waist above a full, gathered skirt, her pretty face and long nutmeg curls hidden beneath a sheer white organdy veil.
Jesus, she looked so beautiful he couldn't breathe. Walking next to her father, who looked equally debonair, she followed Abby, her maid of honor, and a friend from San Francisco, all dressed in pink. The women moved to one side and Samantha stopped directly in front of him. Nick struggled to remember what he was supposed to do.
The minister said something his brain was too foggy to catch.
Her dad answered, “Her mother and I.”
Then Nick was taking her hand, both of them turning to face the minister, a tall, bone-thin man with a leonine mane of perfectly groomed silver hair.
Everyone sat down and the ceremony began. “Dearly beloved,” the minister started, repeating the words of the traditional service that Samantha had wanted, and which felt just right to Nick.
As the ceremony progressed, he figured he made all the right responses since Rafe didn't jab him in the ribs and Dylan didn't snicker. All Nick could think of was Samantha and how lucky he was that she was about to become his wife.
The rest of the service passed in a blur. He put a ring on her finger, proving she was his, and that was all that mattered to him.
He failed to keep track of the rest of what went on until the minister said, “In the name of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit, I now pronounce you husband and wife. Nicholas, you may kiss your bride.”
He swept her into his arms and did so with gusto, kissing her soundly, a deep, open-mouth kiss that lasted way longer than it should have. He heard Cord whistle, heard Derek's laughter, and Noah's booming
“Hooah!”
Nick was grinning when he let her go, and Samantha was blushing.
“Hello, Wife,” he said.
She smiled up at him, looking so sweet his chest squeezed. “Hello, Husband.”
The minister spoke to the crowd. “It gives me great pleasure to introduce Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Brodie.”
Sitting next to Mary, Jimmy whooped. Some of the women were dabbing their eyes, and his friends were cheering. He caught a glimpse of his new boss, his blond, blue-eyed cousin Ian, next to his wife, Meri. Dylan's fiancée, Lane Bishop, sat next to Dylan's little girl, Emily. Winnie Henry, the woman who had helped raise all three Brodie boys, was wiping tears from her apple-round cheeks.
Even Nick's cousin, Ty, and his wife, Haley, had flown up from L.A. for the wedding.
To say nothing of Samantha's entire family, a lot of whom Nick wouldn't meet until the reception, which was being held in a room the family had decorated behind the church.
Nick looked out over the sea of friends who had come to wish him well and couldn't remember ever smiling so broadly.
He was married. He had found his perfect match, a brand-new family, and the job he was meant for.
A man didn't get any luckier than that.
Author's Note
I hope you enjoyed Nick and Samantha in AGAINST THE SKY, book two of the Brodies of Alaska trilogy. If you haven't read Dylan's story, AGAINST THE WILD, I hope you will.
Up next is Rafe's tale, AGAINST THE TIDE, another high-action, romantic adventure. The owner of a charter fishing boat fleet in Valdez, Alaska, Rafe is drawn to Olivia Chandler, the new owner of the Pelican Café. Rafe is intrigued by the beautiful woman whose past is shrouded in mystery, and the more she avoids him, the more he's determined to have her.
Olivia can't allow the attraction she feels for Rafe to grow, not when her very life depends on keeping her identity secret.
But murder and intrigue are in the wind, and Olivia and Rafe are drawn deeper and deeper into the mystery they must work together to solve—before it's too late.
I hope you'll watch for AGAINST THE TIDE and that you enjoy it. Till then, very best wishes and happy reading.
 
Kat
Don't miss Rafe Brodie's story,
 
AGAINST THE TIDE,
 
coming in June!
Chapter One
Valdez, Alaska
 
The piercing ring of the cell phone lying on his nightstand didn't bode well. There was no such thing as good news at three o'clock in the morning.
With a sigh, Rafe rolled over and grabbed the phone, scrubbed a hand over his face as he pressed it against his ear. “Brodie.”
“Police Chief Rosen here. We've got a problem, Rafe, and it's not a good one. I need you to meet me down at the harbor. How soon can you get here?”
Rafe swung his long legs to the side of the bed and sat up. “Ten minutes. What's this about, Chief?”
“It's Scotty Ferris, Rafe. I'm afraid he's dead. I'll fill you in when you get here. I'll be waiting on the dock next to the
Scorpion.
” The police chief hung up the phone.
For several long moments, Rafe just sat there. His chest felt tight. Scotty Ferris was twenty-four years old, a handsome, hardworking kid who was engaged to be married. His June wedding to Cassie Webster, one of the local girls, was only three weeks away. Cassie was going to be crushed.
Rafe swore softly. What the hell could have happened?
But in this rugged country where the climate, wild animals, or just bad judgment could get you killed, accidents happened all the time.
Shoving himself up from the bed, Rafe grabbed a pair of worn jeans off the chair and jerked them on, pulled a sweatshirt over his head, pulled on his heavy socks, and shoved his size-thirteen feet into a pair of high-topped, rubber-soled boots. Since the temperature at night even in late May was still in the thirties and it had rained during the night, he grabbed his jacket as he headed for the steps down to the garage.
The boat harbor wasn't far from his house, a brown bilevel with an oversized two-car garage that sat a few blocks north on Mendeltna, a street off Hazelet Avenue here in Valdez.
Sea Scorpion
was his flagship charter fishing boat, a thirty-eight-foot Mac, his pride and joy. It was the boat he usually captained himself, one of three that made up his fleet. Scotty Ferris was part of the
Scorpion
's crew.
Rafe thought of the young man as he parked his dark green Ford Expedition in a spot in front of the harbor, climbed out, and closed the door. Puddles from last night's rain sloshed against his boots as he made his way toward the dock. The occasional streetlight burned into the darkness but quiet surrounded him, along with the familiar salty tang of the sea.
Ringed by the snow-capped Chugach Mountains, gleaming white glaciers, and the turquoise waters of Prince William Sound, Valdez was considered one of the most beautiful places on earth.
But the climate was a major drawback for most people, being wet, cold, and snowy much of the year. Rafe couldn't imagine living anywhere else.
Which brought his thoughts full-circle to Scotty. With year-round residents numbering less than forty-five hundred, everyone knew everyone who lived there. And everyone knew and liked Scotty. The kid had been born in Valdez. He thrived on the rugged lifestyle, planned to marry and raise kids here, probably never would have left.
What the hell had happened? Rafe thought again as he walked toward his boat.
And why did Chief Rosen want to meet him at the
Scorpion
?
A few spaces down from where'd he parked, Rafe spotted a black-and-silver Ford police SUV. In the distance, the familiar antenna above the wheelhouse of the
Scorpion
marked where the boat bobbed near the middle of the dock.
Rafe started down the long wooden walkway, his gaze on the group of people gathered next to where the
Scorpion
was moored. The area was cordoned off with yellow crime scene tape, the boat clearly off-limits until the police were finished collecting evidence.
Police Chief Clifford Rosen, a stout man in his fifties, bald head ringed by thinning gray hair, stood next to a figure lying on the dock, covered by a long white cloth. Knowing Scotty Ferris lay under the cloth made Rafe's stomach burn.
Two other officers quietly conversed while a doctor he recognized as Karen Ward, a woman who worked at the local clinic and served as medical examiner, knelt next to the sheet-draped body.
“What happened?” Rafe asked the chief.
“Looks like he was robbed,” Rosen answered. “Wallet's missing, jewelry's gone. Car keys. Cell phone's missing. Single blow to the back of the head. Blunt instrument. Baseball bat seems the most likely, something that size that was easy to handle.”
“Jesus.”
“I asked you to come down because I need someone to identify the body. With his parents both dead, I figured better you than his fiancée. Soon as you do that, I'll break the news to the Webster girl.”
Rafe just nodded. Cassie was going to be devastated. She and Scotty were crazy in love, the kind Rafe figured had a good chance of lasting. Sometimes fate could be a real bastard.
“Who found him?”
“Young couple wandered out this way from the Fisherman's Catch Saloon. Found him lying right there. Shook 'em up pretty bad.”
“What time?”
“Two a.m. ME makes preliminary time of death between eleven and two.”
One of the officers, a red-haired young cop Rafe recognized as Rusty Donovan, leaned down and lifted the edge of the sheet. As the cover rolled back, Rafe's gaze fixed on Scotty. The boy's brown eyes were open, staring sightlessly into the black night sky. His handsome face was frozen in a look of surprise.
He was wearing a jacket but it was unzipped, revealing a long-sleeved blue T-shirt that read
FISHERMEN DO IT DEEPER.
Rafe could almost see the grin on the kid's face when he'd put it on.
“It's him,” he said darkly. “Scott Ferris.”
“You know what he was doing down here?”
“No.” But once he got his head wrapped around Scotty's death, he intended to find out.
“As soon as we check for any forensic evidence on the boat, I'll want you to take a look inside, see if anything's missing. At first glance, there's no sign of a break-in. Probably took him out before he went aboard.”
Rafe just nodded.
“That's it then,” the police chief said. “We'll wrap things up here and I'll talk to Cassie Webster.”
Rafe looked down at Scotty and clenched his jaw. “You're going to catch the sonofabitch, right? You're going to find the guy who killed him?”
“If he's in town, we'll catch him. If he's some loser just passing through, might be a whole lot harder.”
Rafe frowned. “You don't think he was killed by a local?”
“Wouldn't be my first guess. Hell, we haven't had a murder here in years. But violent crime's been creeping up lately, assaults, thefts, burglaries. These days anything's possible.”
“Either way, you're going to get him,” Rafe repeated, making it clear there had better not be any doubt.
Rosen just nodded. “Thanks for coming down.”
“Keep me posted, will you?” When the chief made no reply, Rafe shoved his hands into his jacket pockets, turned and started back the way he'd come.
It was almost dawn. If he had a fishing charter today, he'd be at the dock by five, getting ready to take the boat out at six. He did half-day cruises; nine-hour; or full-day, twelve-hour charters that lasted till six p.m.
He wasn't taking a group out today, which meant he wouldn't be seeing Jaimie Graham, the nineteen-year-old girl who crewed for him along with Scotty. She dressed like a man, worked like a man, but under her determination to prove herself in the world of men, Jaimie had a bad crush on Scotty. Like Cassie, she was going to take the news damned hard.
Rafe got into the Ford and started driving toward the house Jaimie lived in with her parents. He needed to speak to her, break the news before she found out from someone else. He hated to wake up her folks, but he didn't have any choice.
Rafe sighed into the darkness. He wished he could just go back to bed, get some badly needed sleep, but there was no chance of that.
Not with his mind circling around, going over what had happened, trying to make sense of the senseless murder of Scotty Ferris. Trying to think why Scotty might have been down at the
Scorpion
in the middle of the night. Wishing he knew who had killed him.
Thinking how much he'd like to wrap his hands around the bastard's neck and squeeze till he paid for what he had done.
Chapter Two
The breakfast crowd at the Pelican Café had begun to arrive, as people did every morning when it opened at six a.m. The café had been started in the fifties and been going strong ever since. Of course it had passed through a dozen different owners, had its ups and downs, and been near financial ruin more than once.
Having purchased the restaurant six months ago, Olivia Chandler was the most recent person to step into the driver's seat. Unlike the previous owner, who had let the place sink into disrepair, Olivia had been making changes, most of which had been heralded with great enthusiasm by the local customers.
The bell above the door rang as a young mother and her little girl walked in and headed for one of the light-blue vinyl booths. Melissa Young, Olivia remembered, was her name. Liv made a point of getting to know her customers—just not too well.
While Melissa grabbed a child's high seat and settled one-year-old Suzy in it, the waitress, a slim little blonde named Katie McKenzie, grabbed the coffeepot off the burner behind the counter and headed for the booth. Katie smiled as she filled Melissa's mug and handed her a menu.
“I'll give you a minute to decide,” Katie said, hurrying off to another table to refill an earlier patron's cup.
One of the changes Liv had made was to hire a new cook—one who wasn't high on marijuana half the time. Wayne Littlefish was Alaska Native, reliable and great in the kitchen. An older man, Charlie Foot, worked the dinner shift.
Liv had also hired two part-time waitresses instead of one full-time worker, which gave each of the girls a more flexible schedule and made taking time off easier for all of them, including Olivia and longtime employee, Nell Olsen.
A buxom woman with thick, silver-streaked black hair, Nell had worked at the café for more than ten years. She was as much a fixture as the sky-blue interior, the ocean theme, and the anchors and fishing nets on the walls.
Nell had been invaluable in helping Liv take over the business since, aside from waiting tables for the past couple of years, being a fairly decent cook, and a very fast learner, Liv had almost no experience in running a restaurant.
Still, in the last six months she had managed to keep the old clientele happy and add new customers. The tourist season was just starting, so business was getting even better.
“Well, look who's coming,” Nell said, staring out the window at a tall man in jeans and a sweatshirt crossing the outside patio. The brick patio was empty now while it was still cold, but with summer approaching, soon would be noisy with people. “If it isn't Mr. Tall, Dark, and Handsome.”
Katie walked past Liv just then, a platter of bacon and eggs riding on the flat of her hand. “I just call him Mr. Freakin' Hot.”
“Shame on you,” Liv teased. “You just turned twenty-one. Rafe Brodie's got to be at least a dozen years older.”
“Just means he's a man, not a boy. And I like a guy with a little experience.”
“From what I hear, he has plenty of that,” Liv said dryly as Katie sailed off to deliver the food.
Nell chuckled. “I'm fifty years old and that man can still make me swoon.”
Olivia busied herself wiping off the long Formica-topped counter as Rafe shoved through the door, ringing the bell above. Seating himself in his usual booth, he stretched his long legs out in front of him. Rafe was a regular in the café, which sat on North Harbor Road right across from the boat dock.
“Katie's busy,” Nell said with a matchmaking glint in her eyes. “Why don't you wait on him?”
Olivia shook her head. “I'm busy, too. You go ahead.”
Knowing there was no persuading her, Nell sighed. “Probably better you don't. Everyone in town knows Rafe's a dedicated bachelor.”
As the owner of the café, Olivia caught most of the local gossip. According to Cassie Webster, the other part-time waitress, Rafe Brodie had dated a woman named Sally Henderson for nearly three years, until she'd dumped him four months ago because he refused to marry her.
Apparently, he'd made his intentions—or lack thereof—clear from the start, but Sally hadn't believed him, poor girl.
Dedicated bachelor or not, Nell and Katie were right about Rafe. With the thick, dark brown hair curling just over his collar, the faint shadow of beard that usually lined his hard jaw, and those hot, whiskey-brown eyes, he was one of the best-looking men Olivia had ever seen.
Which was exactly the reason she had avoided him since the day she had met him.
Liv looked over at him, saw those hot, dark eyes watching her, and knew she was in trouble.

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