Close To The Edge (Westen #2) (28 page)

Read Close To The Edge (Westen #2) Online

Authors: Suzanne Ferrell

Tags: #Contemporary Romance Novel

BOOK: Close To The Edge (Westen #2)
11.87Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

She whirled and planted one finger right in the middle of his chest. “Don’t you ever…ever make me do that again.”

He held up his hands and backed toward the porch steps. “Yes, ma’am.”

She followed him. “You want me to talk to someone, I’ll talk to them. But I won’t lie to them. Understand?”

His back against the porch, he nodded, hands still in the air. “I got it. No lying to anyone. No matter what.”

“Okay.” She stood less than a foot away from him, breathing deep to calm her anger.

“Done chewing me out?”

“I don’t know.”

He reached for her and pulled her in tight against his chest. This time she let the solid warmth of his body work it’s magic on her. The tears flowed freely once more and soft sobs shook her.

“It’s okay, sweetheart,” he murmured against her hair. “You’ve had a very trying day.”

No longer capable of words, she simply nodded and sucked in some air. It sounded like a hiccup to her.
Great.
Not only had she blown up at him like a Roman candle, now she’d turned into a watering can all over him.

“And I should’ve known she’d want her mom and that would hurt you. You’re the toughest woman I’ve ever met.”

She pulled back, wiped at her tears and stared up at him in the moonlight. “No, I’m a wuss.”

“Nope. I’m the sheriff here and no one tells me off like you just did.” He lowered his head and brushed her lips in a soft kiss, his hands rubbing the muscles of her back.

She pressed in closer, wanting more.

“Don’t you have a murderer to catch?” Clint asked from the porch shadows above them. “Looks to me like you have something else on your mind.”

Gage ended the kiss and pulled her tight against his chest. “You okay now?” he whispered against her hair.

“I’m fine.”

He turned and looked where his cousin-in-law was lighting a cigar. “Emma know you still smoke those things?”

“Yes. But only on rare occasions and only out on the porch. So what did you find out from Teeny? Anything useful? She kept asking Harriett if she was an angel.”

“Harriett, an angel?” Gage eased Bobby aside. Taking her hand, he led her up the porch steps.

“Yeah. That’s when I knew she was still hallucinating.”

“What she said to us didn’t make any more sense, either. She was scared of someone called ‘the fishman’. Apparently Rusty was ordered to shut her up, that’s why he beat her.”

“I think she saw Harley’s murder.”

Clint took a drag on the cigar. “So Harley’s death wasn’t an accident?”

Great.
She’d forgotten they’d let everyone believe he’d died from a blow to the head when he fell.

Gage wrapped his arm around her and pulled her into his side. “The official cause of death hasn’t been determined, but his death wasn’t an accident, and we have reason to believe his death is mixed up in all this.”

“So the sooner you find this guy or I find a place to send Teeny, the safer we’ll all be.”

“That’s about right.”

“What’s your next move?”

“Frankly, I don’t know. I’m wondering if Dad might’ve kept some files on who Rusty might’ve been connected with over at the office. But with Ruby’s filing system who knows where it’s buried?”

“A word of warning. Emma just called and said the mayor and some people are looking for you. Might want to avoid the café for now.”

“Thanks. You find a place for Teeny yet?”

Bobby’s heart swelled again. There it was, Gage worrying about Teeny. He didn’t see it, but every time she turned around, he had the welfare of another citizen of Westen on his mind. Even someone as helpless and hopeless as Teeny.

“Libby Wilson has an ambulance coming from a private clinic in Columbus.”

“Libby Wilson, the county social worker?”

“Yes, she’s become a great friend to Emma and me, since your aunt’s Alzheimer’s has grown worse.” Clint paused to take another drag on the cigar. “Libby has a friend who’s a psychiatrist at the clinic and willing to see Teeny, so we can have her evaluated and held for a few days. But after seventy-two hours, unless the doctor finds a psychiatric reason for keeping her, I’ll need to find a drug rehab program to get her in.”

Gage let go of Bobby and opened the door. Waiting for her to go past, he looked back at Clint. “Send the bill for the private clinic to me. I’ll find a way for the sheriff’s budget to cover it.”

“That’s gonna piss off Tobias and the town council.”

“Too bad.”

***

For a town that usually rolled up its sidewalks by ten, Main Street was lit up like a birthday cake. Gage drove past the café, which was still doing a brisk business an hour after closing time. He turned into the alley behind the jail and parked.

“So, now what do we do?” Bobby asked, as she hopped out of the other side.

“Just what I told Clint.” He opened the door and held it for her to pass through. “We need information on Rusty.”

“Which means with Cleetus out at the tunnel, I get to search through Ruby’s files all by myself.”

“Once I get Daniel on his way out there, I’ll help you search.”

“Hope you’re as good as Cleetus.” She winked at him in that sassy way that always sent need coursing through him and made him want to grab onto her hips. This time he let her keep walking in front of him, even as he watched her hips swing softly with each step. Now wasn’t the time to talk about what he’d really like to do to her sexy ass. The whole town of Westen depended on the two of them solving this mystery. Hopefully, he’d be able to talk her into staying once this mess was cleaned up.

Suddenly, she stopped in front of him. He put his hands on her shoulders as he slammed into her to keep her from falling into the main office.

Good thing, since it was crammed full of people. The mayor was seated in his chair. Richard Davis, the newspaper’s owner, and two other members of the town council, Thomas Yoder, the town’s legal advisor and Harold Russet, all stood in the room. Deke, who’d beat them back to the office, leaned against one file cabinet, his quiet stare taking in the group.

“Good of you to join us, Sheriff,” Tobias said in his best, I’m-the-mayor-and-I’m-in-charge voice.

“Sorry, Sheriff, they wouldn’t leave until they talked to you.” Daniel came around the deputies’ desk, his shoulders slung back in military precision. Daniel had spent ten years in the army and standing at attention was a sure sign he’d been trying for some time to hold his temper.

Gage gave Bobby a little shove into the room and followed her in.

“Hello, Gage,” a deep, sultry voice he’d planned to never hear again said from his left.

The voice stopped him in his tracks. He turned his head just in time to see the woman unwind her long, lean body from her chair and saunter over. She wrapped her arms around his neck and pressed in close. “I’ve missed you.”

A movement to his right caught his eye. Bobby dropped her bag on his desk and kept walking to the file cabinets, her back rigid. Finally, she turned to look at him, her face a mask of contentment, except for one arched brow. “Oh, I forgot to tell you. Your
wife
called earlier.”

Oh, shit.


Ex-wife
.” He set the viper away and took a step back. Everyone else in the room watched them with rapt attention, except Bobby, who’d turned her back and was pulling out files. Icicles were forming in that corner.

For a moment he studied his ex. Tall and thin as a supermodel. Dressed in designer clothes her inheritance had paid for and fashion magazines dictated. Not a hair out of place, makeup applied like an artist. A beautiful cover for an empty, hollow person.

“What do you want, Moira?”

“We haven’t seen each other in two years. Can’t I just stop by to say hello?”

It’d been three years and he thanked God every day he wasn’t married to her anymore. “You never do anything without a reason.”

“Gage,” Tobias picked that moment to move out of his chair. “I’m sure that is no way to speak to a district attorney with a reputation such as Ms. Dudson’s.”

“It’s assistant district attorney and Tobias, don’t get in the middle of this. You’re way out of your league here. And by the way, why are you here?” he asked as he slipped behind his desk, keeping one eye on Bobby, who still hadn’t turned around.

“The town council and I want to know what you intend to do about this meth-head lying over in the clinic?” Tobias glanced at his minions who all three bobbed their heads on cue. “Why isn’t she in jail?”

“The
victim
is in Clint’s clinic because she’s unconscious and requires medical aid. You wouldn’t want me to lock her up in the jail, then have something happen to her so she or her family could sue the town for refusing her medical care, would you?”

“Well, no. We certainly wouldn’t want that.” The mayor backpedaled faster than a Tour de France racer going in reverse. “Why aren’t you out trying to find the other one? You don’t think he’s holed up somewhere here in town, do you?”

“No. I know exactly where he is.” Taking out his keys, he removed one and tossed it to his deputy. “Daniel, go over to my garage, get a couple of sleeping bags and some camping gear, then meet Cleetus out at the old MacPherson place. Take some walkie-talkies so we can stay in touch.”

“What’s up over there?” Daniel grabbed two hand-held radios off the docking station on Gage’s desk and headed toward the back of the office.

“Cleetus will fill you in.”

“Yes, sir.” Without further question, Daniel marched out the door.

Gage wished he could go with him. He glanced at Deke. His friend just lifted the unscarred side of his mouth in return. Big help he was. Bobby, busily opening and closing files by the wall of filing cabinets, pretended to ignore everything in the room.

With a deep sigh, Gage turned to stare at his ex-wife. “Now, what are you doing in town and what trouble have you brought with you?”

“Ms. Dudson has brought you some information about the drugs infiltrating our town, which you didn’t seem to know anything about,” Tobias interrupted before Moira could respond. She just smiled in that calculating way she had when she had a suspect under her thumb.

A bolt of déjà vu shot down Gage’s spine. To his left Bobby had stilled her movements.

Ignoring the mayor once more, he inhaled. The old wound caught, reminding him that with Moira there was nothing coincidental about her actions. He narrowed his eyes at his ex-wife. “What information is that?”

“That there may be a meth lab somewhere in your jurisdiction,” Tobias announced.

Ignoring the mayor, Gage studied his ex-wife. “For months we’ve been getting fliers about rural areas all over the state being hotbeds of meth activity. What makes you think there’s one specifically near here?”

“I have it on good authority the State task force believes a lab has existed in this area for some time. Whoever is behind it has stayed under their radar until recently,” she replied.

“And you know this how?”

Moira flipped her long, dark-blonde hair with a toss of her head and gave him a sultry look. “Don’t you think we should talk about this privately?”

“What I think,” he said, slowly pushing himself out of his chair and reaching for her arm, “is that you need to sit right here.” He gently pushed her into his vacated seat. “And tell me how you got this information.”

He leaned against the corner of the desk and extended his legs, trapping her between him and the wall. He folded his arms over his chest and waited. Since what he really wanted to do was reach down and choke the hell out of her, his patience surprised him.

Moira glanced around the room, her calculating eyes seeking any source of assistance.

Gage slammed his hand against the desk. “Now, Moira.”

She jumped, narrowing her eyes at him. “I have a friend on the task force.”

“You’re sleeping with one of the DEA agents.” It wasn’t a question. With Moira there was never friendship in her plans. When she wanted info, she slept with someone to get it. Something else he’d learned after his shooting. “So what did your source have to say?”

“Raids are going down tonight, Gage. All over the state. They plan to shut down the urban supply.” She twisted her lips which meant she was holding something back.

He’d seen that look more than once, the last time before he’d gone off to get shot. “And?”

“They’re hoping the dealers will panic and come for any drugs the rural suppliers have in store.” She leaned forward, just enough to be sure her deeply cut top gave him and anyone looking a full view of her breasts. “It’s our chance to beat them to the punch. You and I can bring in the drugs before the DEA gets here. We can call in the press to give us state-wide coverage. Think of how great that will be to both of our careers.”

She laid one hand on his thigh and lowered her voice. “You could get out of this rinky-dink town and get back to real police work.”

Slowly, he pried her hand from his leg, leaning close. “You’re out of luck, Moira. I’ve already found the cook, the drugs and contacted the DEA. You’ll have to go screw someone else to get your name in the paper.”

“You bastard.” She stood and drew back her hand to slap him, but he caught it inches from his face.

“Careful. You wouldn’t want to spend a night in this rinky-dink town’s jail for assaulting an officer of the law, would you?”

Her eyes narrowed again like a cat considering her options. Finally she shook her head.

“Good decision.” He released her hand and moved away from the desk. “Now I suggest you take your career and your ego back to Columbus.”

With a feral growl, she snatched up her purse and slung it over her shoulder. She pushed past his leg and stalked from the room, her heels clacking hard against the ancient wood floors.

No one said a word until the office’s front door slammed behind her.

“What do you mean you’ve found the drugs? How much drugs are we talking?” Tobias was the first to jump from his spot into Gage’s face.

“Who was the cook?” One of the councilmen asked.

“What are you going to do about the drug gangs coming here?”

“That was your ex-wife? Did you get a rabies shot instead of a blood test before the ceremony?” Deke’s comment cut through the yelling by the other men.

Other books

A Matter of Sin by Jess Michaels
The Story Teller by Margaret Coel
Triplet by Timothy Zahn
My Husband's Wives by Faith Hogan
No sin mi hija by Betty Mahmoody, William Hoffer
The Spanish Armada by Robert Hutchinson
Cowboys for Christmas by Jan Springer