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Authors: Maggie Shayne

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BOOK: Colder Than Ice
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“Nope, not that I saw.”

Josh sat down on the sofa beside his son. “Meant to tell you, that was a good call this morning. Spotting the strange car, telling me about it.”

Bryan shrugged, but at least he looked up from the magazine he wasn't really reading. “I wasn't sure whether to say something in front of Beth or not. It made her nervous, didn't it?”

“Seemed to.”

“Guess she has reason to be.”

Josh nodded. “Yeah. I wanted to talk to you about that.”

“About what?”

“About me. About…Beth Slocum. And why I reacted the way I did when I first saw her.”

Bryan lifted his brows. They disappeared beneath the shock of brown hair that slanted across his forehead. “I thought that was none of my business.”

“You said that, Bry. I didn't. I just…had to make sure she was who I thought she was before I said anything.”

“And now you're sure?”

“Yeah.” Josh took a breath, telling himself that Beth's advice had sounded great at the time. Carrying it out was another matter. “This goes back a ways, so bear with me. Before you were born, I worked for the ATF. It was one of the things that came between your mother and me. She hated it.”

“I know all about that.”

Josh blinked. “You do?”

“Yeah. Mom told me.” Bryan set his magazine back on the coffee table.

Josh nodded. “Okay. But she probably didn't tell you why I was fired from that job. There was a cult leader, keeping underage kids, mostly girls, on a fenced compound, with armed guards and dogs. He was dealing drugs and stockpiling weapons, and no one was sure the girls who were there were free to leave.”

“The Young Believers,” Bryan said.

Josh lost his entire train of thought. “You know about them, too?”

“Sure I know. Mom told me about the raid that went bad. She told me about the girl you accidentally shot, how you lost your job over it. And she told me never to bring it up with you. She said it was the worst time of your life and probably the main reason you two broke up. She said the guilt ruined you.”

Josh just sat there for a moment, absorbing his son's words. “I had no idea she'd told you all that.”

Bryan tipped his head to one side. “Doesn't mean I don't want to hear your version of it. Besides, what does all that have to do with Beth Slocum?”

“Everything,” Joshua said softly. He looked his son in the eyes. “It turns out she's the girl I shot.”

Bryan bobbed his head forward, eyes widening. “But I thought the girl you shot was dead.”

“So did everyone else. Nearly everyone, I mean. For all these years, I believed it. When I went to see her in the hospital after the raid, she was in a coma. They told me she wouldn't live, and the way she looked, I had no trouble believing it. She was…hell, she was your age.”

“And they let you think you'd killed her? I can't believe no one ever told you. You recognized her when we first saw her, didn't you?”

“I did. It had been a while—she was eighteen years younger and at death's door when I last saw her, after all. But yeah, it's not like that face hasn't haunted me ever since. I just couldn't believe it could really be her.”

Bryan nodded slowly, his eyes holding his father's, almost probing them. “That's what's different, then.”

Josh looked at him, unsure what his son meant.

“The guilt you've been carrying around, Dad. Jeez, finding out you didn't kill her after all must have been like having a lead weight taken off your shoulders.”

He nodded slowly. “You know, that's probably it.” Then he frowned. “You ought to look into a future as a shrink, you know that?”

“Doesn't take a shrink to nail that one.” He paused, studying his father's face so closely that Josh wondered what his son saw there. Then he said, “Tell me the rest, Dad.”

He really wanted to know, Josh realized. He organized his thoughts and continued his story. “The cult leader, Mordecai Young, didn't die in the raid, either, though for a long while everyone believed he had.”

“So that's who they think might come after Beth?”

Josh nodded. “A year ago they crossed paths. She was a teacher—he'd kidnapped one of her students. She bluffed her way into the house were Mordecai was holding the girl, and then she tried to kill him.”

“No way.”

Josh nodded. “Shot him point-blank, right in the chest. But he'd vested up ahead of time. The Feds figured the most
she'd done was piss him off, and that if he could ever find her, he'd return the favor. So she was relocated.”

“You think it might have been him—Mordecai Young—in that brown car earlier?”

“I don't know. We should probably err on the side of caution, though.” He closed his eyes. “I don't like her being in that cottage alone. It makes protecting her nearly impossible.”

Bryan opened his mouth, then closed it again and leaned back on the couch, looking stunned by all his father had revealed.

“What?” Josh asked.

“Nothing. Hell, I'm blown away by this. I can imagine how you must feel, but—no. Nothing.”

“Bry, come on. I wouldn't have told you all this if I didn't trust you. So if there's something you want to say, spit it out.”

Bryan shrugged. “Just…I don't know. Lying to her to protect her was one thing. Not telling her you're the guy who shot her…It's way worse. It feels wrong.”

“I know. But…she'd send us packing if she knew. And that would leave her unprotected.”

“I guess. But shouldn't that be up to her? I mean, it's her life, Dad.”

Josh sighed. “I know. And you're right. I hate this, Bry. But Jesus, if I make the wrong move and she ends up dead…”

“You figure this is your chance to make up for the past.”

“It's more than that. This isn't about me. It's about protecting Beth.”

“I don't blame you, Dad. I mean, I disagree with you, but I don't blame you. I guess I might do the same thing.”

No anger, no accusations. Josh couldn't believe it. He hadn't told his son the worst of what he'd learned by reading Beth's dossier, though. That she'd had a child, a daughter who'd been
adopted while she'd lingered in a coma, fighting for her life. And raised by someone else while she'd been putting that life back together again.

A daughter. A little girl she had lost because of him. And if there was one tragedy Joshua understood, it was the loss of a child.

Bryan didn't need to know all that. That was Beth's private hell—and his own.

“I just wish I could come up with an excuse to get into Beth's house long enough to check the place out, make sure her locks are secure, things like that.”

The screen door creaked open, and Maude walked in, accompanied by another woman, one who wore baggy jeans and a sweatshirt with a one-horned moose on the front. Printed beneath the moose were the words, Is That Your Final Antler?

Bryan grinned at the sweatshirt as he got up, to relieve the women of the shopping bags they carried. “A movie and shopping in one night?” Bryan asked.

“It was a long movie. We got hungry,” the newcomer said. She had short copper-red hair, in tight kinky curls, and was younger than Maude. Late fifties, Joshua guessed.

“Boys, this is my good friend, Frankie Parker.”

Joshua was on his feet, as well. “Police Chief Frankie Parker?”

“The one and only,” she said, extending a hand.

“Frankie, this is my grandson Joshua and his boy Bryan.”

Frankie was smiling, but her smile died. “Don't play with me, Maude. You don't have any grandson.”

“As far as you or anyone else in this town is concerned, Frankie, I most certainly do.”

Frankie frowned at her.

“Trust me. It's important. And it's between us, Frankie. I
knew you would hear about this and start snooping sooner or later. How much Josh does or does not want to tell you is up to him. All you need to know is that he's here for a good reason. And that I trust him.”

“I don't like this, Maude.”

“You don't have to, Frankie.”

Frankie moved her gaze to Josh's. “Good to meet you.”

“Same here,” Josh said, but he wasn't happy about the situation. Clearly this woman knew more than she should.

“If you're up to no good, I'll find out.”

“I've got no doubt about that. But I'm not.”

Bryan looked worried, and when the old woman's eyes fell on him, he said, “I'll, uh, put these away for you.” He carried the groceries into the kitchen.

“Leave the dry goods right in the bags, Bryan,” Maude called. Then she turned to Frankie. “Thanks for helping me in with the bags, hon.”

“Anytime, Maudie. You…give me a call if you need anything.” She sent a lingering look at Josh, and he had no doubt she would be on the horn tomorrow, checking him out with every contact she had.

“Like I'm gonna need anything with these two strapping men around the house,” Maude said. She walked her friend to the door, waved as the other woman left, then turned to face Josh. “Don't look like that,” she said. “What else could I say? She's known me for thirty years. And unlike most folks in town, she knows I never had children.” She shrugged. “Besides, I trust her. She's not going to blow your cover.”

“Are you sure?”

“Of course I'm sure. I've know
her
for thirty years, too. And you might want to think about confiding in Frankie—God
knows she's not going to let this go until one of us does. She's good at her job, even though she's far from your typical law enforcement type.”

“You can say that again.”

She smiled. “Now, did I hear you saying you needed a chance to snoop around Beth's house?”

He lifted his brows. “Why, you have an idea?”

“Well, since my range is on the fritz, I thought we could all have dinner at Beth's place tomorrow night.”

“I didn't know there was anything wrong with your range.”

She smiled, adding wrinkles to her wrinkles. “There's not.”

“You oughtta work for the government, Maude.”

“Isn't that what I'm doing?”

“I guess you are.”

Maude knew nothing about his reasons for being there, other than what he had told her: that her good friend Beth had some enemies from her past who might be a threat to her, and that he needed her help to make sure Beth would be safe.

That was all he'd needed to tell her.

“I'll clear it all with Beth when she stops by on her run tomorrow morning,” she said.

Josh got the feeling Beth wasn't going to have much choice in the matter. She was hosting them for dinner tomorrow night. Because what Maude Bickham wanted, Maude Bickham got.

Chapter Five

Saturday (wee hours)

B
eth was dreaming. She knew she was dreaming, and she wanted to wake up, but just like before, she was unable to.

Her dream self lay in a hospital bed. She could tell by the antiseptic smell, the steady beeping of her monitors and the tubes she could feel at her nostrils, gently blowing cool, ultra-dry oxygen, and the one in her throat that she kept thinking would choke her.

She was asleep in that hospital. She didn't think she was dead, but it wasn't a normal sleep. She couldn't wake up. She didn't know where she was, and when she tried to think about who she was, or what had happened to her, a yawning black hole opened up in her mind. She felt close to panic at that gaping hole in her mind. It felt as if she were teetering on its edge, as
if she might fall in and be swallowed up by its darkness, so she chose not to look there anymore. Instead, she focused on the sensation of a warm, strong hand that surrounded one of hers.

And from that point her senses opened wider, to admit the soft, tormented voice that spoke to her.

I'm sorry. God, I'm so sorry.

She wondered what he was so sorry about. Was he somehow responsible for whatever had happened to her? But he held her hand, and he sounded so kind….

I don't even know your name. No one does.

Not even me, she thought.

But believe me, I'd switch places with you if I could. I'd rather it were me in that bed than you.

She liked the man who held her hand. She wished she could find a way to tell him that it was all right. That
she
was all right. And then she realized—she wasn't. She couldn't wake up. Maybe she never would.

I'd give anything in the world if you would just open your eyes. I want to see them. Their color—I want to see that more than anything.
He squeezed her hand a little tighter.
Come on. Open your eyes for me. Open them.

Then there was a woman's voice. She told him he had to leave. And on the way out, she said, “It wasn't your fault, we all know that. She was in the line of fire. Any one of the agents could have been the one whose bullet hit her.”

And then she went on. “There's really no point in your coming back here, you know. She doesn't know you're here. And besides, she's not going to last out the week.”

Then I'm not sure how the hell I'm supposed to.

God, his voice was so familiar. And so filled with regret!

A telephone rang, shrill and sharp. It cut through the
dream, and Beth sat up, looked at her bedroom around her and sagged in relief when knowledge filled her mind. She knew who she was. She knew where she was. She was all right after all.

But that dream—it had been a long time since she'd had that particular dream. She'd all but forgotten about the man who had come to sit with her while she wasted away, a comatose Jane Doe in a hospital bed.

The phone rang again. She turned toward the nightstand, reached out for the telephone, the night-light making it easier. Then she brought it to her ear.

“Hello?” No one was there. “Hello? Who is this?”

When no one answered, a chill slid up her spine like an icy finger. The memory of Mordecai crossed her mind, and she reminded herself that she had always known he would find her sooner or later. Maybe tonight was the night.

Then she frowned, because she could hear voices. She pressed the volume button on the side of her phone, clicking it up as many notches as it would go. It sounded like…it sounded like Maude, speaking to someone else. It was muted, distant.

Beth flung back her covers and got out of bed, going into the living room, where the caller ID box was, and looking at the digital readout. Maude's phone number showed on the screen. She listened, heard nothing more, then depressed the cutoff and dialed it back.

A harsh busy signal was her only reply.

“Hell.” Something was wrong over there. She didn't know Joshua Kendall well at all—and the fact that he'd stirred some kind of insane attraction in her should probably be taken as a bad sign rather than a good one. The last man she'd been attracted to had turned out to be an insane mass murderer.

Beth shoved her feet into her running shoes, simply because they were near the door. She yanked a coat off one hook and her car keys off another as she went out the door and into the brisk chill of an autumn night in Vermont.

 

Joshua had been dreaming about hot, wet, frantic sex with Beth Slocum when something woke him up—and at the worst possible moment.

He groaned, wondering when the hell he'd started having dreams worthy of a seventeen-year-old, then rolled over and glanced at the clock. The time—5:06 a.m.—glowed at him in neon green. Then he heard footsteps and was on his feet and pulling his gun out of the holster on the bedpost before another thought had time to cross his mind.

He yanked a bathrobe—one Maude had laid out for him that was not his own—from the footboard and jerked it on, then headed barefoot into the hallway, the gun in his hand, his hand in the robe's pocket.

At Maude's room, he paused, because her door was opening. He stepped back a little. She poked her head out. “Is that you, Joshua?”

“Yeah, it's me. Something woke me.”

“Me, too.” She swung her door wider and turned around, shaking her head. “I could have sworn I heard someone in the kitchen.”

“Why don't you stay right here and let me go check?”

“My goodness. Yet another benefit to having a young man around the house, I guess. All right, I'll force myself to let you wait on me. After all, ‘A woman who says she dislikes chivalry is both dishonest and a fool.'”

“That's a good one. I'm gonna write that down.” He gave
her shoulder a squeeze, then took hold of her door and told her to get back inside. She did, and he pulled it closed. Then he closed his hand around the grips of his .38, tiptoed to the stairway and down it.

There was someone in the kitchen. Even now, he heard movement. Soft, barely audible, but there.

He crept through the house, through the dining room and into the kitchen. Reaching inside, he flipped the light switch and raised the gun.

A large black cat sat on the counter, glaring at him with eyes that seemed more irritated than startled.

Sighing, he lowered the gun.

“Well, I'll be…” Maude said from behind him.

He frowned, turning to face her. “I thought I told you to stay upstairs.”

“Oh, Joshua, don't be silly. I've never obeyed a man's orders yet, and I don't intend to start now, chivalry or not.” She nodded at the cat. “That's Frankie's beast. Comes in here any time I leave a window open more than a quarter inch, looking for a snack. I swear he's made of rubber. Aren't you, Siegfried?”

“Siegfried?” He shook his head. “Don't tell me—Frankie has another cat named Roy?”

“Dog. Bluetick. Dumb as a rock, but twice as friendly.” She moved to the fridge, pulled it open and reached in to straighten the row of tiny brown vials of insulin before grabbing a small carton of cream. As she poured some into a bowl for the cat—who weighed fifteen pounds if he weighed an ounce—headlights invaded the house from the front, and then footsteps raced across the porch and someone pounded on the door.

Maude paid no attention. She was looking at the cordless
phone that lay on the counter beside the feasting cat, bringing it to her ear and frowning at it.

Joshua went to the door and, after a cursory look outside, opened it.

“What is going on?” Beth asked. “Where's Maude?”

“Um…” His brain was not processing her questions, because she was standing there in an unbuttoned denim jacket with fake fur at the neck and sleeves, and a T-shirt. Aside from the sneakers on her feet and the goosebumps on her legs, he wasn't sure she was wearing anything else, and that idea sort of lodged in his brain and wouldn't let go. “Uh…”

She snapped her fingers in front of her chest, then raised them to point at her eyes. “Up here, Josh. Hello? You with me now?”

He nodded. His gaze faltered, started to slide lower again. She had great legs. Kind of funny to see them with sockless feet and running shoes at the bottom and a T-shirt hem at the top, but still…Must be all that running that made them so slender and firm and—

She hooked a finger under his chin and lifted his head. “Hey, caveman. Me Beth, you Josh. Where Maude?”

“Kitchen.”

“Ugh.” She rolled her eyes and walked past him into the house. He followed as if she'd slipped a leash around his neck, barely remembering to close and lock the front door before he did.

“Beth! Well, my goodness, what are you doing out here at this hour?”

“My phone rang. When I answered, no one was there, but the call came from here.”

Maude thinned her lips and sent the cat a glare. “Siegfried! Did you do that?”

“You think the cat called me?”

“I have you on speed dial, dear. Siggy had knocked the phone off the charger stand and more than likely stepped on a button or two while he was scavenging the kitchen for a free meal.”

Beth heaved a sigh and sank into a kitchen chair. “Well, that's a relief. I thought something had happened.”

“You don't need to worry about me, hon. Not with Joshua and Bryan here.”

Beth slid a glance Josh's way, and he knew it had been his presence she'd been worried about. She didn't trust him.

He turned to Maude. “The question remains, though. How did Siggy here get into the house? I thought it was locked up tight.”

“Oh, I probably left a window cracked. My bathroom, more than likely. I'm always leaving that one open. Or the basement, maybe.”

He nodded slowly. “I'll check them. It's probably a good idea to try to break that habit.”

“Hell, Josh, Maude's got nothing to worry about. Everyone in town adores her, and it's not like we get any random crime in Blackberry.”

“Well, you never know,” Maude said. “You feel free to check, Joshua, and I'll do my best not to forget again.”

“Kiss-up,” Beth accused.

Maude sent her a wink. “I'm goin' back to bed. You two put that cat outdoors when he finishes his cream. He'll go right on back to Frankie's. Always does.” With that, Maude left them in the kitchen and headed up to bed.

Beth sighed. “You may as well go back to bed, too. I'll head home.”

“Hell, it's heading for five-thirty. No point going back to
bed now.” He turned to the counter, started running water into a carafe. “I'm making coffee. Stay for a cup?”

“Sure. Why not?”

He measured ground roast, poured in the water, turned on the switch. “So you were worried I had done something to Maude and came rushing over here to save her.”

She frowned at him. “I was afraid something had happened to her. She could have fallen, broken a hip or something.”

“If she had, didn't you think I would have taken care of her?”

“She's in her seventies, Joshua. Almost eighty. She has to shoot insulin into her veins before every meal, and I know her balance is getting pretty shaky, though she'd rather be shot than admit it. I was worried. She's my friend.”

He nodded. “And I'm a stranger.”

She pursed her lips. “It wouldn't matter if you were a stranger or not. I…don't trust men.”

“None of us?” He made his eyes wide and lifted his brows as he searched her face. “Not even the good ones?”

“You telling me you're one of the good ones?”

“Lady, I am the
best
one.”

“You're full of yourself, too.”

He let his teasing smile die. “You've been burned by my gender before, I take it.”

She met his eyes, and he saw swirling depths of emotion—whirlpools that threatened to suck him right in. “Burned. Yeah. I've been burned. Fell for the bad guy, then was damn near destroyed by the rescuing heroes.”

He winced inwardly at that, had to avert his eyes briefly.

“I've got horrible taste in men, Joshua.”

“Then it's a good sign that you don't like me, right?”

“That's just it. I do like you.” She slid out of her chair and got to her feet. “I'll take a rain check on that coffee, okay?”

Without waiting for an answer, she walked to the door. Without waiting for an invitation, he followed her. He reached past her for the door, opened it for her. She turned to look up at him, smiled just a little. “Don't try to kiss me, okay?”

He'd been thinking about doing just that, and her frankness surprised him. “How am I supposed to resist? Huh? You show up at the crack of dawn with your hair practically standing on end, wearing a baggy T-shirt and the most god-awful jacket I've ever seen—and sneakers. Damn, woman, I'd have to be a saint to resist that.”

BOOK: Colder Than Ice
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