Showdown in West Texas (6 page)

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Authors: Amanda Stevens

BOOK: Showdown in West Texas
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Despite his age, he had a boyish charm about him, and his old-world courtliness intrigued Grace. But it was his eyes that held her attention now. They were the most vivid blue she'd ever encountered, and that piercing color gave the directness of his gaze a pretty powerful punch.

Grace's stomach fluttered as they regarded one another across the expanse of her desk, and she thought,
Oh, damn. Not now. Not with him.

Her first inclination was to nip that little ripple of
sexual tension in the bud, even if it meant she had to cut the meeting short and send Dale Walsh packing. The last thing she needed or wanted was any kind of awkwardness between her and one of her subordinates.

But dismissing Dale Walsh out of hand after he'd come all this way at her predecessor's request was totally unprofessional. The department was shorthanded and from everything Charlie had told her, Walsh was a good candidate. If she found him attractive, well…that was her problem, not his. Why deprive the county of a good deputy and Dale Walsh of a steady paycheck just because that nasty business in Austin had left her feeling stupid and gun-shy?

What she really needed to do was get a grip, Grace told herself.

She cleared her throat and broke the gaze. “Charlie tells me he's been after you to come in for an interview for quite some time now. Mind telling me why you finally decided to take him up on the offer?”

For the first time since he'd entered her office, Dale Walsh looked unsure of himself. Then he shrugged. “It's no big mystery, really. Sometimes a man just needs a new challenge. New scenery. That's all there is to it.”

Grace could appreciate the need for new scenery. After her humiliation before the review board, she hadn't been able to get out of Austin fast enough. But there had been nothing simple about her decision to come back to Jericho Pass, and she wondered if Dale Walsh might have an ulterior motive as well.

“One word of caution,” she said. “If you think a rural police department like ours is a place where you can coast, think again. We're seeing a high level of
violence down here these days. West Texas is no place for the faint of heart.”

“I'm not looking to coast. That's the last thing I want.” Walsh leaned in a bit, his expression earnest. “I'm a cop. It's what I do and it's who I am. If I wanted to coast, I'd go off and work for my brother-in-law or something.” He smiled, and the commas at the corners of his mouth deepened.

Grace found herself smiling back at him, and she hadn't felt like doing that in a long, long time. Dale Walsh's manner was open and engaging, and she couldn't help responding to him. “I've found that working with family is not for the faint of heart, either,” she said.

“I hear that.”

She cleared her throat again. “I don't know how familiar you are with the situation down here, but if you're really looking for a new challenge, you've come to the right place. We've got ranches right across the border that are being used as paramilitary camps by the drug cartels. Their recruits are being trained in the use of all manner of weaponry, including AK-47s, AR-15s, grenade launchers, you name it.”

“Sounds like they're planning for a war,” he said.

“They're already at war,” Grace replied. “Once the cartels started hiring army deserters and ex-members of the Guatemalan Special Forces to militarize their operations, they turned the occasional turf battle into an all-out Armageddon. We've got assassins and narco-terrorists operating on both sides of the border, and so far we've not seen much concern from Washington or the news media. We've been doing what we can on our
own, but with limited resources and manpower, it's like taking a pellet gun to a bazooka fight. I'm not trying to scare you off,” she added. “I'm just trying to give you a realistic rundown of the situation.”

“I appreciate that,” Walsh said. “Sounds like you've got a real mess on your hands.”

“To put it mildly.” Grace studied him for a moment. “I'll be honest. If everything that Charlie told me about your record is true, we'd be lucky to get you. We can always use someone around here with your kind of experience. The pay's lousy and the hours are even worse, so I don't see how you can possibly turn us down,” she said with a half smile. “But before either of us makes a final decision, I think you should take some time to think it over. I understand you'll be here for a few days, so why don't we meet back here tomorrow morning and I'll show you around the station, introduce you to some of the staff. I also think it would be a good idea for you to do a bit of exploring. See what a town like this has to offer a guy like you.”

He nodded. “Sounds like a plan.”

As soon as Grace rose, he stood, too.

“I assume you already have a place to stay while you're here?” she asked.

“Uh, yeah, that's not a problem.”

“Then I guess there's only one other thing we need to talk about before we call it a night.” She came around the desk and propped a hip against the edge. “When you were first contacted about this position, you had every reason to believe you'd be working for Charlie Dickerson. His return is up in the air at the moment, and for the next several months at least, I'll be in charge of this de
partment. Do you have a problem answering to a female superior?”

Again, he looked her right in the eyes and said without hesitation, “No, ma'am. That's not a problem for me.”

Grace appreciated the conviction she heard in his voice. She thrust out her hand and they shook again. “Thanks for making that long trip. I'm glad you didn't cancel once you heard about Charlie.”

“Yeah, me, too.”

“I'll see you in the morning—let's say, nine o'clock. Is that good for you?”

“Nine o'clock sharp,” he agreed, and turned to leave.

“Detective Walsh?”

He hesitated a fraction of a second at the door before he turned. “Yeah?”

She nodded toward the chair he'd just vacated. “You forgot your briefcase.”

Something flickered in his eyes before his gaze dropped to the floor. “So I did.” He went over and picked up the case, then paused again at the door. “Well, good night.”

“Good night.”

Grace stood in the doorway and watched him stride across the station. There was much to like about the man, she decided. Even aside from Charlie's glowing recommendation, Dale Walsh had the kind of quiet confidence and innate strength that Grace had always preferred over the in-your-face bravado of some of her male compatriots. He hadn't wavered once in the face of the border crisis she'd described, nor had he so much as blinked when she asked if he had a problem working for a woman.

All that was a definite plus. During her time at the TBI, Grace had seen her share of pandering, condescension and resentment, all solely because of her gender. So, it was refreshing to meet a man who had a healthy sense of himself and was not threatened by a female associate, let alone a superior.

And he seemed to be just a genuinely likable guy.

Of course, her initial assessment of him could always change. She'd been fooled before, unfortunately.

Closing her office door, Grace moved over to the window that looked out on the parking lot. Walsh had been heading toward his car, but he stopped suddenly, glanced over his shoulder, then slowly turned back to the station.

Grace wondered if he might have forgotten something else, but he made no move toward the building. Instead, he stood there for several seconds as if in deep contemplation—or conflict.

Then he seemed to shrug off whatever had held him immobile, and continued on his way across the parking lot.

But as Grace watched him climb into his car and drive off, she couldn't help wondering about those odd little moments of hesitation.

Was Dale Walsh really as open and direct as he'd led her to believe?

Chapter Six

When Cage left the station, he still wasn't sure what he aimed to do about the briefcase. Now that he'd met the target in person, he was having a harder time just walking away.

But he knew he was in no condition to reasonably assess the situation. He was tired, hungry and in pain. What he needed was a shower, some food and a safe place to hole up where he could do some serious thinking and planning.

Stopping by a discount store, he bought a change of clothing, underwear, socks and the essential toiletries he would need to make himself feel human again. He asked the clerk who checked him out for a motel recommendation, and a little while later—after a quick bite at a drive-thru—he found himself at a rooms-for-rent place called Miss Nelda's, which was run, appropriately enough, by a woman named Nelda Van Horn and her sister, Georgina.

The gingerbread-trimmed house was a rambling two-story with a wraparound front porch and a long balcony on the second floor where guests could enjoy
panoramic views of the mountains and the spectacular West Texas sunsets.

The sisters looked to be in their seventies, one still a determined blonde, the other an improbable redhead, and neither the least bit shy about giving Cage a long scrutiny that was anything but subtle. They watched him sign the registry, then took a deposit in cash without blinking an eye. Next, they pointed him up the stairs to his room on the second floor.

The first order of business—once Cage had secured both the hallway and balcony doors—was to hide the briefcase behind an old steam radiator. Then he called his sister in Dallas and Andy in El Paso with the excuse that he'd broken down on the road and was spending the night in a town several miles to the east of Jericho Pass so they wouldn't call the police when he didn't turn up. Finally, he stripped off his dusty clothes and climbed into the shower.

After scrubbing the grime of the desert out of his hair and off his skin, Cage braced himself with his hands against the tile wall and leaned into the water, letting it sluice over his head and down his body until the temperature started to cool. Then he climbed out, dried off and sprawled on the bed, folding his hands behind his head as he stared up at the ceiling.

Grace Steele's suggestion that he stick around town for a few days, however impractical or ill-advised, was starting to have some appeal. If Dale Walsh had been, in fact, both a cop and a hired gun, Cage was now in a unique position to find the sheriff's would-be killer. In all likelihood, the conspirator would contact him the moment he—or she—learned that Walsh had hit town.

On the other hand, the man Cage had met out on the highway might well have been an impostor. In which case, the real Dale Walsh was still out there somewhere, and dead or alive, he was bound to turn up sooner or later.

Cage knew what he should do. He should get the heck out of town while the getting was good.

But he couldn't deny the situation he suddenly found himself in was more than a little exhilarating. The prospect of immersing himself in real police work again gave him the kind of adrenaline buzz he hadn't experienced since he'd left the team.

Could be that he'd been looking at this all wrong, he mused. Maybe everything that had happened to him in the last several hours wasn't divine retribution, but divine intervention. Maybe someone upstairs was trying to throw him a bone.

And as to those men from San Miguel who were after him—if they hadn't yet identified him, it wouldn't be long until they did. For all he knew, they could already have colleagues in Dallas looking for him.

Maybe hiding here, right under their noses, was his smartest move. They were hunting Cage Nichols, not a guy named Dale Walsh.

Rolling onto his side, Cage closed his eyes. For the time being at least, he decided to ignore that little niggling voice warning him that Grace Steele's dark, soulful eyes might be playing hell with his judgment.

 

T
HE FEATHER BED
at Miss Nelda's was a little too soft for Grace's liking. She'd tossed and turned for hours, her thoughts ping-ponging back and forth between the
terrible doubts she'd had earlier about her own sister and then that lusty little flutter she'd felt for Dale Walsh.

Finally, she managed to dismiss the first concern. No matter what Lily's grievances might be, she would never deliberately set out to hurt anyone, let alone her own sister. They'd grown apart over the years, but Grace knew that somewhere beneath that hard, jaded exterior was still the same caring, sensitive person who had once rescued every stray animal that had wandered onto the ranch.

But if Lily hadn't been at the top of those stairs, then who had Grace seen?

She wanted to believe the whole episode was just an unfortunate accident. Maybe she really had tripped on the rug.

But how to explain the sound that drew her attention on the landing? The glimpse of movement out of the corner of her eye? The feel of a hand on her back a split second before she went tumbling?

Could
she have imagined all that?

Grace had always prided herself on having a level head on her shoulders, but she couldn't deny the house where her parents had been murdered still wreaked havoc on her nerves.

She'd never told anyone, but she'd once suffered a severe panic attack when she'd found herself alone at the ranch. For what seemed an eternity, she'd remained paralyzed in her bedroom, unable to move, unable even to breathe. And then just like that, the spell ended and she'd never experienced anything like it again.

But maybe something similar had happened to her
earlier. A different kind of panic attack. It made about as much sense as her sister—or anyone else—trying to kill her.

And as for her attraction to Dale Walsh, she could look to her more immediate past to explain her overreaction. Daniel Costa's betrayal had really done a number on her confidence. As a deputy director, he'd been responsible for bringing Grace into the TBI where she'd quickly become one of the hottest young agents in the Bureau. Her meteoric rise, at least in part, could be traced directly back to the strings she'd allowed Daniel to pull on her behalf.

Once their relationship turned personal, Grace had been a little too willing to ignore her persistent doubts about Daniel's integrity because a man in his position often had to make tough decisions. At least that was how she tried to justify turning a blind eye.

And then Daniel had thrown her under the bus, apparently without a moment's hesitation in order to save his own hide. That had stung. A lot. He'd wounded her pride, embarrassed her in front of her peers and derailed a very promising career. But worst of all, he'd made Grace doubt herself. How could a woman with a future as bright as hers have been so blindly stupid?

Grace had learned a hard lesson from that unseemly mess, and now she was determined to keep the stain of misconduct and bad judgment from touching her current position. She had a chance to start over here in Jericho Pass. It might be her only chance. She wasn't about to blow it.

So she was attracted to Dale Walsh. Big deal. Why make a mountain out of a molehill? It had been Grace's
experience that the initial spark usually fizzled out pretty quickly after spending time in a man's company. She doubted Walsh would be an exception.

And if she couldn't manage to keep her personal life separate from her professional one after everything she'd been through in Austin, well, then, she had no business wearing a badge anyway.

Grace fluffed her pillow, rolled over and decided she was going to fall asleep right then and there if it killed her. She'd just drifted off when the creaking of the windmill awakened her.

Except…she wasn't at the ranch.

Her eyes flew open, but she remained still as she listened again for the sound.

There it was!

The creak came, not from a windmill, she realized, but from the settling of a floorboard beneath a stealthy footfall.

Grace was facing the balcony, and she saw a shadow outside the glass door. Sliding open the nightstand drawer, she removed her gun as she climbed out of bed and slipped quietly across the room. But by the time she got to the door, the shadow had moved on.

She put her ear to the glass and listened for footsteps. After a moment, she could pick out the steady creak of the floorboards as someone walked away from her room.

Twisting the latch, she eased back the door and stepped out on the balcony. Even in the dim lighting, she could easily pick out the silhouette of a man two rooms down from hers. He had his hand on the doorknob.

He must have sensed her presence because his other hand went behind him, as if he were reaching for a weapon.

Grace drew a bead. “Freeze!”

His hand stilled, but his head slowly rotated to face her. “It's Dale Walsh, Sheriff.”

He moved out of the shadows then and Grace caught her breath. He had on nothing but a pair of jeans and he carried nothing in his hands but an ice bucket.

Quickly, she dropped her weapon to her side. “Sorry. I heard a noise and came out to investigate.”

He held up the ice bucket. “Just getting some ice. Sorry to disturb you.”

“No, it's okay. I'm not usually so jumpy. Strange bed and all that…” She trailed off awkwardly.

For a moment, neither of them said anything else, and the waiting silence strangely excited Grace. She tried not to stare, but there he was right in front of her, all sunburned skin and blazing blue eyes. She couldn't help noticing that her earlier assessment had been right on the money. Despite his lean build, Dale Walsh did have some serious guns.

“I didn't know you were staying here,” she finally said.

“I didn't know you were staying here, either.”

As he propped a hand on the wall beside her, Grace suddenly became aware of her own bedtime attire—cotton pajama bottoms and a thin knit tank top that, even in the dimmest of lighting, would clearly reveal the outline of her breasts.

Hardly the outfit she would have favored for her second meeting with Dale Walsh.

She resisted the urge to cover herself with her arms, which of course would only call more attention to the area she wished to hide. “I only moved in today. I've been staying out at my family's ranch since I got back to town, but that didn't work out so well.”

“I hear that. An hour or two at a time is about all I can take of my sister's constant chatter, and you don't even want to get me started on my mother.”

“I'll take your sister's chatter over my sister's cold shoulder any day of the week,” Grace said.

“Silence is golden,” he said with a devastating grin. “I'll take that deal. Of course, I should warn you that my sister comes with strings attached. Namely, the jerk she's married to.”

“Still sounds like a fair exchange to me.”

“That bad, huh?”

“Right now it is. But…that's a subject for another day,” Grace tried to say lightly. “It's late, and your ass is melting.”

“My what?”

“Ice. Your ice is melting.”

“So it is.” He straightened, but he made no move to leave.

Instead, he just stood there looking down at her, making her feel as if she had all the poise of a thirteen-year-old. Grace couldn't remember the last time she'd felt so flustered and self-conscious. Even the review board hadn't torpedoed her composure this badly.

“Well…I guess I should go in and try to get some sleep before the alarm goes off,” she said. “I'll see you in the morning at nine, right?”

“Yes, ma'am. Nine o'clock sharp.”

She stepped through the door and turned the lock. Leaning a shoulder against the frame, she listened for Dale Walsh's retreating footsteps.

It took a moment, but finally she heard the telltale creak of the floorboards as he moved away from her room.

And then Grace let out a breath she hadn't even realized she was holding.

Holy moly,
she thought.

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