Authors: Carla Neggers
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Romance, #Adult, #Suspense, #American Light Romantic Fiction, #Fiction - Romance, #Romance: Modern, #Ex-convicts, #revenge, #Romance - Suspense, #Separated people, #Romance - General
Jack would—and maybe then some. She didn’t care
what Alice said, or how small and cute she was with her
newly dyed hair and feminine look. The woman had no
business showing up in Somerville.
Susanna dumped the last of her coffee and ducked
into an upscale sporting goods store. She hoped when
they all returned from their week in the Adirondacks,
they’d discover Alice Parker had moved on.
She debated buying snowshoe poles for a few min-
utes, then gave up and headed back to her office. She
enjoyed the walk through the crowded marketplace,
through Government Center and onto Beacon Street,
heading up toward Boston Common and the gold-
domed Massachusetts State House.
Despite the longer days and moderating tempera-
tures, it was still very much winter. She wore her black
cashmere coat, black gloves and boots, but, because of
Jim Haviland and Davey Ahearn’s comments about the
Wicked Witch of the East, she’d bought herself a deep
scarlet scarf. She was unapologetic about her black gab-
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ardine wool pantsuit. She was a professional in a con-
servative business—people trusted her with their
money. She couldn’t wear bangles and tight little pas-
tel sweaters like Alice Parker.
She paused at a store window, pulling her scarf over
her head as a sharp gust of wind hit her. She glanced up
the street out of the corner of her eye, and her breath
caught. She spun around, convinced she’d made a mis-
take, but she hadn’t.
Jack stood at the entrance to her nineteenth-century
building with his hand on the head of one of the mar-
ble gargoyles.
Susanna didn’t move. His dark eyes were on her. He
had on his white cowboy hat, a suede jacket, jeans and
cowboy boots, and she thought he was the sexiest man
on the planet.
But she fought a visceral, inexplicable urge to bolt.
Not that she’d get far if her husband meant to talk to her,
but this was her office, her city, her space. His presence
felt like an invasion—yet it was what she’d wanted. For
months, she’d dreamed of him coming to Boston, tell-
ing her he wanted her back in his life. Wooing her, Mag-
gie and Ellen would call it. But that wasn’t it. She
wanted to know she mattered to him. She wanted him
to tell her. She wanted him to ask her to tell him all her
secrets, one by one, to understand all of them. To admit
his own fears and secrets, finally, she thought. To talk.
Well, sometimes that was what she wanted. Other
times she didn’t have a clue, except a certainty that some-
thing had gone wrong between her and the man she loved.
Of course, none of that was why Jack was here. He
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was here because of her phone call last night. Because
of Alice Parker.
Susanna made sure her legs were steady under her
before she resumed walking up the street. She peeled
off her gloves, stuffing them in her coat pockets.
“Hello, Jack,” she said calmly. “Have you been wait-
ing long?”
“Thirty minutes.” His Texas drawl was slow and not
at all casual, curling up her spine, oozing in like smoke.
She felt self-conscious, aware. He kept his gaze pinned
on her, revealing nothing of what he felt. “Your door-
man wouldn’t let me in.”
“Smart doorman.”
“An unarmed doorman and a couple of ugly gar-
goyles. That’s not much security.”
“I don’t need much security.”
He moved off from the gargoyle. If she wanted to get
into her building, she’d have to go around him, not just
past him. Her opportunity to do an about-face and get
out of there had evaporated, if it had ever existed. He
tilted his head, taking her in with those trained eyes,
more Texas Ranger right now than husband. But then
he said, “Your nose is red.”
“I’ve been out walking.” She pulled off her scarlet
scarf, aware of him watching her hair fall. “I had meet-
ings this morning. I was taking a break.”
“Sam said I should tell you he tried to get me to call
ahead.”
“I’ve always liked Sam.” The wind gusted again, but
it didn’t feel as cold this time. “You’re here because of
Alice Parker.”
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He kept any reaction tightly under control. “I’m here
because of you.”
“Because you’re annoyed at me.”
He took a step closer, close enough that she could
feel the heat and warmth of him. “Very.”
“I’ve wondered what it would take to get you on a
plane.” She cleared her throat, wishing she could con-
trol her response to him. Twenty years of sleeping with
him hadn’t done a thing to dampen her desire for him.
And it had been so long since she’d had him next to her,
loving her. “Um—there’s a coffee shop down the street.
We can talk there.”
He smiled knowingly. “What’s the matter, Susanna,
you don’t want to be alone with me?” He skimmed a fin-
ger across her cold cheek and along the curve of her jaw,
sending warm currents through her. “It doesn’t matter.
I can kiss you right out here on Beacon Street.”
“Jesus, Jack,” she breathed, “you could be more
neutral.”
His dark gaze stayed on her. “Not where you’re
concerned.”
“All right,” she said briskly, furious with herself for
wanting him to kiss her—right now, right there on a
cold, busy street in downtown Boston. “We can go up
to my office. It’s on the fourth floor.”
“I’d like to see it,” he said simply, and her throat
caught, because maybe it was true. Maybe he did want
to see her office.
The lobby was small, elegant with its marble floors,
brass trim and dark, rich woods. A curving staircase led
up to the second floor. There was a tiny, cramped, old
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elevator, but Susanna had a sudden image of it getting
stuck between floors with just her and Jack in there. She
started up the stairs, leading the way, feeling his eyes
on her as she moved quickly, unbuttoning her coat. She
was hot, self-conscious, trying to regroup. He’d had
time to get used to the idea of seeing her—to plot his
strategy, the approach he’d take. She’d been caught off
guard. It was her own damn fault. She should have
known that message would get him on a plane.
She took off her coat on the second flight and slung
it over one arm, her scarf falling on the step. Jack
scooped it up, tucking it back in with her coat. Every
nerve ending she had seemed to be on fire. She picked
up her pace, rushing up the third flight of stairs. She
could hear his boots click as he maintained a steady pace
behind her.
She couldn’t get a decent breath. She staggered down
the hall to her office, disgusted with herself. She did the
stairs all the time. She ran, she lifted weights, she did
yoga and tai chi. She was in good shape. It wasn’t the
exertion that had left her breathless—it was having her
husband on her heels.
“This is it,” she said, as casually as she could man-
age, and unlocked her office door, pushing it open. She
motioned for him to go in ahead of her. “After you.”
He gave her one of his quick, professional scans, but
the twitch at the corners of his mouth was disconcert-
ingly unprofessional. He was reading her breathlessness
for what it was—him. But there was something else in
his eyes, a hardness she hadn’t noticed before. He
walked into her office, and she shut the door behind her.
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It was quiet, everything in place. Tess Haviland could
come in here and notice that her friend’s life was out of
balance, but Jack wouldn’t. He wouldn’t know what to
look for, not here.
“I can take your coat,” Susanna said.
“No.” He looked back at her. “I won’t be staying long.”
He was angry. She could see it now. On the one hand,
she felt guilty because, really, she shouldn’t have left
that message last night. On the other hand—an angry
Jack wouldn’t want to tear her clothes off and make love
to her on her new leather couch.
Not necessarily, anyway.
She groaned silently at herself. What was the
matter
with her? She flung her coat over a chair and adjusted
her suit jacket, making sure her blouse wasn’t askew or
her lacy silk camisole showing.
Jack set his bag on the wood floor, placed his hat on
top of it and walked over to the windows. He glanced
down at the cemetery. “You like working with a bunch
of dead people at your feet?”
“John Hancock’s buried down there. You know,
hero of the American Revolution, former governor of
Massachusetts. Paul Revere, Sam Adams. Benjamin
Franklin’s parents are down there, too. The victims of
the Boston Massacre.” She pushed her hair back with
both hands, finally catching her breath. “Mother
Goose.”
“You and I visited Old Granary when we were in col-
lege.” He glanced back at her, nothing about his expres-
sion softening. “In the fall.”
“I remember. And we took the girls when they were
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in kindergarten and we were up visiting Gran over
spring break.”
He didn’t respond. She wondered if he was remem-
bering that day with the girls skipping out ahead of
them amidst the shaded gravestones, or an earlier day,
when they were students, madly in love—or neither
day. Maybe he was just seething over her midnight call
about Alice Parker.
“I didn’t want to wake you,” she said, knowing he’d
follow her train of thought. “That’s why I left a message
on your voice mail. It was late—”
“When did you find out about Alice?”
“Last night. Jack, I called you as soon as I could—”
“What time?”
She walked over to her desk and sat at her computer.
It was in sleep mode, the screen blank. She hit the space
bar. “Before midnight. It took a while for it all to sink
in. Alice Parker has been here for weeks. I imagine she
got here around the time you told me she’d been re-
leased. She and Gran have seen each other two or three
times a week—Gran had her over to the house one
morning.” Susanna watched her monitor come to life.
“I had no idea. I was stunned. It was a lot to absorb, and
I had to talk to her and the girls.”
Jack wasn’t relenting. “Did you?”
She nodded, still not looking back at him. “I told
them to stay away from Alice Parker.”
“And Alice?”
“I told her to stay away from all of us.”
“So that’s it,” he said. “It’s done as far as you’re con-
cerned. You’ve handled it.”
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“That’s not what I meant.”
She swiveled around to face him, calmer now that
she’d had a little time to adjust to his presence. But she
couldn’t fathom what had possessed her not to call him
at home. Had she known, deep down, it would bring him
to Boston? Had she wanted it to?
No. She’d wanted to avoid having to tell him about
Beau McGarrity and Alice, about that day in her
kitchen. Having him guess. Was that why Alice had
come to Boston? Because of McGarrity? Susanna felt
a rush of panic, wondering if she’d missed something
that day with Beau McGarrity. Something Jack would
have caught if she’d told him.
She was so sure there was nothing he or Alice, the
prosecutors,
anyone
could use to help them solve Ra-
chel McGarrity’s murder. But what if she was wrong?
“I’m sorry, Jack,” Susanna said simply. “It was asi-
nine to leave that message last night. I knew what I was
doing.”
“You always know what you’re doing.”
She eased to her feet and stood next to him at the win-
dow. “You must have been really ticked off to jump on
a plane first thing this morning.”
His eyes softened for half an instant. “Stick to the
present tense.”
“Okay, so you’re still mad.” She sighed, staring down
at the snow-covered graveyard. “I didn’t think about
your voice mail giving the bloody time I called.”
“Susanna…”
“I should have been more vigilant. You warned me
about Alice. I should have investigated when Gran told
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me she had a new friend at the pub.” She drew a shal-
low breath, swallowing as she felt him leaning in close
to her. She kept her gaze on the gravestones. “I didn’t
want to believe it was Alice Parker.”
“I know.”
He took her hand, and she let her fingers intertwine
with his, then turned to him as he drew her closer. He
touched her lips, threaded his fingers through her hair,
his dark eyes on her, the hardness gone, the fury dissi-
pated. She didn’t know what he saw in her eyes, but he
kissed her softly, lightly, as if anything more would be
too much after so many months apart. “It’s good to see