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
Alice resisted rolling her eyes. She no longer felt so
smart for having hooked up with Destin Wright, ex-mil-
lionaire. But there was more bounce in his step when
he left, checking up and down the hall before he darted
out into the hall, like the Nazis were still after him.
She flopped on her bed and stared up at the ceiling,
the bright morning light doing nothing for her mood. She
didn’t know if her plan made any real sense—after all,
how well had she done when she’d found Rachel dead?
She thought she’d done some good thinking then, too.
She had come to at least one conclusion. Beau Mc-
Garrity was a bigger problem for her than Jack Galway.
Jack would toss her back in prison if she crossed the
line. Beau would kill her.
She sighed at the ceiling. “I am no good at this shit.”
Then she jumped up off the bed and grabbed some
clothes. Damn northern winters. She was freezing.
��
Fourteen
Susanna waited with Gran in a small, cozy sitting room
off the wide hall where Paul and Sarah Johnson, the
young couple who owned Blackwater Inn, had set up
their reception desk. They’d decorated the room in
warm tones of deep green and honey, and it had a bay
window that looked onto the lake. Gran stared out at the
snow-covered landscape. “This is the room where my
mother died,” she said quietly.
“Gran, if you want to leave—”
“No, let’s wait for Audrey…Alice.”
Susanna sat on an elegant upholstered chair. She and
Gran had decided to stop at the inn first, before going
to the cemetery. The Johnsons had greeted Gran as if she
were a living legend. In a way, she was. She was Iris
Dunning, the daughter of renowned Adirondack guide
John Dunning, a famous guide in her own right. The
Johnsons proudly showed off the wall of old pictures
they’d collected and framed of the inn’s early days.
Gran couldn’t bring herself even to look at them.
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225
Embarrassed by their enthusiasm, Sarah Johnson had
pulled Susanna aside and apologized. “It’s easy for us
to forget your grandmother experienced terrible tragedy
here. Sixty years seems like such a long time to us, but
for her—it must be like the blink of an eye.”
“She’s never said much about her past here,” Su-
sanna said simply. It was an understatement. Gran
never
talked about her life on Blackwater Lake.
Paul Johnson added, “Nobody around here thinks of
the scandal anymore.”
“No,” his wife said, “absolutely not.”
He nodded. “We all think of Iris Dunning as a truly
remarkable woman in the history of this region.”
Gran had made a noise, turning to the young couple.
“That sounds like an epitaph. You’d think I’ve been
dead all these years instead of living a few hours away
in Boston.”
That was when Susanna had decided to ask about
Destin Wright. Jack would no doubt consider this tread-
ing on his turf, but at this point she didn’t care—she’d
needed a change in subject. Eager to make amends, the
Johnsons told her that Destin had checked into the inn
with Audrey Melbourne the day before. They were both
in. Did Susanna want to see them?
They’d called up and Audrey—Alice—was on her
way down now. They hadn’t been able to reach Destin
and assumed he must have gone out.
Susanna glanced at her grandmother after the John-
sons excused themselves. What tragedy? What scandal?
She knew only the bare outlines of her grandmother’s
life before she’d moved to Boston. Susanna admitted
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Carla Neggers
she was madly curious, but Gran’s reaction to the inn-
keepers’ innocent missteps encouraged caution. She
didn’t want to push for details her grandmother might
be reluctant to share with her—or thought were none of
her damn business. This was Gran’s
life
they were talk-
ing about.
“I told Alice about this place,” Gran said. “That viper.
She made herself so easy to talk to, pretending to be in-
terested in my life—”
“Maybe she was interested, Gran. People are com-
plicated.”
She waved a hand, impatient. “I was indulging my-
self. I thought she wanted to know what I’d been
through to help her sort out her own life.”
“Don’t beat up yourself—”
“I’m not. I’m merely stating the facts.” She shook her
head, her eyes never leaving the beautiful view of the
lake. “Jimmy Haviland will never let me hear the end
of this one. He was suspicious of her from the start.”
“Not so suspicious that he told me about her right
away,” Susanna said. “He waited several weeks before
he said anything.”
Alice Parker entered the room with a snap to her step
and no indication she’d done anything wrong by turn-
ing up on Blackwater Lake. She wasn’t taking any pains
to pretend she was here for the winter outdoor sports.
She wore tight jeans, a close-fitting rib-knit teal sweater,
western boots and lots of gold jewelry. “Hello, ma’am,”
she said politely to Iris, then nodded at Susanna. “Mrs.
Galway.”
Iris spoke first. “You lied to me, Miss Parker.”
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227
“About some things, ma’am, yes, I did.” Her tone was
apologetic if not contrite. “But I didn’t lie about every-
thing. Not most things.”
“Your name. Why you were in Boston. You never
mentioned that my granddaughter’s husband investi-
gated you.”
Alice fiddled with one of her rings. “I am truly sorry,
Ms. Dunning. I never meant to upset you. This inn—
this country up here—” she paused, but went on again
in that same sincere but steady tone “—it’s all as pretty
as you said.”
“I never lied to you,” Iris said.
“No, ma’am, you didn’t.”
Gran eased onto the window seat, sitting sideways on
the honey-and-green brocade cushion, her back to Su-
sanna and Alice, as if they’d both offended her. With a
pang of regret, Susanna wondered if buying her cabin
on Blackwater Lake was more of an intrusion into her
grandmother’s life than she’d realized. In hindsight, she
should have consulted Gran first, instead of acting on
impulse. But it was as if she’d been moved along by a
force greater than herself. Once she saw the lake, the
cabin, the snow-covered mountains, she wasn’t sure
she’d had any choice at all.
“You came here with Destin Wright,” Susanna said.
Alice nodded. “Yes, we struck up a friendship at
Jim’s Place.”
“Did he tell you he’s after me for money?”
“Well, we talked about the new company he’s work-
ing on.” She shrugged her slender shoulders, tossing
back her red curls. “I don’t know much about business,
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Carla Neggers
I’m afraid. He said he needs—what does he call it?
Some kind of money.”
“Angel money,” Susanna supplied, her tone neutral.
“That’s right. I’m not involved in any of that. I just
wanted to see the Adirondacks and get out of town, fig-
ure out what to do now that I was persona non grata in
your neighborhood.” She smiled matter-of-factly. “I
have to tell you, after being in prison all those months,
I don’t even mind the cold up here.”
Susanna refused to let herself get distracted, either
by Alice shifting the subject or trying to charm her. It
couldn’t have been easy for Jack to investigate her. “Did
Destin tell you that Jack is here?”
“Your husband. Yes, Destin told me. I guess Lieuten-
ant Galway would think it a provocation, me showing
up right down the street from you.”
“That’s what we all think, Alice,” Susanna said
calmly. She supposed Jack would want her to stop here,
leave and tell him that Alice was at the inn—not let her
irritation and concern get the better of her. “He ran into
someone at Gran’s house the other night and got hit on
the head.”
“Lieutenant Galway?” Alice looked surprised—or
did a good job of it. “Do I look as if I could get the jump
on him? I’ll bet you I’m not even half his size.”
“You’re an experienced police officer.”
“And he’s a Texas Ranger. I’m sorry he got hit, and I
can see how you all might think I had something to do with
it. Well, I didn’t. So, you either prove I did, or you leave
me alone. I’ve served my time. I’m not on parole. I can
come and go as I please, provided I don’t break the law.”
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229
She was right, and Susanna sighed reluctantly and
nodded. “Fair enough. Do you know where Destin is?
I’d like to talk to him.”
“He wanted to try bobsledding. I think he might
have hitched a ride with someone. I don’t really know.”
Alice shrugged, losing interest. “We’re just here for a
good time.”
“It was his idea?”
“I don’t know, we just got to talking about you all
coming up here, and how I was curious about it, after
what Miss Iris had told me—” She stopped, frowning.
“How many more questions do you have for me, Mrs.
Galway?”
Susanna didn’t answer. Gran turned from the lake
and got slowly to her feet. “Alice, I think you should talk
to Jack, before you get in over your head and do some-
thing you regret.”
Alice’s mouth snapped shut. She seemed insulted.
“How stupid do you think I am?”
“How did you land up in prison?” Gran went on, her
eyes vivid and alive now, relentless. “You got in over
your head, and you did something you regretted. No
doubt it all seemed to make sense at the time, but in ret-
rospect, I suspect not. We tend to repeat our mistakes,
you know, until we learn from them.”
Alice was breathing rapidly, a flush spreading from
her face down her neck. She seemed taken aback at
Iris’s straightforward words—her insight. But she said
nothing, and Susanna remembered her brief conversa-
tion with Jack before they’d left for Blackwater Inn.
Sam Temple was on his way to Boston.
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“Beau McGarrity,” Susanna said, before she could
stop herself. “Do you know where he is?”
“No, but he worries me.”
“If you still have the tape I gave to you, I’d like you
to give it to Jack and let him listen to it. I’ve assumed
all this time it’s irrelevant, but—I’m not making any
more assumptions.”
Alice stood in front of Susanna and touched her
shoulder, her fingers ice-cold even through Susanna’s
heavy sweater. Her gray eyes were intense, and she said
in a low voice, “There’s nothing on that tape anyone can
use against Beau. I’d have given it to your husband if
I’d thought it would have made a difference.”
“But you still have it?”
She shrugged, evasive. “Mrs. Galway, Ms. Dun-
ning—you don’t have to believe me, but I just did what
I thought was right, no matter how it turned out.”
The sunlight caught the wrinkles in Gran’s face, but
they didn’t make her look drawn and ancient—they
made her look very alive, a woman who’d lived a full
life. She didn’t know anything about the tape, but
wouldn’t ask Susanna about it in front of a friend who’d
betrayed her. “If you hadn’t lied to us, Alice, we might
give you more credit now.”
“There’s so much you all don’t know.” Alice flopped
onto a second love seat, looking petulant and stubborn
and very young, not at all like a small-town Texas po-
lice officer or an ex-convict. “Rachel McGarrity—she
and I were friends. That’s why Beau called me that
night to find her body. I know it was him. I can’t
prove
it, but I know. And you, Miss Susanna. You think he
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231
started following you after he killed his wife. Well,
that’s not true.”
Susanna jumped to her feet and stared at her, aware
she was giving Alice the shocked reaction she wanted.
“What do you mean?”
“I mean Mr. Beau looked you up
before
Rachel was
killed.”
“When?” Her voice was choked, and she only just
managed to stay on her feet. “I never saw him before
Jack started investigating you. How do you know?”
“Rachel was interested in you and your folks in Aus-
tin. She wanted me to do some investigative work for her
on the side, but I never got much of it done—she never
clued me in to the big picture. Beau must have got wind
of what she was up to and followed you. After Rachel
died, we—the police didn’t find anything that linked
back up to you. I don’t know, maybe there was nothing,
or maybe Beau got rid of it before he killed her.”
Susanna couldn’t speak.
Alice raised her eyes, and they were cool now, with
a slight gleam of victory. “I followed Beau right to
your door.”
“When?”
“A week or so before Rachel’s murder. Your daugh-
ters were still at school. You were out front working in
the garden. He parked across the street, got out of his