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
car and watched you for about five or ten minutes. Never
said a word. And you didn’t look at him. When you went
around back, he got into his car and drove away.” She
sank back against the soft cushions in the attractive sun-
room. “He did pretty much the same thing a couple
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days later, except this time you got in your car. He fol-
lowed you while you picked up your daughters at
school.”
“Did you know who I was, that my husband’s a Texas
Ranger?”
She nodded. “I imagine we both did.”
“Why didn’t you say something?”
She shrugged, without arrogance or defensiveness
now that she had Susanna reeling. “I told Rachel. We
were still trying to figure out what was going on when
she was killed. You have to understand, Mrs. Galway,
we had no idea Beau was going to do what he did. Not
a clue in the world. Rachel was a very private woman,
but I think she’d have gotten around to telling me ev-
erything. She just didn’t live that long.”
“Alice,” Susanna said, her voice hoarse from ten-
sion, “please tell me the truth. Did you tell the detect-
ives on the murder investigation, your chief of police,
my husband—
anyone
—about Beau McGarrity follow-
ing me? About Rachel McGarrity’s interest in me?”
She shook her head. “No. I didn’t want anyone to
know I was friends with Rachel. It would have compli-
cated everything. Maybe if I’d had proof.” She lifted her
small shoulders and let them drop, sighing. “I was up
against someone smarter and meaner than I am.”
Susanna said nothing. She was reeling, her mind
flooded with thoughts and images and a thousand dif-
ferent questions.
Alice didn’t move from the love seat. “Maybe you
can see now why I came to Boston. I was worried Beau
McGarrity might come after you. I thought maybe that’s
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233
why you were up here—because you were afraid of
him.” She swallowed. “I guess none of that matters now.”
“You know I’m going to tell Jack everything.”
“That’s what I’ve always assumed,” Alice said, her
eyes bright, a little smug. “That you’d tell Lieutenant
Galway everything.”
Susanna ignored the jibe. “He’ll want to talk to you.”
“Fine. Let him talk to me.”
“Come on, Gran,” Susanna said. “I promised to take
you to the cemetery. Let’s go.”
They left Alice Parker on the love seat, gazing out at
the Adirondack view. Susanna briefly debated calling
the local police and asking them to sit on Alice until she
could get Jack out here, but Alice seemed willing to
wait—and talk.
Susanna followed Gran out into the hall, feeling hot
and breathless, as if she’d been running up and down the
inn’s stairs instead of chatting in a slightly cool sun-
room. Her great-grandmother had died in there. Gran’s
mum. Suddenly she was overwhelmed, wondering what
Rose Dunning must have been like, how they’d all
ended up here so many decades after her death—her
daughter, Susanna, Alice Parker, Destin Wright.
They said goodbye to the Johnsons, and Gran added
that she thought their inn was wonderful. They seemed
pleased, and even a little relieved.
When they reached the parking lot, Gran said, “Her
parents are alcoholics.”
“Whose? Alice’s?”
“’Total no-accounts,’ she called them.” Gran half
smiled, pulling open the car door. “She has an engag-
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ing manner when she isn’t so focused on how all her
good intentions have never amounted to anything.”
Susanna felt bile rise up in her throat. Alice Parker had
never told Jack or her or
anyone
that Beau McGarrity fol-
lowed her before his wife was killed. That was a serious
omission. It was more than good intentions gone awry.
“She told me she always wanted to be a Texas Ran-
ger,” Gran said, seemingly oblivious to the February
cold. The bright sun caught her face, making her eyes
seem less vivid, more serious somehow. “She’s the type
who’s always living her life in the future, never in the
present. That’s the easiest way of all to lie to yourself,
I think, by not looking in the mirror and being honest
with yourself about who you are.”
Susanna touched her grandmother’s thin shoulder.
Maybe the trip to the inn had been too much for her—
the memories, Alice Parker, the talk of murder and stalk-
ing. “Gran, are you okay?”
She smiled gently, covering Susanna’s hand with
hers for a moment. “I’m just fine. What about you, love?
Are
you
okay?”
“I have to talk to Jack.”
“Yes, you do.You’ve had to talk to him for a long time.”
Susanna followed her grandmother to the far end
of the snow-covered cemetery, to the Dunning fam-
ily plot, a dozen or so graves enclosed within a low
stone wall. Gran climbed over the stone wall unaided,
seemingly oblivious to the cold wind and knee-deep
snow that drifted up against the tombstones. She had
her red knit hat pulled tightly down over her ears, but
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235
her pants were more suited to a trip to her senior cen-
ter in Somerville than trekking in an Adirondack
cemetery.
A biting gust of wind rocked Susanna back on her
heels, but Gran didn’t seem to notice. She came to a pair
of simple, matching headstones and sank onto her
knees, brushing the snow off the stones with her gloved
hands. Susanna stood behind her, worried that the win-
ter conditions were too hard on her grandmother. Per-
haps they should have waited until summer.
The graves were of her parents, Rose and John
Dunning.
“No one believed my father would die an ordinary
death,” Gran said. “He was a risk-taker, he loved the
mountains. He respected their dangers, but he never let
fear stop him from doing what he wanted to do. And
what he wanted to do was spend as much time as he
could in the mountains.”
“How did he die?” Susanna asked.
“Bee sting. He got stung while he was working on the
dock in front of the inn and was dead in fifteen minutes.”
Susanna looked at the dates and did the math. He was
forty-eight when he died, Gran just twenty. Her mother
died a year later.
“Everyone thought he’d die on a mountain,” Gran
went on quietly, “or out on the lake rescuing someone
in a storm. Or he’d live to be a very old man, and when
he was done, he’d walk into the wilderness and go to
sleep. He was an extraordinary man. He taught me as
much as he could about these mountains.”
“I’m sorry I never knew him,” Susanna said.
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Carla Neggers
“My mother was hard-working, forbidding in many
ways. She kept the inn running and the family in food
and clothes. That wasn’t my father. But she loved it
here as much as he did, and she loved him. She was dev-
astated when he died.” Gran stood up slowly, balancing
herself with one hand on her mother’s tombstone.
“Those were difficult years.”
“Dad was just a baby when you lost both your parents.”
“Yes, he was all that kept me going.” She gestured at
some of the other graves. “Those are two of Father’s
cousins and several people Mother knew from her nurs-
ing days in Saranac, former tuberculosis patients who
came to work for us at the inn.”
She lifted her leg high and stepped into a deep drift
of snow, pushing forward to another headstone in the
opposite corner of the plot. Susanna, worried about her
grandmother now, stayed with her, ready to catch her if
she stumbled.
“Here we are,” Gran said under her breath, stumbling
in front of a pink granite marker. “Oh, Jared…”
Susanna put her arm around her grandmother. “Gran,
you’re freezing. I don’t want to rush you, but we can al-
ways come back here when it’s warmer—”
“I’m fine.” She glanced up at Susanna, her eyes shin-
ing. “This is your grandfather.” She pulled off a glove
and ran her fingertips over the name carved in stone.
Jared Rutherford Herrington.
“He had the bluest eyes.
He was a preppy, square-jawed Princeton graduate from
a very wealthy family. They still own most of the north
end of Blackwater Lake.”
Susanna had never known her grandfather’s name.
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237
She wasn’t even sure her father knew it. “Why is he bur-
ied here?” she asked.
“Because of me.”
“Gran…”
“I took my father’s place as Jared’s guide on a day
hike up Whiteface Mountain. He was twenty-five, and
I was eighteen—we fell in love on our way up the moun-
tain. I can remember—” She shut her eyes tightly and
smiled. “All of it. Every minute we had together.”
Susanna tried to picture her grandmother at eigh-
teen, madly in love with a handsome Ivy Leaguer.
“What was he like?”
“He was smart, charming, well-traveled, much bet-
ter read than I. He used to write me poetry. I knew the
mountains, every inch of Blackwater Lake, and I was
down to earth—we were so in love. But there was a
problem,” she said, looking up at the blue sky, as if she
could see him. “He was married.”
Susanna remained silent, sensing what it cost her
grandmother to talk about her past.
“He had a son,” Gran went on. “He loved his little boy
very much, and I think but for him—well, those were
different times. It was an unhappy marriage, for both of
them. He’d asked for a divorce, but agreed to come up
here for a few months separation. He was supposed to
be hiking and canoeing, not carrying on with a girl guide.
But when he told me he had a wife—I was furious.” She
tucked her hand into Susanna’s, pulling herself to her
feet, wisps of white hair coming loose out of her hat. “He
left her late that summer and asked me to marry him as
soon as the divorce was final. We never had that chance.”
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Carla Neggers
“My God, Gran.” Susanna could feel the tears in her
eyes. She’d seen the date on her grandfather’s grave. A
few months before her father was born. “I’m so sorry.”
“He went out one day on the lake, alone. And he
never came back. I found him that winter, five months
later. I was snowshoeing on my own, debating whether
I should fling myself off a cliff or cut a circle in the ice
and jump in.”
Susanna held back her shock. “Because you were
pregnant?”
“Pregnant, alone, despairing of ever finding happi-
ness again. I was thinking about whether I’d freeze to
death or drown first if I went into the water when sud-
denly here at my feet was this man I loved. He must have
tripped over a rock or a tree root and hit his head. Just
like that, and it was over.” A sudden strength came into
her step, and she pushed through the snow toward the
stonewall. “I knew then that I had to carry on.”
“Your parents—”
“They accepted what had happened, and your father
was such a charming baby—how could they not accept
him? Then my father died, and my mother came down
with a sudden, virulent case of tuberculosis, of all
things. It took her so quickly. There was no chance for
her to cure.”
“You lost everyone you loved in such a short time.
Gran, my God, I don’t know how you survived.”
“Because I didn’t lose everyone.” She smiled up at
Susanna. “I had Kevin. I had Jared’s son.
My
son. I sold
the inn and worked as a guide for as long as I could. I’d
strap Kevin on my back, and off we’d go. But those were
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239
hard years, and I knew I couldn’t stay here. So, I moved
to the city and started over.”
A breeze floated through the evergreens, whistling
slightly, almost eerily, as they climbed over the low
stone wall.
Gran wasn’t even breathing hard. “I’ve had a good
life, Susanna, if not always a happy one.”
“I think I understand.”
“Oh, you don’t understand a thing.” She spoke with-
out any edge or condescension, simply stating a fact that
was obvious to her. “Life brings with it hardship and
loneliness from time to time. I learned to move forward
from where I am, not to keep insisting I ought to be
where I once was, not to keep dreaming about where I
might be one day. To truly embrace where I am.”
Susanna sensed where her grandmother was headed
and smiled, trying to veer her off subject. “Did you
learn to talk this way in your seniors’ yoga class?”
But Gran wasn’t letting her off the hook. “Do you un-
derstand what I’m saying?”
“Sure. Live for today—”
“No.”
Gran shook her head, impatient. “Figure out
where you are and move forward from there, that point
and no other. That’s different from living for today.”
“Gran, if you’re talking about Jack—”
“I’m talking about
you.
You can’t move forward until