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
phony witness. Jack didn’t know about the change
purse, but he suspected she hadn’t told him everything
about her and Rachel McGarrity. He didn’t believe it
was sheer incompetence that had driven her to contam-
inate the crime scene, trample on evidence. But when
she plea-bargained, playing on everyone else’s desire to
put a police corruption case behind them, she hadn’t left
him much room to maneuver.
At least he didn’t think she was so stupid as to not
follow basic police procedure when coming onto a mur-
der scene. That was something.
But she’d never become a Texas Ranger now, that
was for darn sure.
She eased around the boulder, coming to a steep em-
bankment. If she got to the bottom without breaking a
leg, it looked as if the going would be easier, and there
was a point that jutted out into the lake where she might
get a better fix on which direction she should go. She
needed to get out of the elements. She’d read about peo-
ple digging snow caves and surviving that way. She had
no idea how she’d even start.
She grabbed hold of a thin sapling, anchoring her-
self, and edged sideways down the hill, then let go and
half scrambled, half tumbled the rest of the way, drop-
ping to her butt for the last few feet.
When she came to a stop, she sat there in the snow,
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Carla Neggers
her feet pressed up against thick lake ice. She was
breathing hard, fighting tears. She was hungry. A nice,
hot bowl of Jim Haviland’s clam chowder would do her
fine. She’d even eat the clams.
A light came on further along the shore, about
twenty-five yards from her. A flashlight. It bobbed to-
ward her, and Alice got unsteadily to her feet. She snif-
fled. “Destin?”
She doubted whoever it was could hear her. Destin
wasn’t the sort to be prepared with something as prac-
tical as a flashlight—or to wait for her out in the cold.
Maybe it was a winter camper, someone who’d heard
her thrashing around. The Johnsons had mentioned that
people camped in the Adirondacks year-round.
Alice watched the light moving toward her, unable
to make out the dark silhouette of the figure behind it.
She could see the snow bright under the arc of light, tree
trunks, a stretch of ice and jutting rock, and squinted as
the light found her, settled on her. The figure stopped,
raising the light to her face, shining it in her eyes. She
shielded them, but made out the man’s face and imme-
diately thought hypothermia must have set in. “Beau?
Is that you?”
“Hello, Alice.” His voice was cold, steady. “You’ve
had a tough time out here.”
“I sure have. I’m glad to see you—”
“You were supposed to meet Destin Wright.”
She tried to lick her lips, but her tongue felt dry.
“Have you seen him?”
McGarrity shifted the harsh light off her face. He was
properly dressed for the frigid temperatures in a high-
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285
end parka, the hood up, and wind-resistant gloves and
pants. He didn’t look cold at all. “I caught up with him
after he broke into Susanna Galway’s cabin.”
“I sent him after the tape—”
“Alice.” Beau’s voice was ice. “I have the tape.”
The tape was in her suitcase in her car, parked at the
rich people’s house through the woods. Except Beau
had it. “You found my car?”
“Mr. Wright said you two had planned to meet at the
teahouse. It made sense you’d leave your car at the main
house.”
“I got lost.”
“Yes, I know.” He took a step toward her, his de-
meanor still calm, but with a menacing undertone that
kept her sitting in the snow, unable to move. “Your
friend didn’t know anything about a tape.”
“He wouldn’t know he could tell you—”
“Alice, if you haven’t seen him since you got lost,
how did the tape end up in your bag?”
She cleared her throat, wishing she could think faster.
Even warm, she wasn’t a fast thinker. “I lied to him.”
“No, Alice. You lied to me.”
Her entire body convulsed into uncontrollable shiv-
ering, and she staggered to her feet, her teeth chatter-
ing, her hands shaking. She’d lied to Beau McGarrity.
He knew it. He’d shot his wife in the back, and now he’d
kill her. She was dead. She’d never see Texas again.
She’d never make it to Australia.
And Destin. He was a self-absorbed jerk, and he’d
had no idea what he was up against in Beau McGarrity.
Alice hadn’t warned him.
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Carla Neggers
She didn’t want to think about Destin.
She crossed her arms tightly over her chest, but she
didn’t think she’d ever get warm again.
Beau McGarrity had a gun pointed at her in the hand
not holding the flashlight. Destin’s Heckler & Koch. It
was an expensive gun. He’d showed it to her the other
night in the motel in New Hampshire. He was very
proud of it, but he barely knew how to hold the thing.
He should have brought it with him when he broke into
Susanna’s cabin, just so he could have it on him when he’d
run into Beau. Instead, he must have left it in his pack,
and Beau had found it when he’d searched Alice’s car.
“You’re a former police officer, Alice,” Beau said, al-
most amused. “You should know not to leave a weapon
in an unoccupied vehicle.”
“It’s Destin’s—I don’t have a gun.”
Not that it mattered. Her brain felt dull and mushy,
and she knew she was putting together the pieces of the
mess she was in slowly, some floating away before her
mind could quite grasp them and put them in place.
Ra-
chel Tucker McGarrity, interior designer, a woman with
fine manners, a lover of fine things…her friend…dead…
murdered…gone forever…
“I should have left well enough alone with Destin.”
Alice spoke absently, hunching her shoulders as her
teeth chattered. Her eyelids were heavy. She desperately
wanted to sleep. “I’m very cold.”
“The teahouse is just up this way.”
At least he wouldn’t shoot her out here on the ice
and snow. He’d take her inside the teahouse, and shoot
her there.
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287
He stood back and motioned with his flashlight, the
H&K held steady. “After you, Officer Parker.”
He left her in the teahouse.
Alice didn’t know where he was. She was alone,
huddled into a corner of the crumbling, gazebolike
structure on the lake front. He had thrust a sleeping bag
at her and told her to climb inside, and she’d thought he
meant to smother her. Or maybe he hoped the down
feather lining would muffle his gunshot. But once she
was inside, Beau handed her a bottle of water and told
her to keep it in the sleeping bag with her or it would
freeze.
“You’ll survive until morning,” he told her. “If you
don’t, you don’t—but you will.”
“Why won’t I crawl out of here and get help?”
“Because you don’t have the strength. Because
you’re desperate. And because you might run into me.”
“Destin—”
“He’s no help to you. It was a mistake on your part
ever to think he would be.” He’d stared at her behind that
flashlight, so still she thought he might have turned to
ice. “I know why my wife was interested in Susanna
Galway. I understand the connection now.”
“Jesus,” Alice breathed, “you don’t care about the tape.
That’s not why you’re here. You don’t want it to get out
to the public, but it’s Rachel’s interest in Susanna—”
“Sleep well.” His tone was without inflection, and he
started out, stopping at the gazebo door and looking back
at her, the flashlight pointed at the floor. “You should have
told me the truth. Instead, you tried to double-cross me.”
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“We can still do a deal.”
“Maybe.”
And he’d left her like that. She took a few sips of
water and shoved the bottle to the bottom of her sleep-
ing bag, and now she was hunkered down deep. She’d
sealed off any gaps where the cold air could seep in. She
could feel her breath hot against the slick fabric. Freeze
or suffocate. What a choice. She thought of the idiots
who climbed Mt. Everest. What did the women do when
they had to pee in the middle of the night?
Even if she didn’t run into Beau, she’d die of expo-
sure if she left the teahouse. She had no flashlight, no
compass, no provisions. She already knew she had no
sense of direction in these woods. And her socks were
wet. She wouldn’t get far in wet socks.
Her only hope was to stay alive until morning and try
to work out some kind of deal with Beau.
I loved my wife, Officer Parker. I loved her very much.
She couldn’t remember when Beau had said that.
Tonight? The night of Rachel’s death?
It’s your fault she’s dead. Yours and Susanna Gal-
way’s. You’re the ones responsible.
Had he
ever
said that? Alice shut her eyes, her cheeks
and lips burning from the wind and the cold. If Beau had
said that, she should have told Jack Galway.
Maybe Beau hadn’t said it. Maybe this was one of
her prison dreams, and she’d wake up on her cot in her
cell, sweating and hyperventilating.
She’d never had much luck in life.
She rolled onto her side, trying to get comfortable on
the rotting, loose floorboards. She imagined Iris Dun-
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289
ning as a young woman, her chestnut hair flowing, shin-
ing in the moonlight as she made passionate love to a
rich, married man out here on a hot summer night.
��
Eighteen
Sam Temple sat at the oak table drinking coffee and
eyeing Susanna, who was showered, dressed and accus-
tomed to being in the company of Texas Rangers and
therefore not intimidated. Sam, however, had already
made it abundantly clear that he was not happy with her.
It was morning and a storm was brewing. Clouds had
moved in from the west, and the wind was picking up.
Susanna pictured them all trapped in the cabin for days
on end in a major blizzard. She couldn’t imagine Sam
building jigsaw puzzles and playing Scrabble.
Jack was in the shower. Maggie and Ellen were in
their room taking turns reading
Pride and Prejudice.
They’d rebounded well after yesterday. Gran was on the
couch in front of the fire, pensive, uninterested in work-
ing the castle puzzle.
“My life would be easier if you’d just come on back
to Texas,” Sam said.
Susanna leaned back in her chair. “And just how
would your life be easier?”
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291
“Well, I wouldn’t be up here in the frozen north freez-
ing my ass off.”
“That’s a stretch, Sam. It was your choice to come
up here. I had nothing to do with it.”
He shook his head. He was chiseled, dark and very
handsome. “You have everything to do with why I’m
here. Beau McGarrity turned up in your neighborhood
when he told his cleaning woman he was going hunt-
ing. I don’t like that.”
“He’s after Alice Parker, not me.”
“That’s what we regard in my line of work as a leap
of logic. There are two detectives back in Boston keep-
ing an eye out for McGarrity, and Jack and I will be talk-
ing to the local and state police up here. Mr. McGarrity
has some explaining to do.”
“You need an articulable reason for picking him
up—”
“I know what I need. We have good reason to believe
he broke into Alice’s apartment and your grandmother’s
house.”
“But it wouldn’t matter,” Susanna said. “You’d pick
him up for having a beer at Jim’s Place.”
“It’s provocative conduct.”
“You don’t like it.”
He almost managed a smile. “That’s right, Mrs. Gal-
way. I don’t like it. And if McGarrity’s after Alice Par-
ker, she has a right to protection, as well.”
“Courtesy, service, protection.”
He winked. “That’s our motto.”
Susanna stared out the window at the white and
gray landscape. “Sam, I’m sorry. If I’d known Beau
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McGarrity had hunted me down before his wife was
killed—”
“You didn’t. I’ll give you that one. If we’d known
about his visit after his wife’s murder, we might have
pressed him more, we might have pressed Alice more—
but she copped to the witness tampering right off, so
who the hell knows?” He shifted in his chair, and if he
felt out of place in an Adirondack cabin, he’d never
show it. “Never mind McGarrity and Alice Parker. My
life’d be easier, period, if you came home. Jack hasn’t
been in a good mood since you took off to Boston.”
“Give me a break, Sam. I was sleeping with Jack
when you were in the ninth grade.”
His black eyes flashed with amusement. “Sleeping
with Jack that tough, is it?”
She gave him a steady look, refusing to let any color