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
all heaped their snacks onto the counter, Susanna paid
and they piled back into the car, the temperature notice-
ably colder, the night very dark. As they headed further
north, the highway narrowed to two northbound lanes,
and the ambient light from nearby towns and cities dis-
appeared, leaving only the stars, a sliver of a moon and
their headlights to guide them.
For long stretches, theirs was the only car on the road.
Gran, Maggie and Ellen drifted off to sleep, and Susanna
stayed focused on her driving, trying not to think about
Jack somewhere on the road behind her. Huge outcrop-
pings of rock and tall evergreens showed up on the edges
of her headlights, and she was on alert for moose and
deer, ice patches, sleepiness. All in all, she should have
stuck to her plan and waited until morning.
Three hours north of Albany, she finally turned off
on their exit, taking the winding, narrow road into the
village of Keene Valley. This was the High Peaks region
of the Adirondack State Park, a preserve of six million
acres of state and private land in the northern reaches
of New York state. It was the largest wilderness area in
the continental United States, bigger than Yosemite,
Yellowstone, the Grand Tetons—thirty thousand miles
of rivers and streams, more than two thousand lakes
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and ponds, with forty mountains over twenty-five hun-
dred feet.
Blackwater Lake was deep, cold and acidic, located
near the resort villages of Saranac Lake and Lake Placid.
Iris roused, as if she sensed they were close to her
childhood home. “The air’s different here. Can you tell?”
“I can, actually.” Susanna smiled at her grandmother.
“It’s a hell of a lot colder.”
Gran nodded. “People believed the air helped relieve
their tuberculosis. Saranac Lake was a health resort for
people who suffered from tuberculosis. Before antibi-
otics, thousands came here, rich and poor alike, for the
mountain cure. They were required to be out in the air
for eight to ten hours a day, four seasons a year. It didn’t
matter if it was twenty below.”
“And it worked?”
“For many,” Gran said quietly.
They came to Blackwater Inn, a rambling lakefront
house that Gran’s parents had owned when she was a
child. The Dunnings had come to the Adirondacks in the
early nineteenth century as trappers. The rugged moun-
tains and the harsh, inhospitable climate generally kept
permanent settlers away, even the native Iroquois who
hunted and traveled the waterways but seldom stayed.
Susanna made her way up along the lake and turned
off the main road onto a narrow, frozen dirt road. The girls
jerked awake as the car began to bounce over the hard
ruts. “Oh, man,” Maggie breathed, “it’s so dark up here.”
“How cold is it?” Ellen asked. “It has to be below
zero. Dad’s going to croak when he gets here.”
Susanna could hear the eagerness in her daughter’s
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voice. Despite the circumstances, she and Maggie were
both excited to see their father. Intellectually, they un-
derstood their parents’ stalemate had nothing to do with
them—they’d done nothing wrong. But they loved and
missed their father.
The dirt road fingered off into three driveways, and
Susanna took the left-most, which lead straight to the
back door of her cabin. There was no garage. She parked
and turned off the engine, feeling the silence around her.
Maggie leaned forward in the back seat and whispered,
“Gran, I can’t believe you grew up here. It’s
creepy.
”
“That’s because you’re not used to it,” Gran said. “I
thought Boston was creepy when I first arrived. All
those buildings and people, all that light blocking out the
stars.” She drew a deep breath, pushing open her door
and peering up at the starlit sky. “It’s just as I remember.”
Susanna had more prosaic concerns. She jumped out
into the cold, very dry air and unlocked the back of her
all-wheel drive wagon, starting the girls on unloading.
The cabin was open, her property manager having seen
to cleaning and stocking the cupboards.
Maggie shivered in the still, frigid air. Susanna shook
her head. “You’d be warmer if you weren’t wearing a
coat from 1957.”
“Don’t worry, I brought all my winter jock clothes.
I don’t plan to freeze to death up here.” Maggie grabbed
a backpack and hoisted it on one shoulder, then grabbed
another. “This is going to take a million trips.”
Ellen swooped in and loaded up as much as she could
in one trip. “Let’s get inside and turn on some lights.”
She and Maggie rushed toward the back door, Gran
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141
following at a slower pace. There was no wind, no sound
coming from the nearby dark woods or the expanse of
snow-covered lake.
Lights came on in the cabin, and the girls whooped
in pleasure—Susanna could hear them running around,
checking out the big kitchen, the stone fireplace in the
living room, the windows overlooking Blackwater
Lake, the downstairs bedroom. They pounded upstairs
to the loft and the two bedrooms there. Susanna fol-
lowed her grandmother through the mud room, into the
kitchen with its warm colors. “Why don’t you go on to
bed, Gran? We can unpack in the morning. You can take
the downstairs bedroom—”
Iris shook her head. She had on her red knit hat, but
looked tired after their long trip, showing all of her
eighty-two years. “No, I’ll sleep upstairs. You and Jack
might want your privacy.”
“Gran—”
She smiled. “I said ‘might.’”
Maggie and Ellen banged back down the stairs.
“Mom, this place is great,” Ellen said. “I can’t wait to
build a fire. Look at this fireplace! When you said it was
a cabin, I though you meant
Little House on the Prai-
rie
or Daniel Boone. The pictures don’t do it justice.”
“It’s really beautiful here,” Maggie said, more re-
strained but, Susanna could see, equally pleased with
her mother’s choice.
They’d heaped most of the stuff from the car on the
kitchen floor. They grabbed their backpacks out of the
mess, looking tired after their long trip. Ellen scooped
up Gran’s suitcase, and Maggie took her grandmother’s
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arm. “I’ll spot you on the stairs. You wouldn’t want to
fall your first night here. They’d probably have to air-
lift you to a hospital.”
“There’s a hospital right in Saranac Lake,” Gran said.
Ellen started across the living room, but turned back
to her mother. “Should we wait up for Dad?”
Susanna shook her head. “No, you all go on up to
bed,” she said. “I’ll wait for your father.”
��
Nine
While she waited for Jack, Susanna dragged her suit-
case into the downstairs bedroom and unpacked every-
thing into the oak dresser and closet. The queen-sized
bed was already made, with an electric blanket and a
fluffy down comforter folded at its foot. There was an
adjoining full bathroom with sage-colored towels and
woodsy scented candles. She laid out her toiletries and
debated whether she had time for a bath. She decided,
though, it wouldn’t be smart, having Jack find her in the
tub when he still had up a good head of steam.
She pushed the image aside and ignored the jolt of
desire, concentrating instead on relaxing into her cabin.
She could come up for a stretch in the summer and
paint and replace rugs, buy new furniture—make it her
own. Her parents would be over on Lake Champlain.
Thinking that far ahead was difficult, a toe in the
water to see what her life might be like in four or five
or six months. What did she want it to be like?
She heard the rattle of a truck engine, and headlights
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sliced into her bedroom window. She quickly slipped
back into the kitchen and looked out the window over
the sink. Davey Ahearn’s truck came to a hard stop be-
hind her car. The driver’s door opened and banged shut.
She could see Jack’s tall silhouette as he walked to-
ward the cabin.
He didn’t knock. The mud room door creaked open
and thudded shut, and he materialized in the kitchen
doorway. No coat, no hat, no gloves, every muscle in
his body rigid—but he was pale.
Susanna took a step toward him. “Jack, what is it?”
He held up a hand, stopping her. Without a word, he
went to the sink and heaved. Not a lot, but with violence.
She swore under her breath and ran back through her
bedroom into the bathroom, wetting a face cloth with
cold water. Her own stomach felt a little queasy.
When she returned to the kitchen, he had the sink
rinsed out and his head under the faucet, cold water
running over his hair and face. He took five gulps of
water in a row, rinsing out his mouth. “Fucking curried
corn chowder. I should have known it’d come back up.”
He pulled his head out from under the faucet and
sank against the counter, taking the face cloth from her
and putting it behind his ear, holding it there while water
dripped from his dark hair, down his neck, into the col-
lar of his denim shirt.
“Jack…Jesus, what happened?” Susanna saw the
caked blood on his fingers and touched the face cloth,
easing it back, wincing at the one-inch gash and nasty
lump. “You drove like this? You could have a concus-
sion. You should have gone to the emergency room.”
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“I should have paid better attention.” His eyes, pain-
racked and very dark, drilled into her. “I was thinking
about you instead.”
“Cursing me, you mean. Do you want ice?”
“No.” And he added, without softening, “But
thanks.”
Susanna dropped her hand, but stayed close. “Was it
Alice?”
“I don’t know. I was hit from behind, the hall was
dark—I didn’t get a description. By the time I got to my
feet, whoever it was had cleared out.”
“Where did this happen?”
“Your bedroom.”
She could feel her own face pale. “At Gran’s? You
were attacked—”
“Yes. I was attacked in Iris’s house. I went over there
when you didn’t show at Jim’s Place. Someone was up-
stairs—two people, from what I could tell.” He dropped
the face cloth in the sink. His face had more color after
the dunk under the faucet. “They got out before I could
catch them.”
“Did you call the police?”
“On my way out of town. They’re not happy with me
for clearing out, but they’ll get over it. They won’t find
anything. For all I know, I walked in on a couple of Iris’s
friends and they took me for the intruder.”
“But you don’t believe that,” Susanna said, stiffen-
ing so she wouldn’t start shaking.
“No.”
“I should have been there. I feel so guilty—”
His gaze burned into her. “Good.”
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She nodded. “I deserved that.”
“Damn right.” But this time, his voice softened, if not
his eyes. “Don’t you ever consider consequences?”
“All the time. Day in and day out in my work, with
Maggie and Ellen, Gran. Just not with you.”
And that did it.
He hooked an arm around her middle and pulled her
to him, using his free hand to trace her mouth. “Su-
sanna…damn…” A gleam came into his eyes. “I suppose
I shouldn’t have said I’d hunt you down. Iris told you?”
“Oh, yes. She told me every word you said. It was a
provocative comment, but—” She stopped, gulping in
a shallow breath when he threaded his fingers into her
hair, then cupped the back of her head with his palm.
“Don’t you have a concussion?”
“Probably.”
He spoke into her mouth, drawing her against him.
She could feel that he was fully aroused already, within
minutes of walking into her kitchen and throwing up in
her sink. He kissed her, a hard, deep, hungry kiss. He
tasted of spring water now, and as she responded to
him, she had to contain a moan of pleasure. After so
many years together, he knew all her responses, all her
defenses. He knew just how to kiss her, just how to
touch her.
“We shouldn’t…” she whispered. “Your head…”
“It’s pounding. It’s been pounding for three hundred
and fifty miles as I thought about what I’d do when I
got to you.”
“Was this it?”
“This was just the start.” He curved both hands over
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her hips and drew her against him, thrusting, as if he
were inside her. His eyes were impenetrable, and if he
were in any pain from the lump on his head, he wasn’t
paying any attention to it. “Where’s your bed?”
“Jack…we should…”
But he wasn’t listening, and she pointed to her bed-
room, shaky with desire. This was what she’d wanted