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
“Rachel planned to make contact with Susanna Gal-
way and tell her everything.”
“So?”
“She was in the process of turning her life—my
life—into a spectacle. I saw her notes. I saw her ideas
for publicity and promotion, pictures, magazine spinoff
articles about how she’d come to Texas and married the
man of her dreams all because she’d wanted to find her
father’s illegitimate half brother.”
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319
Alice tripped on her own feet, and Beau nudged her
in the back with the gun. “Don’t try anything stupid.”
“What, like walking?”
He ignored her. “You knew about the book.”
“No, Mr. Beau, I didn’t know a damn thing. I wish
I had.”
“That’s why you killed her. Rachel came around at
the last minute and promised me she’d burn all her notes
and let the past be. You were furious. You saw your
chance for the big time slip away. No book, no money
for digging around in your new friend’s past.”
The Paranoia Scenario converged nicely with the
Great Savior Scenario. Beau McGarrity as avenger of
his wife’s death, the man who’d bring her murderer to
justice—or just shoot her. It depended, Alice imagined,
on what Beau and she did next.
“Okay,” Alice said. “That’s why I killed her. Why did
you kill her?”
He sniffed. “You think you’re so clever.”
“I’m guessing you two had your fight over the book,
and then I pipe up with that comment about smother-
ing you with a pillow—you took it literally. You let your
imagination and paranoia take over and got yourself so
carried away with what we were up to that you went and
shot her.”
“You’re weak, Alice. You of all people know the
power of the bad seed.”
She thought of her grandma, her parents when they
weren’t drinking. They were good people. Alcoholism
was a disease. Even as dehydrated and frozen as she
was, Alice could feel the tears hot in her eyes.
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Carla Neggers
Her grandma had always told her to watch out for the
mean and crazy ones.
Beau was one to talk about bad seeds. He’d murdered
an innocent woman. His wife. Rachel, a kind and sweet
woman who’d just wanted to write a book about her
poor grandfather, a man who’d been dead for more than
sixty years. But it wasn’t the kind of publicity Beau
wanted—it wasn’t the kind he could control. And Ra-
chel wasn’t the kind of woman he could control. He’d
seen it all in those days before he’d hid in the azaleas
and shot his wife in the back.
“Susanna Galway knows more than she’s letting on,”
he said. “She has right from the start. Why else wouldn’t
she tell her husband about our little visit?”
Alice didn’t even try to tackle that one, not again.
She prayed Susanna was still alive. She’d expected
Beau to go after her, but Susanna had scooted out of
reach, using the steep ledge and the harsh conditions to
her advantage. He would have had to creep down the
treacherous, icy path and climb over poor, dead Destin.
Susanna would have had plenty of time to get the jump
on him and whack him or trip him with her remaining
ski pole.
He hadn’t bothered sending Alice. She’d used up the
last shreds of her energy swiping at Susanna and knock-
ing her off her feet.
He’d debated trying to shoot her. “We’re on a freak-
ing lake,” Alice had told him. “Two Texas Rangers are
here. The local police are hunting us. Do you really
want this place echoing with
gunshots?
Do you want to
risk tripping on the ice and shoot- ing yourself? Su-
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321
sanna’s probably unconscious. She won’t last thirty
minutes out here. And I’m already your hostage. Count
your blessings.”
He’d backed off. Alice didn’t know if her reasoning
had convinced him or he’d simply looked at the situa-
tion and realized he’d be risking his tactical advantage
to go after Susanna Galway. Beau liked to think he only
did things for logical reasons.
Mean and crazy. That was Mr. Beau. He wasn’t crazy
as in a treatable mental illness. Grandma hadn’t meant
that when she talked about his sort. He was crazy as in
he didn’t think like other people. No empathy. Lots of
rage at the impure. Stuff like that. As far as Alice could
see, his favorite scenario was to pin his wife’s murder,
the break-ins, the mess with the tape, Destin’s death,
whatever turned out to have happened to Susanna—to
pin all of it on her, Alice Parker, the corrupt police of-
ficer, the fabricator of an eyewitness against him, the
contaminator of evidence in a murder. The nitwit, the
loser, the dreamer.
He’d find a way to blame everything on her, and he’d
find a way to kill her and make it look as if he’d saved
the day.
Poor Rachel. She’d thought he was her knight in
shining armor.
“The anonymous call and my change purse. You
wanted me to find Rachel and see the evidence you
planted to incriminate me. You knew I’d panic and mess
up the crime scene. And if you guessed wrong and I was
working with a partner that night, you’d still have the
change purse. A win-win scenario for you.”
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Carla Neggers
Another nudge with the H&K. “Keep walking.”
Alice knew her fingers and cheeks were frostbitten.
Her toes were numb, dead-feeling, the excruciating pain
of frostbite gone now. She could end up losing couple
of them, if Beau didn’t kill her first. She was dehy-
drated and hungry, dumb with exhaustion.
But suddenly she could smell smoke, assumed it was
from the fireplace at Susanna’s cabin, and felt her heart
jump. She had no idea what Beau had in mind. “You
didn’t have to kill Destin,” she said in half whisper. “He
was just a harmless, self-absorbed blowhard.”
“His greed killed him.” Beau’s tone was cold, with-
out remorse or sympathy. “Nothing more, nothing less.
He made his choices.”
“And you pushed him off a cliff.”
He didn’t respond, and they descended a long, slop-
ing hill. She could see the woods open up and knew they
were coming upon the cabin now, that she’d have to con-
centrate, anticipate, think, for once in her life, like a good
cop. But the wind and the snow kept pounding at her, and
her mind was numb, her body aching. She was past shiv-
ering. She just wanted to lie down and sleep. Never mind
an active death. She’d curl up in the snow and go quietly.
“Stop,” Beau said, pulling her behind a snow-laden
evergreen. He pressed Destin’s gun into her back and
said, his breath hot on her ear, “That’s Sam Temple’s ve-
hicle. The truck Lieutenant Galway borrowed from the
plumber isn’t here.”
“What did you do, spend the night scouting?”
“Shh, Alice. You want to live through this, don’t you?
You’re a survivor. Don’t pretend you aren’t. Look at
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323
what you let happen to Destin Wright to save your skin
with me.”
“That’s not fair.”
He gave a quiet, cold laugh. “Do as I say, precisely
as I tell you to. Do you understand?”
She nodded, her eyelids heavy. What if she just col-
lapsed in the snow?
“I want you to go to the back door,” he said. “Draw
Sam Temple outside. Tell him you’ve found Destin and
Susanna and you need his help. I’ll be watching.”
“What’re you going to do?”
She could feel his smile. “Stop you.”
“You’re going to kill me,” she said dully. “You’re
going to be the hero. The great savior.” She shook her
head—or thought she did. She couldn’t tell. “They
won’t believe you.”
“Leave that to me. If you don’t do as I say, Alice, I’ll
kill you right here, right now. Do you understand?”
She nodded. “Yes.”
“This path veers off and goes up over the hill out to
the Herrington house. It’s a shortcut. If you make one
wrong move, I will shoot you and get out of here before
anyone can do anything about it. There won’t be any
witnesses. You’ll be dead. My prints aren’t on this gun.
Destin Wright’s are.”
“Beau, this is crazy—”
He raised the H&K to her temple. “You’ll go to the
back door. You’ll draw Sam Temple out.”
He lowered the gun, and Alice knew she had two
choices. She could let him shoot her now. Or she could
let him shoot her in a few minutes.
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Carla Neggers
She figured she’d have a better chance of surviving
with Sam Temple on the scene than up here with just
her and Beau. And even if she didn’t, it wasn’t going to
do anyone any good if she let him shoot her now. He
was already here. He wasn’t leaving. He probably had
two or three backup plans, and all of them included
shooting somebody.
He couldn’t just shoot her in the back the way he had
Rachel. He needed a good reason to shoot her, so he
could tell Sam Temple “there you go, there’s your mur-
derer, I saved you.”
Knocking on a door and asking a Texas Ranger for
help wasn’t a good reason.
Maybe he planned to get Sam Temple to shoot her.
Something.
She wished she could think faster.
As she walked toward the cabin, she was vaguely
aware that her feet were cold and wet, blistering, and
her hands were shaking. Beau had chosen his cover
well, a tall evergreen closest to the back door. He was
known in south Texas for his excellent marksmanship.
If he started shooting, he wouldn’t miss.
“Sergeant Temple?” Alice sniffled, her words intel-
ligible and clear, but her voice obviously on the thresh-
old of complete panic. “It’s me, Alice Parker. Susanna’s
in trouble—she needs your help—”
Sam Temple emerged from the cabin with his .357
SIG Sauer drawn and pointed right at her. “Don’t move.”
She opened her palms in front of him. “I’m not
armed. Susanna’s hurt.” Alice half expected to feel the
bullet in her back, pictured Beau crouched in the woods,
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325
taking aim with the H&K…Destin’s gun. Would he
blame Destin, not her? Destin
and
her? “Oh, my God,
Beau’s not going to shoot me—Sam, he—”
But Temple had already seen something, sensed
something, because he grabbed her, pulling her with
him back into the mud room—protecting her—even as
she heard the shot.
He kicked the mud room door shut, pinning Alice to
the floor, his weapon on her. She knew he’d been hit.
She saw his hard grimace as the blood oozed from a
wound in his upper thigh.
“I don’t know what he’s going to do. Give me your gun,
sergeant,” she said, panicked, “let me go after him—”
“Don’t move,” Temple said, moving toward the
kitchen, the bullet in his leg not stopping him.
A girl screamed.
Iris Dunning appeared in the door to the kitchen. She
was pale. Shaken. She sank against the door frame,
ghostlike. “Sam—the twins—”
He touched her shoulder, breaking through her
shock. “Which way?”
She couldn’t seem to focus on what he was saying.
“They didn’t stay in their rooms like you told them.
They ran out onto the porch—I don’t know what they
were thinking—”
“Iris,” Sam said. “Where did McGarrity take them?”
“Off the porch. Up—up into the woods.”
“His car—” Alice could barely speak. She felt
woozy, and for a second, she thought she might pass out.
“It’s at the Herrington house. He told me.”
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Carla Neggers
“Stay here,” Temple said. “Both of you.” He glanced
at Iris. “Call the police. Get hold of Jack.”
He headed outside, and Alice stood frozen in the
mud room, noticing the snow melting off her boots. She
stared at Iris Dunning. “I’m sorry,” Alice whispered. “I
didn’t know what to do. Susanna—I think she’s still
alive.”
The old woman looked as if she weren’t breathing at
all. “Can you help Maggie and Ellen?” she asked
weakly. “Sam’s been shot. That man—”
Alice saw the keys to the SUV on the mud room
floor, in a small puddle of water. They must have fallen
out of Sam’s pocket when he’d pulled her inside, sav-
ing both their lives. Beau had meant to shoot them both.
She saw that now. He’d had that split second of oppor-
tunity, and he’d failed, not because she’d seen it in
time—because Sam Temple had.
She should have realized what Beau meant to do
sooner. First he’d shoot Temple. Then he’d swoop out
of the woods while Alice was still screaming and shoot
her at close range. He’d claim she was the one who’d
shot Sam Temple and that he’d wrestled the gun from
her, shooting her in the process.
Then he’d shoot any witnesses who would tell a dif-
ferent story. Kill everyone if he had to.
But he hadn’t managed to kill Sam Temple.
Now he had the Galway twins.
Why hadn’t he slipped back through the woods when