Winsor, Linda (28 page)

Read Winsor, Linda Online

Authors: Along Came Jones

BOOK: Winsor, Linda
13.16Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

"He
deserved it," Jon assured her, hauling C. R. upright.

"She
broke my nose!" the latter whined through the two fingers he clamped on
it.

Deanna
felt ill.
Lord,
I
don't know what happened. I just...

The
younger agent gave C. R. a shove toward the house. "How do you know it
wasn't me? There was a lot going on at the time." He winked at Deanna.
"Have you got any towels inside?"

At
least she had one champion. No, two. Still... "Look," she said to C.
R., "for what it's worth, if I did do it—" Like Jon Kessler had the
nails to scratch C. R.'s face. "—I'm sorry. Come on in and I'll get you
some ice."

Numb
from her emotional overload, Deanna led the way.

"I'll
put the dog up," she heard Ticker volunteer behind her. "Looks like
we got enough trouble."

"Has
that dog had his shots?"

Deanna
sighed as she climbed the step to the porch. No better than she'd acted, maybe
she
was the one he ought to be asking about.

Once
Jon was finished cleaning C. R. up, as best he could, his nose was packed in
ice, and Deanna left them. Retrieving her silk blouse and slacks, thoughtfully
taken to the cleaners by her host, she hurried to take a shower before the
helicopter arrived. With luck, she might slip and break her neck, putting an
end to this misery once and for all.

As
she hung the garments on the back of the door, Deanna pulled off the cleaning
tag, her thoughts going back to the man who'd paid for it. Had he taken her to
the cleaners too? Even as the thought processed, another rebelled against it.
Or could he have been really like her—innocent, in the wrong place at the wrong
time, trapped by circumstances beyond her control? Ticker had confirmed, Shep
was an ex-marshal.

Yet,
he'd not trusted her enough to accept her on her word, her mind seesawed down.
He'd called to check on her story the next day. On the upswing, she didn't
trust him enough to tell him the whole truth. But—down again—she hadn't
preached trust to him or toyed with his affections to win it. Deanna's feelings
had been real. She'd done it all over again, fallen head over heels on the heel
of her first betrayal. And this time, for some reason, it hurt worse.

Sheesh,
Pavlov's dogs were smarter! Ripping the plastic off, Deanna wadded it in a ball
and slam-dunked it into the waste-basket. She knew the reason. With C. R. she'd
hoped he was real and took the risk, knowing she'd have the executive position
with or without the romance. The revelation somehow took the edge off her
initial betrayal. C. R. was a weasel who'd used her, but she wasn't exactly the
lily-white innocent she'd worked herself up to be. He'd crossed the line of law
and morality for his ambition. Her ambition led her to take a calculated risk
and she'd lost.

But
there'd been no calculation with Shep. It just happened. He was the real McCoy
she'd hoped C. R. was—a straight shooter, gallant, shy but not too much so, and
a good man. His friends were testimony to that. He might have fooled her, but
he couldn't fool an entire town. And he hadn't faked that inner glow she'd seen
when he sang in the church. No one could fake what Deanna saw.

God,
how can I separate this hurt from the ruins of my hope when I can't even think
straight?

Emotion
collided with reason, feelings with knowledge. Yet above the confused clamor,
there was one voice that, like Shep's plea, would not be lost in the fray

"I
will never leave you, nor forsake you."

Deanna
seized at it like a lifeline. "Then hold me, Lord. Help me to see what is
right." She squeezed her temples with her palms, relieving the throb of
the pulse there. "Give me strength and courage to do what You'd have me
do. You alone are the Rock that will not shift beneath my feet. You are all
that I have left."

"God
is enough."
Shep's
reassuring words came back to her, words of truth.

"Amen."

Taking
a fortifying breath, Deanna turned on the shower to give the hot water time to
reach it from the other side of the house. If she was going to step out on the
water, she'd at least be warm. A mischievous giggle erupted from out of
nowhere, followed by immediate contrition.
God, I hope You're at least
smiling up there. Gram said You gave me my sense of humor.

Deanna
felt as though that silly, spontaneous pop of amusement had relieved a
considerable weight from her chest. As she shed her soiled clothes, she
imagined them her fears and doubts. What would be would be, she decided,
testing the water. It was just right. God was enough.

Twenty-nine

The
Jeep radio crackled with the hourly news brief, confirming what Will Addison
told Shep. "After an extensive manhunt involving federal and state law
enforcement agencies, the fugitive was apprehended with his female accomplice
earlier today at a social event in Buffalo Butte. Majors and Manetti face
charges for embezzlement of 3 million dollars from a Great Falls business
called Amtron Enterprises. An additional count of alleged money laundering by
the firm is pending further investigation. More on this story as it
develops." The announcer shifted to a brighter note. "And now, in the
sports arena—"

Shep
turned the button, silencing the speakers. Gripping the wheel as though it were
Jay Voorhees's throat, he turned into Hopewell. Shep knew exactly what the man
was up to. Voorhees called in the arrest, counting on Dusault's henchmen being
on their way to Buffalo Butte the instant the news hit the airwaves, which had
to have been a little over an hour ago. Addison said that wiretaps picked up
the informant's call to Dusault, but the tech team couldn't trace it to the
source before the caller disconnected.

So
Voorhees was playing with a wild card. The informant could be on the agency's
end or right here at Hopewell—which was why Shep came prepared to take no
chances. Dusault was a new player to Shep, but by all accounts, he was a deadly
one.

Leaving
a trail of dust in his wake, Shep accelerated past the travel trailer when he
spied Ticker rushing out of his home in the alley, waving like a wild man. The
Jeep skidding to a stop, Shep leaned across the seat and opened the passenger
door. Ticker poked his head in, breathless.

"Boy,
all kinds of tarnation and surprise is broke loose since you left—"

"I
know," Shep cut him off. "Just listen. There's no time for
questions."

"But—"

"Saddle
up the horses, take your guns and radio, and suit up. I'll meet you in the
barn."

"About
the barn, that's what—"

"Tick!
We don't have much time. I need to get Deanna out of here and quick."

It
had taken some doing, but Addison secured clearance for Shep to take Deanna
and—if Voorhees was smart enough to cooperate—C. R. Majors up to the cabin in
the high country If not, let the man risk losing his witness and possibly his
life. As for Deanna, she was going with him, like it or not.

"Suit
up?" His partner repeated Shep's instructions as if he hadn't heard right.

"We're
dealing with gun carrying critters this time."

Snapping
to, Tick nodded and backed away.

Pulling
off as Tick gave the door a sling, Shep raced straight down the narrow dirt
street and pulled up to the house.

While
he got a head start with Deanna, Tick would carry Majors and the agents over to
the Double M for extra horses. They'd rendezvous at the cabin below the tree
line and hole up until the authorities came up with a plan Dusault
wasn't
privy
to.

"Hey,
buddy, where's the fire?" Jay called from the porch as Shep vaulted out of
the vehicle before the engine stopped.

"I'm
taking Deanna out of here before she winds up another victim of your
ambition."

"I'll
be—"

Shep
spun on his heel and grabbed the agent by the jacket. "Come with us or
stay and shoot it out. Don't like it, call your supervisor. My friends in high
places have already cleared it."

Letting
Voorhees go as if he'd dirtied his hands, Shep ducked inside, the agent
following him.

Kessler
and Majors sat in the living area watching the news. Kessler jumped to his
feet. "Something wrong?"

"You
mean aside from you guys airing my death warrant on the evening news?"
Majors sneered. "Like I'm going to live to testify."

Shep
took up short. "What the devil happened to you?" C. R.'s face looked
as if the barn cat had used it as a scratching post. Not that Shep really gave
a hoot. "Never mind," he said, leaving Majors sheepish and fumbling
for words. All he cared about was Deanna. She was the only one who mattered.

***

Deanna
struggled with the delicate buttons of her silk blouse as Shep barged into the
room like a steamroller. Her startled shriek blended with the bang of bedroom
door against the wall.

"What...
have you ever heard of knocking?" she sputtered, the same heat that
flushed her face tripped her tongue, but her fingers were frozen on the last
button.

"Hurry
up and get dressed."

"Why?
What are you doing—" she exclaimed as Shep began shoving the hem of her
blouse into her waistband when she didn't move fast enough to suit him.
"Is the chopper here?"

He
stopped abruptly. "What chopper?"

"There's
a chopper on its way to pick us up, Jones," Voorhees said from the open
doorway, "so we don't need your Lone Ranger act."

"There's
no chopper coming for you, none with clearance from Great Falls anyway."
At Voorhees skeptical expression, Shep challenged him. "Call and see for
yourself. I just finished talking to the agency less than five minutes
ago."

"You
can bet on it, buddy." Voorhees dug in his jacket for a cell phone.

"Shoes."

Shoes?
Before
Deanna realized Shep was speaking to her, he put his shoulder into her side and
hoisted her foot like she'd seen him do to clean Patch's hooves.
"Hey—" She hopped sideways as he shoved one of her slippers on.
Frantic, she tried to hold up the trousers she'd yet to fasten with one hand
and catch herself on the bed with the other. "I'm not a horse."

The
bed slid under the weight of her impact as Shep dropped to his knees and
reached for the slipper's mate.

"Don't
I know it," he grumbled. "Horses are a lot easier to deal with."

"What
is the matter with you?" Deanna jumped to her feet and hauled up the
zipper of her trousers, only to have it snag on the tail of her blouse.
"Jiminy blue Christmas!"

"Here."
Shep stepped up to help, but she dodged the maniac.

"I
can dress myself, thank you very much."

"Jon,
go get that tech head Gretsky and find out where in static land he got his
information," Voorhees shouted from the kitchen. "This is one messed
up..."

Deanna
winced at the string of expletives the agent in charge—or rather, out of
charge—used to describe the infectious mania that had assailed them. At the
slam of the porch door, Shep hastened to the window to watch Jon Kessler leave.

God,
You have just gotten me calmed down and everyone else is going nuts.

The
silk material of her blouse wouldn't budge from her zipper, no matter how she
tugged on it. Deanna rolled her eyes toward the ceiling. "What difference
does it make if we go to jail in a chopper or a car?"

"Because
bad guys are coming in the chopper and they can take out the car." Shep
spun away from the window. "Let me get that."

Her
eyes widened as he brandished a knife from his boot big enough to skin Old Bull
with one fell slice. "Oh no you don't." Turning her back to him, she
wrestled with the zipper.

Shep
grabbed her arm. "Just hold still—"

"This
blouse sells for ninety bucks at Saks," she grunted, "not that I paid
that much, but—"

"I
don't care if it cost nine hundred dollars, just—"

"Put
that knife away or your head's gonna be up there with Old Bull's!" Deanna
stomped her foot, glaring at the man glaring back at her in what had to be the
most ridiculous standoff in the history of time.

"I
think you would." The electronic tick of the Neanderthal radio alarm on
the nightstand marked off the passing seconds as he considered his next move in
silence.
One, two, three, four...

Unable
to stand it any longer, Deanna confessed in a tiny whisper. "You're
scaring me, Shep... and I was just beginning to see your side of things."

The
half-crazed look on his face gave way to surprise. "You were?"

She
nodded.

"What
changed your mind?"

"I
decided to go with what I believed instead of how I felt." A sheepish
smile licked at one corner of her mouth. "I realized that I was like the
pot calling the kettle black. If I want God to forgive me for the lies I told,
I'd better forgive you."

He
answered with a corresponding twitch that accented a charming dimple she'd not
noticed before. "I love you, Slick—"

She
was in his arms, her eager lips meeting his.

"Me,
too—" she groaned, burying her fingers in the thick of his hair. Apology
sounded with every beat of her heart only to be echoed by his. Joining as one
in a love song that traveled from pulse point to pulse point, they spread the
word of surrender. It felt as though her senses waved white flags of passion,
while fireworks popped in her ear... or was it firework?

Whatever
it was, Shep jerked away from Deanna at the sound. Before she could think, he
dragged her to the floor. "Stay down!"

"You
bet," she managed, alarm snaking its way up her spine as he crawled to the
front window. "Is it the bad guys already?"

Waving
her to be quiet, Shep ventured a cautious peek over the ledge. He winced as two
more pops sounded. "Aw, no—"

Without
thinking, Deanna looked in time to see Jon Kessler stumble away from the tech
trailer as though drunk. He reached behind him with awkward gestures as though
he had an itch he couldn't quite reach when, knees buckling, he went down on
his face.

"Omigosh—"
Belated, Deanna covered her mouth.

"Stay
down," Shep said, ducking her head below the window level. "And
listen close. Ticker is saddling the horses." He paused as if thinking his
plan through. "He'll take you to the safety of Double M and—"

"On
a horse? Why don't you just shoot me?"

"I
thought you were getting comfortable with Molly and Patch."

"Hey,
I'm comfortable with a lot of things," she told him, "but that
doesn't mean I'm going to hop up on their backs and hi-ho-Silver away."

"Everyone
okay in there?" Voorhees called out from the kitchen.

"Secure."
Shep's reply was mechanical, but his mind spun wheels behind the gaze he fixed
on Deanna. It didn't take a genius to see that he was trying to figure out what
to do with her.

"And
I'm not leaving you," she declared. Anticipating objection, she stood
defiant as a black gum tree in a lightning storm. "I got you into this
mess."

"All
right then. There's no time for me to argue, so you do exactly as I say, got
it?"

"Got
it."

"Crawl
to the bathroom and stay there. It's the safest place."

"What
are you—"

"Just
move it," he said, shoving her forward with his shoulder. "I have a
plan."

With
Shep right behind her, Deanna met Jay Voorhees dragging C. R. into the central
hall.

"Well,
now you know who your friends are,
buddy."

Voorhees
ignored Shep's dour observation. Phone in hand, he punched out a number by
memory and touch, because there certainly wasn't any light.

"I
have plenty of firepower in the gun cabinet, and Ticker's armed and got enough
sense to lay low. I think we can take—"

The
agent swore, throwing the phone down. "Either I have the worst luck in
history and my battery's acting up, or that murderous tech wit out there has
done something. I can't get through for backup."

"Think
you and I can take him?"

"If
we can flush him out of the trailer. Otherwise, all he has to do is—"

"What
about Jon?" Deanna interrupted.

"Hey,
best worry about us," C. R. reminded her. "Your golden boy's
toast."

Voorhees
gave the self-serving prisoner a sling into the bathroom. "Keep it up,
Majors, and I'll turn the girl loose on you again."

Shame
burning her face, Deanna looked away from the startled glance Shep cast her
way.

"You're
not going to take these cuffs off?" C. R. exclaimed as Voorhees pushed him
into the bathroom.

"Why,"
the agent derided, "so you can cover your eyes?"

"I
know how to use a gun. It's my life on the line here. Besides, someone needs to
protect the girl."

"Oh,
puh-leez," Deanna said, shoving her ex's face back into the room.

"We
can slip out the back and circle round from both sides," Shep said to
Voorhees, all business. "Or, we can make a run for it in the Jeep and
leave the son-of-a-gun and his buddies for another time."

Voorhees
shook his head. "No, I think between us, we can take them in. There can't
be more than four in the chopper."

Shep
thought a moment, his face darkening with each passing second. "Not worth
the risk. You cover me while I—"

Other books

A Wild Ride by Andrew Grey
Sugar Skulls by Lisa Mantchev, Glenn Dallas
Ultimatum by Antony Trew
The Natural [Answers 3] by Christelle Mirin
The Future by Al Gore
Dash in the Blue Pacific by Cole Alpaugh