He felt the urge to wrap an arm over her shoulders, but didn’t give in to the intimacy.
“Can we get out of here?” she asked.
“What? And leave all this luxury?” He forced a smile he didn’t feel and noticed that her lips twitched despite the creases in her forehead.
“It’ll be hard, I know. A sacrifice. But I think it’s time.”
“And go where?”
“Home.”
“I’m not sure your condo is safe.”
“I’m not talking about Seattle,” she admitted, her brown eyes dark with thought. “I think I need to go home. Back to Montana. Until this is all sorted out. I’ll call my editor and explain what’s going on. He’ll have to let me work from the ranch. Well, he won’t have to, but I think he will.”
“Wait a minute. I thought you were hell-bent to start over. To prove yourself. Take command of your life again.”
“Oh, I am. Believe me.” She nodded as if to convince herself. “But I’m going to do it closer to my family.” Staring at him, she inched her chin up in a gesture he’d come to recognize as pure unabashed McCafferty, a simple display of unbridled spirit, the kind of fortitude that made it impossible for her to walk away from a challenge. “Come on, Striker, let’s get a move on.”
He glanced around the cabin and decided she was right. It was time to return to Montana. This case had started there...and now it was time to end it. Whoever had first attacked Randi had done it when she’d attempted to go back to her roots at the Flying M. Somehow that had to be the key. Someone had felt threatened that she was returning. Someone didn’t want her back at the ranch... Someone hated her enough to try to kill her and her unborn child....
His mind clicked.
New images appeared.
The baby. Once again, Striker thought Joshua was the center of this maelstrom. Didn’t children bring out the deepest of emotions? Hadn’t he felt them himself?
It was possible that whoever had started the attacks on Randi had done so with a single, deadly purpose in mind that Kurt hadn’t quite understood. Perhaps Striker, Randi, the McCaffertys and even Sam Donahue had been manipulated. If so...there was only one person who would take Randi’s fame and pregnancy as a personal slap in the face. And Kurt felt certain he knew who the culprit was.
“What do you know about Patsy Donahue?” he asked suddenly.
Randi started. “Sam’s wife, or ex-wife, or whatever she is?”
“Yeah.”
“Not a lot.” Lifting a shoulder, Randi said, “Patsy was a year ahead of me in high school, the family didn’t have much money and she got married right after she graduated, to her first boyfriend, Ned Lefever.”
“You weren’t friends with Patsy?”
“Hardly.” Randi shook her head. “She never liked me much. Her dad had worked for mine, then her folks split up and I think she even had a crush on Slade, before Ned...well, it’s complicated.”
“Explain. We’ve got time.”
“I won some riding competition once and edged her out and...oh, this is really so high school, but Ned asked me to the prom. He and Patsy were broken up at the time.”
“Did you go?”
“To the prom, yes. But not with Ned. I already had a date. And I wasn’t interested in Ned Lefever. I thought he was a blowhard and a braggart.” Randi rested a hand against the battle-scarred railing as she rolled back the years. “It was weird, though. All night long, during the dance, I was on the receiving end of looks that could kill. From Patsy. As if I was to blame for Ned’s—” She froze. “Oh, God, you think Patsy’s behind the attacks, don’t you?”
Kurt’s eyes held hers. “I’d bet my life on it.”
Chapter 12
“How could she let herself get tangled up with the likes of Donahue?” Matt grumbled to his brother as he uncinched Diablo Rojo’s saddle. For his efforts, the Appaloosa swung his head around in hopes of taking a nip out of Matt’s leg. Deftly Matt sidestepped the nip. “You never learn, do you?” he muttered to the fiery colt.
Rojo snorted, stamping a foot in the barn and tossing his devilish head. Matt, Slade and Larry Todd, the recently rehired foreman, had been riding nearly all day, searching for strays, calves who might have been separated from the herd in the cold Montana winter. Spring was still a few months off and the weather had been fierce since Christmas, snow drifting to the eaves of some of the outbuildings.
Larry had already taken off, but Slade and Matt were cooling down their horses now that three bawling, near-frozen calves had been reunited with their mothers. The barn was warm and smelled of dust, dry straw and horseflesh. The same smells Matt had grown up with. Harold, their father’s crippled old spaniel, was lying near the tack-room door, his tail thumping whenever Matt glanced in his direction.
Slade unhooked The General’s bridle and the big gelding pushed against Slade’s chest with his great head. He rubbed the horse’s crooked white blaze and said, “I don’t think Randi planned on getting involved with Donahue.” The brothers had been discussing their sister’s situation most of the day, hoping to find some answers to all of their questions.
“Hell, the man was married. I bet Patsy put up one helluva ruckus when she found out.”
Slade nodded.
“She always was a hothead. She never liked Randi, either, not since Randi beat her out of some competition when they were in high school.”
“What competition?” Slade scooped oats from a barrel with an old coffee can. The General, always eager for food, nickered softly. As Slade poured the grain into the manger, the old chestnut was already chomping.
“I can’t remember. I wasn’t around, but Dad mentioned it once. Something about horse racing, yeah, barrel racing, when they were kids. Randi beat Patsy, and Patsy did something to her at school the next week.”
Slade began rubbing The General down. “Wasn’t that Patsy Ellis? Jesus, I think she had a thing for me once.”
“You always think women are interested in you.”
“Don’t tell Jamie.”
“Right.” Matt was feeding Rojo. Thankfully the colt was finally more interested in food than in taking a nip out of Matt’s hide. “That was her maiden name. Right after high school she married Ned Lefever. A few years later they were divorced and a while after that she took up with Donahue, married him. It must really have teed her off that he ended up cheating on her with an old rival.”
“A woman scorned,” Slade muttered as the barn door opened and Kelly, her eyes bright, her cheeks nearly as red as the strands of hair escaping from her stocking cap, burst inside. Harold gave off a gruff bark.
“Shh,” Kelly reprimanded, though she bent over to pat the old dog’s head. Snow had collected on her eyelashes and was melting on her skin. To Matt, as always, she looked sweet and sexy and was the most incredible woman to walk this earth. “I just got a call from Striker,” she announced breathlessly as she straightened. “He and Randi are on their way back here, and guess what? They think Patsy Donahue is behind all this.”
Matt and Slade exchanged glances.
“I’ve already checked with Espinoza, and the police are looking for her, just to ask her some questions. I put a call in to Charlie Caldwell’s ex-girlfriend and guess who handed her over the keys to the maroon Ford van that edged Randi’s Jeep off the road? Good old Patsy.”
Slade’s grin moved from one side of his face to the other. “Your husband and I had just come up with the same idea,” he said.
“No way.”
“Honest to God.” Matt held up a gloved hand as if he was being sworn in at a trial.
“Great. Now you can both be honorary detectives and form your own posse or something.”
Matt tossed aside the brush and walked out of Diablo Rojo’s stall. “Don’t I at least get a kiss for being so smart?” he teased.
“If you were so smart why didn’t you come up with this idea months ago and save us all a lot of grief. Forget the kiss, McCafferty.” She winked at him and his
heart galumphed. He’d never figured out why she got to him so, how when she walked into the room, everything else melted into the background. “Besides,” she said coyly, “I expected smart when I married you.”
“And good-looking and sexy?” he asked, and heard his brother guffaw from The General’s stall.
“Minimum requirements,” she teased. Matt dropped a kiss on her forehead and molded his glove over the slight curvature of her belly where his unborn child was growing. “Come on, you good-looking, sexy son of a gun,” she began, pulling on the tabs of his jeans.
“On my way,” Slade intercepted.
“I think she was talking to me.” Matt shot his brother a look that could cut through steel.
“Both of you!” Kelly insisted, backing toward the door. “Let’s go have a little heart-to-heart with Patsy Donahue.”
“I think you’d better leave that to the police,” Matt said.
“I was the police, remember?”
“Yeah, but now you’re my wife, the mother of my not-yet-born child and Patsy could be dangerous.”
“I’m not afraid.”
“Spoken like a true McCafferty,” Slade said as he slipped from The General’s stall and tested the latch to make certain it was secure. “But maybe you should leave this to the Brothers McCafferty.”
“We’re like the Three Musketeers,” Matt said.
“I won’t say the obvious about a certain trio of stooges,” she baited, and for her insolence, Matt whipped her off her feet and hugged her.
“Sometimes, woman, you try my patience.”
She laughed and winked up at him with sassy insolence as he set her on her feet.
“Leave this to the men,” Matt insisted as he held the barn door open and a blast of icy Montana wind swept inside.
“In your dreams, boys.” Kelly adjusted the scarf around her neck as she trudged through the snow toward the ranch house. Not far from the barn stood the remains of the stables, blackened and charred, in stark contrast to the pristine mantle of white and a glaring reminder of the trouble that had beset the family ever since Randi’s fateful drive east. “Look,” Kelly said, sending her husband a determined glare. “I’ve been involved with this case since the beginning. Patsy Donahue is mine.”
* * *
“Guess what?” Kurt asked as he clicked off the cell phone. They were driving east through Idaho, closing in on the western Montana border. Night was coming and fast, no moon or stars visible through the thick clouds blanketing the mountains. “That was Kelly. She and Espinoza and your brothers went over to Patsy Donahue’s place.”
“Let me guess.” Randi adjusted the zipper of her jacket. “Patsy is missing.”
“Hasn’t been at her house for days, if the stacked-up mail is to be believed.”
“Great.” Randi was disheartened. Would this nightmare never end? It was unbelievable to think that one woman could wreak such havoc, be so dangerous or so desperate. Could Patsy hate her that much as to try to kill her? Kill her baby? Harm her brothers?
“I just don’t get it,” Randi said as she turned toward the backseat to check on Joshua. The baby, lulled by the hum of the truck’s engine and the gentle motion of the spinning wheels, was sleeping soundly, nestled in his car seat. “Why take it out on the ranch...I mean, if she had a thing against me, why harm my brothers?”
“The way I figure it, Thorne’s plane crash was an accident. Patsy wasn’t involved in that. But the attacks on you were personal and the fire in the stable was to keep you frightened, maintain a level of terror.”
“Well, it worked. Slade nearly lost his life and the livestock... Dear God, why put the animals in jeopardy?” She bit her lip and stared at the few flakes of snow slowly falling from a darkening sky. Sagebrush and scrub pine poked through the white, snow-covered landscape, but the road was clear, the headlights of Striker’s truck illuminating the ribbon of frigid pavement stretching before them.
“She’s angry. Not just at you but at your family. Probably because she doesn’t have much of one. Besides, you own the lion’s share of the ranch. She must’ve figured that hurting the ranch and hurting your brothers was hurting you.” He flicked a look through the rearview mirror. “I just feel like a fool for not seeing it sooner.”
“No one did,” she admitted, though that thought was dismal. Maybe when they arrived at the ranch, Patsy would be in custody. Silently Randi crossed her fingers. “So what’s going to happen to Sam?”
“He’s being questioned. Just because he wasn’t responsible for harming you doesn’t mean he’s not a criminal. If you testify about his animal abuse, illegal betting and his throwing of the rodeo competitions, we’ll have a good start in bringing him to justice. There’s no telling what the authorities will dig up now that they’ve been pointed in the right direction.”
“Of course I’ll testify.”
“It won’t be easy. He’ll be sitting at the defense table, staring at you, hearing every word.”
“I know how it works,” she retorted, then softened her tone as they passed through a small timber town where only a few lights were winking from the houses scattered near the road and a sawmill stood idle, elevators and sheds ghostlike and hulking around a gravel parking lot and a pile of sawdust several stories high. “But the truth is the truth,” Randi continued, “no matter who’s listening. Believe me, I’m over Sam Donahue. I would have taken all of the evidence I’d gathered against him to the rodeo commission and the authorities if I hadn’t been sidetracked and sent to the hospital.” She leaned back against the seat as the miles sped beneath the truck’s tires. “I had worried about it. Wondered how I would face Joshua’s father. But that’s over. Now I’m sure I can face him. The way I look at it, Sam Donahue was the sperm donor that created my son. It takes a lot more to be a real father.”
The baby started coughing and Randi turned to him. Kurt glanced back, as well. Joshua’s little face was bright red, his eyes glassy. “How much longer until we get to Grand Hope?”
“Probably eight or nine hours.”
“I’m worried about the baby.”
“I am, too,” Kurt admitted as he glared at the road ahead.
Joshua, as if he knew they were talking about him, gave off a soft little whimper.
“Give me the cell phone,” Randi said. She couldn’t stand it another minute. Joshua wasn’t getting any better; in fact, he was worsening, and her worries were going into overdrive. Kurt handed her the phone, and she, trying to calm her case of nerves, dialed the ranch house as she plugged in the adapter to the cigarette lighter.
“Hello. Flying M Ranch,” Juanita said, her accent barely detectible.
Randi nearly melted with relief at the sound of the housekeeper’s voice. “Juanita, this is Randi.”
“Oh, Miss Randi! ¡Dios!, where are you? And the niño. How is he?”
“That’s why I’m calling. We’re on our way back to the ranch, but Joshua’s feverish and I’m worried. Is Nicole there?”
“Oh, no. She is with your brother and they are at their new house, talking with the builder.”
“Do you have her pager number?”
“¡Sí!” Quickly, Juanita rattled off not only the telephone number for Nicole’s pager, but Thorne’s cell phone, as well. “Call them now, and you keep that baby warm.” Juanita muttered something in Spanish that Randi interpreted as a prayer before hanging up. Immediately Randi dialed Thorne’s cell and once he answered, she insisted on talking to his wife. Nicole had admitted Randi into the hospital after the accident, and with the aid of Dr. Arnold, a pediatrician on the staff of St. James, had taken care of Joshua during the first tenuous hours of his young life.
Now, she said, “Keep fluids in him, watch his temperature, keep him warm, and I’ll put a call into Gus Arnold. He’s still your pediatrician, right?”
“Yes.”
“Then you’re in good hands. Gus is the best. I’ll make sure that either he or one of his partners meets us at the hospital. When do y
ou think you’ll get here?”
“Kurt’s saying about eight or nine hours. I’ll call when we’re closer.”
“I’ll be there,” Nicole assured her, and Randi was thankful for her sister-in-law’s reassurances. “Now, how are you doing?”
“Fine,” Randi said, though that was a bit of a stretch. “Eager to get home, though.”
“I’ll bet—oh! What...?” Her voice faded a bit as if she’d turned her head, and Randi heard only part of a conversation before Nicole said, “Look, your brother is dying to talk to you. Humor him, would you?”
“Sure.”
“Randi?” Thorne’s voice boomed over the phone and Randi felt the unlikely urge to break down and cry. “What the hell’s going on?” Thorne demanded. “Kelly seems to think that Patsy Donahue is the one behind all this trouble.”
“It looks that way.”
“And now Patsy’s gone missing? Why the hell hasn’t Striker found her?”
“Because he’s been babysitting me,” Randi said, suddenly defensive. No one could fault Kurt; not even her brothers. From the corner of her eye Randi noticed Kurt wince, his hands gripping the steering wheel even harder. “He’s got someone on it.”
“Hell’s bells, so does Bob Espinoza, but no one seems to be able to find her. It’s time to call in the FBI and the CIA and the state police and the damn federal marshals!”
“She’ll be found,” Randi assured him, though she, herself, doubted her words. “It’s just a matter of time.”
“It can’t happen soon enough to suit me.” He paused, then, “Tell me about J.R. How is he?”
“Joshua’s running a temperature and has a cold. I’m meeting Nicole at St. James Hospital.”
“I’ll be there, too.”
“You? A big corporate executive? Don’t you have better things to do?” she teased, and he laughed.
“Yeah, right now I’m discussing the kind of toilet to go into the new house. Believe me, it’s a major decision. Nicole’s leaning toward the low-flow, water-conservation model, but I think we should go standard.”