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Cassidy, Carla - Midnight Wishes

Page 17

by Midnight Wishes(lit)


  To her surprise Luke leaned over and took her hand. For a moment she

  allowed the heat and strength of his grasp to comfort her, ease her

  fears. "It's important you find out what's happening with you. We

  need to know if you suffered a blackout the night that Greg was

  killed."

  Abby snatched her hand away, reminded once again of the reason Luke was

  here, what his ultimate goal was in being with her. "We may never know

  for sure whether I suffered a blackout that night, but I know I didn't

  kill Greg. I'm not capable of that kind of violence." And she

  resented the fact that Luke had held her in his arms, made sweet love

  to her, and didn't realize it was impossible for her to commit

  murder.

  She opened her door, irritated by how easily he could affect her with

  just a simple touch. "Let's get this over with," she said as she got

  out of the truck.

  Despite her irritation with Luke, she was grateful for his presence

  next to her as they entered the bar. The interior was dim, with a

  thick layer of smoke that lay like a veil across the low ceiling. The

  jukebox in one corner blared the latest Alan Jackson hit and several

  couples danced in drunken movements on the small sawdust-covered dance

  floor.

  "Hey, little lady, ain't never seen you in here before." A cowboy

  leaned toward Abby with a smile, nearly falling off his bar stool in

  the process.

  "And you'll never see me in here again," Abby replied as she took a

  step closer to Luke.

  "Come on, let's talk to the bartender." Luke placed an arm around her

  shoulder, glared at the drank on the stool, then led her to the other

  end of the long wooden bar where the bartender was talking to a young

  woman.

  "What can I get for you?" he asked as Luke and Abby slid onto

  stools.

  "Two beers," Luke said. "And perhaps a little information."

  The bartender looked like a man who had once been a prizefighter. His

  nose was flat and scar tissue formed a knot across one eyebrow. The

  glare he shot at Luke didn't improve his forbidding countenance. "I'll

  get you two beers, but I'm not no information booth."

  "What kind of information are you looking for, handsome?" the woman

  next to Luke asked as the bartender turned to get their drinks.

  Luke turned around on the stool and offered her a sexy smile. The

  woman's heavily lined eyes flared with a spark of feminine interest and

  Abby had the ridiculous impulse to hit both of them upside their

  heads.

  "You a regular in here?" Luke asked.

  The bartender snorted. "If Dotty here gets any more regular she's

  gonna start having to help pay the taxes on this place." He slammed

  two full beer mugs down in front of them. "You two the heat?" he

  asked, his gaze suspicious.

  "No, we aren't cops," Luke replied. "We don't care whether your liquor

  license is current or if you serve minors."

  "Huh, a minor bellies up to my bar, I kick his butt," the bartender

  exclaimed. "So, if you aren't cops, what kind of information are you

  looking for?"

  "You know any of the workers from the Connor spread?" Luke asked.

  "I do," Dotty said, and smiled coyly as Luke looked at her once again.

  "I've danced with them, drank with them. One of them, the blond named

  Roger, tried to pick me up one time by telling me he was a son of some

  congressman." She laughed and shook her head. "I thought I'd heard

  every line a man could throw at a woman, but that was definitely a new

  one."

  "Who else have you seen in here from the COnnor place?"

  Dotty shrugged. "I figure all the men have been in at one time or

  another. The old man, Rusty, comes in occasionally and Billy is in

  here almost every night." She frowned. "Although he's definitely not

  the friendly sort. He usually sits in the co ruer and drinks until

  he's nearly passed out."

  "Did you know a man named Greg Foxwood?" Abby asked, wanting to cut to

  the chase and get out of the bar.

  Dotty. leaned forward, her eyes widened. "You mean the guy who was

  murdered, right?" Abby nodded and Dotty continued. "Yeah, I knew

  him." She shivered and wrapped her arms around her shoulders. "What a

  trip, one week I'm rolling around in his bed, and the next week he's

  dead."

  Abby flushed. She didn't want to know intimate details about what Greg

  had done with various women in the weeks before his murder. '"Did you

  ever see Greg talking to any of the men from the Connor ranch?"

  Dotty's eyes narrowed. "You're his ex-wife, aren't you? The one

  they've arrested for his murder?" Dotty grinned. "I don't blame you,

  honey. He was a fine-looking man, but it was easy to see he had the

  wanderlust. Hell, I wasn't the only woman in here he slept with."

  Abby took a sip of her beer, appalled that Dotty had given her approval

  for supposedly killing Greg. Abby was out of her realm of reality.

  Resentment toward Greg flooded through her. She resented him for

  sucking her down into such an ugly piece of the world.

  "So, did you see Greg having conversations with any of the men from the

  Connor ranch?" Luke picked up the questioning where Abby had left

  off.

  Dotty frowned thoughtfully. "I don't remember anything specific, but

  this is a small place and Greg was a friendly man. I'm sure he

  probably talked to all of them."

  Abby touched Luke's arm. "Let's get out of here. This is a dead

  end."

  Luke nodded and took a couple deep drinks of his beer. Then, throwing

  a few dollars on the bar, he stood. "Thanks for your time and your

  help," he said to both the bartender and Dotty. The bartender grunted

  and Dotty smiled.

  "Anytime, handsome," she replied, casting him another smile that

  indicated she'd love more time with him if he'd lose Abby's company.

  Abby and Luke had just about reached the door when it opened and Billy

  Sims walked in. His dark eyes widened in shock as he saw them.

  Immediately he turned and began to make his way to a table in the

  corner. Before he could get there, Luke grabbed his arm.

  "I want to talk to you, Sims," he said.

  Abby was as surprised as Billy at Luke's demand. "About what?" Billy

  asked with a dash of belligerence.

  "About what you were doing in Abby's barn yesterday."

  "I don't have to talk to you about nothing," Billy exclaimed. He

  tried, unsuccessfully, to tear his arm from Luke's grasp.

  "I think you do--that is, unless you want to be implicated in a charge

  of attempted murder."

  Abby wasn't sure who gasped louder, her or Billy. "What are you

  talking about?" This time Billy managed to jerk out of Luke's grasp,

  but he made no attempt to move away from them.

  "I'm talking about the fact that somebody tried to kill Abby by

  throwing a bale of hay from the loft yesterday and I saw you in the

  barn before it happened."

  Abby looked at Luke sharply, wondering why he hadn't mentioned seeing

  Billy in the barn before now. They'd been parmers for less than

  twenty-four hours and already he was withholding inf
ormation from

  her.

  "You're crazy," Billy replied. "I wouldn't do any thing like that. I

  wouldn't try to hurt Miss Connor."

  "Then what were you doing in the barn?"

  "I had to get something." Billy stared down at his feet, refusing to

  meet either of their gazes. "Something that I'd forgotten."

  "What, Billy? What did you take?"

  Abby felt pressure build in her chest as she waited for his answer. Why

  had he been in her barn after she'd fired him? Had he stolen a

  branding iron? Had he intended to implicate her in yet another

  crime?

  "I had a stash hidden in the barn," Billy mumbled, his words barely

  audible.

  "A stash? I don't understand," Abby said. "Booze," Luke answered

  flatly. "Is that right?" Billy nodded. "I had a couple bottles

  hidden in the barn. Yesterday I went back to get them." For the first

  time he looked directly at Abby. "But I swear, I didn't throw no hay

  bale at you. I was mad 'cause you fired me, but I'd never try to hurt

  nobody."

  Abby believed him. She'd had her share of mean men working at the

  ranch. But Billy, although not particularly well liked by the other

  workers, had not had a reputation as a brawler or a vicious man. Rather

  he'd been viewed with a combination of disgust and pity.

  "Come on, Luke. Let's go home," she said, suddenly exhausted. The day

  had begun with such promise. She'd been sure that by thoroughly

  checking Greg's room they would find proof in some shape or form of her

  innocence.

  Even on the way to the bar, she'd retained the hope that somehow they'd

  find some answers, that somebody in the bar held the secrets she needed

  to be cleared.

  As she and Luke walked back to the truck, her despair lay heavy in her

  heart: What if they never found anything to absolve her? The thought

  caused her to stumble. She pitched forward, gasping as Luke grabbed

  her and steadied her close against him.

  "You all right?" His breath was warm against her temple.

  She nodded, fighting the need to lean against him to allow him to wrap

  her in his arms and keep her safe. But she knew that wasn't what he

  offered her. : He was here to find a killer and for no other reason.

  "I'm fine," she said as she stepped back from him. "Discouraged, but

  fine."

  "You shouldn't be discouraged," Luke said once they were in the truck

  and heading back to the ranch. "We now know there is a definite

  possibility of connection between somebody at the ranch and Greg." '

  "Yeah, but a connection with whom? This doesn'i help me at all."

  "Sure it does," Luke countered. "At least yo lawyer can make a

  reasonable alternative theory for

  Greg's murder, that he fought with. somebody frol the ranch who later

  took a branding iron and used to kill him. "

  "I don't want alternative theories, I want to be abl to go into court

  with positive proof that I'm inn cent." To her horror, her last words

  ended on a sow

  She gulped, swallowing convulsively as she fought

  for control, but the tears came faster and faster. She couldn't wipe

  them away fast enough to keep the from blurring her vision.

  "Pull over. I'll drive." Luke's voice was filled with a touch of

  sympathy and Abby didn't hesitate to take him up on-the offer.

  She swerved, over onto the shoulder and stumbled from the truck, sobs

  still pressing thickly against her chest. Despair overwhelmed her,

  deeper, more profound than any she'd ever experienced in her life. She

  had no defenses left, no strength to still the tears.

  Luke met her at the front of the truck and rather than passing her to

  get into the driver's seat, he pulled her against him, holding her

  tight as she continued to cry.

  Despite her desire not to, Abby gave in to her need to cling to him.

  The darkness of the night, and the isolation of the area where she'd

  pulled over helped by giving her a sense of privacy.

  She cried until there were no more tears left, only gasping dry hiccups

  that she found enormously embarrassing. She finally disentangled

  herself from him. "Thanks," she murmured, averting her face from his

  view.

  His palms cupped each side of her face, forcing her to look up at him.

  "Abby, there's no shame in needing a shoulder to cry on. There's no

  disgrace in not being strong all the time."

  Abby stiffened and pushed away from him. "I know," she said softly,

  then went around the truck and got into the passenger seat.

  Easy for him to say, she thought as he started the truck. Certainly

  there was no shame in needing somebody to comfort you, hold you up when

  the world's weight got too heavy. That's what people who cared about

  each other did. But she'd be a fool to depend despair lay heavy in her

  heart: What if they never found anything to absolve her? The thought

  caused her to stumble. She pitched forward, gasping as Luke grabbed

  her and steadied her close against him. ! i

  "You all right?" His breath was warm against her temple.

  She nodded, fighting the need to lean against him,

  to allow him to wrap her in his arms and keep her safe. But she knew

  that wasn't what he offered her. : He was here to find a killer and

  for no other reason.

  "I'm fine," she said as she stepped back from him. "Discouraged, but

  fine."

  "You shouldn't be discouraged," Luke said once they were in the truck

  and heading back to the ranch. "We now know there is a definite

  possibility of a connection between somebody at the ranch and Greg."

  "Yeah, but a connection with whom? This doesn't help me at all." "

  "

  "Sure it does, Luke countered. At least your lawyer can make a

  reasonable alternative theory for!J

  Greg's murder, that he fought with somebody from the ranch who later

  took a branding iron and used '

  to kill him. "

  "I don't want alternative theories, I want to to go into court with

  positive proof that I'm cent." To her horror, her last words ended on

  a

  She gulped, swallowing convulsively as she fought for control, but the

  tears came faster and faster.

  couldn't wipe them away fast enough to keep from blurring her vision.

  "Pull over. I'll drive." Luke's voice was with a touch of sympathy

  and Abby didn't hesitate to take him up one the offer.

  She swerved. over onto the shoulder and stumbled from the truck, sobs

  still pressing thickly against her chest. Despair overwhelmed her,

  deeper, more profound than any she'd ever experienced in her life. She

  had no defenses left, no strength to still the tears.

  Luke met her at the front of the truck and rather than passing her to

  get into the driver's seat, he pulled her against him, holding her

  tight as she continued to cry.

  Despite her desire not to, Abby gave in to her need to cling to him.

  The darkness of the night, and the isolation of the area where she'd

  pulled over helped by giving her a sense of privacy.

  She cried until there were no more tears left, only gasping dry hiccups

  that she found enormously embarrassing. She finally dis
entangled

  herself from him. "Thanks," she murmured, averting her face from his

  view.

  His palms cupped each side of her face, forcing her to look up at him.

  "Abby, there's no shame in needing a shoulder to cry on. There's no

  disgrace in not being strong all the time."

  Abby stiffened and pushed away from him. "I know," she said softly,

  then went around the truck and got into the passenger seat.

  Easy for him to say, she thought as he started the truck. Certainly

  there was no shame in needing somebody to comfort you, hold you up when

  the world's weight got too heavy. That's what people who cared about

  each other did. But she'd be a fool to depend on Luke Foxwood. He

  didn't care about her and she resented the fact that he pretended he

  did. More than that, she resented the fact that she wanted him to

  care.

  LUE FELT Abby's frustration as it filled the interior of the truck cab.

  In truth, the same emotion rolled around inside him. He felt his

  shirt, the dampness from her tears still evident. Her tears had

  touched him, more than he'd thought possible. Since his time at the

  ranch he'd come to admire her strength, and her uncharacteristic tears

  had shaken him.

 

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