The Sheriff of Heartbreak County - Kathleen Creighton 12 стр.


Roan brought his eyes back to Cliff Holbrook, and he wasnt surprised to see the older mans complexion had darkened considerably. It had grown unnaturally silent in the room, as though the other four people in it had faded into the woodwork, leaving him and the senator to face each other alone.

I want to go with you when you pick her up, Holbrook growled, head lowered and eyes burning-more angry bull, now, than wolf.

Roan shook his head and said firmly, Sorry, Senator, I cant let you do that. He rose and reached for his hat. This is my job. Ill deal with Miss Mary Owen.

Alone? Holbrooks voice sounded hoarse and strained. Shouldnt you at least take some backup?

Roan gave him a crooked smile. Cliff, this isnt Ma Barker were dealing with. Besides, he added with pointed looks at his deputies, these folks here have plenty else to do. Tom, Lori, dont you have a murder weapon to find? As the two deputies snapped to attention, he nodded at Ruger and Fry. And if you gentlemen wouldnt mind, I think maybe a trip to Coeur dAlene might be in order.

He got their nods of agreement, settled his hat on his head and nodded at the senator, then briskly took his leave. Nobody was more surprised than Roan when Clifford Holbrook sat in his chair and let him go without another word of argument.

Chapter 5

Mary was sweeping up after her last client when the light seemed to dim around her, as though a cloud had passed in front of the sun. Then the glass front door to her shop slapped open and Sheriff Roan Harley stepped inside, politely removing his hat as he closed the door behind him.

Her heart thumped like an alarmed rabbit and fear fisted in her stomach, but she gave no outward sign of that as she called out, Be with you in a minute, and went on carefully coaxing snowdrifts of crisp gray-white hair into a dustpan.

Oh, but even without looking she could feel his presence, jarring and alien, too much rawboned masculinity for such a cozy, pink, feminine place. And she could feel him watching her. When she straightened, dustpan in one hand and broom in the other, awareness bloomed warm in her cheeks, and she touched an unsteady hand to smooth back the strands of hair that dangled limply around her face.

Dont be a fooldont let him get to youhe cant hurt you. She sang the words silently to herself like a calming lullaby while she tilted the dustpan into the nearest wastebasket and propped the broom against the wall beside the work station. Then, jamming her hands into the pockets of her smock to stop their fidgeting, she turned resolutely to confront her visitor.

And once again, as it had the night before when shed first seen the sheriff of Hart County through her latched screen door, she was conscious of a strange sensenot of déjà vu, exactly, but more as if she were seeing a double exposurethe vibrant flesh-and-blood man standing before her, and the memory of a much different man, one from a life shed put behind her long ago.

Right now, today, this man, the real man, was turned sideways to her, leaning on one elbow against the glass display case that served as a reception counter, turning his hat around and around in his hands and watching her through the arrangement of white artificial tulips in a Blue Willow bowl.

Against that image, blurring it like rain cascading down a windowpane, the memory: Dark, sultry Latino eyes laughed at me behind a single red rose, taunting medaring meseducing me into dancing the tango

Then the sheriff straightened and she moved toward him and the memory shimmered into nothingness.

Miss Owen, he said in his soft, grumbly voice, nodding his head toward her in an awkwardly formal way that was oddly attractive in so self-assured and masculine a man.

Sheriff, she said, returning the nod. And for some reason she found herself gazing, not at his face with its probably un-characteristic shadowing of beard stubble, but at his thick sunshot hair, with the imprint of a hatband molded into it. Her fingers tingled with the urge to plunge into itburrow through itfluff out and smooth away that telltale cowboys furrow. The hairdresser in her, she told herself. Except that hairdressers werent supposed to think of how that hair would feel, were they? Warm silkvibrant and alive

She forced her lips into the shape of a smile, and the twinge of pain that action caused was an acute reminder of why this man was here. She touched her lip and asked, Did you come to give me back my gun? Knowing he hadnt. Her heart was beating as if shed been running hard uphill, beating so fast it made her chest hurt.

КОНЕЦ ОЗНАКОМИТЕЛЬНОГО ОТРЫВКА

She forced her lips into the shape of a smile, and the twinge of pain that action caused was an acute reminder of why this man was here. She touched her lip and asked, Did you come to give me back my gun? Knowing he hadnt. Her heart was beating as if shed been running hard uphill, beating so fast it made her chest hurt.

He didnt return her smile. Fraid were going to be needing it a while longer. His sky-blue eyes studied her narrowly, and there was a hardness in them that hadnt been there before. Im going to need to ask you a few more questions, too, if you wouldnt mind coming down to the station with me.

Would it make any difference if I do mind? Mary asked, tilting her head slightly, still holding on to the smile. Surprised at how little emotion she felt, now that this moment-the moment shed been dreading-had finally arrived.

The sheriff kept his face impassive. He stood tall and arrow-straight now, a commanding presence, but completely relaxed, with his feet a little apart and his hat held casually in both hands. No, maam, he said, I dont believe it would. I guess its up to you whether you want to make it easy or hard on yourself.

Are you arresting me? And how was she able to ask it so calmly, while deep in the pockets of her smock her tightly clenched fists felt like chunks of ice?

He made a small dismissive gesture with his hat. Maam, like I told you, Id just like to ask you a few questions.

I cant imagine what I could tell you that your deputy hasnt found out already, over at the courthouse, Mary said pointedly.

The sheriff acknowledged that with a hint of an ironic smile. News travels fast.

Its a small town, Mary said. And Miss Adas a good customer-and friend-of mine. Anger was beginning to seep through her veil of calm. Anger and a bitter sense of irony. After all Ive been through, everything Ive sacrificed, to have it all undone by some small-town back-country sheriff with a great big murder to solve. Ive given you my gun and my blood-what else can you possibly want?

Well, for starters, the sheriff drawled as he folded his arms on his chest and seemed to take root and grow immoveable as a ponderosa pine, Id sure like to know your real name.

The world darkened. A rushing sound filled the inside of her head. Her voice caught, and then she said, Mymy name? I dont know what on earth you mean. But there was no real conviction in it. Shed waited just that critical heartbeat too long.

She heard a soft hissing sound-an exhalation. The sheriffs eyes narrowed and his features hardeneddarkenedbecame the face of a man nobody in his right mind would care to cross. Oh, sure you do, he said in his soft, growly voice, and Mary marveled that a voice shed thought so pleasing, even sexy, could sound so dangerous now. We both know youre not Mary Owen. For one thing, shes dead-been dead for thirty-some years. So that brings me back to my question: Who the hell are you?

Mary did the only thing she could think to do. She drew her hands from the pockets of the smock, nudged her glasses more firmly onto her nose as if girding herself for battle, then folded her arms tightly across her waist and slowly shook her head. She made a small, throat-clearing sound and said, Dont I have a right to remain silent?

The sheriffs chin jerked up a notch. For a moment or two he didnt answer, and the space between them pulsed with the shimmering, vibrating silence. A muscle twitched in the side of his jaw-the only sign of any annoyance he might have felt. If I place you under arrest, he said finally.

Then once more the silence waited, growing denserharder to break. Marys throat and mouth were too dry to form words and swallowing didnt help. In the end she had to whisper them. Then I guess youll have to do that. Because I have nothing more to say to you.

The sheriff made that hissing sound again, and slowly shook his head. Miss Mary, he said as he settled his hat on his head, you have no idea how sorry I am to hear you say that.

Roan closed the door to the interrogation room carefully behind him, resisting an unprofessional urge to slam it. Frustration tension gripped his neck and shoulders as he nodded brusquely at the man standing with folded arms in front of the observation window, then continued on down the hallway to his office without saying a word.

After a moment, Senator Holbrook pivoted and followed, his steps hurried and heavy with anger. He fired point-blank as he pushed through the door behind Roan, almost on his heels. You didnt arrest her?

No, Roan snapped back without turning as he rounded his desk and jerked back his chair, I did not.

Gripping the back of the chair closest to the desk, Holbrook leaned on his white-knuckled hands, hardened his already iron jaws and demanded tightly, Why the hell not?

Instead of answering immediately, Roan stared down at his own hands and pictured his daughters face-for him the equivalent of counting to ten. The fact that the man standing before him huffing and snorting like an angry bull was a United States Senator didnt have much bearing on Roans efforts to cut him some slack, but the fact that he was the murder victims father sure did. All Roan needed to keep his own temper under control was to remember what it had felt like to be in this mans shoes.

The fact that shes not willing to talk to us, aggravating as that may be, does not mean shes guilty, he said patiently, bringing his eyes up to meet Holbrooks narrow and glittering glare. Id really like to have some evidence she is before I arrest her, and right now we dont have any hard evidence connecting her with Jasons murder. We know the gun she gave us isnt the murder weapon, and we didnt find any others when we searched her place. Her blood on Jasons sleeve only proves he assaulted her, it doesnt-

Назад Дальше