Czytaj książkę: «Lock, Stock and McCullen»
For a moment, her breath caught.
She found Maddox in her kitchen, scrambling eggs on the stove with a mug of coffee in his hand. The big, tough-looking cowboy seemed at ease in the kitchen, but his jaw was still set in that firm line, and when he looked up at her, a dark wariness had settled in his eyes.
He poured her a cup of coffee and handed it to her, their fingers brushing. A tingle rippled through her at the heat, but he yanked his hand back quickly, then scooped the eggs onto a plate.
“We need to talk.”
Rose’s instincts surged to life, and she sank into the kitchen chair. She sipped her coffee. “You found something?”
He shook his head then joined her at the table, his big hands wrapped around the mug. “That’s just it, Rose. I ran a background check on Thad Thoreau and didn’t find anything.”
She frowned. “Nothing incriminating?”
“I mean nothing,” he said, emphasizing the last word. “As in the Thad Thoreau you knew doesn’t exist.”
Lock, Stock
and McCullen
Rita Herron
RITA HERRON, a USA TODAY bestselling author, wrote her first book when she was twelve, but didn’t think real people grew up to be writers. Now she writes so she doesn’t have to get a real job. A former kindergarten teacher and workshop leader, she traded storytelling to kids for writing romance, and now she writes romantic comedies and romantic suspense. Rita lives in Georgia with her family. She loves to hear from readers, so please write her at PO Box 921225, Norcross, GA 30092-1225, USA, or visit her website, www.ritaherron.com.
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Contents
Cover
Introduction
Title Page
About the Author
Prologue
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Epilogue
Extract
Copyright
Prologue
There were days and nights when he didn’t know if he could do it.
Kill Rose.
He remembered her smiling face as a child. That striking red hair. Her singsongy voice. The way she’d looked at him as if he hung the moon.
After she’d disappeared from his life, he’d dreamed about her. Had wanted to find her. Had asked his father over and over where she’d gone and if she was coming back.
His father had told him to forget her.
Then, years later, he’d stumbled onto the truth.
And he hadn’t known what to do.
Mistakes had been made, his father said—mistakes that had cost lives.
Mistakes that, in the end, could save others.
His resolve kicked in. Unfortunately there was no turning back now.
Rose Worthington had to die.
Chapter One
Sheriff Maddox McCullen did not want his father to die.
But he was dying anyway, and Maddox couldn’t do a damn thing to stop it.
He clenched the doorknob to his father’s bedroom door, his stomach fisted into a cold hard knot.
He’d looked up to Joe McCullen his whole life, admired his father’s love of the land and the way he’d run the family ranch, Horseshoe Creek. It had been passed down from one McCullen to the next for generations and had made men out of all of them.
His father was as tough as steel and had worked hard. He’d bred thoroughbreds and raised cattle and treated his ranch hands with respect and authority.
But he would be gone soon, and Maddox had to take over. Not that he wasn’t prepared. The ranch was in his blood. Taking care of it and the town gave him a purpose.
Mama Mary, the housekeeper and cook who’d practically raised him, met him at his father’s door. Short, plump and sturdy, she’d squished him in her big loving arms since he was a child.
“How is he?”
“Resting,” she said, her hands gripping a tray holding a teapot and empty cup. “But he wants to see you.”
Maddox rapped gently on the door, then pushed it open, forcing himself not to react to the changes in the big, strong man who’d taught him how to shoot a rifle, ride a horse and rope a calf. His father had lost more weight, his eyes looked sunken and his hand shook as he raised it to cover a cough.
Dammit. Maddox was a take-charge man, a doer. He fixed people’s problems. He didn’t like this feeling of being helpless.
But his father needed him to be strong. He sure as hell didn’t need to see his oldest son break down.
“Dad?”
“Come on in, Maddox. We need to talk.”
God, not another discussion of his will and how and where he wanted to be buried.
“What is it? Can I get you something?”
A sheen of sweat coated his father’s pale forehead. “No, but there is something you can do for me.”
His dad waved him over, and Maddox crossed the room, his boots pounding the wood floor. He dragged the straight chair in the corner next to the bed, straddled it, then removed his Stetson.
“Anything, Dad. You name it.”
His father pushed himself to a sitting position, then raked what little hair he had left back from his forehead. “It won’t be long now—”
“Don’t say that, Dad.”
His father’s hand shot up to cut him off. “Let me finish. It won’t be long, but before I die, I need to see your brothers. There’s something I have to talk to each of you about.” He coughed again, then struggled for a breath, making Maddox’s own chest ache.
“I know you all don’t get along,” his dad continued, “and that’s partly my fault, but it’s important I see Brett and Ray.”
Maddox swallowed to temper his anger. How could he deny his father’s last request? He had a right to say good-bye to each of his sons.
But resentment made him seethe inside. Brett, two years younger than him, had always been irresponsible, a love-’em-and-leave-’em womanizer who’d left home seven years ago chasing his dreams of fame on the rodeo circuit.
And Ray...hell, Ray was the rebellious son. Ever since he turned thirteen, he’d clashed with their father. Maddox had no idea what Ray was up to now, although his youngest brother had skirted the law a few times.
Neither Brett nor Ray had been home to see his father since...well, he couldn’t remember when.
That had suited Maddox just fine.
“Will you call them, son?”
Maddox gave a clipped nod.
A weak smile tilted the corner of his dad’s mouth. “Families need to stick together. Try to bridge the gap between you and your brothers, son. You all need each other.”
Maddox gritted his teeth. He might just be asking the impossible.
“Maddox?”
Words hung in his throat, but he forced them out. “All right, I’ll try.”
Relief softened the harsh planes of his father’s face, and Joe visibly relaxed and closed his eyes. “Just let me know when they get here.”
“I will.” Maddox strode to the door, but his father’s request haunted him.
He would track down Brett and Ray—at least they owed his father the courtesy of a goodbye.
But he didn’t expect them to stay. And he didn’t need them. He didn’t need anyone.
Hell, he’d assure them they could go their separate ways as soon as they paid their visit.
* * *
ROSE WORTHINGTON HAD been alone for so long that she couldn’t believe she was finally getting married.
She inhaled the lavender scent of the bubble bath, laid her head back and soaked in the decadent claw-foot tub.
Her fiancé, Thad Thoreau, was on the other side of the door putting together a romantic midnight picnic for the two of them to eat in bed. Since neither of them had family to speak of, they’d opted to save money and elope. Pistol Whip, Wyoming, was small-town, a blip on the radar of Wyoming, and was reminiscent of an old Western movie set—not exactly the setting Rose had envisioned for her nuptials.
So they were on their way to Cheyenne for the ceremony. But Thad had pulled off the highway and driven to a cabin off the beaten path, saying they’d have a romantic night before the wedding.
She opened her eyes and glanced at the vintage ivory dress she’d bought for the special occasion tomorrow, her heart fluttering with excitement. The string of pearls Thad had given her lay in the velvet box beside the pearl comb she’d bought for her hair.
She held her hand up and splayed her fingers, admiring the way her French-cut halo diamond sparkled in the candlelight.
Tomorrow she would become Mrs. Thad Thoreau.
Not only would she have a husband to hold her and love her every night, but one day they’d also have a family.
A pang of regret nagged at her for not calling her parents and telling them about her engagement. But they hadn’t gotten along since she was a teenager. For some odd reason, ever since she was little, she’d sensed she didn’t belong with them. That they were a wrong fit. That she was a problem they didn’t know how to get rid of.
And then there had been the awkward conversations she’d overheard, the whispered comments, the looks...
The secrets.
They’d wanted to send her away. She’d heard them plotting that one night.
So as soon as she’d turned eighteen, she’d packed and left. Her parents hadn’t stopped her. In fact, they’d said it was probably for the best.
Who thought it was best not to talk to your own child?
When she had a baby, she’d make sure her little one knew he or she was loved, that she’d do anything for her child.
The water turned chilly, and she climbed out and dried off, then pulled on her robe. Footsteps sounded from the master bedroom, and she eased open the door.
Thad’s voice echoed from where he stood by the window, and she realized he was on the phone.
“Yes, she’s the one. I’m positive.”
Her heart swelled with gratitude to have found Thad. For so long she’d built walls and kept herself from loving anyone, too afraid to get hurt. But then Thad had walked into her antiques store, Vintage Treasures, and stolen her heart.
Just last week he’d shown her a photograph of the estate he owned in Cheyenne. They were headed there the day after their wedding. Apparently he had inherited family money, which he’d invested, and he’d accumulated his own fortune.
Not that she cared about the money. She wanted companionship, love, a real family...
She started to slip into the room, to inch up behind him and surprise him with a kiss, but he lifted a flyer of a picture of a little girl on a milk carton, a child of about five years old.
“Yes, I’m certain it’s her,” Thad said. “The woman I’m with is the little girl on the milk carton.”
Rose frowned. What was he talking about? How could she be the child? Those ads were placed for missing children...
Thad walked over to the side table, opened his briefcase and removed a pistol. Rose tensed, her heart tripping into double time. Why did he have a gun?
“Don’t worry,” Thad said, his voice low, as he loaded the weapon. “Your problems will soon be over. She’ll be dead by morning.”
* * *
MADDOX MUTTERED A CURSE as his brother’s voice mail clicked on. The first time he’d called, he’d gotten Brett’s publicist, but he refused to go through a third party with such a personal matter, so he’d dialed the number again.
Did Brett even answer his own calls?
“Brett, it’s me, Maddox. I know we haven’t talked in a while—” two years to be exact, but he bit back a snide comment “—but it’s important. Dad is sick, really sick... He’s dying, Brett, and he needs to see you. Call me.”
Maddox paced to the fireplace, his gaze drawn to the photograph of him and his brothers when they were young. He was about ten, Brett eight, Ray six. Close in age, they’d wrestled and fought and raced on horseback as kids.
But they’d grown apart after their mother’s death and were as different as night and day.
What the hell would he say to them if they did return?
Upstairs, the house seemed quiet and he hoped his father was resting. But his request nagged at Maddox. He didn’t especially want his brothers here. He and his father got along great.
He had no idea how he’d live without him.
But...he had to honor his dying request, so he searched for Ray’s number. It took him a half dozen calls through various sources he’d had over the past years to track down his youngest brother’s current location.
While he punched in Ray’s number, he strode to the bar in the den and poured himself a whiskey. Brett had been irresponsible and wild, but he hadn’t possessed Ray’s anger and temper.
The phone rang and rang. No answer. Dammit.
He left Ray a voice mail, then carried his drink outside to the front porch. The night air filled his lungs, the heat nearly oppressive as he sank onto the porch swing and looked out at the McCullen land. Acres and acres of farm and ranch land that bordered on the mountains and held elk, deer, antelope and other wildlife.
He loved Horseshoe Creek and would keep it up when his father was gone.
But what would he do if Brett or Ray actually wanted to stay and help run it?
* * *
COLD FEAR WASHED over Rose. Had she misunderstood Thad?
Had he really said she’d be dead by morning?
“Trust me, no one will find her body.”
Rose struggled against the urge to scream. Why would Thad or the person on the other end of the line want her dead?
Was that the reason he’d insisted on them eloping? So he could dump her body in the miles and miles of wilderness around Pistol Whip?
Terror seized her, and she stumbled backward. She caught herself by grabbing the counter, but her hand hit the hair dryer and knocked it to the floor. Suddenly footsteps clattered, and Thad stood in the doorway with the gun in his hand.
The cold look of a seasoned killer greeted her. “Eavesdropping, Rose?”
She shook her head in denial, then glanced around for a weapon, but the bathroom held nothing. Except for her hairspray.
Desperate, she reached for it, but Thad pounced toward her. She jerked up the can and sprayed it at his face. Thad cursed and rubbed at his eyes, then tried to grab her. “You won’t get away, Rose.”
Taking advantage of the moment, she shoved him and ran. He bellowed and chased after her, waving the gun at her.
A bullet pinged off the wall beside her. Hands shaking, she grabbed her purse and fumbled for Thad’s keys on the table.
Suddenly Thad yanked her by the hair and dragged her toward him. She screamed again, fighting him as he threw her to the floor. Her head hit the tile and pain ricocheted through her temple.
He straddled her, then lifted the gun and pointed it at her head.
Rose’s vision blurred, death whispering her name. Another image came out of nowhere—another gun. Another man. The sound of a gunshot firing.
Blood spraying everywhere. The floor, the walls...
What was happening...?
Thad’s fingers closed around her wrists, tightening so painfully that a sob escaped her.
But reality surfaced and the blurred image of the other shooting faded. The will to live kicked in, giving her a surge of adrenaline, and she used one hand to knock the gun upward. He cursed, and she slammed her fist into his crotch, causing him to double over and roll off her.
She lunged to get away, crawling on her hands and knees into the bedroom, but another gunshot pinged off the floor beside her. Her foot hit the lamp as she tried to get up, sending it crashing to the floor.
Terrified, she reached for the gun and managed to snag it. They struggled with it, both trying to gain control, but the gun went off. Thad grunted, then his eyes widened in shock and he looked down at his chest.
Blood oozed from his torso and soaked his shirt. Frantic, she pushed herself up, grabbed her purse and ran outside. The night sky was dark, void of stars, the endless sea of wilderness swallowing her as she raced to his sedan.
“You can’t get away,” Thad shouted as he staggered onto the porch after her.
She jumped in the car, keeping her eyes on Thad, her hand trembling as she fumbled with the keys. Three tries and finally the engine fired up.
Thad staggered down the steps, one hand to his bloody chest as he collapsed. She pressed the gas pedal, shifted into Reverse and sped backward, slinging dust in her wake. Thad managed to lift his head and raised the gun and fired again, but he was too far away and the bullet hit the dirt.
She swung the sedan around, stomped on the accelerator and roared down the graveled road to the highway. Nausea clogged her throat as she dug in her purse for her cell phone. Dammit, she had no service!
Tears streamed down her face as she drove back toward Pistol Whip. She repeatedly checked over her shoulder in case Thad found a way to follow her. But she didn’t stop until she drove into the small town and parked at her rental house.
Fighting a sob, she careened into the drive, threw the car into park and dove out. She ran up the steps to the porch, the keys jangling as she let herself inside. Her phone was ringing as she entered. She flipped on a light in the hallway, then raced to get it.
Whoever it was, she’d get rid of them and call the sheriff. Maddox McCullen would know what to do. He’d help her.
But a sinister voice echoed from the other side of the phone. “You can run, but you can’t hide, Rose. I’ll find you.”
Chapter Two
“No, Ray, I’m not exaggerating.” Maddox grimaced at the fact that Ray had even suggested such a thing. “Dad is...dying. Emphysema.”
Silence stretched between them for a long minute. Maddox braced himself for Ray to deny his father’s request. How he’d explain that to his father he didn’t know.
“I’ll think about it,” Ray said in a belligerent tone.
“Do more than think,” Maddox said tersely. “The least you can do is to say goodbye to him. You two might have butted heads, but he is your father.”
Ray muttered something ugly that Maddox couldn’t understand, but he refrained from asking him to repeat it. He didn’t want to know.
He’d given up understanding Ray a long time ago.
His phone beeped that he had another call, and he sighed in relief. Sad that he welcomed a work call to save him from talking to his own flesh and blood. “I’ve got another call I have to take. Now get your butt home. If you don’t, I’ll track you down and drag you back to Pistol Whip myself.”
He didn’t bother to wait on a response. He clicked over to answer the other line. “Sheriff McCullen.”
“Sheriff, it’s Rose Worthington.”
Maddox frowned at the way her voice warbled. “What’s wrong, Rose?”
“Someone...my fiancé...he tried to kill me tonight.”
Shock bolted through Maddox. He’d seen Rose around town, even lusted after her a few times. How could a man not? She had silky red hair, raspberry-ripe lips and a body that made a man want to bury himself inside her.
But he’d been too busy taking care of his father and the ranch, and protecting the town, to get entangled with her. Besides, she’d had a ring on her finger.
“Did you hear me?” Rose said. “He tried to kill me tonight.”
Maddox swung into professional mode. “Where are you?”
“My house,” Rose said. “Please hurry. I’m afraid he’ll come after me.”
“What’s your address?”
“Two-thirty-one First Street.”
“I’m on my way. Just stay on the line.” Maddox fastened his holster and gun and hurried outside to his squad car. “Tell me what happened?”
“Before he attacked me, I heard him talking on the phone. He said I’d be dead before morning. He had a gun and I tried to run, and he grabbed me and...the gun went off.”
“Are you hurt?” Maddox flipped on his siren and sped toward the street where Rose lived. A Mustang pulled out in front of him, and he beeped his horn and passed it, irritated to see the driver on his cell phone. If he’d had time, he’d have pulled the jerk over, but Rose sounded terrified and he needed to hurry.
She might still be in danger.
* * *
ROSE SHIVERED AS she peered out her front window. Was Thad dead?
Or if he’d survived, had he followed her here? Was the person he’d been talking to watching her?
Nausea rolled through her, and she checked to make sure the door was locked, then looked down and realized she was still wearing her robe. Her diamond glittered beneath the light, a reminder of how excited she’d been when she and Thad had left for their trip. All her hopes and dreams were going to come true. Thad loved her.
All lies.
Revulsion mingled with humiliation. She ripped off the ring and tossed it into a drawer, then turned to go upstairs to get dressed. But a noise sounded above and she froze, terrified someone was upstairs.
No...she was probably just paranoid. It was just the furnace...
But...what if the mysterious voice had been calling from inside the house?
A siren wailed, and she pulled back the curtain again and watched as the sheriff’s car spun into the driveway. She ran to the door, threw the lock open and rushed outside to the porch.
Seconds later, Sheriff McCullen stepped from the vehicle, his tall frame emerging in the shadows.
“Rose?”
“I’m here.” Her voice faded as she ran down the steps toward him. He rushed toward her and she fell into his arms, trembling as a sob escaped her.
* * *
MADDOX PULLED ROSE into his arms, cradling her close as she shuddered against him.
He murmured soothing words to her and stroked her hair, hating himself for noticing that it was just as soft as he’d imagined when he’d seen her around town.
What kind of man lusted after a woman when she was quaking in his arms from nearly being killed?
“You’re all right, now,” he said, lowering his voice to a gentle pitch. Both his brothers had told him that he sounded like a bear when he talked. He couldn’t help that he’d been given a deep baritone voice.
It came in handy when he wanted to intimidate a suspect. Not so much when a frightened woman was looking for someone gentle to comfort her.
She clung to him, rasping for breath. “You’re safe now, Rose. I won’t let anyone hurt you.”
She heaved another breath and sniffled, her damp tears soaking his shirt. “I’m sorry. I...didn’t know what to do. Who to call.”
“I’m the sheriff,” he murmured. “I’m here to protect you and everyone in this town.”
She nodded against his chest, her sobs finally subsiding. Then she lifted her chin and looked up at him. The pain in her eyes tore at him.
She blinked, tears glistening on her eyelashes in the moonlight that seeped through the clouds.
“Let’s go inside and you can tell me everything.”
Her lower lip quivered as she released him and folded her arms around her waist. She stumbled on a fallen tree limb on the ground, and he steadied her as they walked up the steps to the porch. When they made it to the doorway, she froze, her eyes widening again in fear.
“I thought I heard a noise upstairs earlier.”
He immediately drew his gun and coaxed her aside. “Wait here. Let me check the house.”
She nodded and gripped the doorjamb as he scanned the living room to the left. It was clear, so he veered to the right and scanned the kitchen, which was connected to the living room by a breakfast bar. The kitchen was empty, so he took the staircase, his senses honed for sounds of an intruder.
The furnace kicked on, rattling in the silence, and he paused at the top of the staircase to glance into the room to the right.
An iron bed covered in a pale blue-and-white quilt dominated the room, and an antique dresser held perfume bottles and candles by the bathroom door. He went inside, instincts alert, but saw nothing amiss. A quick check in the closet told him this was Rose’s room. Feminine dresses, blouses and shoes filled the closet.
Exhaling slowly, he turned and crossed to the room on the opposite side of the hall. This must be a guest room. The bedding was simple, with a white coverlet on a four-poster Shaker-style bed, and there was a Shaker-style dresser by the wall. The closet held a few containers stacked with extra clothing and items.
But the rooms were clear.
Relieved, he headed back down the stairs. Rose was pacing by the fireplace, her hands worrying the belt of her robe, her face pale.
“No one is upstairs.”
“Let me put some clothes on,” she said as if she suddenly realized how naked she was.
He nodded. He needed her clothed so he could forget about how she’d felt in his arms and focus on the reason someone had tried to kill her.
* * *
ROSE THREW ON a pair of jeans and a T-shirt, fighting a sob. Thad had not only made a fool out of her but he also wanted her dead.
Why?
She glanced in the mirror, shocked at the woman she saw looking back. Her eyes were puffy and red with dark circles beneath them, her face bruised, her hair stringy and tangled. She didn’t even look like herself.
Forcing herself to take a deep breath, she dragged a brush through the tangles, then slowly descended the steps, relieved that the sheriff had made it to her house so quickly. She didn’t know Maddox McCullen very well, but everyone in town said he was decent and hardworking—a family man.
A man to trust.
God knows she’d trusted the wrong man so far.
“I’ll make coffee,” she said, desperate for something to do with her hands as she met him at the foot of the staircase.
He gave a grim nod and followed her to the kitchen. An awkwardness, thick and unsettling, cloaked the room as she measured the grounds and filled the coffeepot with water, and they waited on it to brew.
She removed two mugs from the cabinet. “Sugar or cream?”
“Black,” he said.
Just as she’d expect from a man like him. Everything about Maddox screamed alpha male. Strong, take-charge...masculine.
When it was ready, she filled his mug. He blew on his coffee for a moment, and she gestured toward the pine table and sank into a straight chair. He joined her, still silent, as if he knew she needed time to pull herself together.
Finally she shoved her hair from her eyes, took a deep breath and began. “Thad suggested we elope yesterday,” Rose said. “Since neither of us have family that we’re close to, I agreed.”
“You were anxious to get married?”
She nodded, although heat flooded her cheeks. Why did men make it sound as if women were desperate to get married? “I thought he loved me, that we were going to build a life together.”
His jaw tightened. “Go on.”
“We decided to go to Cheyenne for the ceremony, but on the way Thad said he knew this private little place off the path, that we could spend the night and have a romantic evening before the wedding.”
“So you went to this cabin?”
“Yes.” Rose sipped her coffee, tidbits of the last twenty-four hours taunting her. Little things that at the time had seemed insignificant, or even thoughtful, now took on a sinister meaning.
“At first, I thought it was eerie when he drove down this dirt road to the cabin, but he had flowers and wine and...he said he wanted us to be alone, and he made it seem romantic.”
“Did you tell anyone where you were going? That you were eloping?”
She shook her head. “I wanted to call Trina, my assistant at the antiques shop, but he said it was more fun if it was our secret, so I texted her that I was taking a couple of days off and asked her to manage Vintage Treasures.”
“You didn’t tell her where you were going?”
“No, no one knew.” Self-disgust ate at her. “Now I understand the reason. He planned to kill me and leave me in the wilderness so no one would find me.”
Silence lingered for a full minute before Maddox asked, “What happened at the cabin?”
She massaged the scar at the base of her temple, a nervous habit she’d had since she was young. “I went to take a bubble bath while he was supposedly setting up a picnic for us. But when I got out of the tub, I heard him talking on his cell phone.”
“Who was he talking to?”
“I don’t know.” The conversation echoed in her head, making her blood run cold. “I heard him say that I was the one... At first, I thought he meant it romantically. That I was the one he loved, the one he was meant to be with.”
The irony of that statement seemed to hit both of them. “Then what happened?”
“He held up this flyer. It had a picture of a little girl on a milk carton on it.”
Maddox’s brows drew together in a deep frown. “A little girl?”
“She was about five years old.” She fidgeted, still trying to make sense of it. “Then he said I was the one they’d been looking for, and that I’d be dead by morning.”
A heartbeat passed. “He meant that you were the girl on the milk carton?”
“Yes,” Rose whispered, her agitation mounting. “But that doesn’t make sense.”
“He didn’t elaborate?”
“No.” She shivered. “Instead, he pulled a gun from his briefcase.”
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