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Cassidy, Carla - Midnight Wishes

Page 10

by Midnight Wishes(lit)


  lawyer had confessed to Abby that he couldn't do anything for her in a

  criminal trial, so Junior had stepped in and arranged things for her.

  Bert told her his fee, an amount that stole her breath away, but after

  spending a night in the jail cell, Abby would have paid him with her

  soul if he could get her out and back to the ranch with Cody.

  "The state's case is weak," Bert said. "Mostly circumstantial. The

  threats you made, no alibi for the time of the murder, and the missing

  button from your blouse."

  "The missing button?"

  "Apparently a button was found beneath Greg Foxwood's body. The button

  came off your blouse."

  How was that possible? Fear fluttered through Ab by's stomach. How

  was it Possible for her button to be beneath Greg unless . unless

  she'd been there?

  As Bert went through the arraignment procedure, explaining everything

  to Abby, cautioning her to let him do the talking, she wondered if she

  should tell him about the night she awoke on the lawn. The phone call

  she'd thought was from Greg. She decided against telling him, not

  wanting to muddy the waters with things she didn't understand. Besides,

  the phone call was obviously a prank, and the other event had merely

  been a single incident of stress-induced sleep-walking.

  "That should do it," Bert said, rising from the conference table where

  they'd been seated. "I'll see you in court in less than an hour."

  "Mr. Manigan? You never asked me if I did it." Bert grinned. "I

  don't want to know. Guilt or innocence, it's all the same to me. My

  job is to see you don't get convicted and I'm damn good at my job."

  An hour later Abby pleaded not guilty to the charge of second-degree

  murder and Bert argued for a mason able bail to be set. Less than two

  hours later she walked out of the jail, a free woman until the date of

  her trial set in six weeks' time.

  Six weeks of freedom. Six weeks to find a killer, Abby thought as

  Junior drove her back 'to the ranch. And if they didn't find a

  reasonable doubt that she didn't kill Greg, she'd go to prison for

  years. Cody would grow up without a mother and the ranch would be lost

  to future generations of Connors.

  She nearly laughed aloud at this thought. The ranch was probably

  already lost. With her bail and Bert

  Manigan's fee, she'd never manage to pull the ranch out of the red.

  "Abby, I'm sorry." Junior finally broke the silence that had reigned

  during their drive.

  "For what? For doing your job?" She offered him a forgiving smile.

  "Junior, I don't blame you for this mess. The problem is, I don't know

  who to blame."

  "Abby, I've been thinking long and hard about this. If you had nothing

  to do with Greg's death, then the murderer has to be somebody at your

  ranch."

  Abby sighed. "I know. I've come to the same conclusion." She thought

  of the people at the ranch, her family, the workers whom she'd come to

  depend on and trust. "And it has to be somebody who not only has

  access to the barn, but to the house, as well. I'm telling you,

  Junior, somebody pulled that button from my blouse to intentionally

  incriminate me." She shivered at the very thought. Who at the ranch

  hated her enough to do such a thing? Who would want to see her in

  prison for a crime she didn't commit?

  "What about that new fellow out at your ranch?" Junior asked.

  "Luke?" Abby frowned thoughtfully. Her heart picked up its pace as

  she thought of the day he'd arrived. "What about him?" she asked.

  He'd arrived on the day that Greg had been murdered. Coincidence? Or

  something more ominous?

  "What do you know about him?" Junior returned her question with his

  own.

  Who was Luke Black? What did she really know about him? Nothing. Only

  the bits and pieces he'd shared with her, and they had been few and of

  little use in discerning his character or exactly what had brought him

  to her ranch.

  "Not enough," she finally admitted. She thought of the shine on his

  boots, the new, raw calluses on his hands. Neither were in keeping

  with a seasoned ranch hand. So, who was he really and what had brought

  him to the ranch?

  She shivered as a new thought entered her mind. What if Luke did have

  something to do with Greg's death? What if he had some sort of

  vendetta against the Connors, against her? She'd left him in charge of

  Cody. Dear God, she'd put her most precious possession right in his

  hands.

  As Junior pulled up in front of the house, her heart pounded so loudly

  she was surprised the lawman couldn't hear it. "Thanks for the ride,"

  she said as she flew from the car.

  "Cody?" she yelled as she opened the front door. "We're in the

  kitchen, More."

  She nearly sobbed with relief at the sound of his voice. She entered

  the kitchen to see Cody at the table and Luke at the stove. "Luke is

  making pancakes," Cody exclaimed.

  "So I see." She went over to her son, needing to touch him, hug him,

  reassure herself he was fine. "Mom," he protested as she kissed his

  cheek.

  "Maria is still gone?" Abby asked as she sank into a chair at the

  table.

  "She called this morning, said her sister is doing better and she

  should be back by the end of the week," Luke replied as he removed

  pancakes from the griddle and placed them on a plate. "Want some?" As

  he placed the plate in front of Cody, his gaze lingered on her face.

  searchingly. "You all right?"

  "As right as I can be," she said, not wanting to say too much in front

  of Cody.

  "Did they let you go?"

  She shook her head. "I was charged and arraigned. I'm out on bail."

  "What's bail?" Cody asked as he smothered his pancakes in syrup.

  "Just grown-up stUff," Abby answered.

  "Did the police find out who killed Dad?"

  "No, son, they didn't. They're still looking." Abby hoped to hell her

  words were true. Hopefully Junior or some member of the police force

  was still investigating and hadn't quit because of her arrest.

  "Coffee?" Luke asked.

  "Please." She murmured her thanks as he set a cup in front of her,

  then poured himself one and joined them at the table. "I can't thank

  you enough for babysitting Cody for me."

  "Don't say baby-sitting," Cody said with a mouthful of pancake and a

  scowl. "I'm not a baby."

  As Cody ate, Luke and Abby kept their conversation light, but she could

  see the questions in his eyes, the need to know what had happened, how

  she'd fared in jail.

  "Well, I'd better get out of here," Luke finally said after his second

  cup of coffee. "Rusty will be complaining about me being in here

  instead of out there earning my pay."

  "If he complains, I'll take care of him. You've more than earned your

  pay dealing with this little monster for a night." She ruffled Cody's

  hair, then stood to walk with Luke to the front door.

  All her earlier questions and worries about him had disappeared. Had

  he wanted to harm her, he could have done so last night, with Cody.

  "So
what happens now?" Luke asked as they stepped out onto the front

  porch.

  Abby wrapped her arms around herself despite the heat of the sun

  overhead. "My lawyer is coming by this evening and we're going to

  discuss defense strategy." She forced a smile: "He seems to think I

  need more than a proclamation of innocence to get me off."

  "What else can you get?"

  "I can find the real killer." Abby shivered and looked out to where

  the hired help went about the business of keeping the ranch running.

  "Whoever killed Greg is out here, close to me, pretending to be a

  friend while setting me up."

  "What makes you think that?"

  "Nothing else makes any sense. Whoever killed Greg got into my closet

  and pulled a button off the blouse I wore the night of the murder.

  Whoever killed Greg used my branding iron as the weapon. Somebody

  wants me put away for a murder I didn't commit, and it's somebody on

  this ranch."

  "So, how are you going to go about finding out who this someone is?"

  There was a touch of indulgent humor in his expression.

  "I'm glad you find this amusing," she snapped. "I'm already about to

  lose this ranch, and if I don't do something, I'll probably spend the

  rest of my life in prison."

  "

  "I'm sorry," he replied. "I don't mean to poke fun, but you aren't

  exactly Jessica Fletcher."

  "No, I'm not." To her horror, tears burned at her eyes. "But I can't

  just sit around and do nothing." She swallowed hard, trying to control

  the tears, but failing. "I've never 'felt so frightened, or so

  alone."

  He pulled her into his arms. For a moment, as tears splashed down her

  cheeks, she leaned into him. His T-shirt smelled of sunshine and

  strength, and for just a moment she allowed herself to be wek, allowed

  him to hold her up both physically and emotionally.

  It felt so good. She felt as if she'd spent her lifetime alone and in

  these moments of allowing Luke to support her, she gave him her trust,

  a tiny piece of her heart.

  "Is there anything I can do?" he asked when she finally moved out of

  his embrace.

  She shook her head, then smiled. "You just did it." They both turned

  at the sound of a car approaching. "What now?" Abby sighed. At least

  it wasn't a police car, rather it was an expensive luxury model. Abby

  groaned. "Just what I need. Henry Carsworth."

  "Who's Henry Carsworth?" Luke asked.

  "A vulture," Abby replied as a squat, short man got out of the car.

  "Morning, Mr. Carsworth."

  He tipped the hat that looked ridiculously small atop his big head.

  "Henry. I told you the other day to call me Henry." He flashed a grin

  almost as bright as the sparkle on the huge belt buckle he wore. "I

  figured after a night in jail you might be willing to talk turkey. "

  "A night in jail didn't change my mind, Mr. Cars-worth. The ranch is

  not for sale."

  Henry's grin didn't waver. He pulled a fat cigar from his pocket and

  lit it, his gaze going first to Abby, then to Luke, then back to Abby.

  "Now, now, let's not be hasty. Perhaps we can go inside where it's

  more private, you can listen to my offer, then make a decision."

  "It doesn't matter what your offer is, my decision has already been

  made."

  Henry placed a foot on the porch, displaying a custom-made snakeskin

  boot with a three-inch heel. "Be reasonable, Abby. You're in trouble,

  in big trouble. Way I hear it, all that's keeping this place afloat is

  your determination. Now you've got legal bills and a criminal case

  hanging over your head. What you going to leave that boy of yours if

  you go to prison? You're going to lose the ranch. Why not let me buy

  it, I'll give you a fair price, enough to pay your legal fees and still

  live a good life or put some in a trust fund for your kid."

  Abby grimaced with annoyance. "Mr. Carsworth, this ranch is not for

  sale."

  For the first time since his arrival his smile fell. He dropped the

  cigar to the ground and squashed it beneath his heel. "I'm going to

  own this ranch, Abby. I can either buy it now, or I can buy it later,

  when you're in prison. But, one way or the other, this ranch will be

  mine." He tipped his hat, then walked back to his car.

  "That snake," Abby hissed beneath her breath. "Who exactly is he?"

  Luke asked.

  "He's a wealthy man from California who's a wanna-be."

  "A wanna-be?"

  "He wants to be a cowboy and he wants my ranch."

  Luke gazed at the road, where the last stirring of dust from the car

  lingered in the air. "I wonder how badly he wants to own your

  ranch?"

  "Why?"

  Luke looked back at her. "I wonder if he wants it bad enough to frame

  you for murder?"

  GUILTY OR INNOCENT. 9 Those two words plagued Luke all day. They

  battled in his head, sparred in his heart. Could any woman be as good

  as Abby at radiating innocence and hiding guilt if it weren't true?

  Luke had a feeling he was out of his depth. If he were smart, he'd

  head back to Chicago, back to his desk job and solitary life-style. If

  he were smart, he'd leave it to the authorities to decide Abby's guilt

  or innocence, allow the judicial process to either punish her or let

  her go. But, for the first time in his life, Luke didn't want to be

  smart.

  He couldn't leave here without knowing exactly who was responsible for

  Greg's death. He leaned against the corral fence. Dammit, it had all

  been so clear when he'd left Chicago to travel out here. He'd been

  determined to straighten things out, to right past wrongs.

  "You seem to be worming your way in real good with the boss lady."

  Luke turned and grinned at Rusty. "She's an attractive woman, I'm a

  healthy man."

  Rusty snorted. "If you're thinking you can weasel your way into owning

  a piece of this place by snuggling up to her, you'd better think again.

  That's what her first husband tried to do and look what it got him."

  Luke looked at the old man sharply. "What do you mean? Are you saying

  Greg married Abby to get the ranch?"

  Rusty shrugged. "I'm just an old fool, but that's the way it appeared

  to me. Abby's parents had just passed away, leaving her in charge.

  From the moment he arrived here, he honed in on her like a hawk to a

  rabbit. When she refused to put the place in his name, he left her."

  "What kind of a boss is she?"

  "Hard, but fair." Rusty rubbed his jaw thought fully. "That is until

  lately."

  "What about lately?"

  Rusty frowned and again stroked his whiskered jawline. "I don't know

  lately she seems to be real absentminded, you know. Even' before the

  murder, she seemed to have moments when I wasn't sure she was all

  there."

  Luke sighed and ran a hand through his hair. "You got family,

  Rusty?"

  "Had a wife and a little boy once. The wife took the boy and left me

  years ago. Never heard from her again."

  Luke looked at him curiously. "What about your son?"

  "He got in touch with me not long ago, had lots of questions I couldn't

/>   answer, seemed to need things I couldn't give him." Rusty sighed, the

  wearied sigh of an old man. "Ah, family ... better off' without

  them."

  "So, who do you think killed Greg?"

  Rusty ran a gnarled hand through his grizzled gray hair and his frown

  deepened. "Don't know for sure, but I can tell you one thing?" He

  looked toward the house. "I saw her come home the night he was

  murdered. I heard she told the police she was out at Walker's pond,

  but when she drove in that night she came from the opposite direction.

  She came from the direction of town."

  Luke frowned and also looked toward the house, more confused than ever.

  Was Abby an innocent victim of some conspiracy, or was she an evil,

  heartless woman who would do anything to protect what was hers?

  "I'LL BE IN TOUCH later in the week," Bert Manigan said as he walked to

  the front door.

  Abby nodded wearily. Midnight approached, and they had been talking

  since eight o'clock. Her mind whirled with all his proposed legal

  maneuvering, most of which she didn't understand. "Thanks, Bert."

  He smiled. "Don't worry. If my investigator doesn't turn up something

  we can use in your defense, we'll ask for a continuance. We won't go

 

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