Harlequin Intrigue, Box Set 1 of 2

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Harlequin Intrigue, Box Set 1 of 2 Page 12

by Delores Fossen


  Even though Laurel had had some doubts that Theo was actually in love with her, she knew he had some feelings for her. In his own obsessed kind of way. However, she had also known that a one-sided relationship would never work.

  Of course, now she was repeating that with Jericho.

  Definitely one-sided. Yes, he’d kissed her several times, but that was just lust. There’d always be lust. But when he was thinking straight, and that would happen, he would remember that he would lose his family by being with her. Jericho wouldn’t allow that to happen.

  And neither would Laurel.

  “There’s a USB with an email conversation between Theo and a shrink named Dr. Marvin LaMastus,” Levi relayed to them. He was still examining the envelope while volleying glances between it and them. “And there’s also a statement from the nurse of the second psychiatrist. She says she never saw Laurel in the doctor’s office, and there’s no record of any appointment. Both the emails and the statement look legit.”

  “Of course they are,” Theo snapped. “Both psychiatrists were pressured or bribed into giving their diagnoses.”

  “I don’t suppose the shrink said anything in that email about Herschel hiring him?” Jericho asked.

  Theo’s jaw tightened even more. Maybe because they weren’t jumping for joy over what he’d brought them. “You don’t know what I had to do to contact Dr. LaMastus. I had to risk your father finding out.”

  “You poor thing.” Jericho’s voice was loaded with sarcasm. “Laurel was shot at. If you cared one ounce about her, you should be doing any and everything to help her get out of this mess.”

  Theo looked down at the wedding ring. “No. Not now. I’m done with her. As far as I’m concerned, you two deserve each other.”

  Normally, that would have been an insult, but considering Laurel had spent most of her adult life playing with the idea of marrying Jericho, she decided it wasn’t much of an insult, after all.

  Theo glanced at his mother before he stormed out the door.

  But Dorothy didn’t budge. She lifted her suddenly weary gaze to Laurel. “You have no idea what you’ve done.”

  Jericho glanced at Laurel to see if she knew what the woman was talking about. She didn’t. Because this seemed to be a whole lot more than just a broken engagement, especially since Dorothy had never seemed that fond of her.

  “Why don’t you explain to me what I’ve done,” Laurel insisted.

  Dragging in a long breath, Dorothy got to her feet. “You need to annul this marriage and try to smooth things over with Theo. I’m not saying you have to go through with marrying my son, but you need to make it look as if you two have kissed and made up.”

  Was the woman insane? “Kiss and make up? Dorothy, someone’s trying to kill Jericho and me. I’m on the verge of losing my son. My freedom. And you think all I have to do is kiss and make up with Theo?”

  Dorothy nodded, and she must have worked her way through the shock of all of this because she suddenly looked a lot stronger. “I know you haven’t forgotten about Rossman and Cawley. They’ll kill you because of those failed business deals.”

  Laurel hated how those two, Rossman and Cawley, kept popping up, especially since no one had been able to find them. Was it really that simple—did the pair want her dead because of the money they’d lost from the broken business deals?

  Because it felt like more than that.

  “Do you have any proof whatsoever that Rossman and Cawley hired someone to attack us?” Jericho asked. And yes, he was all lawman now.

  “None.” Dorothy didn’t hesitate, either. “And you won’t find anything, either. They’re thorough, and they won’t resurface until they’ve tied up every loose end in this mess.”

  Laurel was a loose end. Well, she was if she believed what Dorothy had said.

  “You stand to lose a lot of money from those business deals, too,” Laurel reminded the woman.

  Dorothy stayed silent a moment. “Go ahead. If it makes you feel better, accuse me of this. But it won’t help you. Nothing will, except your crawling back to Theo and begging for his forgiveness.”

  Laurel was just punchy enough to laugh. “That’s not going to happen.”

  “Then I guess I’ll be attending your funeral soon. Yours, too,” Dorothy added to Jericho, and she walked out. Not in a hurry, either. More like a woman out for a Sunday stroll.

  Jericho and she stood there, waiting until they saw Dorothy’s limo drive away. Jericho holstered his gun, put his arm around her again, and it took Laurel a moment to realize why. She’d gone past the trembling stage, and her legs had nearly given way.

  “I’m sorry,” she said as tears watered her eyes.

  Jericho cupped her chin, forced eye contact. “Not your doing.”

  “But it is. God, Jericho. I could cost you everything.”

  The anger flashed through his eyes. For just a moment, anyway. When their gazes connected again, there was a lot more than anger in them. There was a swirl of all the things that Laurel herself was feeling.

  Including the heat.

  Oh, yes. It was there, all right, thanks to that latest kissing session in his office. She had to do something to avoid kissing him again, and even as the thought flew through her head, Laurel knew there was zilch she could do about that. Jericho’s lifted eyebrow let her know that he was right there on the same page with her.

  Jericho’s phone buzzed, and her heart skipped a beat or two when she saw Jax’s name on the screen. Laurel held her breath, waiting and praying for good news.

  “We made it to the safe house,” Jax said when Jericho answered the call and put it on speaker. “We’re all okay.”

  Once again, Laurel’s legs turned wobbly—this time from sheer relief—and she leaned against Jericho to keep her balance. “Can I talk to Maddox?”

  Even though you really couldn’t have a phone conversation with an eighteen-month-old, Jax didn’t hesitate. “Tell Mommy hello,” Jax instructed Maddox.

  “Mama,” Maddox said.

  The warmth and the love went through her, head to toe. “Maddox, I love you.”

  And Jericho said the same thing to their son.

  Maddox attempted to say it, as well, with love coming out as wuv. It was exactly what she needed to hear. Apparently, it worked for Jericho, too, because he smiled right along with her.

  “Sorry, but he just spotted a toy chest,” Jax said, coming back on the line. “Looks like he’ll be busy for a while.”

  Laurel heard Maddox babble bye-bye.

  She had no idea where this safe house was, but Laurel was glad it contained something to keep Maddox entertained. Glad, too, that he would have family with him. And that she’d gotten to hear his precious voice.

  “We’ll stay here until we hear from you,” Jax added.

  Heaven knew how long that would be, and it broke Laurel’s heart to think she might not be able to spend Christmas with her son. Of course, that was the lesser of two evils. She didn’t want Maddox to be in any danger.

  “Is everything all right there?” Jax asked.

  Definitely no smile from Jericho this time. “Still working out some things. Thanks for everything, Jax.” His gaze slashed to the front of the building. “Gotta go. I’ll call you when I can.”

  Laurel tried to see what had caused Jericho’s reaction, but as he had done with Dorothy and Theo, he pushed her behind him and drew his gun. Sweet heaven. Was there about to be another attack? Had those men in the SUV followed them here?

  “What the hell is he doing here?” Jericho said under his breath.

  However, she didn’t have to see their visitor to know who it was. Because she soon heard his voice.

  “Laurel,” her father said, his voice syrupy sweet. “I thought I might find you here.”

 
CHAPTER TWELVE

  Jericho’s happy meter was at zero, and he was so not in the mood to deal with Laurel’s father. Yet, here he was.

  “You can wait in my office,” Jericho said to Laurel. She didn’t, of course. Not that he’d thought for one second that she would.

  She was exhausted. Still unsteady on her feet. But Herschel’s mere presence seemed to give him a jolt of energy and put some fire in her eyes.

  “What do you want?” she snapped at her father. Definitely not a trace of affection.

  Not that Jericho could blame her. Herschel was a snake of the worst kind. A man who’d destroy, or maybe even kill, his own child, to get what he wanted.

  “You managed to delay the arrest warrants,” Herschel said. “Clever. But not clever enough. Tomorrow morning, those warrants will be served.”

  “Predicting the future now? Clever,” Jericho repeated. “And please don’t tell me you came all the way here to toss that puny threat at us.”

  “No.” That’s all he said for several moments. “A little bird told me Theo and Dorothy were just here.” Herschel’s gaze slid from Jericho and her to the papers that Levi was holding. “What did they give you?”

  “Evidence to prove you’re lying so you can frame Laurel,” Jericho quickly answered.

  There was a moment, just a moment, when there was some uncertainty in Herschel’s body language, but it vanished, and he became the dirtbag father again.

  “Whatever Theo gave you is a lie,” Herschel insisted.

  Jericho took a step toward the man. Hopefully, the look on his face was as mean-spirited as Jericho felt. “Oh, yeah? Why would Theo do that?”

  “To cover his tracks, that’s why. He’s behind all of this.”

  “Really?” Laurel took a step closer to her father, too. “Theo has nothing to gain from having me committed to a mental hospital. Or nothing to gain from being tossed in jail. And he certainly has no solid reason to want me dead.”

  Herschel huffed. “Ever hear of revenge? Payback? Laurel, the man’s obsessed with you. He’d rather see you dead than with someone else. Especially Jericho Crockett.”

  Theo was indeed obsessed. Furious, too, about the broken engagement. Add to that the money he had lost in the broken business deal with Rossman and Cawley, and yeah, that all added up to motive. But Herschel had the same motives. And more than that.

  He wanted custody of his grandson.

  “And you’re obsessed with getting Maddox,” Jericho spelled out for him. “Why, exactly? Is it to get back at Laurel? To put the screws to me? Or did you just wake up one morning and decide you wanted to be a bigger jackass than usual?”

  Herschel had to do another quick wrestling match with his temper, but as he’d dealt with the surprise of Theo’s evidence, he quickly corralled it. “I love Maddox. You know that.”

  “Do I?” Jericho asked. “Because you’ve said the words, but I’m just not feeling it. Maybe because you’re not capable of love.”

  “I’m capable!” No corralling that time. Oh, boy. That was a little temper tantrum that Jericho was pleased to see. Pissed-off people usually said a lot more than calm ones. “And I don’t want you or any Crockett raising my grandson.”

  There it was. In a nutshell. Despite the fact Herschel had almost certainly ordered Sherman Crockett’s murder, it still wasn’t enough. He wanted the rest of them to suffer, too.

  And why?

  All because Jericho’s father had made it his business to put a stop to Herschel and his scummy dealings.

  “I’m tired of talking to the two of you,” Herschel grumbled. “And now I see you’re married.”

  Jericho hadn’t seen the man even glance at Laurel’s wedding ring. Or maybe he’d heard the news from his little bird source. Probably some idiots he had spying on the sheriff’s office.

  “If you think a marriage will stop me from getting custody,” Herschel added, “think again.”

  “The marriage alone might not,” Jericho countered, “but I have a legal right to take custody of my son.”

  “Not if you’re in jail. And I’ll do anything to make sure you join my daughter behind bars. Anything!” Herschel took a huge risk by smiling, and Jericho had to do some temper corralling of his own so he didn’t beat the man to a pulp.

  “I’ll add that threat to the evidence I have here,” Levi said. He clicked off the tape recorder he was holding. There was no temper in his brother’s voice. Just a calmness with the edge of the dark storm brewing beneath it.

  Oh, Herschel didn’t like that, either. “You can’t just record me.”

  “Sure he can,” Jericho argued. “This is an interview of a potential suspect. It’s procedure to record it.”

  Levi nodded. Smiled, too. “I can turn it over to the Dallas PD so they know the real Herschel Tate.” And as if it was a done deal, Levi picked up his phone.

  Herschel volleyed some nasty glares among all three of them. “Trust me. You don’t want to cross me.”

  Jericho went closer. Not quickly. He made sure Herschel heard each step. “Too late. The crossing’s already been done. On my part. And yours.” He leaned in, violating a lot of personal space. “Big mistake, Herschel. I will bring you down.”

  And it wasn’t a bluff. Somehow, someway, Jericho would make it happen. Apparently, Jericho got his point across, because Herschel whirled around and left.

  Jericho immediately turned to make sure Laurel was okay. She wasn’t trembling, but he had no trouble seeing the worry in her eyes.

  “This has to end,” she said, her voice barely a whisper.

  It wasn’t a smart thing to do, but Jericho pulled her into his arms again. He was doing that a lot lately.

  Wanting to do it, as well.

  He didn’t bother to curse the attraction. Or their situation. Hell, Laurel and he just seemed to end up together, no matter what.

  “Let me make some calls, finish up a few things here, get you something to eat,” Jericho told her, turning her toward his office, “and I’ll get you to another safe house. Not with Maddox,” he added. “It’s clear Herschel has someone watching the place, and it’d be too risky for you to go there.”

  She nodded. Blinked back tears. And just like that, she was back in his arms. Good grief. He hated seeing her put through the wringer like this. She was still in his arms, too, when Levi cleared his throat.

  “I just got a call about Rossman and Cawley,” his brother announced.

  That got Laurel and Jericho moving apart, and they made their way to the desk Levi had been using. Levi put the call on speaker.

  “This is Detective Mark Waters from the San Antonio PD on the line,” Levi explained to them. “Mark, why don’t you tell my brother what you just told me.”

  “Cawley’s dead,” Waters immediately explained. “He was killed in a car accident yesterday.”

  “Accident?” Jericho questioned. Because the timing of it sure was suspicious.

  “That’s what it’s being called for now. Dallas PD is investigating since it happened in their jurisdiction. If they come up with anything, they said they’d call.”

  Jericho figured if Cawley had been murdered, there wouldn’t be any evidence to find.

  “What about Quinn Rossman?” Jericho pressed.

  “Plenty of shady deals as Levi suspected, and the FBI’s getting ready to arrest him for money laundering. I did find something interesting, though. Levi mentioned that Cawley and Rossman had lost a boatload of money from some failed business deals. One involving Laurel and Herschel Tate.”

  Beside him, Laurel pulled in her breath. Maybe because she thought this detective had found something else to incriminate her.

  “Well, it turns out that Cawley and Rossman didn’t lose a cent in those deals,” Waters went on. “They moved what they’d p
lanned to invest into something else and made a bundle. Turned out to be a very good thing for them. The only ones who lost money in that deal were Herschel, Theo James and his mother, Dorothy.”

  Bingo. That wasn’t proof of which one was behind these attacks, but it did help Jericho narrow down his suspect pool from five to three.

  “I need to talk to Rossman,” Jericho insisted. “Even if it’s a phone interview.”

  Because if he could get Rossman to admit that Laurel hadn’t known anything about the money laundering, it could negate the charges against her. It would keep Laurel out of jail and go a long way to putting Herschel behind bars for orchestrating this.

  “I’ll see what I can do,” Waters assured him.

  Jericho thanked him and then stepped away when his phone buzzed. Laurel moved quickly to look at the screen. Probably because she thought it was from Jax. But it wasn’t. The call was from his other brother, Chase. Since Chase was a marshal, Jericho hoped that something else hadn’t gone wrong.

  “I don’t want any bad news,” Jericho greeted him.

  “Sorry.”

  Even without the sorry, Jericho knew something wasn’t right. “Are you hurt?”

  “Some. I’ll be fine.” But Chase’s voice said otherwise.

  “What the hell happened?” And a lot of bad possibilities started going through his head. Laurel’s, too, since she gasped and pressed her fingers to her mouth.

  “Jericho,” Chase finally said, his voice sounding even weaker. “There’s been a murder.”

  * * *

  OH, MERCY.

  The fear roared through her head like a piercing scream. “Maddox?” Laurel managed to say.

  “Not Maddox,” Chase answered. “This wasn’t family.”

  That helped, but the fear already had her by the throat, and Laurel couldn’t just turn it off. Jericho put her in the chair next to the desk, turned down the volume on the speaker function of his phone and continued the conversation with Chase.

  Levi stayed right there next to him, listening, no doubt to see if there was something they were going to have to buffer for her.

 

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