by Debra Webb
Tugging at her blouse, she closed her car door and summoned the nerve to head for the entrance. The towering door opened and another massive man gestured for her to enter. Emily walked past him and paused just inside the grand entry hall.
“Are you armed?”
She scowled at the man. “What? No.”
“Lift your arms,” he ordered.
Appalled but not inclined to learn the consequences of refusing, she raised her arms. He patted her down, just like in the movies. She gasped when he reached her thighs.
He glanced up. “Spread your legs.”
Horrified but certain this was the only way to get past the man, she obeyed. When he’d finished, he stood. “Let’s go.”
Reeling at the violation, she followed him up an elegant staircase and then into a large office.
Sidney Fairgate sat behind a wide, gleaming desk. He was older than Emily by several years, but she’d seen him around at the trial. She recalled quite distinctly that he had a reputation for being as crude as he was unattractive.
“Do you need money?” he demanded, those beady eyes peering at her as if he hoped to see through her clothes.
She remembered that, too. He was known for being nasty and mean when it came to women. “No.”
“Then why are you here?”
She wet her lips and took the necessary leap. “I want to know if my father is in trouble … financially.”
Fairgate’s eyebrows shot upward. “I can’t discuss anyone else’s business with you. What kind of man do you think I am?”
Fear sparked along her nerve endings, made standing still extremely difficult. “I just want to help.”
“You can’t help.”
Emily blinked, startled by his indifference. “Surely there’s something I can do.”
A sinister smile spread across his hawklike features. “There are always things a woman can do,” he said as he blatantly sized her up, “but I’m certain you wouldn’t be interested.”
Anger kicked up enough to make her go temporarily stupid. “Stop harassing my father.”
“Or what?” Fairgate fired back.
The huge guy who’d led her here and who had waited by the door until now took a step in her direction.
Time to go. She turned her back to the pig behind the desk and started for the door.
“If you want to know your daddy’s troubles, Miss Emily Wallace,” Fairgate said, causing her to hesitate, “ask him to tell you the secret he’s been keeping for all these years.”
What kind of secret? What did he mean, all these years? Don’t ask. Just go! She prepared to move toward the door once more.
“Everybody has their secrets, including your precious daddy,” Fairgate taunted. “Nobody’s perfect.”
Anger poked at her, had her sucking up her courage and turning to face him. “There’s one difference between you and my father, Mr. Fairgate.” That beady, penetrating gaze probed her, but she refused to be intimidated. “My father would never keep a secret that would hurt another person. You, I am quite certain, would have no qualms doing just that.”
He sneered at her. “I have secrets, Miss Wallace. Many, many secrets. And, as you say, a number of those would cause harm. Some already have.”
She told herself not to be baited … told herself to go … but she couldn’t walk out now without asking. Between Justine bringing it up and Emily’s parents’ argument and then this … she couldn’t not ask.
“Like …,” she heard herself say, her mouth going sandbox dry, “ … the one about Clint Austin’s alibi?” Her heart stumbled as her own words, words of betrayal, ricocheted in the room.
Fairgate snickered. “I wondered how long it would take people to start asking that question now that he’s out. I got one thing to say; the answer to that question is for me to know and you not to, Miss Wallace. That’s the thing about secrets. You can keep them. If you have other interests regarding Mr. Austin, perhaps I can assist you with those.”
Outrage unfurled, mostly at herself. “The only thing about Clint Austin that interests me, Mr. Fairgate, is making sure justice is served.”
“Really.” He braced his hands on his desk, leaned forward. “And here I was thinking you were interested in the truth.”
She pivoted away from the amusement in those beady eyes and stamped out. Taking the stairs in a blind rush, she flew to the front door, already standing open with another of those bouncer-type guys waiting to close it behind her.
Outside, she gulped as much air as possible. Bastard.
She didn’t care what that evil little man said, her father had to have a good reason for interacting with him. Ed Wallace wouldn’t have any secrets harmful to anyone other than perhaps himself. The remark about her being interested in the truth had been designed to unnerve her. Well, Fairgate had succeeded. Damn him.
She started her car, executed a three-point turn, and barreled down the drive. She stopped for the gate, irritation pounding with every beat she waited; then she rolled out into the street.
A black Maxima parked on the other side of the street caused her to slow when she wanted to floor the accelerator and rocket away from this place. The woman behind the wheel stared at Emily, then waved.
Misty Briggs?
Emily braked automatically, powered her window down, and resuscitated one of her pretend smiles. “Hi.” She could feel the new rumors forming and mutating already. She should not have come here.
Misty Briggs adjusted her clunky glasses. “Emily.” She glanced at the closing gate. “Fancy meeting you here.”
Emily prompted her brain to generate a plausible excuse. “I came to speak with Mr. Fairgate.” No point pretending otherwise. The woman wasn’t blind, just nearsighted.
“Oh.” Ms. Briggs met Emily’s eyes briefly, then stared in the direction of the house again as if something there kept distracting her. “Lots of people come to see him.”
Okay. No need to prolong this strange reunion. Before Emily could offer a parting line, Briggs asked, “Was he there?”
Confused at first, Emily asked, “Who?”
Those huge hazel eyes, magnified further by the thick lenses, flicked to Emily’s. “Fairgate.”
“Oh. Yes, he was there.”
“Alone?”
Stranger by the second. “You mean alone other than his apelike bodyguards?”
“Yes, that’s what I mean.”
“I didn’t see anyone else.” Sitting here having this discussion with her former science teacher who had clearly inhaled way too many toxic fumes was too weird. “Well, it was good to see you.”
Briggs scrutinized Emily now as if she’d only just realized to whom she was speaking. “Justine mentioned that she’d spoken with you.” Briggs said this as if she hadn’t heard Emily’s cue that she intended to go, as if she hadn’t asked those odd questions about Fairgate. “She thought you seemed terribly upset about Clint Austin’s release.”
Emily wanted to ask what she was supposed to feel; instead she said with amazing aplomb, “I’m extremely disappointed in the parole board’s judgment.”
Briggs pushed at her glasses again. “You know, I almost hate to mention this, but the subject came up in the beauty shop the other day.”
Here it came. This was why Emily rarely came home and never ventured into town.
“I’m certain there’s nothing to it,” Misty went on. “Just a rumor.”
Emily braced herself. She should just drive away and leave the woman sitting here wondering why.
“It was very disturbing, though. The rumor suggested that Austin was innocent. That his alibi was real, but he just couldn’t prove it.” She stared at the Fairgate house again as if God himself resided there. “I guess only he knows the answer to that one.”
Despite having buttressed herself for the disclosure, Emily hadn’t been adequately prepared. She couldn’t dredge up a response. The idea that Justine had mentioned being at the beauty shop with all Emily’s old friends filtere
d through along with Misty’s remarks. Had they all been talking about Emily? About the murder?
A symphony of notes shattered the stifling silence.
“That’s my phone.” Briggs offered a quick smile. “Maybe I’ll see you again before you go back to Birmingham.”
Emily managed a choked good-bye, took her foot off the brake, and coasted away. She glanced in her rearview mirror. She’d gone through all that emotional turmoil and she still didn’t know any more than she had before she’d arrived.
Except a lot of ridiculous gossip about Austin’s alibi. He didn’t have an alibi.
What the hell did her father have to do with any of this? Her father did not keep damaging secrets. Gossip. Rumors. That was all this was.
Secrets and lies.
None of it changed the truth.
Emily knew the truth.
CHAPTER TWELVE
“What was that all about?”
Sid snapped out of the pseudocoma he’d lapsed into and glared at her. “What’re you moaning about?” Goddamn bitch. She should know better than to get into his business. He didn’t even know why she was here.
She wanted something. He saw plenty he wanted. Anticipation altered his foul mood ever so slightly.
As if sensing the change, she studied him curiously. “Was that Emily Wallace?”
He pointed a threatening finger. “That is none of your fucking business.” He glowered at her when what he really wanted was to fuck her brains out, but she’d never once looked at him that way. She was too high-and-mighty.
“You seem a little tense,” she offered coolly.
“And why wouldn’t I be?” he demanded, giving her a stare that usually had the people who dared to enter his office cowering. “It’s Grand fucking Central Station around here!” First Clint Austin came shooting off his mouth, then that frigid bitch Emily Wallace. Damn straight he was tense. Ready to snap.
She hummed a note of disinterest. “Someone really should tell that man that he isn’t welcome in this town anymore.”
“You think that’s my fucking job?” Sid snarled. It wasn’t his place to straighten out his daddy’s goddamn shit. But Sid did enjoy watching people thrash around like puppets on a string. There were lots of people thrashing with Austin’s return.
The twat currently watching Sid folded her arms over those high, full tits, blocking his view of those firm nipples poking against the thin fabric of her dress. “So, are we doing business or what?” she challenged.
He shivered. Damn, she was powerful. He rarely met a woman who could do that to him from halfway across the room. His gaze roved over that filmy red dress, the wrap kind that tied at the waist. He imagined the wicked lingerie beneath. “That depends upon what you have to offer.”
Her manicured fingers tugged at the strings of the sash, and the silky fabric swept over her shoulders and cascaded to the floor. She held out her arms, showcasing her spectacularly naked body. “What will this buy me?”
His eyes bulged, but he managed to nod, tough to do considering every muscle in his body had gone rock hard. “That could put me in a very generous mood.” More so than he had anticipated, in fact.
She walked toward him, those firm, smooth thighs and the perfect tilt of her breasts making his mouth water. When she moved around his desk, she scooted onto the edge right in front of him. The idea of her bare ass on that polished mahogany sent electricity rushing through him. God, he wanted her. He’d always wanted her.
She inclined her head, causing her long silky hair to fall across one delicious tit. “You give me what I want and I’ll give you this … once.”
His cock twitched. Once would be enough. “Name it.” His respiration grew ragged. He wanted to touch her. But he held back. This was business. He wouldn’t do anything but look until he knew the terms.
“It’s very simple.” Her scent was driving him crazy. “Your father had a secret that you’ve been keeping for him for a very long time. You continue to keep that one secret and we’ll have a deal.”
He scrubbed a shaky hand over his jaw. He didn’t see a problem. What the hell? “Which secret?”
She licked those lush, red-painted lips and then smiled. Her arms draped around his neck and drew his face close to that beautiful mouth. She whispered the words in his ear.
He should have known.
She drew back, widened her thighs enough for him to get a better view of her negotiable asset. “Do we have a deal?”
Time for him to reclaim control. He had a reputation after all. “What makes you think you can trust me to hold up my end of the bargain?” He kept his hands at his sides, no matter that his fingers itched to molest her in every imaginable fashion.
“Like I said, you’ve been keeping this one a very long time.” Her hand settled on his fly, rubbed his thick cock. “I’m certain it’ll continue to keep.”
He wanted to hold out a little longer, make her beg, but—his gaze traveled over that perfect skin—that wasn’t happening. What she said was true. He had kept this particular secret for a very long time. And now he intended to have some fun with it.
“Deal,” he agreed. At least it was a deal until he decided differently. This bitch should know better than to trust him.
She smiled, purred like a little harmless kitten. “Excellent.” She lowered his zipper, reached inside. “Just one last thing, baby.” Those skilled fingers wrapped around him, made him groan. “Tell me how you want it.”
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
5:10 P.M.
Emily parked across the road from Austin’s house. Her antiperspirant had long since melted in the ninety-eight-degree heat. Even with every window in the car open and the shade from the maples, her clothes plastered to her skin in five minutes flat. She skimmed the list of most frequently violated parole conditions she’d made, but she couldn’t seem to concentrate on that. She needed to understand what was going on with her father.
Every instinct warned that her father’s business with Fairgate somehow related to Austin. That weasel Fairgate had said her father had kept his secret all these years. But Fairgate could be toying with her. She could be reading too much between the lines. Coupled with the rumors floating around regarding Austin’s innocence, doubt as to what she thought she knew had taken far too formidable a foothold.
Fairgate was the only loan shark in town. That both Ed Wallace and Clint Austin had been involved with him wasn’t such a stretch. Except for the idea that that this was her father she was talking about. He didn’t do shady.
She needed answers. All these years she had focused on Heather’s murder and keeping Austin behind bars. Had her parents needed her and she hadn’t been there?
Her gaze settled on the house across the road. If she asked him for information regarding Fairgate, would he tell her what he knew? She had to be out of her mind to even consider it. But then she was desperate. The idea that her parents needed her help had shaken her from the obsession that had been her whole existence for more than a decade.
Her heart rate accelerated at the idea of getting close enough to him to carry on a conversation. She closed her eyes and blocked the sensations. All those years he’d been in prison she’d hated him … wanted him to die. Now he was out and she couldn’t stop those damned feelings she’d thought were dead and buried. That she could still feel attracted to him made her sick with shame.
Maybe she was losing it. Her eyes popped open. Maybe her parents were right and she did need Dr. Brown.
No. It was being here, in Pine Bluff, surrounded by all those crazy rumors about Austin’s innocence, getting to her. Had to be. She was doubting herself, that was all.
Austin’s red Firebird appeared in her rearview mirror, roaring along the dirt road, dust flying behind it. He slowed when he neared her car, turned unhurriedly into his drive without looking in her direction, parked in his usual spot, and went inside the house.
If she worked up the nerve to ask him about Fairgate, Austin would just lie to her even
if he knew the truth. She was the last person on earth he would want to help. He should be the last person she would ask for help. She had to get her head on straight and start thinking clearly.
Her brain abruptly registered Austin exiting the house.
Where was he going now? So far he’d come home each evening and stayed put, at least until she left at ten or so. He hadn’t changed clothes. Same worn jeans hugging his long legs and grease-stained T-shirt stretched over his muscled torso that he’d been wearing when he got out of the car.
“What is he doing?” she muttered.
He strode right past his car and down the drive.
Toward the road … toward her—
Instinct had her grabbing her cell phone. She jerked it loose from the charger, her pulse reacting to an adrenaline dump as Austin crossed the road. She sat there and watched him come closer … something implacable and lethal in his stride. As he neared her car, the fury on his face … in his eyes registered. Her danger gauge abruptly kicked in full throttle. The real fear she should have felt ten seconds prior tore through the dim-witted curiosity muddling her good sense.
He stopped at her door, glared down at her with such ferocity that the oxygen stalled deep in her chest. “Get out of the car.”
For an instant she couldn’t find her voice. The way he looked at her … such anger … such … pain. Confusion scattered her thoughts. “Stay away or I’ll call the police.” Her voice shook as badly as her hands.
His jaw tightened with that fury blazing in his eyes. “Call ’em. Call right now.”
He hadn’t made a move to open her door or even touch her vehicle, but she couldn’t be sure he wouldn’t do just that any second now. He was in a rage. Was this the kind of rage he’d been in when he entered her room uninvited that night? Her mind argued with her … he’d looked terrified that night … frantic. Nothing like this.
Her fingers fumbled across the keypad. When the 911 dispatcher had finished her spiel, Emily gave her location and asked that the police be sent right away.