Authors: Lora Leigh
brother. Johnny got drunk one night right before he died and decided I should know that.
Dayle tells her what to do, and she does it. She doesn’t make many moves without
Dayle’s permission.”
“But Johnny did?”
Rogue stared across the bar as she tipped the beer to her lips and narrowed her eyes
thoughtfully. Finally she set the bottle back on the bar and shook her head.
“I would have said no, but it appears he did.” She shrugged again.
“Why would you have said that?” Chaya asked.
Rogue pursed her lips. “Johnny was a weaselly little thing. He craved male attention and
approval. I wouldn’t have thought he would have done that, simply because his uncle
Dayle would have been disappointed in him. And he couldn’t have borne that. It was bad
enough when Dayle found out he was gay.”
“What happened when his uncle found out he was gay?”
Rogue tapped a fingernail against the bar, frowning down at the movement for long
moments. “Johnny didn’t walk for weeks,” she finally said. “I kind of felt sorry for him,
went to the house to check on him.” She shook her head on a bitter laugh. “Dayle had
beat him from head to toe. Johnny was in a dress, stockings, and a wig. Said it was his
punishment.” Disgust marked her expression. “Damn, sometimes I wonder why I don’t
just go ahead and move back to Boston. You know better than to get involved with
people there.”
Chaya glanced around the bar. There weren’t many customers, but those who were there
seemed to keep an eye on Rogue. And Chaya.
“Did Johnny spend much time in bars?” she asked the other woman then.
Rogue shook her head. “Not really. Johnny was the home-and-hearth type. I guess that’s
why it surprised a lot of us when we found out what he’d done. He didn’t seem the type.”
“And you don’t care that you’re telling me all this?” Chaya injected. “Getting people
around here to talk hasn’t been easy. Yet you’re more than willing.”
Rogue smiled. A wicked upturn of Cupid’s bow lips, and eyes filled with cynical
amusement. “Lady, this county holds no love for me, or me for it.” Bitterness flashed in
her eyes. “The only difference between me and the fine upstanding citizens of this town
is that I tell the truth as I see it. Let’s see. Example. I bet a half dozen spiteful little
bitches are going to tell you, if they haven’t already, how hard they partied with Natches
the weekend before you lit back into town.” She smiled gleefully. “I can tell you Natches
hasn’t snacked on any homegrown offerings since he came back from the Marines. Now,
the good sheriff over there? Widowed at a young age, he sampled the fine pleasures of
one Janice Lowell just last week. And from what I hear, he’s a real go-getter. An all-
nighter.” She leaned over and waved at the sheriff over her shoulder.
Chaya glanced back and was surprised to see Sheriff Mayes watching the other woman
with narrow-eyed disapproval.
“He does the whole good-cop routine so well.” Rogue sighed elaborately.
“What else can you tell me?” Chaya asked her then.
“I can tell you a lot of women want to claw your eyes out. Weekend gossip is so much
fun. And I can tell you that one of your agents—” She paused and shook her head, the
brittle amusement dropping for a second. “Hell of a way to go. I heard he was killed this
morning and several others almost went up in flames as well. What do you want me to
tell you, Agent Dane?” The mocking, devil-may-care grin was back.
“Who was pulling Johnny’s strings? Even better, who set the bombs?”
“If I knew, I’d be barbeque, too.” Rogue grimaced. “All I hear is a little gossip here and
there.” She shook her head, the tiny bells at her ears chiming softly. “The Mackay family
is damned weird though. Ray, he’s a good guy, so are Dawg, Rowdy, and Natches. I
didn’t know Chandler before he died, thank God, but I know he and Dayle were having
one major fight the night Chandler and his wife were killed. And I know Nadine Mackay
Grace and Dayle like to get the nasty on a little too often.” Her smile was all teeth; her
eyes were bitter and much too cynical. “If I had known anything more, trust me, one of
the Mackay cousins would have known, because there’s nothing in this world I would
have loved better than bringing down Nadine Grace.”
“Why?” Sometimes that was the most important question a person could ask.
Rogue picked at the label on the bottle of beer, then reached over and turned the recorder
off.
“Interview over,” she said softly.
Chaya picked up the recorder, transferred it back to her pocket, and watched Rogue
expectantly. “Just between us girls then,” she told her. “What did Nadine do to you?”
Rogue glanced at where Natches and the sheriff sat, then turned her eyes back to Chaya.
Somehow she wasn’t surprised to see the hollow pain reflected within them.
“She helped create me,” Rogue said then, her voice low and haunting. “One of these
days, I’ll get to remind her of that. Create a monster, and it can come back and bite you in
the ass. Isn’t that true, Agent Dane?”
Chaya nodded slowly. “That’s very true, Rogue. Very true.”
“Natches, you’re making a mistake here,” Zeke muttered as they watched the two
women. They couldn’t hear the words, but a look told a thousand tales. “You need to pull
her out of this.”
Rogue, the one woman who men in three counties feared on a daily basis, almost blushed,
and she softened. She looked younger; her gaze twinkled in humor. Then her expression
shifted again, sorrow, and then bitterness. Natches swore that in the years he had known
her, which hadn’t been many, he’d rarely seen anything but hard, mocking amusement in
her eyes.
As he watched Chaya though, his chest clenched. He’d been ready to tie her to his bed
and force her out of this. Make her swear she would duck and hide until this was over and
let him deal with the mess Cranston was creating.
But as he watched her, he remembered crashing into that filthy little dirt cell in Iraq. The
smell of blood and death had filled the cramped area, but there had been Chaya,
crouched, a gun in her hand, dressed in her tormentor’s uniform.
Her eyes had been so swollen there had been no way she could have seen out of them.
Her feet had been ragged, though he hadn’t known that at the time. She had been so
bruised and mauled, he’d seen his own life flash before his eyes. Because he couldn’t
have left her, and there hadn’t been a chance he could’ve carried her out of there.
But she had run. There had been no tears, only strength. No excuses, no recriminations.
She had fought to live and fought to fight, and it was those qualities that had first stolen
his heart.
And he thought he could take that from her now?
“That’s not my job,” he finally murmured.
“It’s your job to protect her, damn it,” Zeke cursed.
And to that, Natches nodded. “It’s my job to watch her back while she does her job. You
don’t change what you love, Zeke, or you never loved it to begin with.”
He had fallen in love with the agent. Strong, independent, fiercely determined. Take
those things away from her, and she wasn’t Chaya. She wouldn’t be his heart or his soul,
and that he couldn’t allow.
Natches escorted Chaya back to his houseboat after the interview, the tension burning hot
and heavy through them.
“The boat has been checked thoroughly,” he told her as they walked along the floating
docks toward it. “Alex hit town a few hours ago. He and his team went over it from top to
bottom while we were on our way in.”
Alex Jansen was Special Forces and worked closely with Cranston. Chaya had worked
with him several times. He was also Crista Mackay’s brother.
It was already dark and growing bitterly cold for the season. The wind off the water felt
like ice and cut through Chaya’s thick jacket like the sharpest blade.
She felt cold from the inside out. As though icicles were growing in the pit of her
stomach and freezing her with fear.
What the hell was going on in this beautiful little county? A place where young men were
punished in such horrible ways for their sexual preferences, where young women, like
twenty-four-year-old Rogue, were more cynical than women twice their ages. And
agents, good men, family men, were being targeted to die in an inferno.
“Alex and his team are at Dawg’s right now.” Natches’s voice was low, restrained.
“We’ll wait till later to meet with them. After you’ve had a chance to rest and eat. You
haven’t eaten today, Chay.”
Was that concern in his voice? God, she didn’t want to hear the gentleness in his voice
when she knew he was furious. Probably furious with her. She was furious with herself.
She hadn’t taken the proper precautions. Somehow, she had missed something during the
interviews she had conducted. An expression, a flash of maliciousness, a lie. There were
always signs. Always. It was always there, in the eyes, in the small shifts of the face, and
she had missed it. And because she had, Kyle was dead.
Cranston had arrived in town as she left the bar. The text message had flashed on her
phone, warning her that he would meet with her the next morning. On Natches’s
houseboat. She hadn’t told Natches yet.
“Come on, baby.” His voice was a breath of warmth against her ear as he unlocked the
door and they stepped into the heated interior.
After locking the door behind them, he slid her jacket from her shoulders and unclipped
her weapon from her side.
“You need a shoulder harness for this.” He laid the holstered gun on the jacket at the end
of the couch.
Chaya stared at the gun for long moments. She hated it. She hated carrying it, she hated
being tied to it, and she hated the life she had led for the last five years. God, the last ten years. The only part of her life that had seemed worthwhile was the time with Beth. And
with Natches.
She shook her head. “They aren’t comfortable.”
She wanted to turn to him, she wanted to beg him to hold her, to take away the pain, and
she couldn’t. She was the agent, this was the life she had chosen. What right did she have
to burden him with her regrets now? He would only feel as though he should fix it,
somehow drag her from it, and now she couldn’t let it go.
“Chay.” His arms came around her as she felt her throat tightening with emotion. “I have
you.”
His head rested against hers, and his warmth surrounded her.
“I need a shower.” She pulled away from him. “Do you want to order dinner? I could
probably fix something when I get finished.”
“How domestic.” He let her go, though his tone grated on her nerves, that hint of
knowledge, patience, and just a tinge of condescending male. “I do know how to cook,
Chay,” he told her a second later as he breathed out roughly. “I’ve been doing it for a
while now.”
“Since your father threw you out of your home.” She turned on him, feeling it burn in her
now, that icy rage. Nearly everyone she had spoke to knew about it, mentioned it, seemed
to wallow in the dirty gossip and nasty stories they thought they knew.
“It was never my home,” he said simply. “It was a place to crash for a night or two.”
He said that so simply, as though it didn’t even matter.
“The scars on your back? He beat you senseless . . .”
“Yeah, well, he managed it that time.” His grin was smug if tinged with bitterness. “He
has a few scars on his back now though. What the hell is this, Chay? I was barely twenty
years old. We got into a fight over my sister and ended up fistfighting. He had the bigger
fists at the time. Too bad, so sad. I survived it.” He shook his head and stared at her in
confusion. “If you want to crucify Dayle Mackay, I’ll be the first in line to help you, but
that’s not what this is all about.”
No, it wasn’t. It was about the fact that he had every intention of jerking her out of that
bar. That he had informed her, quite bluntly, that they would be discussing it when they
returned here.
Well, she was ready to discuss it now.
“You haven’t yelled at me yet, and I’m sick of waiting on it.” Her hands were shaking
with nerves, with reaction. “Go ahead and do it and get it over with. I should have come
straight back here this morning, right? I should just let you take care of all the pesky little details of my job and of protecting me. Go ahead. Say it.” She waved her hand back at
him as she felt the tears trying to fill her eyes. “Get it off your chest.”
She was yelling. She was irrational. She had never been irrational in her life but as
Natches stared back at her with that expression of patient male understanding, she wanted
to scream. Men didn’t understand. They didn’t feel the same things, they didn’t hurt the
same way. They didn’t fear the same things. And she knew damned good and well he
hadn’t understood anything when they entered that bar.
“So. Let me get this straight.” He crossed his arms over his chest and tilted his head,
watching her curiously. “I should be chewing on your ass for doing your job? Despite the
fact that it just impressed the fucking hell out me. Kind of like it did in that damned
desert. Now, suddenly, I’m supposed to change everything about you that made me so
crazy about you to begin with?”
“You didn’t want me to go,” she snapped back. “You were ready to tie me up and drag