Excerpt:
Proper ladies didn’t
go calling on men alone, even in a safe town like Rennieville. She needed to
douse his suspicion. If he saw her as a friend and ally, her chances of success
would increase, wouldn’t they? Though she’d never tasted whiskey, she said,
“Yes, I’ll have a drink.” A surprised frown notched his brow. She added, “If
you put on a shirt.”
“Only business I’m
interested in is bed business. Why would I get dressed just to undress again?”
Eyes skeptical, he offered her the bottle.
Very well. She
wouldn’t look at his chest, however tanned and hard-muscled, however taut
and—oh, damn. She lifted the bottle to her lips and swallowed a big mouthful,
then gagged and coughed as the whiskey boiled up in her throat.
He jerked the bottle
away and held it to the light. “Take it easy.”
Eyes watering, she
forced the liquor down and composed herself. A deep breath, a nervous swallow. Yes,
better. Her face and body hot, she doffed her gloves and cape, dropped them on
a chair, and swept a hand across her burning brow.
His gaze again moved
from her feet to her head, pausing on her silky white shirt. “Did the old man
send you, China Doll?” A silver flare beneath those thick lashes, a quick feral
show of teeth. He took another, longer drink and wiped his mouth with the back
of his hand.
She took a steadying
breath. “My name is Diana. Miss Rennie to you.” Did that sound too challenging?
“Um, my father doesn’t know I’m here.” She sensed his rising animosity and
forced herself to meet his belligerent gaze. They must seem to be on the same
side. “He hasn’t been himself since the day you came to our house.”
“Must be his
conscience getting after him. He tell you how he caused my father’s death?”
“He told me nothing.
Whatever Owen did—”
His black brows
lifted. “Owen?”
“Owen. My father.”
Defensiveness would only stir his hostility. Time for a little history, enough
perhaps to gain some sympathy. She paced a slow circle. “I was born on the
ranch. When I was three, my mother took me to New York. I returned nearly four
months ago upon Mother’s passing.” Seeking his gaze, she added, a small throb
in her voice, “I was lost all those years, lost in a big cold city until I
found my home again and my beloved father.” She swallowed. “Yet—I couldn’t call
him that, so we settled on his given name for now.”
Was there even a
smidgen of empathy in his eyes? She couldn’t tell by his stony expression. He
set the bottle down with a thump and leaned back against the table, arms out at
the sides, hands resting palm down on the plank surface. The lantern dropped a
beacon of light on him, capturing her attention despite her vow not to look at
his body. There was insolence in his stance, an overt display of virility. She
stared at his muscular thighs and the coarse hairs rising above his breeches.
“Yeah, it’s a sad
story. I’ve got one too, because when I was ten I watched your old man send my
father to his death. But you, miss well-bred, didn’t come here to chat about
your past. What’s your real reason for this visit?” He picked up the bottle and
took a deep swallow, eyes on her the entire time.
Controlled anger
seemed to roll off him in waves. This wasn’t working as she had planned. She
stepped to him. “May I have another drink?”
He passed her the bottle, then crossed his arms over his chest and watched her. Eyes squeezed shut, she took another mouthful and felt the same slow burn as before. She managed not to gag this time but couldn’t stop from grimacing.
He passed her the bottle, then crossed his arms over his chest and watched her. Eyes squeezed shut, she took another mouthful and felt the same slow burn as before. She managed not to gag this time but couldn’t stop from grimacing.
“All right.” She spoke
with careful precision. “Mr. Russell, um, Del, when you said you might kill
Owen, I grew afraid. Terribly afraid. I came here to appeal to you to leave
Rennieville, leave my father in peace. He—he’s very torn up about this
business. He’s remorseful and sad and ashamed, and—oh—it breaks my heart to see
him that way.” Was this working? One more mouthful of whiskey. God, it was
awful. She shuddered and scrubbed her mouth with the heel of her hand.
He grabbed the bottle
and set it away. “You’ll be on the floor if you keep drinking.”
She gazed at him with
what she assumed was earnest trust, her hands clasped as if in prayer. “Will
you leave town? What would your father want you to do?” Damn. Did that sound
right? Her cheeks burned hotter. Would a tear be too much? Shouldn’t have had
that last drink. She was losing direction, grasping for words. “Um, didn’t you
say he forgave Owen? Can’t you do that too, for your father?”
Outside, the rising
wind gusted around the eaves and skidded along the roof, flapping loose wooden
shingles. He looked up and listened to the low thrum of the wind as if it were
speaking to him.
“And,” she added, “you
can look for his remains. Why, I’ll help you.”
He stared at her.
“Hell, you must really want me gone.”
“I—I want peace for my
father. Can you understand that?”
Another gust of wind
scuffled the shingle down s and tossed some to the ground, while in the stove burning
wood crackled and hissed. He rubbed a hand over his chin and up the side of his
face. He was thinking, considering, weighing; his jaw tightened, then relaxed.
“The hardest thing in the world is watching your father die. After all these
years it’s damn hard to let it go—”
A chink had formed in
his armor. Time to strike. Her voice soft, she said, “But you will, won’t you?”
She thrust out her hand.
“You’ve had enough.”
“No. I want us to
shake hands on our agreement that you’ll leave.”
One side of his mouth
twitched into a half-smile. “If it’ll get rid of you so I can go back to bed…”
He clasped her hand, his palm rough and calloused, and she felt a curious
vibration in her fingers. Their gazes locked, and she was transfixed by his
eyes of pebbled slate webbed with silver. Without another word he placed her
palm flat on his chest and covered it with his hand.
— Cat
The Queen of Paradise Valley available at:
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