She was being followed. Caroline Hampton pulled her wool jacket around her, fingers tight on the Navajo embroidery, but even that couldnât dissipate the chill that worked its way down her spine.
Santa Fe could be cold in early March, but the shiver that touched her had nothing to do with the temperature. She detoured around the tour group in front of the central monument of the plaza. Ordinarily, she might stop there to do a little people-watching, her fingers itching for a pad and a charcoal to capture the scene. But not when she felt that inimical gaze upon her.
Evading a vendor determined to sell her a carnita, she hurried across the square, only half her attention on the colors, movement and excitement that she loved about the old city. She was letting her active imagination run wild; that was all. This persistent sense that someone watched her was some odd aftereffect of shock and grief.
She stopped at a magazine stand, picking up a newspaper and pretending to study it as she used it for a screen to survey the crowd. There, see? No one was paying any attention to her, or at least, no more attention than her tousled mass of red curls and artistic flair with clothing usually merited. Everything was fineâ
Her heart thudded, loud in her ears. Everything was not fine. The man had stopped at a flower stand but his gaze was fixed on her, not on the mixed bouquet the vendor thrust at him. Short, stocky, probably in his forties, dressed in the casual Western style that was so common hereâhe looked like a hundred other men in the plaza at this moment.
But he wasnât. Sheâd spotted him beforeâwhen she was leaving the gallery after work, when she returned to the apartment she and Tony had shared overlooking the river.
This wasnât grief, or an overactive imagination. This was real.
She shoved the newspaper back on the rack, hurrying toward the Palace of the Governors. It was bustling with tourists, its entrance turned into a maze by the Native American craftspeople who spread their wares there. Sheâd lose him in the crowd; sheâd go back to the galleryâ¦.
But heâd been at the gallery. He knew where she worked, where she lived. The chill deepened. Her fingers touched the cell phone that was tucked inside the top pocket of her leather shoulder bag. Call the police?
Her stomach seemed to turn at that, emerging memories of the moment theyâd arrived at her apartment door to tell her that her husband was dead. To ask her questions she couldnât answer about Tony Gibson.
She wound her way among the craftspeople, nodding to some of the regulars. Ask them for help? But what could they do? Theyâd want to call the police.
The knot in her stomach tightened as her mind skirted the older, darker memory that lurked like a snake in the recesses of her mind. She wouldnât think of that, wouldnât let herself rememberâ
She risked a quick look around. The man was no longer in sight. The tour group, apparently released by their guide, flooded to the crafts vendors on a tide of enthusiasm, swamping everything in their path.
All right. Sheâd slip around the Museum of Fine Arts and make her way to the city lot where sheâd left her car. It would be fine. She rounded the corner.
The man stepped from a doorway to grab her arm.
Caroline took breath to scream, jerking against his grip, trying to remember the proper response from the self-defense class sheâd taken last winter.
âYou donât want to scream.â His voice was pitched low enough to hide under the chatter of the passing crowd. Cold eyes, small and black as two ripe olives, narrowed. âThink of all the questions youâd have to answer about Tony if you did.â
âTony.â Her mind seemed to skip a beat, then settle on the name. âWhat do you have to do with my husband? What do you want?â
âJust the answers to a couple of questions.â He smiled, nodded, as if they were two acquaintances whoâd happened to meet on the street. âWe can stay here in full view of the crowds.â The smile had an edge, like the faint scar that crossed his cheek. âThen youâll feel safe.â
She summoned courage. Act as if youâre in control, even if youâre not. âOr you can beat it before I decide to scream.â
She yanked at her arm. A swift kick to his shins might do itâtoo bad she didnât have heels on today. Sheâdâ
âJust answer me one thing.â His tone turned to gravel, and his fingers twisted her wrist, the stab of pain shocking her. âWhere is Tony Gibson?â
She could only stare at him. âTony? Tonyâs dead.â
Fresh grief gripped her heart on the words. The fact that Tony hadnât been the man she thought him, had lied from the first moment theyâd metânone of that could alter the fact that she grieved for him.