Chapter One
âWhat youâre asking is impossible,â Jamie Morrison warned as she dragged her fingers through the fringed layers of her dark hair. She paced back and forth in front of the imposing mahogany desk in her editorâs equally imposing corner office.
âSome would have said it was impossible a year ago, also,â Frank Black said drolly, and arched one hairy gray eyebrow in emphasis.
Jamie whirled away from that challenging look. Arms akimbo, she stared out the floor-to-ceiling windows, which provided a postcard-pretty view of Manhattan and the vastness of Central Park. Early winter dusk was settling over the island of glittering lights and harsh buildings. The architecture was softened by the last rays of light, which bathed heavy snow clouds with cotton-candy hues of pink and blue.
âTheyâre predicting a blizzard for tomorrow and yet you expect me to drive to Vermont and hike up half the side of a mountain just to have him turn me down,â she said in challenge.
Frankâs indignant huff greeted her comment. âCome now, Jamie. Galen Hawke didnât turn you down before. Why would he do it now?â
Maybe because she hadnât seen Galen since he had been in a horrific accident that had nearly killed him? Maybe because she had been waiting for him to phone since their one night together and he hadnât, despite her repeated calls. But, regardless, she knew her editor well enough to understand that he wouldnât settle for no as an answer.
Facing him, she jabbed a finger in his direction. âIâm making reservations at the best inn in town, complete with a full spa package on the magazineâs credit card.â
Frank grinned, but there was something cold and calculating in his smile. âIâve got something you might want in anticipation of the interview.â
He opened his desk drawer and took out a book. She recognized the cover immediately. Galenâs new release. She had a similar copy sitting on her nightstand at home, but hadnât been able to get past the handwritten note below the bookâs dedication. As her editor opened the book and pushed it across the desk toward her, she held up her hand like a cop directing traffic.
âThanks, but Iâve got my own.â
âProbably his best work yet. Some might even say itâs inspired.â He leveled his gaze on her, obviously aware that she might have been that inspiring muse.
She waved him off with a flip of her hand and headed for the door, but then paused to look back at him. âI hope you have a backup story for the issue just in case.â
He chuckled and wagged his head, chastising her. âFailure isnât an option, Jamie. Remember that.â
She shouldnât have raised the specter of that possibility. Last month Frank had fired a veteran reporter for missing a deadline. Granted it was supposed to have been a huge scoop and the cover story for the upcoming holiday issue, but still extreme in the eyes of most at the weekly entertainment magazine. Especially considering that Frank wasnât known for his generosity when a writer did provide him front-page material.
All things considered, she often wondered why she stuck it out as a journalist when she would much rather be working on her novel. The one she had been inspired to start after her interview with Galen Hawke last year. An interview that had led to a night she still found hard to forget.
Almost running from Frankâs office, she told herself not to return to memories of that night, but it was impossible to stay away.
* * *
One year earlier
Catâs Claw Mountain, Vermont
Galen Hawke scoped out the people filtering into the hall for his workshop, some of whom were vying for front-row seats. They were the ones who considered him a celebrity, an unwelcome status in his mind. He still preferred to think of himself as an ex-cop who had somehow managed to turn his much more suave and successful alter ego, Jack Fitzgerald, into a household name with his bestselling crime novels.
As an ex-cop, it was hard not to notice people and profile them.
Besides the groupies now settled into the first row tittering at him, a fifty-something woman in a diaphanous floral outfit and beads that dangled at her neck, ears and wrists floated into a seat in the second row. He imagined her in Zen meditation, waiting for writing inspiration to channel itself into her brain.