âItâs not funny, Kit. If anything happened to you â¦â
He raised himself up on one elbow and looked searchingly at her. He reached for her arm, gripping it gently. âIf anything happened to me, then what?â
She could hardly think with him touching her. âI donât want to think about it.â
âWhat donât you want to think about?â he pressed. âWhat are you afraid of?â
âIâI wouldnât want you to get hurt protecting me.â Her stammer was a dead giveaway that her emotions were in turmoil.
âI wouldnât want anything to happen to either of us. For you to get hurt on my watch is unthinkable to me. Come here. Letâs talk about it.â He pulled her forward until she fell against him on the floor. He gathered her closer and entangled their legs.
âKitââ She half gasped his name.
âOn second thought, I donât feel much like talking.â He lowered his mouth to hers. Natalie had been wanting this for so long she was past considering the wisdom of it. Kit started kissing her with a hunger as great as her own. In an explosion of need she began kissing him back, forgetting everything as she poured out her feelings for him.
REBECCA WINTERS, whose family of four children has now swelled to include five beautiful grandchildren, lives in Salt Lake City, Utah, in the land of the Rocky Mountains. With canyons and high alpine meadows full of wildflowers, she never runs out of places to explore. They, plus her favourite holiday spots in Europe, often end up as backgrounds for her romance novels, because writing is her passion, along with her family and church.
Rebecca loves to hear from readers. If you wish to email her, please visit her website, www.cleanromances.com.
Chapter One
Texas Ranger Kit Saunders took cover behind a fat pine tree and watched with his binoculars from a distance. Seven people accompanied the honey-blonde widow standing at the grave site at the Evergreen Cemetery on this hot July afternoon in Austin.
The woman was Natalie Harris, and her husband, Rodney Parker Harris, age thirty-three, was being laid to rest. As far as any of the mourners, including his widow, knew, the deceased had been an accountant with LifeSpan Pharmaceutical, a huge private corporation in Austin. A week ago heâd been found at the low-end Sleepy Hollow Hotel, dead of a gunshot wound to the temple.
Kitâs captain, T. J. Horton, had assigned him to the case only yesterday.
The police had run the victimâs DNA through the database and, according to their report, the name Rodney Harris was the latest in a string of aliases. The name on the deceasedâs original birth certificate was that of escaped felon Harold Park from Colorado, whoâd disappeared eight years ago.
Park was on the FBIâs Most Wanted list. After serving only two years of a sixty-year sentence for murder, embezzlement, armed robbery and grand larceny, he and another prisoner, convicted killer Alonzo Morales, had escaped during a transfer from the ADX Federal Penitentiary in Florence, Colorado, to Canaan Federal Prison in Pennsylvania. Since that time both fugitives had gone by many false names that prevented the Feds from recapturing them.
The preliminary report from the detective here in Travis County suggested the gunshot wound was self-inflicted, but nothing would be official until all the forensic evidence had been reviewed. Something didnât add up in Kitâs mind. It didnât make sense that the felon would kill himself. A clever killer could have set it up to look like suicide.
A search of Harold-alias-Rodâs bank records revealed that $400,000 had been deposited into his checking account one day and withdrawn the next. The day after that, heâd been found dead in his hotel room. The size and date of the large deposit were inconsistent with his earnings from the pharmaceutical company, and the abrupt withdrawal was just plain suspicious. Normally that kind of money would have been put in a money market or the stock market at least.
Since Harold-alias-Rod had crossed state lines and had been an armed, dangerous killer, the police had asked for the Texas Rangers to take over. These were early days in the case. The police report also stated that Mrs. Harris had hired an attorney whoâd attempted to serve him with divorce papers on the day he was shot. Since they werenât yet divorced and heâd absconded with money she had half rights to under property laws, it appeared she could have a motive to see him dead.
But if Harris had still been living a life of crime and the money was stolen, then there may have been accomplices involvedâmaybe even other ex-felons from his past lifeâwho might be potential culprits. If the widow was innocent of any wrongdoing, then she herself might be a target for interested parties still looking for the missing money.