Texas Stakeout. Virna DePaul
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“The same thing I’m still planning to do. Watch and wait until capturing him doesn’t present a danger to you or your son, then nab him and bring him back into custody.”
“What do you mean wait until capturing him doesn’t present a danger to me or Peter? Were you planning to come in with guns blazin’? Have the big shoot-out at the O.K. Corral on my property?”
Instead of answering, Dylan stared at her, holding her gaze with his. She’d noticed before how startlingly blue his eyes were, but the expression he held now, one mixed with pity, compassion and a hint of fury, made the blue seem all that brighter. He shifted, and his plaid snap-front strained against the breadth of his shoulders. Under different circumstances, she’d label him a hunk. If she’d met him at the grocery store or the post office, she’d probably check for a wedding ring. And if she was being completely honest, she’d admit she’d already done the labeling and checking several times.
She mentally chided herself when her gaze once again dipped to his left hand. His ringless left hand. Damn it! This was not some friendly guy seated next to her at a Back to School Night. This man was the enemy.
She pushed her glass forward and waited as Dylan unstoppered the alcohol and poured her a drink, then used a finger to push it back across the wooden table to her. Despite wanting to down the entire glass in one gulp, she forced herself to sip elegantly, letting the firewater drift down the back of her throat, wishing she could be sharing the drink with Josiah. Tears filled her eyes and she tipped her head upward. She cried easily, always had, but she didn’t want He-Man to see her tears. Not after he’d watched her sob, naked, on the floor of her shower. Granted, the glass of the shower surround had been so fogged Dylan hadn’t actually seen her naked. But still...
Dylan cleared his throat. “I don’t understand why you think it’s so unbelievable your brother would run from the law. He’s a convict.”
“A convict who was falsely accused. A convict whose case is under appeal. A convict who will win that appeal and be fully acquitted.”
Dylan shook his head slowly, his gaze piercing hers. “You can’t possibly be that naive, Rachel.”
“And you can’t possibly claim to know me. Just because you did the whole gallant-knight thing today, riding in on a charger, coming to the rescue, doesn’t make you the good guy. It doesn’t make you right.”
The corner of his mouth tipped upward in a crooked smile. “So I was a gallant knight, then?”
Funny how that curl relieved some of the tension of the day. The man probably made women melt and teenage girls swoon. But Rachel was far from a teenager, and she wasn’t in a melting or swooning mood. She wasn’t sure if she wanted to rip Dylan’s head off for being against her brother or spend the night crying into her pillow over Josiah’s death.
She let out a deep sigh, allowing the alcohol to blur her emotions, smooth the jagged edges. But then a thought suddenly occurred to her, and the jagged emotions were back with a vengeance.
“Josiah,” she breathed. “You implied he might have been murdered. You can’t possibly think...”
But he did. She could see it in his eyes.
“Josiah fell,” she said baldly.
“Maybe,” Dylan said. “Maybe not.”
She stood abruptly. “I think you’ve said all you needed to say. My brother’s escaped, and he might be on his way here. The U.S. marshals have my place staked out. Now I need to find my son and go about our evening chores. Tomorrow’s a big day—I have a funeral to start planning, and I need to figure out how to hire a ranch hand I can’t afford. So I think it’s time I thank you for your help with our crisis today.” She gestured to the front door.
The man remained seated.
“Seriously, did you not get what I said? I’d like you to leave now.”
He nodded. “I heard you. And yes, I understood the subtext without the need for added direction. But I’m not leaving. Not until you understand what kind of threat your brother truly represents. Not until you understand that you and your son may be in mortal danger from Jackson Kincaid.”
* * *
Dylan figured no one wanted to hear someone they loved could hurt them, but he’d seen too many instances of domestic violence not to know that sometimes the ones you loved the deepest were the ones who could cause the most harm. He also figured Rachel Kincaid had heard and experienced all she should have to in one day. Unfortunately he couldn’t give her the reprieve he wanted to.
He had a duty to the citizens of the United States to keep them safe.
Justice. Integrity. Service.
The motto of the U.S. marshals wasn’t simply words on letterhead. Those words meant something to him. If he did his job, fugitives were brought to justice. He did his job with integrity, respecting the rights of all concerned, be it family, victim or the fugitive himself. And he did it all for personal satisfaction, yes, but mostly to be of service—to his country and to its inhabitants.
Right now being of service meant convincing Rachel Kincaid her brother could harm her.
He wished he didn’t have to. The woman had gotten under his skin in just a few hours. If he were a lesser man, he’d say his connection to her was simply physical. The woman was a looker, no doubt. And although those glass walls in her shower had been steamed up pretty well, he’d seen the swell of her breasts, the roundness of her naked hip, when he went to check on her.
But he knew there was more to his feelings for Rachel than physical attraction. He admired her. She certainly put up with a lot from her son. Before that... According to the files he’d read, she’d taken over running the ranch when her parents died, and had raised her younger brother, Jackson. He’d been ten and she’d just turned eighteen. She’d quit college and moved back to the ranch. Six months later she’d married a local boy—Phillip Wright—who’d killed himself a few years later in a drunk driving incident, leaving Rachel a widow with a three-year-old son to raise even as her teenage brother got himself into more and more trouble. She’d been struggling to do the right thing for all of them ever since.
“I know you raised him, Rachel. That you were little more than a child yourself when your parents died. You had your hands full with him, didn’t you?” he asked.
She shot him a hard look. “Jax was like any other teenager. He got screwed by life and screwed things up in response.”
“Detention throughout high school. He didn’t even graduate—had to take his GED. Then two DUIs and a few minor drug busts followed. All that I could see blaming on losing his parents so young. Typical messed-up kid stuff.”
“So?” Rachel snapped at him.
He paused before going on. “Then a B-and-E that he got a light sentence on because he was a juvie. Then another B-and-E. Again, maybe you could blame the loss of your parents on him acting out. Being stupid. But then there was the bust for possession of marijuana for sale. His first potential felony. He got off on that one on a technicality. Still sounding like a screwed-up kid to you?”
Rachel sagged back down in her chair and let her hands fall into her