Chapter Twelve

“Dead?” Boone exclaimed, careful to keep his voice low. “Of what?”

“A gunshot wound,” Hayes replied. He pulled out a chair and sat down. “I had the coroner out, along with a forensic team from the state crime lab and my own investigator. We found latent prints and a shell casing, but I don’t need ESP to know who did it.”

“Keely’s father,” Winnie guessed. “Or that partner of his, Jock.”

“They were desperate for money, Keely said,” Hayes replied.

“I told Keely to tell Ella to put the house on the market, but not really sell it, to make Brent Welsh think she was complying. But the men must have gone to her and demanded immediate results. She either refused or infuriated them, I don’t know.

” He sighed. “We don’t dare let Keely see her body. It will have to be a closed casket.”

“What?” Boone exclaimed.

Hayes’s expression was eloquent. “They tortured her, probably to find out about any assets she hadn’t produced.”

“Good God!” Boone said heavily. “They’ll come after Keely, won’t they?” he asked coldly. “She’ll be next, because she’ll inherit what little Ella had to leave her.”

“We haven’t heard anything about sightings of them since Misty and her father and the detective ran for the border,” Hayes told him.

“They may be spooked enough to keep running, if they were in the same network with the remnants of the Fuentes brothers’ drug smuggling operation.

Too, the murder may prompt them to keep running, since they know we’ll be after them for it.

On the other hand, if Ella left life insurance, Keely will get that.

And Ella’s savings accounts would mean ready cash.

I talked to her banker already. He told me there is some money there. ”

“We’ll need more men to protect the ranch,” Winnie thought aloud.

“Several more, all ex-military, and I know where to find them,” Boone said grimly. “I’ll make the ranch into a fortress. Welsh will never get his hands on Keely!”

“I could make a comment here about vigilante justice,” Hayes said with grim humor, “but I won’t. Just don’t step over the line. I can’t afford any more bail money.”

Boone chuckled. “You’ll be paid back for that.” The smile faded. “Poor Keely,” he said heavily. “First the snake, now her mother.”

“Someone will have to tell her.” Hayes looked around him at the grim faces. “We could draw straws. Or we could ask Coltrain to do the dirty work.”

“I’ll tell her when the time comes,” Boone said softly. “It’s my responsibility now.”

Winnie didn’t say anything, but she looked thoughtful, and happy.

* * *

Which was a far cry from how Keely looked when she came out from under the effects of the medicines she’d been given.

Boone never left her bedside. She’d glared at him the first time she saw him there, when she was still too sick and weak to speak. By the third day, she was regaining some strength and she was furious.

“I know, I know,” he said before she got started.

“I got everything backward. I accused you of things you didn’t do and threw you out of the house.

” He looked briefly tortured. “I know I caused this.” He drew in a long breath, staring down at his boots.

“God Almighty, I never meant for you to walk home with temperatures at the century mark! I must have been out of my head not to realize that you didn’t even have a way to get home. ”

Keely wanted to rage at him, but she was still very sick and her arm hurt. She winced every time she moved. “It wasn’t me…with Clark, in that picture you shoved in my face!”

He lifted his head and nodded. “I know,” he said grimly.

That look, and the words, told her things she wouldn’t have asked about.

He knew. He knew about her shoulder. She closed her eyes and tears flowed out of them.

She felt even worse now. She’d never wanted Boone, of all people, to know her secret.

Her mind went back to the boy who’d thrown up when he saw her shoulder…

He moved close to the bed and bent over her, with one big hand beside her head on the pillow.

“They’ll kill me if I sit down here. I know you’re still weak and you hurt like hell.

But I want you to feel something.” He drew her right hand up to his chest over the shirt and smoothed it down.

He watched her eyes while she did it, saw the realization in her green eyes, and nodded.

She frowned as she met his eyes.

“There are more of them,” he said stiffly, rising away from her.

“A lot more—one that even took bone out of my thigh. When Misty saw me, in Germany, just after the bandages were removed, she ran out of the room. It’s a little less messy now, after some plastic surgery, but the scars are too deep to be permanently erased, and it’s noticeable.

I don’t go shirtless anymore,” he added bitterly. “I haven’t for years.”

She felt the pain. She understood it. “I haven’t worn anything short-sleeved since I was thirteen years old,” she replied quietly.

“When I was sixteen, a boy I liked asked me out on a date. He was just fumbling, you know, like boys will, but when he got my blouse half-off and saw the scars—they were fresh, then—he…” She closed her eyes.

“He jerked the car door open and threw up. He was sorry, very sorry, but I was devastated. I knew, then, that I’d never have a normal life.

I knew I’d never get married and have…have children…

” Her voice broke and tears fell hotly onto her cheeks.

She was weak and sick and in pain, or she’d never have let him see her devastation.

It affected him. He bent down again and drew his mouth over her eyes, her nose, her cheeks. “Don’t,” he whispered huskily. “You’ve been so brave, Keely. I can’t bear to see you cry. Don’t, honey. Don’t.”

Now she knew she was dreaming. Boone had never called her a pet name, and he didn’t care if he hurt her. She closed her eyes, though, enjoying the dream. It was so sweet to have his breath on her lips, his mouth caressing her wet face, his deep voice murmuring sweet and impossible things.

The sound of the door opening stopped the dream, of course.

Boone moved away and she was sure it had been her imagination.

She’d been heavily sedated, after all, to compensate for the terrible pain.

Boone’s expression was taciturn, as usual, and he didn’t look anything like a man who’d been whispering sweet endearments to her.

Winnie and Clark came into the room, somber and worried, especially when they saw Keely’s face.

“You didn’t tell her?” Winnie asked angrily. “Coltrain said not to—”

“Tell me what?” Keely asked at once, dabbing her eyes with the sheet.

Winnie’s face contorted. Boone glared at her. So did Clark.

“Tell me what?” Keely demanded, belligerent now, as she looked from one guilty face to the other.

“I said I’d tell her when it was time,” Boone said shortly. “It’s not time.”

“Yes, but…” Winnie stopped, horrified, as the television, overhead, began with the lead story of the day’s news.

The first bit was a photo of Ella Welsh and news about her murder.

That was what she and Clark had rushed back into Keely’s room to tell him, because they knew the television had been on although turned down, so they could catch the evening news.

They’d seen the beginning of this broadcast on the wall televisions as they passed through the waiting room.

They hadn’t thought about the murder story being broadcast so soon.

Keely burst into fresh tears, almost hysterical.

“Damn that thing! Shut it off!” Boone shot at Clark as he started toward the call button next to Keely’s pillow.

While Clark shut off the television, Boone pressed the button and asked the nurse to come in, before he bent to curl Keely’s face into his shoulder.

“It’s all right, honey. It’s all right. I’m so sorry.

I never meant you to hear it like that!”

The nurse came in. Boone explained quietly what had just happened. The nurse grimaced and went to call Coltrain, who was, she explained, still making rounds.

The redheaded doctor was in the room scant minutes later. He ordered a sedative for Keely and waited until it took effect before he called the siblings out into the hall.

“It was the damned television,” Boone said angrily. “Why do you have those things in every room in the first place?”

“It wasn’t my idea, believe me,” Coltrain replied at once. “Keely’s going to have a hard recuperation if she has to go back to that house alone.”

“She won’t,” Boone said at once. “She’s coming home with us. I’ve already discussed it with Hayes Carson.”

“Good thinking,” Coltrain replied. He drew in a heavy breath. “I never expected that story to come out so soon. Hell, we don’t even have a local television broadcasting station in the county.”

“San Antonio is plenty close enough to pick the story up, especially on a slow news day,” Winnie murmured. “There’s nothing but political news, and everybody’s sick of that.”

“You’d better hire some bodyguards to protect you at home,” Coltrain advised. “These guys are desperate enough to go after money any way they can get it.”

“Everybody knows they killed Keely’s mother—at least locally we know it,” Winnie said. “They’d be stupid to stick around.”

“These guys will never get work building spaceships,” Coltrain said, tongue-in-cheek. “Otherwise, they wouldn’t have risked coming here in the first place. Hayes Carson would love to get Brent Welsh in his sights on any pretext.”

“So would I,” Boone replied grimly. “He stood by and watched while Keely got mauled saving a kid from a mountain lion. Those scars are going to be permanent, aren’t they?” he asked Coltrain.

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