"What a horrible life for the two of you."
"Blanche died when I was twelve, and things got worse. I was fifteen before I grew big enough to defend myself properly. The beatings stopped. I found trouble everywhere I looked, and I was always looking for trouble. I've had problems with the law since I was a kid."
No wonder Reece was such a hard man, such a loner. Elizabeth wanted to know more, wanted him to share all of his past with her. Her instincts told her that he had never told anyone else the things he was telling her.
"All those years, you knew B. K. Stanton was your father?" Elizabeth asked.
"Yeah, I knew the richest and most powerful man in town was my father. And I knew he didn't give a damn whether I lived or died." Reece closed his eyes, shook his head and groaned. "Damn, I wish I'd left that town-his town-before he decided to take an interest in me."
"When was that?"
"When I was sixteen he stopped me on the street one day. Just like that-" Reece snapped his fingers "- B.K. grabbed my arm and asked me if I was Blanche Landry's boy." Reece's stomach churned. A sour taste coated his tongue. Hot, bitter anger rose in his throat. "He offered me a part-time job. I had quit school, and he said if I'd go back to school he'd give me a job after school and full-time in the summer. We made a deal, my old man and me. Then when I graduated high school, I joined the marines, did my time and came out determined to make something of myself. My only mistake was going back to Newell."
"Why did you go back?"
"Damned if I know, unless..." Reece slammed his fist into the sofa arm.
MacDatho rose from the floor, watching Reece intently.
"I'm not going to hurt her, Mac," Reece told the wolf-dog. "You should know that by now."
"He knows." Elizabeth placed her hand on Reece's arm. "You went back to Newell because you had something to prove, didn't you?"
"I guess. I suppose I wanted B. K. Stanton to know I was going to college, that no matter what I'd come from, I was going to be somebody."
"You had a lot of mixed emotions about your father, didn't you?"
"I hated him. Plain and simple." Reece stood, stretching, exercising his muscles.
"Did you hate him enough to kill him?"
Reece turned sharply, glaring at Elizabeth. "I thought you believed me, believed that I didn't murder him?"
"I do believe you."
"Then why ask me if I hated him enough to kill him?" Reece walked to the windows, staring out at the sunshine spreading over the snow, glistening on the velvety white surface as if it were scattering crushed diamond particles everywhere it touched.
"What happened when you returned to Newell after the marines?" She should have known he'd been in the marines. Sam had been a marine. Reece Landry and Sam Dundee shared some common traits.
"I went to college, worked at Stanton Industries in my old job as a machine operator to help supplement Uncle Sam's financial aid. When I got my B.S. degree the old man offered me an office job. That's when I got to know the rest of the family."
"Your father's other children?"
"Yeah, my big brother, Kenny, the heir apparent, and my sister, Christina. Kenny and I hated each other on sight. I liked Christina, and she liked me. She's the one who hired a lawyer for me when I was arrested for the old man's murder."
Elizabeth longed to put her arms around Reece, to offer him the care and support he'd never known. But she knew he wouldn't accept her comfort right now.
"Your sister believed you were innocent?" Elizabeth asked.
"She wanted to believe I didn't kill our father, but she had her doubts. I could tell every time she looked at me, she was wondering if I'd done it."
"Why did the sheriff arrest you? What evidence did they have against you?"
He glanced at Elizabeth and suddenly realized how much he wanted her to believe him. "The gun was mine. I'd reported the .38 stolen a couple of days before somebody used it to kill the old man. They didn't find any fingerprints. Whoever used it had wiped the gun clean. And the usual paraffin test for powder residue was inconclusive because my hands had been covered with dried blood."
"Motive and weapon. You hated your father and the gun that killed him was yours."
"That's right, only there's more. B.K.'s wife, Alice, and the family lawyer found me leaning over my father's body with blood all over my hands and the gun at my side."
76
"Oh, Reece." She touched him then, unable to prevent herself. He tensed at her touch, but when she hugged up against him, he relaxed and slipped his arm around her waist.
"B.K. had called and asked me to come to his home. He said he had something important to tell me. When I arrived, the front door was standing wide open, so I walked in. I called out. B.K. told me to come on back to the study. Then I heard my father arguing with someone, but I couldn't make out the other voice. Couldn't even tell if it was male or female. B.K. was shouting, saying he could do whatever he damned well pleased, that nobody could tell him what he could and couldn't do.
"Before I reached the study I heard gunshots. I rushed inside and someone hit me from behind. They didn't knock me unconscious, but everything went black for a few minutes and I was pretty shaken up. I didn't see who had hit me. When my vision cleared, I staggered over to where B.K. lay on the floor. He was bleeding like a stuck hog. I knelt down, covering his stomach wound with my hands. He called my name. And then he died."
Elizabeth held Reece in her arms, trying to absorb some of his pain, longing for him to accept what she offered, knowing he had never shared as much of himself with another human being.
"Motive, weapon, opportunity." Elizabeth sighed. "They didn't believe you, of course, about the person who hit you over the head. And the authorities never looked for another suspect."
"Brother Kenny and his mother had their lawyer, Willard Moran, use all the influence the Stanton family had in Newell, and believe me, it was plenty. I spent five months in that damned little jail cell, feeling like a trapped animal, knowing I was doomed."
Elizabeth held him. He hugged her fiercely.
"During the trial my lawyer pointed out that if I'd shot B.K., I'd have hardly had time to wipe the gun clean before Alice and Willard found me. And there was no proof that I'd actually fired the gun. I was convicted on circumstantial evidence."
"The Stantons must be very powerful to possess that much control over the sheriff's department and the district attorney."
"The Stantons own Newell, and if the Stantons say I killed B.K., then the town has no choice but to agree."
"You were framed," Elizabeth said.
"You do believe me, don't you?"
"Yes, of course I do. Did you think I wouldn't?"
He buried his face in her shoulder, breathing her sweet rose scent, accepting her loving warmth as she held him.
Abruptly she pushed him away. The sense of loss overwhelmed him.
"O'Grady! My God, Reece, go upstairs and wait. O'Grady will be here in a few minutes."
"How the hell do you know..." Reece grinned. "I've got to get used to this sixth sense of yours."
"When O'Grady leaves, I want to talk to you about our calling Sam to help us," Elizabeth said.
"No way. This guy may be your step-uncle, your family and friend, but I don't know him from Adam."
"Sam will help us."
"I said no." Grabbing her by the shoulders, he gazed into her eyes. "Understand me, Lizzie. I don't want you calling Sam Dundee."
"You can trust him."
"I don't trust anybody, lady, you should know that by now."
"Even me, Reece?"
He hesitated momentarily. "I'm not sure, Elizabeth. I want to trust you, but-"
The sound of a horn alerted Elizabeth to the fact that O'Grady had arrived. "Go upstairs and stay there until I come and get you."