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“Do your trick for Daddy,” Avery told her.

 

Obediently, the child cupped a handful of suds and blew on them hard, sending clumps of white foam flying in all directions. Several landed on Tate’s

 

knee. He made a big deal of it. “Whoa, there, Mandy, girl! You’re taking the bath, not me.”

 

She giggled and scooped up another handful. This time a dollop of suds landed on Avery’s nose. To Mandy’s delight, she sneezed. “I’d better put a stop

 

to this before it gets out of hand.” She bent over the tub, slid her hands into Mandy’s armpits, and lifted her out.

 

“Here, give her to me.” Tate was waiting to wrap up his daughter in a towel.

 

“Careful. Slippery when wet.”

 

Mandy, bundled in soft pink terry cloth, was carried into her adjoining bedroom and set down beside her bed. Her chubby little feet sank into the thick rug.

 

Its luxuriant nap swallowed all ten toes. Tate sat down on the edge of her bed and began drying her with experienced hands.

 

“Nightie?” he asked, looking up at Avery expectantly.

 

“Oh, yes. Coming right up.” There was a tall, six-drawer chest and a wide, three-drawer bureau. Where would the nighties be kept? She moved toward the

 

bureau and opened the top drawer. Socks and panties.

 

“Carole? Second drawer.”

 

Avery responded with aplomb. “She’ll need underwear, too, won’t she?” He unwound the towel from around Mandy and helped her step into her

 

underwear, then pulled the nightgown over her head while Avery turned down her bed. He lifted Mandy into it.

 

Avery brought a hairbrush from the bureau, sat down beside Tate on the edge of the bed, and began brushing Mandy’s hair. “You smell so clean,” she

 

whispered, bending down to kiss her rosy cheek once she’d finished with her hair. “Want some powder on?”

 

“Like yours?” Mandy asked.

 

“Hmm, like mine.” Avery went back to the bureau for the small music box of dusting powder she’d spotted there earlier. Returning to the bed, she opened

 

the lid. A Tchaikovsky tune began to play. She dipped the plush puff into the powder, then applied it to Mandy’s chest, tummy, and arms. Mandy tilted her

 

head back. Avery stroked her exposed throat with the powder puff. Giggling, Mandy hunched her shoulders and dug her fists into her lap.

 

“That tickles, Mommy.”

 

The form of address startled Avery and brought tears to her eyes. She pulled the child into a tight hug. It was a moment before she could speak. “Now you

 

really smell good, doesn’t she, Daddy?”

 

“She sure does. ‘Night, Mandy.” He kissed her, eased her back onto the pillows, and tucked the summer-weight covers around her.

 

“Good night.” Avery leaned down to softly peck her cheek, but Mandy flung her arms around Avery’s neck and gave her mouth a smacking, moist kiss.

 

She then turned onto her side, pulled a well-loved Pooh Bear against her, and closed her eyes.

 

Somewhat dazed by Mandy’s spontaneous show of affection, Avery replaced the music box, turned out the light, and preceded Tate through the doorway

 

and down the hall toward her own room.

 

“For our first day ”

 

She got no further before he grabbed her upper arm and shoved her inside her bedroom and against the nearest wall. Keeping one hand firmly around

 

her biceps, he closed the door so they wouldn’t be overheard and flattened his other palm against the wall near her head.

 

“What’s the matter with you?” she demanded.

 

“Shut up and listen to me.” He moved in closer, his face taut with anger. “I don’t know what game you’re playing with me. What’s more, I don’t give a shit.

 

But if you start messing with Mandy, I’ll kick you out so fast your head will spin, understand?”

 

“No. I don’t understand.”

 

“The hell you don’t,” he snarled. “This sweetness and light act is a bunch of crap.”

 

“Act?”

 

“I’m an adult.”

 

“You’re a bully. Let go of my arm.”



 

“I recognize your act for what it is. But Mandy is a child. To her it’s real, and she’ll respond to it.” He inclined his body even closer. “Then, when you go

 

back to being your old self, you’ll leave her irreparably damaged.”

 

“I ”

 

“I can’t let that happen to her I won’t.”

 

“You give me very little credit, Tate.”

 

“I give you none.”

 

She sucked in a quick, harsh breath.

 

He looked her over rudely. “Okay, so this morning you dazzled the press on my behalf. Thank you. You took my hand during the press conference. Sweet.

 

We’re wearing matching wedding bands. How romantic,” he sneered

 

“You’ve even got members of my family, who should know better, speculating that you had some kind of conversion experience in the hospital found Jesus

 

or something.”

 

He lowered his head to within inches of hers. “I know you too well, Carole. I know that you are at your sweetest and kindest just before you go in for the

 

kill.” Increasing the pressure on her arm, he added, “I know that for a fact, remember?”

 

Distressed, Avery said fervently, “I have changed I am different.”

 

“Like hell You’ve just changed tactics, that’s all But I don’t care how well you play the part of the perfect candidate’s wife, you’re out. What I told you before

 

the crash still stands. After the election, no matter the outcome, you’re gone, baby.”

 

His threat of dispossession didn’t frighten her. Avery Daniels had been dispossessed of everything already even her identity. What stunned Avery was that

 

Tate Rutledge, on whose integrity she would have staked her life, was a phony after all.

 

“You would manipulate the public that way?” she hissed. “You’d go through this campaign with me playing your devoted wife, standing at your side, waving

 

and smiling and delivering silly speeches that are composed for me, only as a means of getting more votes?” Her voice had risen a full octave. “Because

 

a happily married candidate has a better chance of winning than one caught up in a divorce procedure. Isn’t that right?”

 

His eyes turned as hard as flint. “Good try, Carole. Shift the blame to me if it makes you feel better about your own manipulations. You know damn good

 

and well why I didn’t kick you out a long time ago. I want this election for myself and for the following I’ve cultivated. I won’t let those voters down. I can’t do

 

anything that might prevent me from winning, even if it means pretending to live in wedded bliss with you.”

 

Once again he subjected her to a contemptuous onceover. “Your surgery made the packaging look fresher, but you’re still rotten on the inside.”

 

Avery was having a difficult time keeping the aspersions he was casting on Carole separate from herself. She took each insult to heart, as though it were

 

aimed at her and not his late wife. She wanted to defend herself against his criticism, to fight back with a woman’s weapons. Because, while his fierce

 

temperament was intimidating, it was also arousing.

 

His anger only intensified his sexiness. It emanated from him as potently as the scent of his after-shave. His mouth looked hard and cruel. It became

 

Avery’s goal to soften it.

 

She raised her head, defying his resentful glare. “Are you sure I’m the same?”

 

“Damn sure.”

 

Sliding her arms over his shoulders, she clasped her hands behind his neck. “Are you sure, Tate?” Coming up on tiptoes, she brushed her parted lips

 

across his. “Absolutely sure?”

 

“Don’t do this. It only makes you more of a whore.” “I’m not!”

 

The insult smarted. In a way, she was prostituting herself with another woman’s husband for the sake of a story. But that wasn’t motivating her as much as

 

a growing sexual need more powerful than any she had ever experienced. With or without her story, she had a genuine desire to give Tate the tenderness

 

and love that had been missing from his marriage to Carole.

 

“I’m not the woman I was before. I swear to you I’m not.”

 

She tilted her head to one side and aligned her lips with his. Her hands cupped the back of his head, her fingers curling through his hair and drawing him

 

down. If he really wanted to, he could resist, Avery assured herself.

 

But he allowed his head to be drawn closer to hers. Encouraged, she daintily used the moist tip of her tongue to probe at his lips. His muscles tensed, but

 

it was a sign of weakness, not endurance.

 

“Tate?” She gently nipped his lower lip with her teeth.

 

“Christ.”

 

The hand bracing him against the wall fell away. Avery was propelled backward when she absorbed the weight of his body, becoming sandwiched

 

between him and the wall. One arm curled hard and tight around her waist. His other hand captured her jaw, almost crushing it between his strong fingers.

 

It held her head in place while he kissed her ravenously. He sealed her open mouth to his with gentle suction, then burrowed his tongue into the silky wet

 

cavity.

 

Leaving her gasping for breath, he angled his head the opposite way and tormented her with quick, deft flicks of his tongue across her lips and barely

 

inside them. Her hands moved to his cheeks. She laid her palms against them and ran her fingertips across his cheekbones as she gave herself totally to

 

his kiss.

 

He fumbled with her clothing, thrusting his hand beneath her skirt, into her underpants, and filling it with soft woman flesh. She moaned pleasurably when

 

he tilted her middle up against his swollen pelvis and ground it against her cleft.

 

Avery felt fluid and feverish. Her sex was wet and warm. Her breasts ached. The nipples tingled.

 

Then she was abruptly deserted.

 

She blinked her eyes into focus. Her head landed hard against the wall behind her. She flattened her hands against it to keep herself from sliding to the

 

floor.

 

“I’ll grant you that it’s a polished act,” he said woodenly. His cheeks were flushed and his eyes were dilated. His breathing was rapid and shallow. “You’re

 

not as blatant as you used to be, but classier. Different, but just as sexy. Maybe even sexier.”

 

She looked down at the distended fly of his jeans, a look that made words superfluous.

 

“Okay, I’m hard,” he admitted with an angry growl. “But I’ll die of it before I’ll sleep with you again.”

 

He walked out. He didn’t slam the door behind him, but left it standing open, more of an insult than if he had stormed out. Heartsick and wounded, Avery

 

was left alone in Carole’s room, with Carole’s chintz, Carole’s mess.

 

Everyone in the family had noticed the puzzling inconsistencies in Carole’s personality, but her odd behavior was keeping one person in particular awake

 

at night. After hours of prowling the grounds surrounding the house, looking for answers in the darkness, the insomniac posed a question to the moon.

 

What is the bitch up to?

 

No radical changes in her could be pinpointed. The differences in her face were subtle, the result of the reconstructive surgery. Shorter hair made her look

 

different, but that was inconsequential. She had lost a few pounds, making her appear slimmer than before, but it was certainly no drastic weight loss.

 

Physically, she was virtually the same as before the crash. It was the nonphysical changes that were noticeable and so damned baffling.

 

What is the bitch up to?

 

Judging by her behavior since the crash, one would think her brush with death had given her a conscience. But that couldn’t be. She didn’t know the

 

meaning of the word. Although for all the goodwill she was dispensing, that’s apparently what she wanted everybody to believe.

 

Could Carole Rutledge have had a change of heart? Could she be seeking her husband’s approval? Could she ever be a loving, attentive mother?

 

Don’t make me laugh.

 

She was stupid to switch tactics now. She’d been doing fine at what she’d been hired to do: destroy Tate Rutledge’s soul, so that by the time that bullet

 

exploded in his head, it would almost be a blessing to him.

 

Carole Navarro had been perfect for the job. Oh, she’d had to be scrubbed down, tidied up, dressed correctly, and taught not to spike her speech with

 

four-letter words. But by the time the overhaul had been completed, she had been a stunning package of wit, intellect, sophistication, and sexiness that

 

Tate hadn’t been able to resist.

 

He hadn’t known that her wit had been cleansed of all ribaldry, that her intellect was only refined street smarts, her sophistication acquired, and her

 

sexiness tempered with false morality. Just as planned, he’d fallen for the package, because it had promised everything he had been looking for in a wife.

 

Carole had perpetuated the myth until after Mandy was born that had also been according to plan. It had been a relief for her to put phase two into action

 

and start having affairs. The shackles of respectability had been chafing her for a long time. Her patience had worn thin. Once let loose, she performed

 

beautifully.

 

God, it had been marvelous fun to witness Tate in his misery!

 

Except for that indiscreet visit in the hospital ICU, there’d been no mention made of their secret alliance since she was introduced to Tate four years ago.

 

Neither by word or deed had they given away the pact they had made when she had been recruited for the job.

 

But since the crash, she’d been even more evasive than usual. She bore watching closely. She was doing some strange and unusual things, even for

 

Carole. The whole family was noticing the unfamiliar personality traits.

 

Maybe she was acting strange for the hell of it. That would be like her. She enjoyed being perverse for perversity’s sake alone. That wasn’t serious, but it

 

rankled that she had seized the initiative to change the game plan without prior consultation.

 

Perhaps she hadn’t had an opportunity to consult yet. Perhaps she knew something about Tate that no one else was privy to and which needed to be

 

acted upon immediately.

 

Or perhaps the bitch and this was the most likely possibility had decided that being a senator’s wife was worth more to her than the payoff she was due to

 

receive the day Tate was laid in a casket. After all, her metamorphosis had coincided with the primary election.

 

Whatever her motive, this new behavior pattern was as annoying as hell. She’d better watch herself, or she’d be cut out. At this point, it could all go down

 

with or without her participation. Didn’t the stupid bitch realize that?

 

Or had she finally realized that a second bullet was destined for her?

 

SEVENTEEN

 

“Mrs. Rutledge, what a surprise.”

 

The secretary stood up to greet Avery as she entered the anteroom of the law office Tate shared with his brother. To learn where it was, she had had to

 

look up the address in the telephone directory.

 

“Hello. How are you?” She didn’t address the secretary by name. The nameplate on the desk read “Mary Crawford,” but she was taking no chances.

 

“I’m fine, but you look fabulous.”

 

“Thank you.”

 

“Tate told me that you were prettier than ever, but seeing is believing.”

 

Tate had told her that? They hadn’t engaged in a private conversation since the night he had kissed her. She found it hard to believe that he’d said

 

something flattering about her to his secretary.

 

“Is he in?” He was. His car was parked out front.

 

“He’s with a client.”

 

“I didn’t think he was handling any cases.”

 

“He’s not.” Mary Crawford smoothed her skirt beneath her hips and sat back down. “He’s with Barney Bridges. You know what a character he is. Anyway,

 

he pledged a hefty donation to Tate’s campaign, so when he hand delivered it, Tate made time to see him.”

 

“Well, I’ve come all this way. Will they be long? Shall I wait?”

 

“Please do. Have a seat.” The secretary indicated the grouping of waiting room sofas and chairs upholstered in burgundy and navy striped corduroy.

 

“Would you like some coffee?”

 

“No thanks. Nothing.”

 

She often passed up coffee now, preferring none at all to the liberally sweetened brew Carole had drunk. Sitting down in one of the armchairs, she picked

 

up a current issue of Field and Stream and began idly thumbing through it. Mary resumed typing, as she’d been doing before Avery had come in.

 

This impetuous visit to Tate’s law office was chancy, but it was a desperation measure she felt she had to take or go mad. What had Carole Rutledge

 

done all day?

 

Avery had been living in the ranch house for over two weeks, and she had yet to discover a single constructive activity that Tate’s wife had been involved

 

in.

 

It had taken Avery several days to locate everything in her bedroom and the other rooms of the house to which she had access. She was constantly

 

looking over her shoulder, not wanting to alert anyone to what she was doing. Eventually, she felt comfortable with the house’s layout and where everyday

 

items were stored.

 

Gradually, she began to learn her way around outside, as well. She took Mandy with her on these missions so they would appear to be nothing more than

 

innocent strolls.

 

Carole had driven an American sports car. To Avery’s consternation, it had a standard transmission. She wasn’t too adept at driving standard

 

transmissions. The first few times she took the car out, she nearly gave herself whiplash and stripped all the gears.

 

But once she felt adequate, she invented errands that would get her out of the house. Carole’s way of life was dreadfully boring. Her routine lacked

 

diversion and spontaneity. The ennui was making Avery Daniels crazy.

 

The day she had discovered an engagement calendar in a nightstand drawer, she had clutched it to her chest like a miner would a gold nugget. But a

 

scan of its pages revealed very little except the days that Carole had had her hair and nails done.

 

Avery never called for an appointment. It would be a luxury to spend several hours a week being pampered in a salon something Avery Daniels had never

 

had time for but she couldn’t risk letting Carole’s hairdresser touch her hair or a manicurist her nails. They might detect giveaways that others couldn’t.

 

The engagement book had shed no light on what Carole did to fill her days. Obviously, she wasn’t a member of any clubs. She had few or no friends

 

because no one called. That came both as a surprise and a relief to Avery, who had been afraid that a covey of confidantes would descend, expecting to

 

pick up where they had left off before Carole’s accident.

 

Apparently, no such close friends existed. The flowers and cards she had received during her convalescence must have come from friends of the family.

 

Carole had held no job had no hobbies. Avery reasoned that she should be thankful for that. What if Carole had been an expert sculptress, artist, harpist,

 

or calligrapher? It had been difficult enough teaching herself in private to write and eat with her right hand.

 

She was expected to do no chores, not even make her own bed. Mona took care of the house and did all the cooking. A yard man came twice a week to

 

tend to the plants in the courtyard. A retired cowboy, too old to herd cattle or to rodeo, managed the stable of horses. No one encouraged her to resume

 

an activity or interest that had been suspended as a result of her injuries.

 

Carole Rutledge had been a lazy idler. Avery Daniels was not.

 

The door to Tate’s private office opened. He emerged in the company of a barrel-chested, middle-aged man. They were laughing together.

 

Avery’s heart accelerated at the sight of Tate, who was wearing a genuinely warm smile. His eyes were crinkled at the corners with the sense of humor he

 

never shared with her. Eddy constantly nagged him to trade in his jeans, boots, and casual shirts for a coat and tie. He refused unless he was making a

 

scheduled public appearance.

 

“Who am I trying to impress?” he had asked his perturbed campaign manager during a discussion relating to his wardrobe.

 

“Several million voters,” Eddy had replied.

 

“If I can’t impress them by what I’m standing for, they sure as hell aren’t going to be impressed by what I’m standing in.”

 

Nelson had drolly remarked, “Unless it’s bullshit.”

 

Everybody had laughed and that had been the end of the discussion.

 

Avery was glad Tate dressed as he did. He looked sensational. His head was bent at the listening angle that she had come to recognize and find

 

endearing. One lock of hair dipped low over his forehead. His mouth was split in a wide grin, showing off strong, white teeth.

 

He hadn’t seen her yet. At unguarded moments like this, she reveled in looking at him before contempt for his wife turned his beautiful smile into

 

something ugly.

 

“Now, this is a treat!”

 

The booming bass voice snapped Avery out of her love-struck daze. Tate’s visitor came swiftly toward her on short, stocky legs that were reminiscent of

 

Irish. She was scooped up into a smothering bear hug and her back was hammered upon with exuberant affection. “Gawddamn, you look better than you

 

ever have, and I didn’t think that was possible.”

 

“Hello, Mr. Bridges.”

 

” ‘Mr. Bridges?’ Shee-ut. Where’d that come from? I told Mama when we saw you on the TV that you’re prettier now than you were before. She thought so,

 

too.”

 

“I’m glad I have your approval.”

 

He wagged two stubby fingers, holding a cigar, near the tip of her nose. “Now you listen to oP Barney, darlin’, those polls don’t meant a gawddamn thing,

 

you hear? Not a gawddamn thing. I told Mama just the other day that those polls ain’t worth shee-ut. You think I’d put my money on the boy here,” he said,

 

walloping Tate between the shoulder blades, “if I didn’t think he was gonna put the screws to that gawddamn Dekker on election day? Huh?”

 

“No sir, not you, Barney,” she replied, laughing.

 

“You’re gawddamn right I wouldn’t.” Cramming the cigar into the corner of his mouth, he reached for her and gave her another rib-crunching hug. “I’d purely

 

love to take y’all to lunch, but I got a deacons’ meetin’ at the church.”

 

“Don’t let us keep you,” Tate said, trying to keep a straight face. “Thank you again for the contribution.”

 

Barney waved away the thanks. “Mama’s mailin’ hers in today.”

 

Tate swallowed with difficulty. “I…I thought the check was from both of you.”

 

“Hell no, boy. That was only my half. Gotta go. The church is a long way from here, and Mama gets pissed if I drive the Vette over seventy in town, so I

 

promised not to. Too many gawddamn crazies on the road. Y’all take care, you hear?”

 

He lumbered out. After the door had closed behind him, the secretary looked up at Tate and wheezed, “Did he say half?”

 

“That’s what he said.” Tate shook his head in disbelief. “Apparently he really believes that the polls aren’t worth shee-ut.”

 

Mary laughed. So did Avery. But Tate’s smile had disappeared by the time he had ushered her into his office and closed the door. What are you doing

 

here? Need some money?”

 

When he addressed her in that curt, dismissive tone of voice, which he reserved for the times when they were alone, each word was like a shard of glass

 

being gouged into her vitals. It made her ache. It also made her mad as hell.

 

“No, I don’t need any money,” she said tightly as she sat down in the chair opposite his desk. “As you suggested, I went to the bank and signed a new

 

card. I explained about the change in my handwriting,” she said, flexing her right hand. “So I can write a check against the account whenever I get low on

 

cash.”

 

“So, why are you here?”

 

“I need something else.”

 

“What’s that?”

 

“Something to do.”

 

Her unexpected statement served its purpose. It won her his undivided attention. Skeptically holding her stare, he leaned back in his chair and raised his

 

boots to the corner i his desk. “Something to do?”

 

“That’s right.”

 

He laced his fingers together across his belt buckle. “I’m listening.”

 

“I’m bored, Tate.” Her frustration boiled over. Restlessly, she left the chair. “I’m stuck out there on the ranch all day with nothing productive to do. I’m sick of

 

being idle. My mind’s turning to mush. I’m actually beginning to discuss the soap operas with Mona.”

 

As she aimlessly roamed his office, she made note of several things primarily that there were framed photographs of Mandy everywhere, but none of

 

Carole.

 

Framed diplomas and photographs were attractively arranged on the wall behind the credenza. Looking for clues into his past, she paused in front of an

 

eight-by-ten blowup of a snapshot taken in Vietnam.

 

Tate and Eddy were standing in front of a jet bomber, their arms draped across each other’s shoulders in a pose of camaraderie. One’s grin was as

 

cocky as the other’s. Avery had inadvertently learned that they’d been college roommates until Tate had postponed his education to enlist in the air force.

 

Until now, she hadn’t realized that Eddy had accompanied him to war.

 

“Since, when have you been concerned with your mind?” he asked her, bringing her around.

 

“I need activity.”

 

“Join an aerobics class.”

 

“I did the same day the doctor examined my tibia and gave me the go-ahead. But the class only lasts one hour three times a week.”


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