Page 56 of Texas Honor
“That I misplaced him,” he said easily. “Don’t worry, he’ll believe me. After all, he didn’t think I was serious about you, either, and look how I fooled him!”
She would have said something else, but he was already rolling her over on the big bed and kissing the breath out of her. So she just closed her eyes and kissed him back. Outside it was raining softly, and Mari thought she’d never heard a sweeter sound.
Rage of Passion
For my niece Helen, who sews a fine seam
Contents
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
EXCERPT
CHAPTER ONE
THETELEGRAMCRUMPLEDin the slender hand, a scrap of badly used timber that would have served better as the tree it once was. Pale green eyes stared down at it, hated it.
“Is it bad news, Mama?”
Becky’s soft young voice broke through the anguish, brought her back to the reality of the huge empty Victorian house and the plain, withdrawn child.
“What, darling?” Her voice sounded odd. She cleared her throat and helplessly twisted the crumpled telegram in her hand. “Bad news? Well...yes.”
Becky sighed. She was so old for six, Maggie sometimes thought. Her life had been disordered from the very beginning. An exclusive boarding school hadn’t made her an extrovert; it had only emphasized her painful shyness, made it more obvious.
“Is it Daddy again?” Becky asked quietly. She read the answer in her mother’s worried eyes and shrugged. “Well, Auntie Janet is coming today,” she said with childlike enthusiasm and smiled. “That should make you feel better.”
Margaret Turner smiled back. Her daughter’s rare smiles were magic. “So she is, although she isn’t really your aunt. She’s my godmother. She and your Grandmother Turner were best friends. What a nice surprise for us, meeting her last week. She didn’t even know I had you, you lovely little surprise, you.”
Becky giggled—one of those sweet sounds that Maggie had heard so seldom lately. The boarding school was taking its toll on Becky, but there’d been no choice about it once Maggie went to work. She had no one to keep Becky after school, and her job meant occasional long hours and Saturday work. That left the child vulnerable, and Dennis wasn’t above taking her away and hiding her somewhere. He was capable of anything where money was involved. And this newest threat, this telegram, made it plain that he was going to sue for full custody of Rebecca. He wanted Maggie to know immediately that he’d just given his lawyer the green light to go back to court.
Maggie swept back a strand of her short dark hair, which was very straight, curving into her high cheekbones. She was slender and tall, a good silhouette for the clothes that were such a rage this season. Not that she was buying new clothes. Thanks to her ex-husband’s incredible alimony suit against her—which he’d won—and the fact that her attorneys were still draining her financially, times were getting harder by the day.
About all that was left was this white elephant they lived in and a relatively new car—and Becky’s trust. Maggie’s own father had never approved of her marriage to Dennis, although—at the time—she hadn’t understood why. He’d cut Maggie out of his will entirely, leaving everything in trust for Becky. Maggie hadn’t known this until his death, and she’d never forget the outburst from Dennis at the reading of the will. Her heart already broken, his callous attitude had taken the last of her spirit. After that, she hadn’t really felt alive at all. She’d kept going for Becky’s sake, not her own.
Dennis had tried to break the will. It couldn’t be broken, but there were loopholes that would allow the administrator of the trust to sell stocks and bonds and reinvest them. Maggie could imagine what Dennis would do with that kind of control; in no time he’d have reduced Becky to poverty, robbed her of her inheritance.
As it was, Maggie was working long hours in a bookstore to make ends meet. She loved books, and the job was nice. But being without her daughter wasn’t. She prayed for the day when she could bring Becky home and not have to worry that Dennis might kidnap her if she was left with a sitter. It was a good thing that Maggie didn’t have a social life. But even in the days when her family had been wealthy and she’d had every advantage, she’d never cared for socializing. She’d kept to herself and avoided the fast crowds. She’d been much like Becky as a child—shy and introverted. She still was.
“I won’t have to live with Daddy, will I?” Becky asked suddenly, and the look in her big eyes was poignant.