Royce nodded sharply.
Alec waited, his curiosity growing.
“Right,” said Royce, fingers drumming against the leather arm of the chair. He drew a breath. “Here it is then. We’re being blackmailed.” He paused. “It’s Stephanie.”
“What did she do?” Dope a horse? Fix a competition?
Royce scowled. “She didn’t
Right. Stupid conclusion. Alec tried another tactic. “Who’s blackmailing you?”
“I’d rather not say.”
“Okay…” Alec wasn’t sure where to go with that.
“It’s the biggest drain on the cattle ranch’s account.”
At least that explained why Amber thought Alec ought to know.
“How much are we talking about?” he asked.
“A hundred thousand a month.”
“A
Royce’s expression was grim as he nodded.
Alec straightened in his armchair. “How long has this been going on?”
“At least a decade.”
“
“I know.”
“You’ve spent
Royce rocked to his feet, shoulders square, hands balled.
“Must be one hell of a secret.”
Royce twisted round to glower at Alec.
“Sorry. None of my business,” said Alec.
Still, he couldn’t help sifting through the possibilities in his mind. Was there a shady business deal in their past? Did the family fortune originate from an unsavory source? Gambling? Bootlegging?
“You won’t figure it out,” said Royce.
“I might.”
“Not this. And I don’t want you snooping around.”
“I won’t snoop,” Alec agreed. He’d respect his client’s wishes. “But I might think.”
Royce gazed at the silent screen where an elevenish Stephanie was taking yet another spill. “Suppose you can’t stop a man from thinking.”
“No, you can’t.”
“Aw, hell.” Royce heaved a sigh and sat back down.
Alec gave him a moment. “How bad can it be?”
Royce scoffed out a harsh laugh. “My father was a murderer and my mother was adulterous.” He paused. “We’re being blackmailed by her lover’s brother. The lover was also the murder victim.” Another pause, and Royce’s voice went lower. “
Alec’s brain filled in the blank. “And Stephanie is your half sister.”
Royce drew back sharply, his expression confirming the truth.
Alec shrugged. “That’s the only possibility worth twelve million dollars.”
“She’s
“You can’t keep paying him forever.”
“Oh, yes, we can.” Royce grasped the back of his neck. “My grandfather paid until he died. Then McQuestin paid. I took over a couple months ago.”
Though it went beyond the bounds of his contract, Alec felt an obligation to be honest. “What are you going to do when he ups his price?”
It was obvious from Royce’s expression that he hadn’t considered that possibility.
“You’ll eventually have to tell her, Royce.”
Royce shook his head. “Not if we stop him.”
“And how are you planning to accomplish that?”
“I don’t know.” Royce paused. “Got any ideas?”
Two
Last night’s cookhouse burger hadn’t measured up to Royce’s talents, but it had filled Stephanie’s hunger gap. And at least she’d avoided one more screening of
It was one thing to show that bloopers reel to friends and family, but to strangers? Business associates? She was busy trying to get Alec to take her seriously, and Royce was making her look like a klutz.
Nice guy her brother.
She opened the wooden gate to Rosie-Jo’s stall in the center section of the main horse barn and led the mare inside. The vet had given the horse a clean bill of health, and they’d had a great practice session this morning. Rosie had eagerly sailed over every jump.
Stephanie peeled off her leather gloves, removed Rosie’s bridle and unclipped the lead rope, reaching through the gate to coil it on the hook outside the stall. She selected a mud brush from the tack box and stroked it over Rosie’s withers and barrel, removing the lingering dirt and sweat from the mare’s dapple gray coat.
“How’d it go?” Wesley’s voice carried through the cavernous barn. His boot heels echoed as he crossed from Rockfire’s stall to Rosie-Jo’s. He tipped back his Stetson and rested his arms on the top rail of the gate.
“Good,” Stephanie answered, continuing the brush strokes.
Though she didn’t look up, a shimmer of anticipation tightened her stomach. The barn was mostly empty, the grooms outside with other horses and students. She hadn’t talked to Wesley since their aborted kiss two days ago. If he wanted to try again, this would be the opportunity.
“Hesitation’s gone,” she added. “You tacking up?”
Wesley nodded. “Rockfire’s ready to go. Tina has them changing up the jump pattern for us.”
Stephanie gave Rosie-Jo’s coat a final stroke. Normally she’d do a more thorough job, but she could always come back later. For now, she wanted to give Wesley another chance. Meet him halfway, as it were.
She replaced the brush, dusted her hands off on the back of her blue jeans and started across the stall to where he was leaning over the rail. Suddenly shy, she found she couldn’t meet his eyes. Was she being too blatant, too obvious? Should she make it a little harder for him to make his move?
It wasn’t like she was experienced at this. Ryder Ranch was a long way off the beaten track. She’d never had a serious romantic relationship, and it had been months-she didn’t want to count how many-since she’d even had a date.
She came to a stop, the slated gate a barrier between them. When she dared look at his face, his lips were parted. There was an anticipatory gleam in his blue eyes. And his head began to tilt to one side.
Should she lean in or let him take the lead?
“Am I interrupting anything?” It was Alec’s voice all over again, and his footfalls rapped along the corridor floor.
Wesley’s hands squeezed down on the gate rail, frustration replacing the anticipation in his eyes.
“Is this some kind of a joke?” he rasped for Stephanie’s ears only.
She didn’t know what to say. Alec seemed to have a knack for bad timing.
“I’m sorry,” she whispered to Wesley.
“Not as sorry as I am.”
She turned to face Alec. “Can I
“I hope so.” He stopped. After a silent beat, he glanced meaningfully at Wesley.
Wesley glared at him for a moment then smacked his hand down on the rail. “Time for practice,” he declared