"You want me to keep an eye on her?" Wade Sutton
pushed the café curtain aside and looked through the window
to the only street in Dry Creek, Montana. Clumps of melting
snow lined the rough asphalt road and the one vehicle in
sight was an old motorcycle leaning against the corner of
the hardware store. A tall, red-haired woman was walking
toward that store right now, swinging her arms as if she was
on some mission from God.
Wade grinned slightly as the edge of his hand pressed
against the cold window. It was a cloudy December day and
seeing the woman in her bulky, gray sweater and faded dress
made his heart beat faster. He liked a strong woman and he
could tell by the way she walked that she was a fine one.
Suddenly, a gust of wind blew the woman's skirt up to her
knees. She caught the material before it could go any
higher. Now, that was the problem with all the piety in this
small town, he thought. What was the point of a woman
wearing a dress if she didn't show more leg than that?
Wade leaned forward to see if the wind would blow again.
"Nice looking, isn't she?" Sheriff Carl Wall said, moving
the toothpick in his mouth. The two men were sitting in the
café with their empty breakfast plates on the table in front
of them. It was ten o'clock in the morning and the waitress
was back in the kitchen. No one else was around.
"She's a regular movie star." Wade let the curtain fall into
place and turned his attention to the other man. He knew the
woman couldn't be as pious as she looked. Not if the sheriff
had asked him to come up from Idaho Falls to watch her.
"What's her thing? Stolen property? Blackmail? Arson?"
Wade was ready to sink his teeth into a surveillance job.
Until six months ago, when he'd injured his leg while taking
down some drug dealers, he'd been the busiest independent
private investigator in the Rocky Mountain area. Now, no one
except his old friend here was willing to defy the doctors
and consider hiring him while he was still in physical therapy.
"Jasmine Hunter hasn't done anything," the sheriff said as
he leaned back. "In fact, she even agreed to be the angel in
the Christmas pageant this year, so she's real popular
around here."
Wade remembered those pageants. "Then she's just plain nuts."
The annual pageant was held in an old barn on the edge of
Dry Creek. The angel traditionally flew over the crowd with
the help of a pulley in the hayloft. Wade had been the last
kid allowed to swing as the angel. Now, it was always an adult.
"They've retired that leather pulley system you used.
The pageant committee put in a whole new rope and wheel job.
It's as safe as riding in an airplane."
Wade grunted. He'd take his chances with the old system; he
didn't trust anything designed by a committee. Either way,
it took nerve, though. Maybe that was why the sheriff had
asked him here. "You want me to keep an eye on your angel so
she doesn't skip town before the pageant? Is that it?"
"Very funny," the sheriff said without a smile as he leaned
forward slightly and lowered his voice. "The truth is, I'm
not worried about what she'll do, but what someone might do
to her—if you get my meaning."
Wade didn't have a clue as to his meaning. The sheriff's
square, homely face didn't give much away. Wade hadn't been
able to read Carl's face forty years ago when they were
boys, so he didn't know why the man thought he could do it now.
"Has she requested protection?" Wade finally asked. The
woman out there walking in the wind didn't look like she'd
welcome someone stepping into her business. "I don't think
anyone would attack an angel, especially not before Christmas."
"It's got nothing to do with the pageant. And no, she hasn't
asked for help. She's too proud. That's why you need to be
discreet, so she doesn't know you're keeping an eye on her."
Wade wondered what the angel was up to in her spare time.
"This better be good. What is it? Abusive husband? Witness
protection? What?"
Wade hoped it wasn't a domestic problem. The holidays
brought out the worst in some families. He should know. As a
boy, he never had a list for Santa Claus. All he wanted for
Christmas was a safe hiding place so he wouldn't meet up
with his grandfather's fists.
"There's no husband," the sheriff said as he leaned back
again. "Not even a boyfriend hanging around. It's just a
hunch I have."
The room was silent.
"That's it?" Wade finally asked to be sure he wasn't missing
something. It wasn't only a desire to get back to work that
brought him here. His savings were almost gone so he really
needed this job, but still—this was Carl. "I remember your
hunches. They didn't always pan out."
"This one's different." The sheriff crossed his beefy arms.
"You'll see."
Wade lifted an eyebrow. "Well, I hope you and your hunch are
going to be around to post bail when this woman hauls me to
court for following her around for no good reason. That's
what will happen, you know. She'll call me a stalker. Just
being worried is no excuse to put a tail on someone."
Wade didn' t have much, but he prided himself on being a
fierce defender of the law. He didn't take bribes, he didn't
look the other way and he sure didn't violate anyone's
rights by surveilling an innocent woman for no
reason—especially not one who was as good-looking as that
redhead. She wouldn't be the only one who would think he was
a stalker; he'd half believe it himself. Even Scrooge would
hesitate to put a tail on the Christmas angel.
"Now, don't go getting ahead of yourself. I'm not asking you
to follow her exactly. She's staying out at her
father's place—Elmer Maynard. You remember him? I just
thought you could keep an eye on her. There's no law against
seeing what's in front of your face."
"Elmer doesn't have a daughter." He remembered more than he
cared to about his days growing up in this small town. The
Maynards owned on the place next to his grandfather's farm
so he knew them well. The man didn't have any sons, either.
"It turns out Elmer had an affair back when we were kids.
Not that he knew anything about Jasmine until she showed up
in Dry Creek last fall, fully grown and cruising past forty."
So she was around his age, Wade thought in satisfaction. Of
course, that didn't mean anything. He made it a point never
to socialize with church women and he'd guess she was a
staunch one if she'd agreed to swing on that rope in the
pageant. Besides, he was here on business.
He went back to the sheriff's comment. "I bet the tongues
are still wagging over Elmer having a daughter."
Even as a boy, Wade knew how much Elmer and his wife wanted
children. Of course, Elmer's wife was dead now so she would
never know that her husband had a kid all along.
The sheriff shrugged. "People can only talk about things
like that for so long. By the time Jasmine found the three
men who might have been her father and figured out Elmer was
the one, well, people had sort of gotten used to her. And
Edith Hargrove stood up for her, which helped a lot. She's
Edith Nelson now that she married Charley, but I'm sure you
remember her."
"Of course, I remember her."
Who could forget Edith? She was a warrior. When he was six,
she had knocked on his grandfather's door and announced that
Wade belonged in Sunday school. His grandfather had been too
drunk to respond and Edith boldly took his silence for
agreement. Every week after that, she stopped by to pick
Wade up on her way to church. His grandfather never looked
happy about it, but he didn't stop her.
Once Wade got over the miracle of someone going against his
grandfather, he paid attention in church. For some strange
reason, Edith saw potential in him when no one else did. Of
course, he knew right from the start that he'd eventually
disappoint her. No one could make themselves believe
something they naturally didn't. Oh, he might have believed
in God back then, but—like now— he just couldn't believe
that God was of much use to anyone in this world. Frankly,
Wade didn't trust Him.
The sheriff grinned. "Edith is some woman."
Wade nodded. "She's a force of nature, all right."
However, with the state of his bank account, he didn't have
time to walk down memory lane.
"The problem is that you can't just pay me to follow someone
around," Wade said, bringing the conversation back to what
he needed to say. "Unless I'm in danger of getting shot, the
county won't want to sign the check. They keep the safe
stuff for their own people even if it means overtime."
Carl's face flushed. "About the money—the county doesn't
exactly have a budget that—"
"Aww, man." Wade looked across the table at the closest
thing he had to a friend. "You're joking, right? I drove all
the way up here and you're telling me there's no money to
pay for the job."
By now Carl's face was red, but he was sticking to his
request. "Hold on. There's money. It's just coming from the
city of Dry Creek instead of the county."
"When did Dry Creek become a city?" Wade glanced around in
bewilderment. This café hadn't been here when he was a boy.
Well, the building had been here, but it had been empty.
There might be a couple of more houses behind the hardware
store. And he heard they'd painted a mural on that old barn
outside of town, hoping to get some tourists. He supposed it
was progress, but— "It hasn't grown that much, has it?"
"We don't need to be big to have money."
"Enough to hire me?"
"Of course, you. We don't want a stranger poking around.
And, if you're here, you can spend a few days at your
grandfather's place. He's the only family you've got.
Besides, he's having a hard time and it's Christmas. It'd be
nice if you visited him."
Everything froze. Then Wade reached for his wallet. He'd pay
for his breakfast and be out of here. "Christmas is just
another date on the calendar as far as I'm concerned. If
going to see my grandfather is part of the deal, then Dry
Creek will have to find someone else."
"Now, don't be a fool," Carl said when he saw Wade's wallet.
"I'm paying for breakfast. I know how it is when you can't
work. And you're at least entitled to gas money for driving
up here."
The sheriff pulled a wad of bills out of his jacket pocket.
Wade hadn't seen that kind of cash in months. "Don't tell me
you carry that much money around. Is that the Dry Creek money?"
Carl flushed as he laid the well-worn bills on the table.
"We don't have a checking account yet."
A suspicion started growing in Wade's mind. Those bills
hadn't come fresh from a savings account, either. "Have you
ever done this before? Collected money to hire someone?"
Carl was quiet.
"Well, that really settles it. I don't take charity," Wade
said as he pushed back his chair. Pride was about all he had
left and those bills told the story. Someone had passed the
hat for him and he didn't like it. "You can tell everyone
that I'm doing just fine."
The two men glared at each other for a minute.
"You can tell them yourself," the sheriff finally said. "If
you're too stubborn to take honest work—"
"What's honest about it? I'm not going to follow some woman
around just so you can give me money and make me think I
earned it."
The sheriff's face softened. "It was either that or I'd have
to deliver a carload of casseroles to your front step. You
know the people around here help their own."
Just then the door to the café opened. Wade looked up and
saw the red-haired woman walk into the room. A leather bag
swung from her shoulder and the faint smell of some floral
perfume swirled around her. As she took a few steps, he
could see he'd underrated her looks. Her delicate porcelain
skin was rosy from the cold and her auburn hair curled
around her face, reminding him of a Botticelli angel with a
halo. No wonder the people here wanted her in the Christmas
pageant. She was like a picture in some museum.
And then she walked closer and he knew he was mistaken. She
was too alive for a museum. Or any celestial gathering if it
came to that. He'd never seen a woman like her. Her copper
hair was spiked instead of curled like he'd thought at
first. And her nose was slightly crooked. She wasn't the
angel at the top of a Christmas tree; she was the angel
who'd fallen just far enough off the top to be interesting
to a flesh-and-blood man like him.
It was a good thing he was sitting down, because he felt a
weakness in his knees. Suddenly, he wasn't so sure that he
hadn't hit his head in the fight six months ago. He felt a
little faint and his heart was acting up. But all he could
do was gawk at her like the boy he used to be when he'd
lived on the edge of this small town. That same feeling of
watching his dreams from afar would pass, of course, but it
annoyed him all the same. He didn't deal with dreams anymore
in his life.
Jasmine felt her breath catch. Who was that man? He stared
back at her for a few seconds before looking down at his
coffee cup. In the moment she met his eyes she could tell he
had something to hide. At least that's what it must be
because he went pale at the sight of her.
For a second, she wondered if he recognized her from prison.
She'd told the people around here that she'd spent time in
jail, but she didn't want someone from her past to come and
remind them of it. Not when she was trying to be a normal
woman instead of an ex-con.
She stood still as she looked at the man more closely. He
had a fine-looking face, one she was sure she would remember
if she'd seen it before. A dark growth of whiskers covered
his chin and his moss-green eyes studied the pattern in the
checkered tablecloth. His blue flannel shirt and jeans were
both well-worn, too, as though he spent a lot of time
outdoors. And he had a black Stetson hat sitting on the
chair next to him.