A Little Town In Texas. Bethany Campbell

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A Little Town In Texas - Bethany  Campbell


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come home,” said the man on the porch. Slowly he came down the steps.

      Kitt had collected herself enough by now to look at him with her usual cool detachment. Ken Slattery was long and lean—well over six feet tall and all sinewy muscle. He was older than Nora by almost seventeen years, but an attractive man. His pale blue eyes looked sharp enough to count the tail feathers on high-flying hawk.

      Kitt recalled him from childhood, although she hadn’t known him well. The years had not much changed him. Oh, weather had lined his face more deeply, and his brownish hair was going gray at the sideburns, but the strongly boned face was the same. The biggest change was that he walked with a noticeable limp.

      “Little Kitt,” he said, “we’d started thinkin’ we needed to drive to Dallas and fetch you home ourselves.”

      He took her hand in welcome. His own was hard and callused, truly a cowboy’s hand. She realized that he wouldn’t embrace her or kiss her cheek. He had an air of reserve that bordered on shyness.

      “I’m sorry,” she said. “I missed my first flight, then they kept delaying the next one.”

      Nora took Kitt’s arm and led her toward the house. “Come on in, stranger. I didn’t make anything fancy for supper because I wasn’t sure when you’d get here. You didn’t even stop at the hotel?”

      “Nope,” Kitt said. “I made reservations ahead of time.” She glanced down the slope at the McKinneys’ house. “What’s happening? A party?”

      Nora shook her head. “Not really. Cal and his family are home. So it’s a gathering of the clan. You remember Tyler and Lynn and Cal?”

      Kitt stiffened. She remembered all of them, but most especially Cal. She hoped to God that he’d forgotten her.

      “They’re all married now,” Nora said as they climbed the stairs. “And they’re entertaining somebody you’ll want to meet.”

      Kitt looked at her questioningly. Nora gave her a knowing look. “Nick Belyle. The first lawyer that Brian Fabian sent down here. The one you want to meet. Now Fabian’s sending another lawyer—Nick’s brother.”

      “He’s already here,” Ken said from behind them.

      The two women stopped and looked at him in surprise. “What?” Nora asked. “Since when?” Kitt’s pulses inexplicably quickened.

      Ken nodded. “He’s at the hotel. Just got in about half an hour ago.”

      “How do you know?” Nora asked, looking puzzled.

      “Phone rang just when Kitt drove up,” Ken said laconically. “It was Cal. He said that Nick’s brother just checked into the hotel.”

      “Well, why didn’t you tell me?” Nora demanded.

      “By that time, you were out the door. A-weepin’ on your niece,” Ken said.

      Nora gave him a mock-angry look and pretended to jab him in the ribs with her elbow. He gave her a one-sided smile. Nora squeezed Kitt’s arm as Ken opened the door for them. “That’s coincidence, eh? You and he getting here the same day? Looks like the action’s about to begin.”

      Kitt only nodded. She thought it best not to mention her little adventure in the Dallas airport.

      They entered Ken and Nora’s living room, and Kitt was struck by how homey and right it seemed. The overstuffed chairs and sofa seemed to beckon one to sit down and sink into soft comfort. Family snapshots crowded the mantel, and the walls were lined with overflowing bookshelves. On the coffee table were a vase of golden carnations and the latest copy of Exclusive magazine.

      “Kind of spooky, isn’t it?” Nora mused. “How fast news travels? That people already know he’s here?—Nick’s brother—what’s his name?”

      Mel, thought Kitt, but said nothing.

      “Mel,” Ken supplied.

      “Come into the kitchen,” Nora invited Kitt. “Yes. Mel, that’s it. His ears should be burning, us all talking about him this way.”

      Kitt smiled weakly.

      BUT IF ANY EARS SHOULD have been burning, they were Kitt’s.

      Mel lay on the big four-poster bed in the West Gold Room of the Crystal Creek hotel. He was savoring, with sharp appetite, a smorgasbord of delicious details about Kitt Mitchell.

      “Now wait,” Mel said, “she was a homecoming attendant both years she was at this posh school in Dallas?”

      “Both years,” said DeJames, a grin in his voice. “Queen her senior year. And the Sweetheart of Phi Omega Phi.”

      “What in hell’s Phi Omega Phi?” Mel demanded.

      “The boys’ academic honor society. She was also editor of the high school paper.”

      “And star of the girls’ track team,” muttered Mel. The redhead was clearly an overachiever. Not normal, a driven person.

      DeJames said, “This is what they put under her picture in the yearbook. ‘Some girls break records. Some break hearts. Kitt Mitchell breaks both.’”

      “Cute,” Mel said sarcastically. “What else does it say?”

      “Most ambitious,” said DeJames. “And most likely to succeed.”

      Mel envisioned her, a fiery-tressed Scarlett O’Hara, conquering by sly charm. Consumed by ambition, a schemer to beware of—even back then. He intended to have the full goods on her. He said, “But how did she get from Podunk High in Crystal Creek to the Snob-brat School in Dallas? I thought her father was just a ranch hand.”

      “The Stobbart School,” DeJames corrected. “He was. And Stobbart was expensive. Very.”

      “Maybe a scholarship,” Mel muttered. For track. Or academics. Or for just being disgustingly over-talented.

      “Stobbart didn’t give scholarships,” DeJames said. “I haven’t figured out yet how she got there. I will. The school itself’s been closed eight years. But I was lucky—got a copy of one of its yearbooks with her in it.”

      Mel’s brow furrowed. “Yeah. How did you do that?”

      “Because,” drawled DeJames, “I am excellent at my work. And I also have mystical powers. You want me to fax that other stuff to you?”

      “Yeah, yeah,” Mel said. “Send it on.”

      DeJames had given him all the basic info on the redhead, where she’d gone to college, her job history, where she lived in New York, even who her last boyfriend had been, a writer who worked for Celebrity Magazine.

      Mel glanced at his watch. “You’re working late, aren’t you, DeJames?”

      “It’s how I’ll get to the top. My excellence. My mystical power. And my legendary tirelessness.”

      “Don’t forget your becoming modesty,” Mel gibed.

      “That, too. You want me to send this yearbook? I can get it there tomorrow by courier.”

      “Do that,” said Mel. “And keep digging. I want to get beneath this woman’s surface.”

      “I think you want to get beneath her skirt,” laughed DeJames.

      “It’s time for you to go home now, DeJames,” Mel said from between his teeth. “To that pitiful, empty thing you call your life.”

      “I happen to have a girlfriend who looks like Jada Pinkett Smith’s prettier sister. A steady girlfriend, Don Juan. You should try it sometime.”

      “Goodbye, DeJames,” Mel said and hung up.

      He sighed and rose from the bed. He’d kicked off his shoes and socks and was shirtless. He smacked his bare chest and padded to the window. It


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