Chapter One
S
uzy Fenton went to the sheriffs office in Harmony, Nevada, at eight o’clock in the morning. Rain pelted the windows of the cement building and splashed off the gutter. Shoulders squared, heart hammering, she stood in front of the lawman’s large, old-fashioned oak desk, which was flanked by an American flag, while water dripped from the hem of her trench coat and made a puddle on the old, worn floorboards. What she was going to say was not easy. And it was liable to shock and anger the usually affable sheriff. But it had. to be said. The time had come. She’d waited long enough.
“Sheriff,” she said, “I quit.” She held up her hand, palm forward so she could continue uninterrupted. “I know what you’re going to say. You need me. I’m indispensable. But nobody’s indispensable. And there are certain circumstances beyond my control. I have to think of my future. Now more than ever. So I’m tendering my resignation.” With a flourish, she pulled a damp sheet of paper from the plastic folder under her
arm and laid it on his desk. Then she collapsed into the vinyl chair that faced the desk, heaved a huge sigh of relief and closed her eyes.
Now, if only she could get up the nerve to make that speech when her boss, Sheriff Brady Wilson, was sitting behind the desk, she could be on her way. After he’d found a replacement, of course. She’d never leave him high and dry. But it wouldn’t be that hard to find somebody to take her place. Under his bluff and bluster, he was the perfect boss. Understanding, appreciative, goodnatured and downright charming when he chose to be.
Except when he was in the middle of a difficult case. Which wasn’t very often. The most dastardly crimes he ever came across were poaching on nearby ranchland, brawls in the saloon and boundary disputes.
A few minutes later Brady came storming into the office, shaking his thick brown hair like a wet terrier and tossing his raincoat in the direction of the coatrack.
“Good.” he said, dispensing with a formal greeting. “You’re here early. Get your coat off. We’ve got work to do.”
Slowly she got to her feet, and slowly hung her coat next to his, watching him out of the corner of her eye as his brow furrowed and he dropped like a stone into his swivel chair. The loud snap as he unlatched his briefcase split the air like the crack of a bullet. Was this the right time? she asked herself. Or was there no such thing as the right time to tell him? Just when she got her courage up, he was in some kind of black mood.
“What’s wrong?” she asked.
“This. This is what’s wrong,” he said shoving a paper across the desk in her direction. “Somebody’s running
against me. Now—a month before the election. Can he do that?”
“He can do it under Nevada law, if the election is previously uncontested and he files within thirty days.”
“How do you know these things?”
Suzy pointed to a thick black book of statutes on the top shelf behind his desk. “It’s all in there.”
Brady nodded, trusting her as he always did for her knowledge of the rules and regulations. She reached for the flyer, printed on,slick paper, and gazed into the earnest eyes of the young man pictured there. When she’d scanned his list of credentials, she realized Brady was going to have to fight for his job for the first time in his law enforcement career.
“Darryl Staples. Is this the guy who bought the Car-stairs Ranch? Who made a fortune in discount furniture stores? Who’s got more money than he knows what to do with? What does he want to be sheriff for?”
“Some kind of ego trip, probably. The damned carpetbagger. He’s not even from Nevada.”
“Neither are you,” she pointed out.
He raised his eyebrows and glared at her. “I’ll remind you I’ve lived here for five years. That I didn’t inflate property values by buying a huge working ranch so I could play at being a cowboy. And I didn’t set out to buy myself a job so I could play at being sheriff.”
“You did buy property, though.”
“A barn on five acres. You call that property?”
“It’s a beautiful barn,” she said. He’d turned the barn into a living space with a loft and huge windows that showed a view of the jagged mountains in the distance.
“And it’s all mine. I thought the job was mine, too. For as long as I wanted it. There’s never been a runoff
for sheriff in the history of Harmony, has there?” he asked.
“Not that I can remember.” She picked up the flyer and studied the face of Brady’s rival. “Not bad looking,” she said. “Is he married?”
“I don’t know. Who cares?” Brady said yanking the paper from Suzy’s hands. “Do you?”
“As a matter of fact...” This was her chance. The perfect opportunity to explain her situation. Anyone else, whose mind wasn’t always on his job, would have realized why she asked. And why she couldn’t stay any longer. Anyone else would have guessed she was going to quit one of these days. But just as she was about to give her speech, the phone rang and Brady answered it.
“Yeah, I know about it. But he doesn’t have a chance. Nobody knows him... Yeah... He does...? He is...? Yeah, okay, I will. Now, today. Thanks.”
Brady slammed the receiver down, stood and paced back and forth in front of the window while Suzy waited for him to speak.
“That was Hal,” he said. “He says Staples is planning to win this election. He wants to make a contribution to his new hometown. He couldn’t contribute to the new library fund or build a community center? He has to have my job?” Before Suzy could respond, Brady continued. “He’s married, for your information. So now I have to compete against somebody with a wife who’s no doubt raising kids and baking cookies.” The scorn dripping from his voice told her what he thought about
that
kind of wife. The very kind of wife Suzy would love to be. He shifted his gaze back to her.
“Well, don’t just stand there, get busy,” he said. “Order brochures and signs. Call the radio station, price TV ads.”
“How are you going to pay for TV ads?” she asked. “You have about $250 in your campaign fund. Enough for some signs and mailers.”
“Fund-raisers. Set up some fund-raisers, you know, spaghetti dinners and coffees. People pay $100,000 to have dinner with the president. How much would they pay to have dinner with the sheriff?”
“At least $5.00,” she suggested. “Maybe $7.50.”
He grinned at her in spite of his bad mood. “That much? I was afraid I’d have to pay
them.
In the meantime I’ve got a stack of Wanted posters that came in off the fax last night. How do they expect me to be sheriff and run for sheriff at the same time?” He shook his head. “Thank God I’ve got you, Suzy. Whatever fortune Staples has I wouldn’t trade it for a secretary like you. You’re worth your weight in gold. What is your weight anyway—115, 120?” He let his gaze roam over all 128 pounds of her generous curves and her steely resolve to quit melted like the snow in the Sierra Nevadas.
Whatever fortune Staples had, he didn’t have a chance with the voters, especially the female voters, when Brady turned on the charm. She knew it, she recognized it and, fortunately, she was immune to it. Because Brady Wilson was a confirmed bachelor. Divorced once, he had no intention of ever marrying again. He’d made it clear to everybody, especially the women who’d initially set their caps for him when he first came to town.
“Save it for the voters,” she said, referring to the appreciative gleam in his dark eyes. Ignoring his question about her weight, she quickly walked into the small office adjoining his before she found herself offering to empty her pockets to bankroll his reelection. That’s how
persuasive he could be. That’s why she dreaded telling him she was going to quit.
She sat at her desk at stared at the walls. Unlike Brady’s, which were hung with official pictures of the president and the attorney general, awards and presentations, Suzy’s walls were covered with pictures of her small son Travis. Travis, with his happy grin, his blond tousled hair. Travis, whose father had deserted them before he was even born, needed a stay-at-home mom. Looking at the, pictures of her and Travis at his birthday party, Travis in a Halloween costume, Travis with his teddy bear, made her heart swell with love and gave her courage. She’d do it. She’d tell Brady today.
Right after she ordered the signs and posters saying Brady Wilson, the People’s Friend. A Man of His Word. She picked up the telephone just as a howl of outrage filled the entire building. Dropping the receiver, she skidded across the floor and opened the door to Brady’s office. He was standing behind his desk, holding her letter of resignation in front of him.
“What does this mean?” he demanded. Only minutes ago he’d looked at her with warmth and appreciation, now there was anger, indignation and disbelief in those same mahogany eyes.
“I can explain,” she began. Here it was, her opportunity to tell him. She couldn’t back down now. “I...I can’t work for you anymore.” Her mind went blank. She couldn’t remember the rest of her speech, something about the future, and circumstances...what else?
“What do you need, a vacation? After the election you can take all the time you need. A raise? I’ll go to the town council and get you one,” he said.
“No...I—”
“Then what?”
“I need a husband.”
“A husband? What the hell for?” he asked, rocking back on his heels.
“So I can stay home with Travis. My mother’s leaving Harmony. Going to live with her sister in Vegas. I’ll be left with no one to baby-sit for me.”
“Find somebody else.”
“I don’t want somebody else taking care of my baby. I want to take care of him myself.”
“Bring him to work with you.”
Suzy grimaced. Now she remembered why she dreaded telling Brady. When he wanted something, he wouldn’t take no for an answer. She didn’t know why she was worried about his losing the race for sheriff. In the face of this kind of determination, the furniture king didn’t have a chance.
“Brady...I can’t bring a one-year-old toddler to this office. He’s just learning to walk now and into everything. He wouldn’t be happy here, and I couldn’t get any work done and neither could you.”
“Okay, okay. We’ll think of something else.” His forehead was knotted into a frown as he paced back and forth in front of his desk. Suddenly he looked at Suzy. “Who are you going to marry?” he asked.
“I don’t know. That’s why I’m quitting,” she said earnestly. Finally he was listening. “I have to find a job where I’ll meet eligible men.”
Brady grabbed Suzy by the shoulders and pinned her with his dark eyes. “Let me get this straight. You want to stay home and take care of the kid. So you’re quitting your job to get married. Am I right so far?”
She nodded.
“But you don’t have anyone to marry, so you’re getting
another
job.”
“One where I’ll meet eligible men instead of drunks, scofflaws and deadbeats.”
“And what might that be?”
“Well, I thought I’d waitress at the diner,” she said, watching his face turn red and his jaw fall open.
“The diner? You’d quit a responsible, well-paying job working for me to be a waitress? I don’t get it. It doesn’t make sense.”
“I can explain if you’ll just listen to me. You eat at the diner, don’t you?” she asked.
“Sure.”
“And so does every other bachelor for miles around. If they don’t come in for dinner, they come in on the weekends. Not only them, but every tourist and every—”
“Ax murderer, psychopath and gunslinger. What are you looking for, anyway?” Brady asked.
“Just a decent guy for once. One who will stay around. Somebody who likes kids, obviously. Is that too much to ask for?”
“Of course not. Not for you. You deserve all that and more. You deserve the best. After the campaign’s over you can take time off whenever you need it. In fact, I’ll even baby-sit for you while you go out on dates. How’s that?” he said with a satisfied smile.
“Thank you. That’s great. But I’m not going to have any dates, because I don’t know any eligible men. That’s why I need to quit.”
“So you can spend all day at the diner. As someone who spends a lot of time there, I’m here to tell you you’re wrong about the place. Tell you what, let’s go get a cup of coffee right now, and I’ll show you what I mean. If you notice one single eligible man who’s good enough for you, I’ll let you go now, today. But if
you agree that nobody there meets your standards, you’ll stay through the election.” He held out his hand. “Deal?”
“But it’s raining,” she said clasping her hands together.
“All the more reason for the guys to hang out in the diner. They can’t work outside.” He grabbed her hands, shook both of them, then draped her coat over her shoulders. “Come on.”
They ran the half block to Main Street, dodging puddles and just escaping another downpour, and stepped inside the steamy interior of the café where the smell of bacon and eggs, toast and coffee filled the air. Suzy’s stomach grumbled. What with dressing and feeding Travis before she dropped him off at her mother’s this morning, she hadn’t had time for breakfast.