Part 5 (2/2)

Oliver looked at him. ”What? Something to do with the deal?”

”I need to grease another wheel.” He raised his hands before Oliver could protest. ”It's almost a done deal. Just this one guy who could hold things up. No reason to get cheap now.”

”Except that I don't have it,” Oliver snapped.

Ace c.o.c.ked his head at him. ”Don't give me that c.r.a.p, Lancaster.” His gaze went to the car. ”What's another twenty-five grand to you?”

”Twenty-five grand.” He choked on the words.

”I promise that will be the last of it. h.e.l.l, we're in a position to make six mil. You're going to b.i.t.c.h about twenty-five lousy grand?”

Oliver glared at Ace, too angry to speak. ”If this deal doesn't go through and I find out that it was all a scam-”

”Please. I'm going to blow three million dollars for the measly hundred grand you've given me for the deal?”

”Two.”

”Two what?”

”Two hundred thousand dollars,” Oliver said, elongating each word.

”You want me to swing by your house and pick up the money?” Ace asked.

”No.” He hadn't meant the word to come out so sharply. ”I'll contact you when I get it.”

”Right,” Ace said, grinning, but there was a sour look in his eyes that Oliver didn't like. Once this deal went through Oliver was going to put as much distance as he could between himself and Ace Bonner.

AS CHANCE DROVE into White Sulphur Springs, he watched for Dixie's red Mustang. He couldn't imagine the kidnapper driving it. Or Dixie, for that matter. If she didn't want to be found, she would have ditched it for something less noticeable. Even if the kidnapping was bogus, by now she had to have realized that people were looking for her.

Chance told himself that this could be nothing more sinister than a power struggle between father and daughter. Bonner was definitely stubborn enough. And probably Dixie, too, from the sounds of it. Maybe Chance was overreacting. Maybe she wasn't in any kind of trouble. Her father, either.

But still, Chance couldn't shake the feeling that Bonner sincerely was afraid for his daughter. And with good reason.

Chance drove down the main drag, then started down side streets, wondering if he wasn't nuts. This felt like a wild-goose chase. Maybe there was no rhyme or reason for Dixie to zigzag across the state. No message. No game plan.

But as he was driving past a house known in these parts as the Castle, he saw something that made him pull up short.

When the Castle had been built in 1892, it was a stone mansion constructed out of local carved granite. The story was that the house had been built for the owner's soon-to-be wife, with no expense spared, including a bathtub.

As Chance remembered the story, the marriage didn't work out, bathtub and all. The Castle was now a museum. The story of past disappointments seemed to fit given that parked behind it was a bright red Mustang with Texas plates.

Chance pulled his pickup over across the street from the Castle and stared at the woman standing out front. No one else was around, the museum apparently closed.

He'd thought he wouldn't recognize her. Not after this many years. Dixie had looked nothing like her sister Rebecca. Rebecca had been pet.i.te and dainty, her blond hair a sleek cap that framed her perfect face.

This woman standing in front of the museum was as long-legged as a colt, and she was wearing a pair of form-fitting jeans that hugged her derriere. She had a slim waist that tapered up to nice broad shoulders that were only partially hidden by a wild dark mane of long curly hair.

The last time he'd seen Dixie Bonner she'd been twelve. Not even filled out. But she'd been tall for her age, slim and had this wild, dark, curly long hair...

He opened his pickup door and stepped out. She didn't turn as he started across the street, but he had the distinct impression that she knew he was here although she still seemed intent on studying the museum hours. Definitely not acting like a woman who'd been kidnapped or who feared for her life. More like a woman who had nothing more on her mind than a vacation.

The squeal of tires and the growl of an engine startled him. He turned in time to see a large black sedan come roaring up the street. For an instant he thought it might be teenagers acting up. But teens in these parts drove old pickups or clunker cars with primer paint and missing fenders-not what looked a whole lot like a full-size rental car.

The car came to a skidding stop in front of the museum between him and Dixie. The pa.s.senger side door flew open and a large man launched himself at Dixie.

No doubt she'd heard the car approach. She swung around almost as if she'd been expecting them. She caught the big man in the face with her shoulder bag and then kneed him in the groin. He dropped like a sack of Idaho potatoes, fell off the museum steps and into the s...o...b..nk where he floundered in pain.

The driver started to get out, but saw Chance come running across the street, gun drawn.

Horn blaring, the driver hit the gas, almost leaving his pa.s.senger who, covered with snow, limped hurriedly after the car. The big man barely managed to get in before the driver gunned the engine, the tires squealing as the car took the first corner and disappeared.

”Are you all right?” Chance asked, running up to her. If he'd doubted before that she was Dixie Bonner, he didn't now. Only a Bonner attracted trouble the way magnets attract tacks.

She glanced at his gun but other than that had no reaction, as if this was a daily occurrence, men trying to grab her off the street and others running up with loaded guns in their hands.

Her gaze skimmed over him. He saw he'd been wrong about her best feature. From her high school senior portrait he'd thought it was her high cheekbones. Now he couldn't decide if it was her big blue eyes fringed in dark lashes or her mouth, the full lips turned up at the corners in a perfect bow.

He was about to go with the mouth when she drawled, ”You certainly took your sweet time getting here, Chance Walker.”

Chapter Five

”Excuse me?”

Dixie took Chance Walker in as if he were a cool drink of water. What she'd loved about him when she was twelve were the same things that Rebecca had tried to change about him. Chance had always been rough around edges.

Montana, it seemed, had made him more so. She saw that he'd aged, but wonderfully, like a good leather couch. There were fine lines around his eyes, but his brown eyes were softer somehow as if life had humbled him over the years and yet at the same time made him stronger.

”Excuse me?” he repeated with a shake of his head. ”I believe 'thank you' would be the appropriate response since I just saved your scrawny behind.”

”My behind is definitely not not scrawny,” she said. ”And it's debatable just how much help you were.” scrawny,” she said. ”And it's debatable just how much help you were.”

His grin brought it all back. Chance Walker was just as Dixie had remembered him. Obstinate, arrogant and positively the best-looking man she'd ever seen at the age of twelve.

She'd had the the worst crush on him and could still recall the horrible ache she'd felt whenever he was around. He'd treated her like the kid she was at the time. That hadn't made it hurt any less. worst crush on him and could still recall the horrible ache she'd felt whenever he was around. He'd treated her like the kid she was at the time. That hadn't made it hurt any less.

”Right. That was genius the way you waited in front of a castle for them,” he snapped.

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