“Where are we going?” Gracie asks, still draped over me, her green eyes flaring with excitement as she gazes down at me.
“Canning invited us out for lunch.” Invited may not be the right word. “He wants to talk about your dad’s case.”
Instant suspicion fills Gracie’s gaze. She hesitates. “Kristian thinks Canning might be involved in this cover-up.”
“Kristian thinks the stray cat six doors down might be involved,” I mutter, though I shouldn’t be surprised by the agent’s suspicion. I wondered the same thing. “When did he tell you that?”
“Last night.” Her fingertips skate over my chest, outlining my muscles. “I want to meet Canning. See what he has to say. Then I can decide for myself.”
“If Klein thinks Canning is involved, then we shouldn’t be going out there.”
“We have to. If we don’t, he’ll be suspicious. He can’t know that Kristian suspects him.”
I sigh. She’s right. Still, if that’s the case, then bringing Gracie out there to meet him is probably a bad idea. “He’s going to see through you in five seconds flat.”
“What are you implying?”
I give her a pointed look, only to earn a scathing glare in return. “Maybe you should call Klein, then, and let him know.” Let him tell her it’s a bad idea and earn her wrath.
“So he can tell us to not go?” She scoffs.
Exactly.
“So . . . when are we leaving?”
I sigh. “Within the hour.”
“I need to shower.” She peels herself off me. “Come on, get up.”
“I am up.” I chuckle.
Gracie peers over her shoulder at me, her intense gaze trailing the length of my body, studying me like a cat studies its prized mouse. She bites her bottom lip and I swell in response.
I don’t think she expects me to move as fast as I do, because she lets out a playful squeal as I reach for her, flipping her onto her back, and fit my body to settle between her thighs.
* * *
“How much does a police chief make, anyway?” Gracie mutters, staring up at the impressive gateway that we pass underneath; stone pillars hold up an ironwork archway with a metal sign that reads “Three Lakes Ranch.”
“Not this much.” We coast up the winding path, in awe of the sprawling two-story rectangular house ahead of us, an inviting row of blue rocking chairs set out on the porch to overlook the lake in front. Beyond the house and to the left is a barn designed to match the house. Horses graze off to the side.
“Do you trust Canning?”
“I don’t know if I trust anyone, anymore,” I admit. “Except you.”
I feel her eyes on my profile and it instantly brings me back to this morning, to her body pressed against me, her heart pounding in her chest, her breathing fast and heavy. Her skin slick in all the right places.
Not the time to be thinking about that.
I throw my Cherokee in park. “Remember, Gracie . . .”
She rolls her eyes. “Do you honestly think he doesn’t already know that the FBI suspects him?”
“Maybe he does. But if he doesn’t, he’s not going to find out from us.” I climb out of the driver’s seat.
Two sheepdogs come galloping around the house, and a moment later, the screen door creaks open and George Canning steps out, smoothing his button-down shirt over a round, hard belly. The loud thwack it makes when it releases to slam shut echoes, earning a few horse neighs from nearby.
“He looks so . . . harmless.” Gracie eyes him as we meet around the front of the truck, a potted plant for Dolores within her grasp.
Canning eases down the front stairs and makes his way toward us at a leisurely pace, but I sense the extra time isn’t so much on account of his slowness with age as it is his chance to do some assessing of his own, his shrewd, calculating gaze never leaving us. “I’m so glad you came!” He sticks a hand out.
“Thank you for the invitation, sir.”
“And this lovely young lady must be Grace Wilkes. Wait, it’s something else now?”
“Richards.”
“Right.” The corners of his eyes crinkle with his smile. “My, you’ve grown up! You look like the perfect mix of your parents, don’t you?”
“I guess?” Gracie says in an even voice.
“Why of course you do! I remember your mother, at the funeral. Pretty little thing.” His brow tightens. “Silas told me about her affliction. I hope she’s finally on the mend.”
Affliction. That’s a polite term for it.
Gracie offers a tight smile. “We have a long road ahead, but she’s doing better.”
I slip my hand over Gracie’s back, a gesture of comfort.
The move doesn’t go unnoticed by Canning’s ever-watchful eyes.
“So, how are you likin’ Austin, Grace?”
“It’s been . . . eventful so far.”
He chuckles. “I’ll bet. And you.” He turns to me. “Sounds like you’ve been doing a bit of drivin’.”
“Yes, sir.”
His eyes flash to Gracie, and then back to me, a knowing twinkle in them. “Come on. Dolores has been busy in the kitchen all mornin’.”
“We hope she didn’t go to any trouble on our account.”
He waves it off. “Heavens no, son! No trouble at all. Dolores lives for feedin’ folk until their bellies are ready to explode. I’m living proof.” He pats his round belly.
We trail him along the stone walkway that wraps around the house, Gracie walking so close to me that her arm nudges my side with almost every step. “You have a beautiful home,” she finally offers, her overly polite voice sounding so foreign that I can’t help but grin at her.
I get an elbow to the ribs in return.
Canning chuckles in that easy way of his. “Oh, this is my wife’s house. I just take up space here.”
We round the corner to the back, where three young children clamber over a play set.
“Hope y’all don’t mind the noise, but we’re watching the young’ns. My sons and their wives are down in Louisiana with our thoroughbreds. They live just over there.” George waves a hand toward what I assume is his property—rolling hills and trees as far as the eye can see, along with two imposing houses, one to the far left, the other to the far right.
“You have a lot of land,” Gracie notes.
He leads us to a covered seating area with plush wicker furniture. “Yes, ma’am. It’s been in Dolores’s family for generations. We had a house in Austin for some years, ’til it was time to move out here full-time. Her great-granddaddy was big into racin’. Her daddy was hopin’ I’d follow suit, and I might have, had the city stopped beggin’ me to stay on. My sons, though, they got the racin’ gene in their blood, so they run the show. I’m here for the pretty view.”
The back porch door creaks. “George! Why didn’t you tell me they were here!” Dolores—who looks every bit the well-bred Southern woman, right down to the paisley apron that covers her white silk blouse and creamy pleated pants—strolls through the sliding door carrying a silver tray. “Noah! It’s so nice to see you again. And so soon!”
“Good day, ma’am.” I push the chairs aside to make room for her to set the tray down. It holds a pitcher of sweet tea and three already-filled glasses, along with a small basket covered in a tea towel. “We brought you pansies. Thought you might like them for your windowsill.”
“Well, how thoughtful of you. That Jackie sure did raise you right.”
I gesture toward Gracie to make introductions.
“It’s so nice to meet you. Why, aren’t you just the most stunning little thing!”
I brace myself for Gracie’s coarse response to being called a “little thing.”
“Likewise, ma’am.” The genuine smile plastered across Gracie’s mesmerizing face has me breathing a sigh of relief.
“Call me Dolores. Welcome to our home. I was bakin’ biscuits for the children, so they’re just hot from the oven.” She pulls the tea towel off the bowl to reveal the golden, round treats. Canning reaches for one and she promptly smacks his hand away. “George Archibald Canning! Now you heard what the doctor said about your diet!”