Delores Fossen - Trace Evidence in Tarrant County

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Texas Ranger Sloan McKinney was hired to solve two different murders - with one eerily similar M.O. Sheriff Carley Matheson had her hands full: A sixteen-year-old unsolved murder and a strong hunch that the killer had resurfaced and struck again.As if things couldn't get any worse, the Texas Rangers had sent Sloan McKinney - the one man she'd always tried to keep at a distance - to spearhead the investigation. Now the only way to keep the citizens of Justice, Texas, safe - and solve two connected crimes - was to join forces.But someone resented Carley and Sloan digging up the past, and before long two of Texas's finest found themselves caught in the crosshairs of a murderer.

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“Were you?” Carley asked.

“Not on your life.”

“But your wife believed you were.”

“Stella often believes that,” he said as if choosing his words carefully. “And it’s because I’ve given her mountains of reasons to doubt me. Her doubt was misplaced this time, though. I wasn’t having an affair with Sarah. In fact, I hadn’t seen that girl in sixteen years.”

Not sure that she was buying this, Carley shrugged. “Then why did Sarah call you?”

“Probably to ask about my relationship with her mother. To try to make some sense of what’d happened.”

Off the top of her head, that was Carley’s guess, too. Sarah had apparently come to town to get a lot off her chest. “And what would you have told her about her mother if she’d asked?”

“I would have said that while I’ve done plenty of kissing, I refrain from the telling part.” He met her gaze. “It would have served no purpose for me to rehash the details of that affair. It was just that. An affair. It meant little or nothing to both Lou Ann and me.”

He was certainly convincing—about that part anyway. Partly because of that Texas charm that seemed to be ingrained in the McKinney males. Still, that didn’t make Jim innocent, and Carley couldn’t exclude him as a suspect.

“So why didn’t Stella tell you sooner that Sarah had called?” Carley continued.

“Like I said, she thought I was having an affair. Or on the verge of starting one. Stella wouldn’t have wanted to play messenger for something like that, so she likely decided to nip it in the bud.”

Carley tried to piece all of that together. “You told Zane that you were home the night Sarah was killed?”

He nodded. “I was. So was Stella.”

There was some hesitation in his voice when he spoke his wife’s name. It was the slightest pause that caused Carley to pounce on it. “You know for certain that Stella was home?”

More hesitation. But Jim still nodded. “Her bedroom door was shut, but the light was on. She was probably reading or watching TV.”

“You and your wife don’t share the same room?”

His face reddened a bit. “Not in a very long time.”

Some arrangement. And in this case it wasn’t a good arrangement for Jim McKinney since it essentially put his alibi in doubt. “So Stella can’t verify that you were home?”

“No. She didn’t see me. I guess a sheriff with a suspicious mind could always say that I sneaked out the window, walked clean across town and strangled a young woman that I had absolutely no reason to kill.”

Oh, Carley could think of a reason. “You could have killed Sarah because she knew you were her mother’s murderer.”

Jim bobbed his head and scratched his chin. “True. But I didn’t.” His gaze went back to hers. “Carley, I know you don’t think much of me. Hell, I don’t think much of myself, either. But in my way of seeing things, women are the most fascinating creatures on this earth. I’d rather bed one than hurt one. So, if you’re going to accuse me of a particular sin or crime, don’t make it the murder of a woman.”

The sound of the door must have snared Jim’s attention, because he turned in that direction. Carley saw the man’s grip tighten on his Stetson.

“Sloan,” Jim greeted. Some of his cocky ease evaporated. “I didn’t know you were back in town.”

“Just got in this morning. I’m taking over the murder investigation while Zane’s working with the grand jury.”

Jim cast an uneasy glance her way. Carley gave him back that same uneasy glance. “Then I guess I’m talking to the wrong lawman. I was giving Sheriff Matheson an account of some information I just learned.”

“Sarah apparently phoned your father the night she was murdered,” Carley provided. “According to him, your mother took the call, but she didn’t tell him about it until this morning.”

Sloan didn’t seem overly surprised. “Mom was jealous of Sarah.”

“Something like that,” Jim verified. “Even if I had gotten Sarah’s message, I wouldn’t have met up with her. Something like that would have gotten back to your mother, and I wouldn’t have wanted that.”

Sloan peered around the doorway at her. “Well, Sheriff? Do you have any more questions for him?”

“One,” Carley readily admitted. “Did you happen to take a shot at me at one o’clock this morning?”

Jim’s eyes widened considerably. “I’m not in the habit of shooting at people. Especially women. And I didn’t shoot at you.” He paused a heartbeat. “Any idea who did?”

“Nope. But I wouldn’t count on it staying that way. The truth has a way of turning up.”

“Not necessarily in Justice,” Jim mumbled before turning back to his son. “You’ll be staying at the house while you’re in town?”

“No. Since I’ll be working here pretty much night and day, I decided I’d crash at the Matheson Inn. I booked a room there.”

Carley was sure her own eyes did some widening. “Since when?”

“Since this morning.”

Good grief. No one ever told her anything. Here, Sloan had booked a room with one of her parents’ employees, and no one had thought it important to let her know that a Texas Ranger was going to be staying practically right next door to her.

There was another jingle of the brass bell, followed by footsteps. No cowboy boots this time. Those were dainty, almost delicate steps.

Carley couldn’t see their visitor, but judging from the looks of pure dread on both Sloan’s and Jim’s faces, this wouldn’t be a good encounter. Carley figured it was probably Donna Hendricks.

But Carley was wrong.

“Jim,” she heard the woman say. And Carley knew before she even turned around that it was Sloan’s mother, Stella.

Stella spared her son a glance before aiming those unapproving eyes at her husband. “Jim, what in the name of sweet heaven are you doing here?”

Jim lifted his shoulder. “I wanted to tell the sheriff about Sarah calling me.”

“Well, you shouldn’t have. You shouldn’t be here at all. Not without an attorney.”

Stella fanned herself as if she were about to faint. It wouldn’t be a first. Carley rarely saw the woman and yet she could recall two instances where she’d personally witnessed Stella pass out.

“Are you okay, Mrs. McKinney?” Carley asked.

“No. I’m not.” Stella turned to face Carley. “I feel horrible, yet I found it necessary to get out of bed and come here when I realized what Jim might be doing. I won’t have you harassing him like this, understand? We’ve been through enough because of you.”

Sloan stepped closer to his mother. “Mom, he came on his own accord.”

“Because he knew that Carley would find out about Sarah’s call sooner or later and then she’d have him hauled in here so she—”

“Speaking of Sarah…” Sloan interrupted. “What exactly did she say the night she called?”

Stella cast uneasy glances at all three of them. “I can’t remember.”

“Try, Mom,” Sloan insisted.

There was more gaze-dodging. Some fidgeting. But finally Stella answered. “She said she wanted to meet with my husband. I told her flat out no. I didn’t want Jim anywhere around that low-rent woman.” She looked at her husband. “We’re leaving now. I can’t breathe in this place. I need to get home so I can take my headache medicine.”

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