slowly pulled away from the curb and drove off. Not exactly the hallmark of a person trying to avoid being seen, but then, maybe heâd wanted her to see him, wanted her to know he was watching.
Goose bumps prickled her flesh at the thought that it might be the same man who had so viciously slashed her tires. Worse, she finally realized where sheâd seen him before. She couldâve sworn that it was one of the Monroes sitting in the driverâs seat. One of Jebâs sons. At least thatâs what she suspected. She couldnât be certain, but she knew she had seen him in the courtroom during the trial, sitting with the other family members and looking nervous, as if he were on trial himself.
She heaved a sigh and turned back to her ruined tires, frowning at how the rubber had been shredded with such savagery, and wrapped her arms around her torso, suddenly cold in spite of the summer heat.
âI gotta go.â
Tomâs announcement was so abrupt, Elle started at the sound of his voice. She cleared her heart from her throat with a cough before asking, âEverything okay?â
âThat was Gabe,â he explained. âHe wants us to come back to the hospital. Something about Jeb Monroe paying him a visit.â
She nodded and headed for his Tahoe. âOkay, then. Letâs go.â
âBy us I meant us Dawsons,â Tom called after her. âI wasnâtââ
She whirled around to face him, cutting him off. âIâm not letting you Dawson boys sideline me just because I donât have a badge,â she snapped. âI was there yesterday, Tom. Remember? And itâs because of me that Gabe is lying in that hospital bed now.â
Tom gave her a sympathetic look. âWe put our lives on the line every day, Elle,â he told her. âWe knew the risks when we chose this career. You canât blame yourself for what happened to Gabe.â
âIâm not blaming myself,â she insisted. âIâm stating the facts. And hereâs another fact for youâIâm going to nail that bastard Jeb Monroe to the wall when we prove heâs behind this.â
* * *
Jeb Monroe slid the sharpening stone slowly along the blade of his hunting knife, studying the gleaming edge of the steel, searching for any pits that needed to be ground out. It was the fourth such knife heâd sharpened that day. And it was completely unnecessaryâhe kept his weapons in immaculate condition, as his father had taught him. But it helped relieve the ache that had settled in the center of his chest.
Mark is dead.
The horrible truth echoed over and over again in the cavernous depth of his soul. His eldest son. His right hand. The man who wouldâve inherited the farmland that had been passed down in their family since the first Monroes had settled there over two hundred years before.
He heaved a sorrowful sigh. He had three other sons who would be eager to carry on the family name, the family legacy. But they werenât Mark. Werenât his courageous, brave boy whoâd been willing to give his life in the fight for freedom against a tyrannical government.
The hole his absence left could never be filled. But Jeb was damned well going to try. The first steps toward filling that hole had already been put in place with his visit to that bastard Gabe Dawson.
The arrogant pretty boy had thought he was untouchable because of who his father was. But Mark had proved otherwise. Now that little shit was scared. Jeb had seen it in his eyes. Heâd seen that look before, in the eyes of other men whoâd looked into the face of death and had seen their sins staring back at them. Gabe Dawson was no different. And the pretty little whore who had prosecuted his son Derrick would pay her own price. Heâd sent his son Jeremy to deliver that message.
Jeb slid the stone down the edge of the blade again, the soft scraping oddly comforting.
Oh yes, theyâd