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“You think Jenna would have married Zeke, if he wasn’t one of the B&B Bascoms?” Patrick blurted out. He kept his voice low. His twin also had bear hearing.
“In a heartbeat. It’s a bonus that he’s independently wealthy. Zeke is what you would call well integrated into the Yakima Ridge community. He’s made himself responsible for the Yakima Ridge Internet. He’s being trained by the fire department. He is not homesick for Colorado. And he does not regret his marriage. I don’t know what’s wrong with you, boy. If I didn’t know you better, I’d think you were jealous of your brother.”
“I just want to be sure that Zeke isn’t going to be left high and dry.”
“Open your eyes, Pat, Zeke’s on top of the world. He’s busy. Madly in love with his wife. His lovely, loving wife. And those kids of his make sure he has no time to brood.”
“That’s another thing, Gil. Triplets. What the devil did he have to go marrying a bear for? Triplets! I ask you.”
“If you’ve never gone frolicking in the woods with your mate, in bear, you haven’t lived. I recommend it.”
“Not you too, Uncle Gil?” Shock throbbed in Patrick’s voice.
Gilbert Bascom just smiled reminiscently. Pat was unprepared for his frontal attack. “You have some explaining to do. What the hell did you want to stir up those blamed Duprés for?”
“You asked me to distribute that money Great-Granddaddy Clive left his love child,” Pat reminded him.
“I told you to think of a way to benefit the residents of French Town with that money,” Gil snapped. “Not to start World War III.”
“You emailed me Clive’s letter. I read it. He wanted his illegitimate daughter to have six million dollars. Shirley Foster Dupré Miller is dead. She had a son by Solomon Dupré, which makes the Duprés her heirs. I reasoned that they ought to get Clive’s money.”
Gilbert’s big broad face was red. A muscle twitched in his jaw. It took a lot to rile the older man, but Patrick seemed to have managed it. “Those Duprés are troublemakers and thieves,” Gil said through his teeth.
Patrick sighed. “I found that out for myself.”
“Shirley is dead,” Gilbert’s voice rose in exasperation. “The woman married twice. She didn’t leave any descendants – just stepchildren and step-grandchildren – from two marriages. Who have already had this whole town in an uproar squabbling over her estate – such as it was. Clive’s letter isn’t legally binding. It’s not a part of his will. We can do what we please with that money. There was absolutely no reason for you to start the Duprés fighting with the Millers again.”
“Setting up a charitable foundation is contrary to Clive’s intentions.” Patrick tried to get Gil to see reason. “He wanted his child to have that money. I didn’t tell those Duprés to start a family feud. I presented them with a carefully prepared distribution of assets. How was I supposed to know that they would respond with some damned incestuous infighting? I swear to God, Uncle Gil, the whole boiling lot of them are so damned inbred they don’t have three wits between them.”
“Bobby Dupré isn’t as slow as he makes out. Mind you, he’s cunning and close-fisted. But that’s exactly why I asked you to come up with a plan.” Gil pounded on the table with one big fist. “I didn’t expect that you would breeze into town while Deb and I were in Maine, and set off a bomb on Yakima Ridge. Deb wants this matter resolved, pronto. And what Deb wants, Deb gets. Do you understand me, nephew?”
As far as Patrick was concerned, his Uncle Gilbert had lost his mind when he had met and married Debbie Benoit. But Gil seemed happy with his choice, and since Gil had been more of a father to him than his own daddy, he didn’t want to argue with him. He held up a big hand. “If I say I’m sorry, and I’m working to fix this, can we be friends?”
“Gilbert leaned back in his chair and nodded. “So long as you fix it so Deb and Uncle Pierre are happy, I’m happy.”
“Yes, sir.”
“Exactly what happened in Syria, boy?” Gilbert touched the scar peeking out from Patrick’s sleeve.
“I caught a little shrapnel,” Capt. Patrick Bascom of the Colorado National Guard said dismissively. “I got off lightly. I spent a lot of my time writing letters home to folks who would never see their kids again.”
Gil’s big broad face sobered. “Well, I’m glad to see you back in one piece. But you must figure this business out. This town doesn’t need any more hard feelings. I know you acted for what you thought was the best, but did you ever think that maybe Clive was trying to make mischief with that money?”
“Why would he do that?” objected Patrick.
Zeke came in with sandwiches and coffee. He snorted. “You look at how Clive treated Laura. Do you think he was trying to be fair when put it in his will that she had to marry and have a child in order to keep the Double B?”
Patrick shook his head. Clive’s will had been a shock to their entire family. Laura was his and Zeke’s second or maybe third cousin, but they thought of her as a sister.
“Laura went to work on that ranch the second she left college,” Zeke continued. “She turned the Double B into the success it is today. And I don’t know if you’re aware of how important she has made the Bascom stud in the Quarter horse world?”
“She’s done okay,” Patrick said.
Zeke glared at his twin. “No, Patrick, Laura has not done okay. She’s accomplished a flipping miracle. Before Laura took it over, the stud was just Clive’s expensive hobby. A money pit. She single-handedly turned it into a money-making business that has the respect of every breeder of Quarter horses in America. Not bad for ten years’ work. And how did Clive reward her for devoting her life to his interests?”
“He left her only a life interest if she doesn’t marry and have a kid,” Pat said sullenly.
“He sure did. And worse than that, he left the reversion to those two useless brats Piper and Nolan. You think that wasn’t malice?”
Piper and Nolan Belington were second or maybe third cousins from another branch of their complicated family. Clive’s many marriages had made for a sprawling family tree.
“Maybe Clive just wanted to see her married and having some kids. Having a more normal life,” Pat suggested.
Gil made a rude noise. “Do you think Clive was demonstrating his respect for you when he stipulated that you, Cal and Zeke had to quit the military if you wanted to claim your inheritance?”
“No. But he always made his feelings about us doing our military service very plain. I told Clive, and Zeke told him, that he could keep his goddamn money.” Patrick suppressed his anger at the from-the-grave attempt to control him.
“If it wasn’t for Laura,” Gil continued, “You and Zeke would’ve been cut off without a plugged nickel. And you wouldn’t have kept your job with B&B, and neither would Calvin. Even though you’ve worked for B&B since you got out of law school. It wasn’t in Laura’s own interest to withdraw her challenge to Clive’s will, but if she hadn’t, you would have had to resign from the Guard.”
“I know. I know. And I’m grateful to her. But the old man had a right to leave his money anyway he saw fit. I just never thought the old bastard had so many lost children.” Patrick threw the words at Gil.
Gil sipped his coffee. “Your Great-Granddaddy Clive had a woman in every town. He married four times – that we know of. Had a heap of mistresses. As far as I know, Shirley Foster was his child. And he left her and her mother high and dry when he left French Town.”
“That was long before he made his fortune,” Patrick felt obliged to point out.
Gil’s brows met. “What difference does that make? Clive abandoned Lila with a bun in the oven.” He drank coffee. “Did you know that young man Laura has helping her at the stud is yet another Bascom? And I wouldn’t be surprised if the lawyers turn up some others. If Clive had wanted to take care of Shirley, he should have done it when she was born. What sort of a life do you think Lila Foster had bringing up an illegitimate kid in French Town?”
r /> Zeke chipped in. “I don’t see how Shirley’s stepkids are entitled to Clive’s money. Well, except for Amber and Heather Dupré. Those two girls looked after her right up until her death.”
Heather Dupré had cornered Patrick right after he had had a long shouting match with the head of the clan. Bobby Dupré had used up his patience and his goodwill. Strangely, he had not found Heather more than passable when they had spoken, although she was irresistible in bear. He had told her in no uncertain terms that he was no longer willing to hand out money to any but Shirley’s legitimate descendants. She had slunk away without another word.
“If you felt like that, Gil, why didn’t you deal with that money yourself?” Patrick argued.
“Because I thought I could trust you to set up a foundation. This town could use a little injection of cash into community projects.”
“You mean like Zeke paying for that clinic in Hanover?”
“Yes. Like Zeke paying to keep the Hanover Free Clinic open.”
“The whole fucking community has their hands in his pocket,” Patrick said in exasperation.
“You think I have a better use for my money than seeing that kids get vaccinated, and women get prenatal care?” Zeke’s voice was genial, but his eyes were stern.
Patrick bit his tongue before he could voice his suspicions that Jenna had married his twin for his money. “I know I screwed up,” he conceded. “But how was I to know that Shirley Foster Dupré Miller left no issue? I was told she had a kid with her first husband.”
“You might have asked Jenna,” Zeke said mildly.
“I figured that I could trust the Duprés to know who they were related to,” Patrick muttered. “Bobby Dupré gave me a list.”
Gilbert began to laugh. “Bobby Dupré is notorious for his underhanded ways. You can’t trust him as far as you can fling him. Debbie’s sons have never forgiven me for getting him to fix her driveway.”
“It looks good,” Patrick said, thinking of the smooth black top and crisp cement curbs. “Well built. What’s wrong with it?”
“Oh, the workmanship is good, I’ll give him that. But Lenny and Joey resent that Bobby charged me extra for a rush job and took a bonus too. Bobby is some sort of cousin to the Benoits – I never figured exactly how.”
Patrick nodded. The inhabitants of Yakima Ridge were all inbred as far as he could make out. He wondered how he could bring the conversation back to Heather Dupré.
“Anyway,” Gil went on, “Bobby Dupré broke some unspoken kinship rules when he overcharged his Aunt Debbie. Didn’t matter that I paid. He made money on the deal, but it permanently tarnished his reputation with the rest of the clan. You made no friends in French Town when you passed over the Millers to offer Clive’s money to the Duprés.”
“I thought that Bobby Dupré was the son of Shirley’s son. I know she and Solomon Dupré had a boy.”
“They did. But Shirley’s son died in Korea. Bobby is the son of one of Shirley’s stepsons. If he told you different – well, son, you got to expect a liar to lie.”
The entire situation made his head ache. Patrick drank his coffee while Gilbert and Zeke tried to explain the relationship between the Millers and the Duprés. He couldn’t follow the convoluted tale, but he tuned in again when Zeke said, “If you ask me, the only ones who deserve that money are those two girls. Shirley left them everything she owned.”
Gil nodded. “They looked after Shirley for five years. According to Deb, they bought her groceries and paid the electricity bill without a lick of help from either the Millers or the Duprés. On what they earn at the hardware store. Which can’t be much.
“Those girls thought they would come into a little money and the house when Shirley died. Come to find out that the old lady had signed power of attorney over to Bobby Dupré and transferred her house to him too. She didn’t have spit to leave.”
“That’s what Jenna told me,” Zeke confirmed. “Amber and Heather were brought up by Marlene and Bobby after their mother died or disappeared. As soon as they graduated from high school, Bobby and Marlene moved them into Shirley’s house and had them take care of her. She had Alzheimer’s by the sound of it, and needed looking after.”
That explained why Heather Dupré had asked him when she could expect her money. He had probably been rude to her. But her name had not appeared on Bobby’s list. Shift on a stick. This whole business was a real can of worms. And he had complicated matters even more by sleeping with the woman. But at least he now had an excuse to visit her.
CHAPTER THREE
His phone rang as soon as Gilbert had left. Jeremy Bascom’s voice buzzed in his ear.
“I guess I could fly back to Colorado, Dad, if you think it’s necessary.”
“I do,” Jeremy insisted. “Laura is thinking of marrying her new stable hand. A fellow she barely knows. Your Uncle Freddie is delighted, of course. Freddie always was a fool. Steve Holden is just a fortune hunter. Laura deserves better. You need to talk some sense into her, or put the fear of God into that gigolo.”
Freddie was Jeremy and Gil’s age, and one of Clive’s grandsons, but their great-grandmothers had been different. But he and Zeke had grown up thinking of Freddie Bascom as an uncle. In fact, Patrick was a lot closer to Freddie than to his own father.
As soon as Gil had told him that Holden was one of Clive’s lost heirs, Pat had known there would be trouble. Not content with his own share, Holden was after Laura’s too. “I’ll do my best.”
“I have enough on my plate, the way Diana is acting,” Jeremy said.
Patrick sighed. His father was ditching his stepmother. Again. Since his mom had died, he had had four or was it five stepmothers? “Just let her have whatever she wants, Dad,” he said wearily.
Jeremy forgot all about Laura and began to argue his case. Patrick shut up and listened. This was why he never, ever wanted to get married. It was too damned messy.
He said goodbye to Zeke and was on his way to the airport in an hour. Laura’s troubles would have to take precedence over sorting out the mess with the Duprés and the Millers. Anyway, if he had to offer money to his one-afternoon stand, he preferred to do it after a cooling off period. He did not recognize the crazy feelings Heather had stirred in him. But he was damned if he would be tricked as Gilbert and Zeke had been.
* * *
“Did you hear that Uncle Bobby filed a lawsuit against the Bascoms?” Amber rolled her eyes.
Heather tried to smile. “Nope,” she said as cheerfully as she could. She kept filing sandpaper in the right cubbyholes. She didn’t know much, but she had heard that Patrick Bascom had left town the very day he had loved and left her.
Bobby Dupré’s lawsuits were legendary in French Town. But Heather no longer found them amusing. Not after the way he had cheated her and Amber. Aunt Debbie, who had been Judge Robichaud’s clerk before she married Gilbert Bascom, had told them that while Bobby’s scheme was dishonest, the paperwork Grandma Shirley had signed had made it perfectly legal.
She and Amber had loved Grandma Shirley – she hoped they would have taken care of her without any reward, but it hurt that Uncle Bobby had made fools of her and Amber. In five years, he had not said word one about owning Grandma Shirley’s house. Nor had he stepped up to help with the bills.
That was Uncle Bobby all over. Everyone said she and Amber should be grateful that he and Aunt Marlene had taken them in after her Mamma passed. But they didn’t know what it was like growing up with the burden of gratitude for the crumbs they had been spared in that house. And with Uncle Bobby all too happy to use his fists when they complained.
Amber broke in on her brooding. She was crowing. “I bet Uncle Bobby doesn’t get anywhere. He thinks he’s so smart, but for all he’s a surly beast, Patrick Bascom is nobody’s fool. Remember how he treated you?”
Only every minute of every day. “I didn’t exactly follow all he had to say. I swear, Amber, that fella doesn’t use a two-cent word if he’s got a twenty-dollar one han
dy. But he wiped the floor with me. Told me that money was in his discretion and he would see to it that I didn’t get a penny.”
Heather had returned from her confrontation with Patrick in a temper. As far as she could make out, Patrick had money from Shirley’s daddy that was supposed to go to her. Or, since Grandma Shirley had passed, to her heirs. If that didn’t mean her and Amber, who could it mean? Shirley had filled out the form from the store in her own handwriting, and she had put down Heather and Amber as the ones to get her money and her house.
But Patrick Bascom was a big city lawyer. If he said she and Amber didn’t get squat, there wasn’t much point in trying to fight him. She didn’t know if she was happy that Bobby was bound to lose his lawsuit, or sorry that Patrick would win. That mannerless son-of-a-bear was no sort of a man at all. Not like his brother Zeke, who was every bit as fine a man as her cousins Gideon and Asher Bascom. Her bear had plumb let her down.
* * *
Patrick was catching up on his paperwork in the living room of the Big House that his Uncle Freddie and Cousin Laura shared on the Double B. The side door opened and he heard Laura talking to a man. He sprang up as they came into the room.
“Hey,” Laura said happily. “I didn’t know you were coming, Pat.” She moved towards him with her hands out. “How’s it going?”
Patrick deliberately set down the papers he had been going through and laid his pen on top. He gave her a tight hug, evaluating her companion over the top of her head. He might have been looking in a mirror. Holden’s big square jaw and dark brown eyes were the mates of his own.
“I heard you were thinking of getting married,” he said directly. “I came to meet your bridegroom.”
Laura flinched. “This is Steve Holden,” she said softly. She showed Pat a rock the size of a marble. “We’re going to get married.”
Patrick took her left hand in his and moved it from side to side as he examined the diamond. His eyes went to Steve. “Nice stone,” he said levelly. “Did you pay for it yourself, Lauralee?”