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A Texas Christmas. Diana PalmerЧитать онлайн книгу.

A Texas Christmas - Diana Palmer


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cleared his throat. Emotions were difficult for him, especially considering his job. “Yeah. Me, too.”

      She grinned. The smile faded as she searched his large, dark eyes. “Do you ever wonder about your mother’s past?”

      His eyebrows shot up. “What a question!” He frowned. “What do you mean?”

      “Do you know anything about her friends? About any male friends she had before she married your stepfather?”

      He shrugged. “Not really. She didn’t talk about her relationships. Well, I wasn’t old enough for her to confide in me, either, you know. She never was one to talk about intimate things,” he said quietly. “Not even about my real father. She said that he died, but she never talked about him. She was very young when I was born. She did say she’d done things she wanted forgiveness for, and she went to confession a lot.” He studied her closely. “You must have had some reason for asking me that.”

      She put her lips tightly together. “Something I overheard. I wasn’t supposed to be listening.”

      “Come on, tell me,” he said when she hesitated.

      “Cash Grier was having lunch with some fed. They were discussing Machado. The fed mentioned a woman named Dolores Ortíz who had some connection to General Machado when he lived in Mexico.”

      Chapter Two

      “Dolores Ortíz?” he asked, the paring knife poised in midair. “That was my mother’s maiden name.”

      “I know.”

      Rick frowned. “You mean my mother might have been romantically involved with Emilio Machado?”

      “I got that impression,” Barbara said, nodding. “But I wasn’t close enough to hear the entire conversation. I just got bits and pieces of it.”

      He pursed his lips. “Well, my father died around the time I was born, so it’s not impossible that she did meet Machado in Mexico. Although, it’s a big country.”

      “You lived in the state of Sonora,” she pointed out. “That’s where Machado had his truck farm, they said.”

      He finished skinning the tomato and reached for another one. “Wouldn’t that be a coincidence, if my mother actually knew him?”

      “Yes, it would.”

      “Well, it was a long time ago,” he said easily. “And she’s dead, and I never knew him. So what good would it do for them to dig up an old romance now?”

      “I have no idea. It bothered me, a little. I mean, you’re my son.”

      “Yes, I am.” He glanced at her. “I love it when people get all flustered and start babbling when you introduce me. You’re blonde and fair and I’m dark and obviously Hispanic.”

      “You’re gorgeous, my baby,” she teased. “I just wish women would stop crying on your shoulder about other men and start trying to marry you.”

      He sighed. “Chance would be a fine thing. I carry a gun!” he said with mock horror.

      She glowered at him. “All off-duty policemen carry guns.”

      “Yes, but I might shoot somebody accidentally, and it would get in the way if I tried to hug somebody.”

      “I gather that somebody female mentioned that?”

      He sighed and nodded. “A public defender,” he said. “She thought I was cute, but she doesn’t date men who carry. It’s a principle, she said. She hates guns.”

      “I hate guns, too, but I keep a shotgun in the closet in case I ever need to defend myself,” Barbara pointed out.

      “I’ll defend you.”

      “You work in San Antonio,” she said. “If you’re not here, I have to defend myself. By the time Hayes Carson could get to my place, I’d be … well, not in any good condition if somebody tried to harm me.”

      That had happened once, Rick recalled with anger. A man he’d arrested, after he’d been released, had gone after Rick’s adoptive mother for revenge. It was just chance that Hayes Carson had stopped by when he was off duty, in his unmarked truck, to ask her about catering an event. The ex-convict had piled out of his car and come right up on the porch with a drawn gun—in violation of parole—and banged on the door demanding that Barbara come outside. Hayes had come outside, disarmed him, cuffed him and taken him right to jail. The man was now serving another term in prison, for assault on a police officer, trespassing, attempted assault, possessing a firearm in violation of parole and resisting arrest. Barbara had testified at his trial. So had Hayes.

      Rick shook his head. “I hate having you in danger because of my job.”

      “It was only the one time,” she said, comforting him. “It could have been somebody who carried a grudge because their apple pie wasn’t served with ice cream or something.”

      He smiled. “Dream on. You even make the ice cream you serve with it. Your pies are out of this world.”

      “Don’t you have an in-house seminar coming up at work?” she asked.

      He nodded.

      “Why don’t you take a couple of pies back with you?”

      “That would be nice. Thank you.”

      “My pleasure.” She pursed her lips. “Does Gwen like apple pie?”

      He turned and stared at her. “Gwen is a colleague. I never, never date colleagues.”

      She sighed. “Okay.”

      He went back to work on the tomatoes. This could turn into a problem. His mother, well-meaning and loving, nevertheless was determined to get him married. That was one area in which he wanted to do his own prospecting. And never in this lifetime did he want to end up with someone like Gwen, who had two left feet and the dress sense of a Neanderthal woman. He laughed at the idea of her in bearskins carrying a spear. But he didn’t share the joke with his mother.

      When he went to work the next day, it was qualifying time on the firing range. Rick was a good shot, and he kept excellent care of his service weapon. But the testing was one of the things he really hated about police work.

      His lieutenant, Cal Hollister, could outshoot any man in the precinct. He scored a hundred percent regularly. Rick could usually manage in the nineties but never a perfect score. He always seemed to do the qualifying when the lieutenant was doing his, and his ego suffered.

      Today, Gwen Cassaway also showed up. Rick tried not to groan out loud. Gwen would drop her pistol, accidentally kill the lieutenant and Rick would be prosecuted for manslaughter …

      “Why are you groaning like that?” Hollister asked curtly as he checked the clip for his.45 in preparation for target shooting.

      “Just a stray thought, sir, nothing important.” His eyes went involuntarily to Gwen, who was also loading her own pistol.

      On the firing range, shooters wore eye protection and ear protection. They customarily loaded only six bullets into the clip of the automatic, and this was done at the time they got into position to fire. The pistol would be held at low or medium ready position, after being carefully drawn from its snapped holster for firing, with the safety on. The pistol, even unloaded, would never be pointed in any direction except that of the target and the trigger finger would never rest on the trigger. When in firing position, the safety would be released, and the shooter would fire at the target using either the Weaver, modified Weaver, or Isosceles shooting stance.

      One of the most difficult parts of shooting, and one of the most important to master, was trigger pull. The pressure exerted on the trigger had to be perfect in order to place a shot correctly. There were graphs on the firing range that helped participants check the efficiency of their trigger pull and help to improve it. Rick’s was improving. But his lieutenant consistently


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