just go see about those brownies,â Catherine murmured. âCome on, Blossom. Iâll bet we could find you a dog biscuit.â
âCome in.â Ursula stepped back from the door to allow Mac inside.
He handed her the cellophane-wrapped bundles. âFor you.â
Ursula gathered the three, no, four bouquets in her arms. âThank you, but why are you bringing me flowers?â
âI want to apologize.â Actually, from the pained expression on his face, the last thing he wanted was to apologize, but he was doing it anyway. This should be good.
âCome with me.â Ursula led him through the maze of tables and power cords littering the living room.
âWhatâs going on?â
âA quilt retreat. Twice a year, Catherine and a dozen or so of her friends reserve the whole inn and spend the weekend sewing. Itâs a lot of fun.â
âDo you quilt?â
âI dabble, but Iâm not a serious quilter like these ladies. My job is to keep everyone fed and happy.â Ursula gestured for him to sit on the couch near the fireplace and laid the flowers in a basket on the coffee table. She sat in a chair directly across from him and leaned forward. âOkay, shoot.â
âShoot what?â
âThe apology. You said you wanted to apologize. Iâm ready.â
He chuckled. âYouâre not making this easy.â
âWell, Iâm curious exactly what youâre apologizing for. Blocking access to the ski trails without giving me notice? Siccing your dog on me? Threatening to have me arrested for trespassing? If it involves this many flowers, it must be serious.â
âActually, none of those things. Well, all those things, but theyâre not the main reason Iâm here.â He took a long breath. âI was rude to you yesterday because I blamed you for something of which Iâve since learned you were innocent.â
She raised an eyebrow. âSay again?â
âYesterday. When I found your note that you had the dog.â He explained, and as he talked, Ursula started to smile. By the time heâd finished, she was laughing out loud.
âYou really thought Iâd sneaked into your house and kidnapped your dog just so I could bug you about the right-of-way.â She shook her head. âYou have some imagination.â
âOccupational hazard, I suppose.â
âWhat occupation is that?â
âIâm a writer.â
âAre you? Thatâs exciting. What do you write?â
âThrillers.â
âAh. I donât read a lot of those. Too scary. I would have thought growing up on a ranch, youâd write Westerns.â
Mac shook his head. âNo. Growing up on a ranch means I know too much to write pretty little stories about cowboys.â
âThat bad?â
âNo.â He paused and just for a moment his gaze went past her toward some remembered place. âRather wonderful actually. It was losing the ranch that was hard. My dad never really got over it. He died young. They both did.â He gave a sudden smile. âBut I didnât come to talk about myself. I came to say Iâm sorry.â
âI accept your apology.â
âGood. Well then, if I can find my dog, Iâll let you get back to what you were doing.â
âIâll get her.â She gathered up the bouquets before starting for the kitchen. âThank you for the flowers. Theyâre lovely.â
âIâm glad you like them. Thank you for delivering the eagle and picking up the fencing wire. And for your patience.â
âYouâre welcome. See you around.â Before she could get to the kitchen, the door opened and Blossom ran past her to Mac.
Catherine followed, carrying a tray. âMac, take one of these brownies before you go. Ursula made them. Sheâs a fantastic cook.â
âYes, I know.â Mac nodded before accepting a brownie and taking his leave.
Ursula carried the flowers into the kitchen. She was on a step stool, retrieving vases from the highest shelves when Catherine bustled in. âSo what was that all about?â
Ursula grabbed a ceramic jar and set it on the counter before answering. âYou mean you werenât standing in the kitchen with your ear pressed against the door?â
âI was but he didnât talk loud enough. Spill. Why are good-looking men bringing you bucket loads of flowers?â
Ursula shrugged. âIt was one man and who knows why he does what he does?â
âSo you admit heâs good-looking.â
âHe is. Heâs also my new neighbor.â
âMaybe he wants to be more than your neighbor.â
âJust the opposite, I think.â Ursula stepped down. âHeâs bribing me to leave him alone.â
âIf that were true, wouldnât he have brought a cactus?â
Ursula laughed and filled the vases with water. âHeâs as prickly as a cactus, but it seems his overachieving conscience wonât let him get away with being rude. Thus, the flowers. Now that heâs apologized, he can go back to brooding in his cave.â
âWeâll see.â
âYes, we will.â Ursula trimmed the stems of one bouquet, stuffed it into a vase, fluffed the flowers and handed the arrangement to Catherine. âHere, you can put these out for your quilters to enjoy.â
* * *
IT DIDNâT TAKE long for the locksmith to do his thing. Once heâd gone, Mac made sure the deadbolts were latched and slipped the new keys onto his key ring. The leather fob had worn to the point that it was hard to read the M stamped onto it. Another of Andiâs craft projects, back before she realized leather came from cows.
Mac picked up his phone and dialed the familiar number. He was in luck. Detective Russ Ralston was in.
âItâs Mac. Just checking in to see if youâve found any new evidence.â
âSorry, nothing.â He sounded almost as frustrated as Mac felt.
âHave you checked out that tip fromâ?â
âYou know I canât share details. Rest assured, weâre following up every lead. That reward you offered has generated plenty of interest. So far none of the calls have panned out, but weâre still working on it. We wonât give up until we find him.â
Mac believed him. Russ was a longtime acquaintance and had a daughter two years younger than Andi. He was taking Andiâs murder as a personal affront. Not that Mac was relying entirely on police resources. The private investigator heâd hired was canvassing everyone even remotely connected to Joel Thaine, Andiâs boyfriend.
Mac never liked him. The first time they met, there was something...off about the young man. Nothing he could put a finger on, just the feeling Thaine was playing a part, saying what he was supposed to say to his girlfriendâs