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  A ruthless killer. A relentless FBI man.

  Both after the same thing…

  One irresistible woman.

  READ

  JULIE

  GARWOOD’S

  ELECTRIFYING BESTSELLER

  HEARTBREAKER

  “Entertaining.”

  —USA Today

  “Heart-stopping.”

  —Port St. Lucie News (FL)

  “Riveting.”

  —Book Page

  Available from Pocket Books

  Acclaim for Julie Garwood’s

  New York Times bestselling

  Clayborne novel

  COME THE SPRING

  “What began so beautifully in For the Roses and continued with the Clayborne Brides series comes to a truly lovely conclusion in COME THE SPRING…. You’ll find it as hard as I did to say farewell to a family you have come to love like your own. Thank you, Ms. Garwood, for Mama Rose and her children.”

  —Kathe Robin, Romantic Times

  “Garwood does her usual superb job…. [A] fascinating tale of western romance and adventure.”

  —Abilene Reporter-News (TX)

  “The Rose series [is a] tremendous collection…. COME THE SPRING is as good if not better than the previous novels…. With its tremendous prose and building suspense, this book [is] a long-term literary classic.”

  —Harriet Klausner, America Online

  “Julie Garwood has become a trusted brand name in romantic fiction … [featuring] characters of the Old West, especially the ruggedly handsome gunslingers and the sassy, beautiful women who love them.”

  —People

  Also available from Simon & Schuster Audio

  Praise for Julie Garwood’s

  Clayborne Brides novels

  ONE PINK ROSE

  “[An] utterly charming little book….”

  —The Philadelphia Inquirer

  “Great dialogue…. Wonderful characters.”

  —Denver Rocky Mountain News

  ONE WHITE ROSE

  “As charming as For the Roses, as sweet and funny and

  sensual as anything Ms. Garwood has written…. A

  must-have book if you love the Claybornes.”

  —Romantic Times

  “Vintage Garwood, funny and tender, familiar yet new.”

  —Book Page

  ONE RED ROSE

  “Charming and heartwarming…. Garwood has a gift

  for sending our hearts soaring.”

  —Romantic Times

  “Absolute dynamite story…. A scrumptious romance,

  nonstop action, and delightful dialogue.”

  —Rendezvous

  These collected novels are also available from Simon & Schuster Audio

  Julie Garwood wins raves for

  her smash New York Times

  bestseller—a tour de force of

  passion and suspense

  HEARTBREAKER

  “Heartbreaker moves along at a racehorse pace, its plot swerving and darting with sudden turns and jolts…. Garwood’s characters are well-drawn.”

  —New York Post

  “Heartbreaker dances between suspense and romance.”

  —USA Today

  “Just when it looks like the ride is over, the action ratchets up again and doesn’t let up until the final shot has been fired.”

  —The Kansas City Star

  “Garwood has quite a flair for intrigue and suspense!”

  —Romantic Times

  “A heart-thumper.”

  —The Ottawa Citizen

  “Engrossing…. Addictive…. By turns explosive and unpredictable…. You cheer for the good guys and are glad when the bad guys get caught…. [Garwood] has found a niche for herself in contemporary romantic fiction.”

  —The Anniston Star (AL)

  A Main Selection of the Doubleday Book Club

  Books by Julie Garwood

  Gentle Warrior

  Rebellious Desire

  Honor’s Splendour

  The Lion’s Lady

  The Bride

  Guardian Angel

  The Gift

  The Prize

  The Secret

  Castles

  Saving Grace

  Prince Charming

  For the Roses

  The Wedding

  Come the Spring

  Ransom

  Heartbreaker

  Mercy

  The Clayborne Brides

  One Pink Rose

  One White Rose

  One Red Rose

  Published by POCKET BOOKS

  The sale of this book without Its cover Is unauthorized. If you purchased this book without a cover, you should be aware that It was reported to the publisher as “unsold and destroyed.” Neither the author nor the publisher has received payment for the sale of this “stripped book”

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  POCKET BOOKS, a division of Simon & Schuster, Inc.

  1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020

  www.SimonandSchuster.com

  Copyright © 1997 by Julie Garwood

  Originally published in hardcover in 1997 by Pocket Books

  All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever. For information address Pocket Books, 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020

  ISBN 13: 978-0-671-00334-0

  ISBN 10: 0-671-00334-8

  eISBN 13: 978-1-4391-4076-5

  First Pocket Books paperback printing October 1998

  16 15 14 13

  POCKET and colophon are registered trademarks of Simon & Schuster, Inc.

  For information regarding special discounts for bulk purchases,

  please contact Simon & Schuster Special Sales at 1-800-456-6798

  or [email protected]

  Front cover illustration by Lisa Litwack

  Photo credit: Darrell Gulin/Stone

  Printed in the U.S.A.

  For winter’s rains and ruins are over,

  And all the seasons of snows and sins;

  The days dividing lover and lover,

  The light that loses, the night that wins;

  And time remembered is grief forgotten,

  And frosts are slain and flowers begotten,

  And in green underwood and cover

  Blossom by blossom the spring begins.

  —From Atalanta in Calydon

  Algernon Charles Swinburne

  For my daughter, Elizabeth,

  who has the mind of a scientist, the heart of a saint,

  the determination of a champion,

  and the twinkle of a true Irishman.

  Oh, how you inspire me.

  Acknowledgments

  A special thanks to the following:

  To Jo Ann for keeping me accurate, focused, and on track … and for putting up with me.

  To my agent, Andrea Cirillo, and my editor, Linda Marrow, for believing in my dreams… and for never saying the word “impossible.”

  And, to all the readers who fell in love with the Claybornes and encouraged me to continue their story. Thank you, thank you, thank you.

  Part One

  For winter’s rains and ruins are over,

  And all the seasons of snows and sins;

  One

  But for the grace of God and an untied shoelace, she would have died with the others that day. She walked into the bank at precisely two forty-five in the afternoon to close her account, deliberately leaving the task until the last possible minute because it made
everything so final in her mind. There would be no going back. All of her possessions had been packed, and very soon now she would be leaving Rockford Falls, Montana, forever.

  Sherman MacCorkle, the bank president, would lock the doors in fifteen minutes. The lobby was filled with other procrastinators like herself, yet for all the customers, there were only two tellers working the windows instead of the usual three. Emmeline MacCorkle, Sherman’s daughter, was apparently still at home recovering from the influenza that had swept through the peaceful little town two weeks before.

  Malcolm Watterson’s line was shorter by three heads. He was a notorious gossip, though, and would surely ask her questions she wasn’t prepared to answer.

  Fortunately Franklin Carroll was working today, and she immediately took her place in the back of his line. He was quick, methodical, and never intruded into anyone’s personal affairs. He was also a friend. She had already told him good-bye after services last Sunday, but she had the sudden inclination to do so again.

  She hated waiting. Tapping her foot softly against the warped floorboards, she took her gloves off, then put them back on again. Each time she fidgeted, her purse, secured by a satin ribbon around her wrist, swung back and forth, back and forth, like a pendulum keeping perfect time to the ticktock of the clock hanging on the wall behind the tellers’ windows.

  The man in front of her took a step forward, but she stayed where she was, hoping to put some distance between them so that she wouldn’t have to smell the sour sweat mixed with the pungent odor of fried sausage emanating from his filthy clothes.

  The man to her left in Malcolm’s line smiled at her, letting her see the two missing teeth in the center of his grin. To discourage conversation, she gave him a quick nod and turned her gaze upward to the water stains on the ceiling.

  It was dank, musty, and horribly hot. She could feel the perspiration gathering at the nape of her neck and tugged on the collar of her starched blouse. Giving Franklin a sympathetic glance, she wondered how any of the employees could work all day in such a dark, gloomy, stifling tomb. She turned to the right and stared longingly at the three closed windows. Sunlight streaked through the finger-smudged glass, casting jagged splotches on the worn floorboards, and fragments of dust particles hung suspended in the stagnant air. If she had to wait much longer, she would incite Sherman MacCorkle’s anger by marching over to the windows and throwing all of them open. She gave up the idea as soon as it entered her mind because the president would only close them again and give her a stern lecture about bank security. Besides, she would lose her place in line.

  It was finally her turn. Hurrying forward, she stumbled and bumped her head against the glass of the teller’s window. Her shoe had come off. She shoved her foot back inside and felt the tongue coil under her toes. Behind the tellers, dour-faced Sherman MacCorkle’s door was open. He heard the commotion and looked up at her from his desk behind a glass partition. She gave him a weak smile before turning her attention to Franklin.

  “My shoelace came untied,” she said in an attempt to explain her clumsiness.

  He nodded sympathetically. “Are you all ready to leave?”

  “Just about,” she whispered so that Malcolm, the busybody, wouldn’t poke his nose into the conversation. He was already leaning toward Frank, and she knew he was itching to hear the particulars.

  “I’ll miss you,” Franklin blurted out.

  The confession brought a blush that stained his neck and cheeks. Franklin’s shyness was an endearing quality, and when the tall, deathly thin man swallowed, his oversized Adam’s apple bobbed noticeably. He was at least twenty years her senior, yet he acted like a young boy whenever he was near her.

  “I’m going to miss you too, Franklin.”

  “Are you going to close your account now?”

  She nodded as she pushed the folded papers through the arched, fist-sized opening. “I hope everything’s in order.”

  He busied himself with the paperwork, checking signatures and numbers, and then opened his cash drawer and began to count out the money.

  “Four hundred and two dollars is an awful lot of money to be carrying around.”

  “Yes, I know it is,” she agreed. “I’ll keep a close eye on it. Don’t worry.”

  She removed her gloves while he stacked the bills, and when he pushed the money through the opening, she stuffed it into her cloth purse and pulled the strings tight.

  Franklin cast his employer a furtive glance before leaning forward and pressing his forehead against the glass. “Church won’t be the same without you sitting in the pew in front of Mother and me. I wish you weren’t leaving. Mother would eventually warm up to you. I’m sure of it.”

  She reached through the opening and impulsively squeezed his hand. “In the short while that I have lived here, you have become such a good friend. I won’t ever forget your kindness to me.”

  “Will you write?”

  “Yes, of course I will.”

  “Send your letters to the bank so Mother won’t see them.”

  She smiled. “Yes, I’ll do that.”

  A discreet cough told her she’d lingered too long. She picked up her gloves and purse and turned around, searching for a spot out of the traffic where she could retie her shoelace. There was an empty desk in the alcove beyond the swinging gate that separated the customers from the employees. Lemont Morgan-staff usually sat there, but like Emmeline MacCorkle, he too was still recovering from the epidemic.

  She dragged her foot so she wouldn’t step out of her shoe again as she made her way across the lobby to the decrepit, scarred desk in front of the windows. Franklin had confided that MacCorkle had purchased all the furniture thirdhand from a printer’s shop. His thrifty nature had obviously compelled him to overlook the ink stains blotting the wood and the protruding splinters lying in wait for an uncautious finger.

  It was sinful the way MacCorkle treated his employees. She knew for a fact that he didn’t pay any of his loyal staff a fair wage, because poor Franklin lived a very modest life and could barely afford to keep his mother in the medicinal tonic she seemed to thrive on.

  She had a notion to go into MacCorkle’s brand-spanking-new office, with its shiny mahogany desk and matching file cabinets, and tell him what a cheapskate he was in hopes of shaming him into doing something about the deplorable conditions he forced his staff to endure, and she surely would have done just that if it hadn’t been for the possibility that MacCorkle would think Franklin had put her up to it. The president knew they were friends. No, she didn’t dare say a word, and so she settled on giving MacCorkle a look of pure disgust instead.

  It was a wasted effort; he was looking the other way. She promptly turned her back to him and pulled out the desk chair. Dropping her things down on the seat, she genuflected in as ladylike a fashion as she could and pushed her petticoats out of her way. She adjusted the tongue of her shoe, slipped her foot back inside, and quickly retied the stiff shoelace.

  The chore completed, she tried to stand up but stepped on her skirt instead and was jerked back to the floor, landing with a thud. Her purse and gloves spilled into her lap as the chair she’d bumped went flying backward on its rollers. It slammed into the wall, rolled back, and struck her shoulder. Embarrassed by her awkwardness, she peered over the top of the desk to see if anyone had noticed.

  There were three customers left at the tellers’ windows, all of them gaping in her direction. Franklin had only just finished filing her documents in the file cabinet behind him when she fell. He slammed the file drawer closed and started toward her with a worried frown on his face, but she smiled and waved him back. She was just about to tell him she was quite all right when the front door burst open with a bang.

  The clock chimed three o’clock. Seven men stormed inside and fanned out across the lobby. No one could mistake their intentions. Dark bandannas concealed the lower part of their faces, and their hats, worn low on their brows, shaded their eyes. As each man moved forward, he
drew his gun. The last one to enter spun around to pull the shades and bolt the door.

  Everyone in the bank froze except for Sherman MacCorkle, who rose up in his chair, a startled cry of alarm issuing through his pinched lips. Then Franklin screamed in a high-pitched soprano shriek that reverberated through the eerie silence.

  Like the others, she was too stunned to move. A wave of panic washed through her, constricting every muscle. She desperately tried to grasp control of her thoughts. Don’t panic … don’t panic… They can’t shoot us … They wouldn’t dare shoot us… The noise of gunfire… They want money, that’s all… If everyone cooperates, they won’t hurt us….

  Her logic didn’t help calm her racing heartbeat. They would take her four hundred dollars. And that was unacceptable. She couldn’t let them have the money… wouldn’t. But how could she stop them? She took the wad of bills out of her purse and frantically searched for a place to hide it. Think … think…. She leaned to the side and looked up at Franklin. He was staring at the robbers, but he must have felt her watching him for he tilted his head downward ever so slightly. It dawned on her then that the gunmen didn’t know she was there. She hesitated for the barest of seconds, her gaze intent on Franklin’s pale face, and then silently squeezed herself into the kneehole of the ancient desk. Quickly unbuttoning her blouse, she shoved the money under her chemise and flattened her hands against her chest.

  Oh, God, oh, God… One of them was walking toward the desk. She could hear his footsteps getting closer and closer. Her petticoats! They were spread out like a white flag of surrender. She frantically grabbed them and shoved them under her knees. Her heart pounded like a drum now, and she was terrified that all of them could hear the noise. If they didn’t spot her, they would leave her money alone.

  A blur of snakeskin boots, spurs rattling, passed within inches. The smell of peppermint trailed behind. The scent shocked her—children smelled like peppermint, not criminals. Don’t let him see me, she prayed. Please, God, don’t let him see me. She wanted to squeeze her eyes shut and disappear. She heard the shades being pulled down, sucking out the sunlight, and she was suddenly assaulted with the claustrophobic feeling that she was in a casket and the man was pushing the lid down on top of her.