Jezebel Koko Brown (best books to read non fiction txt) đ
- Author: Koko Brown
Book online «Jezebel Koko Brown (best books to read non fiction txt) đ». Author Koko Brown
âThatâs notpossible. My father was a God-fearing man. He would never take hisown life.â
Eyes narrowed, Dwyer rightedhimself. âIf I had a dime for every âGod-fearing personâwho ended themselves during the onset of the Depression, Iâd berich as J.D. Rockafella.â
âMy father isnâtâŠImean my father wasnât like most people,â Celesteinsisted. âYou seeââ
Dwyerslammed his arm down on the desk, fist upright. âNo, you seehere. Your father committed suicide.â His thumb shot out fromhis enclosed fist. âFor starter, there was no forced entry.âHis index and middle fingers followed. âYour father didnâthave any enemiesâŠhe was cash poor.â His ringer shadowedthe other three. âAnd we only found his fingerprints on thegun.â
Despite being slammed withthe cold hard facts, Celeste wasnât ready to give up. Even ifshe had to revisit her horrible childhood, the detective needed toknow heâd erred in his investigation.
Celeste leaned forward, asteady stream of questions sheâd prepared earlier on her lips. But she was forestalled when Dwyer picked up the police report andshoved it toward her.
âIf there isnâtanything else,â he said rather matter-of-fact, âI gottawrite up reports for a dozen other cases before I find my tail in asling.â
Celesteblinked. Was he sending her packing? But she had too manyquestions, which needed answering! A seasoned performer since the ageof fifteen, she possessed a skin rivaling an alligatorâs and astubbornness inherited from her father. And no taciturn, shady copperwould dispel her doubts or prevent her from discovering the truth.
âYou have to underââ
Dwyer cuther off, âGoodday,Miss Newsome.â
Dismissed not once, buttwice Celeste choked. As she struggled to regroup, he continued, âIhope you can find your way out.â
Even though Dwyer hadforgotten his manners, she had not, âThank you for your time,detective.â
Feeling as if in a fog, andsuddenly parched, Celeste pushed to her feet. With shaking fingers,she picked up her fatherâs police report and placed it in herpurse.
Barely cognizant of hersurroundings, Celeste retraced her path down three flights of stairsthrough memory alone. But by the time her feet hit the sidewalk, shewavered. Sweat beaded her upper lip and her hands were shakingviolently.
Celeste glanced up GoldStreet and the twenty-block walk south back to Fort Green suddenlyturned into an insurmountable exodus without reinforcements. Ofcourse, she could hail a cab, but by the time she got back to Trudyâsapartment she would probably be a wreck.
She stood on the curb anddeliberated a few seconds more then turned about and headed in theopposite direction. If she walked to the end of the block, turnedeast, sheâd run into Young Turks, a seedy cocktail loungelocated on the cusp of Fort Green. The bar had been a favorite diveof Armand Illy, a French Algerian trumpeter whoâd dragged herthere more times than she cared to remember because the placereminded him of home.
Celeste didnâtparticularly care for the placeâs red lighting, wood-paneledwalls and furniture. The latter was hell on the behind after a longbender. But the bartender was liberal with the sauce. And right nowshe needed a stiff one.
Whatabout her date with Shane? Celeste flipped her wrist and noted thetime. Only half past two, she still had time to spare.
Celesteput her feet in motion. One drink couldnât hurt.
CHAPTER Nine
Shanerefused to pace.
Even in street clothes, healways followed the fighterâs cardinal rule: never let youropponent see you sweat.
Shane rolled his shoulders,self-directed anger coursing through him. He had no one to blame, buthimself. What heâd done had been ungentlemanly. Heâdforced her hand and manipulated her just so he could see her again.And now he was warming a city corner alone and suffering from guilt.
The guilt wasnâtanything new, Shane conceded.
Ever since that night it hadbecome a constant companion, gnawing at his conscience.
It was also the primaryreason heâd wanted to meet Celeste outside his gym instead ofher fatherâs store.
Shane felt the familiar kickin the gut. Heâd practically been a regular at NewsomeâsSugar Sweets. Heâdoften pitched in as soda jerk when things got too busy for theReverend. Shane figured heâd spent just as many hours behindthe counter as he did at the Navy Yard Athletic Club.
Now he avoided the formerlike the plague.
Shaneâs balled hisfist. He deserved to burn in hell for what heâddone. CorrectionâŠfor what he didnât do. And now he wasonly adding to his sin by courting the Reverendâs daughter.
So why take the low roadnow? What was it about that broad? Why couldnât he be thebetter man and leave her alone? Because ever since he laid eyes onher all he could think about was sucking on those luscious lips ofhers, caressing her skin and licking from her delicate ear lobes toher toes.
With a muttered curse, Shanethrew in the towel. Notonly the round but the entire card belongedto her. Obviously,he and she werenât meant to be.
They were from two differentworlds. She was too refined for him, a famous showgirl who probablyhad egg and butter men vying for her attentions at every corner. Shane had moneyâheâd socked all of his prize money awayover the yearsâbut he didnât have the class that camewith it. Right now he wouldnât be surprised if she found dirtunder his nails.
âFace it kid, sheainât going to get off that pedestal for you.â Notcompletely, he mused. Oh, she might have fun slumming it, but broadslike that always remembered their place. And it wasnât withhim.
Shane scratched the back ofhis head. In all honesty heâd wished the circumstances weredifferent. This one had done a number on him.
Giving up his illusions andcursing a mad blue streak a
Comments (0)