The Jade Garden (The Barrington Patch Book 2) Emmy Ellis (top books of all time .TXT) đ
- Author: Emmy Ellis
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âYeah, well, I donât want anyone upsetting you. Goes against the grain, that.â
She prepared herself to climb the fence again then remembered she could unbolt the gate from this side. She did that and walked into the alley, heading for Jasonâs car. Sheâd get him to drop her around the front to pick her own up, then sheâd drive to the squat, set Brettâs clothing and the towels on fire, and go home to chat to Mam. Itâd mean waking her if she wasnât up waiting for Cassie, but it couldnât be helped.
Mam was really her right hand, not Jason, she just kept in the background so he could play the big man. Cassie needed reassurance that sheâd handled this okay, plus she wanted to know whether Mam thought Zhang Wei would be a problem in the future. She knew him better than Cassie.
It had been a long-arsed night, and she longed for her bed, a bit of normality, but that wasnât in her immediate future. That was the problem with running the Barrington. Sometimes, you forgot to actually live your life.
Chapter Twelve
Francis stared at her daughter from her comfy chair in the living roomâwell, Lennyâs favourite chairâa glass of whiskey close to hand, the ice long melted. Sheâd been drinking during the evenings since Lenny had died, it helped her to sleep, but tonight, with Cassie coming home so late, insomnia had taken over the alcoholâs strength, muscling in. As far as Cassie was aware, Francis only had the one nightcap. What she didnât know wouldnât hurt her, and it was only to get Francis through this difficult time.
She sighed now the telling of Cassieâs update had come to an end. It seemed Cassie couldnât see the woods for the trees, yet there was a loud alarm blaring in Francisâ head. She wasnât one to mince words, so sheâd give it to her child straight.
âFunny how Jason suggested kids must have been warning people away from the street, wasnât it.â
There was enough sarcasm there for Cassie to pick up on it, but with her being so tired, maybe it wouldnât click and Francis would have to spell it outâand she would.
Cassie frowned, spreading herself out along the sofa and drawing a pink velvet blanket over her. âSo youâre saying he knew already?â
âIt just seems off how he put the idea out there, that specific idea. I mean, come on, if heâd mentioned people warning others off, thatâd be understandable, but kids? Who would choose lads? Theyâre not frightening, they donât hold any weight with adults.â
Francis had warned Lenny that Jason was a bad choice, but her husband had had a soft spot for him, back from when heâd walked him home one time. Heâd felt sorry for him, wanted to help him grow into a man of his own image, a Grafton without the name but with the same outlook on lifeâthat Jason mattered and could do whatever he put his mind to. A son Francis wouldnât give him. Sheâd said one child right from the start, and that was what sheâd stuck to, despite Lenny trying to persuade her otherwise. Heâd kept an eye on Jason for years, even going so far as to ensure the boyâs father walked out of his life and didnât return, taking his place as much as he was able to with advice on doing well at school.
The lad had âambitionâ, apparently, but Francis thought it was more an ego as big as a house and the aim to get so ingrained in their family setup theyâd miss him if he wasnât there. She saw right through him. Jason had his eye on the Barrington, she was sure of it.
âI see what you mean,â Cassie said, âbut he didnât act funny or owt when he said it. More like musing, coming up with ideas.â She positioned a cushion beneath her head and closed her eyes.
âHeâs a clever one and would know exactly how to word it. Heâs been studying you for months, I bet, feeling you out, seeing how much bullshit youâll swallow. Studying you like youâre some lesson he has to learn off by heart.â Francis folded her arms.
âHe seemed offended when I told him the kid idea was crap.â Cassie smiled and looked at Francis. âYou know me, I couldnât keep my mouth shut, had to tell him my thoughts on the subject.â
âHe would be offended. You undermined his grand idea of using children. I know I donât have proof, just a gut feeling, but itâs him behind this, Iâm telling you. When you speak to Cheryl tomorrow, youâll see her son had to tell folks youâd given the order to keep out of the street, like Jason had said. Wonât that be a coincidence anâ allâŠwhich is what youâre meant to think. Heâs taking the piss, basically saying youâre stupid. Open your eyes, girl, heâs a snake in the fucking grass no matter what your dad said. Lenny was blinded by him, got it into his head he was the son we never had. What he failed to notice was, Jason has no family loyalty to anyone except his mother. And himself.â
Cassie knuckled her eyes, smudging her mascara. âIâll admit he rubs me up the wrong way. Gets right on my nerves at times.â
Francis huffed. âHeâd rub elsewhere given half the chance.â
âMam!â
âWellâŠâ Francis smiled. âHis sort like to climb between the sheets as well as working for you. Just watch him, thatâs all Iâm saying. Not everything your dad said was gospel. I loved the man to death, but he did have poor judgement at times, and I had to set him straight.â
âLou seemed to say as much earlierânot about Dad but Jason.â Cassieâs frown came back, forming two lines between her eyebrows.
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