Jessie Hunt 13-The Perfect Impression Blake Pierce (most popular ebook readers .TXT) đ
- Author: Blake Pierce
Book online «Jessie Hunt 13-The Perfect Impression Blake Pierce (most popular ebook readers .TXT) đ». Author Blake Pierce
âI donât understand,â he said, either dense or pretending to be.
Realizing this was getting her nowhere fast, she decided to comestraight out with it and see how he reacted.
âWe know why you and your friends come to this hotel,â she said flatly.âWe donât care about that. But you need to tell us what you were really doingduring the time that you werenât drinking in the bar with Rich Ferro. Itâs onething for us to know the truth. Itâs another for you to tell it.â
She shut her mouth and waited, hopeful that her hunch was right andthat heâd buy the lie.
Steve Crewe stared silently at her so long that she became aware of the wavescrashing along the seawall not far behind her. They sounded like an audienceclapping before the stage performance was over.
âWhat are you accusing me of?â he asked carefully.
Peters jumped in.
âNo one is accusing you of anything, Mr. Crewe,â he said. âBut if youhappened to be engaged in behavior with someone other than your wife last night,behavior that might look bad to the media or your family in the wake of herdeath, weâre just saying that such behavior need not come to light if it servedto provide you with an alibi. Your son doesnât have to ever know. But if you didengage in this behavior and chose to deny it, there isnât much we can do toprotect your reputation. Weâd have to investigate fully and detail our findingsin publicly available reports. Weâd like to avoid that if possible. Wouldnâtyou?â
Creweâs wounded expression turned to one of embarrassment, and thenresignation.
âWho told you?â he asked.
âThatâs not important,â Jessie said, hoping to move quickly from thefinger-pointing stage to the fact-finding one. âWho were you with and when?â
Crewe lowered his head for a moment, apparently contemplating theenormity of what he was about to say. When he lifted it again, he began talkingquickly, as if speed would make what he said less objectionable.
âBefore I came down to the bar, I met up with one of the manicurists inthe back room of the salon on the other side of the hotel. Her name is Grace. Sheâsnew here and IâI wanted to try her out.â
Jessie managed to keep her expression blank, not wanting to reveal therevulsion she felt at the comment.
âWhat time was that?â Peters asked, moving straight past any blame tohone in on the relevant facts.
âI left the bar to meet her there at nine thirty. We finished up byten. I was back having drinks right after that.â
âDid Gabby know about your appointment?â Jessie wondered.
âShe knew I would be busy from nine thirty to ten. We didnât discussthe particulars but I think she figured it was Grace because I was flirtingwith her when I picked her up after her manicure in the afternoon.â
âAnd she was okay with it?â Jessie asked, needing to hear the wordseven though she knew that was the whole point of the thing.
âMs. Hunt,â he entreated, âyou have to understand. This lifestyle isnâtfor everyone. But it worked for us. Yes, she was okay with it. Sometimes weeven traded stories with each other. It was sexy for us. As long as everyonefollows the rules, everything works out.â
âWhat rules?â Peters asked.
âWell, thereâs really only one. No intermingling amongst each other. Wehave this group that weâre all comfortable with. We have fun together and allshare this naughty little secret. But no one crosses that line. No one has sexwithin the group.â
âIf youâre already swingers, why is that such a big deal?â Jessieasked.
âItâs one thing to have an encounter with a hotel employee who doesthis sort of thing, or a casual acquaintance or even a stranger. But weârefriends. We all live in the same neighborhood. We have barbecues at each otherâshomes. Some of our kids play together. It would complicate matters if weinvolved sex. Weâre a freethinking group, but thatâs just asking for trouble.â
Jessie didnât say out loud what was blaring in her head. If someone hadviolated the one rule of the group, it might be a pretty good motive for theperson who felt violated to act out, maybe even violently. Peters, who wasclearly on the same page, must have feared she was on the verge of sayingsomething because he interjected quickly.
âAnd this thing with Grace the manicurist was your only âencounterâlast night? We heard that you were in and out of the bar quite a bit.â
âSure I was,â Crewes replied, unconcerned. âI was drinking like a horseso I had to piss like one too. I was in and out of the bathroom all night. Ithink I came out here to the garden at one point too. You saw me. I was prettydrunk. I wasnât keeping track of all my movements.â
âWere you keeping track of Gabbyâs movements?â Jessie asked.
âWhat do you mean?â he said, suddenly far less blasĂ©.
âI mean, do you know if your wife was with anyone last night?â
He took a moment to ponder the question. It seemed like the first timehe had.
âI donât think so. I mean, I donât know for sure. But she didnât sayanything. Usually sheâd give me a heads-up so I donât come in the suite if sheâsbusy. She didnât do that. She did say she wasnât feeling great. Thatâswhy she didnât stick around at the bar that long. She told us she just needed alittle quiet time to herself.â
Jessie pictured Gabby Crewe going up to her suite feeling under theweather. It was possible that sheâd just had too much to drink and felt unwell,though now that she thought about it, Jessie couldnât remember anyone eversaying that Gabby actually drank anything that night.
If she hadnât been drinking, that suggested it was possible that shealready knew she was pregnant and was abstaining. Maybe she was feeling theeffects of morning sickness. The pregnancy might also explain her sudden late-nightroom service order of steak, eggs, and toast. Of course, she
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