Coldwater Revenge James Ross (best fantasy books to read TXT) đ
- Author: James Ross
Book online «Coldwater Revenge James Ross (best fantasy books to read TXT) đ». Author James Ross
âWe were working on a three billion pound tender offer. You leave the room with chips like that on the table, and they donât ever ask you to come back.â Canât you be home more than one minute without showing off?
She dismissed the preening. âYour father risked his life for strangers. I never understood that. I was always after him to stop.â
âHe should have listened to you.â
âYour brother, too. Thereâs too much testosterone in this family.â
Sheâd skipped a few questions. âYou look tired. You should rest. Maybe you should stay another week. The last usually signaled the end.
âYou worried about someone blowing me up?â
âKilling yourself with work is more like it. You look exhausted.â
A carousel of images triggered by finding Billyâs body, and the phone call from New York that might mean he would have to cut this visit short, clamored for Tomâs attention. He hadnât wanted to mention any of it right away. But the dead body of a childhood acquaintance is not something that can go unmentioned for long. âLook, mom. On the way in from the airportâŠâ
âIs that why your handâs hovering over your pocket like thereâs a pack of cigs in there and you just quit this morning?â
He sighed, reminding himself to be patient. âJoe delivered your warning about the phone.â
She placed her fingers on his forearm. âLeave it, Tommy. Just for a week. You need your family time.â
âAnd happy to have it.â
The opening was small, but she plunged. âAnd about time you started your own, donât you think?â
He laughed. âNo.â And not fair asking questions out of order.
âYouâre wearing yourself out.â
He shrugged.
âYouâre obsessed.â
That wasnât part of the usual litany. He smiled, hoping it didnât encourage.
âWith money,â she pressed.
Ouch! Then the words slipped out. âI wonder why?â
Her chin jerked up and back as if heâd slapped her from below. But before he could sweep question and subject back under the rug where they belonged, one of the wireless gizmos on the table beside the couch began to trill. Lost among the bottled water, snack packs and piles of paperbacks, it was a moment before either of them could find the source. Mary grabbed the phone first. âNo, Iâm afraid heâs not,â she said. âI would try him at the station house⊠No, I really donât⊠As I told you before, Miss Pearce, this is his home not his office.â Click.
Tom lowered his chin and peered at his mother from beneath compressed eyebrows. âSusan Pearce?â The name of his high-school girlfriend came out a rasp.
âThree times in the last half hour.â
âSheâs here? Already?â
âSheâs been back a year.â
âWhat? The Dooley brothers just fished her brotherâs body out of Coldwater Lake less than an hour ago. Joe got the call on our way here. Thatâs what I was trying to tell you.â
Maryâs hand moved to the top of her forehead where her long white fingers combed a meticulous hairdo. âOh, dear. No wonder youâre so testy. I wish youâd told me. And the poor girlâs just after losing her parents, too.â
âWhat? Dr. Pearce is dead?â It came out nearly a shout. âAnd Mrs. Pearce?â
Mary closed her eyes, sighed and then opened them again. âDidnât you know? Thatâs what brought Miss Pearce back to Coldwater. The parents drowned in a boating accident in Wilson Cove last year. She and her brother inherited that beautiful estate.â
* * *
Susanâs back in Coldwater?
Tom felt like a kid whoâs just heard the jingle of an ice cream truck rolling down the streetâalert, excited, ready to blast off. But the sound of an SUV coming to a stop, a door flying open and cries of, âUncle Tom! Uncle Tom!â forced him to tuck the feeling away for later.
Two pairs of sticky hands wrapped around his neck. Four gangly legs slid into his arms. He staggered upright like an out-of-shape circus strong man. âGirls!â he groaned. âYou make your daddy do this?â
âHe can lift us over his head!â
âWell, I can drop you!â Tom flexed his knees and a staccato of pink flip flops slapped the hardwood. Squeals of laughter blasted his ears.
âAnd whoâs this? Somebodyâs new boyfriend?â A dark haired boy of about six ducked behind his sisterâs legs and peered shyly around them. Tom bent at the waist and held out his hand.
âThatâs Luke, Uncle Tom!â
âNo way! Lukeâs about yeah high.â Tom turned his palm upside down over his knee. âAre you Luke?â
The boy nodded.
âLet me feel your muscle.â Tom reached toward the boy, who lifted his arm slowly while holding tight to his sisterâs leg. Tom wrapped his fingers gently around the boyâs bicep. âWow! Youâve grown, buddy.â The boy smiled. âWhereâs your mom?â He pointed toward the door. âShe got packages?â He nodded and stepped cautiously from behind his sister. âOkay, letâs put those muscles to work.â
Tom and the kids helped their mother carry groceries to the kitchen, then she sent them off to play and do homework. Rising on her toes, Joeâs pretty wife gave Tom a quick peck on the cheek, and whispered, âGood to have you back.â A petite girl-next-door type with a slim figure and short brown hair, Bonnie Morgan was even-tempered, competent and forgiving of her husbandâs many shortcomings, including his family. Tom didnât often see that combination in his colleaguesâ marriages. If his brotherâs wife had been a tall redhead, there might have been some fraternal competition.
Joe came home an hour later and pulled Tom aside. âI got a call from somebody who saw Billyâs picture in this afternoonâs Coldwater Gazette and claims it looks like the guy who broke into his business a few weeks ago. I told him weâd meet him in an hour.â
Bonnie came out of the kitchen and gave her husband a hug and a kiss, saying that dinner would be ready in five minutes.
Joe took her hand. âDid Tommy tell you about Billy Pearce?â
âWeâve been whispering about it all afternoon. Itâs terrible. But donât say anything in front of the kids. Please. We donât want nightmares.â
Joe squeezed
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