Love Under Two Montanans [The Lusty, Texas Collection] Cara Covington (acx book reading .txt) đ
- Author: Cara Covington
Book online «Love Under Two Montanans [The Lusty, Texas Collection] Cara Covington (acx book reading .txt) đ». Author Cara Covington
âThank you.â
Angela smiled. Ricoh eased her onto his lap.
âIâm a private investigator, and Iâm based in Austin,â April said.
âAnd you posed as a waitress and used the name Nancy Drew?â Jeremyâs tone sounded incredulous. âReally?â
April grinned and shrugged. âYeah, not one of my most creative aliases.â She turned her attention back to Jenny. âA few months ago, I received a call from a woman who said sheâd just discovered she might have a granddaughter.
âAmanda Pearl Featherstone was elderly, and not well. Sheâd had a visit from a young woman sheâd seen a lot of in the years her daughter was growing up. That woman had moved away when Mandy, Amandaâs daughter, was in her teens and experiencing a rebellious upheaval.â
At first, Jenny was only half listening. Now, she focused on April. âMrs. Featherstoneâs daughter was named Mandy?â
April nodded. âThis friend of her daughterâs had said sheâd run into Mandy in Dallas, several years before. That sheâd appeared to be getting her life together because she was in the late stages of pregnancy. She said Mandy intended to give birth and keep the child. Mrs. Featherstone had assumed her daughter was dead because sheâd been immersed in the drug culture when sheâd run away, and she hadnât seen or heard from her for more than twenty-five years. Mrs. Featherstone wanted me to find her daughter, if she was alive, and her granddaughter.
âIt took a month before I was able to uncover a record of a Mandy Smith giving birth to a baby girl at one of the hospitals in DallasâŠbut at the same time, I had also discovered thereâd been a Mandy Smith whoâd died at another, the result of a hit-and-run accident. The events were only weeks apart. I found Mandyâs grave, got a court order, and arranged for DNA testing. The results came in before my client died.
âMrs. Featherstone grieved the loss of her daughter but hoped for the discovery of her grandchild. At that point, I didnât think it would be so hard to find you. But I hit a snag.â
Jenny met Aprilâs gaze. âA nurse at the hospital whereâŠwhere Mandy died, a friend of my motherâsâof my adoptive motherâsâpromised Mandy she would protect her babyâme. Apparently, she told the nurse that her family had killed her.â
âIf poor Mandy had been using drugs a great deal in her life up to the time she became pregnant, and then suffered the trauma of her accident, she might well have been delusional at that point.â Kateâs quiet words echoed what Jenny herself thought.
âI donât doubt the nurse and your adoptive mother believed Mandy at the time,â April said. âAbsent of any solid evidence to the contrary, they acted to honor Mandyâs dying requestâand to protect an innocent baby.â
âYouâre certain that Iâm Mrs. Featherstoneâs granddaughter?â
âI am. We will, however, have a doctor take a sample so we can compare your DNA to your birth motherâs. The estate requires that proof.â
Jenny tilted her head. âEstate? Thereâs an estate? Is that why that man grabbed me? And, who is he?â
âHis name is Douglas Vance. He was a great-nephew to Amanda Featherstone, and had believed himself her only heir, and so had been expecting she would leave her entire estate to him.â April shook her head. âThe irony of this situation is Mrs. Featherstone was never going to leave him anything more than she did. Until she learned she had a granddaughter, she intended to leave her estate to charity. Mrs. Featherstone told me that Vance was an inept scoundrel and never saw a dollar he didnât squander or one he ever earned. But he was family from her husbandâs side, and she left him what anyone else would consider a fortune.â She met Jennyâs gaze. âIf Vance had somehow succeeded in his plan, and âremovedâ you from the picture, the will would have reverted to its previous terms as per a codicil. Clearly, the man didnât read his copy of the document. If he had, he would have known going after you would have gained him nothing.â
The door to the roadhouse opened. Connor Talbot and Mel Richardson came in, nodded to Grandma Kate, and then pulled up a couple of chairs and joined them.
Jennyâs eyes widened. âYou two were following the creep, werenât you? You came in right after he and his friend did, and the first thing you did was look at them!â
âWe did,â Mel said. âThe creep is a bottom-feeding loan shark slash minor thug. What you might call a big fish in a rain puddle by the name of Brody Carp.â
âHe came to our attention a while ago, when we were on the case chasing the man whoâd stolen Chloe and Carrie Rhodesâs inheritance.â Connor looked at Grandma Kate. âOf course, weâd been keeping tabs on him, hoping to find an opportunity to have him arrested. And of course, it was a simple matter, once we knew he was trying to find Jenny, to call him with an anonymous tip and have him head this way.â
April looked from Kate to Connor. âIs that how Vance ended up here, too? Because I was certain there was no way on Godâs green earth that man could have figured outâŠâ
âHe obviously didnât figure anything out since he grabbed Jenny and demanded we give him Marissa.â Grandma Kat looked at the group. âHe is a bumbling, odious man.â
âAnd one who was dangerously close to the edge of sanity, obviously,â Kat Jessop said. âAfter he broke into his former investigatorâs office, and the investigator walked in on him, there was a scuffle. The investigator went down, hitting his head on the corner of his desk. Apparently, Vance was convinced heâd killed the man, and that was enough to send him
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