A Bullet to the Heart Kathy Wheeler (best value ebook reader .txt) đ
- Author: Kathy Wheeler
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âShe wouldnât dare,â Jo blew out on a hiss.
Teviâs gaze shot to her.
A slow-burning fury seeped through Joâs veins like molten lava. âUnbelievable.â
âWhatâs going on? Who is she?â Tevi whispered.
Estherâs hand splayed across her chest. She stumbled down the steps so quickly Jo feared she would break her neck. âMerciful God, in heaven.â
Jo could feel Teviâs confusion but was too shocked at Lydiaâs audacity to address her youngest sisterâs concern. Lydia stared back at Jo, her demeanor almost defiant, her focus resting on Jo.
Jo folded her arms across her chest, her eyes never wavering from Lydia. âWhy, Victoria Tevis, donât you recognize your own mother?â
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other!â Teviâs shock jarred Jo to what had just spilled from her lips. âI thoughtâŠâ
âI could use some help here,â Lydia called out.
âShe had a lot of nerve bringing that womanââ Jo caught sight of the astonishment on Teviâs face and froze.
âWhat, exactly, are you trying to say, Jo? That our mother has been alive all these years?â Teviâs voice took on a shrilly trill that rivaled the highest C on the upper register of a pianoâs keyboard. It sounded oddly out of tune.
âItâs complicated, Tevi.â Jo marched down the steps to the rear of the car and hoisted out a couple of the smaller bags.
âJosephine,â Esther called. âLeave those bags be. Thomasâll bring âem.â
Jo, however, needed something to keep herself from wringing Lydiaâs graceful neck, so she ignored the housekeeper. Thomas could get the rest of them. Frizzle met Jo on the porch, nudging her in the hip. No doubt the dog sensed her tension; he was the most reliable male she knew. The stress radiating from her could probably be felt clear across the channel to the mainland.
Inside, Jo dropped the bags she held. Head high, she stalked back in the library bound for the closed cabinet nestled to the left of the terrace doors. Tea was an insufficient antidote for the emotions pulsating through her. She pulled out Victorâs premium stash of brandy and poured herself a shot. It wasnât like he would need it any longer. She took a large swallow, forgetting how it burned going down when one wasnât used to drinking it on a regular basis. She began coughing violently.
A good twenty minutes went by, then Frizzle let out a sharp, deep bark then trotted over to the arch where Lydia appeared like the ever-avenging angel. She scratched him behind the ears. Happy, he moved away and plopped down on the rug with a satisfied grunt. Dead silence riddled with hostility filled the usually calming room. From her corner, Jo watched Lydia hesitate before squaring her shoulders and sauntering across the threshold. She moved with a quiet confidence Jo didnât normally associate with her middle sister and lowered into one of the wingback chairs across from Tevi, who had slipped in quietly and planted herself on the settee.
âI did it,â Lydia said, meeting Joâs eyes.
Keeping her expression blank, Jo moved to the other chair. âYou certainly did.â Jo had not supported Lydiaâs plan for liberating Eleanor from the Auburn Mental Institution.
Lydia steeled her jaw. âI did the right thing,â she said with a stubborn resolve, yet another characteristic Jo did not remember. Her middle sister was the arbitrator, the go-between, the biddable sister. Too many years had gone by; Jo had forgotten important details it appeared.
Lydia clenched her fists in her lap. âI know you didnât want me to bring her here, but Jo, it was terrible. All they were doing was sedating her.â
Irritation flashed through Jo. âYou were too young to remember how she neglected us,â she bit out. Her fury ate at her like a wild dog gnawing on a dead carcass. And Wallace HayesâŠhe didnât bear thinking about.
Lydia didnât back down. Another side of Lydia Jo hadnât expected. âIt doesnât matter. Itâs a horrible way for anyone to live.â
âHow can you say that? It matters.â Jo spoke through her own clenched teeth. Sympathy poured from Lydia, filling the room like a poisonous vapor. Jo had no desire for Lydiaâsâor anyoneâsâpity.
âWhat matters is how long you both have known our mother was alive.â Cold fury came off Tevi in waves. âWere either of you planning to tell me?â
Lydia turned to Tevi, her expression one of exasperation mixed with regret. âUncle Victor didnât tell you?â Lydia glanced at Jo.
Jo could feel her own aggravation bounding off the walls. She flung out a hand. âWe didnât keep it from you intentionally, Tev. Lydia found out and called me. I told her to leave that woman where she was. Obviously, she ignored my advice.â
Lydia snorted. âAdvice. That wasnât advice. It was a dictate. One I decided was punishment excess, to put it bluntly.â Lydia swiveled back to Tevi. âI thought you knew. Uncle Victor said he should be the one to tell you since the news would come as a shock.â
âWell, thatâs an understatement,â Tevi growled. Apparently, she wasnât ready to let Jo and Lydia off with just a nod. âNeither one of you could be bothered to check in with me to see how I would take such news?â
Lydia jumped to her feet. âEver since I learned Mother was alive, Iâve been working hard to save her from that horrid asylum.â She pounded the carpet in her pacing. âSix weeks ago, I entered Uncle Victorâs office. He took one look at me and the next thing I knew, I was at the table being interrogated by the master.â
Jo hated admitting it, but interrogation had been Victorâs specialty. That knowledge did little to subdue her annoyance. Lydia may have every right to defend her own actions, but Jo didnât have to like it. Their mother had never been a mother to them.
Jo pierced Lydiaâs blue eyes with her own. âAre you saying Victor knew Eleanor was there all along?â The storm of emotion roaring through Joâs voice had it rising an octave or two. Referring to Eleanor as âMotherâ was never going to happen.
âApparently.â Lydia dropped back in
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