Let It Be Me Becky Wade (dar e dil novel online reading TXT) đ
- Author: Becky Wade
Book online «Let It Be Me Becky Wade (dar e dil novel online reading TXT) đ». Author Becky Wade
âI thought sepsis might take her down,â Sebastian said. âBut it didnât.â
âPull through,â Leah said to the baby, entreaty in her voice.
âSheâs a fighter.â
âThen fight,â she said to Isabella.
Silently, she prayed over the tiny girl.
How would she have dealt with this had it been Dylan lying here with a machine breathing for him? How could she have kept it together if Dylanâs life had been the one hanging by the thinnest piece of thread, a thread that God could extend or cut?
All life hung by a thin piece of thread.
Her life included. She knew this.
Itâs just that inside this room, Isabellaâs thread seemed excruciatingly fragile.
Leah transferred her focus to Sebastian and found him watching her with a look both soft and somber.
âCâmon.â He extended a hand.
She took it.
Sebastian drove Leah to a museum that contained many fine works of art and one particularly private and dim corridor between galleries. When he came to a halt in the corridor, she glanced at him. Immediately, she read what he was thinking in his unrepentant expression.
âSebastian. Youâre a well-respected surgeon in this city. You cannot be found making out in museum hallways.â
âCanât I?â
âNo.â
He stepped toward her, his hands curving around to support the back of her head. âAs far as I know, making out in hallways isnât against museum policy.â
âHow familiar are you with this museumâs policies?â
âAs familiar as I want to be.â
âHow familiar are you with whatâs in good taste?â
âLeah?â
âYes?â
âIâve never cared about whatâs in good taste.â
She saw so much desire in his eyes that her breath turned shallow.
Heat rose, awareness built. One of his fingertips caressed the tender skin at the back of her neck. She could feel the hammer of her heart, hear the hitch in his inhalations.
âYou wouldnât want to âlet a gorgeous guy like me out of your sight,â would you?â he asked.
She could not resist a man who quoted Han Solo to her. But in the name of spunkiness, she leaned toward his ear and reciprocated with another quote. ââDonât get cocky.ââ
âKiss me.â
âI donât remember a quote about kissingââ
âThat last one,â he whispered, âwasnât a quote.â
Oh, for heavenâs sake, who cared about what was or wasnât in good taste? She pulled him to her and they kissed deep and slow.
A sound of approval rumbled in his throat.
Someone might come in.
But the danger of discovery only heightened the thrill.
His fingers speared into her hair.
Sebastian.
CHAPTER NINETEEN
Late the next morning, Leah woke in her hotel room to a column of sunshine falling across the foot of her bed. Clean, crisp sheets cocooned her.
A text from Sebastian, whoâd be back at work by now on this Monday morning, awaited her.
Meet me for coffee before you drive home? I know a place.
Is this my life? she thought, tossing a hand onto the pillow above her head with a happy sigh.
The enormous gray monolith otherwise known as the Lewis R. Slaton Courthouse had been constructed more than a hundred years ago. Leah sat in the waiting area of the âclosed file room,â smelling the buildingâs age in its dust-scented air and seeing the buildingâs age in the old-fashioned glass partition separating her from the roomâs attendant.
This morning sheâd placed a phone call to the courthouse and learned that criminal records were not available online, but that both criminal and civil records were available here. So sheâd checked out of her hotel and relocated to the courthouse computer lab. Sheâd begun by searching for criminal and civil proceedings that named her parents, Erica and Todd Montgomery. Her efforts generated no matches. Nor did her efforts generate a match for Trina Brookside.
When sheâd moved on to Jonathan Brookside, however, sheâd hit pay dirt. So much pay dirt that sheâd been momentarily caught by surprise, like a hide-and-seek-player who jumps when they discover their friend blinking at them from underneath a bed.
Seven civil suits had been filed against Jonathan over the years. But only twoâone for wrongful termination and one for breach of contractâhad been filed recently enough that the associated documents were available digitally.
Sheâd combed through those two suits and recorded all the pertinent details on her phone. Then sheâd jotted down the case numbers for the other five cases.
When none of the nursesâ names resulted in a single criminal or civil charge, sheâd consulted the staff member in the computer room, whoâd informed Leah that sheâd need to visit the closed file room to gain access to documents pertaining to the old suits filed against Jonathan.
Sheâd submitted a records request for the case numbers in question thirty minutes ago. Ever since, sheâd been waiting alongside an elderly woman speaking Spanish quietly into her phone and a middle-aged couple. The wife was reading Better Homes & Gardens and the husband was dozing while sitting upright.
Seven suits against Jonathan.
Seven! That seemed like an unusually high number, but perhaps it wasnât. Perhaps that was a low number of suits for an individual who owned a company as large as Gridwork Communications Corporation.
âMs. Montgomery?â
She approached the young blond man stationed behind the glass.
âHere you are.â He slid her the stack of pages heâd photocopied from the originals.
She thanked him and returned to her still-warm chair.
Quickly, she skimmed the pages. One suit for breach of contract. One for discrimination. One for intellectual property rights. Two for wrongful termination.
At first glance, it appeared two of the suits had been settled out of court and that heâd been acquitted of the rest. Which, of course, did not necessarily mean Jonathan had been innocent. The acquittals might simply mean that heâd had an excellent defense team.
Leah crossed her legs, collected a pen from her purse, and started wading through the dense legal language of the topmost sheet. Page by page, she circled every key factânames,
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