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Black Rose

Black Rose

Titel: Black Rose Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Nora Roberts
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rooms, in those walls? What was buried in this soil she worked, season after season, with her own hands?
    She had grown up here, as her father had, and his father, and those who’d come before. Generation after generation of shared blood and history. She had raised her children here, and had worked to preserve this legacy so that the children of her children would call this home.
    Whatever had been done to pass all of this to her, she would have to know. And then accept.
    Settled again, she replaced her tools, then went into the house to shower off the day.
    She found Mitch working in the library.
    “Sorry to interrupt. There’s something I need to talk to you about.”
    “Good, I need to talk to you, too.” He swiveled away from his laptop, found a file in the piles on the desk.
    “You go first,” she told him.
    “Hmm? Oh, fine.” He scooped a hand through his hair, took off his glasses. Gestures she knew now meant he was organizing his thoughts.
    “I’ve done just about all I can do here,” he began. “I could spend months more on your family history, filling in details, moving back generations. In fact, I plan to do just that. But regarding the purpose for which you hired me, I’m at an impasse. She wasn’t family, Roz. Not a Harper,” he amended. “Not by birth, not through marriage. Absolutely none of the data—names, dates, births, marriages, deaths—nothing I have places a woman named Amelia in this house, or in the Harper family. No woman of her approximate age died in this house during the time period we’ve pinpointed.”
    “I see.” She sat, wishing vaguely she’d thought to get coffee.
    “Now, if Stella is mistaken regarding the name—”
    “She isn’t.” Roz shook her head. “It’s Amelia.”
    “I agree. But there’s no Amelia Harper, by birth, by marriage, in any record. Oddly enough, considering the length of time this house has stood here, there’s no record of any female in her twenties or thirties who died here. In the house. Older or younger, yes, a few.”
    He set the file on top of a pile. “Ah, one of the most entertaining deaths to occur here was back in 1859, one of your male ancestors, a Beauregard Harper, who broke his neck, and several other bones, falling off the second floor terrace. From the letters I’ve read describing the event, Beau was up there with a woman not his wife engaged in a sexual romp that got a little overenthusiastic. He went over the rail, taking his date with him. He was dead when members of the household reached him, but being a portly fellow, he broke the fall of the female houseguest, who landed on top of him and only suffered a broken leg.”
    “And terminal embarrassment, I imagine.”
    “Must have. I have the names of the women, the Harper women, who died here listed for you. I have some records on female servants who died here, but none fit the parameters. I got some information from the Chicago lawyer I told you about.”
    He began to dig for another file. “The descendant of the housekeeper during Reginald Harper’s time. She actually discovered she had three ancestors who worked here—the housekeeper, the housekeeper’s uncle who was a groundsman, and a young cousin who served as a kitchen maid. From this, I’ve been able to get you a detailed history of that family as well. While none of it applies, I thought you’d like to have it.”
    “Yes, I would.”
    “The lawyer’s still looking for data when she has time, she’s entrenched now. We could get lucky.”
    “You’ve done considerable work.”
    “You’ll be able to look at the charts and locate your great-great-uncle’s second cousin on his mother’s side, and get a good sense of his life. But that doesn’t help you.”
    “You’re wrong.” She studied the mountain of files, and the board, crowded with papers and photos and handwritten charts behind Mitch. “It does help me. It’s something I should have seen to a long time ago. I should have known about the unfortunate and adulterous Beau, and the saloon-owning Lucybelle, and all the others you’ve brought to life for me.”
    She rose to go to the board and study the faces, the names. Some were as familiar as her own, and others had been virtual strangers to her.
    “My father, I see now, was more interested in the present than the past. And my grandfather died while I was so young, I don’t remember having him tell me family stories. Most of what I got was from my grandmother, who wasn’t a

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