Remember When
this out. Three-quarters of the pie is still out there. Where would your father go, Laine?"
"I don't know. I swear to you I don't have a clue. I don't know his habits and haunts anymore. I cut myself off from him because I wanted so much to be respectable. And still... God I'm such a hypocrite."
She rubbed her hands over her face, dragged them back into her hair. "I took money from him.
Through college, a little here, a little there. There'd be an envelope stuffed with cash in my mailbox, or now and then a cashier's check made out to me. And after I graduated, too. A little windfall out of the blue, which I dutifully banked or invested. So I could buy this house, start my business. I took it. I knew it wasn't from the goddamn tooth fairy. I knew he'd stolen it or bilked someone out of it, but I took it."
"You want me to blame you for that?"
"I wanted to be respectable," she repeated. "But I took the money to build that respectability.
Max, I wouldn't use his name, but I used the money."
"And you rationalized it and justified it. I could do the same. But let's just cut through all that and agree that it's a very shaky area. Let's agree you don't take it anymore, and make it clear to him the next time you see him."
"If I had a dollar for every time I tried to make it clear to him. Oh, that's right. I do. But I'll make it stick this time. I promise. Do me one favor?"
"Just ask."
"Put those away somewhere and don't tell me where. I don't want him coming back and talking me into giving them to him. It's not out of the realm."
Max slid the stones back into the pouch, tucked it in his pocket. "I'll take care of it."
"I want to help you get the rest of them. I want that for a few reasons. One, I guess it'll go a ways toward easing my conscience. Two, and more important, it's just the right thing to do. More important than that, I hope that recovering them, getting them back where they belong will protect my father. I couldn't stand for him to be hurt. And somewhere between the conscience and the right thing lies the two-and-a-half-percent finder's fee."
He took her hand and kissed it. "You know, you may have bought that respectability, but you must've been born with that style. I've got a few things to see to. Maybe you can see about warming up that fudge."
"If I wait a bit, both of us get our evening chores done, we could have those sundaes in bed with extra whipped cream."
"I believe I might just be the luckiest man alive at this point in time." His cell phone beeped, making Laine chuckle when she heard the digitized opening riff of "Satisfaction."
"Hold that thought," he said, and answered. "Gannon." His face broke into a wide grin. "Hey, Mama."
Since he leaned against the stove instead of heading out of the room for privacy, Laine started to ease out. But he grabbed her hand, pulled her back.
"So, you liked the glasses. That makes me the good son, right? Your favorite." He scowled, tucking the phone between his ear and shoulder so he could keep a hand on Laine and reach for his wine. "I don't think it's fair to put your grandchildren in the mix. It's not like Luke went out specially and picked them out to suit you. Stay," he said in a hushed aside to Laine, then transferred the phone to his other hand when he released her.
"Yeah, I'm still in Maryland. On a job, Mama." He paused, listening, while Laine puttered around the kitchen looking for something to do. "No, I don't get tired of hotels and eating in restaurants.
No, I'm not sitting here chained to my nasty computer and working too hard. What am I doing?
Actually, I'm two-timing you with a sexy redhead I picked up the other day. There's talk of whipped cream later."
Laine's shocked gasp only had him crossing his feet at the ankles.
"I am not making it up. Why should I? She's right here. Want to talk to her?" He tipped the phone slightly away from his ear. "She says I'm embarrassing you. Am I?"
"Yes."
"Guess you're right about that, Mama. Her name's Laine, and she's the prettiest thing I've seen in my life. How do you feel about redheaded grandchildren?"
He winced, held the phone out a good six inches. Across the room, Laine could hear the exclamations but couldn't tell the tone of them.
"No problem. I've got another eardrum. Yeah, I'm crazy in love with her. I will. Of course I will.
She won't. As soon as... We will. Mama, take a breath, will you? Yes, she makes me very happy.
Really? I want you to hang up and call Luke right now. Tell
Weitere Kostenlose Bücher