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Stuart Woods_Stone Barrington 21

Stuart Woods_Stone Barrington 21

Titel: Stuart Woods_Stone Barrington 21 Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Son of Stone
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friend.”
    “Thank you.”
    “Stone, when we left to fly back to New York with Mike Freeman, one of your pilots was kind enough to show me your Gulfstream jet. Mike thought you might want to sell it.”
    “I think so, Sean. The Mustang is adequate for my purposes.”
    “My partners and I have been looking for an airplane to buy, and I think a G-III might suit us very well.”
    “It’s a very nice airplane,” Stone said. “Arrington bought it a little over a year ago, and it had had only one elderly owner up until then, so it’s a low-time airplane. I’d be happy to send you copies of the paperwork she used to make her decision. Mike advised her on the purchase, so he knows a lot about it, too.”
    “Thanks. I’d like to see the paperwork and perhaps have our consultant on the purchase go down to Virginia and see it.”
    “Of course. If you like the airplane, you might consider hiring the crew, too. Arrington was very pleased with them.”
    “I’ll keep that in mind. Have you given any thought as to what you’ll do with the house and farm?”
    “We’ll sell it, I think.”
    “I’m not in the market for such a place, but I have a lot of very wealthy clients, so I’ll mention it here and there.”
    Stone reminded him to read the Architectural Digest piece, and they said good-bye. Stone asked Joan to make copies of the aircraft material and messenger it to Sean Patrick.
    “I think I’m going to go upstairs and lie down for a while,” he said to her.
    “Aren’t you feeling well?”
    “Just very tired,” he replied. He went upstairs and stretched out on the bed. He’d been having these periods of feeling exhausted since Arrington’s death, and right now, he couldn’t face any further work for the day.

55
    S tone and Peter got ready to go to Elaine’s for dinner and met downstairs.
    “I’m going to go pick up Hattie,” Peter said. “We’ll meet you there in a few minutes.”
    Stone gave him some cash. “We need to open a bank account for you and set up an allowance.”
    “Thanks, Dad, I’d appreciate that.”
    “Joan will set it up on Monday.”
    They walked to Third Avenue together and took separate cabs.
     
     
    Peter wondered what this was about. Ordinarily, the doorman in Hattie’s building would have put her in a cab, and she would have met them at Elaine’s, but Hattie had said she wanted to talk about something.
    He got out of his cab at her building, and she came outside. He opened the door for her.
    “Can we walk for a little bit?” she asked.
    “Sure,” Peter replied. He paid the driver and got out. She slipped her hand into his, and he put both in his coat pocket. They walked up Park Avenue in silence for a couple of minutes.
    “There’s something I have to tell you,” she said.
    “All right.”
    “No one else knows, and you have to keep it a secret.”
    “Of course.”
    Hattie took a deep breath and let it out. “I’m pregnant.”
    Peter stopped and turned to face her. “But we haven’t . . .” He stopped, his mind reeling.
    “It was someone I went out with before I met you,” she said. “It only happened once.”
    Peter thought about that. “I want to help,” he said.
    “Thank you,” she replied. “I’ve already decided to have an abortion, and I won’t brook any arguments about it. If you find that unconscionable, I’ll understand, and you can go your own way.”
    “I want to help,” he said again. “Does the guy know?”
    “No,” she said, “and he’s never going to.”
    “Good,” Peter said.
    “I’ve looked this up on the Internet, and I’ve found a clinic up on First Avenue in the Nineties.”
    “What kind of clinic?”
    “Licensed, part of a nationwide family planning organization.”
    “Have you been there yet?”
    “No.” Her lip trembled. “But I have an appointment after school on Monday. Will you go with me?”
    “Of course,” Peter said, squeezing her hand. “I’ll be with you every step of the way.”
    “The way I understand it is, first, I have an interview, then the procedure is scheduled—there’s a waiting list—and I have to be accompanied by someone.”
    “That will be me,” he said.
    “After the procedure I’ll be kept there for a few hours, until they know I’m all right, then I can go home. But I don’t want to go home.”
    “You can come to my house,” Peter said. “I’ll take care of you there, then take you home later.”
    “What about your father? I don’t want him to

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