immediate plans to conduct the necessary research to determine whether a kiss would turn my legs to jelly. I stuck out my hand.
He took it in his, not crushing it like he had at Daneâs, not letting it go. âI know it wasnât easy, earlier, for you to tell me those things. About Cheri and all.â He examined my hand in his, contemplating the confluence of lines as though preparing to read my fortune. âI said I knew you from school, but we met before, at the river. Spin the bottle. I figured you didnât remember or were too embarrassed to bring it up. But as I recall, it wasnât half bad.â He grinned. âActually, I think you kinda liked it.â He released his grip and stepped off the porch. âSo, anyway, just wanted to get that out in the open.â
His truck sputtered down the road as I watched from the living room window, tipsy from our prolonged handshake, which could almost legitimately be classified as handholding. Sure, heâd been teasing me, at least a little, but he remembered. I didnât have many friends, didnât confide in anyone except Bess, and had never had a boyfriend, but Iâd let Daniel right in, based on no more than a gut feeling and the fact that heâd offered to help with Cheri. He hadnât assumed, as most people did, that it was pointless, that the trail was cold. And as always, when I thought of Cheri, I thought of my mom; as I approached her age at the time of her disappearance, I realized how young she truly was. Cheri and Lila, two lost girls, bookends with a lifetime of mysteries between them. And then it occurred to me: If it was possible to find one, why not the other? It couldnât hurt to ask around. Someone out there might know what happened to my mother. It might not be too late to find out.
I was tired and beyond ready to take off the white dress, which I looked forward to tearing into dust rags. As I reached up to close the window shade, I saw a lone figure on the road, moving slowly, a bent silhouette. Birdie on her night patrol.
Chapter 8
Lila
Crete was waiting for me at the garage a few days later when Carl dropped me off after work, and seeing him there made me nervous. He joked around with Carl like he always did, like everything was fine, but it wasnât. Things had been tense between us since I brushed him off, and heâd barely spoken to me. No more friendly conversation. No more mention of installing AC. I figured he wasnât used to getting turned down, that he was pissed or embarrassed, but sooner or later heâd get over it.
âHey,â he said when Carlâs truck pulled away. âItâs payday.â He handed me an envelope.
âThanks,â I said, opening it up. Instead of a check, there was cash. And not much. I knew room and board were being deducted from my pay, but how much could it possibly cost to put me up in the crap-hole garage? âWhereâs the rest of it?â
âI was thinking it might be best if I put the money straight into a savings account, so you donât have to mess with it. I know youâre wanting to save it all anyhow, and you donât have much in the way of expenses. That pocket money there should cover whatever you need.â
âThanks, but Iâd rather handle it myself,â I said. âI could go into town and set up an account.â
He sighed. âSorry,â he said. âI think itâs best this way.â
âWell, I donât. Itâs my money, and itâs not up to you what I do with it.â
âContract says otherwise,â he said. âGuess you didnât read the fine print.â
I was so angry I was shaking. I stood there mute and watched him get back in his truck. â Asshole! â The word tore out of my throat as he disappeared down the road. I knew he was trying to get back at me, to show me he was in control, but he was taking it too far. He couldnât keep my money.
Enid Blyton
April Bowles
Danielle Ellison
Robert E. Hollmann
David Green
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Kasey Michaels
N.J. Walters
Scarlett Sanderson
Maree Anderson