Grave Risk. Hannah Alexander

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Grave Risk - Hannah Alexander страница 7

Grave Risk - Hannah  Alexander

Скачать книгу

as if startled. “Of course. I knew that.”

      “I heard you had a thing for her,” Fawn said.

      He gave a disapproving frown. “For a newcomer, you sure know a lot about me.”

      “While you’re making apologies, are you going to apologize to Blaze Farmer?”

      He leveled a long, steady look at her. “Have you suddenly decided to become my conscience?”

      “I thought you said you’d come here to make amends. Seems to me you need to be making amends to Blaze for quite a few things.”

      Austin continued to study her thoughtfully. “Yes, it would seem that way, wouldn’t it?”

      His focused attention made her nervous.

      

      Jill sat wiping the massage cream from her face with the turban that had been wrapped around her head. She couldn’t stop staring at Edith’s still form, listening to the soft echo of sobs coming from another room.

      Sheena had run out when Cheyenne made the pronouncement, and Noelle had gone to comfort her and cancel clients for the remainder of the day. Apparently Sheena had loved Edith, too.

      A quick glance told Jill that Rex Fairfield was still here. She returned her attention to Edith as Karah Lee pulled a sheet over that death mask.

      Jill winced. She couldn’t do this. She needed to run away screaming, needed to shake her fist at God and ask what He thought He was doing. She needed to rail at Cheyenne for giving up so easily. These weren’t just impulses, they were compulsions that she had to control.

      The real Jill Cooper was a rational human being, a responsible RN, an adult.

      Oh, the awful terror that had been in Edith’s eyes…the horrible knowledge of something—but what? What had she been trying to say? Hallucinating, no doubt, but why?

      “Jill?” A deep masculine voice broke into her thoughts.

      With a start, she looked up, then looked away quickly, refusing to meet Rex’s gaze. Not now. It was just too much. She didn’t want to deal with this—couldn’t deal with it. All she wanted to do was fall to her knees at Edith’s side and weep against her shoulder as she had done so often as a young teenager.

      “I’m so sorry,” Rex said. The gentle sympathy in his low baritone voice reawakened memories she couldn’t bear right now.

      She nodded. What was this man doing here? What kind of crazy, tilted nightmare was this?

      “The timing is awful,” Rex continued. “I would never have done this to you—”

      “You haven’t done a thing to me, Rex.” She forced herself, then, to meet his gaze. “I don’t know what you’re doing in Hideaway, but I doubt either of us is hung up on something that happened twenty-two years ago.”

      “Some things were left in limbo then,” he said. “We parted without enough explanations, which was unfortunate. I take the blame. Eventually, we’ll need to clear the air. I owe you an—”

      “I have other things to do right now, Rex.” Without waiting for a reply, she brushed past him and knelt to help Cheyenne pick up debris.

      “I need to go tell Bertie,” Cheyenne said.

      “No.” Jill couldn’t allow anyone else to do that. “That should be my job. I’ll need to contact Edith’s family. She has a niece who lives in Springfield, and others—”

      “You need some time to recover.” Cheyenne squeezed cellophane wrappers into a tight ball with more force than normal. “Bertie’s—”

      “Please, Chey. I need to do this.” Jill touched Cheyenne’s shoulder, then noticed what she should have seen earlier—the silent tears coursing down her director’s face.

      “How about you?” Jill asked. “Are you okay?”

      Cheyenne nodded.

      Jill realized this must be bringing back horrible memories for her. When Cheyenne was an ER doc in Columbia, her younger sister had been brought in via ambulance after an automobile accident. Cheyenne couldn’t resuscitate her, and in the end she’d had to call her own baby sister’s death.

      Jill couldn’t imagine how she would have felt had that happened to her with Noelle.

      “I’ll go with her, Cheyenne,” Noelle said from the open doorway.

      Jill continued to feel Rex’s attention on her, and she finally looked up at him. What she saw in his expression soothed her jumbled emotions.

      “I can do this,” Jill repeated, striding from the room. She continued out the front door of the spa, wishing she never had to return to this place.

      When would it all end? How many deaths would this tiny village have to endure?

      She was halfway across the street when she heard footsteps behind her.

      “You don’t need to keep vigil over me,” she said. “I’m fine.”

      “I loved her, too, you know,” came a gentle female voice.

      Jill softened. Noelle. At this moment she could barely focus on placing one foot in front of the other, but out of habit, she forced herself to gather her strength for her sister.

      Noelle rested a hand on Jill’s arm, her touch tentative, as if she half expected it to be shaken off.

      Lord, wake me up! This can’t be happening again, Jill prayed.

      “Edith was always there for us,” Noelle said as they stepped onto the grass across the street from the town square. “Especially for you.”

      Jill nodded. In spite of the oppressive heat, it seemed as if a thick fog had covered the sun. She glanced up to find not a cloud in the blue sky. The sun shone brightly. It just didn’t seem to be reaching her.

      “She was my best friend,” Jill said at last.

      “I know.”

      Edith had taken the place of their mother when she was killed. Edith had played the role of the strong parent when the girls’ father had withdrawn into a world of grief and buried himself in work.

      “I went to her for guidance when I couldn’t control you,” Jill continued.

      “I’m sorry I made it so hard for you,” Noelle said.

      “I’m not saying it was your fault, I’m just saying Edith was my strength.”

      “I was old enough to know better.”

      “You were acting out because you were frightened. You needed your mother, and I wasn’t her. You needed a father, and he wasn’t able to cope.”

      “Stop making excuses for me. Besides, we’re talking about you for once.”

      Jill’s

Скачать книгу