The Secrets of Rosa Lee. Jodi Thomas
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“Thanks.” He shoved the card into his vest pocket. “You worried, too?”
“In some way we all became a family yesterday. Billy even commented about how we need to watch one another’s backs.” She shuddered. “I’ll be glad when we can vote on what to do with that old house. Give our recommendation to the mayor. Forget about the committee. That old place has years of bad vibes. I’ve heard stories about it all my life.”
“Maybe the drill bit flying was just a onetime, freak thing that happened,” Micah mumbled between bites. “It probably had nothing to do with us, just kids playing around. Maybe they wanted the house to fall thinking there would be a park or something else put in its place?”
“Maybe. But if it wasn’t?” She pictured zombies running down Main Street all carrying drill bits as they screamed the committee members’ names. Horror movies always had a group of people on the monster most-wanted list. “What if someone singled us out?”
“Then we fight.” He plopped the last bite of the roll in his mouth and stood.
“Great,” Lora whispered as she waved him goodbye. She was going to war with a regiment from the monster appetizers menu and the preacher thought they could fight.
Ten minutes later, when Lora made it to her office, she could still hear Micah’s determined words. He surprised her. Weren’t men of the cloth supposed to be meek? He seemed kind and thoughtful, but meek wasn’t a word that fit that minister. Yesterday when he’d removed his coat and only wore a shirt and trousers, he’d definitely been relaxed. Today in his brown suit he looked more official.
As she turned toward the car dealership’s set of offices along the back wall of the showroom, Lora wasn’t surprised to see a man sitting on the corner of her desk. Her father thought the floor plan of see-through office walls and no doors except on the restrooms made the place look welcoming and honest. Lora thought it more a bother. Anyone trying to sell her anything could camp out in her office until she showed up. Dora, her father’s secretary and the unofficial hostess, would even serve them coffee.
She waved at Dora. The middle-aged greeter waved back. Her father’s statement about the right combination of fat and meat crossed Lora’s thoughts. She shook the possibility out of her head. Her mother would kill her father by slow endless conversation if he even looked at Dora.
Walking into her cage of an office, Lora ignored the young man dressed as if he had just stepped out of a line dance. She put up her purse and removed her jacket. She couldn’t miss the width of his shoulders, or his Western clothes right down to his fifteen-hundred-dollar boots and pressed jeans. He wasn’t here to try to sell her pencils and caps with the logo of the dealership.
She raised an eyebrow in interest as she shoved her briefcase under the desk. If he needed a car, he would have been waylaid by one of the salesmen before he could make it to her office.
Finally, with everything in order, she faced him. “May I help you?”
His smile seemed calculated. Not too wide, not too innocent. “I certainly hope so, Miss Whitman. I’m Talon Graham. My friends call me Tal.” He waited as if expecting her to recognize the name.
Lora had seen his type before. In fact, she’d married one of the tribe. Handsome, well-mannered, high-maintenance, used to getting his way. The kind of man who wanted a blonde on his arm. Trouble was, she’d been that blonde once before and no longer wanted the role.
Since he obviously knew her name, she asked again. “How may I help you, Mr. Graham?”
He stood. “I’m in oil exploration by profession, but I’m here as president of this year’s Rodeo Association. I’d like you to help me make next year’s rodeo the best Clifton Creek has ever seen.”
“The rodeo’s nine months away. We don’t need to plan advertising yet.” She wanted to add that, hopefully, she wouldn’t be in town nine months from now, but with what her father paid her, it was a possibility. Also, men in oil exploration weren’t known to stay long in one place.
“I know, but it may take some time.” He winked. “First I plan to organize a huge fund-raiser to improve what Clifton Creek laughingly calls a rodeo grounds. Second, I’d like to get to know everyone in town, or at least anyone who will help.” He stood, towering over her. “Your daddy told me yesterday that you wouldn’t mind introducing me around. As an outsider, I’ll need to move in the right circles fast.” He glanced down, seeming almost shy. Almost. “He said you would be at my disposal whenever needed.”
Lora swore she felt smoke coming out of her ears. She could almost hear her father telling this man that his poor daughter had nothing to do with her life and would be happy to take him around. After all, divorced women don’t have an easy time getting back on the horse.
Talon had the nerve to grin when he added, “So, we’ll be seeing a lot of each other over the next few months?”
She’d have to kill Daddy, she thought. “I’ll talk with my father,” she managed to say as she glanced through her glass walls.
He’d finally gone too far, pimping her out to a rodeo. And because Isadore would be impossible to live with as a widow, Lora would have to murder her, too. Maybe she could get a deal when buying double caskets and plots. She saw it all now, the church packed, the funeral procession long and loaded with the newest models on the lot. The coffins would be matching champagne white. Too bad the funeral home didn’t have Casket Cash.
Eleven
The afternoon rain drove Billy Hatcher’s roofing crew inside. Most of the guys called it a day. Sam Davis and Billy drove over to do cleanup on the window replacement job at the Altman house.
The sky hung low, bringing the shadows of twilight early. Billy heard more than one person say the rain might freeze after sundown. If so, there would be no work tomorrow until the sun warmed everything up. He didn’t care. Unlike the others, he had plenty to keep himself busy. Roofing was seasonal work anyway, but it paid well. He figured he had enough put away to last three months in an apartment when bad weather hit. A few inside carpentry jobs should carry him through till spring. If his plan worked, he wouldn’t have to move back in with his father and whatever old lady he had playing house with him now.
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