The First Wife. Tara Quinn Taylor

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу The First Wife - Tara Quinn Taylor страница 3

The First Wife - Tara Quinn Taylor

Скачать книгу

paying for his defense?” I asked, though I’d have bet that I already knew the answer.

      “Wife number three.”

      I’d have won my bet.

      CHAPTER ONE

      “JANE, TALK TO ME.”

      Jane’s heart pounded as Brad’s gaze met hers. Pressure, rising like a tidal wave from within, strangled her throat and throbbed behind her eyes.

      She had enough to handle without Brad Manchester adding to the mix.

      Sitting on a log in the wilderness in Illinois, part of a two-hundred-acre plot of land Brad had purchased with plans to someday build a cabin on it, Jane just wanted a couple of hours away from all the stress. The basket and water bottles, remains of their picnic lunch, still lay on the blanket spread a few feet away. Brad sat with them.

      They’d left their homes in Allenville, a suburb of Chicago, only hours ago. Right now it felt like days.

      The rough bark dug into the backs of her thighs through her jeans. A twig poked just behind her right ear. Strands of chocolate-brown hair hung loose from the clip holding her twisted bun. She’d sweated off most of her makeup—she never left home without it on—an hour into the day-long hike.

      Her employees would look askance if they could see her now. As the editor of a new national women’s magazine, with only initial backing and the threat that if they failed they’d be left in the dust, Jane prided herself on being always professional and well put together.

      She didn’t usually let her hair down.

      Except when she was with Brad. He was her buddy. Safe.

      Usually.

      “You’ve been distracted all day,” Brad said now.

      Jane nodded, not quite meeting his eyes.

      “We’ve been friends what, two years?”

      “About that.” Long enough to see the countless women who flitted in and out of his life almost as frequently as he changed his underwear. And to share in many, many court triumphs with him as he represented abused women seeking freedom.

      “I’ve seen you happy, worried, angry and exhausted, but I’ve never seen you look so…lost.”

      She felt lost. And utterly alone.

      “Obviously something serious has happened. What I can’t figure out is why you aren’t talking to me about it.”

      At her silence, his expression intensified.

      “I thought we could tell each other anything.”

      Not quite. But almost.

      “Have I done something to…”

      “No! Oh, God, no, Brad. You… I… You’re my best friend.”

      “You sure about that?”

      “Yes.”

      “Okay, then, why don’t you tell Uncle Brad what’s got you so distracted that you completely missed my last three attempts at conversation?” His words, while cloaked in levity, increased the tension tightening her chest.

      Funny how one phone call could undo years’ worth of moving on.

      “I’m sorry,” she said, trying to recall anything he’d been talking about during the lunch stop.

      “Don’t be sorry. Just tell me what’s wrong.” He sat forward, feet on the ground, his arms resting on his knees.

      “Did your doctor say something? Are you sick?”

      He knew she’d been for her yearly physical a few weeks before.

      “No.” She shook her head. “I’m in perfect health.” Physically, at least. And she was determined to be so mentally and emotionally, too. She’d fought too hard to let someone else win now.

      “You got another threat, then,” he guessed. It was a testament to how rattled she was by the call she’d received that morning that she hadn’t thought once about the threats. She’d received a couple of pieces of anonymous mail at work, one each for the past two weeks.

      Do what’s right or else.

      Until this morning, the threats had occupied her thoughts almost constantly. She’d read the words countless times, trying to figure out what they meant. What they referred to.

      And hated that she came up blank.

      “No,” she said. “Though I got a call from the police yesterday. They found no fingerprints other than mine and Marge’s on the letters. The envelopes had been handled by so many people they couldn’t identify any thing. They’ve talked to everyone and didn’t find anything.” Which hadn’t been a surprise to her. She knew her staff. If any of them had a problem with her, they’d talk to her face-to-face.

      “So what happens now?”

      “They’re running a search for similar crimes on other magazines, particularly those dealing with women’s issues. They’re also checking into relatives, spouses and ex-spouses of the women at Durango.”

      Jane wasn’t all that upset by a check on the women’s shelter where she and Brad both volunteered. Extra police protection wasn’t a bad thing when you were afraid for your life.

      “What about you? Do they think it’s safe to continue going into the office?”

      “I can’t not work.”

      “That’s not what I asked.”

      “They’re running extra patrols around the office, and around my house, too. And they suggested I hire someone….”

      “And did you?”

      “Marge made some calls. Found a guy who’s going to be starting on Monday at Twenty-Something.”

      “What about at home?”

      “In the first place, I can’t afford a round-the-clock private bodyguard,” Jane said. “In the second place, the danger is clearly at the office—even the police think so. I haven’t received any threats at home. And in the third place, I couldn’t stand to have someone shadowing my every move. I’d rather take my chances.”

      Brad didn’t look entirely convinced. “So why couldn’t you tell me about this?”

      “I just forgot….” As soon as the words slipped out, Jane wished she could take them back. Brad would’ve been satisfied with the threats as the reason for her unusual mental absenteeism.

      Brad stood up. “Forgot?” He shook his head. “What’s going on, Jane?”

      As Jane thought about the phone call from the Ohio prosecutor, she tried to figure out

Скачать книгу