Killer Summer by Lynda Curnyn (knowledgeable books to read TXT) ๐
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- Author: Lynda Curnyn
Read book online ยซKiller Summer by Lynda Curnyn (knowledgeable books to read TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Lynda Curnyn
Amanda didnโt understand why I came home that night scoffing at everything from the fingerbowls to the fancy French menu. She couldnโt comprehend my resistance.
Not that I really resisted. I went out with him again. And again. A part of me secretly enjoyed the raised eyebrows and whispers that broke out at the sight of me, young, blond and wide-eyed on Tomโs arm. I guess everyone assumed I was simply soothing whatever ills lingered after Tomโs divorce from Gillian, his first wife and the mother of his daughter, Francesca. But that was just it. There were no wounds to heal. Tom accepted his lot as divorce and weekend dad with the same pragmatism that guided his business deals. Out with the old and in with the new. And since I had all the glitter and good wine and food that went along with being โthe new,โ I didnโt allow myself to wonder at his apparent lack of feeling for the woman he had left not a year earlier, the child he traveled to see for a few short hours on the weekend. I simply accepted his devotion to me like a kind of amused spectator. I threw my past up into his face, my underachieving alcoholic father, my bipolar mother, my pack of redneck brothers. It was as if Tom didnโt hear me. Or didnโt care.
Which was why when he declared, on our fourth date, that he would one day make me his wife, I laughed mercilessly. But my insides clamored with a mixture of fear and maybe even longing. I hadnโt heard this sort of confident declaration from a man since I was sixteen and Luke, my then-boyfriend, told me he would love me till the day he died. Which I suppose was true, since not two weeks after I dumped him he did die, in a drunk-driving accident. But I wondered what it was that made Tom so certain about me when I wasnโt sure of anything. My life. My career prospects. I felt challenged by his faith in me, challenged to be the cool, confident woman he saw staring at him across that candlelit table. I suppose the fact that I succeeded can be measured by the gap between the hard-living rock-and-roll groupie I once aspired to be to the careful, perfect wife I became.
Tom always wanted the perfect wife. I just wish he could have loved her a little more.
I wish I could have loved her a little more.
Chapter Six
Zoe
Is it hot in here or is it just me?
โShe looks, um, good,โ I said to Sage once we were seated at the back of Whiteโs Funeral Home on East 71st.
Sage gave me a look, and I knew exactly why. I hate when people say that at wakes and funerals. Who looks good when theyโre dead? But the truth was, Maggie did look good. At least better than the last time I saw her. I couldnโt get the image of her sightless eyes and pale skin out of my head. I guess thatโs what wakes were for, I thought, remembering the last one Iโd been to for Mylesโs father. But that had been a whole different thing. One of those sprawling affairs on Long Island, sprawling mostly because Mylesโs father was not only a father of five and brother to six, but a Suffolk County cop, killed in the line of duty. You can imagine how big that wake was. It even made the papers. People came from miles around, in such numbers that they had to limit the viewing hours just so Myles and his family could have some time to grieve in peace. And grieve they did. Iโd never seen Mrs. Callahan so broken up. And Mylesโs sisters. I had always been so close to them, especially Erica, the only one who was still single and close to my age. I didnโt even know what to say to Ericaโto any of them. Myles had been so sweet, so good, trying to stay strong, keep it all together while everyone else fell apart. I knew he was grieving, had held him tight when he finally did cry the night after they buried Mr. C.
Which was why this sophisticated and utterly dry-eyed event had me wondering. If it wasnโt for
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