Daddy PI: Book 1 of the Daddy PI Casefiles by Frost, J (reading comprehension books .txt) π

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Read book online Β«Daddy PI: Book 1 of the Daddy PI Casefiles by Frost, J (reading comprehension books .txt) πΒ». Author - Frost, J
βYes.β
βWhy?β
βItβs what I do,β I say. βIβd like you to help me, but if youβd prefer not to talk about recent events, I understand. If all you can give me is background, that would help, too.β
She lifts her chin so the cords in her throat stand out against her gilded skin. βMy husband went on what I thought was a routine business trip to Mexico. He came back Sunday afternoon two weeks ago. We were supposed to meet friends for cocktails and dinner at eight, but by seven he asked me to cancel because he said he felt terrible. He went upstairs. I heard him being sick. By the time I went upstairs with the antacids, he was lying on the bathroom floor without a pulse.β She takes a deep breath and releases it. βThatβs what happened.β
Most of thatβs in the reports the cruise line provided me. She omitted that she tried to resuscitate him for fifteen minutes before she called an ambulance. Thinking of her terror as she pushed on her husbandβs chest and tried to force air into his unmoving lungs for fifteen minutes hurts so badly that my stomach cramps around the breakfast I just ate. But her painβs not material to my investigation, so I just nod, keeping my eyes on her face, my gaze gentle.
βOther than vomiting, did he complain of anything else?β I ask.
βA headache. He didnβt say he had chest pains or Iβd have taken him straight to the ER. Bill had a minor heart attack six years ago. I wouldnβt have taken any chest pain lightly. He knew that.β
Which is probably why he didnβt say anything about it. All of the other victims reported chest pains, profuse sweating and a racing pulse along with the headache and nausea. βHad he had food poisoning before? Was he allergic to anything?β
She shakes her head. βNot that I knew of.β
βWhat about his lifestyle? Did he exercise? Drink? Smoke?β
She arches a well-groomed brow many shades darker than her hair. βI think you know more about his lifestyle than I do.β
I nod and clasp my hands between my knees, hoping to look non-threatening. βIβm sorry you found out this way. It must have been a shock.β
βYou could say that.β She stops staring me down, picks up the water, and takes another sip to steady herself. βI mean, Iβve read Fifty Shades like everyone else, but I had no idea my own husband was into . . . what do you call it?β
βKink.β
βKink? Like a bent cord?β
βYes.β
She shakes her head. βAnd thatβs what this cruise was all about, right? Kink . . . kinky sex?β
βYes.β
βGod, I had no idea.β Her soft, red mouth twists bitterly. βI feel like Iβve lost Bill twice over. How could I have been married to the man for nine years and not known about this?β
I spread my hands. βMany people feel they need to hide it. Fifty Shades aside, kinkβs not widely accepted. Maybe he worried it would have hurt his marriage to you, or his career, or his friendships. There are lots of reasons.β
βAre you?β She presses her lips together before continuing. βAre you part of this lifestyle, Mr. Logan?β
βYes,β I say simply.
A hint of color rises to her cheeks. βIβm sorry. I had no business asking that. Iβm just so angry. At everyone, and everything, associated with Billβs death. At this lifestyle of his. But I know you didnβt have anything to do with it. Iβm sorry . . . Iβm taking it out on you.β
βNo problem.β I accept her apology the way Iβd accept a bottomβs whoβd misbehaved. Only Iβm not going to be able to spank Reggie Black into forgiveness, no matter how badly she needs it. βGoing back to your husbandβs habits, did he exercise? Drink? Smoke?β
She shrugs. βHe golfed occasionally. He wasnβt really much for exercise, and I nagged him about his weight, Iβll admit. I tried to get him into low calorie beer.β She gives me a fragile, broken smile. βHe called it horse piss. He liked his craft beers, and his gin. But he wasnβt really a big drinker. A couple of beers a week and a few gin and tonics on the weekend. He never smoked cigarettes . . . well, he never smoked that I knew of. I guess he could have been doing two packs a day, for all I know.β
My chest clenches, hearing her doubting everything about the man she was married to.
βMrs. Black, can I offer you a word of advice?β
Which sheβll probably ignore, but her glaring, grating pain makes me ask anyway.
She frowns at me resentfully, but she nods.
βFinding out a secret about a loved one can be painful,β I say. βAnd I can see finding out about your husbandβs alternative lifestyle has hurt you. But that doesnβt mean he was a different person from the man you knew. We all have secrets.β
βDo you . . . keep your kink or whatever a secret?β
She keeps throwing it back to me, invading my privacy, as a way of assuaging her grief. Iβve seen it before. I try not to take it personally.
βNo, not anymore. But I certainly never told my parents while they were alive.β
She sighs and curls in on herself, her shoulders sagging, and I have that overwhelming urge to hug her again. And to put her over my knee.
βI donβt understand why Bill thought he couldnβt tell me. Did he think I wouldnβt understand? That Iβd, what, reject him?β She loses the battle against the tears welling in her eyes and they streak down her cheeks for a second before she pulls out a tissue and blots them away. βGod, Iβm sorry. Thatβs not why youβre here. What can I tell you that will help you find out what happened to him?β
βWhat did he tell you about the business trip? Who was he going with? Where was he going? Who he was meeting?β
She shakes her head, but not in denial. I think sheβs trying to remember conversations that at the time probably seemed inconsequential.
βIt was a business trip like a hundred other
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