Harlequin Intrigue April 2021--Box Set 2 of 2 by Carol Ericson (bill gates best books TXT) π

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- Author: Carol Ericson
Read book online Β«Harlequin Intrigue April 2021--Box Set 2 of 2 by Carol Ericson (bill gates best books TXT) πΒ». Author - Carol Ericson
βYou made the connection between that poor, pitiable little girl and me?β She shook her head. βThatβs some hunch, Detective.β
βIt was a hunch that didnβt bear out when I discovered Jenniferβs daughterβs name was Marilyn Lake, but then I saw this.β He pulled a folded sheet of paper from his pants pocket and shook it out. βUnmistakably you.β
Kyra hunched forward and snatched the paper from his hand. Her motherβs eyes, so full of hope and optimism, met hers, and the scent of her motherβs floral perfume overwhelmed her. Her chest tightened, and her throat closed. The paper floated from her hand as she gasped for breath.
She felt herself tumbling, tumbling through time and fear and sadness. The aching sadness gripped her belly and clawed at the carefully constructed facade that sheβd been building for the past ten years since she graduated from high school and changed her name. The wound gaped open and the contents of her pathetic, tortured life began to seep out.
She clutched her midsection and moaned, toppling onto her side. As she began to slide off the couch, into the narrow space between the couch and the coffee table, strong hands pinched her shoulders.
She heard her name from far away... Mimi, Mimi, itβs me and you, Mimi. Youβre my little good-luck charm.
βKyra, Kyra. Are you all right?β
Rough, blunt fingers, not her motherβs cool, delicate ones with the coral polish on the tips, brushed her cheek. The male voice, low and urgent, pierced the fog of her consciousness.
βKyra, lie back. Iβm going to get you some water, or something stronger if I can find it.β
He left her, and the haze began to clear from her brain. As Jake knocked around her kitchen, she grabbed the arm of the chair and pulled herself to an upright position.
She smoothed her hand over her hair and dashed the moisture from her cheeks.
By the time Jake made it back to the living room with a glass of water in one hand and a measure of something that looked like apple cider vinegar in the other, her breathing had returned to normal, although her heart still galloped in her chest.
He held up the glass in his right hand. βWater or some really old Scotch?β
βIβll take the water. Iβm fine.β When she took the glass from his hand, their fingers brushed and she wanted to drop the glass and grab on to his warm, strong hand for dear life.
She gulped back the water. βIβm really okay. Itβs just that I hadnβt seen that photo in a long time. It brought back...memories.β
He crouched at her feet and rested a hand on her bouncing knee. βTerrifying, tragic ones. Iβm sorry I sprang it on you like that. Itβs a beautiful picture of your mother. The second I laid eyes on it I knew you were her daughter. You look so much alike, except for the eyes.β
Her gaze darted to the picture on the floor. βThe eyes? Really? People always used to tell us we had the exact same color of eyes. She assured me that it would be her eyes that would propel her to stardom, just like Liz Taylorβs. My mother lived for old Hollywood.β
βThe color and the shape are almost identical. Itβs the expression thatβs different.β He pinched the corner of the paper between two fingers. βHers lack your cynicism, your distrust, your worldliness.β
βMaybe if my mother had possessed a little more cynicism and a little less trust, sheβd be alive today.β Kyraβs nose stung and she swiped the back of her hand beneath it. βYou mustβve read about her extracurricular activities. She took the idea of the casting couch a little too far.β
βI saw that.β Jake squeezed her knee and backed up to the sofa in a crouch. βWas your mother from LA? I noticed she was a young mother. What about your father?β
Kyra pinned her hands between her knees and lifted her shoulders. βMy mother was seventeen when she had me. She never told me who my father was. Her small town in Idaho chafed, and she took off for Hollywood when she was twenty.β
βParents, family? Where were they when you were orphaned?β
βI assume theyβre still in Idaho. They disowned my mother and wanted nothing to do with me at her death. Her murder embarrassed them.β She squeezed her knees against her hands until her knuckles dug into her flesh. She had never told anyone this much about her life, except Quinn and Charlotte, and they knew it by heart. She never had to tell them anything.
Tilting her head, she surveyed Jake through her lashes. Now sheβd have to kill him.
He raised an eyebrow. βAre you all right now? You looked like you were going to pass out.β
βIβm fine.β She picked up the piece of paper with her motherβs picture and smoothed it out on the coffee table.
Jake cleared his throat. βHow come you didnβt tell me your mother was one of The Playerβs victims?β
She raised her eyes from tracing her fingertip around her motherβs face. βNobody knows that.β
βExcept Quinn.β He dragged a hand through his messy, dark locks. βYou didnβt think it was important information given the nature of this case?β
βImportant to me.β
βImportant to the task force lead? In factββ he stuffed her Guatemalan pillow behind his lower back ββI wouldβve thought youβd be eager to tell me.β
βEager? Whatever for? Itβs my deep, dark secret.β One of her deep, dark secrets.
βIt wouldβve given you cred, another reason why you belonged on the task force.β
βThe only reason I need for being on that task force is my experience with victims and their families.β She took another quick gulp of water, half of it landing in her lap.
βYou canβt tell me you didnβt want on this task force, Kyra. I know you pulled some strings to get assigned, especially because Castillo knows how I feel about working with therapists.β
βWhen I heard the details of the first two killings, it hit me like a ton of bricks. I knew
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