Dying Breath. Wendy Corsi Staub
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Название: Dying Breath

Автор: Wendy Corsi Staub

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Триллеры

Серия:

isbn: 9780786044559

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ will find some woman who is everything Cam isn’t, at least not anymore. Some woman who’s skinny, financially independent, optimistic, emotionally stable. A woman who is all the things Cam never even was in the first place: blonde, petite and perky, elegant, efficient, self-disciplined…

      Cam can’t bring herself to ask her husband—soon to be ex-husband, that is—if he’s started seeing anyone in the two months since they separated.

      Nor has she asked their daughter what, if anything, she knows about her dad’s new solo lifestyle. It’s not fair to expect Tess to spy on him during their scheduled visitations.

      Anyway, Cam should probably get used to the fact that after all these years of a shared life, certain aspects of Mike’s are no longer any of her business.

      Just as aspects of her own life are no longer any of his business.

      Right. But one aspect of your life most certainly is Mike’s business, and you need to tell him about it. Soon.

      With the official start of summer a month away, Long Beach Island—a skinny, twenty-one-mile-long barrier island off the coast of central New Jersey—is still relatively uncrowded. The busiest town, Beach Haven, has been a bustling resort for well over a century. On this warm, still Tuesday afternoon, though, all is quiet here.

      The sun, dazzling when it rose this morning, is high overhead but its light seems filtered now, more white than golden. Off to the west, above the Victorian rooftops of the historic district, the sky—so blue just an hour ago—is tainted the color of an angry bruise. A pleasant sea breeze has given way to brine-scented air hovering ominously close, as if Mother Nature is holding her breath in anticipation of a coming storm.

      The forecast doesn’t call for rain.

      But that’s the glorious thing about the weather here on the coast. Nobody ever seems able to accurately predict what’s going to happen.

      So different here than out West, where every day brings more of the same: calm, dry, sunshine. Or the Deep South, where late-afternoon summer thunderstorms are as predictable as the sun going down.

      Yes, it’s far more interesting to know that on any given day, the weather might remain calm from dawn to dusk—or a powerful, exhilarating storm might blow in to wreak havoc on this peaceful little town. This so-called haven.

      The afternoon may be waning and the weather threatening to turn, but the beach remains dotted with chatting senior citizens in lounge chairs, young mothers chasing after toddlers, and the occasional power walker plugged into an iPod.

      Nobody seems to be paying any attention to the solitary figure standing at the edge of the surf, testing the waters, so to speak.

      Cam walks slowly down the stairs, past the framed family pictures that line the angled wall.

      There’s Tess as a bald, chubby baby, as a tow-headed preschooler, as a gap-toothed first-grader. There’s that lone, stiffly posed professionally taken family portrait of the three of them, and a couple of framed snapshots, and, of course, their formal wedding photograph.

      Cam averts her eyes as she passes that oversized frame, thinking she probably should just take it down.

      Their wedding day was joyful, and every time she sees the picture, she’s flooded with memories—now bittersweet.

      She remembers exchanging handwritten vows in the little white seaside chapel on the Jersey Shore; the best man’s simultaneously funny and moving toast at the reception; her first married dance with Mike to—appropriately—Etta James’s “At Last.”

      Though it took them awhile to hang their large wedding portrait in their first apartment, that was one of the first tasks Mike accomplished when they moved up here to the suburbs. He did so with uncharacteristic efficiency—almost pointedly, Cam remembers thinking at the time. As if he were determined to prove that they were going to create a fresh start here in suburbia—together.

      By then, though, the tension between them was already pervasive.

      Still, it took almost another decade for either of them to do anything about it.

      Now that the marriage is all but over, the picture hangs here still: white lace and broken promises.

      I really should take it down, Cam tells herself, not for the first time, as she passes on by. And she will, as soon as she has a chance.

      But there are some things she can’t keep putting off.

      You have to tell him, Cam admonishes herself again, reaching the first floor and heading toward the kitchen where she can hear Tess rummaging through the cupboards for a snack.

      Of course I’ll tell him. I’ll call him and say we have to talk…

      Just—not yet.

      This early in the season, the Atlantic surf is icy enough to shoot twin darts of pain from ankle to thigh.

      But physical pain is nothing compared to what I’ve been through.

      Physical pain, like the tide, eventually ebbs.

      Even now, the waterline inches farther from shore with every lapping wave. A flat, soaked, darkened strip at its foaming edge is strewn with glistening relics deposited by the sea: pebbles and shells—mostly shards, with an occasional intact treasure among them.

      Gleaming in a relatively empty patch of wave-packed sand is an eye-catching sliver of something wet and black that just washed ashore.

      Hmm. Can it be…?

      If it is, then it’s a sign.

      One doesn’t come across sharks’ teeth very often on these populated northeastern beaches.

      Be casual. Don’t just snatch it up. Someone will notice.

      But this stretch of beach is fairly deserted, and nobody’s looking this way, anyway.

      Good. Go ahead. Reach down…

      Ah, promising.

      The tiny black object is about the size of a little girl’s pinky fingernail, but triangular in shape, tapering down to a sharp, skinny point.

      It’s clumped with grains of wet sand that need to be carefully brushed away before a positive identification can be made…

      Yes.

      Definitely a shark’s tooth.

      A sign.

      It’s time for the hunt to begin again.

      Tess Hastings looks nothing like Cam did at her age. Every time she gazes at her daughter, Cam sees Mike.

      Tess’s coloring is her father’s: she’s got his light brown hair and green-flecked hazel eyes, as opposed to Cam’s chestnut mane and eyes the same dark shade. Tess’s shoulder-length layered cut suits her hair’s thick, wavy texture and her delicate facial features, while Cam has always worn her own hair long and straight. Cam has an olive complexion that’s quick СКАЧАТЬ