Breaking Through. AM Hartnett
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Название: Breaking Through

Автор: AM Hartnett

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Эротика, Секс

Серия:

isbn: 9780007587858

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ arm he’d wrapped around her shoulders as they walked from the church lot to the café was supposedly to keep her close under his umbrella, but it had been such an easy sweep to get her nearer that she couldn’t help but think it was all part of a scheme.

      It surprised her how little she minded. When the hostess offered to take their wet jackets, Miranda passed hers over to him and got a charge out of his quick-fire look down her body. Save for the hem of her shorts, the clothes she wore underneath her jacket had been spared from the rain, so she wasn’t giving him a show, but that look seemed to go deeper than the yellow T-shirt she wore.

      She liked it.

      He ordered a green tea and caught her crinkling her nose. ‘What?’

      ‘I thought you were an espresso kind of guy.’

      He raised a brow. ‘How do you know that?’

      ‘I’ve seen you in the café at work.’

      ‘And noticed me?’

      She grinned, not about to admit that she had been shit-talking him in her head. ‘You don’t strike me as a green tea and espresso kind of guy. You strike me as a black coffee and powdered doughnut kind of guy.’

      ‘Do I also strike you as a fedora and tommy-gun kind of guy?’

      Miranda laughed and placed her order for a hot chocolate and a cranberry scone, then followed him to a table away from the window.

      ‘First things first, how old are you?’ he asked as he shrugged out of his blazer, then laughed as Miranda shot him a surprised look. ‘I’m going for about twenty-one, but it just occurred to me that you could be sixteen and I could be in for a hell of a lot of trouble.’

      ‘I’m twenty-three, and I have ID to prove it.’ She plucked her wallet from her back pocket and handed it over, then giggled as he peered at the government ID.

      She had to hand it to Simon Reeve: he was charming as hell. Now that the blazer was slung on the back of his chair and he had rolled up his sleeves to reveal strong forearms with faint blond hair, now that he had loosened his tie, he was transformed.

      ‘See? You won’t end up on the evening news, though I have to admit, I’m comforted to know that you’re not into under-age girls.’

      ‘They weren’t worth tangling with when I was seventeen, and they’re sure as hell not worth it now that I’m pushing forty.’

      ‘You’re not forty.’

      ‘You want to see my ID?’

      ‘Of course.’

      He pulled out his wallet and tossed the laminated card towards her.

       Simon P. Reeve.

      She looked from the terrible photo to the man, and thought there was something odd in his expression, but it was gone as soon as she caught a glimpse of it.

      ‘So you weren’t lying when you said you were new in town. You still have your Ontario driver’s licence.’

      ‘Another thing on my to-do list. See? Almost forty.’

      ‘Thirty-eight, actually. You still have a year and seven months to go.’ She tossed the ID back to him, and once he had replaced it in his wallet she mirrored his pose by cupping both hands around her cup. ‘So, Mr Reeve, what exactly do you do for that politician upstairs?’

      He hesitated, drumming his fingertips against the teacup as he pursed his lips.

      Miranda leaned closer and lowered her voice. ‘Are you the guy who gets the hookers and blow for rich donors?’

      Simon laughed and shook his head. ‘Do you think about your words before you let them out?’

      ‘You have no right whatsoever to act shocked by that question.’

      ‘I’m not shocked, and without giving too much away I don’t get “hookers” and “blow” for rich donors, but if they’re involved in anything like that I’m the guy who finds out about it. I’m the guy who is paid to know everything there is to know about everyone.’

      ‘You dig up dirt.’

      He didn’t confirm this, but he didn’t deny it either. He simply raised his cup and took a sip of the yellowish-brown brew.

      ‘I never would have thought local politics would need a man like you,’ she said.

      ‘Every level of government, no matter how small, uses men like me. Roe is going for the federal party leadership at the end of the summer. He’s got such a reputation as an MLA that up until recently the seat was pretty much his, but the competition is heating up for the leadership. I need to make sure he comes out of the wash squeaky clean.’

      ‘And make sure his competition doesn’t come out so clean.’ Again, he didn’t answer, and Miranda laughed. ‘All right. I get it. We won’t talk about your job, which I have to admit makes you sound like a Jacobean villain.’

      ‘Let’s talk about you,’ he said, giving her a look that suggested he was already trying to work out who she was. ‘So far all I have is that you’re twenty-three, you sell insurance, you like to paint and you’re raising your sister’s baby.’

      She swirled the frothy contents of her mug, then tore off a piece of her scone. ‘Sadly, that’s pretty much the gist of who I am.’

      ‘Did you grow up here?’

      She gave him her life in point-form, how she and her sisters had been latchkey kids while their mother worked the jewellery counter in a department store, how her father had been a truck-driver nearly 25 years her mother’s senior and had suffered a massive heart attack in a motel room in Virginia. She told him about Juliet moving to the West Coast, about Des getting pregnant and the father up and leaving for Alberta with the promise of sending her money, only to get there and announce he was marrying someone else. She recounted Des’s shocking and sudden death by heart attack at 24, just two months after giving birth to Eddie. She told him of her mother’s return to her Cape Breton home, where she found comfort in her big family in the aftermath of Des’s death, and the last year living in the Agricola Street house with Eddie.

      She told him too much, she thought, but she found herself unable to stop. Maybe it was because for all the talking she did during the day, she rarely got to talk about herself, and he didn’t seem to mind.

      The whole time, Simon listened with his chin perched on the heel of his hand, saying nothing as she unfolded her life’s story. Then she prompted him for his own past.

      Once more, a moment’s discomfort passed over him but he seemed to swat it away with a hand in front of his face.

      ‘I was born in Ottawa and moved to Montreal when I was a kid. I lived there until I went to the University of British Columbia. I was there for one semester before I transferred back to Quebec. I just screwed around and sponged after I dropped out. I got into this line of work in my late twenties after finally finishing my degree.’

      ‘Bored or broke?’

      ‘Both, СКАЧАТЬ