Dream Weaver. Jenna Ryan
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Dream Weaver - Jenna Ryan страница 5

Название: Dream Weaver

Автор: Jenna Ryan

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Зарубежные детективы

Серия:

isbn:

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ place and Mel let you keep because you apparently grew up in a time-warp bungalow with parents who still aren’t aware that several decades have passed since the mid-seventies.”

      “She means the walls looked dated.” Meliana stopped an excited Shannon from hopping onto the bed. “That’s a white-on-white quilt, handmade by Johnny’s grandmother, Shan. You didn’t have to come all the way to Chicago, Johnny. I’m having the security code changed tomorrow. And I have a dog here most of the time.”

      His frown deepened. “Where is Lokie?”

      “Visiting my cousin in Joliet.”

      He made a disgusted sound. “The kids’ll rip her ears off.”

      “If they do, I’ll kick Joey’s butt from here to Honolulu. She’ll be fine. I taught her how and when to bite.”

      Julie chuckled. Then she sobered and craned her neck. “Damn. Blackburn’s coming back.”

      “With his sidekick Dick?” Meliana teased.

      “Dirk.”

      “Trying to lighten the mood here, Jules.” Climbing to her feet, she ran her fingers through Johnny’s rumpled hair. “You look like you lost the battle with a wind machine.” When his eyes—rather stunning eyes, she acknowledged—narrowed, she let her hand fall. “I don’t think I mentioned this, and I’m not sure if it’s relevant or not, but white’s my favorite color.”

      “Yes, we know that,” Johnny said.

      “Lokie’s a Samoyed, also white. I found her tied up on the front porch right after you moved to Blue Lake six months ago. The vet figured she was maybe five months old.”

      “I thought you said she was a gift.”

      “She was. There was a ribbon around her neck with a card attached to it. It said: ‘A beautiful puppy for a beautiful woman. She’s called Lokelani.’ I thought the Raymonds left her for me when they moved. There were always new dogs popping up over there. But then the roses started coming, and I started to wonder.”

      “You think the rose guy gave you a dog?”

      She regarded them both, her husband the FBI agent and her friend the cop. “White dog, white rose.” She drew a deep breath. “The white dog already had a name and, FYI, Lokelani just happens to be Hawaiian for ‘heavenly rose.’”

      Chapter Two

      They had a brief and mildly unpleasant run-in with Chris in the downstairs hallway. Johnny and Chris had been friends of a sort once. Then Johnny had gone undercover for two years and a great many things had changed.

      “He was hitting on you at our wedding,” Johnny said as he helped Meliana into his SUV. “And he jumped on the first town house that came up for sale in our complex after we moved in.”

      “He likes vaulted ceilings.”

      “He likes you.”

      “I like him back. But like isn’t love, and I’ve told him that at least a dozen times.”

      “Chris Blackburn has the ability to be selectively blind and deaf when it suits his purpose.”

      Meliana grinned. “Unlike another person in this vehicle, right? Will Shannon be okay while we’re gone?”

      “I gave her food, water and a big plate of soda crackers.”

      “You’re corrupting her, Johnny.” Propping her foot up, she retied the lace of her sneaker. “Do you know where you’re going?”

      “Where, yes. Why, no. Charlie Lightfoot’s a nutcase.”

      “Wrong. In actual fact, he solves nutcases.”

      “By picking up psychic vibes from objects, then translating them into emotions and, occasionally, physical traits.”

      “Hey, it’s highly unlikely the cops will get anywhere with this. There were no prints and no help forthcoming from Mrs. Feldman or anyone else. I want to know who stole my lingerie and why, beyond the obvious, the color white seems to be significant. I know.” She cut off his protest. “White denotes purity, innocence, virtue.”

      “Virginity.”

      “Uh-huh, well, he missed the boat on that one years ago. And I was never pure, innocent or especially virtuous.”

      “You were a navy brat.”

      “Base life had its moments, Grand. My mom made captain before she turned thirty-five. I thought it was pretty cool growing up with a parent who flew jets and got to order a lot of other people around.”

      “You’re a chip off the old navy block, Mel.”

      “Did you know she’s a commander now?”

      “Does she know you’re a top-notch surgeon?”

      “A noble and worthy profession, but not the one she wanted for me. Unfortunately, I’m not as fond of flying or of the navy as my mother is.”

      “How’s your nui kaikunane, Maleko?”

      “Very good,” she congratulated. “My big brother Mark’s fine. He’s doing some kind of undercover work in Honolulu. Last time I saw him he looked like a cross between a Gypsy and a pirate. Big gold earring, long hair, slick clothes.”

      “Is your mom okay with that?”

      “She wasn’t especially happy when he left the navy after only four years, but he’s a great cop.”

      “He has the right instincts. My division leader says any time Mark wants a job, it’s there for him.”

      “He’d appreciate that. Turn left here.”

      “I remember where Lightfoot lives, Mel. My brain didn’t burn out totally on that assignment.”

      But more damage had been done than could be easily repaired, Meliana thought with a pang. She changed the subject. “Charlie’s become a fixture on the South Side scene. He broke up with a woman last year because she wanted him to move away from there. He loves his apartment.”

      “And his Deadhead music and his incense. He tried to analyze Mark’s captain’s dreams at our wedding, Mel. He’s lucky the guy was so drunk he didn’t give a damn.”

      “You’re such a stickler. Charlie’s brilliant. Okay, maybe he did a few too many psychedelic drugs in the early seventies, but you like harvest gold and avocado green.”

      “I grew up with them.”

      “I grew up with a father who embezzled money from a pineapple factory, but I manage to keep my fingers out of the hospital funding pot. Honest to God, Johnny, you’re so by-the-book in some ways and so fly-by-the-seat-of-your-pants in others. It’s like there’s two people living inside your head.”

      “One head, Mel, two sides to my brain.” СКАЧАТЬ