The Wanderer. Робин Карр
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Название: The Wanderer

Автор: Робин Карр

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Современные любовные романы

Серия:

isbn: 9781472014863

isbn:

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      “Thank you, Deputy McCain.”

      “Roger McCain, but hardly anyone remembers that. Folks tend to call me Mac.”

      “Nice meeting you, Mac. Thanks for helping out with this.”

      * * *

      Sarah Dupre walked with Hamlet, her Great Dane, down the main street in Thunder Point to the diner. She looped his leash around the lamppost and went inside, pulling off her gloves. This was one of the things she loved about this little town—there was always somewhere to stop and chat for a few minutes. She wasn’t well-known around here, had only lived here a few months, but considering the way she was treated by her new friends, it was as if she’d been here quite a while. If she wasn’t working, she liked to take Ham down to the beach and stop off at the diner on her way home. Apparently she wasn’t the only one—there was always a large bowl of water for dogs by the lamppost. Twin benches on either side of the diner’s front door frequently seated one or two old guys, passing time.

      Gina James was behind the counter of the diner. Gina took care of almost everything at the diner except the cooking. There was another waitress at night and a couple of part-time girls, but it was a pretty small shop. Gina’s mother, Carrie, was sitting on a stool at the counter, her friend Lou McCain seated beside her. Carrie owned the deli across the street. Lou was a schoolteacher who helped out with her nephew Mac’s kids when she wasn’t teaching. Two of said kids were in a booth, eating fries and drinking colas, an after-school treat.

      Sarah said, “Hey,” and all three women said, “Hey,” right back.

      “Something to drink? Eat?” Gina asked her.

      “Could I have a water, please? How is everyone?”

      “What can I say, it’s Friday,” Lou said. “I won’t be seeing the little bast—er, darlings till Monday morning.”

      Sarah laughed at her. “You’re going to heaven for it.”

      “If I died and went to hell, they’d have me teaching junior high,” Carrie said.

      “And if I go to hell, I’ll be making pies and cakes,” Lou said.

      “You have a day off?” Gina asked Sarah.

      “For Landon’s football game. I’m sitting alert Saturday and Sunday, that’s the price I pay for it.”

      “But no one gives you any trouble about it, do they?”

      “Nah. They like weekends off as much as anyone. And I’ll gladly fly weekends if I don’t have to miss Landon’s games. It’s not as though I have any other social life.”

      Carrie leaned her elbow on the diner. “Wish I had an exciting career like you, Sarah. Being a pilot beats my job, any day.”

      “Tell me about it,” Lou said.

      Before Gina could weigh in, the door to the diner opened, the bell tinkling. Ray Anne appeared in her version of a Realtor’s business suit—too short, too tight, too much boobage. She scowled. “Sarah, that dog should be on a leash!”

      “He is, Ray Anne.” She leaned back on her stool to look out the glass pane in the door. “He’s all hooked up.”

      She wiped at her purple skirt. “He still managed to get me with that awful mouth of his.”

      “Well, Ray Anne, you’re just so edible-looking,” Lou said.

      “Ha-ha. Well, you’ll never guess what I just saw! The most gorgeous man, out at Ben’s place. He was built like a brick you-know-what—worn jeans, torn in all the right places, plain old T-shirt under a leather jacket. One of those flying jackets, you know, Sarah. Driving one of those testosterone trucks, pulling a trailer... Handsome face, maybe a dimple, scratchy little growth on his cheeks and chin. He was talking to Mac. It was like an ad for Calvin Klein.”

      “What were you doing out at Ben’s?” Lou asked.

      “I was checking on a rental up the hill two blocks. You know, that old Maxwell place.”

      “Then how’d you see the tears in his jeans and his stubble?”

      Ray Anne dipped a manicured hand into her oversize purse and pulled out her binoculars. She smiled conspiratorially and gave her head a toss. Her short blond hair didn’t move.

      “Clever,” Lou said. “Man-watching taken to the next level. How old is this hunk of burning love?”

      “Irrelevant,” Ray Anne said. “I wonder what he’s doing here. I heard Ben had no next of kin. You don’t suppose cuddly old Ben was hiding a handsome brother? No, no, that would be cruel.”

      “Why?” Sarah asked.

      “Because Ray Anne would love a shot at selling that property of Ben’s,” Carrie said.

      “That’s not true,” Ray Anne protested. “You know me, I only want to help if I can.”

      “And bag a single man or two while you’re at it,” Lou said.

      Ray Anne stiffened slightly. “Some of us are still sexual beings, Louise,” she said. “A notion you might not be familiar with.” As the Sheriff’s Department patrol car passed slowly down the street, Ray Anne said, “Oh, there’s Deputy Yummy Pants—I’m going to go ask him what’s going on. If I can get past the dog!”

      Out the door she wiggled.

      “Deputy Yummy Pants?” Sarah asked with a laugh in her voice.

      “The teenage girls around town call him that,” Lou explained drily. “I don’t recommend it. He hates it. Gets him all pissy. I should tell you what kind of pants Ms. Realtor of the Year has. Maybe Busy Pants.”

      Carrie’s lips quirked. “She suggested you don’t quite get the whole sexual pull. Louise.”

      Lou had a sarcastic twist to her lips when she said, “If she turns up dead, can I count on you girls for an alibi?” Then she turned and called to her niece and nephew. “Hey, kids. Let’s make tracks.” To her friends she said, “I’m going to beat Yummy Pants home. Betcha I get more out of him than Busy Pants does.”

      * * *

      Sarah hung her red slicker on the peg in the mudroom just in time to see her younger brother, Landon, coming toward the back door of their house with his duffel full of football gear. “Hey,” she said. “I didn’t expect to see you.”

      “I came home to get a couple of things and grab a sandwich,” he said. He bent to pet the dog. He didn’t have to bend far—Ham was tall. “Gotta get going.”

      “Wait a sec,” she said.

      “What?” he asked, still petting the dog.

      “For Pete’s sake, can you look at me?” she asked. When he straightened, heavy duffel over one shoulder, she gasped. There was a bruise on his cheekbone.

      “Practice,” he said. “It’s nothing.”

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