Safe Keeping. Barbara Taylor Sissel
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Название: Safe Keeping

Автор: Barbara Taylor Sissel

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Контркультура

Серия: MIRA

isbn: 9781472094445

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ this time.”

      Lissa went to the pantry. “Do you want something to eat?”

      “Nah. Thanks. I stopped at Mickey D’s on the way here. I’d take a cup of coffee, though, if it’s no trouble.”

      “Since when do you drink coffee?”

      “Since it got colder than hell outside.” The grin he shot her was surface, a token meant to placate her. It didn’t.

      “You need to call Mom and Dad, Tuck.”

      “I’ll call Mom, but I’ve got nothing to say to the old man.”

      Lissa could have asked him right then why the police were looking for him, but she didn’t. Instead, she rinsed out the carafe while he told her about his Tahoe, that it had died coming back into town and that he’d gotten lucky when a girl pulled off the road to help him.

      “Did you know her?” Lissa asked.

      “I do now,” Tucker answered, cocking an eyebrow. “I spent the night at her place.”

      “You’re hopeless, you know that?”

      “Yeah, but you still love me, right?” His smile now was pure Tucker, full of mischief and his affection for her. Full of so many small teasing moments they’d shared just like this one. Full of all that connected them—family secrets, sibling histories, the ties that bind.

      Lissa would tell people they were close, and in her next breath she would say they had nothing in common. Either way it was true. She’d taught him to read; she’d taught him to tie his shoes and how to color inside the lines. She’d read aloud to him and sung songs with him. “Itsy Bitsy Spider” was his favorite. He’d loved playing the finger game that went with it. At one time he’d even slept with a big, stuffed spider. It had been purple, and he’d named it Itsy. She wondered what had become of it. They’d played endless rounds of Clue and Monopoly on rainy days and shared a love of Bon Jovi and the first Rocky movie. Sometimes she understood Tucker completely; other times he was an enigma, a puzzle to which she was missing a vital piece.

      She turned off the tap. “What happened to your face?”

      He touched his cheek. “This? Cut myself shaving.” His feet danced.

      She looked out the kitchen window. The coffeemaker sighed. She said, “I hate what’s happening, Tuck.”

      “It’s not your fault Pop’s an asshole.”

      He thought she was referring to the fight he’d had with their father, the latest blowout, and she was, but that was only part of it. The cup and saucer she handed him rattled in his big, work-roughened hands. He had strong, narrow wrists and long, tapered fingers that could measure an octave on the piano. Their mother had taught him to play, and he’d been a willing student until he picked up a friend’s guitar one day in high school. He’d played in a couple of bands, and Lissa thought he was good, but she wasn’t an expert. She only knew what she liked, and anyway, she kind of agreed with her dad. It wouldn’t be reliable, earning a living that way.

      Dad had wanted Tucker to play baseball, as if that would be a more stable occupation.

      “The old man told me not to come back.” Tucker blew over the top of his coffee cup. “So now, in addition to being jobless, I’m homeless.”

      “He didn’t mean it. You know how he is. He’s cooled off now. Trust me.”

      “I think I’m going to move in with Morgan, anyway.”

      “Who’s Morgan?” Lissa sat across from him and stirred the sugar substitute from two blue packets into her cup.

      “The girl I met last night. Her dad owns a car dealership. She thinks he’ll hire me.”

      “What about the band? I thought going on the road with them was the plan.”

      “Whichever works out, I guess.”

      Where were you really? Lissa couldn’t bring herself to ask. She was filled with foreboding, heavy with it. She cleared her throat.

      “What?” Tucker gulped his coffee.

      Too fast, she thought, because he grimaced as if he’d burned his mouth. When he asked for a Coke, she brought it to him, along with the Houston Chronicle. She unfolded it.

      He popped the top on his soft drink. “What’s this?”

      “Do you know her?” Lissa sat down.

      “This girl?” Tucker studied the picture. Nothing altered in his expression or in his voice. Lissa started to breathe, and then he said, “It’s Jessica Sweet. Holy shit!” He brought his glance to Lissa’s. “She’s dead?”

      “You knew her.” Lissa’s heart throbbed in her ears.

      “Yeah. Miranda introduced us. They were friends.”

      “Oh, Tucker. She was a dancer, too? Did they work at the same club?”

      “Yeah. So what? After Miranda was killed, we hung out together, but really, I hardly knew her. Jessica was Senator Sweet’s daughter. You remember him, U.S. senator, back in the day? She was kind of wild, got into trouble with drugs and stuff. I heard she cost her old man his last campaign—”

      “Tucker! She’s dead!”

      “Yeah, that’s what it says here. I can’t believe it.”

      “She and Miranda were friends. They worked at the same club. You knew her. The police are looking for you. It’s happening all over again....”

      “No, Liss. There’s no history between us, no big soap-opera drama. In case you didn’t notice, I didn’t find her body.”

      Lissa didn’t answer.

      “Come on, you know I had nothing to do with this, right? I mean you’re not stressing because you think I’m, like, guilty, are you? I didn’t even know the chick was missing until this morning when I saw the news.”

      “A second ago, you said you couldn’t believe it, as if you hadn’t heard—”

      “I should have known!” He tossed up his hands. “I should have guessed what you’d think. I bet Pop’s all over it, too. I’m a killer, right? The family lunatic, the psycho. That’s why Pop doesn’t want me home.” He stood up fast enough to rock the chair, grabbing his jacket, shoving his arms into the sleeves.

      “Come on, Tucker. You have to admit it’s weird. Twice? In two years? Jessica was found in almost the exact location where Miranda was. You knew both of them. You must see how it looks.”

      “Yeah. I see how it looks. I just never expected you would believe in how it looks. I thought you would believe in me.”

      “I do, of course I do!” Lissa picked up a towel, wound her hands in it. “It’s just—”

      “I’m only going to say this one time, okay? I didn’t kill Jessica. СКАЧАТЬ