The first chapter was a short one, so I have included two in this sample.
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CHAPTER 1
The last thing
fraud investigator Morgan Reed expected to be doing during his
recuperation from a gunshot wound was investigating his own father. But
he had no choice. A mysterious seven-hundred-dollar cash withdrawal
every month for the last nine was not chump change for a
seventy-two-year-old man on a fixed income. Retirement and Social
Security only went so far, and Morgan well knew Sedona, Arizona, was not
a cheap place to live.
He was now in his fourth day of
surveillance, which included following his father around to see what
kind of life the man he’d lost touch with over the last few years really
lived.
Using the small field binoculars he’d purchased at
a pawn shop yesterday, Morgan watched his father coast his ten-speed
mountain bike to a full stop before hopping off in front of a
restaurant. His father seemed impervious to the Sedona heat, despite the
fifteen block ride he’d just completed. Morgan had the air conditioning
in the rented SUV cranked down low enough to make icicles, and still he
felt like he was struggling for every breath. How his father handled
the intense heat was a mystery to him.
Wiggling his
injured leg to keep it from going to sleep on him as he squirmed
uncomfortably in the seat, Morgan watched a beautiful younger woman open
and hold the restaurant door for his father. He lifted his surveillance
camera with its telescopic lens and zoomed in for a closer look.
Thank
goodness he had brought the camera with him. He’d originally intended
to use it for pictures of Sedona’s amazing red rocks. Instead he had
been busy collecting pictures of his father and the multiple women he
courted.
When Morgan snapped the picture, his father’s
hands were gently holding her face. Yes, the restaurant woman definitely
looked much younger. In fact, Morgan would have guessed the woman to be
closer in age to his own forty-four years. Then he almost dropped the
camera in astonishment as his father kissed her soundly on the mouth
while she laughed. After his father released her, the woman yanked him
inside while smacking him lightly on the back of the head.
“Damn, Dad. You big flirt,” Morgan said aloud, his voice barely louder than the roaring fan blowing cool air at his heated face.
Morgan
had no idea what it was like to kiss a woman with the ease his father
just did. He absolutely didn’t want to think about how jealous he was of
his father’s easy familiarity with what appeared to be a damned
good-looking woman by his own standards.
Morgan hadn’t
realized how devoid his life was of real companionship until he’d spent
two months alone recuperating from a gunshot wound. None of the women he
slept with over the last couple of years had even bothered with a phone
call to see how he was faring after his release from the hospital.
Apparently, his value as a male was nil when gratuitous sex was out of
the question. It had taken the shock of that knowledge for Morgan to see
that he wasn’t even friends with any of them.
In fact, it
was hard not to be jealous of his father in every way, Morgan decided.
He had watched the man who raised him move from woman to woman in the
last few days as if the entire older female population of Sedona existed
only for his enjoyment. It was damned humbling to discover how
romantically active the old man was compared to the inactivity of
Mason’s own love life.
His father visited one woman in the
retirement center, closing the door of her room and hanging a “Do Not
Disturb” sign out for an hour. This was the first stop every day. Morgan
couldn’t get access to that room without raising suspicions, but it was
obvious from what he did see through binoculars and a discreet walk-by,
that his father was a regular and well-known visitor.
Another
woman he visited was in the hospital. His father had charmed all the
nurses as well as her. Dressed as a janitor with a ball cap pulled low
over his face, Morgan hadn’t drawn too much attention pretending to
sweep the hall outside the room as he watched his father holding the
woman’s hand.
Then there was the afternoon woman his
father had sex with twice in the same week, or at least it had been
twice already in the three previous days Morgan had followed him. It was
just lunchtime now, but hell, if his father went back to see her for
sex again today, Morgan would for sure feel the urge to put a gun to his
own head. He was lucky to have a bed partner a couple times a month,
and even then it wasn’t all night.
It had been almost
scarring the first time to watch his father practically ravish the woman
against her front door when he left. Morgan had ended up having to look
away from what they were doing when his father’s hands got too busy
exploring. But he hadn’t missed seeing the way the woman watched his
father leave with an adoring expression on her face.
Truthfully,
Morgan was just guessing they had sex. God only knew what they really
did alone together at their age, but Morgan didn’t doubt his father was
proficient at it—whatever the hell it was. And now his father was openly
kissing yet another much younger woman that Morgan might even have
considered dating himself, if he had been looking for a date in this
town.
Morgan picked up his cell phone, connected the camera to it, and downloaded the pictures onto the memory card.
CHAPTER 2
“If
you keep kissing me that way, I’m definitely going to be ruined for all
other men,” Thea Carmichael said when Gerald Reed finally let her go.
She was startled as always by Gerald’s lips locked to hers for a
smacking kiss.
“If you ever find a guy who wants to take
my place, let me know and I’ll stop,” Gerald told her. “I’m not slipping
you tongue, doll. I save that for Lydia. I’m keeping it PG-13 with
you.”
“Get in here,” Thea told him smartly, dragging him
inside and tapping him on the back of his mostly bald head. “How am I
supposed to get a guy to even date me when you keep kissing me in public
like I belong to you? You have enough women, Gerald Reed. I refuse to
be one of your harem, even if you are the most perfect man who ever
walked the earth.”
“Any guy who sees an old geezer like me
as serious competition for a woman like you is definitely not worthy of
you, sweetie,” Gerald told her, patting her butt.
“Yeah,
Aunt Lydia comes in here all the time talking about what an old geezer
you are in bed,” Thea teased, her voice sarcastic. “She brags so much I
have to run her off. I haven’t had a real man in my life in years.”
“You’d
think she’d be more discreet at her age,” Gerald said, rubbing his
chin, secretly pleased that Lydia thought he was good enough to tell
Thea about it. Lydia lit a fire in him, one that hadn’t burned so
brightly in many, many years. She was the kind of woman that made a man
forget his own name.
“Until she met you, my
sixty-eight-year-old aunt was the most discreet woman I’d ever known.
Aunt Lydia says you rock her world and she’s too happy to hold it in,”
Thea told him, leaning against the bar as Gerald climbed up on a stool.
“You aunt is an inspiring woman,” Gerald said, leaning on the bar and looking sideways at Thea. “So is her niece.”
Thea
rolled her eyes but smiled. “If I could clone you, I would. If I didn’t
love my aunt, I’d lure you away. Instead, all I can do is feed you
lunch and pine away hoping for someone just like you to walk into my
life.”
“My son’s in town,” Gerald said slyly.
“Morgan is forty-four. Still single. Good-looking, even if he does look
like his mother more than me–God Rest Her Soul.”
“Is his
heart as good as yours? No. I know this already. You know how I know
this?” Thea demanded, watching her only waitress set Gerald’s usual
half-sandwich and cottage cheese in front him and stand on her toes to
kiss his cheek. Amy liked Gerald as much Thea did. There wasn’t a female
born who wouldn’t fall instantly in love with Gerald Reed when he used
his well-practiced flirting on her.
“I know this because
if your son was like you, he would be snapped up already with his own
version of Lydia glaring me down if I even so much as looked at him. I
don’t think they make men like you anymore,” Thea said, smiling at him.
“Okay.
Maybe Morgan is a little bit of a bitter bastard. It’s that damn job of
his,” Gerald said, sighing. “I didn’t raise my son to have
such a hard heart. It’s a shame that he does.”
“How is Morgan’s leg healing?” Thea asked. Morgan getting shot had been the first thing to shake the man since his wife died.
“Morgan’s
fine I guess—considering he couldn’t walk until a month ago,” Gerald
said, shrugging and digging into his cottage cheese. He didn’t like to
think of what he had felt when he’d heard Morgan had been shot. His
eldest hadn’t even told him until he’d asked to come stay for a few
months. When you get old, your children cut you out of their lives,
Gerald had learned. Most of the time he was okay with that. Now and
again, it was a huge source of pain.
Gerald took a bite of
his sandwich before continuing. “Morgan is getting around fairly well
now. He tells me he transferred his physical therapy to a doctor over
near Tlaquepaque center. Looks like he may be staying the whole four
months after all. He’s started several renovation projects around the
house and pretty much has turned the whole damn place into a mess. I’m
letting him do what he wants no matter how irritated I get. He seems to
need the distraction, but I hate living in a constant construction
zone.”
Thea laughed. “Poor baby. You want to come stay with me while he’s here? I might like having a man around the house again.”
“Sweet offer, but Lydia would skin me,” Gerald said, winking. “Besides, you’ll never lose your wididity with me hanging around.”
“My—my
what? I see that gleam in your eye, Gerald Reed. Does that mean what I
think it does?” Thea asked, appalled laughter rolling from her.
“It
refers to widows who grow their virginity back by not having sex for
years,” Amy informed her, smiling widely as Gerald swung a knowing,
proud smile in her direction.
“I shouldn’t brag, but I had
a hell of a lot of fun relieving your Aunt Lydia of hers,” he said,
going back to his food as both women snickered, blushed, and finally
laughed.
Gerald liked his new bold reputation. Having been
a quiet man for most of his life, he was pleased to have shed that
timidity in favor of really living. He planned to love the current woman
in his life with all he could, no matter how many times he helped lower
her into a grave. Though it had turned him into a very emotional
person, he had come to think of it as the natural order of things at his
age.
“Well, if my aunt kicks off before I do, maybe you
can relieve me of my wididity as well,” Thea said boldly. “Though I have
to tell you I haven’t really missed sex all that much. But I do miss
the foot rubs at the end of the day. Angus Carmichael knew how to rub a
woman’s feet. No masseuse has ever come close to the talent he had in
his hands.”
“Althea, you’re way too young not to miss
sex,” Gerald said, shaking a finger at her. “Here. Before I forget.” He
slid the envelope across the counter. “Put this in Delilah’s account and
buy the medicine.”
Thea sighed at the envelope. She knew it had to represent a healthy chunk of Gerald’s money, and it killed her to take it.
1 comment:
his looks really good! Loved the excerpt.
I had to laugh, though, because I used to live in rural ohio, and a new mexican restaurant came to town by the name of Tlaquepaque. Of course, nobody could pronouce the name, so it was degraged to LackyPacky.
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