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Authors: Dallas Schulze

Lost and Found (16 page)

BOOK: Lost and Found
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By morning, the rain had stopped and only the tattered storm clouds remained. Babs stirred and stretched, aware of feeling rested and more alive than she'd felt in years. Her body ached deliriously, reminding her of last night's passion. Sam had carried her to bed and she'd fallen asleep in his arms. She had no idea what time it was when she woke to the feel of his hands exploring her body, his mouth nibbling a path along her spine. The memory brought a sleepy smile.

The bed was empty but Babs could hear Sam in the kitchen. A slightly scratchy baritone rose over the clatter of pots. Her smile widened. Somehow "It's Not Easy Being Green" was not a tune she'd have expected to hear from Sam. Kermit the Frog he was not.

She threw back the covers and sat up, reaching for the flannel shirt Sam had left draped across the bottom of the bed. Weak sunshine lit the room and she scowled at it. If it wasn't raining, there was no excuse for them to stay here.

She didn't want to leave the old farmhouse. It had been a quiet haven, a break from the madness that had surrounded her life lately. Once they left, she'd have to face the real world again—and deal with what her family had done. She wasn't ready for that. She wasn't sure she'd ever be ready.

She washed her face and combed her hair and then hurried out into the living room. The rain might have stopped but the old house was still cold. Sam had a fire going in the fireplace and the living room was warm and toasty.

"Good morning."

Sam looked up, his eyes sweeping over her from head to foot. Babs felt the look as if it were a touch, warming her, letting her know he was glad to see her.

"Good morning. Ready for breakfast?"

"Sure. What are we having?" She walked to the stove to peek at what was cooking but Sam's hand closed around her nape, tilting her head back for a thorough kiss. By the time he released her, Babs had forgotten all about breakfast. She opened her eyes as he brushed his thumb across her mouth. He was looking at her in a way that made her knees go weak.

"I'm tempted to forget about food and take you back to bed." Babs could only stare at him, her fingers clinging to the front of his shirt. He sighed and pried her fingers loose, pushing her gently toward the living room. "I suppose you need your nourishment. Go sit down and I'll bring your breakfast."

Babs sat on the sofa, carefully avoiding the spring that had broken through the ancient upholstery. Sam brought the food in and settled himself on the floor. She balanced her plate on her knees and stared at its contents.

"Someone must really like corned beef hash."

Sam nodded. "Must have. It could have been worse. They could have liked anchovies."

She took a few bites and then set down her fork. She didn't want to say it. She didn't even want to think it, but it had to be said.

"I guess we'll be leaving after breakfast." She kept her voice carefully neutral, as if it didn't matter at all.

Sam threw her a quick, unreadable look and then looked down at his plate. He cut a beet up into neat little squares, paying careful attention to the operation.

"I think we should stay here today and start out tomorrow."

"I'm rested enough to go today." Why was she arguing? Nothing would please her more than to stay just where they were. But she didn't want Sam to know how much she wanted to stay here. She didn't want to admit how much she wanted to stay.

"Maybe. But I think it would be a good idea to give it another day. You must have been really exhausted to collapse like that. I don't know how far we're going to have to walk before we can get a ride. I don't want to have to carry you to L.A."

"Where are we going to go when we leave here?"

"Well, I figured we'd get to a phone and see if Emmet has shown up. If we can't get hold of him, we'll rent a car. But, one way or another, we're not going anywhere today so why don't you finish your breakfast and relax."

Babs had a million more questions but she didn't ask them. Just for today, she wanted to forget about the rest of the world and pretend that nothing else existed beyond this house and this man.

After breakfast Sam rinsed the dishes and then presented her with a battered copy of an old James Michener novel. He'd found it in the back of a cupboard and the last hundred or so pages were missing but Babs didn't mind. It felt nice to sit next to the fire and read. Sam went outside and she could hear him shifting wood. When he came back in, he was carrying a small piece of oak. He settled himself on a stool near the sofa and began to shave chunks of wood off one end of the stick.

Babs divided her time between h«r book and watching him and then gave up on the book altogether and just watched him.

"What are you doing?"

"I'm whittling."

"What are you whittling?"

"I was thinking of doing an oak rendition of Michelangelo's David. What do you think so far?" He held the stick out at arm's length, studying it carefully. Babs looked at it.

"It looks more like Bugs Bunny," she announced after careful consideration.

He threw her an indignant look. "Everyone's an art critic. Obviously it's still in the early stages of creation. It's unfair to judge it before its true character emerges. The wood has a definite message to reveal to the world and I'm trying to set it free."

"I think you'd do better to set it on fire."

"Funny. Very funny." But his eyes held amusement.

It wasn't until after supper that either of them mentioned the future again. Dinner had been eaten and darkness had fallen outside. The Michener book lay forgotten on the floor. Sam's wood carving sat upright on the hearth, resembling nothing in particular. Babs leaned against Sam's shoulder, staring into the fire, letting the bright flames hypnotize her.

"Do you have a will?" The question startled her out of her pleasant stupor. She blinked.

"What?"

"Do you have a will?"

She struggled to shift mental gears.

"Not really. Just whatever provision is in the trust fund. Why? Do you think I might drop dead and leave you without your fifty thousand?" The question held an edge of hurt despite her attempt to make it a joke. She sat up, running her fingers through her hair. Sam's arm fell away from her shoulders, leaving her alone. She didn't like the feeling.

"To hell with the fifty thousand. I don't care about that." He waved his hand dismissively.

"Then why are you asking about my will?"

He reached out and took one of her hands, his eyes intent in the firelight. "Look, I know you don't want to think about this and I don't blarpe you. But it seems like there's a pretty good possibility that someone wants you more than just out of the way temporarily. They want you dead."

"Why would anyone want me dead?"

"I don't know. But when we leave here tomorrow, it might be nice if we had some idea of who it might be and why. I've given it a lot of thought and the best motive I can come up with is money. You've got a lot of money. If something happened to you, who would inherit your money?"

Babs stared at him, her eyes wide. He was really talking about someone trying to kill her. She'd avoided really thinking about it because the possibility was so horrifying, but he was making it impossible to ignore. Her fingers tightened over his as the realization sank in. Someone wanted her dead.

He must have seen the dawning horror in her eyes because he leaned forward, cupping her cheek with his

free hand, his eyes intent on hers. "Nothing is going to happen to you. I'm going to make sure of that."

Staring into the brilliant blue of his gaze, Babs believed him. Those eyes didn't give her any choice but to believe him. Her breath left her on a quick sigh that stopped just short of a sob.

"I believe you."

"Good." His mouth touched hers in a brief kiss before he sat back, his expression serious. "Who inherits the money if something happens to you?"

"The family. I don't remember exactly how it goes. Finney told me about it when I turned eighteen and the trust fund money had started coming directly to me. I guess I didn't listen all that carefully. At eighteen you don't think about dying." She frowned, her eyes focused on the wall behind his shoulder as she tried to remember the conversation with Finney.

"If I die before I'm twenty-five, then I think the money is divided equally among the rest of the family."

"What happens if you die after you're twenty-five?"

"Well, at twenty-five the money is mine so I guess, after that, whatever happens would be what would happen to anyone's money if they died without a will. I guess the courts would decide who gets it."

"So, if you die in the next six months, your family splits the wealth."

She shivered, feeling chilled despite the heat of the fire. It sounded so cold, so final, when he said it. Sam's eyes refocused on her and he gave her a quick smile.

"We're just speculating here. Nothing is going to happen to you."

"I know, but it's pretty scary to think about someone hating me enough to want me dead."

"It probably has nothing to do with you. It's the money. Some people will do anything for money."

"I suppose."

"Tell me about your family."

"God, I could write a book about my family but no one would believe it. What do you want to know?"

"Just a thumbnail sketch of each of them. Give me some idea of who I'm dealing with."

"You're dealing with a bunch of people who haven't figured out that this is the twentieth century. They all belong in the days of servants and lackies. They'd have been happy then."

"What about the aunt who raised you?"

"Aunt Dodie? Well, she'd have made a good drill sergeant or maybe a director at a camp for the damned. Aunt Dodie believes that she w^as put on earth to manage everyone's lives as she sees fit and to hell with what they want."

"What about money? Does she have any of her own?"

"Some. Her mother inherited quite a bit from my great-grandfather and Aunt Dodie's father managed it pretty well. Uncle Lionel was a lawyer before they were married and he earned a good salary. My cousin Lance never has enough money. He'd probably bump me off in a minute. My aunt has some fantasy about Lance and me getting married—keep the loot in the family, I guess."

"What's Lance like?"

"Spoiled, beautiful, useless. It's a shame, really. He might have turned into a halfway decent human being if Aunt Dodie hadn't drummed it into his head that the world owed him something because he was born into the Malone family."

"So the two of you don't get along?"

She laughed, a short sound that lacked humor. "That's an understatement. We fought like cats and dogs when we were kids. He resented me coming to live with his parents after my parents died. He resented my having money. He resented that I didn't kiss his sleeve as he walked by. He resented me. Period. And I suppose I resented him. It didn't seem fair that his parents were still alive when mine were dead."

"Okay. So we'll put Lance at the top of the list."

"Look, we don't like each other but I can't really believe that he'd have me killed."

"I didn't say he did. But we've got to have a list of suspects. All the best detectives have a list."

Babs smiled weakly at his obvious attempt to interject a little humor into the situation. What she really wanted to do was shut her eyes and lean against him and pretend that the rest of the world didn't exist. She resented the intrusion into their peaceful little world. But Sam was right. They had to face this sooner or later.

"What about the rest of the family?"

"There really isn't all that much. Uncle Emmet—but I don't think we have to worry about him. There's Aunt Bertie and Uncle Clarence, but they aren't likely suspects."

"Probably not but tell me about them anyway."

"Well, neither of them has had any contact with reality since I've known them. Aunt Bertie makes pots and baskets and similar useless stuff. Uncle Clarence collects guns and smokes cigars."

"Guns? Seems an odd thing to collect for someone who's out of touch with reality. You don't get much more real than that."

Babs grinned, relaxing for the first time since this conversation had begun. "Well, the story is that in the twenties, Aunt Bertie was quite a flapper."

"A flapper?" Sam's mouth turned up, trying to imagine that ditzy voice on the phone belonging to a young woman in a drop-waist dress and beads.

"A flapper. Quite a wild one, too, from what I hear. Parties, cigarettes and," her voice dropped dramatically, "rumble seats."

"No. Not rumble seats." Sam looked shocked and Babs bit her cheek to hold back a grin. She nodded solemnly.

"Rumble seats. Anyway, my great-grandfather was threatening to throw her out of the family but Bertie was his favorite, his pet, and he couldn't quite bring himself to do it. Just before her behavior became too scandalous, she got married. And not some hole-in-the-wall affair either but a spectacular wedding with the creme de la creme of society. People even flew in from New York, which was no small thing in those days."

"So she married Clarence and your great-grandfather was happy."

BOOK: Lost and Found
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ads

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