Risky Business

Read Online Risky Business by Nora Roberts - Free Book Online Page B

Book: Risky Business by Nora Roberts Read Free Book Online
Authors: Nora Roberts
Ads: Link
death, and his voice vibrated with both. The jury remained unmoved, disinterested. Though he struggled to hold them, the books began to slip from his grasp. He heard the verdict rebound, bouncing off the courtroom walls.
    Guilty. Guilty. Guilty.
    Defeated, empty-handed, he turned to the defendant. The man stood, lifting his head so that they stared, eye to eye, twin images. Himself? Jerry. Desperate, Jonas walked to the bench. In black robes, Liz sat above him, aloof with distance. But her eyes were sad as she slowly shook her head. “I can’t help you.”
    Slowly, she began to fade. He reached up to grab her hand, but his fingers passed through hers. All he could see were her dark, sad eyes. Then she was gone, his brother was gone, andhe was left facing a jury—twelve cold faces who smiled smugly back at him.
    Jonas lay still, breathing quickly. He found himself staring back at the cluster of gaily dressed dolls on the shelf beside the bed. A flamenco dancer raised her castanets. A princess held a glass slipper. A spiffily dressed Barbie relaxed in a pink convertible, one hand raised in a wave.
    Letting out a long breath, Jonas ran a hand over his face and sat up. It was like trying to sleep in the middle of a party, he decided. No wonder he’d had odd dreams. On the opposing wall was a collection of stuffed animals ranging from the dependable bear to something that looked like a blue dust rag with eyes.
    Coffee, Jonas thought, closing his own. He needed coffee. Trying to ignore the dozens of smiling faces surrounding him, he dressed. He wasn’t sure how or where to begin. The coin on his chain dangled before he pulled a shirt over his chest. Outside, birds were sending up a clatter. At home there would have been the sound of traffic as Philadelphia awoke for the day. He could see a bush close to the window where purple flowers seemed to crowd each other for room. There were no sturdy elms, no tidy evergreen hedges or chain-link fences. No law books would help him with what he had to do. There was nothing familiar, no precedents to follow. Each step he took would be taken blindly, but he had to take them. He smelled the coffee the moment he left the room.
    Liz was in the kitchen dressed in a T-shirt and what appeared to be the bottoms of a skimpy bikini. Jonas wasn’t a man who normally awoke with all batteries charged, but he didn’t miss a pair of long, honey-toned legs. Liz finished buttering a piece of toast.
    “Coffee’s on the stove,” she said without turning around.“There’re some eggs in the refrigerator. I don’t stock cereal when Faith’s away.”
    “Eggs are fine,” he mumbled, but headed for the coffee.
    “Use what you want, as long as you replace it.” She turned up the radio to listen to the weather forecast. “I leave in a half hour, so if you want a ride to your hotel, you’ll have to be ready.”
    Jonas let the first hot taste of coffee seep into his system. “My car’s in San Miguel.”
    Liz sat down at the table to go over that day’s schedule. “I can drop you by the El Presidente or one of the other hotels on the beach. You’ll have to take a cab from there.”
    Jonas took another sip of coffee and focused on her fully. She was still pale, he realized, so that the marks on her neck stood out in dark relief. The smudges under her eyes made him decide she’d slept no better than he had. He tossed off his first cup of coffee and poured another.
    “Ever consider taking a day off?”
    She looked at him for the first time. “No,” she said simply and lowered her gaze to her list again.
    So they were back to business, all business, and don’t cross the line. “Don’t you believe in giving yourself a break, Liz?”
    “I’ve got work to do. You’d better fix those eggs if you want to have time to eat them. The frying pan’s in the cupboard next to the stove.”
    He studied her for another minute, then with a restless movement of his shoulders prepared to cook his breakfast.

Similar Books

Nickel Bay Nick

Dean Pitchford

The Two Week Wait

Sarah Rayner

Otherbound

Corinne Duyvis

About Last Night

Ruthie Knox

Fated

Alyson Noël