Iâve gone through her personal accounts, damn it. Sheâs got under three thousand in fluid cash. Everything else goes into the place for new sheets and soap.â
âI see.â The pause again. It was maddening. âI suppose our Miss Ford hasnât heard of Swiss bank accounts.â
âI said sheâs not the type, Conby. Itâs the wrong angle.â
âIâll worry about the angles, DeWinter. You worry about doing your job. I shouldnât have to remind you that itâs taken us nearly a year to come close to pinning this thing down. The Bureau wants this wrapped quickly, and thatâs what I expect from you. If you have a personal problem with this, youâd better let me know now.â
âNo.â He knew personal problems werenât permitted. âYou want to waste time, and the taxpayersâ money, itâs all the same to me. Iâll get back to you.â
âDo that.â
Roman hung up. It made him feel a little better to scowl at the phone and imagine Conby losing a good nightâs sleep. Then again, his kind rarely did. Heâd wake some hapless clerk up at six and have the list run through the computer. Conby would drink his coffee, watch the
Today
show and wait in his comfortable house in the D.C. suburbs for the results.
Grunt work and dirty work were left to others.
That was the way the game was played, Roman reminded himself as he started the long walk back to the inn. But lately, just lately, he was getting very tired of the rules.
***
Charity heard him come in. Curious, she glanced at the clock after she heard the door close below. It was after one, and the rain had started nearly thirty minutes before with a gentle hissing that promised to gain strength through the night.
She wondered where he had been.
His business, she reminded herself as she rolled over and tried to let the rain lull her to sleep. As long as he did his job, Roman DeWinter was free to come and go as he pleased. If he wanted to walk in the rain, that was fine by her.
How could he have kissed her like that and felt nothing?
Charity squeezed her eyes shut and swore at herself. It was her feelings she had to worry about, not Romanâs. The trouble was, she always felt too much. This was one time she couldnât afford that luxury.
Something had happened to her when heâd kissed her. Something thrilling, something that had reached deep inside her and opened up endless possibilities. No, not possibilities, fantasies, she thought, shaking her head. If she were wise she would take that one moment of excitement and stop wanting more. Drifters made poor risks emotionally. She had the perfect example before her.
Her mother had turned to a drifter and had given him her heart, her trust, her body. She had ended up pregnant and alone. She had, Charity knew, pined for him for months. Sheâd died in the same hospital where her baby had been born, only days later. Betrayed, rejected and ashamed.
Charity had only discovered the extent of the shame after her grandfatherâs death. Heâd kept the diary her mother had written. Charity had burned it, not out of shame but out of pity. She would always think of her mother as a tragic woman who had looked for love and had never found it.
But she wasnât her mother, Charity reminded herself as she lay awake listening to the rain. She was far, far less fragile. Love was what she had been named for, and she had felt its warmth all her life.
Now a drifter had come into her life.
He had spoken of regrets, she remembered. She was afraid that whatever happenedâor didnât happenâbetween them, she would have them.
Chapter 4
The rain continued all morning, soft, slow, steady. It brought a chill, and a gloom that was no less appealing than the sunshine. Clouds hung over the water, turning everything to different shades of gray. Raindrops hissed on the roof and at the windows, making the inn seem all the
Joyce Magnin
James Naremore
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James R. Landrum