Divine Evil Read online

Page 17


  room of violent death. A room of secrets and shadows. His palm left a streak of sweat on the rail as he slowly started up.

  There was pain, sharp and jabbing, like an icicle lodged in the pit of her stomach. It increased with each step. By the time she reached the door, her breath was whistling out of her lungs. She fumbled with the keys, then was forced to press one hand against the wall for balance as she rattled it into the lock.

  “You have to face realities, Clare,” Dr. Janowski would say. “You have to accept them for what they are and deal with your feelings. Life hurts, and death is a part of life.”

  “Fuck you,” she whispered. What did he know about pain?

  The metal hinges keened as the door swung open. The scent of dust and cold, stale air filled the opening. Her eyes stung. She had hoped, somehow, to find some lingering scent of her father. A wisp of the English Leather he had splashed on every morning, a sweet trace of the cherry Lifesavers he'd been addicted to. Even the hot smell of whiskey. It had all been smothered by time. Nothing was left but dust. That was the most painful reality of all. She turned on the light.

  The center of the room was empty, the floor coated with the thick gray powder of time. Clare knew her mother had given the office furniture away years before. She'd been right to do so. But Clare wished, how she wished, she could run a hand over the scarred surface of her father's desk or sit in the worn, squeaky chair.

  There were boxes lined against a wall, neatly sealed with packing tape. More dust, layers of the passing years, clung softly to Clare's icy bare feet when she crossed to them. Using the keys still clutched in her hand, she cut through the tape and pried off a lid. And there was her father.

  With a sound that was half joy, half sorrow, she reached inside and drew out a gardening shirt. It had been laundered and neatly folded, but grass and earth stains remained. She could see him, the faded denim bagging over his thin torso as he whistled through his teeth and tended his flowers.

  “Just look at the delphiniums, Clare.” He'd grin and run his bony, dirt-crusted fingers over the deep blue blooms as gently as a man handling a newborn. “They're going to be even bigger than last year. Nothing like a little chicken poop to give a garden the edge.”

  She buried her face in the shirt, drawing breath after deep breath. And she could smell him, as clearly as if she'd been sitting beside him.

  “Why did you leave me that way?” She kept the scent of him pressed hard against her skin as she rocked as if she could absorb what was left of him. And the anger came, hot waves of it that twisted tight around the smothering grief. “You had no right to leave me that way when I needed you so much. Damn you, I wanted you there. I needed you there. Daddy. Oh, Daddy, why?”

  She lowered herself to the floor and let the tears come.

  Ernie watched her. His body had been atremble with anticipation and power. Now the dark excitement ebbed, and a hot wave of shame, unexpected, unwanted, washed over him. He felt it burn his face and neck as her hard, wrenching sobs filled the room. As he crept away, the sounds of grief chased after him until he was running to escape them.

  * * *

  Dr. Loomis sat in the chair in front of Cam's desk, his hands neatly folded on his briefcase, his polished wingtips heel to heel. Cam wondered if the coroner would tap them together and whisk off to Kansas or wherever the hell home was.

  “When I learned the deceased was your father-”

  “Stepfather,” Cam corrected.

  “Yes.” Loomis cleared his throat. “When I learned he had been your stepfather, I thought it best if I brought you my report personally.”

  “I appreciate it.” Cam continued to read the autopsy report, word for grim word. “This confirms homicide.”

  “There's no doubt he was murdered.” Loomis's fingers steepled up, then folded again. “The autopsy bears out my original theory. The deceased was beaten to death. From the bone fragments and the splinters of wood we found, I would say at least two clubs were used. One of natural pine and one that was stained, commercially, to an ebony color.”

  “Which means we have at least two murderers.”

  “Possibly. If I may?” Loomis picked up the pictures Cam had taken at the scene. After tapping their edges neatly together, he turned them as if he were about to show off family snapshots. “This blow to the base of the skull? It is the only wound on the back of the body. From the bruising and discoloration, this was delivered before death. It would be sufficient to render unconsciousness. Then you note the wrists and ankles.”

  “Someone clubbed him from behind, knocking him out. Then he was tied.” Cam picked up his pack of cigarettes. “Flat on his back for the rest of it.”

  “Precisely.” Pleased, Loomis nearly smiled. “From the depth of the wounds and the amount of fiber in them, he struggled violently.”

  “You would agree that he wasn't killed where we found him?”

  “I would, most definitely.”

  Cam blew out a long stream of smoke. “We located his car. His stereo unit was removed, along with his gun and a case of beer from the trunk. The receipt for the beer was still there. He'd just bought it that afternoon.” Studying Loomis, he tapped the cigarette in an ashtray. “People have been killed for less.”

  “Indeed they have.”

  “How many homicides of this nature come through your office in a year?”

  Loomis waited a moment. “I have never, in my eight years in this county, examined a body so viciously beaten.”

  Cam nodded. It was no less than what he'd expected. “I don't think Biff Stokey was killed for a stereo and a case of Bud.”

  Again Loomis steepled his hands. “I'm a pathologist, Sheriff. That makes me a detective in my way. I can give you the cause of death, the approximate time of death. I can tell you what the victim enjoyed as a last meal and if he had sex with a woman. But I can't give you motive.”

  Nodding, Cam crushed out his cigarette. “I appreciate you getting back to me personally, and so soon.”

  “Not at all.” Loomis rose. “The body was released to the next of kin.” Noting Cam's expression, Loomis felt a pang of sympathy. It hadn't taken long for the gossip to reach him. “Your mother requested that Griffith's Funeral Home here in Emmitsboro handle the arrangements.”

  “I see.” She hadn't called him once for help, Cam thought, and stonily refused every offer he'd made. Smothering the hurt, he offered a hand. “Thank you, Dr. Loomis.”

  When the coroner left, Cam locked the reports and photographs in his desk drawer. He stepped outside and after a moment's debate decided against taking his car. The funeral parlor was only a few blocks away. He needed to walk.

  People greeted him with nods and hellos. He knew without hearing that they whispered and murmured the moment they were out of earshot. Biff Stokey had been beaten to death. In a town that size, it wasn't possible to keep such an aberration secret. It was also no secret that Cameron Rafferty, Stokey's stepson and the town sheriff, had been the deceased's biggest enemy.

  Giving a half laugh, Cam turned the corner at Main and Sunset. It was a hell of a note when the investigating officer and the chief suspect were one and the same-especially since the officer was the suspect's only alibi. He knew he'd been nursing a beer and reading a Koontz novel the night Biff had been killed. As his own witness, he could eliminate himself as a possible suspect. But there was bound to be speculation muttering around town.

  He'd been in a fistfight with Biff and thrown him in jail only days before the murder. Everyone in the bar had seen just how much hate there was between them. The story had spread across town like brushfire, singeing the edges from Dopper's Woods to Gopher Hole Lane. It would have been recounted and replayed over supper tables. Out-of-town relations would have heard the news on Sunday during discounted-rate phone calls.

  It made him wonder if someone had used that very convenient timing.

  Biff hadn't been killed for a car stereo and some beer. But he had been killed, viciously and purp
osefully. However much Cam had hated him, he would find out why. He would find out who.

  There was a crowd of people outside Griffith's aged white brick building. Some were talking to each other, others were hanging back and watching. There was such a tangle of pickups and cars along the quiet street that anybody would have thought there was going to be a parade. From a half block away, Cam could see that Mick Morgan was having trouble restoring order.

  “Look now, there's nothing for y'all to see here, and you're just going to upset Miz Stokey.”

  “Did they bring him in the back, Mick?” someone wanted to know. “I heard he was carved up by some motorcycle gang from D.C.”

  “Hell's Angels,” someone else chimed in.

  “No, it was junkies from over the river.”

  There was a small, vicious argument over this.

  “He got drunk and picked a fight again.” This came from Oscar Roody, who shouted over the din. “Got his head bashed clean in.”

  Some of the women who had poured out of Betty's House of Beauty next door added their own viewpoints.

  “The man made poor Jane's life a misery.” Betty herself wrapped her arms around her own expansive bosom and nodded sagely. “Why, she'd have to save up for six months before she could come in and get herself a perm. And he wouldn't let her have so much as a rinse put on.”

  “What Jane needs now is a woman's shoulder.” Min, her hair rolled up in pink plastic curlers, stared at the front window of the funeral parlor with glittery eyes. If she could get in first, she might even get a peek at the body. That would be worth something at the next Ladies Club meeting. She elbowed her way through the crowd and started for the door.

  “Now Miz Atherton, ma'am, you can't go in there.”

  “You move on aside, Mick.” She brushed at him with the back of her chubby hand. “Why, I've been friends with Jane Stokey since before you were born.”

  “Why don't you go finish having your hair done, Mrs. Atherton?” Cam stepped forward, blocking her path. At his appearance, the arguments settled down to murmurs. Eyes narrowed against the sun, he scanned the crowd. Here were friends, men he might share a beer with, women who would stop him on the street to pass the time of day. Most of them looked away now. Across the street Sarah Hewitt leaned lazily against the trunk of a tree, smoking and smiling at him.

  Min patted her curlers. In the excitement she'd forgotten about them, but it couldn't be helped. “Now, Cameron, I'm not the least bit concerned about my appearance at a time like this. I only want to offer your mother my support in this difficult time.”

  And you'd suck her dry, he thought, so that you can pass out her misery over manicures and on street corners. “I'll be sure to pass your sympathies along to her.” Slowly, he looked from face to face, from eye to eye. Some backed away, others studied the fading bruises on Cam's jaw, around his eye. Bruises Biff had put there only days before.

  “I'm sure my mother could use your support at the funeral.” Christ, he wanted a cigarette. A drink. “But for now, I'd appreciate it if you left this to the family.”

  They filed off, some to their pickups, others to wander down to the post office or the market where they could discuss the situation in depth.

  “I'm sorry about that, Cam.” On a wheezy sigh, Mick Morgan pulled a package of Red Indian chewing tobacco from his pocket.

  “Nothing to be sorry about.”

  “They brought him in around the back. Oscar was working on a toilet inside. That's all it took. Old fart couldn't wait to get his tongue wagging.” Mick stuffed the plug in his cheek. “They were just curious is all. I'd've had them on their way in a minute or two.”

  “I know. Is my mother inside?”

  “That's what I heard.”

  “Do me a favor and keep an eye on the office for a while.”

  “Sure thing.” He used his tongue to settle the chaw more cozily. “Ah…mighty sorry about your trouble, Cam. If you want to take a couple days off, stay with your mom, Bud and me can double up.”

  “Thanks. I appreciate it. But I don't think she'll need me.” Wearily, he walked up to the door with its discreet brass knocker.

  He stepped inside to the overwhelming scent of gladiolas and Lemon Pledge. There was a churchlike hush in the red-draped hallway. Why in the hell did funeral parlors always use red? he wondered. Was that the color of comfort?

  Red plush, dark paneling, thick carpet, and ornate candlesticks. A bunch of plucky glads and lilies sat in a tall vase on a glossy table. Beside them was a stack of printed business cards.

  WE'LL BE HERE IN YOUR TIME OF NEED

  Charles W. Griffith and Sons Emmitsboro, Maryland established 1839

  It pays to advertise, Cam thought.

  There was a carpeted stairway leading to the second floor. The viewing rooms. An entertaining term for a morbid tradition, he thought. Why the hell people wanted to stare at corpses he couldn't figure. But maybe that was because he'd had to look at more than his share.

  He remembered climbing those steps as a child, to look at the dead face of his father. His mother had been weeping, walking ahead of him with Biff Stokey's beefy arm around her. He hadn't wasted any time moving in, Cam thought now. Mike Rafferty hadn't even been in the ground before Stokey put his hands on the widow.

  Now they were full circle.

  His hands jammed in his pockets, Cam started down the hallway. The double doors to the main parlor were shut. He hesitated, then pulled a hand free to knock. Within moments, the door opened silently.

  Standing somber-eyed in one of his five black suits was Chuck Griffith. For more than a hundred and fifty years the Griffiths had been undertakers in Emmitsboro. Chuck's son was already in training to take over the family business, but at forty, Chuck was in his prime.

  As a boy he'd been as comfortable in the embalming room as on the baseball field, where he'd been the star pitcher. To the Griffiths, death was a business, a steady one. Chuck could afford to take his family on a two-week vacation every year and buy his wife a new car every third one.

  They had a pretty house on the edge of town and an inground swimming pool, heated. People often joked about it being the pool that death built.

  In his capacity as coach for Emmitsboro's Little League, Chuck was loud, boisterous, and competitive. As the town's only funeral director, he was somber, soft-spoken, and sympathetic. Immediately he extended one of his wide, capable hands to Cam.

  “It's good you're here, Sheriff.”

  “Is my mother inside?”

  “Yes.” Chuck cast a quick glance behind him. “I'm having some trouble convincing her that, under the circumstances, a closed casket service would be advisable.”

  Cam had an instant and uncomfortable flash of what had been left of Biff's face. “I'll talk to her.”

  “Please, come in.” He gestured Cam inside the dimly lit, flower-filled room. There was music playing quietly from hidden speakers. Something soft and soothing. “We're having some tea. I'll just get another cup.”

  Cam nodded, then walked toward his mother. She was sitting stiffly on the high-back sofa, a box of tissues within arm's reach. She was wearing a black dress, one he didn't recognize. He imagined she had borrowed it or had one of her lady friends buy it for her. She held the teacup in a white-knuckled grip. Her knees were pressed so tightly together, Cam thought they must ache with the pressure of bone to bone. At her feet was a small hard-sided suitcase with a broken strap.

  “Mom.” Cam sat beside her and after a moment put a hand awkwardly on her shoulder. She didn't look at him.

  “Did you come to see him?”

  “No, I came to stay with you.”

  “There's no need.” Her voice was cold and steady as stone. “I've buried a husband before.”

  He took his hand away and had to fight the need to ball it into a fist and bash it against the glossy coffee table. “I'd like to help you make the arrangements. It's hard to make decisions at a time like this. And it's expensive. I'd like to t
ake care of whatever bills there are.”

  “Why?” Her hand was rock steady as she lifted it, sipped her tea, then lowered it again. “You hated him.”

  “I'm offering to help you.”

  “Biff wouldn't want your help.”

  “Is he running your life now, too?”

  Her head snapped around, and her eyes, reddened from hours and hours of weeping, burned into him. “Don't you speak ill of him. The man is dead, beaten to death. Beaten to death,” she repeated in a harsh whisper. “You're the law here. If you want to help, then you find out who did this to my husband. You find out who killed him.”

  Chuck cleared his throat as he walked back into the room. “Mrs. Stokey, perhaps you'd like to-”

  “I don't need any more tea.” She rose and picked up the suitcase. “I don't need anything. I brought the clothes I want him buried in. Now you take me to see my husband.”

 

    A Little Magic Read onlineA Little MagicVision in White Read onlineVision in WhiteTrue Betrayals Read onlineTrue BetrayalsThe Next Always Read onlineThe Next AlwaysA Man for Amanda Read onlineA Man for AmandaBorn in Fire Read onlineBorn in FireTribute Read onlineTributeNight Moves Read onlineNight MovesDance Upon the Air Read onlineDance Upon the AirThe Name of the Game Read onlineThe Name of the GameJewels of the Sun Read onlineJewels of the SunRiver's End Read onlineRiver's EndPublic Secrets Read onlinePublic SecretsHomeport Read onlineHomeportPrivate Scandals Read onlinePrivate ScandalsThe Witness Read onlineThe WitnessBlithe Images Read onlineBlithe ImagesHidden Riches Read onlineHidden RichesKey of Light Read onlineKey of LightDivine Evil Read onlineDivine EvilHigh Noon Read onlineHigh NoonBlue Dahlia Read onlineBlue DahliaSea Swept Read onlineSea SweptThis Magic Moment Read onlineThis Magic MomentYear One Read onlineYear OneA Little Fate Read onlineA Little FateHonest Illusions Read onlineHonest IllusionsThe Reef Read onlineThe ReefShelter in Place Read onlineShelter in PlaceThe Hollow Read onlineThe HollowHolding the Dream Read onlineHolding the DreamThe Pagan Stone Read onlineThe Pagan StoneSavour the Moment Read onlineSavour the MomentThe Perfect Hope Read onlineThe Perfect HopeIsland of Glass Read onlineIsland of GlassHappy Ever After Read onlineHappy Ever AfterBed of Roses Read onlineBed of RosesStars of Fortune Read onlineStars of FortuneDark Witch Read onlineDark WitchThe Return of Rafe MacKade Read onlineThe Return of Rafe MacKadeChesapeake Blue Read onlineChesapeake BlueThe Perfect Neighbor Read onlineThe Perfect NeighborThe Collector Read onlineThe CollectorCome Sundown Read onlineCome SundownRebellion Read onlineRebellionAffaire Royale Read onlineAffaire RoyaleDaring to Dream Read onlineDaring to DreamBay of Sighs Read onlineBay of SighsBlood Magick Read onlineBlood MagickAngels Fall Read onlineAngels FallCaptivated Read onlineCaptivatedThe Last Boyfriend Read onlineThe Last BoyfriendIrish Thoroughbred Read onlineIrish ThoroughbredInner Harbor Read onlineInner HarborThe Right Path Read onlineThe Right PathNight Shadow Read onlineNight ShadowThe Heart of Devin MacKade Read onlineThe Heart of Devin MacKadeShadow Spell Read onlineShadow SpellThe Playboy Prince Read onlineThe Playboy PrinceThe Fall of Shane MacKade Read onlineThe Fall of Shane MacKadeRising Tides Read onlineRising TidesCommand Performance Read onlineCommand PerformanceHidden Star Read onlineHidden StarCordina's Crown Jewel Read onlineCordina's Crown JewelThe MacGregor Brides Read onlineThe MacGregor BridesThe Pride of Jared MacKade Read onlineThe Pride of Jared MacKadeBorn in Ice Read onlineBorn in IceWhiskey Beach Read onlineWhiskey BeachThe Last Honest Woman Read onlineThe Last Honest WomanNight Shield Read onlineNight ShieldBorn in Shame Read onlineBorn in ShameSecret Star Read onlineSecret StarTempting Fate Read onlineTempting FateNightshade Read onlineNightshadeThe Obsession Read onlineThe ObsessionNight Shift Read onlineNight ShiftPlaying The Odds Read onlinePlaying The OddsTears of the Moon Read onlineTears of the MoonOne Man's Art Read onlineOne Man's ArtThe MacGregor Groom Read onlineThe MacGregor GroomIrish Rebel Read onlineIrish RebelMorrigan's Cross Read onlineMorrigan's CrossIn From The Cold Read onlineIn From The ColdNight Smoke Read onlineNight SmokeFinding the Dream Read onlineFinding the DreamRed Lily Read onlineRed LilyThe Liar Read onlineThe LiarMontana Sky Read onlineMontana SkyHeart of the Sea Read onlineHeart of the SeaAll The Possibilities Read onlineAll The PossibilitiesCarolina Moon Read onlineCarolina MoonOpposites Attract Read onlineOpposites AttractCaptive Star Read onlineCaptive StarThe Winning Hand Read onlineThe Winning HandKey of Valor Read onlineKey of ValorCourting Catherine Read onlineCourting CatherineHeaven and Earth Read onlineHeaven and EarthFace the Fire Read onlineFace the FireUntamed Read onlineUntamedSkin Deep Read onlineSkin DeepEnchanted Read onlineEnchantedSong of the West Read onlineSong of the WestSuzanna's Surrender Read onlineSuzanna's SurrenderEntranced Read onlineEntrancedDance of the Gods Read onlineDance of the GodsKey of Knowledge Read onlineKey of KnowledgeCharmed Read onlineCharmedFor Now, Forever Read onlineFor Now, ForeverBlood Brothers Read onlineBlood BrothersSweet Revenge Read onlineSweet RevengeThree Fates Read onlineThree FatesMind Over Matter Read onlineMind Over MatterMegan's Mate Read onlineMegan's MateValley of Silence Read onlineValley of SilenceWithout A Trace Read onlineWithout A TraceThe Law is a Lady Read onlineThe Law is a LadyTemptation Read onlineTemptationDance to the Piper Read onlineDance to the PiperBlue Smoke Read onlineBlue SmokeBlack Hills Read onlineBlack HillsThe Heart's Victory Read onlineThe Heart's VictorySullivan's Woman Read onlineSullivan's WomanGenuine Lies Read onlineGenuine LiesFor the Love of Lilah Read onlineFor the Love of LilahGabriel's Angel Read onlineGabriel's AngelIrish Rose Read onlineIrish RoseHot Ice Read onlineHot IceDual Image Read onlineDual ImageLawless Read onlineLawlessCatch My Heart Read onlineCatch My HeartBirthright Read onlineBirthrightFirst Impressions Read onlineFirst ImpressionsChasing Fire Read onlineChasing FireCarnal Innocence Read onlineCarnal InnocenceBest Laid Plans Read onlineBest Laid PlansThe Villa Read onlineThe VillaNorthern Lights Read onlineNorthern LightsLocal Hero Read onlineLocal HeroThe Search Read onlineThe SearchIsland of Flowers Read onlineIsland of FlowersThe Welcoming Read onlineThe WelcomingAll I Want for Christmas Read onlineAll I Want for ChristmasBlack Rose Read onlineBlack RoseHot Rocks Read onlineHot RocksMidnight Bayou Read onlineMidnight BayouThe Art of Deception Read onlineThe Art of DeceptionFrom This Day Read onlineFrom This DayLess of a Stranger Read onlineLess of a StrangerPartners Read onlinePartnersStorm Warning Read onlineStorm WarningOnce More With Feeling Read onlineOnce More With FeelingHer Mother's Keeper Read onlineHer Mother's KeeperSacred Sins Read onlineSacred SinsRules of the Game Read onlineRules of the GameSanctuary Read onlineSanctuaryUnfinished Business Read onlineUnfinished BusinessCordina's Royal Family Collection Read onlineCordina's Royal Family CollectionDangerous Embrace Read onlineDangerous EmbraceOne Summer Read onlineOne SummerThe Best Mistake Read onlineThe Best MistakeBoundary Lines Read onlineBoundary LinesUnder Currents Read onlineUnder CurrentsThe Stanislaski Series Collection, Volume 1 Read onlineThe Stanislaski Series Collection, Volume 1The Rise of Magicks Read onlineThe Rise of MagicksThe Rise of Magicks (Chronicles of The One) Read onlineThe Rise of Magicks (Chronicles of The One)The Awakening: The Dragon Heart Legacy Book 1 Read onlineThe Awakening: The Dragon Heart Legacy Book 1Dance of Dreams Read onlineDance of DreamsSkin Deep: The O'Hurleys Read onlineSkin Deep: The O'HurleysThe Quinn Legacy: Inner Harbor ; Chesapeake Blue Read onlineThe Quinn Legacy: Inner Harbor ; Chesapeake Blue[Chronicles of the One 03.0] The Rise of Magicks Read online[Chronicles of the One 03.0] The Rise of MagicksTimes Change Read onlineTimes ChangeDance to the Piper: The O'Hurleys Read onlineDance to the Piper: The O'HurleysChristmas In the Snow: Taming Natasha / Considering Kate Read onlineChristmas In the Snow: Taming Natasha / Considering KateWaiting for Nick Read onlineWaiting for NickSummer Desserts Read onlineSummer DessertsDream 2 - Holding the Dream Read onlineDream 2 - Holding the DreamThe Novels of Nora Roberts, Volume 2 Read onlineThe Novels of Nora Roberts, Volume 2In the Garden Trilogy Read onlineIn the Garden TrilogyEight Classic Nora Roberts Romantic Suspense Novels Read onlineEight Classic Nora Roberts Romantic Suspense NovelsBest Laid Plans jh-2 Read onlineBest Laid Plans jh-2From the Heart Read onlineFrom the HeartHoliday Wishes Read onlineHoliday WishesDream 1 - Daring to Dream Read onlineDream 1 - Daring to DreamSecond Nature Read onlineSecond NatureSummer Pleasures Read onlineSummer PleasuresOnce Upon a Castle Read onlineOnce Upon a CastleStars of Mithra Box Set: Captive StarHidden StarSecret Star Read onlineStars of Mithra Box Set: Captive StarHidden StarSecret StarImpulse Read onlineImpulseThe Irish Trilogy by Nora Roberts Read onlineThe Irish Trilogy by Nora RobertsThe Pride Of Jared Mackade tmb-2 Read onlineThe Pride Of Jared Mackade tmb-2Lawless jh-3 Read onlineLawless jh-3Taming Natasha Read onlineTaming NatashaEndless Summer Read onlineEndless SummerBride Quartet Collection Read onlineBride Quartet CollectionHappy Ever After tbq-4 Read onlineHappy Ever After tbq-4Heart Of The Sea goa-3 Read onlineHeart Of The Sea goa-3Search for Love Read onlineSearch for LoveOnce upon a Dream Read onlineOnce upon a DreamOnce Upon a Star Read onlineOnce Upon a StarDream Trilogy Read onlineDream TrilogyRisky Business Read onlineRisky BusinessThe Novels of Nora Roberts, Volume 3 Read onlineThe Novels of Nora Roberts, Volume 3Dream 3 - Finding the Dream Read onlineDream 3 - Finding the DreamPromises in Death id-34 Read onlinePromises in Death id-34The Novels of Nora Roberts, Volume 4 Read onlineThe Novels of Nora Roberts, Volume 4The Perfect Hope ib-3 Read onlineThe Perfect Hope ib-3Less than a Stranger Read onlineLess than a StrangerSavour the Moment: Now the Big Day Has Finally Arrived, It's Time To... Read onlineSavour the Moment: Now the Big Day Has Finally Arrived, It's Time To...Convincing Alex Read onlineConvincing AlexBed of Roses tbq-2 Read onlineBed of Roses tbq-2Savour the Moment tbq-3 Read onlineSavour the Moment tbq-3Lessons Learned Read onlineLessons LearnedKey Of Valor k-3 Read onlineKey Of Valor k-3Red lily gt-3 Read onlineRed lily gt-3Savor the Moment Read onlineSavor the MomentThe Return Of Rafe Mackade tmb-1 Read onlineThe Return Of Rafe Mackade tmb-1For The Love Of Lilah tcw-3 Read onlineFor The Love Of Lilah tcw-3Black Rose gt-2 Read onlineBlack Rose gt-2Novels: The Law is a Lady Read onlineNovels: The Law is a LadyChesapeake Bay Saga 1-4 Read onlineChesapeake Bay Saga 1-4Considering Kate Read onlineConsidering KateMoon Shadows Read onlineMoon ShadowsKey of Knowledge k-2 Read onlineKey of Knowledge k-2The Sign of Seven Trilogy Read onlineThe Sign of Seven TrilogyOnce Upon a Kiss Read onlineOnce Upon a KissThe Novels of Nora Roberts, Volume 5 Read onlineThe Novels of Nora Roberts, Volume 5Suzanna's Surrender tcw-4 Read onlineSuzanna's Surrender tcw-4The Quinn Brothers Read onlineThe Quinn BrothersFalling for Rachel Read onlineFalling for RachelBrazen Virtue Read onlineBrazen VirtueTime Was Read onlineTime WasThe Gallaghers of Ardmore Trilogy Read onlineThe Gallaghers of Ardmore TrilogyMegan's Mate tcw-5 Read onlineMegan's Mate tcw-5Loving Jack jh-1 Read onlineLoving Jack jh-1Rebellion & In From The Cold Read onlineRebellion & In From The ColdBlue Dahlia gt-1 Read onlineBlue Dahlia gt-1The MacGregor Grooms Read onlineThe MacGregor GroomsThe Next Always tibt-1 Read onlineThe Next Always tibt-1The Heart Of Devin Mackade tmb-3 Read onlineThe Heart Of Devin Mackade tmb-3The Novels of Nora Roberts Volume 1 Read onlineThe Novels of Nora Roberts Volume 1Treasures Lost, Treasures Found Read onlineTreasures Lost, Treasures FoundNora Roberts's Circle Trilogy Read onlineNora Roberts's Circle TrilogyThe Key Trilogy Read onlineThe Key TrilogyThe Fall Of Shane Mackade tmb-4 Read onlineThe Fall Of Shane Mackade tmb-4A Will And A Way Read onlineA Will And A WayJewels of the Sun goa-1 Read onlineJewels of the Sun goa-1Luring a Lady Read onlineLuring a Lady