White Space Season 1

White Space Season 1 by Platt + Wright

Book: White Space Season 1 by Platt + Wright Read Free Book Online
Authors: Platt + Wright
second.
    “Oh, I’m so sorry,” Melinda said, her eyes suddenly soft and kind. “I didn’t know.”
    “It’s okay,” Jon said, putting another piece of steak in his mouth.
    “Did you see her sister?” Warren asked. The way he said the second syllable of “sister,” made Jon want to walk to Warren’s side of the table and punch him in the ear.
    “Yes,” Jon said, no emotion. “Sarah’s sister was at the memorial.”
    “She kick the drugs yet?” Warren said, taking another long sip of wine.
    Jon almost laughed at the irony, but held his laugh, and the nasty response he wanted to give, firmly in place.
    “I don’t get daily updates on the Hughes family,” Jon said, “but Cassidy looked good.”
    Jon was pretty sure Warren was about to say something that might get him out of his seat and over to his brother’s side of the table, but before Warren could open his mouth, Melinda set her fork down and opened hers.
    “How long are you going to be in town?” she asked.
    Warren answered for him. “I’m sure Jon has pressing business back home.”
    Jon could feel his blood boil, like it always did within an hour of stepping foot inside Conway Gardens. He caught the glint in Warren’s eyes; interest, anxiety, maybe concern. Whatever it was, the hairs on Jon’s neck didn’t like it a bit.
    Jon lied, “Actually, I’m between projects, reading some scripts. Since I’m back at Hamilton Island, I figured I might as well stay a while, catch up with some old friends.” He swallowed, then added, “I’ll be here at least a week.” Jon turned from Melinda to Warren, then asked, “When’s Dad coming back?”
    “He’ll be back next week,” Melinda said.
    Warren shot her a look.
    Jon smiled ear to ear, his eyes fixed on Warren’s. “Excellent,” he said. “I’ll stay until then, at least.”
    Jon continued to smile as his brother twisted under the thumb of discomfort. The rest of the meal had talk small enough to be mostly invisible. Jon finished his meal, muscled his way through polite goodbyes, then went to the garage where the family kept the classic cars and a motorcycle, and traded his Avalon for his silver Porsche 356, built in 1963, and still looking showroom shiny. He was glad that he’d asked Carl to have someone maintain the car in his absence.
    Jon climbed into the driver’s seat, thrilled to find the keys in the glovebox where he’d left them a year ago. His face suddenly lit with a smile as he fished beneath the seat hoping his treasure was still buried there, too.
    It was.
    Jon pulled the small wooden box from beneath the seat, smiling, then flicked the latch and opened the lid to a vacuum sealed baggie and seven perfectly rolled joints. He wondered how long weed stayed fresh, but figured anything was better than nothing.
    Jon turned the engine, pulled the car from the garage, then left Conway Gardens, waving to a smiling Carl on his way past the gates.
    Jon hit the coast and gunned the engine, speeding toward the island’s north end.
    The entire north side of the island belonged to the Conways, originally as his grandfather’s retreat where he wined and dined politicians and the powerful, and later as home to several Conway Industries laboratories, where they worked on the more sensitive, and Jon suspected, government projects. Jon followed the winding road through acres of unspoiled woodlands which were beautiful during the day, but nothing more than blots of darkness against the night sky as he headed toward Jensen’s Cove, his favorite chill-out spot on the island.
    He needed time to think about Emma, and the possibility that she might be his daughter. If she were, why hadn’t anyone yet told him? Had Sarah kept the secret even from her family?
    As Jon drove through the darkness, he felt more alone than ever, wishing he had a friend he could dig into the deep shit with. Odd, he thought, how the closest people to him these days were people in his employ, his agent, Marty, and his

Similar Books

The Ranger Takes a Bride

Misty M. Beller

Songbird

Josephine Cox

The Book of Beasts

John Barrowman

Dimiter

William Peter Blatty

Brazen

Bobbi Smith

Healing Faith

Jennyfer Browne

Fortnight of Fear

Graham Masterton