somehow, she was going for a dive, too.
As she peeked into the hall, then strode out nonchalantly, she carried Coleâs gift of the orange orchid in her arms.
5
âI s Amelia coming to your place to stay with you?â Cole asked as he drove her away from the hospital. They turned onto the busy Tamiami Trail and headed south toward Turtle Bay. She wanted to recline the seat and go to sleep, but she sat erect, cursing the fact Amelia hadnât brought her sunglasses. The light, the sounds of trafficâtoo bright, too much.
âSheâs with her two little boys right now,â she told him, pulling down the sun visor on her side. âIâm sure sheâll be over soon.â She couldnât decide whether to just level with Cole or to get home first before she sprang her desperate plan on him and Manny. Cole had helped her before, but would he help her now? Besides, just his presence, his closeness, was making her even more nervous than she already was.
âHave you ever scuba dived?â she asked.
âStrictly for recreation, but I can hold my own. The last time was in Tahiti for a wedding anniversary. Iâm single now.â
âSorry.â She wasnât sorry, but she had no time for such thoughts.
âDonât be. Definitely the best for me and her, too, since she left me.â
A woman had left this man? The entire world was crazy.
âBriana, you look shaky. You arenât going to be sick?â
âSick at heart. Iâd warn you before Iâd upchuck in this beautiful car.â
He was driving a big burgundy sedan, probably one he used to impress his clients, because it didnât seem like him and it certainly didnât seem like Turtle Bay. This was a man she didnât really know.
The village of Turtle Bay was a fairly secluded enclave between the Tamiami Trail on the east, the Gulf of Mexico on the west, the city of Naples to its north and Marco Island to its south. Turtle Bay had been built up years ago, with two clam-canning factories that were now defunct, and the usual condos and luxury waterfront homes had not intruded yet. A lot of locals feared the proposed gambling casino boat here could change all that. One of the old canneries was now quaint shops and seafood restaurants; the other had been converted to Sam Traversâs Search and Salvage. Tourists and fishermen came and went daily in Turtle Bay, but returned to their luxe hotels in Naples when the dayâs jaunt was over. It was a tidal bay, so the main marina was built up on high posts, as were some of the modest houses, even those built farther back off the waterfront. Everything from dinghies to yachts and all sizes of sailboats bobbed in the bay.
Manny was waiting for them at the Two Mermaids with the door open. Thank heavens, no reporters were in sight. âLetâs go upstairs,â she told the men and, though every muscle of her body ached, she tried to lead them upstairs gracefully.
Her and Dariaâs two-bedroom apartment above the shop was a light, airy and pleasant place with white wicker furniture, bright floral pillows and open vistas of the marina, bay and gulf. Without Daria, it seemed oppressive, so she was glad to have their company.
She took the orchid Cole had carried up for her and put it on the glass-topped coffee table, which was cluttered with the books Daria had been studying for her accounting class. Theyâd finally admitted theyâd been too careless with the financial end of their business. Manny had volunteered to handle that, but theyâd decided one of them should specialize in it, and Daria had cheerfully volunteered. Sheâd seemed obsessed with the course work ever since. In collegeâDad had insisted they go to his alma mater in Miamiâneither of them had taken courses in anything like accounting or business. Bree had studied languages, and Daria was a philosophy major. The truth was, both of them had majored in giving
Andy Futuro
S.M. Reine
Stuart M. Kaminsky
David Cronenberg
William Ryan
Dorothy Howell
Robin Jarvis
Allyson Young
Marisa Carroll
Robert J. Crane