Silver Linings, стр. 1
PRAISE FOR JAYNE ANN KRENTZ AND HER MARVELOUS BESTSELLERS
SILVER LININGS
“An action-packed plot and a charming heroine.”
—Publishers Weekly
“Jayne Ann Krentz entertains to the hilt in SILVER LININGS…. The excitement and adventure don't stop.”
—Catherine Coulter
HIDDEN TALENTS
“Krentz conjures up a charming relationship between dissimilar but compatible lovers and whimsically paints the eccentric characters of Witt's End…. Krentz's fans will delight in [Hidden Talents].”
—Publishers Weekly
GRAND PASSION
“Filled with the kind of intelligent, offbeat characters…[who] are so fun to get to know that it's hard to close the book on them…. Jayne Ann Krentz is one of the hottest writers in romance today.”
—USA Today
“Charming, suspenseful, and downright steamy…. Pure and unabashed fun.”
—West Coast Review of Books
“Krentz at her best….[Grand Passion has] the snappy dialogue that has become her trademark and a cast of characters you want to know personally.”
—Sandra Brown
Books by Jayne Ann Krentz
The Golden Chance
Silver Linings
Sweet Fortune
Perfect Partners
Family Man
Wildest Hearts
Hidden Talents
Grand Passion
Trust Me
Absolutely, Positively
Deep Waters
Sharp Edges
Flash
Eye of the Beholder
By Jayne Ann Krentz writing as Jayne Castle
Amaryllis
Zinnia
Orchid
Published by POCKET BOOKS
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
An Original Publication of POCKET BOOKS
A Pocket Star Book published by
POCKET BOOKS, a division of Simon & Schuster, Inc.
1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020
Copyright © 1991 by Jane Ann Krentz
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever.
For further information address Pocket Books, 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020
ISBN: 0-7434-9638-8
POCKET STAR BOOKS and colophon are registered trademarks of Simon & Schuster, Inc.
Visit us on the World Wide Web:
http://www.SimonSays.com
To Claire Zion and baby Rose
and the future…
CHAPTEROne
The only thing she really knew about Paul Cormier was that he was dying.
The blood from the wound in his chest had soaked through his white silk shirt and white linen suit and was running in small rivulets over the white marble tile.
The old man opened his eyes as Mattie Sharpe crouched helplessly beside him, grasping his hand in hers. He peered up at her, as if he were trying to see through a thick fog.
“Christine? Is that you, Christine?” Even in a croaked whisper, his accent was elegant and vaguely European.
“Yes, Paul.” Lying was the only thing she could do for him. Mattie held his hand tightly. “It's Christine.”
“Missed you, girl. Missed you so much.”
“I'm here now.”
Cormier's pale blue gaze focused on her for a few seconds. “No,” he said. “You're not here. But I'm almost there, aren't I?” He made a sound that might have started out as a chuckle but turned into a ghastly, gurgling cough.
“Yes. You're almost here.”
“Be good to see you again.”
“Yes.” A hot, torpid island breeze wafted through the front hall of the Cormier mansion. The silence from the surrounding jungle was unnatural and oppressive. “It's going to be all right, Paul. Everything will be fine.” Lies. More lies.
Cormier squinted up at her, his gaze startlingly lucid for an instant. “Get out of here. Hurry.”
“I'll go,” Mattie promised.
Cormier's eyes closed again. “Someone will come. An old friend. When he does, tell him…tell him.” Another terrible gasping sound drained more of the little strength he had left.
“What do you want me to tell him?”
“Reign…” Cormier choked on his own blood. “In hell.”
Mattie didn't pause to make sense out of what she thought she'd heard him say. Automatically she reassured him. “I'll tell him.”
The hand that had been clutching hers slackened its grip. “Christine?”
“I'm here, Paul.”
But Cormier did not hear her this time. He was gone.
The horror of her situation washed over Mattie again. She struggled to her feet, feeling light-headed. Without thinking, she glanced at the black and gold watch on her wrist as if she were late to a business appointment.
With a shock she realized she had been in the white mansion overlooking the ocean for less than five minutes. She would have been here two hours earlier if she hadn't gotten lost on a winding island road that had dead-ended in the mountains. At the time the delay had made her tense and anxious. It occurred to Mattie now that if she had arrived on time, she probably would have walked straight into the same gun that had killed Paul Cormier.
The toe of her Italian leather shoe struck something on the floor. It skittered away across the tile.
Mattie jumped at the loud sound in the eerily silent hall. Then she glanced down and saw the gun.
Cormier's, probably, she told herself. He must have tried to fight off the intruder. Dazed, Mattie took a step toward the weapon. Perhaps she should take it with her.
Even as the words formed in her mind she shuddered. The last gun she had handled had been a little plastic model that had come in a box labeled, “Annie Oakley's Sharpshooter Special. For ages five and up.” A friend had give it to her on the occasion of her sixth birthday. Mattie had practiced her fast draw for hours, whipping the toy gun out of its pink fringed, imitation leather holster over and over again until her concerned parents had taken it from her and replaced it with a box of watercolors. Mattie had dutifully played with the paints for approximately ten minutes and succeeded in producing a cheerful yellow horse for Annie Oakley to ride. The picture had been cute, but was not deemed good enough to hang on the refrigerator next to her sister Ariel's latest rendition of a bouquet of flowers.
Her training in handguns thus halted at such an early stage,