slipping from his hands. His glasses perched on the end of his nose and his eyelids hung low with weariness. He grunted at her.
She sat on the edge of the bed and reached for her book. She swung her legs over. They were strong, mountain-walking legs. She slipped them under the covers.
âWhy donât you turn your light off and go to sleep?â she said.
âWaiting on you,â he mumbled. âWorried.â
âMe too,â she said. Her book was heavy in her hands. She turned the page to read about Agatha Raisin in the Cotswolds of England. Far away.
âIâm worried that youâre becoming an Anglophile,â Jon said, swatting at her book.
She playfully bopped him on the head with it. âOh you! You know Iâll always be a Francophile.â
He grinned.
âNow to sleep with you,â she said.
âYou too?â
âYou know I have to read a few minutes, but Iâm sleepy, so it wonât be long.â
He kissed her, then rolled over to his other side.
Beatrice turned her attention to her book. Soon, Jon was snoring softly and she realized that even though she was turning the pages and her eyes were skimming the words, she wasnât reading at all. She closed her book and set it down on her bedside table, where her battered copy of Leaves of Grass had sat untouched for a few weeks. She noted that the lace tablecloth underneath it showed the dirt and dust in this light. She made a mental note to take all the tablecloths off in the morning and wash them.
She was trying very hard not to think about her only daughter on a cruise ship in the western Caribbean where a storm was headed. From the very start of that childâs life, she had tested Beatrice. She wasnât interested in the same things as Bea: math and physics. Her daughter wanted to dance. Vera had been through so much the last few years of her lifeâa new baby, a divorce, a failed love affair, and a new one that appeared to be going well. Then there was the sleepwalking and the time she was a suspect for murder.
Even though Vera had not followed her motherâs path, Bea admired her daughter for going her own way and forging ahead with her dance studio and her life. That much Vera had gotten from her, she supposed.
When Beatrice closed her eyes, she saw a ship rocking back and forth and waves slapping onto the deck.
Surely not. Those ships were huge. Surely they would be untouched by rough waves of any sort.
But the scientist in Beatrice knew that the power of the ocean could certainly take down even one of the biggest ocean liners, let alone the Jezebel. . . . She turned over to her side.
Of course, the captain and his crew would be well trained and prepared for such things. The fact that they messed up the notification of the murder victim should not have any bearing. That was an unusual circumstance. They were probably flustered and had never dealt with such a thing before. Who gets murdered on a luxury cruise ship, right?
Beatrice turned over to her other side.
Damn, the whole thing rubbed her the wrong way. No use pretending that it didnât. Sometimes you could fool yourself into a calmness. But not this time. Not tonight. She flung the covers off and reached for her robe and slipped it onto her body, bones creaking.
She tiptoed out of the room, leaving Jon to sleep. Someone would need to be rested tomorrow to think clearly and calmly. It wasnât going to be Beatrice.
She headed down the stairs and toward the kitchen, remembering the coconut pie in the fridge. There was at least half of it left. Maybe that would help her sleep. That and a big glass of warm milkâwith a shot or two of bourbon in it. âGood for what ails yaâ is what her daddy always said.
Chapter 17
Dinner was a lavish affair. Each night the ship seemed to outdo itself from the previous night. Buffet tables piled high with fresh seafood, gorgeous vegetables and fruit welcomed them each night. Even
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