The Dead Place

Free The Dead Place by Rebecca Drake Page B

Book: The Dead Place by Rebecca Drake Read Free Book Online
Authors: Rebecca Drake
Tags: Fiction, General, Thrillers
car pulling into the lot. Some ugly old green car belching out smoke from its exhaust pipe. She slipped back down between the cars, this time lying back, bag wedged under her head like a pillow.
    It was a beautiful day. She hummed a cheerful Mozart sonata, playing the notes on the ground until she got caught in a tricky section and couldn’t remember the next measure. She looked up at the big puffballs of white clouds moving lazily across a bright blue sky. She shaded her eyes and made out the shapes in the clouds, remembering doing that with her mother when she was little.
    They’d been lying on a beach then, up at Cape Cod, with the sand gritty between their toes and the sun like a blanket on top of them. “Do you see the alligator, Gracie?” her mother had said, pointing. “Look at its sharp teeth.”
    She could remember the feel of the breeze against her skin and the distant caw of seagulls and how her father had been sitting nearby immersed in a book, his dark head bent over its pages. She had her own little yellow bucket and a blue shovel and she laughed as her mother sprinkled water over her head, cooling her off.
    “What do you see in the clouds, Gracie?”
    Her mother’s voice lilting somewhere above her, and she could remember the feel of a warm kiss pressed against the top of her head. What had she seen in the clouds? She couldn’t remember. Grace closed her eyes, tired of squinting. She had to have seen something, but all she could remember was her mother describing the things that she’d seen. Always the artist, nothing Kate Corbin ever saw was ordinary. Jungle animals, five-layered wedding cakes, an Aladdin’s lamp. What had Grace seen?
    “I see a dog.”
    “What kind of dog?”
    “I don’t know, just a dog.”
    “Greyhound? Boxer? Terrier?”
    She could remember shaking her head, shaking off her mother’s insistence as if it were a touch. “No, no! Just a dog!”
    “Oh, Grace. You need to have more imagination.”
    Grace frowned at the memory.
    “Are you going to sleep all day?”
    Her eyes flew open. Damien was standing above her, leaning casually against the Mercedes, looking hot just like always, tight jeans and cool black T-shirt and those silver aviator glasses that she loved. His blond hair was cut brutally short. A smile played on his lips.
    “Hey!” She scrambled to her feet and grabbed her bag. “I didn’t know you’d arrived.”
    “You were in la-la land, baby.” He accepted her quick kiss, but when she lifted her lips from his, one of his hands reached out and pinched her right nipple, popping out of her bra and against the thin fabric of her knit shirt.
    “Ow!” She pulled back, but his other hand wrapped around to hold her pressed against him.
    “You miss me?” He increased the pressure on her nipple, all the while smiling at her.
    It hurt, but she liked it, too. She could feel heat flooding her face. “Yes.”
    “Show me.”
    She kissed him again then, tentatively pushing with her lips dry against his, and then he let his lips part and her tongue darted forward like a bird dipping into an open flower.
    He circled the nipple with his finger and pushed against it as if it were a button. She moaned against his mouth, pressing up against him instinctively. Along with her love for Damien was a bit of fear. Not that she was really afraid of him, not that, but just a little anxiety about what he was going to do next. She knew he was capable of doing anything. Wasn’t he proving that now by kissing her in this lot and touching her so intimately out here in plain sight where anybody could see them?
    She wriggled out of his grasp, and this time he let her go. “We have to leave before someone sees us,” she said.
    She hurried around the side of the Mercedes, noticing that the panels were coated with dust and the wheel wells and tires were rimed with dirt. Damien took his time getting into the car and adjusting the side mirrors before he pulled out of the lot.
    “You’re

Similar Books

Kitty Kitty

Michele Jaffe

Thai Die

Monica Ferris

Hilda and Pearl

Alice Mattison

The Calling

Cate Tiernan

Fifties

David Halberstam

A Perfect Stranger

Danielle Steel

American Blue

Penny Birch

Dying to Read

Lorena McCourtney