House of Blues

House of Blues Read Online Free PDF

Book: House of Blues Read Online Free PDF
Author: Julie Smith
come examine her house. Nothing was
missing.
    * * *
    The last step was to canvass the neighbors, a task
she dreaded. People in the Garden District, with its mansions and its
private patrol service, were probably the most frightened of crime in
the whole city. She didn't want to look at their dilated eyes and
tight lips as they pressed her for details, as they wrung their
manicured hands and begged her to tell them how to protect
themselves.
    She didn't have the least idea how to reassure them,
and right now she didn't have time either.
    As it happened, the neighbors on the right were on
vacation, according to their own right-hand neighbors. The ones on
the left had been out at the time of the shooting, and the ones
across the street had been closeted in their air-conditioned house.
    Two doors down, however, on the Heberts' side of the
street, Mrs. Gandolfo did think she'd heard a shot, had even peeked
out through her curtains. She called her neighbors, the Heberts'
left-hand ones, and getting no answer, dialed the Heberts. A young
man answered and said everything was fine and he hadn't heard a
thing. Reassured, she'd given up.
    "When you peeked out," Skip said, "did
you notice any cars parked in front of the Heberts' house?"
    " Not really," said Mrs. Gandolfo. "No
more than usual, anyway. Maybe a beige one, I guess, or white. And
there might have been another one, but I really can't remember
anything about it. You know how your mind registers something, but
you don't necessarily know what?"
    " Can you say anything else about the beige one?"
    "No. No, I can't. Except it might have been kind
of small."
    A Mercedes sedan was at least middle-sized, in Skip's
view.
 
 
    3
    Pulses pounding a wild tattoo in her ears, the wheel
slick from her sweat, Reed drove the Mercedes like a sports car,
finding it clumsy on the turns.
    My fault, she thought. Dennis could do this better.
Oh fuck, oh fuck, anybody could.
    Blind with her own tears, she tried not to think,
just drive.
    Oddly, the streets were nearly deserted, or the
Tercel might have hit another car. She might have as well; a cop
might have stopped either one.
    But it was a lazy night in the Big Easy—everyone
was home from work and staying in, it looked like.
    She thought she could remember these words: "If
anybody follows me, I'll shoot them through the head, I swear to God
I will."
    But she wasn't sure. At the time, the words hadn't
even registered. Nothing had. Thought had taken a holiday. Reed
simply acted on automatic pilot.
    Her feet had worked. It was that simple.
    She had given chase, seen Sally thrown roughly into
the Tercel, as if car seats hadn't been invented, and gotten there
too late. The car door was locked.
    Reed was getting flashbacks of the scene, as if they
were part of a dream. In her mind she saw herself as she couldn't
have in real life: tearing out the door, nearly falling down on the
front steps and pausing to right herself, losing precious
milliseconds, tugging at the car door, through the window seeing
Sally's small blond head hit the door on the other side, calling out
her name—Sally!—before hearing the Tercel's ignition. The key had
been left in it, ready to go.
    Reed had had to grapple for her own extra key from
under the right fender, a tiny delay that had made the difference.
Then began the chase, Reed still on automatic, just doing what she
had to do to get her child back. She paid no attention at all to
where she was being led, what neighborhoods she went through, where
she got on the expressway—she just drove; and now these scenes had
started flashing, perhaps the first sign of sanity returning. Could
this really be she, Reed Hebert? What did she think she was doing?
    She thought she should stop and call the police, but
she knew she wasn't about to. She might not be able to find a phone
booth. If she did, 911 might be busy; might not answer right away.
She'd lose the Tercel.
    What if she had stayed at her parents' and called the
police
Read Online Free Pdf

Similar Books

Slocum's Breakout

Jake Logan

The Watercress Girls

Sheila Newberry

Ember

K.T. Fisher

The Art of Domination

Ella Dominguez

Voices in the Night

Steven Millhauser

The Black Madonna

Davis Bunn

The Fire Kimono

Laura Joh Rowland