Sleepless in Las Vegas

Sleepless in Las Vegas Read Online Free PDF

Book: Sleepless in Las Vegas Read Online Free PDF
Author: Colleen Collins
other hand, was crafty, pathologically so, but immature. Maybe the Russian got the itch to dig at Drake, throw him off, so he’d hired this girl, maybe minutes before she walked in here, with hasty instructions to play on his father’s death. Maybe she was hard up for money, feared the thug or both.
    “Why don’t you stick to what you’re good at.” He gave her a scathing once-over. “Although anybody who has to advertise to that extent probably isn’t all that good. Who hired your sorry ass?”
    She opened her slick red lips to say something, but nothing came out.
    Sally appeared, pushed a coaster toward his neighbor. “What can I get ya?”
    Miss Who Dat swerved her stricken gaze to the bartender. “I, uh…”
    He set down his bottle, hard, on the bar. “Order something. We have some talking to do.”
    “Cherry cola?” she asked in a wispy voice.
    Sally gave him a what’s-up look. He flashed her a mind-your-business one back.
    “Maraschino juice in a cola okay?” Sally asked.
    “F’sure. Thank you, ma’am.”
    “Sally. And you’re?”
    “Uh…” Her gaze darted across the bar. “Remy.”
    “Nice to meet you, Remy.” She pointed to Drake’s bottle. “Another?”
    He shook his head as an old Sinatra tune, “Luck Be a Lady,” started playing in the background.
    Remy tapped her fingers on the bar. “I like this song.”
    “Fine. Who put you up to this?”
    She gave him a blank look. “Nobody.”
    “Sticking to that story, eh?”
    The way she lowered her thick black lashes, then raised them slowly, made him think of a theater curtain. He wondered what show he would see next.
    “Like I told you,” she said, oozing earnestness, “I don’t know a Brassell or Yuri.”
    “Braxton.”
    “What?”
    “You heard me.” He’d pulled that same stunt a hundred times. Mispronouncing a name to pretend he didn’t know the person. Playing dumb when you actually knew everything about the person, from the city where they were born to their cat’s name.
    She acted like some kind of psychic nut, but he got the sense she was a lot sharper than she let on. No way was he going to get information from her. Not the truthful variety anyway.
    “What you claim to have heard could not have been my father because…” He paused, swallowed an ache he’d been fighting all day. “He’s dead.”
    There was a stupefied look on her face. Then she keeled forward and hugged him. “Oh, mercy!” she murmured, her voice breaking. “I had no idea.”
    He set down the phone, trying to ignore the curious looks of others at the bar. Placing his hands on her trembling shoulders, he peeled her off him.
    Her eyes glistened with emotion. Her chin quivered. What an actress.
    “You knew.”
    She sucked in a loud, indignant breath. “That he’s de— passed? No, of course, I didn’t know—how would I have? Even if I did know, I wouldn’t have shared what I heard…or sensed maybe is more like it, because to tell you the truth, I’m not all that sure I have the gift…but even if I was sure, I would never have said something like that without believing it offered some comfort.”
    He frowned. “What?”
    She waved her hands in the air. “Never mind.” She paused. “What are you pointing at?”
    “That photo over the register. My dad was the original owner’s best friend, and a lifetime member of the Blottos who still hang out here most afternoons. If somebody wanted to learn facts about my father, all they’d have to do was buy one of those regulars a drink.”
    “I don’t know any facts.” She looked at the photo. “He must be the gentleman on the right. The other one is too old.”
    He said nothing.
    After several beats, she said quietly, “You’re right. Those pulsations likely were your phone on vibrate. Sometimes I think I’m picking up on vibes, but…” She gave a one-shouldered shrug. “My nanny, though, she had the gift.”
    “I don’t care if there’s a radio frequency scanner embedded in your
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