Wild Abandon

Wild Abandon Read Online Free PDF Page B

Book: Wild Abandon Read Online Free PDF
Author: Jeannine Colette
Tags: Contemporary Romance
about two stories high, with white trim and two large doors in front. To the right are a picnic table and a small garden flourishing with vegetables. To the left is a beat-up pickup truck with bumper stickers that let me know exactly what the owner thinks we should do with our borders. I’m also pretty sure I’d find a shotgun in the backseat.
    There isn’t anyone out here, so I walk up to the large doors and pull the one on the right. It opens easily, and I step away from the brightness of the outdoors and into a room so dark that I have to adjust my eyes a few times to see.
    In front of me are rows and rows of oak barrels, that might or might not be filled with wine, piled high to the ceiling. I step to the side, around the barrels, and almost collide with a sofa. Stepping back, I place my hand on the top and feel the smooth velvet material against my palm. My eyesight is now acquainted with the low lighting, so I get an opportunity to look around. A sofa, two wingback chairs, and a wagon-wheel coffee table are in the center of the room. A Persian-style carpet is underneath, and a couple of folding chairs are scattered about. At the end of the room is a black bar with a couple of bottles of wine on top and a few liquor bottles on the back shelf.
    The space is dusty, obviously ignored and in need of a can of Pledge. But perhaps the most peculiar thing about the room are the walls. Painted a faint mauve, the wooden walls are lined from footboard to molding with nails—thin, shiny nails you’d use to hang a small picture frame or poster. It’s as if every memory has been removed, and the nails splintered into the wood are all that’s left as a reminder.
    All memories, except for one.
    On the back wall above the bar area, to the left, is a portrait of a child, painted in dark browns and tans, highlighting the cherub lines of the little girl’s face and the soft curve of her eyes. She looks to be about four years old with brown eyes and matching hair in a half-up, half-down hairstyle. Her lips are a perfect bow shape, as most little girls’ are. She looks sweet and happy, yet the lone placement of the portrait brings on a forlornness that is hard to ignore.
    “Who are you?” a hard voice bellows from the other side of the room.
    I turn around and see a figure standing by the wine barrels. The dim light of the room allows me enough light to take in the man looking back at me like I’m an intruder in his home. He is about five-five with broad shoulders and a wide middle. He is leaning to the side, and when I look down, I see the cane in his hand.
    “I’m Crystal Reid. We have an appointment.” I take a step forward. “I’m here to interview for a job to…” I swallow. “You told Naomi you were looking for someone?”
    The man, who I presume is Ed, hobbles forward. He is wearing khaki pants and a checkered flannel shirt with suspenders and a brown fedora. His face is accentuated with a black beard that reaches below his neckline.
    “Naomi? That curly-haired gal who does the fancy designs?”
    I simply nod.
    “Ah, that girl doesn’t know how to mind her business.” He limps over to the bar and walks through the opening flap that is up, allowing him to get behind the bar.
    Resting his cane against the wall, he leans over the dishwasher and pulls out two glasses. They’re not wine glasses. Instead, he’s taken out two small juice glasses, and he places them on the bar.
    He grabs a bottle of wine and starts to open it when he looks over at me. “Well, don’t just stand there like a tepid goat.” He pours the wine into the glasses.
    I put my shoulders back and walk up to the bar. I rest my hands on the matted black vinyl that lines the edges like a cushion. The bar is only about seven feet long, so there isn’t anywhere to stand that isn’t rather close to him.
    “Drink this.”
    I take the offered glass, take a sip, and place it on the bar.
    The old man is looking at me with a grimace.
    “Jesus Christ,
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