Archer's Voice
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Synopsis
From New York Times bestselling author Mia Sheridan comes an emotional, slow burn romance about a woman desperate to hide and the man who sees through her walls, perfect for fans of Colleen Hoover and Lucy Score.
I wanted to lose myself in the small town of Pelion, Maine. To forget everything I had left behind. The sound of rain. The blood. The coldness of a gun against my skin. For six months, each breath has been a reminder that I survived--and my dad didn't. I'm almost safe again. But the moment I meet Archer Hale, my entire world tilts on its axis . . . and never rights itself again.
Until I trespass into his strange, silent, and isolated world, Archer communicates with no one. Yet in his whiskey-colored eyes, something intangible happens between us. There's so much more to him than just his beauty, his presence, or the ways his hands communicate with me. On me. But this town is mired in secrets and betrayals, and Archer is the explosive center of it all.
So much passion. And so much hurt. But it's only in Archer's silence that we might just find what we need to heal . . . and live.
Includes an exclusive extended epilogue from Archer's POV!
A Goodread's "Top Romance Novel of All Time"
A New York Times, USA Today, and Wall Street Journal bestseller
Release date: November 1, 2016
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
Print pages: 384
* BingeBooks earns revenue from qualifying purchases as an Amazon Associate as well as from other retail partners.
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Archer's Voice
Mia Sheridan
Chapter One
Archer—Seven Years Old; April
Grab my hand! I got you,” I said real soft, the helicopter lifting off the ground as Duke grabbed Snake Eyes’s hand. I was trying to play as quiet as I could—my mama was banged up again and I didn’t want to wake her where she was sleeping up in her room. She’d told me to watch cartoons up in bed with her, and I had for a while, but when I saw she was asleep, I’d come downstairs to play with my G.I. Joe toys.
The helicopter landed, and my guys jumped out and ran under the chair I had put a towel over to make into part of an underground bunker. I picked up the helicopter and lifted it off the ground again with a whop, whop, whop sound. I wished I could snap my fingers and make this a real helicopter. Then I’d pull my mama onto it and we’d fly away from here—away from him, away from the black eyes and my mama’s tears. I didn’t care where we’d end up as long as it was far, far away.
I crawled back into my bunker, and a few minutes later, I heard the front door open and close, and then heavy footsteps walking through our foyer and down the hall toward where I was playing. I peeked out and saw a pair of shiny black shoes and the cuffs of what I knew were uniform pants.
I crawled out as fast as I could, saying, “Uncle Connor!” as he kneeled down and I threw myself into his arms, making sure to stay clear of the side where he kept his gun and police flashlight.
“Hey, little man,” he said, hugging me to him. “How’s my rescue hero?”
“Good. See the underground fortress I built?” I said, leaning away and proudly pointing back over my shoulder at the fort I had made under the table using blankets and towels. It was pretty cool.
Uncle Connor smiled and glanced behind me. “I sure do. You did a good job there, Archer. I’ve never seen a fortress quite as impenetrable looking as that one.” He winked and smiled bigger.
I grinned. “Wanna play with me?”
He messed my hair, smiling. “Not right now, buddy. Later, okay? Where’s your mama?”
I felt my own face fall. “Um, she’s not feeling real good. She’s laying down.” I looked into Uncle Connor’s face and golden-brown eyes. The picture that popped into my head right away was the sky before a storm—dark and sort of scary. I moved back slightly, but as quick as that, Uncle Connor’s eyes cleared and he pulled me into him again, squeezing me.
“Okay, Archer, okay,” he said. He set me back from him and held on to my arms as his eyes moved over my face. I smiled at him and he smiled back.
“You have your mama’s smile, you know that?”
I smiled bigger. I loved my mama’s smile—it was warm and beautiful and it made me feel loved.
“But I look like my daddy,” I said, looking down. Everyone said I had the Hale look about me.
He just stared at me for a minute, looking like maybe he wanted to say something, but then changed his mind. “Well, that’s a good thing, buddy. Your daddy’s a handsome devil.” He smiled at me, but it didn’t move up into his eyes. I looked at him, wishing I looked like Uncle Connor. My mama told me once that he was the most handsome man she’d seen in her whole life. But then she’d looked guilty like she shouldn’t have said that. Probably because he wasn’t my daddy, I guessed. Also, Uncle Connor was a police officer—a hero. When I grew up, I was gonna be just like him.
Uncle Connor stood up. “I’m gonna go see if your mama’s awake. You play with your action figures and I’ll be down in a minute, okay, buddy?”
“Okay.” I nodded. He messed my hair again and then walked toward the steps. I waited a couple of minutes, and then I followed him up silently. I stepped around every squeak, holding on to the banister to move me forward. I knew how to be quiet in this house. It was important that I knew how to be quiet in this house.
When I got to the top of the stairs, I stood just outside the door to my mama’s room, listening. The door was open only a crack, but it was enough.
“I’m okay, Connor, really,” my mama said, her voice soft and still sleepy.
“You’re not okay, Alyssa,” he hissed, his voice breaking at the end in a way that scared me. “Jesus. I want to kill him. I’m done with this, Lys. I’m done with the martyr routine. You might think you deserve this, but Archer. Does. Not,” he said, spitting out the last three words in a way that let me know his jaw was tight like I’d seen it before. Usually, when my daddy was around.
I heard nothing but my mama’s soft crying for a few minutes before Uncle Connor spoke again. This time his voice sounded strange, no expression in it.
“You wanna know where he is right now? He left the bar and went home with Patty Nelson. He’s screwing her three ways from Sunday in her trailer. I drove by and could hear it from inside my car.”
“God, Connor,” my mama’s voice choked out. “Are you trying to make this worse—”
“No!” his voice roared and I jumped slightly. “No,” he said more quietly now. “I’m trying to make you see that it’s enough. It’s enough. If you think you needed to pay a penance, it’s paid. Don’t you see that? You were never right in that belief, but for the sake of argument, let’s say you were—it’s paid up, Lys. It’s long since paid up. Now we’re all paying. Christ, do you wanna know what I felt when I heard the sounds coming out of that trailer? I wanted to bust in there and beat the shit out of him for humiliating you, disrespecting you that way. And the fuck of it all is that I should be happy he’s with someone other than you, anyone other than the woman that is so fucking deep under my skin, I couldn’t dig you out with a jackhammer. But instead, I felt sick about it. Sick, Lys. Sick that he wasn’t treating you right, even though him treating you right might mean I could never have you again.”
It was quiet from inside the room for a couple of minutes, and I wanted to peek inside, but I didn’t. All I heard was my mama’s soft crying and some slight rustling.
Finally, Uncle Connor went on, his voice quiet now, gentle, “Let me take you away from here, baby, please, Lys. Let me protect you and Archer. Please.” His voice was filled with something I didn’t know the name for. I sucked in a quiet breath. He wanted to take us away from here?
“What about Tori?” my mama asked quietly.
It was a couple of seconds before Uncle Connor answered, “I’d tell Tori I was leaving. She’d have to know. We haven’t had any kind of real marriage for years anyway. She’d have to understand.”
“She won’t, Connor,” my mama said, sounding scared. “She won’t understand. She’ll do something to get even with us. She’s always hated me.”
“Alyssa, we’re not kids anymore. This isn’t about some stupid competition shit. This is about real life. This is about me loving you. This is about us deserving to have a life together. This is about me, you, and Archer.”
“And Travis?” she asked quietly.
There was a pause. “I’ll work something out with Tori,” he said. “You don’t need to worry about that.”
There was more silence, and then my mama said, “Your job, the town…”
“Alyssa,” Uncle Connor said, his voice gentle, “I don’t care about any of that. If there’s no you, nothing else matters. Don’t you know that by now? I’ll resign from my job, sell the land. We’ll live a life, baby. We’ll find some happiness. Away from here—away from this place. Somewhere we can call our own. Baby, don’t you want that? Tell me you do.”
There was more silence, only I heard soft sounds like maybe they were kissing. I had seen them kissing before when my mama didn’t know I was spying, like I was doing now. I knew it was wrong—mamas weren’t supposed to kiss men who weren’t their husbands. But I also knew daddies weren’t supposed to come home drunk all the time and slap their wives in the face, and mamas weren’t supposed to look at uncles with the soft look my mama always got on her face when Uncle Connor came around. It was all mixed up and confused, and I wasn’t sure how to sort it all. That’s why I spied on them, trying to understand.
Finally, after what seemed like a long time, my mama whispered, so I could barely hear, “Yes, Connor, take us away from here. Take us far, far away. Me and you and Archer. Let’s find some happiness. I want that. I want you. You’re the only one I’ve ever wanted.”
“Lys…Lys…my Lys…,” I heard Uncle Connor saying between heavy breaths.
I snuck away, making my way back down the stairs, in between the noisy spots, not making a sound, moving in silence.
Chapter Two
I slung my backpack over my shoulder, picked up the small dog carrier on my passenger-side seat, and closed the car door behind me. I stood still for a minute, just listening to the morning cricket songs echoing all around, almost, but not quite, drowning out the soft swish of the trees rustling in the wind. The sky above me was a vivid blue, and I could just make out a sliver of glistening lake water through the cottages in front of me. I squinted at the white one, the one that still had the small sign in the front window declaring that it was for rent. It was clearly older and slightly run-down, but it had a charm about it that immediately appealed to me. I could picture sitting on the porch in the evenings, watching the trees surrounding it sway in the breeze as the moon came up over the lake behind me, the smell of pine and fresh water in the air. I smiled to myself. I hoped the inside offered a little charm, too, or at the very least, some clean.
“What do you think, Phoebs?” I asked softly. Phoebe chuffed agreeably from her carrier.
“Yeah, I think so, too,” I said.
An older sedan pulled up next to my small VW Bug, and an older, balding man got out, walking toward me.
“Bree Prescott?”
“That’s me.” I smiled and took a few steps, shaking his hand. “Thanks for meeting me on short notice, Mr. Connick.”
“Please, call me George,” he said, smiling back at me and moving toward the cottage, both of us kicking up dust and dead pine needles with each step. “Not a problem meetin’ you. I’m retired now, so I don’t really have a schedule to keep to. This worked just fine.” We walked up the three wooden steps to the small porch, and he pulled a ring of keys out of his pocket and began searching for one.
“Here we go,” he said, putting the key in the lock and pushing the front door open. The smell of dust and faint mildew greeted me as we stepped inside and I looked around.
“The wife comes out here as often as possible and does some dusting and basic cleaning, but as you can see, it could use a good once-over. Norma doesn’t get around quite as well as she used to with her hip arthritis and all. The place has been empty all summer.”
“It’s fine.” I smiled at him, putting Phoebe’s dog carrier down by the door and moving toward what I could see was the kitchen. The inside needed more than a basic cleaning—more like a complete scrub down. But I immediately loved it. It was quaint and full of charm. When I lifted a couple of covers, I saw that the furnishings were older but tasteful. The wood floors were wide-planked and beautifully rustic, and the paint colors were all subtle and calming.
The kitchen appliances were older, but I didn’t need much as far as a kitchen went anyway. I wasn’t sure I’d ever want to cook again.
“The bedroom and bathroom are in the back—” Mr. Connick started to say.
“I’ll take it,” I cut in, then laughed and shook my head slightly. “I mean, if it’s still available, and okay with you, I’ll take it.”
He chuckled. “Well, yes, that’s great. Let me get the rental agreement out of my car, and we can get that all taken care of. I listed the security deposit as first and last, but I can work with you if that’s a problem.”
I shook my head. “No, that’s not a problem. That sounds fine.”
“Okay then. I’ll be right back,” he said, moving toward the door.
While he was outside, I took a minute to walk down the hall and peek into the bedroom and bathroom. Both were small, but they would do, just as I’d figured they would. The thing that caught my attention was the large window in the bedroom that faced the lake. I couldn’t help smiling as I took in the view of the wooden dock leading to the calm, glassy water, a stunning blue in the bright morning light.
There were two boats far out, not much more than dots on the horizon.
Suddenly, looking out at that water, I had the strangest sensation that I wanted to cry—but not with sadness, with happiness. Just as soon as I felt it, it started to fade, leaving me with an odd nostalgia I couldn’t begin to explain.
“Here we go,” Mr. Connick called, and I heard the door shut behind him. I left the room to sign the papers for the place I would call home—at least for the next little while—hoping against hope this was where I’d finally find some peace.
* * *
Norma Connick had left all her cleaning products at the cottage, and so after I had lugged my suitcase out of my car and put it in the bedroom, I got to work. Three hours later I pushed a damp piece of hair out of my eyes and stood back to admire my work. The wood floors were clean and dust-free, all the furniture was uncovered, and the entire place was thoroughly dusted. I had found the bed linens and towels in the hall closet and washed and dried them in the small stacked washer and dryer next to the kitchen, and then made up the bed. The kitchen and bathroom were scrubbed and bleached, and I had opened all the windows to let in the warm summer breeze that came off the lake. I wouldn’t get too used to this place, but for now, I was content.
I unpacked the few toiletries I’d thrown into my suitcase, placed them in the medicine cabinet, and then took a long, cool shower, washing the hours of cleaning and more hours of travel off my body. I had broken up the sixteen-hour drive from my hometown of Cincinnati, Ohio, into two eight-hour hauls, staying overnight in a roadside motel one night and driving through the next to arrive this morning. I had stopped at an Internet café in New York the day before and looked online for rental properties in the town where I was headed. The town in Maine I had chosen as my destination was a popular tourist attraction, and so after more than an hour of searching, the closest I could get was across the lake, in this small town named Pelion.
After drying off, I put on a pair of clean shorts and a T-shirt, and picked up my phone to call my best friend, Natalie. She’d called me several times since I’d first texted her and told her I was leaving, and I’d only texted her back. I owed her an actual phone call.
“Bree?” Nat answered, the sounds of loud chatter in the background.
“Hey, Nat, is this a bad time?”
“Hold on, I’m going outside.” She put her hand over the mouthpiece, said something to someone, and then came back on the line. “No, it’s not a bad time! I’ve been dying to talk to you! I’m at lunch with my mom and my aunt. They can wait a few minutes. I’ve been worried,” she said, her tone slightly accusing.
I sighed. “I know, I’m sorry. I’m in Maine.” I had told her it was where I was heading.
“Bree, you just took off. Geez. Did you even pack anything?”
“A few things. Enough.”
She huffed out a breath. “Okay. Well, when are you coming home?”
“I don’t know. I thought I might stay here for a little while. Anyway, Nat, I didn’t mention this, but I’m running low on money—I just spent a big chunk on a security deposit for my rental. I need to get a job, at least for a couple of months, and make enough to fund my trip home and a few months of living expenses once I get back.”
Nat paused. “I didn’t realize it was that bad. But, Bree, honey, you have a college degree. Come home and put it to use. You don’t need to live like some kind of vagabond in a town where you don’t know a single person. I already miss you. Avery and Jordan miss you. Let your friends help you get back to life—we love you. I can send you some money if it means getting you home more quickly.”
“No, no, Natalie. Really. I…need this time, okay? I know you love me. I do,” I said quietly. “I love you, too. This is just something that I need to do.”
She paused again. “Was it because of Jordan?”
I chewed on my lip for a couple of seconds. “No, not entirely. I mean, maybe that was the straw, but no, I’m not running away from Jordan. It was just kind of the last thing I needed, you know? Everything just got to be…too much.”
“Oh, honey, a person can only take so much.” When I was quiet, she sighed and said, “So the semi-strange, impromptu road trip is already helping?” I heard the smile in her voice.
I laughed a quiet laugh. “In some ways, maybe. In other ways, not just yet.”
“So they haven’t gone away?” Natalie asked quietly.
“No, Nat, not yet. But I feel good about this place. I really do.” I tried to sound chipper.
Nat paused again. “Honey, I don’t think it’s about the place.”
“That’s not what I mean. I just mean, this feels like a good place to get away to for a little bit…oh gosh, you’ve gotta go. Your mom and aunt are waiting for you. We can talk about this another time.”
“Okay,” she said hesitantly. “So you’re safe?”
I paused. I never felt entirely safe. Would I again? “Yes, and it’s beautiful here. I found a cottage right on the lake.” I glanced out the window behind me, taking in the beautiful water view again.
“Can I come visit?”
I smiled. “Let me get settled in. Maybe before I turn back around?”
“Okay, deal. I really miss you.”
“I miss you, too. I’ll call again soon, okay?”
“Okay. Bye, honey.”
“Bye, Nat.”
I hung up the phone, went to the big window and drew the shades in my new bedroom, and climbed into my freshly made bed. Phoebe settled in at my feet. I fell asleep the minute my head hit the pillow.
* * *
I woke up to the sounds of birdcalls and the distant lap of water hitting the shore. I rolled over and looked at the clock. It was just past six in the evening now. I stretched and sat up, orienting myself.
I got up, Phoebe trotting along behind me, and brushed my teeth in the small bathroom. After I rinsed, I studied myself in the medicine cabinet mirror. The dark circles under my eyes were still there, although less pronounced after the five hours of sleep I had just gotten. I pinched my cheeks to bring some color into them, gave myself a big, cheesy, fake grin in the mirror, and then shook my head at myself. “You are going to be okay, Bree. You are strong, and you are going to be happy again. Do you hear me? There’s something good about this place. Do you feel it?” I tilted my head and stared at myself in the mirror for a minute longer. Lots of people gave their own reflection pep talks in the bathroom, right? Totally normal. I snorted softly and shook my head slightly again. I rinsed my face and then quickly pulled my long, light brown hair back into a messy twist at the nape of my neck.
I went out to the kitchen and opened the freezer, where I had put the frozen meals that were in a cooler on ice in my car. I hadn’t had a lot of food to bring with me—just the few things that were in my refrigerator at home: a few microwavable meals, milk, peanut butter and bread, and some fruit. And half a bag of dog food for Phoebs. But it would do for a couple of days before I had to find the local grocery store.
I popped a pasta meal into the microwave sitting on the counter and then stood there eating it with a plastic fork. I watched out the kitchen window as I ate, and noticed an old woman in a blue dress and short white hair come out of the cottage next to mine and walk toward my porch with a basket in her hands. When I heard her light knock, I tossed the now-empty cardboard meal box in the trash and went to answer.
I pulled the door open, and the old lady smiled warmly at me. “Hi, dear, I’m Anne Cabbott. Looks like you’re my new neighbor. Welcome to the neighborhood.”
I smiled back at her and took the basket she offered me. “Bree Prescott. Thank you. How nice.” I lifted a corner of the towel on top of the basket, and the sweet smell of blueberry muffins wafted up to me. “Oh gosh, these smell delicious,” I said. “Would you like to come in?”
“Actually, I was going to ask if you’d like to come have some iced tea with me on my porch. I just made some fresh.”
“Oh.” I hesitated. “Okay, sure. Just give me a second to put on some shoes.”
I stepped back inside and set the muffins on my kitchen counter and then went back to my bedroom, where I had kicked off my flip-flops.
When I returned, Anne was standing at the edge of my porch waiting for me. “Such a lovely night. I try to sit out in the evenings and enjoy it. Pretty soon I’ll be complaining about how cold it is.”
We started walking toward her cottage. “So you live here all year-round?” I asked, glancing over at her.
She nodded. “Most of us on this side of the lake are year-round residents. Tourists aren’t interested in this town as it is. Over there”—she nodded her head toward the far side of the lake, barely visible from this distance—“is where all the tourist attractions are. Most in this town don’t mind that, like it even. Course all that’s going to change. The woman who owns the town, Victoria Hale, has plans for a bunch of new development that will bring the tourists here as well.” She sighed as we climbed the steps to her porch, and she sat down in one of the wicker chairs. I sat on the two-person porch swing and leaned back on the cushion.
Her porch was beautiful and homey, full of comfortable white wicker and bright blue and yellow cushions. There were pots of flowers everywhere: wave petunias and potato vine cascading over the sides.
“What do you think about bringing tourists here?”
She frowned slightly. “Oh, well, I like our quiet little town. I say let them stay over there. We still get the passers-through, which are enough for my taste. Plus, I like our small-town feel. Supposedly condos are going up here, so there won’t be any more lakeside cottages.”
I frowned. “Oh, I’m sorry,” I said, realizing she meant she’d have to move.
She waved her hand dismissively. “I’ll be okay. It’s the businesses in town that will be closed down because of the expansion that I worry more for.”
I nodded, still frowning. We were quiet for a second before I said, “I vacationed on the other side of the lake with my family when I was a little girl.”
She picked up the pitcher of tea on the small table next to her, poured us each a glass, and handed me one. “Did you? What brings you back here now?”
I took a sip of my tea, purposefully stalling for a couple of seconds. Finally I said, “I’m on a short road trip. I was happy there that summer.” I shrugged. I tried to smile, but talking about my family still brought a tightness to my chest. I settled on what I hoped was a pleasant expression.
She studied me for a second, taking a sip of her own tea. Then she nodded. “Well, dear, I think that sounds like a good plan. And I think if this place brought you happiness before, it can bring happiness again. Some places just agree with people, I think.” She smiled warmly, and I smiled back. I didn’t tell her that the other reason I was here was that it was the last place my family had been truly happy and carefree. My mother was diagnosed with breast cancer when we got home from that trip. She died six months later. From then on, it had just been my dad and me.
“How long are you planning on staying?” Anne asked, pulling me out of my reverie.
“I’m not sure. I don’t really have a specific itinerary. I will need to get a job, though. Do you know anyone who’s hiring?”
She set her glass down. “Actually, I do. The diner in town needs a morning waitress. They’re open for breakfast and lunch. I was in the other day and there was a sign up. The girl who worked there before had a baby and decided to stay at home with him. It’s right on the main street in town—Norm’s. Always nice and busy. You tell them Anne sent you.” She winked at me.
“Thank you.” I smiled. “I will.”
We sat quietly for a minute, both sipping our tea, the sound of crickets singing in the background, and the occasional mosquito buzzing past my ear. I could hear distant shouts from boaters on the lake, probably about to head in and call it a night, and the soft sound of the lake lapping on the shore.
“It’s peaceful here.”
“Well, I hope you don’t find this forward, dear, but it seems like you could use a good dose of peaceful.”
I let out a breath and laughed softly. “You must read people well,” I said. “You’re not wrong there.”
She laughed softly, too. “Always have been good at peggin’ people. My Bill used to say he couldn’t hide anything from me if he tried. Course, love and time will do that, too. You get so the other person is practically another part of you—and you can’t hide from yourself. Although some are good at tryin’, I suppose.”
I tilted my head. “I’m sorry. How long has your husband been gone?”
“Oh, it’s been ten years now. I still miss him, though.” Melancholy skated briefly across her features before she pulled her shoulders up and nodded her head at my glass. “He used to like a little bourbon in his sweet tea. Made him frisky. Course I didn’t mind. Kept him smiling and only took a minute or two of my time.”
I had just taken a sip of tea, and I put my hand over my mouth to not spit it out. After I had swallowed it down, I laughed and Anne grinned at me.
I nodded after a minute. “I guess men are pretty simple that way.”
“Us women learn that young, don’t we? Is there a boy waiting back home for you?”
I shook my head. “No. I have a few good friends, but no one else is waiting back home for me.” As the words spilled from my lips, the true nature of my aloneness in the world felt like a sucker punch to my gut. It wasn’t news to me and yet, somehow, saying the words brought it home in a way that the knowledge itself didn’t. I drained my glass of tea, attempting to swallow down the emotion that had suddenly overcome me.
“I should get going,” I said. “Thank you so much for the tea and the company.” I smiled at Anne and she smiled back, beginning to stand as I did.
“Anytime, Bree. You need anything at all, you know right where I am.”
“Thank you, Anne. That’s very kind. Oh! I do need to make a trip to a drugstore. Is there one in town?”
“Yes. Haskell’s. Just drive back through town, the way you came in, and you’ll see it on your left. It’s right before the one stoplight. You can’t miss it.”
“Okay, great. Thanks again,” I said, stepping down the steps and giving her a small wave.
Anne nodded, smiling, and waved back.
As I walked back through my own yard to get my purse out of the house, I spotted a lone dandelion full of fluff. I bent and plucked it out of the ground and held it up to my lips, closing my eyes and recalling Anne’s words. After a minute, I whispered, “Peace,” before I blew and watched the fluff float out of sight, hoping that somehow one of those seeds carrying my whisper would reach that something or someone who had the power to make wishes come true.
Chapter Three
The sky was just beginning to dim when I drove into Pelion, a quiet, almost old-fashioned, little downtown area. Most of the businesses looked to be family or individually owned, and large trees lined the wide sidewalks where people still strolled in the cooler late-summer twilight. I loved this time of day. There was something magical about it, something hopeful, something that said, You didn’t know if you could, but you made it another day, didn’t you?
I spotted Haskell’s and pulled into the parking lot to the right of it and into a spot.
I didn’t need groceries just yet, but I was in need of a few basic necessities. It was the only reason I’d run out at all. Even though I had slept five hours or so today, I was tired again and ready to settle into bed with a book.
I was in and out of Haskell’s in ten minutes and walking back to my car in the deepening twilight. The streetlights had blinked on in the time I had been in the store, and were casting a dreamy glow over the parking lot. I pulled my purse up on my shoulder and switched the plastic bag from one hand to the other, when the bottom of the plastic tore open and my purchases fell to the concrete, several items rolling away, out of my immediate reach. “Crap!” I swore, bending down to pick up my stuff. I opened my large purse and started tossing in the. . .
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