Christmastime is here, and justice is the gift that keeps on giving for the Sisterhood and their menfolk in the third part of an exhilarating series by #1 New York Times bestselling author Fern Michaels.
Victory is sweet, but for the Sisterhood and their allies, it's also short-lived. Now that they've convinced some coldblooded slum landlords to pay very dearly for their crimes, they're ready for another mission. While Jack Emery prepares a Christmas feast at his house, the gang gathers to provide one of their own with a yuletide miracle.
Nikki, Jack's wife, has been handling class-action lawsuits filed by victims of Andover Pharmaceuticals. A new leukemia drug was supposed to save children's lives. Instead, it destroyed them. Andover is fighting the suit with all its wealth and influence, and Nikki is losing hope. It's time for Jack and his crew to give Andover a taste of its own medicine-and show them that messing with the Sisterhood's other half has all kinds of unpleasant side effects....
Release date:
September 1, 2014
Publisher:
Zebra Books
Print pages:
124
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All across the United States of America, citizens were waking up to what the weathermen were touting as a white Christmas for most of the country, thanks to a cold front swirling down from Canada. In the South, the sun was shining brightly as picture after picture blitzed across television screens showing Santa arriving on water skis, his sack of presents perched precariously on his back.
Parents, sleepy-eyed, did double time ooohing and aaahing as their bright-eyed children squealed in delight at the mounds of presents piled high under the tree, and then pointed to the empty milk glass and a few stray crumbs on the cookie plate, proof that Santa had indeed slid down the chimney, fire and all. The proof, the little ones pointed out, was the small pile of ash on the hearth. And their parents, of course, nodded sagely, congratulating their beaming children on their deductive powers.
In Georgetown, Jack Emery slept soundly. The digital clock on the nightstand read 5:10, which meant Jack had been asleep for all of two hours. It had been a long night as he and the others wrapped up their current project to everyone’s satisfaction, then attended the midnight religious service in the Southeast section of Washington, D.C. No one, it had seemed, wanted the wonderful night to end, and the pastor at the church agreed wholeheartedly. This, after all, was the community’s way of thanking the men who had entered their lives with riches beyond their wildest dreams. Not riches in the monetary sense of the word, but riches in food, warmth, hot water, love, and caring, which, the pastor boomed at the pulpit, just proved what he had preached all his life, give and you shall receive. And Jack and the boys, thanks to Dennis West and his inheritance, had given beyond the community’s wildest dreams.
The dark night had yet to give way to the dawn that waited impatiently to surface, cloaking the house in Georgetown in a white mantle of snow. The silence was so total that Jack slept peacefully, his arms wrapped around his pillow as dream after dream marched through his tired brain.
Jack stirred restlessly. “Hmmnn, um, oooh,” he moaned as he gripped his pillow tighter against him. “Oh, yeah, oh, don’t stop. Aaah, oooh.” He cracked an eye to stare at two pointed ears and two very large brown eyes staring down at him. “Cyrus!” The big shepherd barked happily as his tongue sought Jack’s ear again. “Son of a gun, you gotta stop doing that, Cyrus. You got me all hot and bothered there for a minute. God, what time is it? It’s only 5:15! It’s not time to get up yet.”
Cyrus thought differently as he tugged at the covers.
Jack yanked at the covers. “Turn the heat up. I’m not getting up until it’s warm in here. Two clicks, Cyrus. I taught you how to do that. Two clicks to the right. Go!” Cyrus leaped off the bed and immediately ran out to the hallway, where he hopped up on the bench under the thermostat and looked at it. He brought his paw up, gave the button a smack, waited for the click, then hit it once more. His bark was pure joy as he spun around, jumped off the bench, and enthusiastically raced back to the bed, where he took a flying leap and landed smack in the middle of Jack’s chest. Then they tussled for a few minutes, the way they always did when Nikki was away. Jack wrapped his arms around the big dog and whispered, “Merry Christmas, big guy. Thanks for waking me up. We gotta get that turkey in the oven. C’mon, I’ll let you out before I take my shower. Last one to the door stinks!” Cyrus was off like a shot, while Jack shuffled in his bare feet into the hall, then down the stairs and out to the kitchen, where Cyrus was barking frantically.
“I see it, Cyrus, I see it,” Jack said as he eyed the mountain of fresh snow that had fallen during the night. “Okay, in and out, and you can do the rest later.”
In seconds, Jack had the coffeepot going. He struggled with the huge turkey and set it in the sink. He turned on the oven just as Cyrus rang the back doorbell to get in. The shepherd shook off the snow and saw Jack looking at the water puddling on the floor. He trotted into the laundry room and dragged a towel out of the laundry basket and dropped it at Jack’s feet. “Oh, no. Your mess, you clean it up,” Jack yelled over his shoulder as he raced up the stairs to take his scalding-hot shower.
Meanwhile, in the kitchen, Cyrus looked at the towel and considered the puddle on the floor for almost a half minute. Then he let loose with a shrill bark, turned around, and raced up the stairs, as much as to say, that’s not my job.
Twenty minutes later, Jack was shaved, dressed, and ready to take on Christmas Day without his wife, for the first time in their marriage. He allowed himself a few minutes to contemplate what he was feeling before he patted Cyrus, his other true love, on the head and made his way down the stairs to start what he hoped would be a wonderful memory for his mental scrapbook.
Jack turned on the lights of the Christmas tree and smiled. He turned on the Bose sound system and was rewarded with what he knew would be twenty-four hours of Christmas music. After listening to Bing Crosby singing Irving Berlin’s immortal “White Christmas,” he let loose with a heavy sigh. Today would be whatever he made of it, no more, no less.
In the kitchen, Jack poured coffee, fished a yogurt out of the fridge, toasted a bagel, then sat down, his eye on the towel and the puddle. Cyrus, having come downstairs after Jack and quietly entered the kitchen, was dancing around the towel. “You want to eat, clean up your mess. You know the rules, Cyrus. Nothing is free in this world.”
Jack thought he heard the big dog sigh as he dragged the towel across the floor, back and forth. He barked again, this time shrilly, as much as to say, this is as good as it’s gonna get. He dragged the towel back to the laundry room just as Jack opened the fridge to get out his food, which he warmed in the microwave oven. He was glad now that he had taken the heaped-up to-go plate the young pastor had insisted on when they left the parish house earlier in the morning.
“Merry Christmas, world,” Jack muttered to himself as he walked over to the kitchen door to view the winter wonderland into which his backyard had been transformed. A white Christmas. It didn’t get any better than that, now did it? If only Nikki were here to share it with him. If only. Don’t go there, Jack, he cautioned himself. Not today. Today is . . . is . . . whatever I damn well make it.
Jack smacked his hands together to get himself in the mood, then turned up the volume on the Bose. Sound invaded the house. “Now, that’s more like it!” he said to his empty kitchen. He eyed the monster turkey and vowed out loud, to his still-empty kitchen, to make the bird as delicious and succulent as one the long-absent Charles Martin would have prepared. But first he had to build a fire to complete the ambiance.
While he waited for the logs to catch, along with the kindling, Jack looked at the pile of presents he had so painstakingly shopped for and wrapped. They were definitely not up to Nikki’s standards when it came to exquisite wrappings, but if intent counted, he’d aced that chore. Nikki’s present was in the drawer of the china cabinet and would remain there until she came home. He’d found it by chance one day in a little shop on a narrow side street in Georgetown and immediately scooped it up because it screamed Nikki’s name.. . .
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