No Time for Goodbye

No Time for Goodbye by Linwood Barclay Page A

Book: No Time for Goodbye by Linwood Barclay Read Free Book Online
Authors: Linwood Barclay
Tags: Fiction, Suspense, Thrillers
Ads: Link
Cynthia, about what had happened to her mother and father and brother, to leave that kind of money to care for her?
    And then I wondered whether I should tell the police. Get Tess to turn over the letter and the envelopes. Maybe, even after all these years, they still held some secrets that someone with the right kind of forensic equipment could unlock.
    Assuming, of course, that there was anyone still in the police department who cared about this case. It had gone into the “cold” file a very long time ago.
    When they were doing the TV show, they had a hard time even finding anyone still on the force who’d investigated the incident. Which was why they’d had to track down that guy in Arizona, sitting out front of his Airstream, so he could insinuate that Cynthia had had something to do with the disappearance of her brother and her parents, the prick.
    And so I lay awake, haunted by the information I had that Cynthia did not, and how it only served to remind me of how much we still didn’t know.

    I killed some time in the bookstore while Cynthia and Grace looked at shoes. I had an early Philip Roth, one that I’d never gotten around to reading, in my hand when Grace came running into the store. Cynthia trailed behind her, a shopping bag in hand.
    “I’m starving,” Grace said, throwing her arms around me.
    “You got some shoes?”
    She took a step back and modeled for me, sticking out one foot and then the other. White sneakers with a pink swoosh.
    “What’s in the bag?” I asked.
    “Her old ones,” Cynthia said. “She had to wear them right away. You hungry?”
    I was. I put the Roth book back and we took the escalator up to the food court level. Grace wanted McDonald’s, so I gave her enough money to buy herself something while Cynthia and I went to a different counter to get soup and a sandwich. Cynthia kept glancing back over to the McDonald’s, making sure she could see Grace. The mall was busy on this Sunday afternoon, as was the food court. There were still a few tables free, but they were filling up fast.
    Cynthia was so occupied watching Grace that I moved both our plastic trays along, gathered together cutlery and napkins, loaded the sandwiches and soup as they became ready.
    “She’s got us a table,” Cynthia said. I scanned the court, spotted Grace at a table for four, waving her arm back and forth long after we’d caught sight of her. She already had her Big Mac out of the box when we joined her, her fries dumped into the other side of the container.
    “Eww,” she said when she saw my cream of broccoli soup. A kindly looking, fiftyish woman in a blue coat, sitting alone at the next table, glanced over, smiled, and then went back to her own lunch.
    I sat across from Cynthia, Grace to my right. I noticed that Cynthia kept looking over my shoulder. I turned around once, looked where she was looking, turned back.
    “What?” I said.
    “Nothing,” she said, and took a bite of her chicken salad sandwich.
    “What were you looking at?”
    “Nothing,” she said again.
    Grace pushed a fry into her mouth, biting it into quarter-inch segments at a furious rate.
    Cynthia was looking over my shoulder again.
    “Cyn,” I said, “what the hell are you looking at?”
    She didn’t immediately deny this time that something had caught her eye. “There’s a man over there,” she said. I started to turn around and she said, “No, don’t look.”
    “What’s so special about him?”
    “Nothing,” she said.
    I sighed, and probably rolled my eyes, too. “For crying out loud, Cyn, you can’t just stare at the guy for—”
    “He looks like Todd,” she said.
    Okay, I thought. We’ve been here before. Just be cool. “Okay,” I said. “What is it about him that makes him look like your brother?”
    “I don’t know. It’s just something about him. He just looks like Todd would probably look today.”
    “What are you talking about?” Grace asked.
    “Never mind,” I said. To Cynthia, I

Similar Books

El-Vador's Travels

J. R. Karlsson

Wild Rodeo Nights

Sandy Sullivan

Geekus Interruptus

Mickey J. Corrigan

Ride Free

Debra Kayn