by Winona Kent
“Nothing.”
“You don’t sound too broken up about it. About his being with the Russians.”
“I’m of two minds,” Robin replied. “I’m not sure how I feel.”
“I wonder how she’s taking it,” Anthony added, thoughtfully. “Interesting about Evan, though. She’s been at the hospital every day to see him.”
They turned into the impound lot and went inside the office. Robin took out a wad of money and described his car to the attendant.
“Twenty-five dollars,” the attendant said, flipping through his files. “And five unpaid parking tickets—totals—eighty dollars.” He stuck out his hand.
Robin borrowed twelve dollars from Anthony; the attendant wrote out a receipt.
“Thank you,” Robin said, civilly. They went out behind the office to search for his car. “Aw, no—no. Do you believe this?”
He kicked the driver’s door in disgust. All four tires—brand new radials, hardly worn—were flat.
“Back to the bus?” Anthony guessed, sympathetically.
Robin glared at him.
At the bus loop, a lineup had begun for the Hastings Express. Robin leaned against the railing, one foot resting on the crossbar; he squinted up at the sky. Looked like rain.
Anthony’s attention was distracted by a girl. She was quite an unusual-looking individual. Half of her head was shaved. The other half was covered with long hanks of uneven hair, dyed platinum blond and interwoven with feathers, bits of ribbon, and the odd barrette. She was dressed in leopard-skin tights, a long black overcoat, and army boots. A string of pearls dangled from one ear.
“Hi,” she grinned, joining the queue, lounging next to Anthony.
“Hi,” he said.
“If I, like, wanted to give you something, would you, you know, take it?”
Robin swiveled his head around.
“Depends,” Anthony replied. “What have you got?”
She reached into her pocket. At the same time, Robin grabbed his brother’s scarf and yanked him out of the queue. “No!” he shouted.
The girl looked at them, startled.
Robin dragged his brother to the other side of the bus loop. “Are you crazy?”
“Tickets?” the girl said. “That’s all—tickets? To Spit Factory? Free concert? Tonight?”
“No!” Robin yelled, and his voice flew all around the buildings, resonant, loud, and extremely definitive.
More from Winona Kent
Persistence of Memory
Combining the language, humor and manners of Jane Austen’s era with charming characters and colorful storytelling, PERSISTENCE OF MEMORY is a mystery, a love story, and a speculative novel about accidental time travel.
Charlie Lowe has two obsessions: saving the Stoneford Village Green from unscrupulous developers and researching her ancestor, Louis Augustus Duran, whose mysterious origins perplex her.
When a freak lightning strike and a rogue computer virus send her back to 1825, Charlie discovers she must persuade a reluctant Sarah Foster to marry Duran, or two centuries of descendants—including herself—will cease to exist.
Unfortunately, Louis Duran turns out to be a despicable French count who spends his days impregnating a succession of unfortunate housemaids and attempting to invent the first flushing toilet in Hampshire.
A hopeless romantic, our heroine does her best to encourage the happiness of those who surround her—but will she be able to mend a matrimonial wrong, restore the Village Green to its rightful owner and, of foremost importance, conclude the tale in the company of the gentleman with whom she was always meant to be?
The Cilla Rose Affair
A novel of espionage, intrigue, and mysterious sound waves underneath London.
Evan Harris's experiences as a spy helped make him a star playing one on TV. When Britain's best-loved breakfast show DJ dies, only Evan knows what it has to do with a pirate radio station, a long-lost diary, a suspected double agent, the London Underground, and mysterious sound waves underneath the Fitzroy Theatre.
So Evan recruits his three sons to help him unmask the traitor deep within the British spy community in a sting operation not unlike a storyline from his own cult 1960’s TV show…
Cold Play
Jason Davey ran away to sea after the death of his wife, finding work as a contract entertainer aboard a cruise ship, the Star Sapphire. But when faces from his past come aboard as passengers, Jason's routine week-long trip to Alaska becomes anything but relaxing.
Jason's wife once worked for Diana Wyndham, a beautiful and eccentric actress. And hard-drinking ex-rocker, Rick Redding, once toured with a band Jason has strong ties to. Now Diana occupies one of the ship's luxury suites, and Rick dwells in the stateroom next door. Between them, they may know more about Jason's secret past than anyone suspects.
Jason narrates his—and the Sapphire's—story with drama, humor, and a touch of the supernatural as he tries to survive a trial by fire and ice on the journey to Juneau, Skagway and Glacier Bay.
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