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Twisted Genius

Page 23

by Patricia Rice


  Sean was the son of the other man who had been killed with our fathers. He’d kept his distance from Graham for years, but the two had quit circling each other like dogs since Sean had chosen Patra and left me alone.

  Stiffly, Graham nodded acceptance. He really wasn’t used to dining with others anymore. He might attend an occasional secret business meeting where coffee was served, but nothing like my family’s informality. Mallard had waited on him hand and foot, so I wasn’t certain Graham even knew how to fix his own coffee, much less get up and fetch his own food from the buffet.

  “Nick made it, so it’s pretty foul,” Sean offered, delivering a mug. “We kind of told Mallard to take the day off. Hope that’s all right.”

  “I’m amazed he accepted the offer,” Graham said dryly, sipping the foul brew without wincing. He rummaged through the bagel bag I offered.

  “He didn’t,” a cool voice said from the doorway. “I ordered him out.”

  Magda.

  Chapter 27

  Remembering his rusty manners, Graham rose from his chair and pulled out the one across from Ana. He couldn’t remember the last time Max’s immense table had held so many people.

  Looking far more polished than when he’d last seen her, Magda brushed past him in a cloud of expensive scent. She pressed a kiss to Ana’s head, then took the chair he offered. Her blond hair had been fashioned in a casual upsweep and her attire could have graced a runway. She didn’t appear as if she’d spent the night adorning a police station.

  He’d gladly throttle her, but that was Ana’s privilege. He had to learn to share.

  The others didn’t appear surprised at their mother’s appearance, so she must have arrived earlier and spent her time preparing to make a grand entrance. Wordlessly, Graham helped himself to a bagel and ignored the woman who would in effect be his mother-in-law.

  He hadn’t asked Ana to marry him. He wasn’t in the least certain Ana had any interest in legalities. But given the size of the mansion and their respective fortunes, they’d have to discuss it sometime. He’d better consider Magda part of the baggage Ana carried. He’d let Ana take care of philosophical matters. He knew how to deal with practical ones, like Magda. They would make a good team.

  “Captain Freddy didn’t lock you up on general principles?” Ana asked, sipping her tea.

  “Max helped Frederick’s father when he was shot and disabled on the job a few decades ago. It’s all about who you know, dear.” Magda gazed in distaste at the scattering of crumpled bagel bags. “You might consider hiring additional help. You cannot expect Mallard to wait on pigs.”

  “An unfortunate choice of words,” Graham murmured. “I trust PETA won’t be breathing down our backs for last night’s incident?”

  “You were always an annoying pest, darling,” she said dismissively, getting up to pour tea. “Rose should be resigning about now. You need a television in here.”

  “Over my dead body,” Ana said before Graham could. He hid his smile behind his cup of coffee-flavored mud.

  Nick got up and found china in the sideboard. Juliana disappeared in the direction of the kitchen stairs, presumably to fetch more tea. Graham admired how they all knew their tasks with a minimum of fuss. He more than admired Ana’s refusal to wait on the woman who had benefitted from her daughter’s willingness to take care of her children for so long.

  Ana was the reason everyone knew their tasks.

  Magda floated gracefully back to her chair. “Of course. You all have those annoying little phones.”

  EG held up her tablet showing an image of a business-suited man being led away in handcuffs. Sean glanced over. “Rose. They arrested him at his office moments ago.”

  Magda smirked. “It’s done. Top Hat has been crippled from the top down. The minor appendages that remain haven’t the connections to unite. They’ll pour their money into some other rubber-headed candidate like Bill Smith, I suppose.”

  “And we have your balloons and pigs to thank for that?” Graham asked cynically.

  “Well, I did find Moriarity for you, darling,” she cooed.

  Ana checked her email and showed him one from Ireland. Graham snorted and let her present it to the table. She handed it to Patra, who was closest.

  Patra hooted and gave it to Sean, who passed it to Nick. Juliana returned with the tea and refilled cups. She glanced at the email and shrugged. Graham had high hopes for Juliana. She was an idealistic peacemaker disinterested in politics. He’d like to get to know her brother when he arrived. He’d seen Zander’s work. The man was brilliant at understanding financial records. The twins’ extended family had been absolutely correct to rip them from Magda’s carelessness, even if it meant they’d grown up not knowing their siblings or mother.

  EG didn’t look up from her tablet. That one was an enigmatic puzzle. He might enjoy watching her evolve.

  He’d never had family. Could Ana teach him how family worked?

  Nick politely passed Ana’s phone to Magda. She didn’t attempt to read it but passed it back.

  “Forgot your reading glasses again?” Ana taunted, scrolling through the rest of her messages. “My Irish contact found Scion’s most recent will. It left everything to Rose—which gives Rose another reason for murder. Unfortunately, Scion never bothered signing it. His family will ultimately inherit it all.”

  “A severe disappointment to Rose’s party, I’m sure,” Graham said, sipping the abominable coffee.

  Ana laughed as she continued scrolling through her phone. “The Moriaritys are already holding news conferences saying they intend to dissolve Scion Pharmaceuticals and all its related businesses. Who sent them the financial records Zander compiled?”

  “Tudor,” Graham said. “We didn’t want them to know where the information came from. He offered to pipe it to them under one of his internet aliases.”

  “I can’t wait until he attends MIT next year,” Ana crowed. “Just think. . .” She stopped herself and looked up at him.

  “What we can do with our very own personal hacker?” Graham finished for her. “Boggles the mind, doesn’t it? I might even take some time off, have a holiday.”

  “You should take Ana. I’ll stay here with the children,” Magda suggested, delicately applying cream cheese to a plain bagel.

  The room erupted in hoots of laughter and very loud protests.

  Ana smiled, and Graham reached beneath the table to stroke her hand.

  They might fight, but they’d already learned how to handle that. The very best part of having each other was that they would never, ever be bored—or lonely—again. He squeezed Ana’s hand and she flashed that breath-taking smile just for him.

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  Thank you for reading Twisted Genius

  I am an independent author, so getting the word out about my book is vital to its success. If you liked this book, please consider telling your friends, and writing a review at the store where you purchased it. Reviews help other readers find books. I appreciate all reviews, whether positive or negative.

  About the Author

  With several million books in print and New York Times and USA Today's bestseller lists under her belt, former CPA Patricia Rice is one of romance's hottest authors. Her emotionally-charged contemporary and historical romances have won numerous awards, including the RT Book Reviews Reviewers Choice and Career Achievement Awards. Her books have been honored as Romance Writers of America RITA® finalists in the historical, regency and contemporary categories.

  A firm believer in happily-ever-after, Patricia Rice is married to her high school sweetheart and has two children. A native of Kentucky and New York, a past resident of North Carolina and Missouri, she currently resides in Southern Calif
ornia, and now does accounting only for herself. She is a member of Romance Writers of America, the Authors Guild, and Novelists, Inc.

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  Also by Patricia Rice

  The World of Magic:

  The Unexpected Magic Series

  Magic in the Stars

  Whisper of Magic

  Theory of Magic

  Aura of Magic

  Chemistry of Magic

  No Perfect Magic

  The Magical Malcolms Series

  Merely Magic

  Must Be Magic

  The Trouble With Magic

  This Magic Moment

  Much Ado About Magic

  Magic Man

  The California Malcolms Series

  The Lure of Song and Magic

  Trouble with Air and Magic

  The Risk of Love and Magic

  Historical Romance:

  The Rebellious Sons

  Wicked Wyckerly

  Devilish Montague

  Notorious Atherton

  Formidable Lord Quentin

  The Regency Nobles Series

  The Genuine Article

  The Marquess

  English Heiress

  Irish Duchess

  Regency Love and Laughter Series

  Crossed in Love

  Mad Maria’s Daughter

  Artful Deceptions

  All a Woman Wants

  Mysteries:

  Family Genius Series

  Evil Genius

  Undercover Genius

  Cyber Genius

  Twin Genius

  Twisted Genius

  About Book View Cafe

  Book View Café Publishing Cooperative (BVC) is an author-owned cooperative of over fifty professional writers, publishing in a variety of genres including fantasy, romance, mystery, and science fiction. Since its debut in 2008, BVC has gained a reputation for producing high-quality ebooks. BVC’s ebooks are DRM-free and are distributed around the world. The cooperative is now bringing that same quality to its print editions.

  BVC authors include New York Times and USA Today bestsellers as well as winners and nominees of many prestigious awards, including:

  Agatha Award

  Campbell Award

  Hugo Award

  Lambda Award

  Locus Award

  Nebula Award

  Nicholl Fellowship

  PEN/Malamud Award

  Philip K. Dick Award

  RITA Award

  World Fantasy Award

  Writers of the Future Award

 

 

 


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