Almost a Family

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by Stephanie Bond


  “Hurry, you don’t have much time.”

  She lifted the hinged lid to reveal a shiny gold locket on a gold chain. She pressed her lips together to stem her welling tears. “It’s lovely,” she whispered, pulling the necklace from the box and fingering it lovingly. She slipped her thumbnail into the groove and opened the case to reveal a recent picture of Chad. Her heart swelled.

  “Do you like it?” he asked. “I bought it all by myself.”

  She reached for him and gathered him in a powerful hug. “I absolutely love it, but you didn’t have to do this���it must have cost a lot of money.”

  He shrugged. “I took my new Nintendo back to the store and got a refund.”

  “Oh, Chad.”

  He bit his lip. “I didn’t deserve a new one. I left my game lying on the floor. What if you’d tripped on it and fallen down the stairs?”

  Ah���now she knew why he’d never played with the new game, because he’d felt guilty. “But I didn’t,” she said lightly, and kissed his nose. “You never cease to amaze me, you wonderful boy. Do you know how much I love you?”

  He blushed happily. “Yeah, Mom, you only tell me ten times a day.”

  Another knock sounded, and Rita stuck her head in. “Ginny, everyone’s waiting!”

  “Be right there,” Virginia said. She handed the necklace to Chad. “Will you put it on for me?”

  He nodded, lifting the chain over her head, lowering it carefully to avoid messing up her hair.

  “How does it look?” she asked.

  “Beautiful,” he breathed.

  “I’ll never take it off,” she promised.

  He grinned.

  “I think they’re ready for us,” she said.

  He straightened, then cocked his arm out, elbow bent, just like he’d practiced. She tucked her hand inside, and they walked out into the hall.

  Jerry and Detective Lance opened the doors to the chapel, smiling and nodding. Virginia and Chad stepped to the back of the church, the wedding march chiming louder to announce her arrival. The small congregation stood as she entered, and at the altar, Bailey turned toward them. She saw her future in his eyes, hers and Chad’s. She squeezed her son’s arm, smiling, and they walked toward him together.

  The End

  Page forward for more from Stephanie Bond

  Excerpt from

  License to Thrill

  Author’s Cut Edition

  by

  Stephanie Bond

  Originally published 1997 in the U.S. by Bantam Books under the pen name Stephanie Bancroft.

  The digital version has been updated by the author.

  Chapter 1

  “Testosterone,” Kat McKray said, viciously squeezing a dribble of juice from the lemon wedge into her water glass. “Testosterone is the root of the world’s problems.”

  “Mmm,” her best friend, Denise Womack, agreed as she sipped her tea.

  “Overbearing men, everywhere I turn.” Kat pounded her fist on the cafe table. A waiter who had stopped to refill their drinks eyed her warily and moved on. She pushed her wire-rimmed glasses higher on her nose. “If you ask me, hormone therapy would be the surest route to global peace.”

  Denise arched an overplucked eyebrow. “Speaking of hormones, Kat, yours are running high today.” Then she nodded knowingly. “You need a man.”

  Kat’s mouth fell open. “You’re delirious���that’s the last thing I need.”

  But her red-haired friend only grinned. “You, my friend, are horny.”

  Flustered, Kit could only gasp in outrage. “That’s ridiculous���just because I’ve had it up to my eyeballs with pushy men, doesn’t mean I’m… anything.”

  “Let me guess���Napoleon’s being a pain in the ass again?”

  “Again? He didn’t stop long enough to resume.”

  “So why do you put up with the little dictator? He couldn’t run the museum without you.”

  Kat sighed and tore off a chunk of buttered roll. Her friend didn’t know it, but she was planning her escape in two months, she just hadn’t yet chosen a destination. “I’ve been giving serious thought to leaving Jellico’s.”

  “Good. There are dozens of museums and galleries in San Francisco that would pluck you up in a minute.” Her friend popped a cherry tomato into her mouth for emphasis.

  Kat cupped her hand behind her ear and tilted her head.

  “What are you doing?”

  “Listening as my father turns over in his grave for me even thinking about leaving Jellico’s.”

  After a wry laugh, Denise said, “You’ve already made your mark there���why else would they have chosen you to handle the exhibition of the King’s letter?”

  “Alleged King’s letter,” Kat said. “It hasn’t been authenticated yet. And this is a prime example of my boss lowering the standards of the museum by agreeing to show a document that might not even be genuine.”

  “I saw an interview with the owner on the national news last night���she’s convinced it’s real.”

  Kat laughed. “Lady Mercer has a vested interest in spreading that rumor���American collectors are clamoring for an invitation to bid on the letter.”

  “She’ll be rich.”

  “If it’s genuine.”

  “What do you think?”

  Kat chewed her bread. “I think it’s highly suspicious when a two-hundred-year-old historically significant document suddenly appears.”

  “The news segment said the letter has been hidden between the pages of an old book and packed away in a trunk.”

  Pursing her lips, Kat shook her head. “Seems a little pat to me.”

  “It happens, doesn’t it?”

  “Sure,” Kat conceded with a shrug. “It hasn’t been so long since an art collector attended a party and noticed a Michelangelo statue on a stairway newel post in the host’s home. The owners had no idea of its worth.”

  “Wow,” Denise said, her eyes shining. “And now a love letter from King George III has come to light���you have to admit it’s kind of romantic, Kat.”

  “If it was written by King George III,” Kat said wryly. “Besides, I think the collectors are more interested in the part about him being sympathetic to the American Revolutionaries than about the naughty talk to a mistress.”

  “Have you read it?”

  “No,” Kat said. “I just know what the newspapers are reporting, same as you.”

  “Imagine, something worth so much money sitting right under your nose. Wouldn’t it be great if that hideous gargoyle on my fireplace mantel turned out to be worth something? Of course, it wouldn’t have to be a mint���I’d settle for a measly thirty-five thousand, two hundred and fifty dollars.”

  “Still trying to buy your condo?” Kat asked sympathetically.

  Denise nodded. “I’ve got six weeks to come up with the down payment or I’ll have to move.”

  “Got any rich relatives?”

  “Not any on the verge of dying, unfortunately.”

  “You could marry my boss,” Kat suggested cheerfully. “And then get him off my back.”

  Denise made a face. “I’m not getting on my back to save yours.”

  “And why risk making that new boyfriend jealous?”

  “Kat, I keep telling you, this guy is just a friend.”

  “So what’s his name and when will I meet him?”

  “Never mind, okay? What time does the letter arrive?”

  Kat pointed her fork. “I could tell you, but then I’d have to shoot you.”

  “I only asked because I need to borrow your washer and dryer tonight.”

  “Again? As much as your appliances break down, I’d think you’d be glad to move.”

  Denise adopted a drawl. “It ain’t perfect, but it’s home.”

  Kat squinted, mentally moving through the remainder of her day. “Besides the arrival of the infamous love letter, I have to develop a schedule to inventory our vaults. Arrrgh! I’m gl
ad it only comes once every three years���I’d rather have a mammogram.”

  Denise eyed her friend’s large breasts and ran a hand over her own flat chest. “Ouch.”

  Kat laughed. “I should be home by seven o’clock.”

  “Thanks.” Her petite friend flagged the waitress, then plopped down a couple of bills and some change.

  “See you tonight,” she said, then waved and scampered off.

  Kat watched her retreat, noticing several male heads turn. She scanned Denise’s picked-over salad, then frowned and glanced down at her own plate of fettuccini Alfredo. “I’m starting a diet,” she murmured, then twirled the noodles onto her fork. “Tomorrow.”

  But as she walked back to the museum, Kat pushed aside thoughts of her snug waistband. The manuscript would arrive by courier from London around three o’clock. Upon arrival, she and the courier would note the condition of the document, then place it in the vault for the evening, where it would await the ministrations of a team of international experts on eighteenth-century British manuscripts.

  Sending the letter to the States had been a brilliant move on the part of the owner, she noted. Most British historians had been outraged at the supposed content of the letter, and, naturally, most American historians had been delighted. The letter would make its debut next week at Jellico’s, San Francisco’s most renowned private museum and gallery.

  As she badged in at the rear staff entrance, Kat laughed to herself, wondering if George would be amused at the new little war he’d started between England and the United States. Her smile dissolved when she saw her boss, Guy Trent, standing two feet inside the door, arms crossed, toe tapping.

  “Where have you been? I’ve been calling you.”

  Kat adopted her own authoritative stance���not too difficult considering she towered over him by a good six inches. “To lunch,” she retorted. “I turn off my phone for an hour of peace and quiet.”

  She didn’t miss his gaze flitting over her unfashionably round figure. “Well, while you were having lunch,” he said as if she’d committed a grievous sin, “the courier arrived.”

  Kat’s pulse jumped. “I wasn’t expecting him for another two hours.”

  Frowning, her boss walked to another door and flashed his badge in front of the card reader. “They’re waiting in the painting vault with Andy.”

  “They?” She rushed to keep up with him as he trotted down the hallway.

  He looked at her as if she were half-witted. “The courier and the armed guard.”

  Now it was Kat’s turn to frown. She mentally scanned the details of the Mercer deal as they stopped before the door of the vault room and signed in at the guard’s desk “There was no mention of an armed guard in our negotiations.”

  Guy flashed his badge again, and the light over the doorknob blinked. Placing his hand on the knob, her boss said, “Tell that to Her Majesty’s secret service man.”

  Kat frowned, then lightly patted her tight chignon, even though she knew every dark hair was in place, as usual. She gave her black crepe suit a quick glance and smoothed a hand over her hips, sending the hem of her long skirt swishing around her ankles as she followed her boss into the vault.

  The temperature-and moisture-controlled room was lined with narrow metal cages fitted with handles to slide them from their respective slots. Each cage was designed to hold a separate piece of art���in this particular vault, paintings, and in some cases, documents.

  Two men stood beside her coworker Andy Wharton, and Kat’s eyes were instantly drawn to one of the strangers. Dressed in a slate-gray Armani suit, the dark-haired man stood well over six feet tall, his brown eyes squinting slightly as he sized her up in return. Tiny hairs rose on the exposed nape of her neck. The slight bulge of a shoulder holster beneath the fabric of his breast pocket confirmed his position, but this man was no rental cop.

  “Gentlemen,” Guy said, smiling grandly. “May I present the curator who will be handling the letter, Ms. Katherine McKray. Kat, this is Mr. Muldoon, the courier.”

  Kat dragged her eyes from the tall stranger to offer her hand and a smile to a smaller, wiry man. Mr. Muldoon nervously relinquished his grasp on the letter transport box long enough to give her a two-finger handshake.

  Guy swept his hand up and toward the larger man. “And this is Mr.���”

  “Donovan,” the man supplied, his English accent lazy and rumbling. The right side of his mouth lifted as he captured Kat’s gaze and held it. “James Donovan.” As he spoke, a dimple appeared, then disappeared.

  Stephanie Bond was five years deep into a corporate career in computer programming and pursuing an MBA at night when an instructor remarked she had a flair for writing and suggested she submit material to academic journals. But Stephanie was more interested in writing fiction���more specifically, romance and mystery novels. After writing in her spare time for two years, she sold her first manuscript, a romantic comedy, to Harlequin Books. After selling ten additional projects to two publishers, she left her corporate job to write fiction full-time. To-date, Stephanie has more than fifty published novels to her name, including the popular BODY MOVERS humorous mystery series. For more information, visit http://www.stephaniebond.com/

  Table of Contents

  Cover

  Dedication

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Epilogue

  Excerpt from LICENSE TO THRILL by Stephanie Bond

  Meet Stephanie Bond

  Table of Contents

  Cover

  Dedication

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Epilogue

  Excerpt from LICENSE TO THRILL by Stephanie Bond

  Meet Stephanie Bond

 

 

 


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