Read Connor's Gamble Online

Authors: Kathy Ivan

Connor's Gamble

Connor’s Gamble

By Kathy Ivan

 

Begin Reading

Table of Contents

Copyright

 

 

 

“This is the first I have read from Kathy Ivan and it won't be the last. Desperate Choices had it all…” Night Owl Reviews

 

“I highly recommend Desperate Choices. Readers can’t go wrong here!” Melissa, Joyfully Reviewed

 

“I loved how the author wove a very intricate storyline with plenty of intriguing details that led to the final reveal…” Night Owl Reviews on Second Chances

Chapter One

Wednesday

 

C
onnor cracked one eye open, squinting against the overly bright sunlight streaming through the window.  A sharp pain stabbed his brain and he bit back a groan. 
Damn, that hurts
.  He forced his other eye open and slouched further down, bumping his knee against the back of the seat in front of him.

Damn bus
.

“Finally awake, are you?”  A decidedly chipper voice sounded to his right.

Oh so slowly he swiveled his throbbing head the smallest possible amount, cut his gaze to the side, and took note of the elderly woman seated beside him.

Where'd she come from?
   She hadn't been there when they’d started day two of what he euphemistically titled the bus trip from hell.

Closing his eyes again, he contemplated ignoring her. 
Yep
,
I'm being a rude bastard. Tough
. After the night he'd had, he wasn't in the mood for casual conversation with a total stranger.  And from the brief glance he'd gotten,
strange
seemed apropos.

“I know you're awake, Connor, even with those bloodshot peepers.”

Connor couldn't ignore the woman, though.  His Gran had made sure he and his brothers were brought up better than that.  All women were afforded the utmost respect.  Always.  Didn't matter how bad things were; courtesy and respect were concepts ingrained from the cradle.  Besides, his Gran sat in the front row of the bloody bus and she'd march down the aisle and give him hell if she found out.  Easing up carefully, he straightened in his seat, wincing at the sledgehammers pounding a consistent boom, boom, boom rhythm at the base of his skull.

“Morning, ma'am.”

“Morning, ha.”  She smiled up at him, displaying the whitest teeth he'd ever seen on somebody her age. 
Have to be dentures.
  “It's already afternoon.  We stopped for lunch a couple hours ago, but you slept right through it.”  Leaning in closer she whispered, “Don't know how, though, with all the racket those cackling hens was makin'.”  She gestured toward the front of the bus.

Connor's gaze followed the direction of her pointing finger.  The twenty-eight-seater private charter bus was filled with senior citizens making their annual pilgrimage, a special tour package to New Orleans.  To gamble.  Slot machines and Texas hold 'em.  Flashing lights and loud music aboard a fully restored and refitted Riverboat smack dab on the Great Mississippi River.

How in the hell did I let Gran talk me into this fiasco?
  “Where are we?”

“Not nearly far enough, you ask me.  That's the problem traveling with a bunch of old farts.  Seems like we stop every fifteen minutes so somebody can go tinkle.”

Too. Much. Information.
  Connor closed his eyes again, rubbing the bridge of his nose between his finger and thumb.

“Your granny's a real pistol, ain't she, Connor?”

“Ma'am?”

She reached up to pat her bright red curls before flashing him that artificial white smile again.

“Call me Gladys.”  Winking at him, she shifted in her seat, her navy blue pants hitching up to reveal the fuzzy pink bedroom slippers on her feet.  She shifted to face him.  Her riot of short fiery red curls caught the sunlight pouring in from the window across the aisle.  The effect was startlingly graphic.  Connor blinked and stared at her.  She looked like her head was on fire!  It almost appeared engulfed in flames, the unnatural color at odds with her aged, lined face.  She had to be in her seventies at least, but she seemed to carry herself well despite her advanced age.  Gladys snapped her fingers in front of his face.

“Your granny.  Molly.  Shoot, we've been friends since she first moved to Boca Raton.  Hit it off right away.  I've got the apartment two doors down and across from her.”  She crooked a finger at him, indicating he should move closer.

“The others don't know but a few of us got a steady game every Saturday night.” 

“Game?”

Gladys looked around before turning back to him.

“You know,” she whispered. “Texas hold 'em.”

Connor choked back his laugh.  Poker.  Why wasn't he surprised his grandmother was running an illegal poker game at her senior living complex?  He just shook his head.

“She win much?”  He asked the question, already knowing the answer.  After all, she'd taught all her boys to play when they were up in New Orleans.  When she was on her game, he still couldn't beat her.

“Yep.  She's pretty good.”  Gladys grinned, winking at him.  “I'm better.”

Connor quirked his brow at that brash statement but said nothing.

“That's why we're taking this trip, first to New Orleans and on up to Shreveport.  Gonna try our luck at the big tables.  See how good we really are.”

Dammit.  Gran's at it again.
  He couldn't resist looking toward the front of the bus, squinting against the bright sunlight pouring through the open windows.  There she sat, surrounded by her traveling companions.  An assorted group of women, varying in ages anywhere from late fifties on up.  There were a few men, too, not counting the driver.  Most of the seats were filled with only an occasional empty seat.  On climbing aboard the bus, he'd slouched into the last seat by the window and blocked everything else out.  He hadn't planned on this “trip within a trip” when he'd decided to visit his grandmother in sunny Florida.

Forced into medical leave while recovering from an on-the-job injury, it had been a spontaneous decision to visit.  Florida in mid-December sounded like a really good idea, especially since he couldn't go back to work.  Stupid doctors told his captain he had to be off at least four weeks, in a sling for at least the first three.  After two weeks he was climbing the walls.  His captain finally ordered him not to show up at the fire station until his time was up or he'd personally throw him under Big Red, the station's shiny new fire truck.  All bluster, he knew.  But he also knew he needed to get away.

This last fire had been rougher than most, worse than he'd let on.  They'd caught the fire-setting arsonist bastard, though.  Put him in a cage for now and after the trial, he'd be there permanently.  Son of a bitch deserved so much worse for everything he'd put those families through, but at least he wouldn't burn another woman ever again.

A laugh from the front jerked his attention back, focused it like a laser.  He knew that laugh.  At one time his goal in life was to hear her laugh every single day.  Now she sat next to his grandmother near the front of the bus.  Her shining dark chestnut brown hair was cut in a style shorter in the back and lengthened as it skimmed her jawline, framing her face.  Dark chocolate brown silk, it shimmered in the sunlight.  His hands itched as he remembered the feel of those tresses when they'd been longer, his fingertips sliding through its glossy length.  Sense memory was a real bitch.  Her hair used to fall in waves past her shoulders and midway down her back.  Memories of it spread out on his pillows, night after night, tormented him like a tight fist encircling his lungs, squeezing the air out in a rush.

Not going there, dammit.  So not going there.

“She sure is pretty, ain't she, Connor?”  Gladys's voice pulled him back to the present and he dragged his gaze away from the raven-haired beauty at the front of the bus.

“Got a real sweet heart, too.  Anything you need, just ask Alyssa.  Everybody at the center knows that.  We all thank God for sending her to Whispering Pines.  She's been a blessing, a true blessing.” 

“I'm sure she is, ma'am.”

“You stop that ma'am nonsense, Connor.  Call me Gladys.”

Connor smiled.  His Gran would carve out his liver if he called a lady of Gladys's advanced age by her given name.

Wondering again how far they'd traveled while he'd slept, he looked out the window, watching for signs.  The Alabama state symbol on the side of a passing police cruiser brought him up short. 
Damn, I must have been asleep a hell of a lot longer than I thought.

Gladys rose from the seat beside him to wend her way along the center aisle, holding onto the back of each seat as she ambled toward the front.  Her gait was slow and deliberate, displaying without words her frail elderly state.  Unwillingly, as though drawn by some unseen force, he looked toward the front of the bus.  Alyssa stared at him, her expression unreadable.  Connor stared back, refusing to flinch away from her condemning gaze.  She leaned in toward his grandmother, gave her a quick hug, then stood, a frown marring her beautiful face before her calm façade slid back into place.  She stood and started toward the back, walking past Gladys's shuffling form as though she weren't there.

Stopping in front of him, she stood with arms crossed, glaring down at him.  The bus hit a bump and she grabbed for the back of the seat in front of Connor.  Steadying herself, she held on, her frown evident not only on her downturned lips but equally evident in her golden-brown eyes.

“What were you thinking, Connor, coming on this trip?”  Her whispered words stroked along his spine like a caress, even through the underlying hostility.  It had been years since he'd set eyes on her.  Three long years to be precise.  The last time had been at the courthouse, the day they'd signed their divorce papers.

“Gran invited me along.  I didn't know when I came to visit she had this trip planned.  I had the time off anyway so . . .”

“You should have said no, Connor.”

“Why?  It's been three years, honey.  Surely we can be in the same room or on the same bus together without causing a scene?”  Connor kept his tone cool with a hint of sarcasm.  Their last encounter still rankled even after all this time.  If he'd know she worked at his grandmother's senior living center, he probably wouldn't have come. 
Don't lie to yourself, buddy.  If you knew, you'd have been on the first plane to Florida.

Another rough bump and the bus skidded a bit before the driver wrestled back control.  Thrown forward with the lurching motion, Alyssa stumbled toward Connor.  He reached to grasp her arms, missed, and she landed hard, face-down across his lap, her floral skirt-covered backside a tantalizing mound directly in front of him.  He bit back a grin as she wriggled, trying to right herself, and her movements shot desire straight to his groin.  No other woman ever lit him up the way Alyssa did.  Around her, he'd always had a hair trigger.

“Sorry, folks.”  The bus driver's voice echoed through the bus.  “These roads are getting a bit slippery.  Ya'll might want to stay seated now.”

Alyssa slid into the seat next to his, and Connor couldn't help grinning at the flush of color staining her cheeks.  She'd have to be dead not to notice the physical effect she'd had on him.

“Sorry.”  Barely audible, Connor knew the whispered apology was hard for her.  Even with some of their knock-down, drag-out, over-the-top fights, she hated to be the one to apologize first.

“No problem, honey.”

“Don't call me that.”

“Old habit.”  Connor shrugged at her quirked brow, his lips curving upward.

“Look, I haven't seen Gran in over a year.  I had some time off from work and she invited me to visit.”  He paused a second before continuing.  “She didn't tell me you worked there.”

Other books

Back Bay by Martin, William
The Sign of the Book by John Dunning
Claiming the She Wolf by Louisa Bacio
The World is My Mirror by Bates, Richard
No Simple Sacrifice (Secrets of Stone Book 5) by Angel Payne, Victoria Blue
Golden Ghost by Terri Farley
Monstrous Races by K. Jewell


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024