All the Little Raindrops Read Online Mia Sheridan

Categories Genre: Dark, Suspense, Thriller Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 139
Estimated words: 128488 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 642(@200wpm)___ 514(@250wpm)___ 428(@300wpm)
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Tallulah picked up her drink and took a long sip through the straw. “Anyway, I was injured, but I made it out. They didn’t come after me. I was surprised, to be honest, but grateful too. The police went back the next day, and there was nothing there. Not a sign. They made it disappear in twenty-four hours. They said I must have the location wrong. There were no cages, no body of an old sweet prostitute with a heart as big as the moon.” That flash of pain again. “Nothing,” she said. “Not a damn thing.”

God, she couldn’t even consider what it would have felt like to leave without Evan. Everything—everything—about her life would be different. Noelle was intimately aware of the friendship and connection forged, and grieved for Tallulah. “How’d you manage to get out of the cages?” Noelle asked softly.

Her eyes brightened, heavy lashes bobbing. “I used my wits,” Tallulah said. “I engaged the guy with the key. I was always good with sweet talk. My gramps used to call me a silver-tongued devil, said I could sell ice cubes in a snowstorm.” She laughed. “I mighta done big things. Better things. But then drugs came along, and well . . .” She shrugged, and though Noelle could see she’d once been beautiful, time and poor choices had taken a toll. At least she still managed to be colorful, even if she was doing it in the back corner of a musty bar.

“So you engaged the jailer . . . ,” Evan said.

Tallulah nodded, taking another long sip of her drink and then looking off behind Evan into the gloom. “Yeah. I might not have even tried if I didn’t keep getting these gifts with my meals that reminded me of who my gramps had seen me as.” She looked at Evan, and her whole face seemed brighter. “It was almost like Gramps himself was sending me signs from above somehow, you know? You got this, Lula-bug, I heard him saying. Remember who you are. And I did. For a little while anyway. I did.”

CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX

Evan dropped his duffel bag on the bed and walked to the window and then pulled the heavy curtain aside. The window was tinted, and so although it was midafternoon, it looked like it was early evening. Par for the course in a gambling town, where it was in the casinos’ favor to trick people’s bodies into thinking it was perpetual night. Perpetual party hour.

“So what do you think?” Noelle asked from behind him. He turned from the window, watching her for a moment as she sat down on the bed, opening a bottle of water and taking a swig.

“I think Tallulah experienced the same thing we did.”

“If she’s not making it up.”

“The police thought she was.”

She screwed the top back on the bottle, her expression thoughtful. “Evan, is it possible that the man you spoke with in prison, and/or Tallulah Marsh, read about what happened to us and used the details from our crime to fake their own?”

“To what end?”

“I don’t know. Maybe they were involved in something they were trying to cover up.”

“But both of them went to the police on their own. They weren’t arrested or even questioned for something else. I can’t think of a motive for faking their story. Especially since nothing ever came of it.”

“True,” she said. “But people fake crimes for different reasons. Just because nothing came from it doesn’t mean there wasn’t intention . . . to get attention or . . . who knows. People do weird things all the time for reasons that are hard to understand.”

He walked to the desk across from the bed and turned the chair toward her before sitting down. “But both of them? I had the same thought about Lars, even though my instinct was that he was telling the truth. But we have two people now who are telling similar stories.”

She nodded, biting at her lip, her eyes meeting his. Something moved between them, a current that made the hairs on his arms stand up. They needed to stop meeting in hotel rooms like this. The thought almost made him laugh. Pretend she’s your business partner, nothing more.

Right. You used to be more honest, too, Evan.

“Did you get the feeling Tallulah was lying?” he asked, forcing his attention back to the conversation at hand.

“No.” She sighed. “But now we have two people who might have been victimized by the same people, or group or whatever, as we were, and we still have nothing to go on. The police checked out the locations, and even if they missed something in both cases, so much time has passed that even if we could persuade the local authorities to reexamine the scene, any evidence would be totally destroyed by now.”


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