Total pages in book: 100
Estimated words: 94598 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 473(@200wpm)___ 378(@250wpm)___ 315(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 94598 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 473(@200wpm)___ 378(@250wpm)___ 315(@300wpm)
That someone had turned out to be Bill Carlisle and he’d been her boss at the time…in the very same store. I’d been shocked to discover I’d been talking to Betty Carlisle, the owner of the store, the entire time. After a stint in rehab that Bill had paid for, she’d spent the next forty years as his wife before he’d died of a heart attack. Together, they’d built a chain of Carlisle’s Markets throughout the Pacific Northwest. The stores serviced smaller communities that didn’t always have access to the bigger, well-known chain grocery stores. And while Betty wouldn’t make the Fortune 500 list anytime soon, the estate her husband had left behind was worth more than I would ever make in ten lifetimes.
After my drug test had come back negative, Betty had put me to work that very same day. In the beginning, I’d worked part-time under the watchful eye of the main nightshift worker, but he’d quit the previous month to go to graduate school in another state, so Betty had offered me full-time work plus overtime for any extra hours she needed me for rather than replacing the guy. The extra money was a godsend and starting next month, I’d be eligible for the health plan.
But if T had his way, I’d lose it all.
And worse, I’d betray Betty, the only other person besides Father O who’d given me a second chance.
T’s request the night before had been for me to help him steal prescription drugs from the pharmacy section of the store, which he would then turn around and sell on the street at a huge profit. He’d gone on to explain that he had someone who could give me bottles with fake pills to replace the ones I stole, making it an operation we could milk for a while before being discovered. I hadn’t even let him finish the thought before I’d told him no for the second time.
I had no clue how I was going to get out of this whole thing since I knew T wasn’t going to just let me say no. I could try going to the cops, but they weren’t exactly my biggest fans. Not to mention I was worried they’d somehow link me back to my crimes seven years ago. And I didn’t want to tell Betty because I didn’t want her to look at me with suspicion…like she was wondering if I was maybe going to do it at some point. The only option was to let T kick my ass until he realized I wasn’t changing my mind…and hope that he wouldn’t kill me in retaliation.
Thankfully, the short walk to the bus was uneventful and I’d timed it perfectly so I didn’t have to wait very long. The ride home was quick since it was still early and there wasn’t any rush hour traffic to battle. I kept my eyes peeled for T as I walked from the bus stop to my apartment building, but my luck held out and I made it into the relative safety of the six-story building. But I couldn’t breathe a sigh of relief just yet since I had one more obstacle to get through before I could crash in my bed for a few hours of much-needed sleep.
As expected, my father was sitting at the kitchen table when I entered our small, two-bedroom apartment. It was the same apartment I’d lived in most of my life and while I’d often wondered why my father hadn’t moved throughout the years, considering how run-down the place had become, I did have my suspicions about what was keeping him there, though I never voiced them.
There were just some things that people were never prepared to accept.
That my mother was never going to return was one of them.
From all the pictures my mother had shown me when I was a little kid, my parents had seemed blissfully happy early on in their marriage. Even at my young age, I’d recognized their devotion to one another in photographs. But there were fewer and fewer pictures to document my parents’ life together after Ricky’s arrival. Sure, there were dozens upon dozens of him as a baby, but there’d been very few of my parents. And there were even fewer of me when I’d been born.
Maybe the excitement had just been gone at that point or maybe Ricky’s strain on my parents’ marriage had started to slowly drive them apart. It didn’t really matter because it had taken just one discovery to cause the whole marriage to implode. I’d been there that day when the building’s maintenance man had shown up at our door and asked our father to go down to the boiler room with him. My mother had been at work and a then fourteen-year-old Ricky had been off with friends. My father hadn’t seen me follow him and the guy downstairs after my curiosity had gotten the best of me and I’d disobeyed the order to stay in the apartment.