Happiness Key

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Book: Read Happiness Key for Free Online
Authors: Emilie Richards
if he wasn’t worth so much as a rip in her pantyhose?
    Sunlight was pouring through the slits between the bedroom blinds, and she had been sitting on the edge ofthe bed long enough. She wished, as she always did, that she had not promised her son she would never smoke again. Then she headed for the bathroom.
    One squint in the mirror convinced her she had not, as hoped, indulged in genuine beauty sleep last night. She had been plagued with hot flashes. If she’d slept soundly in between, the evidence was nowhere to be seen. She had bags under her eyes, crow’s-feet at the sides, furrows shooting up between her eyebrows like twin exclamation points. The signs of aging still surprised her.
    No wonder Ken didn’t find his way home very often.
    After a tepid shower—she really should have put a new hot water heater on the list for that Deloche woman—she changed into shorts and a tank top, and wound her hair on hot rollers. Then she limped into the kitchen to see what she could pull together for a late breakfast.
    She was surprised to find Ken was still good for something. He had brewed a pot of coffee, which had cooked down to sludge, but he’d also brought in the newspaper. Armed with her first cup of hazelnut mocha from a fresh pot—sinfully rich with sugar and whipping cream—she turned to her horoscope.
    “Aries…” She scanned the column and read out loud. “‘You don’t lack for romantic interests, but playing the field won’t bring you closer to finding your heart’s desire. The time has come to narrow your prospects. Friends can help you find your true love. Remember, others can see what you can’t.’”
    A belly laugh erupted. The laughter felt good, cleansing, as if she were getting rid of something poisonous.
    She read the paragraph again. Okay, point one was correct. No question she had to narrow her romantic interests. She had reached a saturation point. In fact, therereally wasn’t enough free time in her evenings for all the men who were begging for her attentions.
    Still, Wanda wasn’t sure playing the field, so to speak, was a bad idea. So far she’d gotten a lot of fun out of it. And that third part? Well, she didn’t have a friend in Palmetto Grove who would care if she found true love or not. The women she worked with at the Dancing Shrimp were all caught up in their own love lives. Most of them were actually young enough to have them. Only Lainie, the waitstaff supervisor, still made Wanda feel like a hot young chick, because Lainie was closing in on seventy. She was the only person, too, who knew that Wanda was one inch from kicking Ken out of the cottage.
    More accurately, of course, Wanda was ready to turn over this lease to Ken and buy a place of her own. A condo, something modern and easy to keep clean. Maybe one with a real view of the gulf, and a swimming pool, so the grandkids would fight to visit.
    Something lumbered down the road. When she heard the squawk of a two-way radio, she frowned and folded the paper beside her cereal bowl. Nothing ever happened here. Sometimes fishermen drove out to the point near to where the ill-fated marina had been planned, but this time of day anybody who wanted to fish anchored offshore. Spring was the best season for tarpon, but tarpon were fish for a boat, and there was no good place to launch one at this end.
    She crossed the cottage, which didn’t take all that long, and opened the door, peering into the sunlight for a glimpse of whatever was taking place. Her eyes took a moment to adjust; then she saw a black minivan with no windows disappearing down the road toward town, followed closely by what looked like a sheriff’s vehicle.
    She pondered the possibilities, none of them pretty. It didn’t take a genius to figure out who was likely in trouble. The Indian couple was young, and so was the Deloche woman. They looked healthy, if a little thin for her taste. No, chances were the unfortunate passenger in that van was either Herb Krause or

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