The Girl in the Mist (Misted Pines #1) Read Online Kristen Ashley

Categories Genre: Romance, Suspense Tags Authors: Series: Misted Pines Series by Kristen Ashley
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Total pages in book: 127
Estimated words: 129001 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 645(@200wpm)___ 516(@250wpm)___ 430(@300wpm)
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All that was going on, and he was worried about me.

I took Polly’s hand. “Let’s go.”

I got her up to the house. I got her a cup of coffee and a cinnamon roll.

She ignored both, sat at the bar and stared at the counter.

I busied myself with coffee mugs and making another pot just in case, wiping down counters and cleaning out a tin I’d made the rolls in that had been emptied.

I did not look outside.

It took time, the deputies and other folks who had come weren’t done, and an ambulance had arrived, when Bohannan, Jace and Jess came in.

Bohannan immediately put the folder down on the bar, opened it and started sifting through it.

But with great care.

His tone was soft when he asked Polly, “This chronological?”

“I don’t know. He hid it from me,” she said, sounding almost robotic.

“There aren’t any envelopes in here, Polly.”

She lifted her gaze from the counter to him.

“I looked everywhere. The first one came in, I open his mail, I saw it. It was addressed to the station, but attention to you. I’d opened it and read it before I saw that on the outside. I took it to him, asked him if he wanted me to call you. He said no. He said it was some crackpot, giving us the run around. But that was when he demanded the mail be brought directly to him. I should have known then, Cade.”

He absolved her. “A lot’s been going on, Polly.”

She rejected his absolution. “Still should have told you. I know better. And I got a real bad feeling when I saw that folder.” She indicated it with her head. “He was looking at it when I came in one day. When he saw me coming, he shoved it in the drawer he always keeps locked so I can’t see what’s in it. I know it sounds like I’m defending myself, but the truth is, he’s always hiding stuff from me. I learned a long time ago to focus on the boys, not his dysfunction. The boys want to do good, he’s got his own agenda. If I focus on the boys, they can do a little good.”

“I understand,” Bohannan said.

She nodded, but she didn’t look convinced of the movement.

“After we got the call today, I went in and jimmied that drawer. That’s what I found. Went through everything in his office so I could be sure to get it to you if it was pertinent. But that’s all I found.”

“That’s okay, Polly. We’ve got this and this is good. But you saw that first envelope?”

“Yes.”

“Attention me?”

“Yes.”

“Postmark?”

“Misted Pines, Cade. I checked that after I saw what was inside.”

Bohannan nodded.

“I read them. He’s messed up in the head, Cade, real bad.”

“Yeah, he is, sweetheart.”

“And he’s out there…”

“Where’s Pete?”

“He’s at the diner.”

“We’ll call him, and he can come get you.”

“I’m okay, hon.”

“We’ll call him.”

Bohannan jerked his chin to Jace.

Jace peeled off, pulling out his phone.

Bohannan closed the folder.

And for now, that was that.

It took more time for everything to be wrapped up outside. Pete, who was obviously Polly’s husband, came to get her (yes, Pete and Polly Pickler, he was maybe two inches taller than her, and when he arrived, he only had eyes for her—they were adorable, I already knew I loved them).

And when it was just the four of us, that being approximately point-oh-two seconds after Pete’s car started pulling away, Bohannan again opened that file.

He scanned the first piece of paper, set it aside.

The next, set it aside.

Then he picked up a coffee mug that was sitting on the counter, turned and side-arm threw it with great might across the kitchen.

It crunched through the wood of a cabinet, and I heard some plates breaking.

“Dad,” Jace said quietly. Both he and Jesse were positioning for lockdown.

Bohannan turned back to the file and said to it, “Dead girl at my pier, he left her for me. Told me he was gonna do it right…” he stabbed a piece of paper with his finger, “fucking…” he stabbed it again, “here.”

Oh my God.

I closed my eyes.

I saw her.

Malorie.

They’d closed her eyes.

So I opened mine.

Thirty-Two

Invisible

Humans are animals.

As such, we adapt.

We’re also individuals.

As such, how we do that is unique to every one of us.

I’d learned how to read people, to quickly but carefully observe every nuance I could gather in order to construct the full visual of their puzzle, and then behave accordingly, because I grew up in a house without love.

My mother didn’t have a good relationship with her parents, so they were in my life, but not deeply. My father left before I formed memories of him, and his parents hated my mother and weren’t thrilled she had me, so I had no memories of them either.

She did not beat me, though there were times I wished she did.



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