[Download] "Cardinal Red" by Ross Tarry * Book PDF Kindle ePub Free

eBook details
- Title: Cardinal Red
- Author : Ross Tarry
- Release Date : January 18, 2011
- Genre: Mysteries & Thrillers,Books,
- Pages : * pages
- Size : 217 KB
Description
Tuesday Afternoon
August 30
88 degrees, Humidity 92%
It was Tuesday, the end of August and muggier than hell. Everything steamed. I had taken my gun from the holster on my right hip and put it in the top right drawer of my desk, and rocked back in my swivel chair daydreaming, my fingers laced behind my head, my stockinged feet propped on the sill of my office window. The louvered blinds, the narrow, ivory colored plastic kind, were up. A broken yardstick held the bottom sash open, allowing in the street sounds and the stale smells of late summer. It was the kind of August day Mo would have loved. She would be in shorts, halter-top and floppy cotton hat, weeding her garden, or maybe pruning her roses, her tanned skin glistening with perspiration.
Sheās been gone nearly two years. Actually, one year and ten months to the day. Seems impossible. The deep-throated rise and fall of a siren of a fire apparatus came lethargically through the window on the heavy, damp air, growing louder with blasts of air horn as it crossed Division, then faded down Seventh Avenue.
When youāre young, it seems the days, months, years just crawl by. For some time now, it seems the days flash past so fast that every evening I have to stop and think, where the hell did the day go? If Iād broached this with Mo, sheād have said it was because I hadnāt created any memorable memories. She was probably right. She was all about living life.
I sat quietly in the sound of the street traffic and the fading siren, with Mo as heavy in my thoughts as the sodden air. One would think Iād remember her last words, or at least the last conversation weād had before she died. There had been words, but as hard as I try I canāt seem to bring them to mind. Maybe itās a coping mechanism. I can see her though. As emaciated and dwindling as she was, she was still beautiful. But itās those damn other words I remember. I canāt seem to get them out of my mind. It was a late June evening. We were in the hospice atrium watching the sunset on one of her better days, when she was exceptionally lucid, between the morphine drips and the pain. āLaw enforcement canāt be a reason for being, Darling, find your reason and live it,ā she had said.
Weād had conversations like this before. She understood these things. I didnāt know anything else. Iād been a cop for thirty-two years. I needed more straight-forward concepts. But the words still haunt me.