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Authors: Shelly Ellis

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BOOK: Bed of Lies
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Jesus Christ
, Evan thought, taking a step back.
The deed was done.
What
deed?
Had Antonio just confessed to killing a man?
“Oh, Ev, he is so adorable!” Leila gushed, making Evan jump in surprise. “I forgot what it's like to hold someone so little. I can't wait to have our baby.” She turned to Antonio, threw her arms around his neck, and hugged him. “Your son is
so
beautiful, Tony! You should be so proud.”
“Thanks . . . and I am,” Antonio said, hugging her back and giving Evan a meaningful look over her shoulder.
As their eyes met, Evan's throat went dry.
Chapter 28
Dante
D
ante slammed his desk drawer shut and impatiently tapped his fingers on the rubber mat near his keyboard as he waited for the computer to shut down.
“Come on. Come on,” he muttered, wanting to throttle the swivel post of computer screen like it was a human neck, to squeeze it until it made gagging sounds and choked to death. He angrily shoved back from his desk. “Fuck it!” he muttered before rising to his feet, even as the blue shutdown screen went black and the CPU's green On button flickered to Off.
His rollaway chair sailed across the room and bumped into a nearby bookshelf filled with binders and law books. He grabbed his briefcase off his desk, opened his office door, and walked into the corridor, slamming the door closed behind him. A janitor was bent over a vacuum cleaner in the center of the hall, dancing to whatever tune played in his oversized headphones as he cleaned the law office's carpets. As Dante strode toward him, the janitor looked over the top of his glasses and tugged one of the headphones off his ear. Dante reached into his jacket pocket to pull out a stick of gum.
“Have a good night, sir,” the janitor called out as Dante passed.
Dante didn't answer him. Instead, he balled up the metallic wrapping from his peppermint gum and tossed it onto the floor in front of the janitor, making the other man pause mid-cha-cha.
Dante stalked toward the elevator, unabated fury propelling him forward like the engine of a freight train. And he had plenty to be furious about.
“That old bitch,” he muttered as he chewed his gum and pressed the Down button. “That old bitch” had called off the lawsuit against Terrence Murdoch because she got an attack of guilt. And now, once again his chance to exact revenge on the Murdochs had eluded him.
“That fucking bitch,” he said again as the elevator doors opened and silently slid shut behind him after he stepped into the compartment. He pressed the L button, which would take him to the first-floor level.
Every time he thought about Mavis, about how she had defiantly glared at him when she told him that she had betrayed him and went behind his back to talk to Terrence, he felt fresh rage all over again. He wished he was choking
her
neck right now, watching her gag and scratch at his hands as he squeezed the life out of her.
He closed his eyes, envisioning her features twisted in agony while he strangled her. He opened his eyes again.
They were going to get away with it, he realized as the elevator descended and he listened to the soft beeps marking each passing floor. The Murdochs were going to sail off into the sunset and continue to enjoy their fast cars and big houses and big parties where everyone stood around kissing their asses, telling them how wonderful they were. And once again, he would be left to stew silently and watch them from afar.
“I'll be goddamned,” he murmured as the elevator doors opened, revealing a lobby with pale wood paneling lit by custom hand-blown chandeliers. He walked toward the office building's glass revolving doors leading to the adjacent four-story parking garage. “I'll be goddamned if I let that happen.”
The sky was already dark. A heavy wind blasted him as he stepped onto a brick courtyard, sending his tie flying like a boat sail. Dante walked across the courtyard and under a concrete overhang that led to the parking garage. He then climbed a flight of metal steps leading to the second floor of the garage. His footfalls sounded like sledgehammers, like ricocheting gunshots in the night.
His siblings might think that his most recent setback would make him back off but they were sorely mistaken. He would find a way to finally get to them. Even though he hated his father—despised the man to the point that his hate was almost palpable—he had inherited one very important trait from George Murdoch: tenacity. Dante wouldn't give up until he was victorious, until he finally made Evan, Terrence, and Paulette suffer. At this point, he didn't know how he would do it or when he would do it, but the opportunity would eventually come again.
Maybe Murdoch Conglomerated had some shady dealings that could be leaked to the press. Maybe he'd finally tell Paulette's husband about the affair she had been carrying on right under his nose. Maybe some dark skeletons lurked in Terrence's closet. Who knows! But Dante did know one thing: He would be careful who he partnered with the next time around. No more weak fools like Mavis and Renee or unstable prima donnas like Charisse. He would choose wisely and make sure whoever helped him was totally on board and would follow orders from beginning to end.
Dante walked across the parking lot asphalt toward his silver Jag. He shifted his leather briefcase to his other hand and dug into his pants pocket, eventually finding his car keys. He opened the car doors with his remote, watching as the headlights flashed and the engine turned on with a soft rumble.
His plans for the future, however tenuous, quelled his anger a little. His face even broke into a smile as he reached for the car door handle, but he paused when he caught the reflection in the tinted window of a dark figure standing behind him.
Dante frowned. He whipped around and stared in surprise at the familiar face. “What the hell are you doing . . .”
His words tapered off when he saw the glint of the handgun. He suddenly brought up his briefcase as a shield and instinctively shut his eyes when he heard the gun fire. He winced at the harsh, echoing sound.
Dante opened his eyes in just enough time to see the person run off.
“What the hell?” he mumbled.
Had they intended to shoot him? Did they miss? Or maybe they had pointed the gun into the air during the split second that he'd closed his eyes. He slowly lowered his briefcase and glared at their retreating back in outrage.
“What the fuck were you thinking?” he shouted after them, angered all over again that someone had scared him that badly. “Are you . . .”
Dante paused and looked down when he felt something wet on his side. He saw a red spot bloom on his dress shirt, then spread across his torso. He touched the spot and marveled at the bright red blood on his fingertips.
So he had been shot after all.
Pinpricks of light dotted his sight. He was going to faint. He slumped against his car's passenger door and slowly fell to the parking lot pavement. That was when he finally felt the pain, which was indescribable. He started shaking. His bladder loosened and another bright spot bloomed on the crotch of his slacks.
“You . . . you shot me,” he whispered in shock.
Dante closed his eyes just as his head thumped against the garage floor.
A READING GROUP GUIDE
BED OF LIES
 
Shelly Ellis
 
ABOUT THIS GUIDE
 
The suggested questions that follow are included to enhance your group's reading of this book.
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
1.
Evan urges Leila to try harder to get her daughter, Isabel, to like him because he believes their relationship is largely dependent on Isabel's view of him. Do you think he's wrong to ask that of Leila, or should Leila try to see things from his perspective?
2.
Paulette went from lying about being blackmailed and having an affair to lying about her pregnancy. She believes she still has to lie because the stakes are even higher. Do you think her reasons are justified, or is she continuing to make the same mistakes?
3.
Dante decides to represent the woman who was in the car accident with Terrence in yet another way to exact revenge on the Murdochs. Dante says that he's behaving much like his father did when he was alive. Do you think his late father, George Murdoch, would at least admire Dante's ruthlessness and tenacity?
4.
A usually optimistic Terrence sinks into depression after his car accident. Why do you think it was so hard for him to bounce back from what happened to him?
5.
C. J. ran away from her old life and started a new one because she said she no longer wanted to be restricted by her family's lies and expectations. In the course of doing that, she broke all ties from her family and ran out on her fiancé the day of her wedding. Were her actions justified?
6.
Paulette decides to talk to the detective in order to find out more information about Marques's murder investigation even though she fears her husband, Antonio, may have murdered Marques. Was that a smart move on her part?
7.
Charisse confesses to Evan her reason for why she was such a horrible wife to him and why she wants to try to salvage their marriage. Based on her explanation, should Evan give her a second chance?
8.
Terrence is angry at C. J. for not telling him about showing up at the hospital to interview him soon after his accident. Does he have the right to be angry?
9.
When Evan figures out that Leila's ex-husband plotted Isabel's attempt to run away, he decides not to tell Leila and asks Isabel to also keep the information secret. Do you agree with his decision?
10.
C. J. decides to forgive her father and agrees to help him with his campaign and return to Aston Ministries. Terrence tells her he doesn't think this was a good decision. Who do you think is right?
11.
Who do you think shot Dante?
Don't miss the next book in the Chesterton Scandal series:
Lust & Loyalty
Available in April 2017!
Prologue
H
ospitals weren't usually happy places, especially the Wilson Medical Center ICU where many of the patients were hovering near death's door and a pall of sickness seemed to hang over every surface. But today the ICU staff at least
tried
to be festive in honor of the new nurse's birthday. Meredith, the plump nurse with the springy red curls and freckles was turning thirty. The other nurses figured the big 3-0 deserved, at minimum, a small party in their break room. They had even brought a cake and candles for her. One of the nurses, Rhonda, had brought balloons and streamers that were left over from her nephew's birthday earlier that week. By the time they finished decorating that sad-looking room with its bare white walls, loaned microwave, coffee maker, and two tables, it looked like a completely different place. A small two-tiered cake sat at the center of one of the tables on a cotton bed sheet that they used as a makeshift tablecloth.
They decided to hold the party mid-day when visiting hours were at a lull since many of the patients' families would leave to eat lunch and return in an hour or so to stand vigil at their loved ones' bedsides. The five nurses on that shift had agreed to take turns at the front desk and keep an ear out for the buzzing from patients' rooms, though most of the patients were so sedated they wouldn't be buzzing anything. Not Mr. J. Hinkler in Room 402, who was dying of cirrhosis of the liver. Or Mrs. C. Reynolds in Room 410, who had suffered multiple strokes and was now little more than a vegetable connected to a respirator, and certainly not Mr. D. Turner in Room 406.
Turner was the youngest patient in the ICU, and if not for the gunshot wound to the stomach that he had suffered earlier that week, he probably wouldn't have found himself in the ward at all. He looked fit and handsome. The nurses had speculated that he had been quite the heart-breaker before the shooting. A few of them had even whispered about his six-pack abs and muscular arms, and admired and giggled about another appendage they had noticed while changing the dressing on his wound.
“No wonder his name is Dante,” Rhonda had murmured ruefully as she pointed to his bare crotch. “A man
that
fine wielding
that
thing could certainly drag a girl through hell and back!”
But Mr. Turner wouldn't be putting any women through hell or breaking any hearts any time soon. He was heavily sedated while his body repaired itself. And unlike the other patients, he had had almost no visitors to his room.
Nurse Kelly took the first shift while the rest attended Meredith's birthday party. She glanced through the glass doors of each hospital room, including Mr. Turner's, as she walked from the break room to the front desk, carrying her slice of carrot cake. She passed an old woman who gave her a wan smile before entering Room 403.
“Hello, Mrs. O'Shea,” Kelly said, giving her greeting from the doorway.
“Good afternoon,” Mrs. O'Shea said, as she dragged a chair toward the bed to sit next to her husband, who was dying of end-stage lung cancer.
A minute later, Kelly plopped into her rollaway chair and dug into her carrot cake, finishing the entire slice in less than three minutes and licking the remaining icing off the plastic fork and the tips of her fingers. She looked longingly at her empty paper plate. She could use a second slice.
A moment on the lips, a lifetime on the hips,
she thought, glancing down at her wide hips encased in blue scrubs. She had been trying to lose her last ten pounds of baby weight for ages. Plus she was supposed to be manning the front desk while the other nurses were at the birthday party.
But then Kelly ran her tongue over her lips, tasting the remains of the cream cheese icing and she almost shuddered in ecstasy. She remembered how fluffy the cake itself had been, how the bits of carrot had been so crisp.
“Just one more,” she mumbled, rising from the chair. “I'll be quick.”
With the exception of Mrs. O'Shea, it was dead as a door nail around the ward—no pun intended. None of the patients would miss her.
It was just seconds after Kelly walked out of the break room and plunged her fork into her second slice of carrot cake that she heard the alarm, a piercing beep to alert anyone at the nursing station that a patient was in distress. She rushed down the corridor, still holding her plate of cake in one hand and fork in the other, wondering if it was Mrs. Reynolds or poor Mr. O'Shea.
That's when she saw something jump out of Room 406 and flash past her like a wraith in a horror movie. She screamed and dropped her cake and fork to the floor. It was only after a few quick blinks that she realized it hadn't been some ghost that had flown out of the room, but a person—a living, breathing person dressed in a black hoodie, cap, and sweatpants who was racing with breakneck speed down the hospital hallway.
“Hey!” she shouted after him—or her. She couldn't tell the sex of the person at this distance. “Hey, what were you—”
Her words died on her lips when the person slammed into the metal doors, shoving them open and disappearing into the adjoining hall. The door slammed shut behind them.
Kelly began to give chase but paused near Room 406 when she caught something out of the corner of her eye. She looked and saw a pillow slumped on the linoleum floor. Her eyes raised and she saw Mr. Turner. His head was now tilted to the side instead of forward and upright in its proper position, and it looked like his breathing tube had been partially removed. The white tape below his nose now flapped limply, revealing the peach fuzz above his lip. His mouth hung open like a catfish on a slab of ice.
“Oh, God,” she whispered, feeling the carrot cake and bile rise in her throat as she realized what had happened. She rushed into the room and heard thunderous footsteps behind her as the other nurses and doctors came to assist.
It looked like someone had tried to kill Dante Turner
—again.
BOOK: Bed of Lies
10.62Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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