Студопедия — Table of Contents 12 страница
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Table of Contents 12 страница






“You got a new car, Dad?”

He looked shocked that I’d spoken and nodded in reply.

“Four years now,” he said.

Those were the first words he’d spoken to me since saying that I was no longer his son all those years before.

Momma just stared at me.

No one spoke on the way home. I sat in the back seat, staring out of the window while roads and houses and trees flashed by me. As the scenery gradually became more familiar, the panicky feelings started to subside, and I was excited to see places I recognized. But all the time the stone in the pit of my stomach weighed heavier the nearer we got to the place I’d called home.

We bumped down the familiar dirt road and the cottonwoods parted. They were taller than I remembered, more luxuriant, but the house looked smaller and kind of rundown. Dad had always been insistent on cleaning out the gutters and keeping the paintwork fresh. I remembered the times Mikey and I had bitched about having to climb up ladders to fix things. It looked like nothing had been fixed in a long while. Eight years, perhaps.

Inside, the house was the same but different. A new lampshade here; a new table in the kitchen there. The family room seemed the least changed, the sofa and curtains familiar. Only the TV had been updated.

“I’ve made your bed.”

My head snapped up, stunned that Momma had spoken.

I scanned her face for something else, but she wasn’t looking at me.

“Thanks,” I said at last.

I headed upstairs, pausing outside Mikey’s room. I took a deep breath and pushed the door open—and stared. Nothing, and I mean nothing had changed. His clothes were still hanging across the chair as if he might come back at any moment and throw them on. His posters and pictures were still tacked to the walls, and his yearbook was open at the page with the football team.

I closed my eyes as my stomach coiled and rolled. I backed out and headed for my own room.

That had definitely changed. Everything had been stripped out, all the posters gone, all my books and school stuff gone, the closet and drawers empty. It hit me then—they hadn’t planned on me coming back. I wondered what had changed their minds. Why was I here?

I know now it was a way of punishing me more—as if I hadn’t thought about Mikey every waking hour of every day since it had happened.

Beside me, Torrey stretched and yawned.

“Did I fall asleep?”

“Only for a few minutes—twenty, maybe.”

“Did you sleep?”

“Too much snortin’ and snorin’,” I smiled.

“I do not snore!” she complained, roughly pushing my shoulder.

“If you say so, sweetheart.”

“You’re not being very smooth, Jordan Kane. I bet Mikey wouldn’t have told a woman that she snored!”

I liked to hear her talking about Mikey like he was a real person, not someone whose name had to be whispered. She had a way of helping me remember the good stuff, not just the way he died.

“I wish you could have known Mikey. He was a great guy.”

“Hmm, two Kane brothers,” she said, with a gentle smile. “That sounds like double trouble to me.”

“Hell, yeah! We got into a lot of shit, that’s for sure.”

“Sounds like he led the way most of the time.”

I smiled to myself.

“Well, yeah. He was the oldest by 18 months. I wanted to be just like him.”

She looked thoughtful for a moment.

“That’s something that’s been puzzling me, Jordan. When you talk about him, I picture this wild, bad boy—a version of you. But when everyone else mentions him, it’s like he was halfway between a saint and an angel.”

I knew what she meant, but that’s only because people wanted to remember the good stuff.

“He was real, Torrey. But special. Blessed, you know? He just had a way of drawin’ people to him. Like you.”

She was quiet and I didn’t know what she was thinking.

“Did you ever say goodbye to him?”

“What do you mean?”

“Well, you went straight from the hospital to juvie. Did you get a chance to visit Mikey’s grave since you got out?”

Her words hit me with the force of a ten-ton truck.

“No, I … I don’t even know where … where they put him.”

“It’s not hard to find out—if you wanted to go.”

Do I? The words ‘final resting place’ seem so unreal.

I felt her fingers flutter down my chest, and she laid her hand over my heart.

“I’ll come with you, if you want to go … if you want me to.”

“I don’t think I can. I don’t deserve…”

She slapped my chest hard and my eyes snapped to hers. She looked genuinely angry, like a bad tempered bull in a horn tossing mood.

“For God’s sake, Jordan! Love isn’t a life sentence! But that’s how you’re using it, like a punishment. You loved your brother and it sounds like he loved you. Do you think for one second he’d want you to live your life rotting away like this? Blaming yourself for being the one who survived? Blaming yourself for living? Would you have wanted that for him if it had been the other way around? Don’t you see? You have to live for both of you!”

She jumped to her feet and started scrambling around for her clothes. My heart pounded and I felt sick.

“Are you leavin’?”

We’re leaving. We’re going to find Mikey’s grave. Right now!” Her expression softened. “So you might want to put your pants on for that.”

Was I ready for this? Probably not. I didn’t think I ever would be. But she was right … I needed to do this.

I dressed fast, while Torrey picked up our trash and paper plates.

“I don’t even know how to go about findin’ … how… where … where the right place is at,” I admitted, cringing at the thought.

Torrey squinted at me. “Um, I kinda already know.”

I turned around to stare at her. She looked slightly nervous, but stuck out her chin defiantly.

“You do?”

“Well, yeah. Do you mind?”

I blew out a long breath. “No, I don’t mind. I’m just…” I ran my hands through my hair. “It’s a lot to take in.”

She nodded, looking wary, as if I was fixing to bolt—or she was.

The thought of running had definitely crossed my mind. Stupidly, I’d even considered disappearing while I was still on parole. And the first week with my parents had been so bad, I’d seriously considered doing something to get myself sent back to prison. I guess some sense must have kicked in, because I’d stuck it out.

Part of me wanted to visit Mikey’s grave, to see if I could do this, but part of me was still that 16-year-old kid, lost and hurting, the kid who just wanted his big brother.

We packed up the truck in silence. It didn’t take long and Torrey didn’t call me out for going slower than I needed to. Finally, we were done and I’d run out of excuses.

“So, um, where are we headin’?”

“South Trinity Street,” she said calmly, measuring my reactions.

I took a deep breath and started the truck’s engine. The sound reassured me, but as I drove through the town and along familiar streets, I felt sweat break out all over my body. My heart rate escalated until I was afraid I’d pass out.

I was almost hyperventilating by the time she said quietly, “We’re here.”

I climbed out of the truck, feeling numb, my hands shaking, the palms clammy. I thought I was going to be sick.

I walked to the entrance in a daze, and stared out across the neat turf and narrow, well kept paths.

“Fuck, I could use a drink,” I admitted.

Torrey clasped my hand between both of hers. “I’m all out of booze, but I’ve got a hard candy you can have. That any good?”

I gave a shaky laugh. “Maybe later.”

“It’s this way,” she said, tugging gently on my hand.

We walked past rows of ornate headstones, some of which had wilting bouquets in vases next to them.

“Was I supposed to bring flowers? I feel like I should have.”

“Just yourself,” she said, soothingly.

Then I saw his name and cold reality washed over me. It was real—this was real. My brother, who’d been so full of life, so full of love—this was his grave. This was his end. Because of me. The future spun out in front of me and I was alone, my brother no longer at my side.

I touched the cool stone with my hand, needing to feel it, to make that connection. I closed my eyes, trying to sense something—his presence—anything. But there was nothing, just the polished marble under my fingers.

Then I opened my eyes and it was as if someone had punched me in the gut when I read the full inscription.

 

Michael Gabriel Kane

 

November 25, 1987—July 10, 2006

 

Beloved Son

 

 

“Do not fear those who kill the body but cannot kill the soul.”

 

 

I heard a weird, strangled sound, but it was only when Torrey wrapped her arms around my waist that I realized it had come from me.

“‘Beloved Son!’ Christ, they couldn’t even … they didn’t want … he was my brother, Torrey! My brother! It’s like I never even existed. God, Mikey! I’m so, so sorry! It should have been me! I’d do anythin’ to take it back!”

I fell to my knees, my head spinning, bile rising in my throat.

“It should have been me.”

Torrey was on her knees next to me, the strength of her small body the only thing that kept me from falling further.

“No!” she gasped. “Don’t say that! I’m glad you’re alive. I’m glad you survived.” I felt her fingers in my hair and her breath was warm against my neck. “You have to find the strength to be glad, too—for the rest of your life.”

She tightened her grip and slowly the ground stopped shifting beneath me. I leaned against her, breathing in the scent of summer in her hair.

After a few minutes, I felt her grip relax.

“My knees are killing me, Jordan. Can we please sit down?”

Some of the tension left my body as we both collapsed onto the grass. Torrey snuggled into my side. She leaned her head on my chest and stroked my arms, as if calming a frightened child.

Her touch soothed me, and I felt an odd sense of peace, sitting there among the tombstones.

“I was wondering…” she said, after a few minutes.

“What’s that, sweetheart?”

“What would you tell Mikey about me?”

I raised my eyebrows and shifted so I could look at her, but she wouldn’t meet my eyes.

“You know,” she went on, “guy to guy, brother to brother.”

“Hmm, you want me to break the bro code?” I teased her.

“Pretend I’m not here.”

I almost laughed. “That would be a fuckin’ impossibility.”

“Aw, go on!”

I took a deep breath and tucked her into my side again, taking strength from her slender arms around my neck.

“Hey, Mikey! It’s been a while. I guess you know why I haven’t been by. So, you see my girl, Torrey? She’s somethin’, ain’t she? God, she’s so fine. She’s got the sweetest face, and this mess of long, curly hair the color of corn just before harvest, and it near about kills me to wind it around my fingers, it’s so soft. She’s a real firecracker, too. And she’s one of those people that lights up the room when she walks into it, ya know? She’s so full of livin’, so full of laughter. And fuck, she’s honest. I don’t get away with shit when I’m with her. In the bedroom? Hell, yeah! She’s so fuckin’ hot! I cain’t get enough of her. I know, I know—totally pussy whipped. But I gotta tell ya, bro, she’s so worth it. When she looks at me I can see my future in her eyes—us livin’ our lives together, gettin’ old together, kids—the whole thing. She don’t know it yet, but she’s not gettin’ away from me. Do I love her? It’s more than that, bro. She’s my reason for livin’.”

I stopped talking and risked a sideways glance at Torrey. She looked stunned, her mouth hanging open. I waited nervously for her to speak. She’d asked me to say the kind of things I would have told Mikey, so that’s what I’d done. I was terrified it was going to backfire on me.

Say something! I was screaming inside my head.

She cleared her throat nervously. “Uh, Jordan, that’s … I mean, wow! I didn’t realize … phew!”

“Too much?” I asked, afraid of her reply.

“Um, just a little overwhelming.”

I shrugged. “That’s how I feel. I know you’re not there yet…”

She didn’t answer, and a small stab of fresh pain entered my heart like a splinter.

I stood up and pulled her to her feet.

“Come on, let’s get out of here. We’ve got a date to finish.”

She nodded wordlessly and worried her bottom lip with her teeth. The longer she went without saying anything, the more nervous I became.

“Jordan, I really care about you…”

I waited in silence as ice formed in my heart.

“But I don’t … I’m not…”

“It’s okay, Torrey,” I sighed, “I know you don’t feel the same. I wouldn’t expect you to. Why would you? You’re beautiful and sweet and kind and so fuckin’ feisty and good. You’ve got your whole life ahead of you. You don’t need me draggin’ you down.” Just saying it tasted like dust and despair.

She turned angry eyes on me. “Stop putting words in my mouth, Jordan! That’s not what I said and not what I was going to say. It’s just a lot to get my head around. I mean, everything is in front of you now. In a few months you’ll have all the choices you could want. I just happened to be the first woman you ran into. You’re a great guy, and you’ll be beating girls off with a stick once you get your groove back and…”

That’s what she thinks? Really?

“No, you’re so wrong, Torrey. It’s way more than that, and I’m gettin’ mighty pissed hearin’ you talk this way. You think I don’t know my own mind, what I want? Hell, I’ve had eight years of wishin’ and dreamin’ but I never thought I could meet someone like you. It’s not just that you accept me for who I am. You make me want to be more than I thought I could ever be. And the way we connect—I’ve never felt anythin’ like that. Look me in the eyes and tell me you don’t feel it, too. Tell me!”

I was almost shouting at her by now, and I could see by the stubborn angle of her chin that I was making her mad. Well, good! This shit was important! I had to make her see what she meant to me.

But she surprised me again when the expression of fury morphed into a huge grin.

“You know you’re pretty hot when you get mad, Jordan. You should do it more often!”

I couldn’t help laughing with relief.

“Woman, you blow my mind! Are you trying to seduce me in a cemetery?”

“Hmm, the thought had occurred, but I’m fairly sure there are laws against it.”

“Yeah, probably,” I agreed, still smiling. “Although Mikey would have got a kick out of the idea.”

She winked at me and flicked her tongue against her teeth; a move that she knew would have me adjusting my pants.

“Come on, then. Let’s get out of here. Do the rest of the date thing.”

I turned to Mikey’s grave one last time, resting my hand on the headstone.

“Bye, Mikey. Love you, man, wherever you are.”

Torrey hugged me gently, and as we stood there in the afternoon sunshine, I felt a weight that I’d been carrying around for so long slip from my shoulders.

We walked back to my truck hand in hand and I felt a new sense of purpose and a new sense of peace.

Painful as it had been, I was glad that she’d forced me to come here. I hadn’t realized that it was something I needed to do.

“Okay, confession time,” I said, as I drove away from the cemetery. “I don’t have anythin’ else planned. But we could maybe catch a movie if we can sneak in through the fire door. Mikey and me used to do that all of the time. I’d take you for a coffee, but the only place that won’t kick my ass into the street is where you work, and that just don’t seem right for a date. Sorry, I’m kinda out of options, unless you want to hang out at the junkyard with Hulk.”

Jesus, help me! Did I really just ask a smokin’ hot woman like Torrey if she wanted to hang out at a junkyard? Smooth, Kane, real smooth.

“Tempting,” she said, tapping her finger against her lip as she obviously tried not to laugh. “But I prefer my idea.”

I glanced across at her and caught the wicked glint in her eye.

“Are you gonna share?”

“We go back to the Rectory and fuck on every flat surface we can find.”

I nearly drove off the road.

“Damn, woman!” I said, my voice choked from the rush of adrenalin as I braked hard and the truck came to a shuddering stop.

I looked down at my hands gripping the steering wheel for dear life and was aware how close we’d come to having an accident.

We were half off the side of the road, and my mind was flashing back to the night Mikey had died, my body in panic mode.

“Shit,” I whispered, unable to get the shaking under control.

“God, I’m so sorry,” Torrey stuttered. “I’m such a freakin’ idiot. Are you okay? Do you want me to drive?”

“Uh, no, that’s fine. Just … just give me a minute.”

I closed my eyes and forced my body to relax, breathing in and out slowly, as my racing heart fell back into its normal rhythm. I felt Torrey’s warm hand on my thigh.

“Okay now?” she asked, guilt painting her voice.

I smiled at her—well, grimaced. “Yeah, I’m good. And now that I’ve managed to make a complete ass of myself, I’d really like to take you up on your offer—if it’s still open.”

“Oh, I’m still open,” she laughed with relief.

Even though I was aching to take her up on that as soon as possible, I drove even more slowly to her house. If we’d been going any slower, the truck would have been in reverse.

I pulled up outside the Rectory, pretty damn relieved that we’d made it in one piece.

“I’m hoping your momma is out,” I admitted. “I don’t think I’d be able to, uh, perform, if she was in the house. It just wouldn’t seem right.”

Torrey smirked at me. “You’re quite an old fashioned gentleman underneath all those muscles and tats, aren’t you?”

I glanced over at her.

“Well now, if your momma is out, I’ll be perfectly happy to demonstrate how much I’m not a gentleman.”

“Deal!” she laughed, leaping out of the truck.

I followed her right quick, almost tripping over my feet in my eagerness to get to her.

We fell in through the front door and she damn near attacked me, pushing me against the wall, her hungry hands roaming freely up and down my body.

“You want it here, sweetheart?”

She laughed throatily.

“Well, it is a flat surface.”

Can’t argue with that.

“Hmm, let’s see what’s cookin’.”

I picked her up so her legs wrapped around my waist automatically and carried her into the kitchen.

“W-what are we doing in here?” she gasped.

“First horizontal surface,” I breathed against the salty, damp skin of her neck.

Then I placed her onto the kitchen counter and snapped open the button on her shorts.

“Lift up for me, sweetheart.”

I slid the shorts down her legs while she reached for my zipper.

I managed to grab my jeans before they fell to the floor and pulled out a rubber.

“Gonna have to stock up on these, sweetheart.”

She gave a breathless laugh. “We should buy shares in the company.”

I pumped myself a couple of times then rolled the condom on, tugging it to make sure it was as far up as it could go.

“God, I love seeing you do that,” she said.

“What, sheath up?”

“When you touch yourself,” she said, her voice low and full of need. “It turns me on.”

“Does this turn you on?”

I held her knees wide apart and pushed myself inside her inch by inch. She rested her hands on my shoulders, but her eyes were focused on my dick, slowly sliding in and out.

“You like to watch, Torrey,” I murmured, my eyes trained on her face.

She nodded wordlessly.

I picked up the speed, relieved that I could finally show some fucking control, and that I wasn’t blowing my wad the second I entered her.

I knew this was fucking to her and not making love, but I’d take whatever she’d give me. And right now I wanted to feel her come around my cock.

I reached down to massage her, and she whimpered and tried to wrap her legs around my waist.

“No, sweetheart,” and I pushed her knees even further apart, giving me room to touch her as I circled my hips.

“Oh my God, Jordan!” she shouted.

I could feel the small tremors begin building through her body, and I started moving faster, but without losing the rhythm. I was determined to make this good for her.

She leaned on her hands; her head falling back and some mangled vowels fell from her lips. I felt her sweet pussy clamp around me. I managed to hold on for another few seconds, before my vision went dark and I was pulsing inside her.

My head was buried in her neck, and I allowed her to fold her legs around me.

“Oh my God, Jordan!” she half laughed, half groaned. “That was … I don’t know what that was! Felt gooood!”

“Seein’ as I’m just an old fashioned country boy,” I said, between hard kisses, “how about we take it to your bedroom for a change. Make some lovin’ in comfort?”

“Hmm, a bed,” she snickered, digging her heels into my ass as she spoke, “that sounds different. I guess we could try it.”

Which we did. Several times. That woman just about wore me out.

We’d been three rounds, and I wondered if I’d used up the ration of spunk that I’d been storing over the last eight years. Could that happen? I didn’t know. I did know that if she grabbed me hard again, my dick would probably fall off or just plain give up on me.

I propped myself up on one elbow to look at her. Her hair was a soft, tangled mess like a halo around her head, and her body glistened with sweat. It made me want to lick her salty skin. My dick twitched once in appreciation before admitting defeat. Poor guy needed some time off for good behavior.

“Oh my God,” Torrey moaned. “I don’t think I can move.”

I stroked her soft stomach, enjoying the silkiness of her skin.

“You don’t have to, sweetheart. You can stay here till sun up. But I’m gonna have to get goin’ soon.”

“Noo,” she whined.

“Sorry, darlin’. Your momma could be back any time now and my curfew will be up in an hour.”

She sighed and opened her eyes.

“I’ve really enjoyed today, Jordan. All of it.”

“Me too, sweetheart. Maybe we can do it again sometime?” I added, hopefully.

“I’d like that. Big fat yes.”

She yawned and sat up. I carried on looking at her. Well, staring really, my eyes fixing to dribble out of my head. She was so peaceful in her own skin—she just fit. That was rare.

Then she wrinkled her nose.

“Ugh! My room smells of sex!”

“We have kinda been goin’ some, sweetheart,” I said, running a hand down her back, almost drooling when she pushed her tits out at me. “We’ll have to spend a whole day in bed next time.”

She arched her spine and stretched her arms above her head, ensuring that my eyeballs remained glued to her chest.

“God, yes!” she laughed. “So, will I see you tomorrow morning? Maybe we could get in a quickie before I have to go to work.”

“Woman, you are insatiable! I’m just gonna have to marry you!”

The words were out of my mouth before I realized what I’d said.

Torrey froze.

“What?”

“Aw, hell. I’m sorry. It just sorta slipped out.”

“So you were joking?”

Was I?

“It’s crossed my mind,” I answered, truthfully.

“Oh my God!” she snorted, leaping off the bed as if she’d been stung. “Do you have any idea how crazy that is? We barely know each other! Marriage is big! Huge! Until death do us part-huge! I mean, fucking shit! We’ll both be leaving soon and … it’s just freakin’ crazy!”

“Whoa, whoa! Slow down, Torrey! It’s marriage not a prison sentence!”

“Same thing!” she snapped.

“Not hardly,” I said, grimly, “and I think I know what I’m talkin’ about here.”

She paused for just a moment before resuming her nervous babbling.

“No, but … come on! It’s just … I mean, marriage is just … it drives people apart!”

“I don’t think that’s how it’s supposed to work,” I smirked, amused to see her freaking out at a few words.

“I’m serious, Jordan!” she yelped, hurling a pillow at me.

I caught it before it took my head off.

“I can see that you’re serious. All I’m sayin’ is that you’re my dream woman. Why wouldn’t I want to marry you?”

She stared at me, completely unaware that she was totally naked and utterly magnificent. She looked like a wild animal that had been cornered but was untamed. I wouldn’t have been entirely surprised if she launched herself at me, teeth and claws flailing. Well, it wouldn’t be the first time.

“You … but … we … not…”

“Just think about it. Mr. and Mrs. Ex-felon. It has a ring, don’t cha think?”

“You are teasing me,” she said, dropping back onto the bed in relief.

“No, firecracker. I’m givin’ you a get-out that you can live with. I’d marry you tomorrow if you’d have me.”

“I have to work tomorrow,” she said, faintly.

“Why you so down on marriage, sweetheart?”

She gave me a look that said, are you kidding me?

“Was it that bad when you were growin’ up?”

She sighed and snuggled up to me like a kitten, her claws retracted … for now.

“No, it wasn’t all bad. They were happy once, I think. It’s almost like it fell apart so gradually, none of us realized until it was already really bad. The year before Mom decided to leave, that was horrible. They didn’t argue that much, there were just all these silences. I used to get so tense I could hardly eat. I lost so much weight, they ended up taking me to see a doctor, but I couldn’t say what the problem was, not with Mom sitting there.”

I pulled her into my body, stroking her back, a strong need to protect flooding through me.

“You’re only a lil’ bitty thing now.”

“Big enough to kick your ass!” she snorted, biting my chest.

“Okay, okay, you win! Don’t hurt me!” I laughed.

She smirked and pretended to bite me again, instead turning it into a soft kiss.

“When Mom finally left, I couldn’t help feeling like she’d chosen God over me. I didn’t get why she had to make a choice, or why God would want her to make that sort of choice. I still don’t get it. But I see how hard she works and how much it means to her. And I think she’s happier now. I know the choice wasn’t easy. It’s just that she made it, and everyone else had to face the consequences.”

“Yeah,” I said, quietly, “I know what that’s like.”

“What about your parents?” she asked, tracing a finger across my chest, and then following the lines of my armband tattoo.

It signified mourning and was the first one I designed and the first one I had my buddy Styx ink.

“They were mostly happy, I think. I mean, they had arguments like anyone else, mostly over stuff I’d gotten caught doing. I told you Mikey was the smart one—he never got caught.”

That was so true—I couldn’t help smiling at the memory.

“Hell, Momma was called up to the school just about every week because I’d gotten caught fightin’ or smokin’ or makin’ out with some girl in the janitor’s closet.”

Torrey wrinkled her nose. “Ugh, really? That’s so not classy!”

I shrugged and winked at her.

“I was 15 when that happened. Mikey thought it was pretty funny. ‘Specially as we’d been caught, um, ya know, doin’ it. The girl’s father threatened to whup my ass. Momma was so embarrassed ‘cause it was someone she and Dad knew from church. It was Mikey’s fault. He was the one who’d told me to use that damned closet in the first place.”

Torrey laughed. “I’ll stay away from closets when you’re around.” Then her face turned thoughtful. “What would you tell him, that teenager? What would you say to him?”

“Christ, I don’t know. Don’t drink and drive? Don’t drink.”

“Do you think he would have listened?”

“Nah. I was so damn cocky … thought I knew the answer to every question, even before anyone had asked.”

“Seriously, Jordan. If you met a kid like that now, how would you try to get through to him?”

I thought about her question. Was there anything that could have stopped the 16-year-old me from taking the first step that led to Mikey dying?

“I guess I’d take him to juvie, show him what that’s like. They did that when I was there—schools organized groups of kids who were gettin’ into trouble and then they’d march ‘em through. The kids would stare at us like we were animals in a zoo. I think that would have made an impression. Maybe.”

She nodded slowly. “Yeah, I remember seeing a documentary about something like that in high school. Scared Straight I think it was called.”

I didn’t reply but looked out of the window again, noticing that the moon was brighter and traveling steadily across the sky.

I sighed. “I’ve gotta git now, Torrey. And I won’t see you tomorrow mornin’.”

“Why not?” she pouted.

“Gotta go see my parole officer. Usually she just talks for a while, but it can take longer if she’s feelin’ officious. I might have to wait. It’s first come, first served. Maybe I could come by the coffee shop after work?”







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Кардиналистский и ординалистский подходы Кардиналистский (количественный подход) к анализу полезности основан на представлении о возможности измерения различных благ в условных единицах полезности...

Обзор компонентов Multisim Компоненты – это основа любой схемы, это все элементы, из которых она состоит. Multisim оперирует с двумя категориями...

Композиция из абстрактных геометрических фигур Данная композиция состоит из линий, штриховки, абстрактных геометрических форм...

Гальванического элемента При контакте двух любых фаз на границе их раздела возникает двойной электрический слой (ДЭС), состоящий из равных по величине, но противоположных по знаку электрических зарядов...

Сущность, виды и функции маркетинга персонала Перснал-маркетинг является новым понятием. В мировой практике маркетинга и управления персоналом он выделился в отдельное направление лишь в начале 90-х гг.XX века...

Разработка товарной и ценовой стратегии фирмы на российском рынке хлебопродуктов В начале 1994 г. английская фирма МОНО совместно с бельгийской ПЮРАТОС приняла решение о начале совместного проекта на российском рынке. Эти фирмы ведут деятельность в сопредельных сферах производства хлебопродуктов. МОНО – крупнейший в Великобритании...

Реформы П.А.Столыпина Сегодня уже никто не сомневается в том, что экономическая политика П...

Виды нарушений опорно-двигательного аппарата у детей В общеупотребительном значении нарушение опорно-двигательного аппарата (ОДА) идентифицируется с нарушениями двигательных функций и определенными органическими поражениями (дефектами)...

Особенности массовой коммуникации Развитие средств связи и информации привело к возникновению явления массовой коммуникации...

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