Their Secret Wife (Shadows Between Lies Book 2) Read online




  Their Secret Wife

  Shadows Between Lies - Book 2

  Nicky Webber

  Media Publishers Ltd

  Copyright © 2021 Nicky Webber

  Copyright © 2021 Nicky Webber

  for THEIR SECRET WIFE in the series

  Shadows Between Lies – Book 2

  The right of Nicky Webber to be identified as the author of this work in terms of section 96 of the New Zealand Copyright Act 194 is hereby asserted.

  Published by Media Publishers (2001) Ltd, New Zealand

  All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise), without prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.

  ISBN: 9780995134751

  A catalogue record of, THEIR SECRET WIFE

  is available from the

  National Library of New Zealand.

  All characters and events in this publication, other than those clearly in the public domain, are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

  Foreword

  Praise for THEIR SECRET WIFE

  SHADOWS BETWEEN LIES Series - BOOK 2

  ‘A master storyteller with razor-sharp observations and insights on life. Couldn’t put it down. Gripping to the end!’

  Karen Bowller

  ‘This is a superb piece of work: an incredibly sensitive and perceptive insight into female and male emotional psyche. I read, Their Secret Wife straight through.

  between laughter and tears.’

  Seán-Patrick Lovett

  ‘Their Secret Wife is an excellent read. With every page, I was drawn more and more into the characters, and became intrigued by the storyline with twists and turns all the way to the unexpected last chapter.’

  A Reisenberger

  ‘This is a great book! The characters portrayal is succinct, deep and amazing. I really enjoyed this incredible read.’

  Sue Hall

  ‘Addictive! 5-Stars from me.’

  Kristina Shelton

  CHAPTER 1

  The Buzz

  Fred strolls inside from the yard, his jeans covered in dirt, clutching a hacksaw in one hand. Sweat stains from working in the searing Los Angeles summer are visible on his T-shirt splattered with sawdust, some dry leaves and grit which fall onto the kitchen floor.

  Maddy calls out from the bathroom. ‘Is that you, Fred? There’s homemade lemonade in the fridge.’

  ‘Okay,’ he shouts, stepping back to the doorstep. Fred removes his gardening gloves and dusts his clothes down. He pulls the laces and yanks his old pair of trainers from his feet before dragging both damp socks off and flinging them into the laundry basket.

  With bare feet sticking to the icy floor, he walks towards the fridge and pours himself a tall glass of ice-cold lemonade. Stirring the sweet cloudy liquid with the handle of a fork, he takes a deep gulp, grateful to quench his thirst.

  He frowns. The bees are a worry. He watches them swarm under one of the old fruit trees. He can hear them now as he gazes through the open back door across the yard towards the distant buzzing.

  Maddy bursts into the room, smiling. ‘Wow, you really made a dent in the garden.’

  Fred grins, glad she recognizes his efforts.

  ‘Did you call them?’ Maddy asks, turning towards the fridge to pour herself a cold drink too.

  ‘Yeah, the LAPD called me back now,’ Fred says with authority.

  ‘And?’ she asks.

  ‘Nothing much, really,’ he says. ‘What did you expect to happen?’

  ‘Well, Chucky’s going to jail, but your information may help with their court case. What did they say?’

  ‘No need. They have enough evidence to lock him up for twenty-five.’

  Maddy hesitates, sips her drink. ‘They don’t need you in court. Chucky’s behavior, back then, shows he was always heading for trouble.’

  ‘Yeah, I said that on the phone.’ Fred lies. ‘But they say the prosecutor has my case and several others on file. They’re aware and will contact me if they need me. But he thinks a conviction is a slam dunk.’

  ‘Oh, okay. I guess that’s all you can do. Less drama for us.’

  Fred’s phone beeps. ‘Yeah?.’

  ‘Hey what about this?’ says Logan into the cell phone. ‘Feel like going to court and checking out Chucky on the stand?’

  ‘Ahhhh.’ Fred looks at his wife, but can’t tell if she’s listening to Logan’s voice.

  ‘It would be good to see the prick go down.’

  Maddy raises her eyebrows and smiling at Fred.

  ‘Nah, the less contact I have with him, the better. There’s nothing gained.’

  ‘Sure Bud,’ Logan says. ‘Tell Maddy I’ll be back at four and to text me if she needs any milk. I drank most of the last bottle at breakfast.’

  ‘No problem. See you soon.’

  He clicks off the phone, and his wife stares at him. ‘What?’

  ‘I assumed you would attend court and see the bastard jailed for murder.’

  ‘You and Logan really don’t get it,’ Fred sighs. ‘It was a lucky escape. I don’t want to know about the guy. Besides, Chucky could identify me in the crowd and make a mental note to hunt me down. Don’t you see that’s a real risk?’

  ‘I guess,’ Maddy says. ‘I can understand your reluctance…’

  ‘Good.’

  Fred shuts the conversation down, pulls his shoes and gloves back on, and heads outside to finish the pruning. He skips down the two concrete steps and strides across the lawn towards the back hedge. A flock of warblers fly up from the shrubs growing along the timber fence. They land on the untrimmed end of the hedge. He primes the hedge trimmer. The menacing machine noise startles the birds who instantly fly skywards, high over the neighbor’s roof before disappearing.

  The previous afternoon, he and Logan sat on the back stoop, drinking beer and listening to the evening birdsong. Everything so peaceful. He couldn’t live without Maddy. Being alone is inconceivable. He represses his fears about the pair being lover, believing he can act as if nothing has changed. Trouble is, he can’t help watching them, guessing what they’re up to when they are out of sight. Turning a blind eye is the only way forward. He must learn to cope with Maddy’s adultery, but how long can he play the fool?

  CHAPTER 2

  The Mating Game

  Mila Jones brushes the dark hair from her face with the back of her flour-covered hand. Reaching for the rolling pin, she continues pressing out the stubborn dough on the white stone countertop at the center of her kitchen. It’s perfect for pastry, and she silently congratulates her genius decision to have the kitchen renovated before they moved into the house just over a year ago. The pale gray floor-to-ceiling cupboards enhance the large walk-in pantry with its double doors ajar. Streaks of Californian sunlight fall across her face and onto the white-tiled floor where she stands. Her eldest daughter bursts through the kitchen doorway as Mila swings around. Sacha’s ruffled shoulder-length blonde hair is a mess after a deep night’s sleep.

  ‘Morning, Mom.’ she smiles. At twenty-two, she is the eldest of two daughters. They both have soulful blue eyes like their father, reflecting a sadness of some kind. Mila often jokes that if she hadn’t been in the delivery room when they were born, she would never believe she was their mother.

  ‘Hi Darling,’ Mila responds, wiping both hands across her navy striped apron. Several other attempts at dust
ing flour off her fingers have already run their course over the linen fabric. ‘Did you sleep well?’

  ‘Like the dead!’ Sacha says, reaching out for a cup from the overhead cupboards and pours coffee from the countertop espresso machine.

  Moments later, her sister, Suzie, a younger and shorter version of her older sibling, bounces into the room. Suzie is studying at UCLA, struggling to complete her degree. Initially, she rented a small apartment with two friends and Sacha. But the sisters soon realized it was both costly and frustrating renting and cleaning-up after the others. In the past year, they moved back home, much to the relief of Mila and the quiet consternation of Logan, He figured it would be a process of short-term pain on the home front for long-term gain.

  ‘Listen, you girls need to get breakfast, dress, and help me set the table for lunch. Maddy and Fred are coming at noon, and it’s already ten-thirty.’

  ‘Noted!’ Sacha continues buttering her toast and eating while still standing near the coffee machine with her half-filled ceramic mug.

  ‘Well, no screwing around,’ Mila says. ‘Your father’s going to be late. You both need to lend a hand. Sacha, can you please make a salad?

  ‘With what?’ she says, disgruntled. ‘Don’t you start now, cheeky!’ Their mother purses her lips and begs God to let this be a calm, uneventful Sunday afternoon.

  ‘I’m serious! What kind of salad do you want?’ Sacha opens the fridge door and picks out a package of pre-cut coleslaw and a bag of baby spinach leaves. ‘Is this okay? Shall I put nuts and feta in it too?’

  Mila carries on pressing the dough into a round glass pie-dish. ‘Remember the salad dressing as well,’ she says without looking up from her pastry pummeling.

  Sacha rolls her eyes to the ceiling behind her mother’s back and sighs. This ritual goes on every weekend, with Mila choosing to ignore the bait while shoving the pie base into the preheated oven. Two hours later, both families sit around a large glass-topped table under the covered deck, overlooking the yard and the inviting blue water of the swimming pool.

  Fred clutches a beer and stands next to Logan at the large barbeque grill, turning over the steak and sausages. Both men are talking about their cycling times from the previous day’s ride lasting over four hours to Thousand Oaks and back. It was over sixty-five miles and they enjoyed an excellent lunch at a local café with good, strong coffee before they headed back home.

  ‘My shoulders are damn sore,’ complains Fred, stretching his neck.

  ‘Have you checked the height of your seat post or do you think it’s the new position of the handlebars?’

  ‘Yeah, if only it were something I could fix.’ Fred grins at Logan. ‘I’ve got a horrible feeling after all the tweaking of the seat and post that I’m the problem. My neck is getting too old to hold up my head. I need a replacement.’

  ‘You and me both, Bud,’ chuckles Logan, flipping the grilled steak. ‘This is about done. Say three minutes more.’

  The two sisters stretch themselves out, relaxing on loungers near the pool. Blake, Fred and Maddy Davis’ eldest son, perches on the edge of one lounger, chatting to the girls. Hawke, their youngest son, is the baby of the collective offspring, and swims in the pool. He floats to the edge and leans into the conversation. They discuss the latest music and the hottest clubs in LA.

  Hawke takes note, knowing full well he can’t afford to go, with beers costing over $12 each. ‘Do you think I could pass for twenty-one?’ Hawke asks them. ‘You know, if I got a fake ID.’

  Sacha smiles, and Suzie asks, ‘It depends, I mean, like what would you be wearing? That makes a tremendous difference. Those baggy shorts you wear hanging off your butt are a dead give-away.’

  ‘Hell yeah, Bro.’ Blake snorts at his younger brother. ‘You look like a twelve-year-old with your crack glowing in the dark.’

  They all roar with laughter. Hawke joins in, agitated at how Blake always puts him down in front of the sisters. ‘Okay guys, I’ll dress in a collared shirt and wear Blake’s slacks. What do ya reckon? In with a chance?’ Hawke asks, wanting to engage Sacha in the conversation. He’s known the sisters all his life, but things have changed in recent months. Sacha seems different. She looks more magnetic, he can’t keep his eyes off her. It’s not that impossible to imagine being with Sacha. He’s only four years younger than her.

  ‘I guess so,’ Sacha remarks. ‘It’s all about confidence. Walking the talk and all that.’

  ‘But how’s a student like you going to afford the drinks and cover charges?’ asks Blake, intent on bringing Hawke back to harsh reality. ‘Listen, brother, you will not pull the girls if you can’t afford to buy them a drink. Sit it out for a few years or you’ll be bankrupt by twenty.’

  The girls smile, Blake laughs.

  ‘I pre-load at friends’ places before-hand so the cost of a couple of beers is nothing,’ Hawke responds, trying to gain some ground. ‘I still think I could pass for twenty-one.’

  Suzie looks at him and smiles. ‘Sure, but don’t get caught with that fake ID or they’ll fine you. Your parents will be pissed. You’ll spend next summer paying it off. It’s just not worth it.’

  Hawke knows the cover charges at the local clubs and the cost of buying drinks were prohibitive, so the whole discussion was only hypothetical. His biggest problem was the drama with his parents, who insist he be home by midnight. They’re Archaic!

  At the table, already set with plates, cutlery, paper napkins and bottles of wine and glasses, Maddy and Mila dressed in light summer tops and jeans remain engrossed in conversation. Fred glances at them several times while grilling the meat and wonders what is so intriguing in the discussion between the pair. He dismisses the talk as women’s prattle.

  Several large bowls of delicious salads dot the long glass-topped outdoor table. The women had already prepared and contributed plenty of fresh meat for a relaxing Sunday afternoon. Both families often spent Sundays this way, at one or the other’s homes. Occasionally, they took long walks around the local park or through the forest reserve. Those plans usually halted their adult children in their tracks, so the foursome enjoyed their own company without the prying supersonic ears and unwanted verbal input from their offspring.

  ‘Food’s ready!’ announces Logan, picking up the large roasting pan laden with tasty grilled steaks, sausages and a few marinated beef ribs. They ate and chatted, exchanging the week’s activities and upsets, joking about various buffoons in the Senate as the daily political circus unfolds. ‘Politics Schmolotics,’ Hawke interjects, looking at the others around the table. ‘Let’s leave the actual problems to the grown-ups, eh? Beach, anyone?’

  Within minutes the four friends leap up, gather their plates and load them in the dishwasher. They hurriedly thank their collective parents and race out of the front door.

  ‘Drive carefully, guys!’ shouts Maddy as the door slams behind them.

  ‘Too easy,’ laughs Logan. ‘I love them, but I love it more when we have time to ourselves.’

  All four adults smile in unison and raise their glasses. ‘Here, here,’ they say, clinking their glasses of chilled Sauvignon together.

  ‘Is Vida still lost and struggling?’ Logan asks after Maddy’s mother. ‘It’s been tough losing her husband after sixty-two years of marriage. She met him in Holland when she was fifteen and he was eighteen-years-old in 1948. It’s been difficult for her adjusting to being alone. She’s just lonely and distracted, talking constantly about Dad and the past.’

  ‘You wouldn’t get that kind of love these days,’ Mila says as both men listen.

  ‘Very sad,’ Fred comments. ‘He was the love of her life.’

  ‘Yes. Not that way now. I feel sorry for our kids in the bar-crawling, clubbing culture of narcissistic self-indulgence and opportunistic sex.’ Logan sighs.

  Mila flicks his arm with her napkin. ‘Logan!’

  ‘What? I’m just saying. It’s a casual mad one-night-stand kind of thing. Romance is out the window.’

/>   ‘You don’t know that.’ Mila responds.

  ‘Look around you,’ says Fred, backing up his closest friend. ‘Romance these days goes like this. First, a text that says; Wanna hook up?’

  Logan snorts with amusement. The women raise their eyebrows as Logan persists in acting out the potential bar room conversation.

  ‘Okay…’ he puts on a high-pitched female voice. ‘Without hesitation a guy’s been watching her from the other side of the bar gulp down two vodkas and three tequila shots. So, he knows she’s ripe for a damn good nailing. He saunters up to her and leans over the bar and asks her. Did you get my text? She swings around on the barstool and looks him up and down. If he’s average or even below, she’ll shrug and say, Okay.’

  ‘Really?’ interrupts Maddy. ‘But how did he get her cell number?’

  ‘Details, darling, details. Don’t worry about how,’ says Logan, grinning.

  Fred takes over and continues with the imaginary dialogue. ‘Hell yeah. Then he says, I’ve got this boner wanna take a ride?’

  They all guffaw. Mila covers her mouth with her hand in mild embarrassment.

  ‘What’s so funny?’ asks Logan. ‘It’s EXACTLY how it goes down in millions of new relationships. It’s as romantic as it gets.’

  ‘Pretty sad,’ says Maddy. ‘And I hope our kids aren’t doing that right now while we’re sitting here laughing.’

  ‘You think romance is dead?’ says Mila.

  Both men lift their chins in mock definance. There is no mistaking how they view generational differences during the human mating game.

  ‘I blame Porn Hub. It glues kids to it every waking moment. They screw with kids’ priorities and values,’ Fred said. ‘Hear about people under twenty-five in Japan not have sex anymore? Their population growth is below zero and is falling!’

  ‘Crazy stuff,’ Maddy comments. ‘I guess they think the actual world is like the online adult entertainment world. I mean, what girl can compete with that?’