Someone Knows Read Online Vi Keeland

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Dark, Suspense, Thriller Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 93
Estimated words: 87988 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 440(@200wpm)___ 352(@250wpm)___ 293(@300wpm)
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But I keep going. I’ve lost track of how many bags are strewn across the garage floor, but I think it might be bag number nine I find it in. The thick envelope her lawyer brought is now smeared with coffee grounds, but otherwise intact. I rock back on my butt and rip it open.

The handwriting is shaky and barely readable, but it only takes ten seconds to get to the line that makes my blood run cold, makes me draw a hand to my mouth in shock.

Dearest Elizabeth,

I know I don’t have long now, and as you are very aware, I am a true believer. There is one sin I have yet to confess, and you are the person I will confess it to. In the Old Testament, Book of Exodus, 21:23-24, it reads:

“And if any mischief follow, then thou shalt give life for life, Eye for eye, tooth for tooth, hand for hand, foot for foot . . .”

You know the scripture.

Perhaps it excuses what I did. Perhaps not. But I did what I had to.

He took the life of your baby, my grandchild. So I took his. And I do not regret it. That night you’d fought back and gotten away. Next time you wouldn’t be so lucky.

I might have been a shit mom to you. I didn’t have the best examples myself growing up, and the drinking and pills didn’t help. Probably, I failed you in every way. But no one was going to hurt my grandchild, no one was going to hurt you and get away with it.

I’ll say this here, so you may keep it always, because I suspect you may not believe it otherwise. I love you.

I would ask for your forgiveness, but I am beyond all of that now, if you are reading this.

So I will just ask for you to go to confession. Cleanse your soul. My reminders didn’t work, so I pray that your mother’s dying wish might start your journey with God over.

Love,

Mom

I swallow back a mix of so many emotions I’m surprised I’m not choking. My body feels as though it’s vibrating as I read the letter again, and then again. I picture Noah in the driveway the other morning, how he said he didn’t know who killed his father, how he suspected it might have been his mother.

But it wasn’t his mom after all.

It was mine.

Because she loved me.

CHAPTER

45

Ten months later

How was your week this week?” Dr. Sterling folds her hands on top of her notebook, the one that’s always on her lap.

“It was good. I slept through the night twice with no sleeping pill.”

“Oh, wow. That’s a big deal.”

I nod and smile. “It is.”

Ten months ago, when I returned from Louisiana, I expected things to improve—things like my mental health and insomnia. Minton Parish was behind me, and there were no more chapters coming in since Mom was gone, and, well, dead people take their tales with them. So I assumed I’d settle back into the way life had been before Hannah had thrown it into a tailspin. But too much has changed. I’m no longer only Elizabeth Davis. I’m also Jocelyn Burton—she didn’t stay down south like I’d hoped. Neither did my mother. I’ve felt a lot of guilt for not being with Mom at the end, when it turned out she’d done so much for me. So instead of my mental health getting better, things got worse. I wasn’t hungry and couldn’t sleep. My ability to concentrate was virtually nonexistent. Grading exams for a class of forty students went from taking me two hours to almost two weeks. And then there were the physical manifestations of stress—heart palpitations, muscle fatigue, and the worst heartburn.

I went to the doctor a few times. But with all the new symptoms, she wanted me to see a psychiatrist or a therapist—get to the root of the problem. I’d yessed her at my visits, like I was going to look into it. But after she wouldn’t prescribe me sleeping pills anymore, I had no choice but to actually do it. So I made an appointment with Dr. Sterling. I figured she already knew I had some pretty big issues, so she wouldn’t be a hard sell to get what I needed. I had no intention of letting her dig into my psyche, but I did need someone to prescribe me those pills so I could sleep. As it turns out, she’s done a lot more. I think she’s actually helping me.

“So tell me about your week,” Dr. Sterling says. “You’re finished with classes now, right?”

I nod. “Thursday was my last day of the spring semester.”

“Will you teach any summer courses?”

“Not this year. It will be the first time since I started teaching that I have three full months off.”

“I think it’s good you’re taking a break. Do you have any plans for the summer?”


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