"Christine W. Murphy - Through Iowa Glass" - читать интересную книгу автора (Murphy Christine W)======================
Through Iowa Glass by Christine W. Murphy ====================== Copyright (c)1998 Christine W. Murphy 1998 Hard Shell Word Factory Hard Shell Word Factory www.hardshell.com Suspense/Romance --------------------------------- NOTICE: This work is copyrighted. It is licensed only for use by the original purchaser. Duplication or distribution of this work by email, floppy disk, network, paper print out, or any other method is a violation of international copyright law and subjects the violator to severe fines and/or imprisonment. --------------------------------- This book is dedicated to my mother, a small town girl from Iowa, who traveled far and wide and raised a daughter who enjoys doing the same. Also, I wish to acknowledge the many people in the RWA Outreach International mystified by this entire "writing thing" left me alone to work; and Liz Kading, proofreader and friend. -------- *Chapter One* "WHAT THE HELL!" Alex jerked awake when his car left the road. A tree branch slammed into the windshield, cracking the glass. He wrestled with the steering wheel. His foot missed the brake, and the car plowed a path through waist-high corn. He turned the car sharply to the left and cursed the worn-out shocks when his head banged the ceiling. Finally, he found the brake and stomped down hard. The car came to rest at the edge of a corn field beside County Road G29. The perfect homecoming. His forehead resting on the steering wheel, he willed his pulse to return to normal. The sound of his ragged breaths filled the car. Alex and the '76 Mustang were apparently in one piece. He peered through spider-web fractures in the windshield. A misty rain veiled a shadowy skyline. Skyline? Hell, Close, Iowa, was too small to have a skyline, just a few lumps on the horizon with the water tower hovering overhead like an alien space craft. From where Alex sat, the town looked the same as it had when he was twelve, almost twenty-five years ago, the night he ran away. He turned and looked behind him. The road, straight and narrow, disappeared in the distance, obscured by ripening crops. A quick walk around the car confirmed he wasn't driving anywhere soon. |
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