icon 0
icon TOP UP
rightIcon
icon Reading History
rightIcon
icon Sign out
rightIcon
icon Get the APP
rightIcon

Don't Tell My Secret no

Chapter 2 3

Word Count: 600    |    Released on: 11/04/2025

ionately by a woman. He allowed his mind to drift

She certainly didn't come a

. James couldn't remember the

y only wanted his money, so

nto hi

onist smiled up at James. To

nd stood. He displayed a soci

st time waiting for the lift,

ent

sun felt hot. Summer appeare

orted. James threw his tie an

ible then slipped behind the

d the sports car into

tline a plot over the kiss A

ion overlooking the bay came

ceiling double glazed window

ening. No matter where he w

back and consume the wine in

i

in the room. The fake gas fir

nit. It did a great job keeping

him cool in the summer. Situa

ich was always stocked full o

s long narrow desktop. Each

l twenty minutes down the road

iter's block overtook him Jame

the place. He wandered the s

inspiration. Ideas which use

m high

e space is actually what

iveway, he clicked the remot

n the same remote. A bell sou

g the narrow door, he

ate lifted him silently to hi

packed two suitcases and rode

mes had started drivi

breakfast hotel situated on

ve from the Melbourne CBD. In

to tower up out of the water.

ntains on the oth

te the hotel's main door. T

mature Japanese Maple tre

Claim Your Bonus at the APP

Open
Don't Tell My Secret no
Don't Tell My Secret no
“"JAMES, I loved your last crime novel it's been a huge success." "Thank you; Fire Games took quite a while to write." James Buxton sat opposite his publicist, Amanda Daltry, a woman who was twenty- years his senior. By interviewing other authors, he discovered she was in her early forties. Somehow, she always managed to get what she wanted. In the four years since they met, she talked straight to the point. She saw things in black and white. A writer either liked or loathed her. James sat on the fence. He respected Amanda for the business-woman she portrayed, and he hated her at the same time. The only place they ever talked happened to be in her office after he'd finished a book. Since their first meeting, he'd seen her out at night only twice. The first time happened by accident when his close friends insisted he go with them to a Melbourne nightclub. He saw Amanda sitting at a table amongst five ladies. She held a wine glass firmly in her hand. The second time they crossed paths he was sitting in his BMW convertible, watching her kissing some bloke in a car at a supermarket carpark. He felt surprised she opened the passenger door to the Mercedes sports car and walked off into the night, seeing how the drizzle had changed to rain. What surprised him even more; Amanda didn't look back at the car. He thought she would change her mind when the driver started the engine. Then he thought she'd wait for the car to draw level with her. Neither guess happened to be correct. The car completed a slow U-turn. At speed the vehicle was driven down the road. It didn't take long for the engine noise to fade and the tail lights to vanish. James sat in the driver's seat of his car thinking about the scene. A crime novel began to unravel in his mind. It was something he'd always been able to do quite easily. He finally made up his mind Amanda must have been ending an affair, though speculation always got him into trouble. Sitting further back in the office chair, Amanda's mini-skirt shortened. She eyeballed James through brown eyes. He saw her frown and flick a few strands of long blonde hair from her face. James used an even pace to walk across the thick cream coloured carpet to the window. He stood watching the cars buzzing past in the Melbourne CBD. He loved the city for the rush. When he needed to, he'd sit at his favorite café observing people going through their daily life while he waited for inspiration to start a new novel. He didn't have the courage to tell Amanda he'd slipped into the vortex of the dreaded writer's block. James turned from the window to focus on Amanda. "From the first day we met, you represented someone who never gets nervous about anything. Today you seem on edge over something?"”