SHADOW OF A RECLUSE

By Tessa Harvey


    The moment Tarrant woke up, he knew at once that today was different. It was an instinct, perhaps inherent in all of us, that things are about to change. For some people that was a source of joy - for others like Tarrant, it was not. His brother was coming.
    Tarrant had been in prison for two years. The crime was petty larceny. A reputable clerk in a law office, he should have known better than to try and rort that particular system, but he had not known better, or at least had not listened to that inner voice which, knowing right from wrong, attempts to dissuade us from foolish acts.
    Sylvie came to him with two children and he added another child in their two years of marriage.
    As Tarrant had tried too hard to impress this admittedly beautiful young lady, to the extent of stealing from his bosses, he thought she would be waiting for him to come home. Sylvie was not waiting. Tarrant had a lot to learn - and very quickly.
 

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