Drop Dead Gorgeous (20 page)

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Authors: Linda Howard

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BOOK: Drop Dead Gorgeous
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"I know! I
know
, all right?" Trying to keep from yelling, because my neighbors had young school-age children who were probably in bed asleep, I took two more steps away from him and leaned against the cabinets, my arms crossed under my breasts. I also took a couple of deep breaths. "You have a point. I understand what you're saying." It galled me to admit it, but fair is fair. "Without a tag number or something concrete, there's nothing you can do, no way
you can
investigate—"

"
Blair
!" he yelled, evidently not caring about my neighbors' children. "Fuck! Write this down, so you can remember it: No.
One.
Is.
Following.
You.

There's nothing to investigate! I'm not going to dance to your tune and spend city money because you're feeling nervous. Privately, yeah, I signed on knowing you aren't exactly maintenance free, but leave my fucking job out of it, okay? I'm a city cop. I'm not your private cop you can call on to check out every little thing that pops into your head. These dumb-ass tricks aren't funny. Got it?"

Okay. Okay. I opened my mouth to say something but my mind was curiously blank, and my lips felt numb, so I shut it again. I got it. I
so
got it.

Actually, there didn't seem to be anything
to
say.

I looked around the
kitchen,
and out into my tiny backyard where the trees were strung with white lights to make it look like a fairyland. A couple of the lights had burned out; I needed to replace them. The
vase of flowers on the table in the dining alcove were
wilting; I'd have to pick up some fresh ones tomorrow. I looked everywhere except at Wyatt, because I didn't want to see in his eyes what I was afraid I'd see. I didn't look at him because… because I just couldn't.

The silence in the kitchen was thick, broken only by the sounds of our breathing. I should move, I thought. I should go upstairs and do something, maybe refold the towels in the linen closet. I should do anything other than just stand there, but I couldn't.

There were arguments I could make. I knew there were. I could explain things to him, but somehow all of that was beside the point now. There were a lot of things I should say, things I should do… but I just couldn't.

"I think you should go home."

That was
my
voice saying those words, but it didn't sound like me; it was toneless, as if all expression had been drained away. I hadn't even been aware I was going to say anything.

"Blair—" Wyatt took a step toward me and I stumbled back, out of reach. He couldn't touch me now, he absolutely shouldn't touch me, because too many things were tearing me apart inside and I had to deal with them.

"Please, just—go."

He stood there. Walking away from a fight wasn't in his nature. I knew that, knew what I was asking him to do. This was too important for me to finesse, too vital to my life for me to risk it for some cosmetic fix that would go only skin deep. I wanted away from him, I had to get away and be completely by myself for a little while. My heart was beating with slow, hard thumps that hurt all over my insides, and if he didn't leave soon I might start screaming from the pain of it.

I took a shuddering breath, or tried to; my chest felt constricted, as if my heart had got in the way of my lungs and wouldn't let them work. "I'm not giving back your ring," I said in that same thin, flat tone. "The wedding is still on—"
Unless you want it cancelled
. "I just need some time to think. Please."

For a long, agonizing minute, I didn't think he'd do it. But then he wheeled and left, grabbing his suit jacket on the way out. He didn't even slam the door.

I didn't collapse to the floor. I didn't run upstairs to throw myself on the bed. I just stood there in the kitchen for a long, long time, gripping the edge of the countertop so hard my fingernails were white.

Chapter Fourteen

 

 

Eventually, moving slowly, I checked the doors to make certain they were locked. They were. Though I hadn't been aware of the extra beeps, Wyatt had also set the alarm system on his way out. As angry as he was with me, he was still careful with my physical safety. The realization hurt; this would be easier if he showed some lack of concern, but he didn't.

I turned out all the lights on the first floor,
then
laboriously climbed the stairs. Every move was an effort, as if there was
a disconnect
between my mind and body. I went to bed but didn't turn out the lights, just sat in bed staring at nothing as I tried to order my thoughts.

My favorite coping method is to concentrate on something else until I feel ready to deal with the important stuff. That didn't work this time, because my whole world felt filled with the things Wyatt had said. I was battered by them, suffocated by them, crushed under their weight, and there were simply too many of them for me to handle. I couldn't isolate any one
thought,
nail down any one issue—not yet, anyway.

The phone rang.
Wyatt
!
was
my first thought, but I didn't grab for the receiver and answer the call. I wasn't sure I wanted to talk to him just yet. In fact, I was certain I didn't. I didn't want him to muddy the water with an apology that would just gloss over the bigger problem I sensed, and that was assuming he thought he owed me an apology anyway, which was a big assumption.

I picked up the cordless phone on the third ring, just to see if it was him calling or someone else, and the Caller ID showed that weird number from Denver again. I set the phone down without answering it. The ringing cut off after the fourth ring anyway, as the answering machine downstairs picked up. I listened, but didn't hear a message being left.

Almost immediately the phone rang again.
Denver
again.
Again, I let the machine get it.
Again, no message.

When the third call followed closely on the heels of the second call, I got pissed. Obviously no survey-taker would be calling after eleven p.m., because that's a guaranteed way to not get your questions answered. I didn't personally know anyone living in Denver, but, hey, if someone I knew
was
calling, why not leave a message?

Wyatt had said the number and Denver location could be because someone was using one of those prepaid phone cards, in which case I guess someone I knew could be calling, trying to wake me up. I'd even seen a short item on the local news about phone cards, that the rates were so cheap some people were using them for all their long-distance calls. I might not know anyone in Denver, but I did know people who lived in other places, so the next time the phone rang, I answered it.

Click.

A minute later, it rang again. The Denver number showed on the phone.

These were obviously crank calls. Some piece of punk slime had learned these phone cards weren't traceable and was having fun. How was I supposed to concentrate on Wyatt with this almost constant ringing?

Easy.
I got up and turned off the ringer on both my bedroom phone and the phones downstairs. This way the punk slime would still be burning money and minutes, and I wouldn't know a thing about it.

The calls were so irritating that they had succeeded in breaking through my numb misery. I could think now, at least well enough to know this problem was too big for me to make any sort of decision tonight. I needed to think things through, one issue at a time.

Because writing things down helps
me
get things ordered in my mind, I got a notebook and pen and settled in bed with the notebook braced against my upraised knees. Wyatt had made a lot of accusations, both direct and indirect, and I wanted to think about them all.

I wrote down the numbers one through ten, and beside each number I wrote a bullet point, as I remembered them.

 

1. Nutty

2. Did I expect him to jump through
hoops,
and get
pissy
when he didn't?

3. Paranoid

4. Imaginary

5. High maintenance

6. Dumb-ass tricks

7. Did I call him for every little thing that popped into my head and expect him to check it out?

 

Try as I might, I couldn't think of anything for numbers eight, nine, and ten, so I crossed them out. Those seven were enough.

One item I knew was wrong. I hadn't been imagining anything. Someone driving a white Chevrolet had definitely been tailgating me today, had definitely tried to follow me, and had definitely been parked across the street from Great
Bods
. The ball cap, the sunglasses, the facial structure—I'd seen enough to know the person who had been parked waiting for me was the same person who had tried to follow me. Yesterday, a woman driving a white Chevrolet had definitely followed me to Great
Bods
. Whether or not the two drivers were one and the same was up in the air, but how else to explain how today's driver
had
known where I work?

Where my imagination bogged down was that I couldn't think of any reason why someone would be following me. I didn't carry large sums of money around. I hadn't robbed a bank and buried the money somewhere. I wasn't the contact for some spy, and, really, why would a spy be in western
North Carolina
anyway? Neither did I have a former lover or friend or relative who was a spy or a bank robber, and had escaped from prison, and the federal marshals had me staked out thinking that this former lover, friend, whatever, would try to contact me and… okay, this was stretching the limits even for Hollywood.

This was where my thinking parted company with Wyatt's, I realized. To him, there was no reason for anyone to follow me, ergo, I wasn't being followed. Where we differed was that I
knew
the driver behind me in the turn lane was also the driver who had been parked across the street, and had arrived ahead of me. I didn't have any proof, but proof and knowledge
aren't
the same thing.

It stood to reason that if I wasn't imagining things, then I also wasn't paranoid. I'd had my own doubts, because I couldn't see why anyone would be following me. But once I realized that I definitely had been followed then the reason didn't matter, at least as far as paranoia went—unless I was also delusional, in which case none of this mattered because it wasn't happening.

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