Authors: Sandra Brown
Tags: #Women editors, #Islands, #revenge, #Fiction, #Romantic suspense novels, #Editors, #Psychological, #Georgia, #Authors and Publishers, #Suspense, #Novelists
"Why don't you say `damn the
financialsànd do just that? I could be taken."
He kissed her again, then purposefully set her away from him. "Sorely tempting, darling.
But duties call."
"I understand."
"Tonight? After dinner with Daniel?"
"You have a date." She kissed him quickly, then retrieved her raincoat and handbag. "I may stay late and try to clear my desk, so I probably won't change before dinner."
"Then we'll leave straight from here and ride over together. I'll have a car waiting downstairs at six-forty-five."
"See you then."
He blew her a kiss as she went out, then returned to his desk, confident that he had dodged a bullet. As always, Maris had been pacified with a little attention and affection. But her upset over the WorldView meeting was no small matter.
When he considered how close he'd come to being caught today, he wished to watch Morris Blume slowly and agonizingly bleed to death. Telling Maris about that meeting had obviously been Blume's way of reminding him that the deadline was fast approaching. Blume had seized an unplanned opportunity to make a power play, to remind him that WorldView was ultimately in charge of this transaction.
It had been a close call. It had cost him some valuable time. In the long run, however, the incident had caused no permanent damage.
Thank God he'd had the foresight to inform Daniel of that meeting with just this contingency in mind.
In the event that he or Maris had gotten wind of it--and the industry grapevine was notorious--he had taken the old man into his confidence, thereby throwing him off track.
The Matherlys weren't fools. But they were nowhere close to being as clever as he. He left absolutely nothing to chance. He planned meticulously. His schemes were long-range and therefore took a steely patience and perseverance that lesser individuals lacked.
###He relied on his instincts and his ######395
intelligence, but also on the best possible resource, the one that was virtually unfailing and always in full supply--human nature. Mind control was easy if you knew a person's likes, dislikes, secrets, weaknesses, fears.
He possessed a gift for getting people to go right where he wanted them to go and to do exactly what he wanted them to do. He was talented that way. He had an uncanny knack for manipulating people, for persuading them to make a decision they mistakenly thought was their own and to act on it. He had done it before. Most recently with Howard Bancroft. But he had honed this particular skill long before he had even heard of Howard Bancroft.
His desk phone rang. Before he could even speak, Cindy apologized for the interruption.
"I'm sorry, Mr. Reed, but Ms. Schuller has called five times and insists on being put through."
"Fine." Noah depressed the blinking button. "Hello, Nadia," he said breezily. "I understand you had quite an exciting lunch."
* * *
"Envy" Child. 12
Key West, Florida, 1986
Todd Grayson's first impression of Key West was a crushing disappointment.
Making the move had been nearly all he'd talked about for months. He'd thought of little else and had practically exed off the days of his calendar like a child counting down toward Christmas. He'd resented anything that interfered with his daydreaming and planning, including his final semester's studies.
His heart, mind, and soul had been focused singly on getting to his Floridian mecca.
But now, having arrived, having fulfilled a long-held dream, his first sight of it left him less than spiritually enraptured.
He likened the place to an old whore. It looked used, seedy, a little unhealthy, and a lot tired. Continuing the metaphor in his mind as though he were writing it down, Key West appeared to be more a common streetwalker who advertised her wares on a corner, rather than an exotic courtesan who enticed with whispered promises.
Once the tacky and rather pathetic attempts at glamour were stripped away, the town had little to offer
#and nothing to recommend her. She was cheap ###397
and common, and the only promise at which she hinted was one of dissipation.
His and Roark's plan had been to depart for Florida the afternoon of their college graduation.
They had everything packed and ready, their only chore before hitting the road being to return the caps and gowns in which they'd marched to "Pomp and Circumstance" and received their degrees.
They planned to caravan in their respective automobiles and had agreed to stop just before their arrival and toss a coin to determine which of them got to lead the way to Duval Street.
But fate intervened. Their well-laid plans were changed for them. A family obligation prevented Todd from leaving that day. Roark offered to postpone leaving, too, but after a rushed consultation, they agreed that he should go ahead and start looking for housing.
"I'll be the scout. By the time you get there, I'll have camp set up," Roark had said as they exchanged their dejected goodbyes. Roark's Toyota was packed to the gills. Every square inch of interior space had been utilized
to transport all that he owned in the world from the fraternity house where he had lived for the past three years to the next phase of his life.
"This sucks," Todd muttered.
"Big time. But hey, it's only a minor setback."
"Easy for you to say. It's not your setback.
While I'm languishing, you'll be down there writing your ass off."
"Hardly, man. I'll be busy scoping out things, finding us a place to live. Getting the telephone hooked up. That kinda shit. I won't get any serious writing done."
Todd knew that wasn't true. Roark always wrote--drunk or sober, tired or wired, sick or well. He wrote when he was happy and when he was sad. He wrote just as much when he was in a good mood as he did when he was pissed over something. He wrote when it was flowing easily and when the phrases simply would not come. He wrote no matter what. Any which way you looked at it, despite all his arguments to the contrary, this was giving him a head start, and Todd resented it like hell.
As Roark wedged himself into the driver's seat of his packed Toyota, he tried again to lift
#Todd's spirits. "I know this seems like a ##399
big deal now, but one day we'll barely remember it. You'll see."
As agreed, he had called Todd immediately upon his arrival in Key West. A few days later he phoned again to report that he had rented them an apartment. Todd barraged him with questions about it, but his answers were evasive, his descriptions vague.
After hanging up, Todd realized that all he really knew about their new place of residence was that it fit into their budget.
It was six weeks before Todd was able to set out for his relocation to the tip of the continent. The morning of his departure, as he left his childhood home for what would be the last time, he wasted no time on sentiment and never looked back. Instead, he equated it to a release from prison.
He drove almost twenty hours that first day and crossed the state line into Florida before pulling off at a roadside park and napping in the driver's seat of his car. He arrived in Key West at midafn the second day. Although not all his expectations were met upon his arrival, some were.
The air, for instance. It was warm and balmy.
No more running to an early class on a bitterly cold and windy morning ever again, thank you very much. The sun was hot. Palms and banana trees grew in abundance. Jimmy Buffett music was pervasive, as though it were secreted through the pores of the city.
As he navigated the tourist-clogged streets, following the rudimentary directions Roark had given him, his initial disappointment began to recede and was replaced by flurries of excitement. His mood was buoyed by the sights and sounds and smells.
But this flicker of encouragement didn't last.
It was snuffed out when he located his newly leased domicile. Dismayed, he checked the address twice, hoping to God he'd made a wrong turn.
Surely this was one of Roark's practical jokes.
Tall oleander bushes formed a unkempt hedge between the street and the shallow, weedy lawn in front of the building. He expected Roark to leap from between the blooming shrubs, grinning like a jackass and braying, "Man you oughta see your expression.
Looks like you've been hit in the face with a sack of buzzard shit."
###They would have a good laugh, then Roark ###401
would guide him to their actual address. Later they'd go out for a beer and relive the moment, and that would be the first of a thousand times they would retell the story, as they retold all their good stories when they wanted or needed a laugh.
Except the one about the incident with Professor Hadley. That was one story that neither retold. They never talked about it at all.
Todd parked his car at the crumbling curb and got out. He was reluctant even to step between the oleanders--which looked like shrubs on steroids--and follow the cracked sidewalk up to the door of the three-story building. The cinder-block exterior had been painted a flaming flamingo pink, as though the lurid hue would conceal the low-grade building material. Instead, the color accented the lack of quality.
A crack as wide as Todd's index finger ran through the wall of blocks from eaves to foundation.
A wild fern was growing out of it at one spot.
Hurricane shutters, the color of pea soup, were missing slats and seemed to be clinging to the building only out of fear of falling into the stagnant water that had collected around the foundation. As wide as a moat, it was a flourishing mosquito hatchery.
The frame of the aluminum screen door probably had once been rectangular, but it had been dented and bent so many times that it was grossly misshapen. A large part of the mesh had been peeled away, making it totally ineffectual against flying insects--or chameleons, Todd discovered when he opened the door and stepped into a dank vestibule with a concrete floor. Two of the green lizards were lounging on the interior wall.
One scampered away when Todd entered. The other puffed out his red throat as though in protest of the intrusion.
Six mailboxes, which would usually be found on the outside of a building, had been secured to the wall. Once his eyes had adjusted to the dimness, Todd read, to his distress, his and Roark's name on one of the boxes.
There were six apartments in all, two on each floor. Theirs was on the third. Stepping over a puddle of unidentifiable fluid, he started upstairs. When he reached the second-floor landing, he could hear __The Price Is _Right coming from a TV within one of the apartments. Otherwise the
#building was quiet. ##################403
By the time he reached the third floor, he was sweating. He cursed the same balminess he'd been extolling only minutes before as he'd driven through the streets with the car windows rolled down, ogling the bare-shouldered, bare-legged girls strolling the sidewalks.
Surely the individual apartments were air-conditioned, he thought as he tried the door knob on 3A. It was locked. He knocked
--three times in all before Roark answered. His suntanned face broke into a wide grin.
"Hey, you made it! An hour early."
"No air-conditioning? Are you fucking kidding me?"
The heat inside the apartment was, if anything, more stifling than the unventilated vestibule and staircase. And that was only one of the many amenities the apartment lacked. As Todd surveyed it, his misgivings were realized. And then some.
It was a rat hole, and that was putting it kindly. Actually, it would need to undergo a major renovation to reach the classification of a rat hole.
No self-respecting rat would be caught dead here.
An oscillating fan was blowing hot air around the matching beanbag chairs that served as living room furniture. It was also circulating the stench of leftover pizza that had congealed inside its box on the small table that, along with a two-burner hot plate and a sink, comprised the kitchen.
"I was in the shower." Indeed, Roark had answered the door sopping wet. His only nod toward modesty was a hand towel clutched around his hips.
"I thought maybe you'd gone homo," Todd said querulously.
"Come on, you gotta see this." Roark turned and headed toward an open door that led into another room.
Todd was so angry he could barely suck the stifling oxygen into his lungs. His deposit money had been squandered. If Roark had signed a lease on this place, then he could eat it for all Todd cared. He would flatly refuse to be responsible. Obviously his friend had suffered a mental lapse, or had lost their pooled money along the way, or had gotten it stolen, or
#something. ############################405
No rational person, no one who wasn't absolutely destitute and desperate, would voluntarily take shelter in this building. Being homeless had more stability than this, because unless the sky fell, a homeless person wouldn't have to fear being crushed to death by a loose plaster ceiling.
"Roark, damn you!" Todd struck out after him, shouting his name. "Roark! What the fuck?"
The door led into a small cubicle of a room with twin beds. One was groaning under the weight of Roark's belongings, most of which were still packed.
Articles of clothing had been pulled from the crates and were spilling out over the tops of them like entrails.
On the other, Roark had been sleeping. And working, apparently. A computer terminal and keyboard were on the bed itself, the tower and printer were on the floor beside it.
"A computer?" Todd exclaimed. "You got a _pc? When?" They had wanted word processors the way most collegiates covet TransAms. Roark had said nothing to him about buying a computer. "Is that what you spent our money on?"
"My uncle gave it to me for graduation,"
Roark called in a stage whisper. "Now will you shut up about that and get in here? Hurry."
Todd turned toward the opening where a door should have been. Instead, the detached door had been propped against the adjacent wall. Todd had a fleeting thought that it might have been placed there to provide the wall with additional support.