Authors: Leslie Caine
you off the hit list you were worried about last night."
"Hooray for me," she said over her shoulder as the
door swung shut behind her.
Not five minutes had passed before someone threw
the door open so hard it banged against its stop. Matthew
stepped inside. His cheeks were red, his eyes blazing, and
he seemed to be staring directly at my neck as he came
toward me, breathing heavily with his hands balled into
fists.
I sat up and braced myself. I had no place to run. I
could flip my chair over and use it to shield me. Should I
try to call 911? Would it be too late when they arrived?
He shook a piece of paper, clenched in his fist, at me.
"I now have a police record, thanks to you, bitch!"
"What do you mean?"
"They arrested me in connection with stolen merchandise!"
"When?"
"Saturday!"
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"Morning? How did you deliver the desk to Burke?"
"I had Mike do it. My employee. And thanks so much
for your concern!"
"Your being under arrest at the time might have been
the best thing that's happened to you, Matthew. The desk
was booby-trapped with a grenade. This way you might
have an alibi."
"I know! The police grilled me about that Saturday
night! I had nothing to do with the damned grenade, and
no idea how the damn thing got there!"
He was leaning into my face close enough for me to
smell his sour breath.
"If that's--"
"It was put there after Mike delivered it. So I don't give
a rat's ass about the grenade! I just care about trying to
keep myself out of jail and my business afloat despite
these lame-ass charges!"
I mustered some courage and said, "This is my office,
Matthew. Get out of my face before I call the police on
you again!"
He snarled at me, but took a step back. "I'll get you for
this, Erin! You'll be sorry for reporting me!"
To my immense relief, he turned and left, slamming
the door again behind him.
c h a p t e r
2 3
sullivan arrived at the office half an hour later. By
then, all was quiet, no shrieking former clients
or furniture makers barging through the door to vent at
me. I had calmed down enough to decide that Matthew
was just voicing empty threats in my direction--if he'd
been the killer, his words would have served no purpose.
I'd vowed not to say a word to Steve about Jennifer
Fairfax's presence at the awards presentation Saturday
night. Or to ask if they'd spent Sunday together.
With his hair adorably tousled and his coat collar up,
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he looked ridiculously handsome. I sighed and shook my
head.
"What?" He removed his coat and hung it up. "Did I
miss an appointment already or something?"
"No, just some whining and shouting. Margot's upset
that the Sentinel ran a sidebar on the front page about her
private jet . . . not exactly a solar-powered vehicle. And
Matthew Hayes is probably going to get a heavy fine for
buying stolen merchandise. Personally, I doubt he'll do
jail time for that. In any case, he blames me."
"He should look in the mirror. He's the one who broke
the law."
"That's exactly what I told him."
"Good. Did he thank you for showing him the light?"
"Of course. And then we burst into a rousing rendition
of 'Amazing Grace' together."
He chuckled. "Sorry I missed that."
My heart was racing. Something was wrong with the
way Sullivan was acting. The tone of his voice was fine,
but he wasn't quite looking at me. He and I felt out of
step somehow, and it now seemed impossible to keep my
promise to myself.
"Guess you should have gotten up earlier, then," I
said.
He ignored my remark. He raked his fingers through
his hair. His eyes were glassy, and his hands were shaking
a little.
"What's the matter? Did Jennifer Fairfax keep you up
late last night?"
"No, Erin."
"Something's going on between you two, Steve. I saw
the way she was looking at you Saturday night."
He set his jaw and stared at the top of his desk.
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"Tell me something, Sullivan. How is it that you can
find yourself standing two feet away from a grenade that's
ready to explode, and calmly pick it up and throw it into
a pond, but you can't sit ten feet away from me and tell
me the truth about your feelings?"
"Because I'd rather lose my right arm than lose you."
He spoke through clenched teeth.
"Lose me? By telling me the truth?"
Sullivan winced, but otherwise remained motionless.
"Oh, God. I'm right about you and Jennifer." I sank
my head into my hands. "Just when I'd have given anything to be wrong."
"Erin. It was just--"
"Just what?!" I shouted. I was suddenly so irate that I
felt utterly out of control. "Just a mistake? Just a one-night
stand? Just sex? What are you going to say? That it was
meaningless and you were thinking of me the whole
time?"
"I was, actually," he answered in a choked voice. "Not
that it makes it any more forgivable."
"No, it doesn't." I got to my feet. This felt unreal. How
could this be happening? How could I feel stabbed in the
heart like this? Because I'd believed all along that he was
my soul mate. "You knew full well that I didn't want you
making love to Jennifer Fairfax and imagining it was me!
I wanted it to be me!"
"I know, Erin. That's what I want, too. I'd go back in
time and change it if--"
"Are you in love with her?"
"No!"
"It sure looks like she's in love with you, though."
"She thinks she is. But I told Jen Saturday night
that--"
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"Don't say her name! I know who you're talking
about!"
"It was a one-night stand. Right after Richard died.
When we ran into each other downtown. I was out of my
head, Erin. And I know it was wrong of me, but I was so
mad at you. For not . . . knowing things that I hadn't told
you. And there she was, all of a sudden, throwing herself
at me . . ."
"Yet you went on seeing her time after time, working
with her one-on-one as your private client! What's this
going to do to our business? To our word-of-mouth referrals? Don't you realize she'll tell her friends about this?"
"She won't, Erin. I told her before and afterwards that
it could never happen again, and she said it was fine.
That she, too, was a consenting adult. That she was just
looking for a good time, and that it meant nothing to her,
either."
"Here's a news flash, Sullivan. Women lie. It's less
painful than admitting to someone's face that he's just
broken your heart."
"Have you ever gotten your breath knocked out so bad
you can't get your breath again? And for a split second
you feel like you're going to die from the pain?"
"Yes, Sullivan, I have! That's what I'm feeling right
now!"
"That's the way I felt when I heard Richard died," he
continued, ignoring my remark. "When I felt like it was
my fault." The phone started to ring. I stared at it. "Don't
answer that," he said. He went over to the phone jack on
the wall and disconnected the wire.
I headed for the door. "I've got to go."
"Please, listen to me, Erin. These last few weeks . . .
months, even, I'd gotten so wrapped up in you, in us, it
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was all I could think about. Wanting to be with you, to
make love to you. Then Richard called out of the blue. It
just felt . . . connected somehow. I got this fantasy stuck in
my head where he'd be my best man at our wedding. You
two would hit it off, and we'd introduce him to Audrey,
and the four of us would be these fast friends, for the rest
of our lives. It was crazy and stupid. Then, just when I realize it's actually happening, that you want me, too,
Richard calls, totally whacked-out. And you two meet,
and you hate each other. Then he gets murdered right in
front of me, and it was too damned stupid to take him to
the emergency room. And--what's-her-name comes on
to me like gangbusters. I was in a state of shock. Couldn't
figure out how it all went so wrong. I started thinking . . .
maybe I was wrong about you and me."
Although I'd listened to his long confession as best I
could, part of me was silently arguing with his every statement. "I've endured my own share of rough times, damn
it all! You don't see me hopping into the sack with the
first client who comes on to me!" I grabbed my coat.
"Erin, please." He came toward me. "I don't deserve
you. I know that. Don't let this be the last straw for you.
I'm begging you to forgive me. I hope I can make you understand. It was a mistake that I regret. But I told you the
truth. All of it. I thought that's what you wanted."
"I wanted the truth to be different."
"So did I. So do I." He stood in front of me, blocking
my path to the door. "Right after the awards ceremony I
told . . . her that I was in love with you. I love you, Erin."
"What am I supposed to say to that now? That you've
got one hell of a way of showing it?"
He looked stricken. "How about that you understand
that I made a mistake? And that you can find it in your
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heart to forgive me someday? Can't you focus on the fact
that I love you? Not on the screwup I made when I was
out of my head?"
"Not right now, I sure can't. This is all too much to
sort out at once, Sullivan."
"I understand. All I can do now is apologize and
promise nothing like this will ever happen again."
"I have to go." I left, and this time, he didn't try to
stop me.
I ran to my van, got behind the wheel and sobbed for a
few minutes, but afterwards I didn't feel any better. I
needed to talk to a girlfriend right now. And although I
had several closer friends, it was Linda Delgardio whose
advice I most craved. Maybe because her relationship
with her husband was the one that I most admired of all
my friends.
She answered her cell phone by saying, "Hi, Erin.
What's up?"
"Are you on duty right now?" My voice sounded utterly pathetic to my own ears.
"Not for another two hours." Her voice was rife with
alarm. "What's wrong? Please tell me you're not being
held at gunpoint, so I can keep breathing."
"No, I'm fine. Rather, I'm not in physical danger. It's
about Sullivan. We broke up. He slept with a client."
Silence. "Was this right after his friend was killed?"
"Are you psychic, or something? He didn't talk about
that during a police interview, did he?"
"No, Erin. It's just . . . something that's been known to
happen. A reaction to being confronted with one's own
mortality. But never mind that now. Do you want to
come over?"
"No, I want to know what to do! I want to be somebody
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else . . . anybody but me! He just said he loved me, but
now I can't believe him. We agreed a while ago that we
weren't going to see anybody else. I thought I could trust
him, but I obviously can't. I'm feeling so . . . I don't even
know how to describe it. Like I'm getting pulled every
which way."
Linda was silent for several seconds. "Where are you
right now?" she asked gently.
"In my van. In my parking space."
"If he came after you right now, what would you do?"
"I don't know."
"Do you love him?"
"I don't want to answer that question. The man just
told me he cheated on me!"
"I thought you hadn't even slept with him yet."
"I haven't. Why? Should that make a difference?"
"It would to me."
I reconsidered. It wasn't as if we were engaged, or married. I wanted an operator's guide to this situation. Or just
a step-by-step guide to surviving the next five minutes.
"What would you do if you were me?"
"That depends. Do I still get to be a cop, and carry a
loaded service revolver?"
"No, you're an interior designer. And he's your business partner. Linda, he said all the right things that I've
been dying for him to say, but at the worst possible time.
He broke my heart." I sighed. "I can't take this. It's just
not worth the pain."
"Sure it is."
"Jim's never cheated on you, though, has he?"
"Not since we were engaged, no, but we've had plenty
of fights and other people who caught his eye, or caught
mine. Plenty of times over the years one of has done
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something stupid or claimed that this was the last straw,
that it's over between us. But we just . . . muddle through
them somehow. If you really want my advice, Erin, it's to
go treat yourself to a massage, or whatever helps you relax. Me, I'd go to a shooting range, but that probably