Notes on Cole
1.
I'm convinced that robbery wasn't legit. He had to have been tailing Bethanie to know she'd be there on Freebie Friday, which means he'd been tailing her for a while. A guy in love enough to do that is crazy. I know crazy and he isn't it.
2.
He dresses all
GQ
, picks fancy restaurants, but doesn't have a job or come from money. That spells gold digger to me.
3.
He shows up just in time to rescue Bethanie from some thug waiting in her parking space, and with just a look, can scare this guy off. Cole is charming and cute, but not the least bit intimidating. So how does he stare down a thug and run off hungry people waiting for BOGO tamales?
4.
And can I get a last name, please?
I figure that last one shouldn't be so hard to get if I can convince Bethanie to talk to me.
Â
The next morning, I'm up early even though I got close to zero sleep thinking about my list of clues. The plan is to at least get a full name for Cole before the weekend is over. What kind of guy won't give his girl a last name? I'm also dying to know what they do all day when Bethanie is supposed to be in school and working for some charity afterward. I imagine it's a whole lot of shopping with her money, but even for Bethanie that has to get old after a while. Since Bethanie won't talk to me at school, I figure I'll go to her house. She could blow me off there, too, but I'd have her parents' backup because they want me to talk to her.
I do a repeat of last Sunday and get there when I know the Larsens are still in bed. Luckily Lana hadn't come in from last night's stakeout when I left, though I'll have to make up some story about where I've been so early on a Sunday morning if I don't make it back before she gets in. I can only hope her stakeout yielded a bunch of arrests that will keep her busy filing reports all morning.
After the two buses it takes me to get to Cherry Creek, I'm awake enough to realize I'm so early that it's almost rude. The frost has not even begun to melt off the grass and most driveways still have a newspaper lying at the end of them. I try to slow my gait, but it's so cold I really just want to be in someone's house with a cup of coffee warming my hands. Just as I round the curve to Bethanie's street, I see a car turning off, it heading toward me. A few seconds later, another car turns off and heads the same way the first car does. That guy is going to get so busted for having an obstructed view if a cop sees himâhe didn't scrape the frost off the windows and I'm pretty sure he can't see much. He must be in one hell of a hurry to get to work if he couldn't bother to scrape off more than a peephole, though I doubt anyone in this neighborhood works weekends.
The fact that at least two people on Bethanie's street are awake makes me think I'm not being so rude after all, and when I get to her house, I see Mr. Larsen pulling out of the driveway. He waves to me and keeps on driving. Maybe I have the rich and idle all wrong and they aren't as idle as I think. That must mean Bethanie and her mother are awake, too. When I have to ring the bell about ten times, I realize that isn't the case.
“Are you insane?” Bethanie says when the door finally opens.
“No, but since I need to talk to you and you're barely in school these daysâand you avoid me when you areâI figured I'd come here when I knew you'd be home.”
“Go home,” she says, actually closing the door in my face, but not before I put my hand up to stop it.
“You can't give me a few minutes?”
“For what?”
“To apologize.”
Now she seems interested. Enough to invite me in and fix me a cup of instant coffee when I ask for something to help me warm up. Instant coffee is just wrong on so many levels, but I'm freezing so I relax my standards.
“So you want to apologize for thinking my boyfriend is a gold digger out to rob me blind?”
“I could have been more receptive about a relationship that is obviously making you so happy,” I say, really trying not to lie while still regaining her confidence. It works, because she seems to interpret it as an apology.
“Good, because I want your opinion about something,” she says, joining me at the breakfast bar with her own cup of bad coffee. “How do you get a guy to be interested?”
“If I knew the answer to that I'd be home a lot less often on weekends.”
“You got Marco's interest.”
“Yeah, but I don't know how to hold on to it.” Or I'm not willing toâI haven't yet decided exactly what my problem is when it comes to Marco.
“Not me. I wouldn't have that problem if I had the guy I wanted, and I sure wouldn't let my parents keep us apart.”
“Waitâwhy are you even asking? Is there someone else besides Cole?” I say, hoping I don't sound too excited about that.
“No, of course not. I'm talking about Cole.”
“It seems like you've already got him pretty interested. He wants to be with you practically 24/7 as it is.”
“That's just it. All the time we've spent together, we have never even kissed.”
I must look incredulous to her, because I am.
“See, you didn't know what you were talking about, suggesting statutory ... I can't even say it. That's the farthest thing from where Cole and I are.”
Wow, neither of us are in danger of getting jobs as romance advice columnists. Bethanie doesn't know how to get the boy she wants, and I don't know what to do with the boy I have.
“Okay, so what do you do all that time when you're skipping class?”
“Drive around, get something to eat, see movies, go to the museum. A couple of times we went to bet on the dogs.”
“Preppie Cole doesn't seem the dog track type.”
“He must have realized that, too, because both times we only stayed a few minutes, just walked around and never even placed a bet. He said I was underage, and he wouldn't place one for me. I swear, I might as well be hanging out with my parents.”
Oh,
now
he thinks she's underage. And somehow I can't imagine her parents at a museum.
“That's kind of weird,” I say. “I mean, a guy who wants to be with you but not be
with
you. Isn't that what they're all trying to get every second of the day?”
“I thought so. But he
is
a gentleman. I guess I should appreciate that.”
This revelation just puts a whole new kink in the mystery. I still think Cole wants her money, but why not get the girl, too? Especially when Bethanie seems more than a little interested in moving the relationship in that direction.
“Good, I'm glad to see you two girls talking again, even if it's at a god-awful hour,” Mrs. Larsen says, coming into the kitchen. “Where's your father?”
“How should I know?” Bethanie says with a whole lot of attitude.
“The only reason I'm up this early is because he woke me when he got out of bed. He must be around here somewhere,” Mrs. Larsen says.
“I saw him leaving this morning; that's why I figured y'all were up when I rang the bell,” I say.
“Where was he going?” asks Mrs. Larsen.
“I didn't talk to him. I just saw him pulling out of your garage. Seemed like he was in a hurry, just like the other two cars I saw turning off your street just before he left.”
Mrs. Larsen goes over to a window that looks onto the backyard, not the front of the house, like she thinks I'm lying and her husband is really back there.
“Have you seen Tiny?” she asks, still scanning the backyard like Tiny might be hiding back there along with Mr. Larsen.
“No, Mom. Um, Chanti and I were trying to have a conversation.”
“Mr. Larsen was driving himself,” I offer in the way of Tiny's whereabouts.
“What? Oh, right. Mr. Larsen usually drives himself. Not to worry,” she says as though I might, although she looks plenty worried herself. “I don't want to interrupt you girls, especially if Chantal is trying to talk some sense into you.”
“Talk some sense into me?”
“Your father don't like this personâColeâyou've been hanging out with.”
“I never told you his name,” Bethanie says, looking at me like she wants to kill me. “You told them. You've been talking to
them
?”
Before I can salvage the situation, Mrs. Larsen says, “She agrees with us that this Cole is up to no good. I think ...”
Bethanie doesn't wait to hear what her mother thinks. She leaves the kitchen, not even bothering to pick up her bar stool when she knocks it over getting up so fast. I'm pretty sure she'll never trust me again, and I wouldn't blame her.