Authors: Laura Griffin
Tags: #Romance, #Mystery, #Suspense, #Thriller, #Contemporary
Austin, Texas
Nine months later
C
elie Wells dropped the fire extinguisher on the floor and gaped at her kitchen through the cloud of yellow dust. How come they never showed scenes like this on the Food Network?
Her lungs tickled. Coughing, she waved away the superfine particles that floated around her. God, she’d made a mess. And a racket. She should probably notify the building super about her little accident.
She eyed the disemboweled smoke detector on her kitchen floor and decided against it. If anyone from the building’s management saw her luxury unit in its current state, she could kiss her hefty security deposit good-bye. And her ceiling wasn’t permanently damaged, nothing a little spackle and touch-up paint couldn’t fix.
She picked up the portable phone, battling the urge to do what she normally did when disaster struck, which was call her mom. Virginia Wells was great in a crisis, and she would be delighted to learn that her domestically challenged daughter was baking, though she’d never approve of the reason.
But Celie wasn’t in the mood for a lecture, and that’s just what she’d get if she told her mother she’d set her kitchen on fire while baking goodies for the Bluebonnet House Easter party. It wasn’t that her mother disliked battered women’s shelters
per se
; she just didn’t believe it prudent for a thirty-one-year-old divorcee to work at one.
Celie wasn’t up for the debate tonight. Her self-esteem had taken a hit already when the cheerful, scrumptious bunny cake she’d lovingly created had morphed into a charred, inedible pancake inside her oven.
Throw together a festive Easter party in six simple steps!!
the glossy magazine had proclaimed from the check-out line. Celie’s radar should have been on red alert when she read step one:
Create a tasty bunny cake that doubles as a fun centerpiece!
Celie dumped the nontasty, nonfun bunny cake into the sink. Even her disposal rejected it.
Celie sighed. Her uselessness in the kitchen was just one more sign that the Suzie Homemaker gene had missed her. It was ironic, really, considering that her lifelong ambition had been to settle down, make a home, and raise a family.
She was being hormonal again.
She fetched the broom from the hall closet and began sweeping up the snowy mess all over her floor. She’d made it through this entire hellacious week without a meltdown, and she wouldn’t lose it now, not over a stupid rabbit cake. If Feenie were here right now, she’d be laughing, not on the verge of tears.
The phone rang. Celie glanced at the caller ID and confirmed for the umpteenth time that her best friend had mental telepathy.
“Hi, Feenie, what’s up?”
Feenie Juarez lived five hours away down in Mayfield, but she and Celie talked so much, she may as well have lived next door.
“Just calling to see how your meeting went. Did you get the director to recommend drug treatment for your kid?”
Feenie always called the children at Bluebonnet House “her kids,” and Celie hadn’t gotten around to mentioning that it bothered her.
“No.” Celie leaned her broom against the counter and took a clean mixing bowl out of the cabinet. “But I
did
get roped into being in charge of the Easter party tomorrow.”
“You’re kidding. Don’t tell me you have to cook.”
“You got it.” She started measuring ingredients again. Darn it, she was out of baking soda. She’d borrowed that first teaspoon from her neighbor across the hall, but she dreaded the thought of going back there. That woman could talk the ear off a cactus.
“Hey, you know anything about cake baking?” she asked hopefully. Feenie was no domestic diva, but she’d come a long way in the months since she’d been married. Just last week, she’d been making tamales for her husband.
“I know two things,” Feenie said. “Betty and Crocker.”
Celie sighed, and then explained what was going on, omitting the part about the four-foot flame that had leapt out of the oven and scorched her ceiling.
“I can’t believe you’re making something from a magazine,” Feenie said. “Are you masochistic or just nuts?”
She eyed the April issue of
Living
sitting open on her counter. The photograph showed a rabbit-shaped cake with jelly bean eyes, licorice whiskers, and fur made of shaved coconut, tinted pink of course. Her gaze shifted to the singed heap in her sink.
“A little of both,” she answered, glancing out the window. Even if she hadn’t been wearing threadbare plaid pajamas and waiting on a take-out delivery, she didn’t relish the thought of braving west Austin’s hilly streets in a driving rainstorm.
Especially at night. Celie steadfastly avoided going out alone after dark.
“The good news is I figured out where I went wrong,” she told Feenie. “The bad news is I don’t have any more baking soda, and I want to give this recipe another whirl. Is there something I can substitute?”
Feenie snorted. “You’re asking me for cooking tips?”
“Well, you mentioned the tamales, so I thought—”
“It was a nightmare. I was up to my elbows in corn husks all day, and the final product tasted like soggy Fritos. Next time Marco wants homemade Mexican food, he can hit up his mom.”
“Oh.” Celie felt deflated. In the morning her boss expected her to put on an Easter party for twenty-two kids, some of whom had never even received a birthday present. She wanted to do something special and memorable, but the prospects were growing dimmer by the minute. And the thought of picking up a package of generic, grocery-store cupcakes depressed her. Celie’s mother never would have resorted to such a thing.
“Get over it,” Feenie said, reading her mind. “The kids’ll be fine. Bring ’em some chocolate bunnies, and they’ll think you hung the moon.
“So what are you doing home, anyway?” Feenie asked. “I thought you had a hot date with that grad student.”
And there it was—the real reason for the call.
“I’d say ‘hot’ is an exaggeration,” Celie said. “Think Will Ferrell without the jokes.”
“Well, didn’t he ask you out for coffee tonight? What happened?”
Celie plopped down on the couch. “I told him we’d take a rain check. With this party tomorrow, I didn’t have time.”
Actually, she’d gotten cold feet. Celie hadn’t been on a date since before Google was invented, and she felt woefully out of touch with modern standards. What if this guy wanted more than coffee? What if, say, he wanted to come back to her apartment afterward and jump into bed together? Celie didn’t do recreational sex. Even when she’d been married, the recreation part had been pretty lacking.
“Celie.”
“Hmm?”
“That’s chickenshit, and you know it. Who doesn’t have time for coffee?”
Celie heard cooing on the other end of the phone and decided to change the subject. “Olivia’s awake?”
“Yeah.” Feenie’s tone mellowed. “We’re having one last feeding before bedtime. At least I hope it’s bedtime. Last night we were up every hour between midnight and six.”
No wonder Feenie sounded crabby. “You must be exhausted.”
“I’m okay. Liv’s just colicky, bless her little heart.”
Feenie could hit the kill zone of a paper silhouette from forty yards away with her .38, but motherhood had turned her into a complete softy. Celie had spent a few days down in South Texas after Olivia’s birth, and had actually caught Feenie getting misty-eyed over reruns of
Seventh Heaven
.
Celie felt a pang of envy, and then hated herself for it. Feenie deserved to be happy. She’d been to hell and back over the past few years.
Feenie must have sensed what the silence meant. “So, this cake thing. Here’s my advice: toss the Martha Stewart mag in the trash and stop by the grocery store on your way to work.”
The buzzer sounded, and Celie got up to grab her checkbook off the kitchen counter. “My dinner’s here. Lemme let you go.”
“I mean it, Celie. Pick up some Easter candy and quit torturing yourself. Those kids adore you, with or without cake.”
Celie punched the intercom button. “Yes?”
“Ms. Wells, we have a delivery down here—”
“Send him right up!” And then to Feenie, “All right, I’ll talk to you tomorrow.”
Celie got off the phone and wrote a check to Shanghai Garden. On her way to the door, she glanced in the bathroom mirror to make sure she looked halfway decent. She didn’t. Her dark blonde hair was dusted with flame retardant, and globs of batter decorated her pajama top. Plus, she wasn’t wearing a bra. She grabbed a denim jacket off the hook in the foyer and shrugged into it just as a knock sounded at the door. Out of habit, she patted her pocket to make sure she had her pepper spray handy before going to work on her numerous locks. As she flipped the first latch, she peered through the peephole, expecting to see a stranger in the hallway holding a carton of Chinese food.
But the man who stood there looked all too familiar.
Celie’s hands froze. She backed away from the door and darted a frantic glance around the apartment. Where had she put the phone? He knocked again, and then the doorknob rattled. God, was it possible he had a
key
? She took out her Mace.
“I hear you in there, Celie. Open up, okay? I just want to talk.”
Yeah, right. Did he think she was crazy? She held her Mace in a death grip as she bit her lip and tried to decide what to do.
“Celie, please?” The familiar voice made her chest tighten. Guilt, anger, regret—the emotions battled inside her.
“I just need to talk to you,” he repeated.
Guilt won out.
Instead of locating her phone and calling the police, she moved toward the door. Methodically, she undid all the locks until only one deadbolt remained. She waited a beat, giving herself one last chance to heed the warnings blaring in her head. Then she turned the key and pulled open the door.
Her ex-husband stood before her holding a drooping bouquet of flowers and a baseball cap. He wore a tattered UT windbreaker, sneakers, and wet jeans that clung to his gaunt frame. He desperately needed a haircut.
And, from the look of it, a methadone fix.
“Hello, Robert. Rumor has it you’re dead.”
R
obert glanced over his shoulder, then back at her. A smirk spread across his face as noticed the pepper spray clutched in her hand. “You’d like that, wouldn’t you?”
Sighing, she stepped aside to let him in. “Can’t say it hasn’t crossed my mind.”
He walked through the doorway and immediately created a puddle on her Saltillo tile floor.
“Nice place you got here. I thought students were supposed to be broke.”
“I’ve got a job. What is it you want?” she asked, trying to hide her jangled nerves. Not only was he
here
in her apartment when she hadn’t so much as lain eyes on him in nearly a year, but he’d been checking up on her, too. He’d found out she was enrolled at UT.
Celie had selected this overpriced apartment complex specifically for its security. It had a gated perimeter, enclosed parking, and a round-the-clock guard in the lobby. Didn’t do much good if she buzzed the crazies up herself.
Robert thrust the yellow carnations at her as he strode into the kitchen. The arrangement was tied together with cheap ribbon, and he hadn’t bothered to remove the price tag. “Special delivery.
“You got anything to eat around here?” He paused in front of the sink. “What’s all this?”
Unbelievable. He’d abandoned her, emptied their bank account, and fled the country. Now he shows up wanting a meal? Celie slammed the flowers onto the kitchen counter with a
thwack.
She wasn’t scared anymore, just royally pissed. She pocketed her pepper spray and crossed her arms over her chest.
“I should call the police, Robert. You’re a wanted man.”
He shot her a dismissive look as he opened a cabinet. “You won’t do that.”
“How do you know? You think you know anything about me anymore? You think you have a right to even
be
here?”
He tossed his grimy cap on the counter and began rummaging through her cupboard, knocking over soup cans and boxes of mac-n-cheese.
“What are you looking for?”
He ignored her question. “If you really wanted to rat me out, you would have done it after your PI came to visit me in Antigua.”
Celie bit her lip. He was right. She
had
had a chance to turn him in, but she hadn’t done it.
Instead, she’d divorced him.
After enduring weeks of grueling interviews with the FBI, constant surveillance, and phone taps, Celie had decided her marriage was undeniably over. Her seemingly innocuous husband, the mild-mannered accountant who opened doors for blue-haired ladies at church and didn’t have the nerve to send back an undercooked steak, had been laundering money for the Saledo drug cartel.
After overcoming her initial shock and inertia, Celie had asked Feenie’s husband for help. Marco Juarez, a talented private investigator who made a habit of steering clear of authorities, conducted a quiet search. He located Robert, informed him that Celie had filed for an ex parte divorce, and told him it would be ill-advised for him to contact Celie or her family ever again.
Knowing Marco, he hadn’t been too subtle about driving that point home.
So why was Robert standing here now, foraging through her pantry like a wet raccoon?
“You still get migraines?” he demanded. “You have any of those pills?”
Aha. He needed drugs. Marco had spared her the details of his visit with Robert, but he’d made a few key points: Robert was living the high life, partying hard, and availing himself of the services of numerous local women. It had also been Marco’s opinion that Robert was just a few months shy of a crash. Apparently, he’d been pretty strung out.
“Yes and no,” Celie said firmly.
“Huh?”
“Yes, I still get headaches, and no, I don’t have any meds for you.”
He scowled and opened another cabinet. Celie noticed the tremor in his hands. She had to get him out of here.
“Prenatal vitamins? You never give up, do you?” He plopped a fat plastic bottle on the counter. “Who’s the lucky guy this time?”
Okay, she’d had enough. She spotted the portable phone on the counter and lunged for it.
He grabbed her arm. “Oh, no, you don’t. We’re not done talking.”
“Then
talk
!”
His fingers bit into her skin, and she caught a whiff of beer. He’d been drinking, and clearly he was jonesing for something stronger. She’d have to ratchet things down a notch and
persuade
him to leave her apartment. She’d had enough experience with drug addicts at the Bluebonnet House to know they could be unpredictable and dangerous, especially when they needed something they didn’t have.
God, he looked awful. His skin was tinged yellow, and he hadn’t showered or combed his hair in days. He had a goatee now, too, which just emphasized his underfed junkie persona. Had she actually been
married
to this guy? For six
years
?
She took a deep breath and steeled herself for a conversation she really didn’t want to have. “All right,” she said. “What is it you want to talk about?”
He smiled wickedly. “Money, honey. What’d you think?”
Kate Kepler hated panty hose. Ditto for heels, purses, and any other accessory that made her feel like a wannabe Barbie doll. She steered her Volkswagen Beetle down the winding road, trying to strip off the too-tight nylons without having a wreck. The elastic waistband had been cutting into her skin all night, and the control top made her desperate for air. Finally a stoplight appeared, and Kate wrestled the damn things off.
“Free at last,” she muttered, taking her first real breath in hours.
Never again would she jump at an assignment before nailing down the details. When Irene, the political editor, had told Kate she needed someone to cover a campaign event, Kate had literally leapt to her feet in eagerness. The political beat at the
Austin Herald
was her heart’s desire, the coveted news job Kate had been pining for ever since her first journalism class. Reporting on democracy in action, scrutinizing the activities of elected officials, relaying critical information to the public—this was the work Kate fantasized about.
But tonight she’d done none of those things. Instead, she’d donned her only matching skirt and jacket, moussed up her brunette pixie cut, and—at Irene’s insistence, the old-fashioned witch—shimmied her body into a suffocating pair of panty hose. All so she could spend three hours rubbing elbows with snooty, overdressed socialites who had gathered at some minimansion in the hills to hear a state senator give a ten-minute speech. And what had been the inspiring content of the senator’s talk? Money, of course. And why wealthy Austinites should break out their checkbooks to make sure he got reelected.
The light turned green, and Kate gunned the engine. She had two hours to get back to the newsroom, write up tonight’s event, and transmit her copy to the night editor. Normally, she’d have no problem making the deadline, but rain was coming down in buckets, and she couldn’t ignore the speed limit like she usually did.
“Oh, come
on
!” she huffed as a blinking yellow light turned red in front of the fire station up ahead. She slid to a stop and waited while a man in a fluorescent yellow poncho helped a red fire engine reverse into the driveway. Between tonight’s lightning storm and the slick streets, Kate predicted the men of Station 33 would be summoned back into action in a matter of minutes.
Finally the light changed. Kate hit the accelerator and snaked her way up Ranch Road 2222, one of the steepest, curviest streets in town. As she neared the crest of a hill, she looked out over the precipice to her right, but the typically breathtaking view of Austin was obscured by clouds and sheets of rain.
Something appeared in the road. “Omigod!” she screamed, yanking the wheel left. The Beetle fishtailed and spun, skidding to a stop on the shoulder.
“What the hell?” She whipped her head around to see what she’d nearly run over. Something shiny. A hubcap? A bumper? In the darkness, it was impossible to see.
Her heart thudded in her chest along with the
swish-swish
of the wiper blades. She’d stopped just inches shy of the guardrail that prevented cars from careening over the cliff.
She looked through the windshield and saw a pair of red lights on the opposite shoulder. It was an SUV, its taillights tipped up at an odd angle.
Kate threw the Beetle into park and jumped out. It looked as if the driver had crossed the yellow line and slammed into the cliff. The wreck looked bad. Deadly, even. The left-front side was crumpled like an accordion, and the headlamp on the right stared straight ahead, spotlighting the striations in the limestone wall in front of it. The passenger door stood open, and Kate wondered whether someone had managed to walk clear of the wreckage.
Rain pelted her face as she dashed across the highway to check it out. The car turned out to be an Explorer, dark blue. She approached the open door and peered inside.
“Oh, God,” she muttered. A man was slumped over the steering wheel. “Are you okay?”
The question was absurd. Clearly he wasn’t okay. He probably wasn’t even alive, given the head-shaped indention in the windshield. Kate noticed the flaccid airbag. It had deployed, evidently, but hadn’t managed to protect him from the wall of rock he’d crashed into.
Kate heard an engine start and glanced up the hill in time to see a pair of taillights glowing red in the distance, not fifty yards up the shoulder from her Beetle. It was a pickup truck, and its interior light was on, illuminating two people in the cab.
“Hey!” she yelled. Had they witnessed the accident? Maybe they could help.
The passenger pulled the door shut, and the light switched off. Then the pickup’s back tires spun, kicking up a rooster tail of mud and gravel. Were they
leaving
?
“Hey, wait!” She waved frantically, but the truck disappeared over the crest.
She turned back to the SUV. The driver still wasn’t moving. He wore a windbreaker in that hideous UT orange and a baseball cap. She guessed he was young, maybe even a college student, but it was hard to tell because his face was concealed by blood-matted hair.
“Hey, can you hear me?” she yelled over the rain.
No answer.
Kate scrambled back across the highway, feeling pinpricks in the soles of her feet. She was barefoot, her heels tossed in the backseat along with her ridiculous panty hose. She yanked open the car door and snatched her cell phone from the drink holder.
No signal.
Kate sucked in a gasp as the message flashed on the screen. Of course. Ranch Road 2222 was carved out of the hills. She was standing beside a hundred-foot wall of limestone.
“Damn it to
hell
!” She stuffed the phone in the pocket of her rain-soaked suit and shifted her attention to the highway. On a normal night, this would be a well-traveled route. But with the rain…The driver was in bad shape. She couldn’t wait for a Good Samaritan.
The fire station.
“I’ll be right back, okay? Hold on!” she yelled across the road, hoping against hope that she wasn’t talking to a dead man.
“And did you get the license plate of the vehicle, ma’am?”
The rain had let up, and Kate sat shivering beneath a Mylar blanket on the hood of her Beetle. Across the highway, paramedics loaded the accident victim into the back of an ambulance. He wasn’t conscious, as far as Kate could tell, but she took the paramedics’ hurried movements as an indicator that he still had a chance.
“No,” Kate explained for the third time. “The truck was only there a few seconds.”
“And could you describe the passengers? Are you sure it was two of ’em?”
The tobacco-chewing cop was getting on Kate’s nerves. He’d called her “little lady” twice now and kept telling her she should get someone to look at her cuts.
Kate shrugged off the blanket and stood, trying not to wince as her feet made contact with the pavement. She’d stepped on some glass at the crash site, and chips were embedded in her soles. She probably did need first aid, but she’d be damned if she’d admit it to a patronizing redneck. “I told you. I couldn’t
see
them. It was dark and rainy. But they were parked at the top of the hill and then they took off. I’m pretty sure it was a hit-and-run.”
Officer Skoal looked her over skeptically and spat on the gravel. Kate shuddered. Chewing tobacco was high on her list of repulsive male habits.
“But you didn’t actually
witness
the accident?”
She fisted her hands at her sides. “No. I told you before. When I got here, the Explorer had already crashed.”
Kate glanced at her watch. She was so screwed. She had barely an hour to get back to the newsroom with her story, and she hadn’t had a chance to call the night editor yet about the accident. He’d probably want it for tomorrow’s metro section.
“I can’t believe he had a pulse,” Kate said, watching the ambulance pull away. Its siren was on, which she interpreted as a positive sign.
Officer Skoal turned and followed her gaze. “Barely. He was tore up pretty bad. Wasn’t wearin’ a seatbelt.”
Kate shuddered again and for a moment thought she might lose the cheese bites she’d eaten earlier.
At the senator’s cocktail party.
The one she was supposed to have written a story about more than an hour ago.
Kate watched as a fireman directed the intermittent traffic around the cones he’d set up in the lane nearest the wreck.
“Excuse me,” Kate said. “What did you say your name was again?”
The cop’s chest expanded. “Don Poole.”
“Officer Poole, did you see any indication that a dark-colored vehicle bumped into the back of that Explorer?”
He glanced at the SUV. Aided by the light of orange street flares, several workers were measuring skid marks and investigating the wreckage.
“Not so far,” Poole said.
Kate hadn’t seen anything either, but she’d thought she should at least ask. Several things about the accident scene didn’t make sense to her, starting with the fact that the passenger’s-side door had been open.
“What I
did
see was some cans of Bud in the front,” Poole continued. “Looks to me like this kid got liquored up and lost control of the car.”