| (1999)
Finally Gail has everything she wanted: an engagement ring, a new
law practice, and a new house--then someone starts threatening her
ten-year-old daughter, Karen.
Like
anyone else with a telephone, Gail Connor had received her share
of crank calls, but none where the person on the other end had disguised
his voice, called her a bitch, and said she was going to die. The
night she received such a call, it was more annoying than frightening.
At thirty-four, trained as a litigating attorney, she was not the
sort of woman to be easily rattled. And she thought she knew who
had done it-the kid across the street. He was fourteen, and earlier
she had yelled at him to stay out of her backyard. He'd been smoking
in the gazebo. Even worse, Karen and two of her friends had been
out there with him, and Karen was still under eleven years old.
Later on that night, Gail
wondered if her temper might have been the result of so many changes
in so sort a time. Divorcing one man, falling in love with another.
Giving up a partnership to open her own practice. And moving into
an old house that was making her crazy. She and Karen had lived
in it less
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"Gripping
. . . dark . . . a riveting thriller."
—Publishers Weekly
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than
a month. They were not used to high-beamed ceilings and heavy plaster
walls, to narrow stairs that twisted to a second floor, or to an
immense gas stove that hissed, then popped into flame. The toilets
gurgled; the air conditioner wheezed. Warped windows stuck halfway
open. Gail would have to go outside and shove while Karen jiggled
the crank. During heavy rains they put towels on the sills. Gail
told Karen they were having an adventure. Karen crossed her arms
and rolled her eyes. Gail's mother had warned against uprooting
the child so abruptly from her old neighborhood. Gail could see
the point-in hindsight-but didn't know what could be done about
it now. To make Karen feel better, she had allowed her to bring
home a kitten from the animal shelter, a little black-and-white
female named Missy. So far the creature had thrown up twice on Gail's
bedroom rug and peed on one of Anthony's best jackets.
They had planned to move
in after the wedding to a home freshly painted and patched, with
a new kitchen and refinished oak floors. Karen would get to design
her own bedroom. But the week after Gail put their old house on
the market, expecting to have months till the closing, A Brazilian
couple offered full price-if they could close right away. Not wanting
to lose the deal, Gail called a moving company and had all her and
Karen's belongings hauled from their modern three-two in South Miami
to the 1927 coral rock and stucco relic in Coconut Grove, where
air plants sprouted from the leaky tile roof and the bushes had
not been pruned in decades.
She had assumed it would
take only two or three weeks, with little disruption to her schedule.
She had been wrong. The workers, few of whom spoke English, showed
up when they showed up, and charged extortionate rates for off hours.
The painting couldn't be done until the carpenter was finished and
the carpenter had to wait for the plumber. The wedding was only
two months away, and Gail imagined the worst: home from their honeymoon,
Anthony sweeping her into his arms, stepping over the threshold.
They plunge between the open floor joists.
The night Gail received
the telephone call wishing her dead was a Thursday, the middle of
June. Officially Anthony was still living in his own house on Key
Biscayne, fifteen miles away, but he would often come by after work.
On this particular night he had stopped by a gourmet grocery. He
opened the aluminum takeout pan and showed it to Karen, who was
sitting backward in a kitchen chair with her chin on crossed arms.
"Look. Lasagna."
"Yuck."
"¿Qué
pasa, mamita?"
"I hate mushrooms."
"Karen!" Gail
turned around with a hand on her hip. "If you can't be polite,
then go upstairs until you can."
"Fine. I'll starve
to death."
Gail called out to her
retreating back. "And take a bath. I'll come check on you in
a while."
"Don't bother. I'll
be dead." Karen scooped up her kitten, which was playing with
a toy lizard under the table. Heavy-soled sneakers thudded up the
stairs, and a few seconds later a door slammed.
"Sorry about that,"
Gail said. She jerked on a drawer to free it, then scooped silverware
out of the tray. The cabinets were fake walnut, and the appliances
were avocado green. It would all go during remodeling-if they could
ever decide what to put in its place. She gave the silverware to
Anthony-three sets in case Karen repented.
He was still frowning
at the empty archway that led to the hall, which seconds later had
contained a skinny girl with long brown hair and jeans so baggy
they dragged on the floor. "What's the matter with Karen?"
Is she mad at me for a reason that I fail to grasp?"
"No, it's me. I
told her she couldn't go outside and play-excuse me, go hang out-with
Jennifer and Lindsay."
"Que
va. It's almost dark." He glanced at the ceiling. A stereo
had come on, playing just below the volume at which someone might
go upstairs and ask that it be turned down.
"Just
ignore her," Gail said. She's almost eleven, and I've heard
that girls go through this when they hit puberty. It's a natural
phase of development. Supposedly."
Half
to himself, Anthony muttered, "Ah, yes. The obnoxious phase."
Gail
made a little face at him, then put the lasagna in the oven to warm
and went about making the salad. Rip open a plastic bag of mixed
baby greens, throw in a few walnuts, some cherry tomatoes, and crumbled
Gorgonzola. Toss with bottled vinaigrette-not the cheap kind, the
five-dollar brand from Chef Alan. She and every woman lawyer she
knew had a repertoire of recipes that could produce a meal in ten
minutes flat. It helped if somebody else brought the main course.
Anthony
had taken two glasses from the cabinet. "What would you like
to drink?"
"Just
wine. Anything stronger will put me to sleep, and I have a case
to work on." Her wineglasses were lost in the boxes stacked
in the living room. He poured white wine into one short glass and
dark rum over ice into another.
"I
would have gone over the file at my office, but the handyman called.
It cost me a hundred dollars, but at least he fixed the sink. There
was a cat toy stuck in the drain, don't ask me how."
Anthony
touched the rim of his glass to hers. "Salud."
She
gratefully took a swallow and leaned over to give him a quick kiss.
"Thanks. And hello, mi cielo, whom I haven't seen in two days.
I wonder. Is your secretary telling the truth when she says she
can't reach you? Why am I always the one to let the repairmen in?"
"Well,
you live here." Anthony leaned against the counter next to
her, sipping his drink. He had gracefully masculine hands. There
was ring on his last finger-garnet set in gold.
"That
is not the right answer." Gail pulled on his loosened tie.
Patterned silk, which matched the ring, which went with the monogrammed
initials on the pocket of his custom-made shirt. "I bet you
don't even know what a P-trap is, do you?"
"Of
course. I keep them in my nightstand."
She
narrowed her eyes. "Hopeless."
He
set down his drink and kissed her. His soft, full mouth was cool
from the ice, tangy-sweet from alcohol. Both hands went under her
shirt to caress bare skin. She had not worn a bra. He quickly discovered
that fact and pinned her against the counter.
Stopping
to catch her breath, she said, "Stay tonight. Say yes."
She left a trail of light kisses across his cheek. "yes. yes.
I promise you many exotic delights . . ."
"Should
we? If you have work to do, and with Karen in her phase-I'll stay
if you want, but is it wise?"
"Probably
not. You make me very unwise. I'm crazy about you. Absolutely wacko."
He
curled her fingers over his hand and kissed them. The movement made
her engagement ring sparkle, even in the kitchen's buzzing fluorescent
light. The stone was perfect, a man's diamond he had worn on his
own hand, reset for her. His eyes lifted to focus on hers. "Gail,
are you going to tell me what happened in court today or not?"
Since
morning the topic had been in and out of her consciousness like
an intermittent toothache. She reached for her wine. "The judge
is going to appoint a psychologist to interview Karen. I haven't
told her about it yet."
"What
do you mean, a psychologist? The motion was about visitation."
"Yes,
well, they raised the issue anyway, after the judge said that Dave
getting Karen five afternoons a week was a bit much. They said I've
made Karen afraid to admit she wants to live with her father. Afraid?
What in God's name do they think I do, beat her? What really galls
me is that Dave doesn't consider how this is affecting Karen. Never
mind what she's going through, he wants to get back at me. Our marriage
failed, and it's all my fault, but I got the house and the kid.
Well, excuse me. It was Dave who wanted out. Then he took off on
his damned sailboat for six months. Lived with some girl in San
Juan. He hardly ever wrote Karen. I can't tell you the times she
cried over him and I had to make up some story. 'Yes, sweetie, of
course your daddy loves you, but there's no post office on the islands.'
And now he's back and I'm such a bad mother they need a psychologist
to determine the extent of the damage." Gail let her arms fall
to her sides. "Sorry for ranting."
She
could feel the heat building from Anthony's direction. "Come
on. This isn't about you. Dave is angry with me. You're just bonus
points."
A
lift of Anthony's brows said he doubted that. "Karen is old
enough to decide where she wants to live, don't you think? Why doesn't
the judge leave it up to her?"
"Karen
won't make a decision. She doesn't want to hurt either of us, so
she won't say anything."
"You
haven't asked?"
"I'd
rather not put pressure on her."
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