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323
feeling along the edge of the bunk, his eyes focused
on the entrance, where Audra could hear the COs
whispering to each other as they took their posi-
tions for containment and rescue.
Crap
, Audra had time to think.
This is exactly the
kind of incident that gives female COs a bad name—
Then the lights came on, flooding the room with
fluorescent light. Audra blinked, her eyes shifting
painfully with the abrupt adjustment from dark to
light. Then she saw it.
The gun.
Lying between her feet at the foot of the bunk,
tantalizingly close and yet so far away. Haines saw
it, too—it wasn’t two feet from where he knelt, and
an easy sweep of the wrist from being once again in
his hand. Audra heard the music of the great west-
ern classic,
High Noon
, playing in her ears as
Haines’s eyes locked on hers, his lips curving into
that trademark sneer of his. Then the two of them
made their move: Haines for the gun and Audra for
Haines.
Her right foot connected to his jaw, just as he
stretched out his fingers for the weapon. But her left
foot had already connected to that too, kicking it
like a soccer ball for a goal toward the bars.
“Bradshaw, weapon on the floor!” she shouted.
“Coming to—”
Haines’s fingers went around her throat, squeez-
ing, choking out any further hope of words, let
alone breath. Audra grabbed for his hands, but the
man leaned into the work now, forcing her down,
weakening her with every second that passed until
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Karyn Langhorne
Haines’s murderous face was replaced by bright
lights popping behind her eyeballs.
Then, as suddenly as they appeared, the lights
faded. The pressure on her windpipe eased, then
lifted completely. Audra coughed, dragging in air
like a drowning woman, blinking fast, trying to fo-
cus her mind, focus her thoughts enough to under-
stand what was happening now.
“Stupid bitch!” she heard Haines’s screaming.
“Fat, skinny, bright, dark—you still ain’t nothing
but a stupid, stupid—”
“Enough!” Bradshaw roared, and Audra could
finally see him, towering over Haines, who lay face-
down on the floor while two other officers hand-
cuffed him. Art held Audra’s service revolver in his
hand and his walkie-talkie in the other. He gave a
quick “all clear,” indicated that Haines would be
transferred to a holding cell in Solitary, then signed
off, looking at Audra, concern writ in capitals on his
face.
“You all right, Marks?” he asked almost gently.
A smart remark, that’s what the situation de-
manded. Something funny that would diffuse the
tension of violence circling the room like a buzzard
waiting for the kill. Audra knew the words were in-
side her somewhere, the perfect quip that would
make this another one of the stories COs swapped
around locker rooms and at shift change. Something
movie-star clever . . . something . . .
But the words wouldn’t come: not with Art Brad-
shaw looking at her with that mix of concern and
care. Not when all she wanted was to run into his
arms and tell him about Laine and her mother, and
DIARY OF AN UGLY DUCKLING
325
apologize and beg to be forgiven until she could stay
enclosed in those arms forever . . .
Audra rubbed her throat, which felt like it had
been caught in a vise, swallowed once and felt a
fresh pain twist her face into a wince. Tears sprang
to her eyes.
“No,” she whispered, shaking her head while
Art’s deep amber eyes bored into hers. “No . . . I’m
not all right . . .”
“I was afraid something like this might happen,” he
muttered in his low voice.
He had insisted on seeing her home, but she
wasn’t ready to face Edith. So he offered his place,
after the appropriate paperwork was filed. The su-
pervising sergeant placed Audra on administrative
leave until the whole encounter could be investi-
gated and dealt with, warning her with the words,
“I’d expect a call from Woodburn—and maybe even
the Warden—tomorrow.” They stopped once, for
breakfast from a nearby deli, but didn’t speak be-
yond the necessaries. The process of filing the inci-
dent report and realizing how close she’d come to
being a participant in a serious attempted prison
break had dried her tears. But now, sitting here in
his apartment, they were right beneath the surface
again.
“I screwed up,” Audra said as Art pulled their
eggs and toast out of the paper bag and settled their
Styrofoam containers on the coffee table in front
of her.
“Big time. You know the protocol. You’re sup-
posed to have backup, no matter what.”
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Karyn Langhorne
“I’m not talking about Haines,” Audra said
slowly. “I’m talking about with you.”
Art joined her on the couch, his eyes on the Styro-
foam. “With me?” he rumbled slowly. “What makes
you say that?”
“Oh, I don’t know,” Audra said with barely con-
cealed sarcasm. “You haven’t said a word to me
since the Reveal. Hiding out and changing your
shifts around and generally acting like I’ve got the
plague or something! It’s still me, Art. I’ve just got
long hair, a smaller nose and I’ve lost some weight—
and yes, I’m a little lighter—”
“A
little
lighter!” Art exclaimed, his voice a rum-
ble of distress. “Audra, you’re a completely different
woman!”
“So what? I didn’t exactly see you chasing after
the old Audra. You couldn’t even look me in the
face.” She shrugged. “Not that much has changed.
You can’t look me in the face now, either. Look if
you’re not interested, you’re not interested, but if
this is just because you don’t like my skin tone—”
“You look just like Esmeralda,” he muttered, turn-
ing away from her. “What did you do? Take a snap-
shot of her with you?”
“And if I did, so what?” Audra challenged. “What
if I deliberately set out to make myself over in the
form your ex-wife, a woman you pursued and sacri-
ficed for, a woman who you still follow with your
eyes when she leaves a room—”
“Only to make sure she’s not leaving with my
wallet.”
“That’s bull. You found her beautiful and you still
DIARY OF AN UGLY DUCKLING
327
do—admit it! And what’s so wrong with me want-
ing you to find me beautiful, too?”
“I did! I do!” he roared.
“You couldn’t even look me in the face—”
“Because of your eyes!” he shouted.
“My eyes?” Audra repeated, dumbfounded.
“What about my—”
“You’ve got the most beautiful eyes I’ve ever
seen,” he grumbled as though the admission was
hurting him. “It’s like you’re really seeing me. See-
ing through to the heart of me. It’s unnerving and
wonderful and . . .” He paced away from her. “Every
since that day in the day room, when your pants
ripped and the inmates were laughing . . .” His am-
ber eyes found hers. “You handled that with such
grace, and then when I saw your eyes and saw the
hurt”—he sighed—“I lost part of my heart then and
there. I knew I had to keep my head down or you’d
know . . . and I wasn’t ready for that. I had too much
other stuff to get rid of, to sort out . . .”
“Like Esmeralda?” Audra prompted.
“We’ll never be completely rid of her,” he mut-
tered. “But yeah, it had to be sorted out. She was liv-
ing with me at the time and I knew . . . I knew I’d
lose you forever if you found that out. And Penny
had to be prepped. When a child’s been used to the
sole attention of a parent, introducing someone new
can be tough. I wanted you to talk to Penny . . . get
to know her apart from being her dad’s girlfriend,
but that didn’t go right, did it?”
“No,” Audra agreed. “She thought you wanted
me to meet her to give her an ugly duckling pep
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Karyn Langhorne
talk,” Audra said. “And after seeing Esmeralda, so
did I.”
“This is just one miscommunication after an-
other,” he said ruefully. “Because by the time
Esmeralda left us, you were gone. Or at least you’d
made the decision to go. Off to California to be
made over. I wanted to stop you . . . but I thought it
was being selfish, so . . .” He trailed off. “But it
turned out to be a good thing. It was so much easier
then, because I could talk to you without having to
worry about those eyes of yours.”
“But when I came back . . .”
“When you came back and I saw those eyes I
loved in a face so like my ex-wife’s . . . a face I’ve
grown to hate”—he shook his head—“I’ve got to tell
you, it really freaked me out. That, and . . .” His am-
ber eyes pierced her face. “Why didn’t you tell me,
Audra? Why didn’t you tell me about the skin-tone
stuff? All the talking we’ve done over the past few
months . . . I can’t understand how you could keep
something so important from me.”
“I’m sorry,” Audra said. “I knew I should tell
you . . . but I was afraid.”
“Afraid? Of me?”
“A little,” Audra admitted. “Not because I was
trying to look like Esmeralda—I wasn’t. I just
wanted to look like the women in my family: Petra,
my mother. Only now I’ve met the other women in
my family, too . . .” She struggled to regain her fo-
cus. “I didn’t want you to think I was so shallow. I
didn’t want you to think I was some self-hating
black woman whose ideal of beauty was a skinny,
white girl. That’s not me. I may be a silly, self-hating
DIARY OF AN UGLY DUCKLING
329
black woman”—Audra’s eyes filled with unex-
pected tears—“but my ideal of beauty is my sister
Petra . . . and it always has been. I wish she were
here,” she whispered. “I really, really do.”
She felt Art Bradshaw’s arms encircle her, just as
the first tear slid down her cheeks.
“I know,” he murmured into the side of her neck.
“I’ve just got to get used to seeing those eyes in
that face. You’re a beautiful woman now, Audra. I
came out there—to California—ready to profess my
undying love like the hero in a classic Hollywood
drama.” He gave her a sad smile. “And then I real-
ized how unfair that was. I’ve got to get used to see-
ing how other men look at you. I’ve got to deal with
the fact that you’re a beautiful woman. And one day
you might decide you can do better than a guy like
me—”
Audra spun around to face him. “Never. I knew
from the very beginning you were my soul mate.
When you knew the difference between
Casablanca
and
Double Indemnity
.”
Art’s eyes twinkled.
“All we need now,” he purred in his sexiest voice.
“Is an anklet.”
Audra’s mouth went dry, her heart got loud. She
closed her eyes, knowing what he’d say next . . .
“Don’t you get it, Audra?” He shook her shoul-
ders gently. “It doesn’t matter to me what you look
like: light, dark, fat, thin. If you wear sweats or de-
signer clothes—I could care less. Women are so hard
on themselves about the way they look. I’ll be happy
as long as you’re still the woman who makes me
laugh. Who can be tough and tender at the same
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Karyn Langhorne
time. Who’s smart and loyal and full—just full to her
eyebrows with passion for everything she does—”
He stopped short. “Look, I know I’m not what
you’re looking for, so I guess there’s no real point to
this, but—”
“Oh, Art . . .” Audra said realizing in an instant
what had been right in front of her face all along.
“Yeah, I’m in love with you, Audra,” he gave a
hopeless little smile. “Have been from the day you
flipped Haines over your shoulder and threw him
against the wall.”
Audra lifted her hands to his face. “There’s a
speed limit in this state. Forty-five miles an hour.”
He lowered his lips toward hers. “How fast was I
going, Officer?”
“About ninety . . .” Audra murmured as their lips
met, the violins swelled and at long last, Art Brad-
shaw was in her arms, where he belonged.
It was hard to tell which of them was hungrier: Au-
dra wrapped her fingers around the man’s face,
pulling his lips closer to her own. She felt Art’s hands
encircle her waist, then slide to her hips, then lift her
off her feet, all the while his mouth demanding more
and more and more from hers.
“I’ve been dreaming nasty, nasty dreams about
you, boy,” Audra murmured when he broke the kiss
long enough for her to speak. “For months and
months . . .”
Art grinned. “Oh yeah?”
“So unless skinny girls totally turn you off so bad
you can’t get it up—”
“They don’t . . . or least not when their name is