Kiss in the Dark (9 page)

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Authors: Marcia Lynn McClure

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #General, #Contemporary

BOOK: Kiss in the Dark
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“I-I do know,” Boston admitted. “But…but she hasn’t mentioned in years…literally years! Did she talk to you about it?”

“Are you kidding?” he chuckled. “Danielle? Talk to me about her worries, concerns, or problems? Hell no! I mean, heck no. She doesn’t like to talk to me about anything she thinks will cause me to worry about her.”

“Then how did you know?” Boston couldn’t help but ask. He was so intriguing—the way he’d read Steph—and Boston. Now, he’d obviously read Danielle.

He shrugged. “I don’t know. I can just tell,” he began. “Every time you guys mention his name, she goes pale as a ghost. And it’s in the way she doesn’t talk about him too. Furthermore, I think the feeling is mutual.”

“You do?” Boston asked. He had her entirely intrigued. How could he possibly know if Dempsey had deeper feelings than mere friendship for Danielle?

“Yeah,” he confirmed. “He came to the door about fifteen minutes before you did. He dropped off invitations to some party he’s having in a couple of weeks. He shook my hand—looked at me like he was picking up some girl for prom and I was her dad.” He raised a daring, very suspicious eyebrow. “Then he asked me if I wanted to hoop it up with his team Tuesday and Thursday nights.” He paused, waiting for her response.

“Well…well, Dempsey’s very nice…and way, way friendly. He probably just wants to be your friend,” she said.

“Guys don’t ask other guys to join their city league basketball teams without seeing what they’ll bring to the court first,” he explained. “Naw…we got us a case of secret love…on both sides of the fence.”

“Do you have, like, ESP or something? Are you psychic?” Boston asked, and she was serious. In the short time she’d known him, Vance Nathaniel’s ability to read people and situations was uncanny.

“No,” he answered. “I just pay attention to people—their body language, their eyes, what’s hidden behind the front everybody puts up.” He looked at her and grinned. “Like right now, you’re sitting there wondering if I’m for real…or if Danielle’s just been talking to me a lot since I moved in. You’re also wondering if every time I see you from now on…will I wonder if you’re wearing leopard print underwear.” He looked away from her and to the TV.

“Will you?” she asked. He’d been spot-on with his guess as to what she was thinking—if it were actually just a good guess and not some weird psychic ability he possessed.

“Definitely,” he answered.

Boston blushed and felt the need to change the subject back to Danielle and Dempsey. “Why does she keep talking about the Harrison Ford guy at work then? If she likes Dempsey, why does she still date other people?”

“My guess is she’s given up,” he answered. “For whatever reason—and you might know more about it than me—she just doesn’t think it could ever be. So she’s into the bow tie guy at work as a second choice.”

“But then, why doesn’t Dempsey do something? If you’re right about them—”
“Oh, I’m right about them,” he interrupted.
“Then why doesn’t Dempsey do something? He’s really, really outgoing, confident, successful.”

“Same reason Danielle sits on her heels,” he said, looking to her again. “Fear and lack of faith. I mean, how long have you all been friends? Since that summer you guys all worked for Santa or whatever, right?”

“Yeah…”

“Would you want to have an affair of the heart with Dempsey, have it go awry, and screw up all those years you guys have had together?” It was a very valid question.

“Probably not,” she admitted. “But I’m not in love with Dempsey either. If I was in love with him…”
“You’d be just as afraid as Danielle is,” he finished for her.
Boston nodded. “Probably more. I am the weenie of the group,” she said.

“Not the weenie…just the kindest soul.” He paused and smiled at her with inexplicable understanding. “I don’t think you’re an idiot just because your roommate is, you know. And I don’t think you’re weak for dealing with her for so long. It just shows your strength of character where tolerance and kindness are concerned.”

“Okay, what do you want?” she giggled. “Such flattery. Surely you want something.”

He smiled. “Nope. Just calling ’em like I seem ’em.”

Boston’s eyes narrowed as she studied him. He intrigued her thoroughly. She wondered how his mind worked—wished she had the gift of perceptiveness he seemed to possess so that she could better read him at that moment.

However, she remembered something about herself then—a gift of her own when it came to people. Holding out her hand, she asked, “Can I rummage through your wallet?”

“What?” he asked, smiling.

She wiggled her fingers, a gesture he should give her his wallet. “I can turn the tables a little on you if you let me rifle through your wallet,” she explained. “Come on. Or do you keep stuff in there you don’t want someone seeing?”

His eyes narrowed with amused daring as he reached into the right pocket at the knee of his khakis. Removing his wallet, he handed it to her.

“You’re a wallet packrat, first of all,” she began.

“How do you know that?” he asked.

She smiled. The tables were turning now. “Because you carry it in the pocket at the side of your shorts instead of in your back pocket.” She bounced the wallet in her hand once or twice and added, “It’s too bulky and crammed with stuff to fit against your butt comfortably.”

He arched his eyebrows, his entire expression displaying the fact she was correct in her assessment and that he was impressed.

“A single-fold wallet,” she said as she unfolded the well-worn, black cow leather. “Another sign of a wallet packrat.”

Vance chuckled, leaned back on the sofa, and tucked his hands behind his head as if waiting to be entertained. The muscles in his biceps bulged ridiculously, but Boston endeavored not to notice.

“Hmm,” she said, letting her fingers count the cash in the cash pocket of his wallet. “Five, ten, twenty…one, two, three. Thirty-eight dollars in small bills.”

“Means I don’t make a good income?” he prodded.

“Means you don’t waste a lot of cash…that you’re not self-indulgent.” One by one, she lifted his cards out of the credit card section. “One debit card, a rewards card from Cinnabon, one American Express, and one Visa credit card.”

“So?” he urged her.

“You’re frugal. You keep the debit card in front of all the rest, then the Cinnabon rewards card, then the American Express, and the credit card last. It means you avoid debt, using first your liquid asset, cash…then the card that has to be paid off every month so you stay within your budget. Then the last line of defense, the credit card, is just for emergency.” Boston giggled as she pulled out the Cinnabon rewards card and showed it to him, as if he didn’t know it was there. “And you have a Cinnabon problem…because you only need one more punch to get a free cinnamon roll!”

“Very good!” Vance chuckled. “I don’t know that I was even aware of the whole order of the cards in there. But now that you point it out…you’re right.”

“Of course I am,” she teased.

Boston removed his driver’s license. She studied it for a long time, thinking how great the photo of Vance was on it. Most people looked awful on their driver’s license, but not Vance R. Nathaniel.

“Middle name begins with R, huh?” She asked. “What does it stand for?”
Vance grinned. “Romance.”
“Vance Romance?” Boston asked. She rolled her eyes and breathed, “Oh, brother. What does it really stand for?”
“Rockwell,” he answered. “It’s a family name.”

“Hmm.” Boston replaced the license and returned her attention to something she’d seen in the cash pocket—several store receipts folded together. Carefully, she unfolded them. “A receipt for two pair of khaki cargo pants, two three-piece business suits, and two men’s fashion ties.” She looked at him and smiled. “You’re getting ready to start your new job, but you want to make sure you’re ready to look the part of business professional or Steve Irwin…in case you need to wrestle a croc.”

Vance’s smile faded a little, and he shook his head. “I loved that dude,” he said.

Boston remembered how saddened she was by the sudden death of the charismatic crocodile hunter several years before. She thought someone with animal and zoo connections and interests probably felt the loss even more.

“Next receipt,” she said, going to the next receipt. “Ooo! Sofa, loveseat, and reclining chair. Brown leather too. Delivered to 104 Gem Lane, Oklahoma City.”

“And?”

“You have good taste in furniture,” she giggled. “Samuel’s is a good store, with well-made furniture at a good price. You’re getting ready to move into your new house and figured you’d need some furniture. Still, it wasn’t delivered here. Storage unit?”

Vance shook his head. “Nope. The people I bought the house from said I could store everything in the garage. That’s where all my stuff is…including that furniture.”

“That was nice,” Boston said. “And you kept the receipt until you’re sure it fits and looks nice and things.” She went to the next receipt. “Hmm. Wal-Mart! Now
this
will be telling,” she giggled.

Vance chuckled and continued to watch her.
“Milk, orange juice, ice cream, gum. I’ll guess that would be Juicy Fruit gum and that it’s in your pocket too.”
He nodded, and his smile broadened.
“Tomatoes, bacon, bread, lettuce—dated last week—at which point you had yourself a BLT for dinner.”
“Okay, now you’re creeping me out,” he laughed.

“Well, join the club, Vance Romance,” she teased. “Now for photos.” There were very few photos in Vance wallet. “You’re not public with your wallet,” she began.

“What?” he asked.

“It’s yours, and you don’t expect a lot of people to be looking through it. Therefore, the photos in here are for you only…important to only you.” She pointed to a picture of a little girl about five or six. “This is Samantha…yours and Danielle’s niece. Danielle has one too. I’m guessing little Samantha gave it to you herself.”

Vance nodded.

Boston flipped to the next photo—a picture of Danielle and Vance no doubt at a football game. “You and Danielle, probably in high school…since I haven’t heard of her cheerleading or you playing football of recent.”

Again Vance nodded.

The next photo was of Danielle at perhaps fourteen or fifteen, a school photo Boston had seen before. “Danielle as a freshman or sophomore.” She went to the next photo. “Danielle again, sophomore or freshman…though I’ve never seen this one. Hmmm.” She went on. “And this is your mom and dad. Is this recent?” she asked. She looked to Vance to find he was no longer looking at her but had returned his attention to the TV. His smile had faded.

“Yep,” was all he said. He’d lost interest in her tell-all game—or, more likely, just lost interest in her.

“Well,” Boston said, closing the wallet.

“What? That’s it?” he said, looking at her again. She noted he grinned at her, but the sparkle of mischief that had been in his eyes only moments before had dulled.

“What do you mean?” she asked.
He shook his head, clicking his tongue as if scolding her.
“You see,” he began. “Your attention span is too short. You didn’t finish your evaluation.”
“You mean I missed something?” she asked.
“Exactly,” he said, taking the wallet from her.

“But what?” she said, reaching for it again. She’d only stopped looking through his wallet because she thought he’d grown bored with her.

“Too late,” he said, shoving the wallet into the side pocket of his cargo khakis again. “You can’t let your focus wander, Boston. That’s the trick to reading people.”

“Hey, you guys!” Danielle asked as she pushed open the door and walked into the apartment.
“Hi, Danielle,” Boston greeted.
“What are you guys up to?” Danielle asked, tossing her purse into the little chair near the front door.

“Oh, just making out and stuff,” Vance said as his attention remained affixed to the two Humane Society officers removing a pit bull from an abandoned house in Detroit.

“Oh, okay…cool,” Danielle said, rolling her eyes as Boston’s mouth gaped open in astonishment. “I guess Vance is proving to be more fun than Steph, huh, Bost?”

“He’s only kidding, Danielle,” Boston said, fairly leaping off the couch and walking toward Danielle.
Danielle giggled. “Sure he is.”
Boston smiled as she hugged her friend. “How was your day?” she asked.
“Don’t ask,” Danielle sighed.
“Same here.”
“Your pal Dempsey brought over some stuff for you, Danny,” Vance called from his seat on the couch. “I put it on the table.”

“Oh, really?” Danielle said, nearly dashing to the table. She hurriedly flipped through the papers and envelopes Dempsey had left for her until she found the envelope with her name on it. Fairly ripping it open, Boston watched as a smile spread across Danielle’s face—a resplendent, elated smile. In fact, her entire face seemed to radiate joy suddenly.

“A Dempsey party, Bost!” Danielle exclaimed. “Oh my heck, I’m so excited!”
“When is it?” Boston asked, delighted by Danielle’s perfect glee.
“Not this Saturday but the next one. Oh my heck, Vance! Dempsey throws the best parties.”

“Does he now?” Vance said. He turned and looked over his shoulder, winking at Boston conspiratorially. “Well, he invited me too. So I guess I’ll have to see what all the excitement is about, now won’t I?”

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