threw this at you," she said of her shapely body. "I offered
you no-strings-attached, mindless boffing, and
you turned me down. So either you've gone gay,
you're hung up on another woman, or I've lost all my
sex appeal and might just as well kill myself tonight.
Now which is it?"
"Well, I haven't gone gay, and you haven't lost all
your sex appeal."
She didn't make any of the triumphant exclamations
she was entitled to. No "I knew it!" No "You
can't fool me, Hammond Cross!" None of that.
Instead she responded to his solemnity, saying quietly,
"I thought so. When did you meet her?"
"Recently."
"A new armpiece? Or is she special?"
Hammond stared at her a moment, debating
whether or not to try lying. Before his affair with
Steffi, he had dated many women but never stayed
with one for long. Around Charleston, he was known
as an eligible bachelor with family money and plenty
of promise. Scores of single women boldly sought his
company. Potential mothers-in-law considered him
an excellent catch.
His own mother was constantly arranging introductions
to her friends' daughters and nieces. "She's
a lovely young woman from a wonderful family."
"Her people are from Georgia. They're into timber.
Or maybe it's tires. Something like that." "She's simply
a precious girl. I think you two would have a lot
in common." A flip answer would probably convince
Davee that this amounted to nothing more than that.
But Davee was his oldest friend, and he was sick
of lies and lying. He lowered himself to the edge of
the chaise and clasped his hands between his spread
knees. His shoulders slumped forward slightly.
"Jesus," she said as she picked up her drink. "Is it
as bad as all that?"
"She's not an armpiece. About the other, whether
or not she could be special, I don't know."
"Too soon to tell?"
"Too complicated."
"She's married?"
"No."
"Then why is it complicated?"
"More than complicated. Impossible."
"I don't understand."
"I can't talk about it, Davee." He spoke more
sharply than he had intended, but his tone must have
alerted her to how sensitive the subject was.
In any case, she backed down. "Okay. But if you
need a friend ..."
"Thanks." He reached for her hand, pushed back
the bangles, and kissed the inside of her wrist. Then,
as his finger absently traced the pattern etched into
one of the bracelets, he asked, "What gave me
away?"
"The way you're acting."
He dropped her hand. "How am I acting?"
"Like there's a line for mandatory castration and
you're next." She moved to the cart across the room
and mixed a fresh drink. "The minute I saw you at
the funeral yesterday I knew something was wrong.
Career-wise--thanks in part to me--things are going
great for you. So I figured you were suffering from a
heart problem."
"It bothers me that I'm so transparent."
"Relax. Probably no one else has noticed. Besides
knowing you so well, I recognize the symptoms. That
particular brand of misery can only spell lowe."
He raised his eyebrows. "I don't believe it."
"Hmm."
"You never told me."
"It ended badly. I was just coming off of it that
summer we were in the wedding together. A wedding,"
she snorted. "Just the environment I needed to
make me thoroughly miserable. That's why I acted
like such a royal bitch at all the prenuptial parties.
That's also why I needed a friend that night. A very
intimate friend," she said with a soft smile, which he
returned. "Our little escapade in the swimming pool
restored my self-confidence."
"Glad to have been of service."
"You're damn right you were."
Gradually Hammond's smile receded. "I never
would have guessed, Davee. You covered it well.
What happened?"
"We met at the university. He was a preacher's
kid. Can you believe it? Me with a preacher's kid. He
was a real gentleman. Smart. Sensitive. Didn't treat
me like a tramp, and, hard as you may find this to believe,
I didn't act like one with him."
She finished her drink and poured another. "But I
had, of course. By the time I met him, I had whored
my way across campus, through one dormitory, up one side of fraternity row and down the other. I'd
even had a fling with one of my instructors.
"Miraculously he was blissfully unaware of my
reputation. Some of my former partners thought it
would be a great joke to tell him." She moved to the
window and stared through the louvers of the shutters.
"He was an excellent student. Dean's list. Very
straight. He didn't party much. For all those reasons,
he wasn't well liked. The guys enjoyed humiliating
him, figured it was his comeuppance for being so superior.
They didn't spare a single detail. They even had some pictures from a party where I was one of
the favors.
"When he confronted me with all they'd told him,
I was devastated that he knew the truth about me. I
pleaded with him to forgive me. To try and understand.
To believe that I had changed when I met him.
But he refused even to listen." She leaned forward,
resting her forehead on the shutter. "That same night,
to spite me, he slept with another girl. And she got
pregnant."
She remained so still that even her bracelets didn't
jangle. "From a moral and religious standpoint, abortion
was out of the question. Nor would it ever have
occurred to him to do other than what was right. So
he married the girl. As strange as it may seem, Hammond,
that's when I loved him most. I had so wanted
to have his children."
He waited until he was certain that she was finished,
until she moved again, and that was to raise her
glass to her lips. "Have you kept track of him?"
"Yes."
"Is he still married?"
"No."
"Do you ever see him?"
She turned away from the window and looked at
him. "Yesterday. At Lute's funeral. He was seated
near the back with Steffi Mundell. He's still not very
well liked."
When Hammond pulled all the clues together, his
jaw dropped open. Soundlessly his lips formed the
name "Rory Smilow?
She gave a wry laugh. "There's no accounting for
taste, is there?"
Hammond pushed his hand up through his hair.
"No wonder he hated Lute so much. First for his sister.
Then you."
"Well, actually it was the other way around. Lute's
marriage to Margaret didn't come until years later. I
remember when Rory moved to Charleston to accept
the job with the police department. I read about it in
the newspaper. I wanted to contact him then, but my
pride wouldn't let me.
"The woman he married had died giving birth to
their stillborn baby." She paused to reflect on the
irony of that. "His parents were dead, so responsibility
for Margaret had fallen on him. He moved her
here with him. She got a clerical job in the courthouse.
County records, plats, things like that. That's
where she met Lute. It wouldn't surprise me if the romance
developed after she did him a favor, like fudging
a property line or something."
"It wouldn't surprise me, either," Hammond remarked.
"I've heard the marriage was a nightmare."
"Margaret was emotionally fragile. She was certainly
no match for a bastard like Lute." She finished
her drink. "On occasion I had got good and
tanked, swallowed my pride, and accidentally-on-purpose
put myself in Rory's path. He always looked
right through me, as though we'd never known one
another. That hurt, Hammond. It also pissed me off.
"So after Margaret's suicide, I went after Lute and didn't stop phasing him until he married me. Rory
had broken my heart. So I tried to break his by marrying
the man he most despised." She added ruefully,
"Revenge has a way of kicking the avenger in the ass,
doesn't it?"
"I'm sorry, Davee."
"Ah, well, don't be," she said with a breeziness
that Hammond knew was false. "I've still got my
looks. This," she said, holding up her highball glass,
"didn't destroy Mama's beauty. She's as gorgeous as
ever, so I'm counting on good genes to ward off the
ill effects of demon alcohol. I've got lots of money.
As soon as Lute's will is probated, I'll have lots
more. Speaking of which ..."
She walked to an antique desk and opened the
slender lap drawer. "This fucking stroll down memory
lane almost made me forget. I found this while
going through some papers in Lute's desk. It's in his
handwriting." She handed him a pale green Post-It
note. "That's last Saturday's date, isn't it?"
Hammond's vision blurred around the notation.
"Lute wrote down your name and a five o'clock
time. Looks to me like an appointment. Which I'm
sure you would rather no one knew about."
He looked across at her. "It's not what you think."
She laughed. "Hammond, honey, I'd sooner believe
in cellulite-reducing creams than I would believe
you capable of committing murder. I don't
know what it signifies and don't want to know. I just
thought you should have it."
He stared at the second notation on the small
square of paper. "He wrote down another time. Six
o'clock. No name. Any ideas?"
"None. There's nothing on his official day planner
about any appointments on Saturday, with you or
anyone else."
Obviously Lute had intended to meet with someone
else that afternoon, following his appointment
with him. Who? he wondered. Thoughtfully, he
folded the small piece of paper and put it in his
pocket. "Rightfully, you should have given this to
Smilow."
"When have you ever known me to do the right
thing?" Her mischievous smile turned wistful. "I
learned the hard way that it's a waste of time to try
and hurt Rory. I don't believe he can be hurt." Then
her smile disappeared altogether. "But I don't feel
compelled to do him any favors, either."
CHAPTER
25
He was here with me last night." Ellen Rogers had
to shout to make herself heard above the music. "We
sat at that table for hours and ordered several rounds
of drinks. You must remember."
The bartender, a hunky young man with a sleek
ponytail and a silver hoop in his eyebrow, looked her
over in a way that said she was remarkably forgettable.
"I see lots of people. Night after night. I don't
remember all their faces. They sorta run together in
my head, you know?"
A leggy blonde in a tight black dress undulated
onto the neighboring barstool. The bartender reached
across Ellen to light the blonde's cigarette. "What are
you having?"
"What's good?"
He propped his elbows on the bar and leaned
closer to her. "That all depends on what you're after."
"Excuse me," Ellen interrupted. She wound up
having to tap the bartender on the shoulder to regain
his attention. "If he comes back--the guy I was with
last night--call me. Okay?"
With little hope it would do any good, she pushed
a slip of paper toward him. "Here's the number of my
hotel."
"Okay."
She watched him pocket the telephone number,
knowing that his dry cleaner would probably find it
in a couple of days. She had entered the club with the
proud, purposeful stride of a crusader. She was a
woman on a mission.
This morning, after the initial shock had worn off
and she'd had time to pull herself together, she had
determined to track down the lying son of a bitch and
turn him over to the police.
When darkness fell, she had set out with the intention
of canvassing every nightclub in Charleston if
that's what it took to find and expose him. This character
had hustling down to an art. Looking back, she
realized that he had been too smooth for her to have
been his first victim. Nor would she be his last. Feeling
heady and confident after last night's success, her
seducer would be on the prowl again tonight.
But now as she left the club, her zeal was already
on the wane. She acknowledged how foolhardy it
was to be traipsing around Charleston looking for a
liar and thief she knew only as Eddie, which in all
likelihood was an assumed name.
The new patent leather pumps she had bought especially
for this vacation trip were pinching her toes,
reducing her march to a hobble. She was hungry, but
each time she had tried to eat today, her stomach had
grown queasy from last night's liquor consumption
and this morning's self-loathing.
Not that she could afford to eat at any decent
restaurants, she reminded herself sourly. She had notified
the credit card companies of the theft, but it
would be days before she received replacement