Текст книги "The Beauty of Lies"
Автор книги: Brinda Berry
сообщить о нарушении
Текущая страница: 8 (всего у книги 14 страниц)
13
One Fell Swoop
Leo
Harper’s foot slips from the ladder rung, and she reaches out to grab something to hold. It’s no use. She tumbles to the side away from the bookshelf and hits the floor with a sickening pop. The floor is painted concrete with no rugs in front of the bookshelf. The sound of her body crashing against the surface causes me to flinch. It’s like watching one of those car crash commercials on television in slow motion.
My muscles have trouble taking directions from my brain. I drop the bags of takeout and run to her. “God, Harper. Don’t move.”
She’s flat on her back but sits up, obviously determined not to do as I say. “I’m OK.”
Postcards are strewn for at least ten feet surrounding us. I kneel into the space beside her. “Careful. Is anything bruised? Broken?”
Her eyes water and she looks away, sucking in air.
“I knew you were hurt. I’m going to take you to the emergency room.”
“No! I’m fine.” She begins picking up postcards in her immediate reach.
“Leave them.” I put my arms around her body. “You scared the fuck out of me.”
“I’m sorry.” She begins picking up cards again.
I run my fingers along the back of her head to feel for any bumps. Nothing. No blood. I allow myself to calm down. “I didn’t mean to startle you when I came in.”
She must’ve been looking for a book and grabbed one of my storage boxes by mistake. “Baby, you’re shaking. Are you positive you’re OK?” I draw back.
“Yes, yes.” Her voice has a strained edge. “I shouldn’t have been in your things.”
I frown at her expression. Something is off and I can’t put for my finger on her mood. Maybe the fall frightened her as much as it did me. “Come on.” I hold out a hand to help her up.
“Aren’t you mad?”
“No. I mean, I’m just glad you didn’t kill yourself when you hit this floor.”
Harper continues picking up the postcards. She wasn’t looking for a book; does she know what the cards are? I still her hands and take the cards from her. “I’ve got this,” I say. “Let’s get you to the sofa.”
“I’m fine.” Her voice is now soft and regretful. She has to be embarrassed, being caught snooping.
Why do I feel bad for her? Normally, I’d be pissed. Only Josie and Dane know I’m Mr. Expose. And now Harper has glimpsed a part of my life that I’ve vowed to keep a secret.
I put my arm around Harper and kiss her head. “Come on. Let’s see if the lasagna survived. I dropped our dinner when you did the sky dive from my ladder.”
Harper shrugs me off and goes to the bag. “I’m OK. I’ll get the food out.”
I can’t figure out what’s wrong with her. “OK. I’ll pick up this.”
All my storage boxes contain three months of postcards. I carefully log all the cards by scanning them as an image into the computer, but I can’t let myself throw the physical ones away. I save them like some nostalgic hoarder.
It takes me a few minutes to pick up the cards. Although I tag them and put them in a special order when I store the cards, I don’t have time for that now. I have a moody woman on my hands and I’m confused. Harper is not that type.
She stares at me, her body as tense as I’ve never seen it.
“What’s wrong, babe?”
“Can we talk about the postcards? About Mr. Expose?”
My eyes widen. She’s called out the name of my blog and had time to read one of the cards. How long had she been on the ladder, reading?
“It’s for a website I run.”
“Is everything you do a big secret?”
I’m taken off-guard by her tone. Why do I suddenly need to defend myself? It reminds me of the way Tori always quizzed me about how I paid my bills and how much I made. “That’s all you need to know. I’d appreciate not talking about it anymore,” I say coolly. “And you should forget you saw the postcards.”
“It’s not like you’re running a porn site.” She’s breathing hard. “I want to talk about it.”
Why the hell is she so angry? “But it is confidential and my business. People trust me. If I were a psychiatrist, you wouldn’t expect me to divulge client records.”
She squeezes her eyes closed. “I knew you were Mr. Expose before today.”
Her sudden admission feels all wrong, twisting in my gut like a soured meal. I search my brain for some time I’ve slipped and said something. “Why haven’t you said anything? I need to know what’s going on.”
“I sent you a card. I asked that you return it and you wouldn’t. I knew who you were when I moved into my apartment.” She opens her eyes. “I’ve lied to you. I want you to know that I’m sorry. I’m really sorry.”
“Fuck, Harper. I don’t get it.” But I do get it. I thought she’d been following me and that things were too convenient. Why would a postcard spur all that? And how can I look at her without wondering what else is a lie?
She’s pale and I have to stop myself from going to her. I want to comfort her. Comfort myself. But I’ve been with a woman who lied to me too many times and this shift in my world with Harper cuts me.
She is a liar.
I inhale slowly and make my way to the sofa. “I don’t know you at all, do I? You sent me emails. You were the one who kept writing me, over and over. Right?”
She nods and twists her hands. “I should’ve told you in the beginning. But this thing with us isn’t a lie. I…um… I didn’t know I was going to feel like I do about you.”
I rub my hands over my face. I feel hot, and cold. “I’ve been honest with you. I have this thing about people lying to me.”
“Honest? You aren’t honest about what you do with that blog. I’ve hinted around, tried to bring it up and you won’t talk about it. Is that honest?”
My temper paws at the gate of my self-control. “Don’t try to turn this on me. That’s work. It’s confidential. My pen name’s a secret because I don’t tell people about it. It’s not a personal thing between you and me.”
“What about Tori?”
“What about her?”
“Were you with her while she was married?”
It’s a simple question. Yet the answer is very complicated. I pause and attempt to give her an answer, but I’m angry now. How has this conversation turned to my ex? How did she know this about Tori?
Harper raises an eyebrow. “No answer? I only need a yes or no. I don’t want any explanation.”
“That’s convenient.”
“Yes or no.” She stands with her arms folded over her chest.
She doesn’t want an explanation. My pulse thrums in my ears. Tori was a liar. Harper is a liar. I want to reverse the past hour and go back to before. I don’t want to know she’s exactly like Tori. “Yes.”
Harper doesn’t meet my gaze. Her eyes are filled with tears and I’m pissed that I want to stop her pain. At the same time, I want her to hurt like she’s hurting me.
She walks out my door and quietly closes it.
I don’t leave my apartment for two days. Josie drops in and attempts to quiz me about what happened between Harper and me, but I won’t engage. I guess that Josie is the one who told Harper the details of my relationship with Tori.
Josie can be my ally, but she also interferes. When she discovers Harper’s lies, she’ll get all up in arms like she did over Tori. It’s more than I can stand right now. My sister threatened to do Tori physical harm more than once and they weren’t even friends. Josie’s like a gangster that way.
Sometimes the twin thing is just too much. Too stifling. Too invasive.
A knock at my door sends prickles of dread through me. I peer through the peephole, then open the door wide. Dane strolls in with Gunner, a friend from my school days and one I haven’t seen lately. It’d be hard to turn them away.
Dane takes a seat on my sofa and Gunner grabs a barstool.
“What’s going on?” I turn the television volume down.
“Thinking about going fishing. You up for it?”
I shake my head. “I don’t think so. I have too much to do.”
Gunner looks around my apartment. “Nice place.”
“Thanks. You like your new one?” I ask him. “I haven’t seen you much since you moved back.”
“Yeah. It’s taken me a while to get everything set up with the business. I haven’t had time to do anything since I started it. I’ve got a day off.” Gunner’s a guy who works harder than anyone I know with his own landscaping business. When he moved to Arkansas as a teen, I thought I’d seen the last of him.
I’m glad to see him back. A guy can never have too many good friends. My mind wanders to Harper and how I miss her. Is she sitting across the hall alone and thinking about me? But no. I glance at the clock and realize she’s at work.
Dane puts his feet up on the trunk in front of him. “How are you and Harper doing? Have you seen her lately?”
Silence.
This isn’t the type of conversations we usually have. He’s treading on serious ground. “You talked to Josie?”
He doesn’t even pretend. “She mentioned it.”
“She send you over here?” I give him a look. He and my sister should not be joining forces against me.
“Nah. I came on my own. For the fishing.” He glances at Gunner. “Right, Gun?”
“Bullshit.” I smile. It’s fake and hard-as-hell to execute since I haven’t felt anything close to a smile since Harper walked out my door.
Gunner leans back against the bar and stretches his legs to the floor. He’s a tall guy—still built like the star football player he was when I went to school with him. The landscaping business agrees with him. “Women. They make life a helluva lot tougher than it should be.”
Dane nods, as if he has women problems. The only problem he has is running from his feelings for my sister. All other women throw themselves at him. Owning a bar has its advantages and disadvantages. Drunk, lonely women could fall into both categories.
He puts his feet down and leans up with elbows on his knees. “Tori came in last night.”
There’s a reason he’s telling me this. Tori still visits Dastardly’s on a regular basis, so her appearance isn’t news. “Oh yeah?” I ask.
“She said you two might get back together and that Harper is causing both of you problems.” Dane examines his cuticles and picks at one.
“Man. You know that’s a lie.” I take a deep breath.
“Uh huh. Sure. But she’s loud. She said some pretty bad things about what she’d like to do to Harper.” Dane glances up.
“She is insane.” I usually don’t exaggerate or moan and bitch about Tori, but she’s a burr in my side that I’m ready to be rid of. I should’ve tried harder to cut her out. She’s like a festering wound. The thought that she’d hurt Harper makes me want to do her physical harm.
Not that I’d hit a woman. But Tori needs her mouth taped shut.
“She knows Harper is your neighbor.” Dane nods as if he’s telling me something new.
“Yeah. She came by once when Harper was here.”
Gunner picks up a flyer on my bar and studies it. Poor guy is ready to be on with his fishing day.
Dane shakes his head. “I wonder if she’s bothered Harper. Tori asked me fifty questions about her. I didn’t know most of the answers and even if I did, I wouldn’t tell Tori.”
“I don’t think so.” I flash back to Harper telling Tori that she’s my neighbor. “She was asking last night?”
“Um hm.” Dane looks at the door as if he can see through it and across the hall. “Just thought you’d want to know in case she’s harassing Harper.”
“Thanks man.” I’ll make sure Tori stays away from her.
“So. What do you say we go hit the river? The water’s not too low and you need this. Come on. Gun’s here and I need to work on my tan. You’re looking pretty pasty yourself.”
I stare at the windows and think about Harper. If I sit here any longer, I’ll be tempted to go next door and demand we talk through whatever has happened between us and what she wrote on that postcard.
Two nights ago, I picked up the postcard mess and organized them as I always do. Each postcard tagged with an inventory number I created. It’s a way to match it to the image file on my computer. A way to match a postcard from ‘Betrayed Woman’ to the image file.
Harper took more than my heart across the hall. She stole that fucking postcard.
14
Perfect Storm
Harper
From: angelgirl@me.com
To: isabellawarren@iconic.net
Isabella,
I wonder if my compass in life has been destroyed and I’ll never understand true north. What I mean is, will I know when love is real? I can’t understand what’s happened to me in the last four years. How could I be so wrong about someone? So blind to the false things he portrayed?
I hope you find true north someday. I hope we both do.
I hope Charley is doing well. Of course I don’t mind if she emails me. It’s sweet that she wants to be my friend since you are. Also, I know I don’t have to say this, but I’d never reveal our true connection to her. I’m glad I don’t have to make the decision about telling her about her father. I don’t envy you in that.
Hugs,
Harper
My bad luck hasn’t run its course. I’m not certain how Tori discovered where I worked, but she has. Seeing her leave Le Frou Frou’s surprises me. She isn’t carrying a dog out. Maybe she’s dropping one off.
I don’t say a word to her as we pass each other on the sidewalk outside. She’s wearing shorts and platform heels that probably cause traffic to stop when she walks by. It’s all I can do not to purposely bump her into oncoming cars.
People get put away for stuff like that. Orange is not my color.
I open the front door, prepared to put my purse away in cabinet when Tom signals me from the office door. I head there first. Maybe he’s giving me different duties today.
“Hi, Tom.” I try desperately to drum up enthusiasm.
He runs his fingers through his dark hair. “Have a seat.”
“OK.” I sit in the plastic chair in front of his desk.
Tom takes his place behind the desk. “Do you remember walking Hitler, the German shepherd yesterday?”
“Sure I do.” An uneasy feeling crawls up my spine.
“Someone saw you kicking Hitler because he wouldn’t cross the road with you.”
I gasp. Literally draw in air with a horrific sound and begin to hyperventilate. “No. That’s not true.”
“A bystander reported seeing everything.”
I whip around and look toward the exit. “I hope you’re not talking about the girl who just left. She used to date my boyfriend—I mean ex-boyfriend. She made the story up.”
Tom’s lips tighten and he straightens in his chair. How can I prove he’s wrong? He knows me. He’s seen me with the dogs.
He links his hands on the desk. “It doesn’t matter who reported the incident. I can’t have someone working here who treats animals with cruelty.”
“You’re missing the part where I said I didn’t do anything like that. I love the dogs. I love this job.”
“She said she can bring someone else in who also witnessed what happened. They followed you here and that’s how she knew it wasn’t your dog. Not that it matters. Animals deserve better treatment.” Tom stands and puts his hands on his hips. “I really thought you’d work out. We get along and—”
Hung without a true jury. I have to give it to Tori for being cunning. If she wanted to punish me today, she found a perfect way.
“Thanks¸ Tom. Thanks for believing a stranger.”
“Your last check—”
“Mail it.” I leave the office and hope I can make it to the truck without crying.
Inside the truck, I break down. It’s the hottest day of the summer on record and I sit inside the hot cab of my vehicle crying for everything I’ve lost. I know I’m not at fault for losing my job. That was a sucky twist, compliments of Tori. But everything else is something I could’ve prevented.
If only I’d never sent the postcard. If only I’d asked Leo in person for it instead of deciding I’d take what I wanted. If only I’d never deceived him.
My life is a long list of regrets.
But I do have the postcard now and it won’t be printed. I wipe the hot tears from my cheeks with the backs of my hands.
I check myself in the mirror. I resemble a zombie with dark circles framing my eyes.
I’ll be okay. I can do this.
I could go home to my folks. Pretend the last four years never happened.
And never see Leo again. My chest constricts into a tight ball of misery and I slump into the seat.
The ding of my cell phone alerts me of a text. Josie’s tried to contact me over the past few days and I’ve avoided her. My stomach cramps at the thought of losing her as well. I’ve waited for the text that calls me a liar for the things I’ve done to Leo, but that hasn’t come. Yet.
I’m not sure what Leo is waiting for by not telling her.
I drag the phone out of my purse.
Josie: I’m tired of this. What is going on?
My heart thumps hard against my ribcage. I can’t tell her because I’m a coward. I can’t lose her. Not today. It’ll have to wait until tomorrow.
Me: I’ll tell you later. Have to go.
When I was a little girl, Daddy always said that prayer fixes everything. He’s probably right. But I don’t think God wants me to sit around waiting for him to do everything.
I sat around for four years knowing that Wesley hid things, lied, and generally applied for asshole husband of the year. It was a bad plan. Really no plan, except for the money I socked away from the household allowance Wesley gave me.
I promise myself this time I’m only waiting a day to tell Josie about the lies. I turn on the engine and the AC blows warm air on my face. My head swims from the heat, the stress, and the lack of sleep.
Why hadn’t I sat in the air-conditioning while having my meltdown?
I shift into reverse and back out of the spot.
A horn blares and metal crunches somewhere in my awareness. My car slams sideways, my airbag deploys, my head snaps back and forward and back. The smell of burning rubber assaults me.
My car alarms blares into my ears. Something wet slides down my nose.
Then, blackness descends.
I dream of June bugs on my body, skittering around in quick circles, their tiny legs digging into the pores of my skin. Surprisingly, I don’t feel like screaming. I don’t feel like anything really.
“She’s awake,” a woman says in a voice too chipper for my liking. “Can you open your eyes? You have visitors.”
I attempt to see through half-mast lidded eyes. “No.”
There’s a low laugh. “I think she’s OK,” a familiar voice says.
I roll my head to the side and see my hand being held. “Hi. Where are we?”
Josie rubs our linked hands. “Hey crazy. You had an accident. It’s a miracle that you aren’t dead. I was the last number in your phone and they called me. We have to watch you for a concussion.”
“Oh yeah?”
“Yeah. And when you do something, you go all out. No half-assed accident for you. No, ma’am.”
“What…do…you mean?” A movement from the corner catches my eye. It’s Leo, sitting in a chair as far from me as possible. He stares at me, his face expressionless.
“You were backing out of a parking spot. A semi pulled in going way too fast and barreled into you. He dragged you across the lot and into a dumpster. Well, you in your truck. You hit your head on the window. You’re going to be really sore for a while.” Josie squeezes my fingers.
That explains the bandage over my left eye and the feeling that my limbs aren’t attached. That I’m floating above the entire room.
I can’t take my gaze from Leo’s. He doesn’t look away and I’m like a fly caught in the spider’s web. I’m unable to move or escape. Perhaps I wish to die this way—locked in his heaven-blue gaze.
“Don’t remember,” I say. I smack my lips together. “Thirsty.”
To my surprise, Leo rises from his seat and leaves the room. My pulse quickens and I can’t breathe. “Don’t,” I say, but it’s too late. He’s gone.
“He’ll be back, sweetie. Don’t worry.”
I turn my head from her and bite the inside of my mouth hard. There’s a metallic taste and then I close my eyes. As well meaning as Josie is, she is not a substitute for the loss of him.
“Do you want to sit up?” Leo asks.
When I open my eyes, he’s there and holds a straw to my lips. A small sound escapes my lips, like a hurt animal, but I don’t care. I nod.
I take a careful sip through the straw. He pulls it away too quickly and water dribbles down my chin.
“Sip it. You’re stuck with me as a nurse and lucky I’m not letting Josie help you.”
“Maybe I should be doing that.” She points at the Styrofoam cup. “At least I wouldn’t drown her.” Josie laughs deep in her throat, a diabolical sound.
“Kiss my ass.” Leo grins for the first time since I noticed him in the corner. “Harper, help me out a little. Small sip. Look up at me when you’re finished.”
I do as he says and he takes the drink away. He looks tired. Dark circles under his eyes make his eyes look like a midnight sky.
“You need more to drink? Was that enough?” He holds the Styrofoam cup against his chest.
“Missed you,” I whisper. The words slip out before I can think about them.
He looks away. “Josie, can you give us a minute?”
“Yes. Definitely.” She hops to her feet and leaves the room.
“I’m so sorry.” I keep my voice steady.
“I know. Me, too.” He sits in Josie’s chair.
Then, he reaches over to hold my hand and I can finally breathe again. I give him a bright smile even though my face feels numb and my lips are cracked.
I lick my lips. “Do you forgive me?”
“Yeah,” he says. “I can. We can be friends.”
“Friends?” My throat works convulsively trying to find a way to work past the giant lump.
“Yes. I’ve missed you. I have. But I can’t trust you.”
“That’s—” My throat refuses to let the words out. There’s a moment when my eyebrows squeeze together in a plea. “Not forgiving.”
“It is. You and I have a different understanding of what we want. I want to date someone I can trust. Someone I might someday spend a lifetime with. I can’t waste your time or mine if it’s not you.”
He releases my hand and places his face in both palms. “It won’t be easy at first. I know.” He shrugs. “But we were friends before this. We can be friends again.”
“Fuck you.”
He looks shocked for a second and color drains from his face. Did he think I’d so easily take his suggestion?
“OK then.” He gets to his feet. “You need some time to get used to the idea. Wow. I’ve never heard you this angry. Must be the drugs. I’ll go get Josie.”
He turns and walks toward the door.
I choke I’m so furious. “Friends. OK. Guess my feelings for you were a lot stronger than that.”
Leo’s steps slow. He faces the door, but I can still hear him. “You’re wrong. And that’s exactly the problem.”
Josie and Leo take me home the next day. Home. I’m not sure I know the meaning. It’s supposed to be a place that feels safe and happy.
It’s neither.
I realize I’ve entered a dark place in my life and have to salvage myself. If it means letting Leo go, then so be it. Still, it hurts like no other hurt. As Josie says, it hurts like a mother-effer.
I’d obviously given Leo all the round edges and corners of my heart, the open places and hidden ones. The only thing I hadn’t given him was what he needed most—my fears. Because that’s where all the truth lives—in the ugly, honest parts we try not to reveal about ourselves.
Maybe if I’d given him my ugly truths, he’d have given me his.
On day two after my accident, I call Mama and Daddy for an hour-long conversation. It’s the most real heart-to-heart we’ve had since I eloped with Wesley. Sure, they both catch themselves trying to tell me what to do, but for once, they talk to me as an adult.
Josie attempts to be neutral Switzerland. She asks me to do things, brings me books, and never mentions Leo. It’s my third day home from the hospital and I smile at her happy face in my doorway.
“Don’t you have better things to do during lunch?” I ask.
“Nope. This is me, earning my angel wings.” She sweeps in with a white bag. “Brought you a burger. Dane sent it and said you can kiss him later.”
“I’m not hungry. I’ll eat it for dinner.”
She walks to the bar and pulls out the contents. “You’ve lost weight. Which normally, I’d be envious of and wanting to go on the old car crash diet too, but hey. You need to gain a little. Eat.”
I roll my eyes. “Whatever.”
“When do you go back to work?”
“I don’t.”
She slows in opening the to-go container with my burger. “You quit?”
“Mentally? I quit. Officially? I think I was fired.” I slide the burger my way so I can stop talking and eat. The damage that Tori’s done can’t be reversed and I’m really over it. When she finds out Leo and I aren’t together, she’ll be thrilled and leave me alone forever.
“No one would fire you. Forgive me for saying this, but you are such a goodie two-shoes. What did you do? Turn down your manager? Tell him to go suck his own—”
“Someone complained about me.”
“What about?”
“Can we drop it?”
“No.” Josie grabs her burger container from the bag. “I’m your friend and I deserve to know what’s going on. There’s a story that goes with this and the fact that you aren’t telling it bothers me.”
“OK. It was Tori. Are you happy? Tori lied about seeing me doing something really bad to one of the dogs and Tom fired me.”
Josie slaps both hands onto the bar. “I am going to hunt her down like the vermin she is and kill her. Honest-to-God—”
“Don’t swear. And you aren’t killing anyone. She’s done. She won’t bother me again.”
“I’m telling Leo. You can’t stop me.”
I shrug, but the mention of his name drives a blade through my sternum. “You know what? I don’t care. I can’t keep any more secrets.”
She raises an eyebrow. “You have some more I need to know about?”
Dread hovers in my stomach, making my pulse speed up. I’m like a skydiver about to make that jump from the plane. No going back.
“Leo won’t tell you because he’s too honorable or something. I don’t know why. But I’m going to tell you because you’ve been a true friend to me. You don’t deserve anything but the truth.”
“What is it?” Josie tilts her head.
“When I met you in Dog Ears, I had seen you eating with Leo.”
“Yeah, so? You told me that the first time. I’d forgotten about that.”
“I’d been watching Leo. I wanted to meet him. I had ulterior motives.” Should I add the part about Leo being Mr. Expose? It doesn’t seem right that I should tell his secrets.
“You think you’re the first girl to get chummy with me to meet Leo?” Josie laughs. “Crazy. Is this all you’re worried about me knowing? Answer me. Are we really friends or are you faking it?”
“Real. You’re the best friend I’ve had since high school. And I don’t even know those girls anymore.”
“Good. Now that we’ve decided to be all BFF and everything, we can eat.” She winks at me.
For the first time in days, I smile.








