Susan Mallery Fool's Gold Series Volume One: Chasing PerfectAlmost PerfectSister of the BrideFinding Perfect

Home > Other > Susan Mallery Fool's Gold Series Volume One: Chasing PerfectAlmost PerfectSister of the BrideFinding Perfect > Page 22
Susan Mallery Fool's Gold Series Volume One: Chasing PerfectAlmost PerfectSister of the BrideFinding Perfect Page 22

by Susan Mallery

“Do you think someone went back and removed the items from the computer?” Marsha asked. “The deposit and the withdrawal?”

  “Possibly,” Bernie said. “But what about the bank? It doesn’t show the money going in or out, which means it went into another account.”

  “Do we know if it even arrived here in town?” Charity asked. “The check could have been intercepted in Sacramento or before it physically arrived here. It was a paper check, wasn’t it?”

  “Yes,” Bernie said. “If it never arrived here, then whoever is perpetrating the fraud is going to be harder to find. But based on what I know so far, that seems a fairly likely explanation. I’ve contacted other communities to find out if anyone else is having the same problem.”

  “I don’t like it,” Chief Barns said. “I like criminals who do their dirty work out where someone can see.”

  “That would make things simpler,” Bernie agreed.

  She discussed the rest of her investigation, took a few more questions, then the meeting ended. Charity found herself walking with Robert back to their floor.

  “How are you holding up?” she asked.

  “Okay. People are still looking at me funny. I’m living with it. Bernie’s told me privately that she should have me completely cleared in a couple of weeks.” He grimaced. “I’ve given her complete access to my financial records. Checking and saving accounts, my retirement account. All of it.”

  “I’m sorry you’re having to deal with all this,” she said.

  “It’ll pass. Things will get back to normal.” He paused by her office. “I just want her to catch the bastard who’s doing this.”

  “So does the chief.”

  “I think she’s happiest when she’s arresting someone.”

  “Everyone needs a moment of joy in his or her life.”

  Robert shuffled his feet. “Are you… How are things going with Josh?”

  Not a question she wanted to answer, she thought, wishing this were easier. “Good.”

  “You really like him, don’t you?”

  As she was sure being in love fell very close to “really liking” she had no problem nodding.

  “Too bad.” He turned and walked away.

  Another downside of small-town life, she thought. There was no way to escape seeing Robert. Working with him didn’t make matters easier. She could only hope he would find someone who could appreciate his niceness, along with his little quirks.

  * * *

  WEDNESDAY AFTER WORK, Charity headed out on an errand she’d been rescheduling for some time. She liked her new and improved wardrobe, which was great, but now she had to deal with her hair.

  She’d been wearing it exactly the same way since she graduated from high school. Blown dry, so no hint of her natural waves showed, parted in the middle, hanging just below her shoulders. Some days she pulled it back in a French braid. Other days she wore it up. Occasionally it was loose. But there wasn’t anything stylish about it and the color was a boring medium brown. It was time for a change.

  She’d asked around for recommendations and had been given two names. Sisters who were in competition with each other. Pia had warned her she would have to alternate between the two unless she wanted people to think she was taking sides. When Charity had asked what the fight was about, Pia couldn’t say for sure, which was part of the problem. No one really knew, which made staying out of trouble that much harder.

  But they were the best hairstylists in town, so Charity had randomly chosen Julia’s salon—Chez Julia—not to be confused with her sister’s establishment, the House of Bella.

  “You’re the one who wanted to live in a small town,” Charity reminded herself as she walked toward the bright blue building. There were posters of hair models in the window, a lush garden out front and a porch with a rocking chair.

  She stepped into the surprisingly large salon. There were about ten stations lined up along two walls. The windows provided a lot of natural light. The main colors were a deep brown, from the wood at the stations, and turquoise. The walls were a rich blue-green up to the chair rail, then cream to the ceiling. The tile floor was done in a dozen shades of turquoise. Soft music played in the background, the place was spotless and had an air of relaxed elegance. Under any other circumstances, Charity would have been pleased with her find.

  Instead she found herself feeling trapped as everyone in the salon turned to look at her, then didn’t look away. It was as if they knew who she was—which they probably did.

  An attractive woman in her forties hurried toward her. “Charity,” she said. “You’re my four-thirty. I’m Julia. So nice to meet you.”

  “Hi.”

  Julia glanced behind and made a shooing motion, then returned her attention to Charity. “Ignore them. I do.”

  Charity managed a smile. “Just like being the new girl in school.”

  “I know. But it will get better, I promise.” Julia smiled. “Now, I have you down for highlights and a cut. Come have a seat and tell me what you were thinking of doing.”

  Charity followed her to a station in the back. She sat in the padded chair and faced herself in the mirror. Julia stood behind her, waiting.

  “I want something different,” Charity told her. “I’ve been wearing my hair at the same length, in relatively the same style, for years. The color needs help, too.”

  Julia ran her hands through Charity’s hair. “Very thick,” she murmured. “Do you have a wave?”

  “Sort of. I control it with blow drying.”

  “About how much time are you willing to spend in the morning?”

  “Not more than fifteen minutes. I don’t have the patience for it.”

  “Good to know.” Julia tilted her head. “We’ll do subtle highlights? Nothing too obvious. Just enough to give you a little depth.”

  “That sounds great.”

  “And for the cut, I’m thinking a blunt longish bob, with bangs.”

  Charity blinked. “Bangs?”

  Julia dropped her hands to Charity’s shoulders and squeezed. “Trust me.”

  By now conversation had resumed around them. Charity decided to simply go with the flow. Hair grew. If she didn’t like the new style, eventually she could go back to what she’d been doing before.

  Julia left her with a couple of magazines and went off to mix color. A few minutes later, Charity was covered in a plastic cape while Julia expertly applied color to a few strands of hair, then carefully wrapped them in foil.

  “How are you settling in to living here?” Julia asked. “It’s been a few months.”

  “I really like it. I’ve never lived in a small town before. The adjustment has been fun.”

  “What’s Josh like in bed?” a woman in pink curlers yelled from across the room.

  Conversation stopped. For a second there was only the sound of the soft music. Once again everyone was staring at Charity.

  Julia sighed. “You don’t have to answer that,” she said. “Not that we’re not interested,” she added with a wink.

  She turned to the salon. “She’s new, remember. Everyone back off.”

  “But I want to know,” another woman insisted. “I’m sixty-two. The odds of me finding out for myself are slim.”

  Charity laughed. “He’s everything you could imagine and more.”

  The woman in curlers sighed. “I knew it,” she said dreamily.

  “I saw him riding his bike the other day,” another client said. “What that man does for those bicycle shorts. It was the highlight of my day.” She glanced at Charity. “No offense.”

  “None taken.”

  “You’ve been dating for a while now,” Julia said. “How’s that working out?”

  The questions weren’t subtle, Charity thought, more amused than offended.

  “He’s a great guy. I like spending time with him.”

  “Josh is one of the good ones. That first wife of his was a total bitch.”

  “I remember her,” another client said with a sn
iff. “She came to town once. Walked around like she was afraid of getting dog poop on her shoes. She was beautiful, but what a bitch.”

  There was a murmur of agreement.

  Charity would have loved to ask questions about Angelique but wasn’t sure how. After all, she was fairly confident that anything she said would be reported to the entire town, not to mention get back to Josh.

  “You came from Henderson, didn’t you?” Julia asked. “I thought I heard that.”

  “Yes.”

  “Leave anyone special behind?”

  Charity met Julia’s interested gaze in the mirror. “No.”

  “I’m surprised. A pretty girl like you. There had to be someone.”

  Not a topic Charity wanted to discuss. Not with this crowd. “Not really.”

  “My first husband was a total loser,” Julia said. “He cheated, which I could live with, but then lied about it, which I couldn’t. I chased him out of the house with a frying pan. He never came back. Good riddance.”

  “All men cheat,” one of the customers said.

  “Not all,” another protested. “Some don’t.”

  “Name one.”

  “My Arnie. He’s a good man.”

  Julia leaned close to Charity. “And butt ugly. A sweetheart, but the lights would have to be off all the time.”

  Charity did her best not to respond to any part of the conversation.

  “Josh ever cheated?” someone asked.

  “Not that I’ve heard. He was faithful to that wife of his, not that she deserved it. Stupid cow.”

  Josh had claimed to be faithful and Charity had believed him. Which might make her a fool, but she was tired of trying to be sure. After her first two disastrous relationships, she hadn’t been taking any chances with her third. She’d run a credit check and had a friend on the police force get her a DMV report. He’d been clean. Engaged to someone else living in Los Angeles, but clean.

  Hurt but determined to learn from yet another mistake, Charity had accepted the job in Fool’s Gold as a way to start over. Maybe having such a public history was part of Josh’s appeal, she thought. She didn’t have to worry about any secrets. Everyone in town knew everything important about him.

  She went under the hair dryer for about twenty minutes, then enjoyed a very lovely massage with her wash. When she got back into Julia’s chair, the stylist turned her away from the mirror.

  “I don’t want you to see anything until I’m done.”

  Charity felt a tiny knot of fear in her stomach. “I guess that means I’m going to have to trust you.”

  “You’ll be happy, I promise.”

  “That’s a big promise.”

  One of the older ladies had finished. With her silver hair all neatly teased and sprayed, she slipped on her jacket, but instead of leaving, she walked over to Charity.

  “I remember Josh when he first came here,” she said. “That mother of his was awful. He’d been in a bad fall and walked on crutches. He was about the most pitiful thing I’d ever seen. It took him nearly fifteen minutes to go a single block. How he struggled to get to school every day. That poor boy. His clothes were ragged and he was skinny as an alley cat. It about broke my heart. Then one day she was gone.”

  Charity knew the general story of Josh’s past, but she’d never heard it told with such clarity.

  “None of us knew what to do,” another woman added. “We didn’t want to send him to a state home, but there wasn’t much choice. Then Denise Hendrix offered to take him in. The rest of us contributed to the family, helping pay for Josh’s medical expenses.”

  The first woman nodded. “He needed surgery to repair how his legs had healed wrong, then physical therapy. That’s why he started riding a bike. To strengthen his legs. Ethan rode, too.” She patted Charity’s arm. “So Josh is special to us. Always has been. You’ve got yourself a good man there.”

  “Thank you.”

  The old woman started to leave, then paused. Her expression turned sly. “He proposed yet?”

  Charity felt the color flooding her face. Anywhere but here, she thought grimly. She wanted to be anywhere but here.

  “We’re still dating. Getting to know each other.”

  “I wouldn’t be as concerned about him proposing. There’s a bigger danger.”

  Several of the women laughed. Charity didn’t get it until one of them added, “Feeling any cravings, hon?”

  “No. I’m good. But thanks for asking.”

  “Leave her alone,” Julia said firmly. “All of you. You’ll scare her off and we’ll never see her again.”

  The old woman waved and left. The conversation shifted to more comfortable topics. Julia got out a blow dryer. Once she turned it on, Charity couldn’t hear anything that was being said—probably a good thing.

  She promised herself she was never, ever getting her hair done in town, again. Or if she did anything, she would go see Morgan. She doubted he would bother her with a lot of personal questions.

  Asking about Josh was one thing, but hinting she might be pregnant was way too intrusive. And annoying, she thought. Just because everyone knew Josh didn’t mean they had the right to butt into his personal life. There were rules in polite society. Expectations and—

  “Here you go,” Julia said and turned the chair.

  Charity was prepared to simply pay and run. She didn’t want to deal with the teasing anymore. But when she caught sight of herself in the mirror, she couldn’t move. She could only stare.

  Her once boring plain brown hair was now rich and shiny. There were hints of gold and a tiny whisper of red threaded through the strands. But even more amazing was the cut.

  Julia had shortened her hair to just below her jaw, then blown it under in a perfect bob. Feathered bangs made her eyes seem huge. When she moved her head, her hair swayed, then fell perfectly into place. It was the best cut she’d ever received in her life.

  “It’s perfect,” she breathed. “I love it.”

  “Good. Do you have a big round brush?”

  Charity nodded her head, mostly to watch her hair move.

  Julia demonstrated the way to get the shape right, explained what products worked best and how to use them. Charity listened carefully, then paid her bill and left a large tip. The fact that everyone in the salon would talk about her after she was gone didn’t bother her one bit. Not when her hair looked so good.

  She walked back toward the hotel, catching her reflection every now and then and smiling as she saw her hair move. When she walked by Morgan’s bookstore, the old man stuck his head out the open door.

  “Lookin’ good, pretty lady.”

  She laughed. “Thank you.”

  “Hope Josh knows he’s a lucky man.”

  “I’ll tell him in case he doesn’t.”

  “You do that.”

  Now, feeling fabulous, she could think about the conversation in the salon and tell herself no one meant anything bad by their meddling. Josh was important to them, and with her dating him, she was part of what was going on. Although things had gotten out of hand with the whole pregnancy topic. That wasn’t a subject to kid about. Talk about a disaster. An unplanned pregnancy would…

  Charity stopped in front of the hotel and stared at the beautiful old building. But instead of seeing the impressive architecture or the gleaming windows, she stared at the mental calendar in her head and tried to do the math. Exactly how many days had it been since her last period?

  She hurried inside, calling distracted greetings when the staff welcomed her. When she reached the third floor, she ran to her room, raced inside and closed the door behind her. Her date book was on the desk by the wall. She flipped back until she found the day with a little daisy by the date—her private notation of her period’s arrival—then counted forward.

  As the numbers mounted, so did her panic. She counted a second time and got the same number. She was two weeks late. Two weeks.

  Her first thought was to rush to the nearest drugsto
re, buy a test and find out. Then she thought of all the people who would see her and how the information would be spread from one end of town to the other in a matter of minutes. Which meant what? That she had to drive to the next town?

  She was halfway across the room, heading for her car keys, when she remembered the pregnancy test Josh had bought when Emily had insisted she was pregnant with his baby. He’d handed the kit to Charity who had brought it to her room and put it where?

  It took two minutes of frantic drawer pulling to find it, another few seconds to get in the bathroom and pee, then three minutes of pacing until she could know one way or the other.

  She stared at the two straight lines, then at the chart in the instructions.

  She was pregnant.

  CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

  CHARITY STARED AT THE stick for a long time, then carefully wrapped it in tissue and put it in her pocket. She would have to get rid of it somewhere other than her room. Because the maid would probably tell the entire town what it said.

  After circling the room several times, Charity realized she couldn’t stay here. Not with her mind swirling and her stomach flipping and flopping and her hands shaking. Maybe walking somewhere would help. She didn’t have anywhere to go, but right now a destination seemed highly overrated.

  Once she reached the street, she moved purposefully, which made her feel a little better. She started to go back to the office, but wasn’t sure what she would do there. After turning down a couple of streets, she found herself in front of Marsha’s house. Maybe this was the best place to start.

  She walked up to the porch. The front door opened before she could knock.

  “Look at your hair,” Marsha said, smiling at her. “I love it.”

  Charity had nearly forgotten about her sassy new style. “Julia did it.”

  “It suits you. The highlights are great. You look even more beautiful than you did before.”

  “Thanks.” Charity walked in.

  Marsha closed the door. “This is a nice surprise. I was just thinking about what I wanted for dinner. Would you like to join me? We can go out. I’m thinking Angelo’s. I do love the bread.” She patted her hips. “Even though I shouldn’t.”

  Charity drew in a breath. “I’m pregnant.”

 

‹ Prev