A Necessary Lie

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A Necessary Lie Page 13

by Lucy Farago


  “Do you want kids?” The question, truly none of her business, had come out of nowhere. “Sorry, that’s a tad personal.” She pulled her hair back in a makeshift ponytail, twirling the end in her hand as she stared out at the Texas fields.

  “No, it’s okay,” he said. “I don’t stay still long enough to consider having children.”

  “You mean you don’t stay in one place long enough to have a serious relationship?” Again, not that it was any of her business.

  “That too.” He laughed. “I’m always on the go, rarely home. That wouldn’t be fair to the mother or my child.”

  She turned her head and caught him staring. “No, I guess not.” She squirmed. He really should focus on the road. “Is the broker business that busy?” she asked. A group of cows meandered across their pasture.

  “I find what people want. People want a lot of things.”

  She let her hair fall across one shoulder. “Can you find my friend?” she asked, a lump thick in her throat.

  “I’ll try,” he said with such sincerity, the tears she held at bay threatened to spill.

  She didn’t have a lot of faith in people, but for some reason she believed him. “Okay, Daniel. What do we do next?” She turned her head and found him again looking at her. Lucky for him they’d stopped at a red light or he’d get another lecture on keeping his eyes on the road. It was a bad habit.

  “Depends how upset your father was. Is he going to make problems for you?”

  “Knowing him, he’ll have someone spying on me by the time I get to my hotel.”

  Thankfully he turned his attention to driving when the light turned green. “Do you want to return to Dallas?”

  “Oh hell no. I’m not going to let him intimidate me. I discovered things he hadn’t. He can bark all he wants. He doesn’t have an invitation to Ella’s sweet sixteen.” Proud of what she’d accomplished, she grinned. “But I have to go shopping. From what Ella said, the event is formal and I didn’t bring formal wear.”

  “We’ll go together.”

  “You like shopping? You’d be the first guy I know to admit that.”

  “I like it as much as getting my teeth pulled. Getting others what they need is cool, but doing it for myself is tasking. But I left my party hat at home. Let’s spend the rest of the day going over Jessie’s article, maybe search for more clues, and tomorrow morning we’ll go shopping. We can grab some breakfast and then find something to beautify us. Well, me anyway. You’re already beautiful.” He shot her a quick glance, giving her a half smile that normally would have curled her toes. Now, it just made her nervous.

  “Eyes on the road.” She narrowed her own eyes. He was going to get them killed and then she’d never get to relish the fact that he found her beautiful.

  “Yes’m. Sorry. Keep forgetting you’re the fussy type.”

  “I’m not fussy. It’s a practicality. You take your eyes of the road and you might miss some jerkoff doing the exact same thing. Then boom. Road kill.”

  “Are you inferring I’m a jerkoff?” he said, indignantly giving her another sideways glance.

  “I’m inferring no such thing,” she said, a sudden and very naughty image of Daniel and his right hand popping into her head. That had to stop.

  “Suggesting, then?”

  She cleared her dry throat. “Nope.”

  “Well that’s good,” he said, nodding his head once.

  “I’m calling you a jerkoff.” She’d nearly stuttered trying to void that image from her thoughts, where it did not belong. “Eyes on the road, and we’ll be fine.”

  “You’re a might bossy. You know that?”

  “I’ve been told. Now, our next move?”

  “You have this fear of crashing? Is that because of your mother?”

  “No, but have you seen the statistics on texting? People die because they can’t put their phone down.”

  “I’m not texting.”

  “But it’s all about taking your eyes off the road. It only takes a second. As I don’t want to be in a see-what-happens-when-you-get-distracted ad, keep your eyes on the road.” She wasn’t being bitchy or unreasonable. Facts were facts. “And if you keep looking at me I can’t watch you without you noticing I’m watching you.” She smiled to herself. He really did have a magnificent profile. Those gorgeous lips, the ones she’d kissed this morning… and was he laughing at her? “Hey,” she scolded, “what’s so funny.”

  “It’s not as much funny as flattering. Never had a woman tell me to look elsewhere so as not to catch her watching me. You’re cute. Anyone ever tell you that?”

  “Cute?” she said with some disgust. She was not cute.

  “Oh now, don’t get mad. I like cute. It goes great with beautiful,” he said, giving her yet another long sideways glance.

  “Okay, enough. No more talking until we get to the hotel.” Then she could smack him. Which is what she wanted to do now, except he was driving.

  Laughing and turning the radio back on, he obliged her.

  Chapter Ten

  Grace inspected herself in the mirror. She’d changed into a pair of jeans and debated over the turquoise, V-neck crepe or the white off-the-shoulder peasant blouse. Not wanting to come off as trying to look sexy, the V-neck won. She put on her favorite pair of gold sandals, then pulled her hair into a ponytail, stuffed her laptop into her oversized bag, and went to meet Daniel in the bar of the hotel. It was time she showed him Jessie’s article.

  She hadn’t told Daniel about her father hiring ICU, and, because the fancy pants agency hadn’t come up with anything, she wasn’t going to. Either that or a certain overprotective father was keeping something from her. Which wasn’t that far out of the realm of reality and total bullshit. Jessie was running out of time and her father was playing games. It downright infuriated her.

  She found Daniel sitting at a corner booth, a beer bottle and a glass of white wine on the table in front him. He’d changed too and was now back in cowboy mode, wearing a form-fitting t-shirt and showing off that awesome chest. He got to his feet when he saw her, a smile lighting up his face. Honestly, she was just as happy to see him. Now away from his terrible driving, she no longer wanted to kill him. Instead, that smile reminded her of what had almost happened this morning.

  She wasn’t into one-night stands and, although she wouldn’t be walking away for at least two weeks, she barely knew the guy. Why the hell then did she feel so comfortable around him? It went against, well, it went against everything she was, or everything her father had drilled into her head. Trust is earned and even then be on guard. She wasn’t stupid enough to allow his good looks and over-the-top charm to shanghai her very honed, acutely trained sensibilities. What about him was different?

  “I went ahead and ordered you a wine,” he said, taking his seat after she’d taken hers. “The waiter assures me it’s good pinot grigio, but if it’s not to your liking, he’s offered to get you something else. I wasn’t sure how hungry you were. I asked him to come back.”

  She glanced down at the wine, impressed that he remembered what she drank. “I’m sure it’s fine. And I’m not very hungry right now.” She set her purse on the bench beside her and pulled out her laptop, noting a couple of sheets of paper beside Daniel, curiously flipped over. “I brought Jessie’s article.” She’d left the pictures and the notes in her room, a part of her not completely trusting the man, but she’d copied Jessie’s story into a Word document. “I don’t have a printer and I’m sorry, but I’d prefer it not leave my computer.”

  “That’s fine.” He slid around the booth to her side, his thigh touching hers. “May I?” he said, indicating her laptop.

  She spun it clockwise. That way he wouldn’t have to lean over her to read. Then she sipped her wine and waited for him to finish, ignoring how her body reacted to him being this close. His cologne was too subtle for her to place the scent. But he smelled nice. She tried to breathe him in without being obvious. A little woodsy maybe, an herb she couldn’
t put her finger on and… ? She’d make a terrible wine connoisseur. Citrus. Orange? Honestly, spread him on fish and he’d taste delicious. But that could be just her sudden urge to lick him. She swiped her tongue across her bottom lip, inhaling him in again only this time through her mouth. She’d once heard this was how animals did it, to better scent their prey. Bad idea. She had to blink several times to stop her eyelids from fluttering closed. She reached for her wineglass, eager to fill her nose with a scent other than sexy man.

  The waiter came by and asked if they’d care for something to eat. She seriously considered ordering anything with enough garlic to knock him out of her head. “No, thank you,” she said, far too lightheaded to consider eating. “Maybe later.”

  He told them he’d check up on them in a little while and left. Daniel hadn’t bothered to stop reading. She doubted he’d even noticed the waiter. Something in the article had gotten his devoted attention. Her heartbeat kicked up a notch. “Did you find something?”

  “I…I’m not sure,” he said, lifting his gaze from her laptop. “She did a great job of raking his nephew over the coals without implicating the senator. Her commentary on Harrison was bang on. But it’s a sentiment shared by many. She does a good job of expressing who Presley is and what he stands for and reminding everyone he was in active service during the Lebanese Civil War.”

  “He served four years?”

  “I guess. Jessie’s article points out he came home in time to see his son take his first steps. A son who was murdered by a would-be rapist seventeen years later. If that doesn’t make you wave the flag while pulling on your heart strings, nothing will.”

  She was a little taken aback by his sarcasm. The man’s son was killed. “What are you not buying?”

  “Nothing,” he said, shaking his head.

  But it was more than nothing and she gave him a look that said she wasn’t buying it.

  “Fine. The Stantons are a very powerful family. Not just Presley and his political connection. I don’t doubt for a second that someone, most likely Lyle,” he said with apparent derision, “paid off judges. The senator may be innocent, but he must be aware of what his family has done and gotten away with. In my mind that doesn’t make him an innocent bystander.”

  “I agree with you. But he’s super devoted to that granddaughter of his. Maybe that family bond spreads to the rest of the clan? Or he’s not willing to risk his career by admitting his family sucks. Either way, I guess he’s choosing to wear blinders.”

  “Wouldn’t Jessie know that? I mean, how naïve is your friend?”

  “Don’t confuse her being nice with being stupid. That’s what makes this confusing. She’d have come to the same conclusion you did. He knew and wasn’t pointing fingers.”

  “Then why write the article with this tone?”

  “Yeah, I don’t know. If we figure that out, maybe we’ll have a clue as to why she disappeared.”

  “What are the odds he knows what happened to Jessie?”

  “I’m still reeling from the fact they knew each other.” That still hurt, but more importantly, it worried the crap out of her. Why hadn’t Jessie told her?

  “Did you figure that out?”

  “You were right. It was dumb to assume she was sleeping with him. That doesn’t make sense and it’s not at all like her. I googled that town she grew up in. It’s only fifty miles from here. I knew she was from around this part of Texas. I just didn’t realize how close she was to San Antonio and the Stanton Ranch. I called in a favor from a friend of mine. She found old yearbooks from the high school Jessie went to, Petersen something. The senator’s kid, the one who was killed. They were two years apart in school, probably friends? I know her father was the town minister and she told me a few stories that didn’t speak highly of the town. Her parents were killed in a car accident.”

  “I’m sorry to hear that. When did they die?”

  “Oh, must be four months now. She wouldn’t even let me go to the funeral with her, even though I knew she was devastated. She kept saying if she’d been a better daughter, they’d still be alive. God was punishing her. Which was stupid. She was a great daughter. Grief, I guess. It makes us say all kinds of things. I remember being told my dad had been shot and how I’d reacted. Imagine losing both your parents.”

  Cowboy could indeed imagine losing both his parents. He’d lost his entire family. True, he’d done it to himself. He could have stuck around, taken what was coming to him. Maybe they would’ve believed he’d been acting in Jessie’s defense. But Texas had stopped treating fourteen-year-olds who’d taken a life as children. If they’d found him guilty, he’d have gone to a maximum-security penitentiary for adults. Lyle Stanton would have made sure of it.

  “None of this is helping to find Jessie. And it doesn’t explain why she didn’t tell me she knew the family.”

  He suspected he knew the answer to that. Grace was a good reporter. She might have seen right through Jessie’s bullshit, if she’d spun it as bullshit. It was obvious Jessie had been keeping her assault to herself. She’d have had to lie to her best friend, so better to say nothing at all. He could respect that. “But it does make you wonder why she slanted the article in the senator’s favor.”

  “You think she was coerced? Why? I mean, another article by a relatively unknown reporter isn’t going to make or break his career.”

  “I don’t have the answers. Why don’t we order some lunch and then we can try to retrace Jessie’s footsteps?” He had to do what he was paid to do, and he doubted that he could let Jessie’s disappearance go, any more than Grace could.

  “My father did that already. He said nothing jumped out.”

  “People can get nervous when talking to cops. They tend to…forget.” Especially if they had something to hide. He lifted a hand and drew the waiter’s attention.

  “I’m not hungry,” she said. “But you go ahead.”

  “Then let’s go.” He closed her laptop for her, having already taken care of the bill before she’d arrived. He didn’t mind a woman paying for his drinks, but when he was working, he much preferred Ryan did it. He grabbed the picture he’d printed and handed her a copy, keeping one for himself. “We’ll need something to show people.”

  “Where did you get this?” she asked, her question barely audible if he hadn’t expected it.

  “Facebook.”

  “But none of us are friends. You can’t see my pics unless we’re friends,” she said, never taking her eyes off the photo of her and Jessie and that birthday cake.

  “No, but you are friends with Josh. I asked him to send one to me,” he lied. “Whose birthday was this?”

  “Mine. She threw me a surprise party last year. I hate surprises,” she said running a finger over the photo. “But she did it anyway, saying I needed fun in my life and nothing screamed fun like thirty people crowded into your apartment and scaring the pants off you by shouting happy birthday.”

  “Was she right?”

  “No,” she laughed, finally looking up. “But I didn’t tell her that. It made her happy, so I guess it made me happy.”

  “You’re not into spontaneity?”

  “I’m not against it, but I prefer having control. Less chance of being surprised that way.”

  Maybe if he’d been more like her, things would have turned out differently when he’d come upon Stanton raping Jessie. Oh, he’d have definitely done something. He might have been only a kid, but no way would he have stood by and let it continue. But Stanton had had at least forty pounds and a foot on him. The rock had been the only solution his fourteen-year-old mind had registered. He hadn’t meant to kill him, just get him off her. Unfortunately, he’d proved his father right and hadn’t really used his brain. No, he’d reacted with emotion, the bane of his childhood years. “I guess there’s something to be said for wanting control of your life, but what you can’t do is control what happens around you.”

  “No, that’ s true, but I can try.” She smiled, slippin
g the picture of her and Jessie into her bag.

  Cowboy didn’t buy it. She might know the world around had a will of its own, but she wasn’t going to let that stop her from trying to tame it.

  *

  Their first stop was the restaurant where Jessie had told Grace she was going to eat breakfast. Having already talked to the police the waitress on duty knew exactly who they were asking about. Her dark eyes scrutinized them.

  “A young black woman disappears and everyone is interested. Why?” the forty-something waitress asked, a strong note of distrust in her question. “Folks don’t normally stand up and take notice when one of us go missing.”

  Cowboy could understand her skepticism. It was the “everyone” that set off alarms. “Who else has been asking questions?”

  “Please,” Grace pleaded, pulling out the picture and showing it to the woman. “She’s my roommate and my best friend. We’re trying to find her. She’s a good person—the best person—and her time may be running out.”

  Looking down at the photo in Grace’s hands, the woman seemed to accept Grace’s explanation. “I’ll tell you what I told everyone else. She came in, ordered pancakes and coffee, ate, and left. The record says she paid at nine fifteen. That’s all I know.”

  “You mentioned ‘everyone,’” Cowboy said, wanting to remind her.

  “A guy came in shortly after the police. Asking the same questions.”

  “Did you notify the police?” Grace asked.

  “No. Didn’t think I had to,” she said, not liking the inference she should have. “He said he’d been hired to find her.”

  “Do you remember what he looked like?” Who else was looking for her?

  “You know that Men in Black movie? Like that. What you’d expect Secret Service to look like, only this guy didn’t have the suit. He was white, bald, red hair and I couldn’t tell you the eye color ’cause he wore shades the entire time he was here. Tall man whose mother didn’t teach him any manners.”

  “If he was bald how to you know he was a redhead?” Cowboy asked.

  “He had one of those stupid beards guys are sporting. You know the lumberjack wannabes. Can’t stand that look on a man. Makes you think they’re trying to hide something. It’s why I didn’t tell him she got a phone call when she was here.”

 

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