Raising the Stakes

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Raising the Stakes Page 11

by Sandra Marton


  The teddy bear didn’t know it, but it didn’t have a chance.

  “So,” he said, “are you from Vegas originally? I mean, is this home?”

  “It is, now. But nobody’s actually from Vegas. Well, nobody I’ve met, anyway.”

  “Yeah. I guess it’s the same as New York. There must be people who were actually born there but I’ve never met any.”

  “Is that where you’re from? New York?”

  “Yes. I clerked for a judge there, after law school, and—”

  “If you take the next right, we can avoid the traffic. Sorry. I didn’t meant to interrupt. You clerked for a judge in New York?”

  Gray made the turn. “Uh-huh.”

  “But you were born in…Texas?”

  He shot her a startled look. “How’d you know that?”

  “I have a good ear for accents. I guess it’s from living here and talking to people from different places.”

  “Yeah, but I don’t have an accent.”

  “Well, you do. Just a tiny one.”

  “So do you, now that I think about it. I just can’t place it. Is it California?”

  “Take the next left—”

  “Utah? New Mexico? Arizona?”

  “—and just pull in here, into this parking lot, and stop.”

  “That’s not fair. You pegged me as a Texan. Don’t I get the same shot at you?”

  “Thank you for all your help,” Dawn said. She opened the door and stepped out. “And have a wonderful vacation.”

  The door closed. Gray hit the window control. “Hey,” he shouted, as she ran across the lot toward a white building, “aren’t you even going to tell me your name?”

  She turned toward him, waved and went inside the building. That was when Gray saw the sign and realized he was at the back entrance to the Desert Song Hotel.

  CHAPTER SIX

  DAWN was exhausted by the time she tottered into her apartment at eight that night. It had been a long day, but at least things had worked out better than she’d expected.

  For openers, she had her car back.

  She’d taken a few minutes to make herself presentable after she’d arrived at the Song in the afternoon. Then she’d hurried to her office and found Keir waiting for her. She’d started to apologize for being late but he said Jean had already explained.

  “Things like that happen to everyone,” he’d said pleasantly, “but it might be a good idea if you have your car checked over to make sure it’s reliable.”

  She knew it was a polite way of telling her that getting to work on time was part of her job. The raise she’d just gotten was significant. She could set some money aside each week and, eventually, either repair her old car or trade it in on a newer model, but it would take a while. She couldn’t explain that, not without explaining, too, that she had expenses nobody knew about because she had a son and she was paying a pretty hefty tuition to keep him in a small private school not too far from Vegas but far from any possibility his father would ever find him.

  All she could do was nod at Keir’s graciously worded reminder of her responsibilities and assure him she’d have the car fixed and that she’d be on time from now on.

  “Fine,” he replied, and then he’d stunned her by saying he’d have someone take a look at her car, tow it in, if that was necessary, and fix it. When she stammered a protest, he reminded her that the hotel had its own small fleet of vehicles, that it had a contractor who serviced the fleet and that it was simple enough to send one of his men to do the job. He said he’d tell the contractor to charge her the special rate he charged the hotel, and to bill her separately.

  Dawn knew the O’Connells had a reputation for fairness to employees but Keir’s kindness amazed her. She’d wanted to say so but she was afraid she’d cry and embarrass them both, so she just smiled like an idiot and choked out a thank you.

  A little while later, a man in coveralls came to get her keys. A few hours after that, when he returned them, he said her car was in the employee lot, all fixed and ready to go.

  “What was wrong with it?” she’d asked, and he launched into a mind-numbing recitation that involved a dirty air cleaner and something called a ballast resistor. Dawn listened, nodded once or twice as if she understood what sounded like a foreign language, and finally the mechanic grinned and said the bottom line was that they’d bill her at the end of the month.

  The good news was that her old car still had plenty of life in it. Good news? It was wonderful news. And it was heaven to be home at last.

  Dawn kicked off her shoes, waggled her toes and sighed with relief. Wearing heels every day was something new. Her dealer’s uniform had consisted of a shirt, vest and pants. Flat had been okay. The new job required heels. Nothing outrageous, just pumps, but she wasn’t used to heels at all. Summers on the mountain, she’d gone barefoot; winters, she’d worn heavy walking boots. Never heels, no matter what the season. Harman hadn’t approved. They made a woman look like a slut, he’d said, but then he’d said that about almost anything she wore, even the shapeless dresses she’d sewed herself in hopes they would be acceptable…

  Dawn took off her jacket and carefully placed it on a hanger. She was doing it again, wasting energy thinking about the past. Was it because she’d missed her Sunday visit with Tommy last week? She always saw her boy on Sunday. Always. She got up at five, was on the road by five-thirty, arrived at Rocking Horse Ranch at seven and they spent the entire day together, just she and her son.

  Sometimes she took him to a wonderful place Tommy called their hideaway, where water rushed down over smoothly sculpted rocks and things were so green and lush you forgot you were in the desert. Or they drove to what remained of a mining camp, where Tommy had found a battered tin cup that made his eyes shine. If the weather was iffy, they drove to the mesa not far behind the ranch, followed a steep path to the bottom and explored the little canyon at the base.

  She saw her son during the week, too, if time permitted, but those Sunday visits were what she lived for—and she’d missed the last one. Becky had asked her to come in and spend Sunday reviewing things. For one wild moment, Dawn almost said she couldn’t do it, that she had a little boy waiting for her… But nobody knew Tommy existed, not even Cassie.

  He would always be her secret. It was his only protection.

  It still amazed her that she’d made good her escape from the mountain.

  That night, she’d known Harman would go after her. He had friends; one of them would surely lend him a car or a truck. As she’d huddled with Tommy in the dark parking lot of the Victory Diner, waiting for the 1:00 a.m. bus that would take her to freedom, she’d feared every pair of headlights that came down the street. Sure enough, once the bus was on the highway, she’d looked out the window to see a familiar old car racing alongside. It belonged to Harman’s best drinking buddy, but her husband was at the wheel.

  “Harman,” she’d whispered. She shrank back in her seat as he glanced at the bus, even seemed to look right into the window where she sat with her baby in her lap, but then he’d pulled ahead. She’d almost sobbed with relief. Harman had been watching for the truck. His truck. He hadn’t thought she would have abandoned it and taken the bus instead.

  The look of him, wild-eyed at the wheel of that car, haunted her. It was how she imagined him still, driving through the night in search of her. It was why she would never tell her secrets to anyone, why she’d said no, she wouldn’t mind giving up her Sunday when Becky asked. She’d called the ranch, told Tommy she had a cold because she was afraid he’d think she put her job before her love for him, and gave him a big mmmwha that she said was a superduper giant kiss to tuck under his pillow—it was a game that always made him giggle.

  Maybe she couldn’t wake up mornings to see her boy’s smiling face or tuck him in last thing at night, but she had saved him from his father. That was all that mattered. As for her edginess tonight…well, the incident this afternoon had shaken her. A perfectly pleasant man had tea
sed her a little and she’d almost gone to pieces. She’d thought she was past all that, the feeling of suffocating terror when a man leaned too close, when she saw that look, that tautness in a man’s face that meant he was thinking of taking you to bed to do whatever would give him pleasure…

  “Stop it,” she said briskly.

  The apartment was hot and airless after being closed up for so many hours. Dawn hit the switch for the AC, listened as it gurgled and groaned to life, then checked her answering machine. The red light was blinking. Dawn felt her heart in her throat, told herself she was letting her imagination run wild but sagged with relief when Cassie’s voice flowed from the speaker.

  “Hi. It’s me. I know I said I’d come by for pizza but one of the girls called in sick, so I probably won’t make it. Oh, I got your message. That’s great, about your car. Keir’s terrific, isn’t he? Okay, gotta go. Talk to you tomorrow. Maybe we can meet for lunch, you think? Ciao.”

  The machine clicked off. Dawn pressed her hand to her throat. “You really have to stop this,” she said softly.

  A blinking light on an answering machine didn’t have to mean bad news. There were a thousand reasons for someone to leave a message. The hotel called with schedule changes. Salesmen phoned to try to sell her siding and insurance. She and Cassie were in touch almost every day. In her heart, she knew all that. In three years Mrs. Wilton had only phoned a couple of times, and the calls had been about simple things, like Tommy needing new sneakers or jeans.

  It was just that she’d had this—this uneasy feeling all afternoon, the sense that something was wrong. Not wrong, exactly. Maybe just off-kilter. At work, she’d looked up a couple of times with the feeling that someone was watching her but nobody ever was, except for a harried reception clerk who had come to tell her a guest with blue hair and a free drink card was driving everyone crazy, insisting she could swap the card for dinner at La Chanson.

  Dawn unzipped her skirt and hung it alongside her jacket.

  Her mother would have said she was as jumpy as a long-tailed cat in a room full of rocking chairs. She would have told her to knock on wood three times or spit over her shoulder, whatever. Dawn had never been able to keep Orianna’s endless superstitions straight, nor had she wanted to. She’d never wanted to be like her mother in any way, which made it even harder to understand how she’d ended up with a man like Harman.

  To hell with Harman. He was out of her life, and hadn’t she promised herself she wasn’t going to waste another moment thinking about him?

  She snatched up the phone, stabbed the programmed number of the Rocking Horse Ranch. Mrs. Wilton answered on the second ring. Yes, Tommy was fine. He was sleeping. What was new? Well, he’d decided he wanted to be a cowboy when he grew up. Or maybe a fireman, but only if firemen could ride horses, too.

  Dawn laughed as she imagined her little boy’s earnest face. By the time she hung up the phone, she felt fine again. She had to stop seeing shadows where there weren’t any. That man who had helped her today, for example. So what if he’d asked her where she was from? She’d asked him the same question. It was just conversation; it didn’t mean a thing.

  He was a nice guy, that was all. Nice, and nice-looking. Definitely nice-looking. No question about it. Her Good Samaritan was what Cassie would call a hunk.

  She took the pins from her hair and shook it loose, stripped off the rest of her clothes and stepped into the shower. There was a time, however brief, she’d have noticed how handsome he was right away. When she was fifteen, sixteen, before Harman came into her life, she’d just started becoming aware of those things. Other girls her age at Queen City High School had been standing in little knots, eyeing the boys and giggling for quite a while before she’d wanted to eye them herself.

  Of course, she never had.

  Dawn rinsed off and wrapped herself in a towel.

  She didn’t belong to any of those cliques. There was a pecking order even in that squalid town, and she was at the bottom of it. She would have died of embarrassment, anyway, if she’d looked at a boy and he’d noticed, though embarrassment would have been the least of her worries if her mother had caught her. Orianna had set out the rules the day Dawn first got her period. It was just about the same time her breasts began to develop and her waist to curve in above her hips.

  “You’re a woman now,” she’d said.

  Dawn hadn’t felt much like a woman, not at twelve, but she’d known better than to talk back.

  “Boys’ll start comin’ around you. Men, too. And I don’t never want to see you showin’ them any notice.”

  “Yes, Mama,” she’d answered.

  “You do and I’ll beat you till you can’t sit down. You got that?”

  Dawn got it, even if the message hadn’t made much sense. Years later, she’d figured out that it was Orianna’s way of trying to keep her from leading the same life she did but back then, she’d wondered why her mother would warn her about men when she almost always had one in her bed, behind the closed door at the end of the trailer. The door wasn’t much of a barrier. Sounds came right through. Smells, too, that musky stench of sweat and sex that made her gag the first time Harman laid hands on her, even before she’d learned how horrible it was to be with a man.

  “Dammit!”

  She was back to thinking about Harman again when what she should be thinking about was tomorrow, and her new job, and what she and Tommy would do together this Sunday…

  The doorbell rang.

  Dawn swung around and stared in the direction of the front door as if she might be able to see through it. Who would come visiting at this hour? Who would come visiting her at all? Only Cassie, and Cassie had left a message on the machine saying she wouldn’t be coming by. Had she put the chain on? She couldn’t remember. She’d been so glad to be home, so impatient to phone Mrs. Wilton…

  The bell rang again.

  Your abuser can’t control you unless you let him. The steady voice of the Phoenix counselor echoed in her head. Dawn tossed the towel aside, slipped into her old terry-cloth robe and went to the door. Yes, the chain was on. She’d done it automatically.

  “Who is it?”

  “It’s me. Cassie.”

  Cassie! Dawn almost laughed with relief as she undid the chain. “I thought you were working late.”

  “Yeah, so did I, but here I am.” Cassie stepped into the living room and closed the door with her hip. “I figured I’d take the chance you hadn’t eaten yet,” she said, holding out a square white box. “Dinner.”

  “Not only haven’t I eaten yet, I am positively starved.” She was, too, now that she thought about it. “That pizza smells wonderful.”

  Cassie grinned and strolled past her. “Pizza?” she said dramatically, as she deposited the box on the kitchen table. “For shame, mademoiselle. Would I bring something as mundane as pizza?” She flung the lid back. “Regardez! Pizza ;aga la francaise!”

  Dawn peered into the box. “Mmm. Onions. Garlic. Black olives. Ham. Cheese.” She took a deep breath, looked up and smiled. “It’s pizza, and it’s glorious.”

  “Not glorious. Magnifique. You keep forgetting those sixteen weeks I spent at the Sands, strutting across the stage with the Eiffel Tower on my head. I know French when I see it.”

  “Uh-huh.”

  “Uh-huh, my derri;agere. These are olives ni;alcoise.” Cassie took one of the little black olives and popped it into her mouth. “And three different kinds of fromage, if you please.”

  “And the ham?”

  “You mean,” Cassie said, batting her lashes, “le jambon, oui?” She grabbed a piece and ate it. “It’s Parma.”

  “Parma ham’s Italian.”

  “Yeah, well, France is pretty close to Italy, isn’t it? You have any soda?”

  “In the fridge.”

  Dawn put a handful of paper napkins on the table while Cassie opened the refrigerator and took out two cans of soda. They sat down opposite each other and dug in.

  “So,” Cassi
e said after a while, “I guess you had a memorable day.”

  “Only if breaking down on Las Vegas Boulevard is your idea of memorable.” Dawn drank some soda. “How come you didn’t end up having to work tonight?”

  “Jane—the girl who called in sick—decided she suddenly felt better and showed up.” Cassie grinned and tucked a strand of jet-black hair behind her ear. “Actually I think she heard that Prince Ahmat was in the house. He’s a big, and I do mean big, tipper.”

  “Well, that’s nice. Not that he tips big. I mean, it’s nice she decided to work. You certainly didn’t want to work a double shift.”

  “No.” Cassie leaned forward, delicately removed a mushroom from the pizza and put it in her mouth. “I met this guy. A Frenchman.”

  Dawn laughed. Cassie’s tastes in food inevitably reflected her love life. “I never would have guessed.”

  “He’s tall, dark and gorgeous.”

  “Mmm.”

  “`Mmm’ is for pizza. Magnifique is for handsome, loaded Frenchmen.”

  “It’s for pizza, too, according to what you said two minutes ago.”

  “You’re too picky for your own good, you know that?” Cassie sat back and crossed her legs. “So, are you gonna tell me how things went today?”

  “They went fine.” Dawn scooped up a gooey blob of cheese and sucked it off the tip of her finger. “Well, mostly fine. I had a couple of tough moments but all in all, I think it was okay. Jean said so, anyway.”

  “And your car?”

  “All fixed. Something called a ballast resistor and some other stuff had to be replaced.”

  “Great.” Cassie raised an eyebrow. “I heard that a knight in shining armor came to your rescue.”

  Dawn looked up, blushed, and looked down again. “You heard wrong. It’s too hot to wear armor in Vegas.”

  “I also heard he was gorgeous, and that he was riding a black horse.”

 

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