He sat back on his haunches. “Red, I wouldn’t miss it. I like listening to you rehearse in the shower.”
“I’m heading out right now to rehearse in place before the bar and grill opens. I hope Tansy’s right about people wanting to hear somebody sing old songs while they’re eating their pork chops or scooping up nachos.”
She pressed a hand on her belly. “We’re going to find out.”
“Nervous?”
“About the singing? No. I don’t get nervous about singing, it feels too good. About the draw not justifying what they pay me. I’m nervous about that. I’ve got to get on. It’s looking good in here.”
“It’s coming along.” He smiled at her. “Let’s make the word of the day ‘gradation.’ One step at a time.”
“Mmm,” she said, understanding he wasn’t just talking about a new bathroom.
• • •
SHE SQUEEZED IN A LAST REHEARSAL Friday morning, and ordered herself not to think about what she could do with the songs if she had a couple of live musicians.
Still, she thought she put a little of her own spin on the old classic “As Time Goes By.”
“Play it, Sam,” Derrick said from behind the bar.
“Of all the gin joints in all the world.”
“Are you an old-movie fan?”
“My daddy is, so we had to be. And who doesn’t love Casablanca? How’d that sound to you, Derrick?”
“It sounded like Tansy had it right. We’re going to rack them, stack them and pack them on Friday Nights.” Restacking glasses freshly cleaned from the night before, he cocked an eyebrow at her. “How do you feel about it?”
“Hopeful.” She stepped down off the tiny stage. “I just want to say, if it doesn’t pull in a big draw, if it just doesn’t work, it’s not a problem.”
“Are you setting up to fail, Shelby?”
She cocked her head, walked toward the bar. “Forget what I just said. We’re going to kick ass so high here tonight, butts’ll be landing on the moon, and you’re going to be obliged to give me a raise.”
“Don’t get carried away. Want a Coke?”
“Wish I had time for one, but I have to head over to the salon.” To be sure she wasn’t already late, she tipped her phone out of her pocket to check the time.
“Tonight should bring people in, just to see,” she said. “There’s me, the girl who wasn’t there for a while, and all the hyping Tansy’s done. Flyers everywhere, and I’m plastered all over your Facebook page. Hell, my family’s big enough to be a crowd, and a lot of them will be here. That’s something.”
“Kick ass high.”
“Kick ass high,” she agreed. “I’ll see you tonight.”
She walked out, distracted, still rehearsing in her head. She barely noticed the woman who fell into step beside her until she spoke.
“Shelby Foxworth?”
“Sorry.” She’d gotten used to “Pomeroy” again in such a short time she nearly said no. “Yes. Hello.”
She stopped, smiled and searched her memory banks. But the stunning brunette with the cold brown eyes and the perfect red lips didn’t ring any bells.
“I’m Shelby. I’m sorry, I don’t recognize you. Who are you?”
“I’m Natalie Sinclair. I’m Jake Brimley’s wife. You knew him as Richard Foxworth.”
The half-smile stayed on Shelby’s face as the words sounded like a foreign language to her ears. “What? What did you say?”
Something feline moved into the woman’s eyes. “We really need to talk, somewhere more private. I saw a cute little park not far. Why don’t we go there?”
“I don’t understand. I don’t know any Jake Brimley.”
“Changing a name doesn’t change who you are.” Natalie reached into a pale blue handbag, drew out a photograph. “Look familiar?”
In the picture the brunette was cheek to cheek with Richard. His hair was longer than he’d worn it, a bit lighter. Something was different about his nose, Shelby thought.
But it was Richard smiling out at her.
“You—I’m sorry—are you saying you were married to Richard?”
“No. Wasn’t I clear? Let me say it again, in case you have trouble understanding. I was, and am, married to Jake Brimley. Richard Foxworth never existed.”
“But I—”
“It’s taken me quite a while to track you down, Shelby. Let’s have a chat.”
Brimley was not one of the names she’d found in the bank box. My God, had he had another? Another name. Another wife.
“I need to make a call. I’m going to be late for work.”
“Go right ahead. It’s a quaint little town, isn’t it? If you go for gun racks and camo.”
And didn’t she sound just like Richard? “There’s also art.” Shelby bit off the words. “Music, tradition, history.”
“No call to get testy about it.”
“People who consider us hicks are generally self-important snobs from somewhere else.”
“Ouch.” Looking amused, Natalie gave a quick shudder. “Struck a nerve.”
Rather than try to explain what was going on in a call, Shelby texted her grandmother, apologized, let her know she’d be a little late.
“Some people like quaint. I’m a city girl.” Natalie gestured toward the crosswalk, began to walk in gorgeous heeled sandals of pale gold. “So was Jake. But you didn’t meet Jake here.”
“I met Richard in Memphis.” Everything seemed just a little blurry. “I was singing with a band during my summer break from college.”
“And he just swept you away. He was good at that. Exciting, charming, sexy. I’ll bet he took you to Paris, a little café on the Left Bank. You’d stay at the George Cinq. He bought you white roses.”
A raw, ugly sickness roiled in her stomach—and must have shown on her face.
“Men like Jake have patterns.” Natalie patted Shelby’s arm.
“I don’t understand. How can you be married to him? I mean, he’s dead, but how could you have been married to him? We were together for over four years. We had a child together.”
“Yes, that was a surprise. But I can see how the family unit could work for him. I had the poor judgment to marry him—whirlwind to Vegas. Sound familiar? And I had the good sense not to divorce him when he left me in the lurch.”
It dropped on her, a single crushing weight. “I was never married to him. That’s what this means. That’s what you’re saying.”
“Since he was still legally married to me, no, you weren’t ever married to him.”
“And he knew.”
“Of course he knew.” Now she laughed. “What a bad boy! Of course, that’s part of the appeal. Such a bad, bad boy, my Jake.”
The park held quiet. No kids on the swings or teeter-totter, none running over the green, climbing on the jungle gym.
Natalie sat on a bench, crossed her legs, patted the space beside her.
“I wasn’t sure if you realized that part and played along. It seems he duped you. But then, that’s what he does.” For an instant something that might have been sorrow flickered over Natalie’s face. “Or did.”
“I can’t think.” Shelby lowered to the bench. “Why would he do this? How could he do this? Oh my God, are there any more? Did he do this to another woman?”
“I couldn’t say.” Natalie gave an easy shrug. “But since he swung pretty quick from me to you, I don’t think there’s another wife in between. And that’s the time I’m interested in.”
“I don’t understand.” Suddenly breathless, Shelby sat back, pushed both hands through her hair, held it back a moment. “I can’t understand any of this. I was never married,” she said slowly. “It was all fake, just like the ring.”
“You lived pretty well for a while, didn’t you?” Natalie angled to her, aimed a look o
f contempt. “Paris, Prague, London, Aruba, Saint Bart’s, Rome.”
“How do you know all that? How do you know where I went with him?”
“I made it my business to know. You had a luxury condo in Atlanta, country clubs and Valentino dresses. Then the mansion in Villanova. You can’t claim he didn’t give you plenty. Seems to me you had a good deal.”
“A good deal? A good deal?” Not breathless now, not when insult and fury rolled through. “He lied to me, right from the start. He made me his whore without my knowing. I thought I loved him. At first, I thought I loved him enough to leave my family and everything I knew and thought I’d wanted.”
“Your mistake, but you were compensated. Plucked you out of this little hick town, didn’t he? Oh, excuse me, this art-and-culture-ridden town. Dropped you right in the lap for a few years, so don’t whine, Shelby. It’s unattractive.”
“What’s the matter with you? You come here, tell me all this. Maybe you’re the liar.”
“Check it out, be my fucking guest. But you know I’m not lying. Jake had a way of making women fall for him, and do what he wanted.”
“Did you love him?”
“I liked the hell out of him, and we had a damn good time. That was enough, would’ve been enough if he hadn’t hung me out to dry. I made an investment in him, you could say. And I paid a high price. I want my payoff.”
“What payoff?”
“Twenty-eight million.”
“Twenty-eight million what? Dollars? Are you crazy? He didn’t have anywhere near that kind of money.”
“Oh, he had it. I know because I helped him get it. Just shy of thirty million in sparkly diamonds, emeralds, rubies, sapphires and rare stamps. Where is the take, Shelby? I’ll settle for half.”
“Do I look like I have diamonds and emeralds and all that? He left me in debt up to my eyeballs. That’s the price I’m paying for believing him. What did you pay?”
“Four years, two months and twenty-three days in a cell in Dade County, Florida.”
“You—you were in prison? For what?”
“For fraud, since I rolled like an acrobat on Jake and Mickey. That’s Mickey O’Hara, the third member of our happy little band. Mickey’s got twenty years to go, last I heard.”
Smile sharp and derisive, she ticked her finger at Shelby. “You don’t want Mickey O’Hara coming after you, Shelby. Take my word on that.”
“You hired that private investigator to hound me.”
“I can’t say I did. I do my own investigating—it’s one of my skills. Half, Shelby, and I’m gone. I earned every penny of it.”
“I don’t have half of anything to give you.” Shelby lurched to her feet. “Are you saying Richard stole millions of dollars? That the detective from Florida was telling me the truth?”
“It’s what we do, sweetheart. Or in his case, what he did. Find the mark. Rich, lonely widows worked best for Jake. He could turn them into putty in a matter of days. Easy to get them to ‘invest’ in a land deal—that was his specialty. But the big one, the biggest of our career, the one that went wrong, that was jewels and stamps, and she had some beauties. If you expect me to buy that you knew nothing about nothing, you’re not selling it.”
“I’m not selling a damn thing. If he had all that, why am I paying off his debts?”
“He always was a bit of a hoarder. And those jewels were hot. The stamps? You’d need to find just the right collector for them. When it went south, Jake could take off with them, but if he’d tried to sell them, even breaking the jewelry down to the stones, they’d have tracked him. Something like that, it’s best to give it a few years, lay low.”
“Lay low,” Shelby murmured.
“That was the plan. Four or five years, we figured, before we could liquidate and retire. Or semi-retire, as who wants to give up all the fun? You were his cover, that’s clear. But you’re going to have to go a ways to convince me you’re stupid enough to know nothing.”
“I was stupid enough to believe him, and that’s what I’m going to be living with.”
“I’ll give you some time to think about it. Even if you’re the driven snow, Shelby, you lived with the man for more than four years. You think about it hard enough, you’ll figure out something. Consider half of close to thirty million—maybe a little more now—motivation.”
It was Shelby’s turn for contempt. “I don’t want half of anything you stole.”
“Your choice. Turn your part in, take the finder’s fee if you’re delicate. It’d be fat enough to pay off some of the debt you’re swimming in. Like I said, I get what’s mine, I’m gone. If you want to stay in this little nowhere town, working in your grandmother’s beauty parlor for peanuts, singing on Friday nights in a bar for rubes? Your choice. I get what’s mine, you keep what’s yours. You’ve got that pretty little girl to think about.”
“You go near my daughter, you think about going near my daughter, I’ll take you apart.”
Natalie just looked over the side of her shoulder, lips curved. “Do you think you can?”
Shelby didn’t think; she acted. She reached down, hauled Natalie to her feet by fisting a hand on the front of her blouse. “I can, and I will.”
“That’s what caught Jake’s eye. He liked some fire, even in a mark. You can relax. I’m not interested in little girls or in going back in a cell. Fifty-fifty, Shelby. If I bring Mickey in on this, you’ll get nothing but pain and heartache. He’s not as civilized a negotiator as I am.”
She shoved Shelby’s hand off her blouse. “Think about it. I’ll be in touch.”
Because her legs wanted to shake, Shelby sat on the bench again when Natalie strolled away.
Twenty-eight million? Stolen jewelry and stamps? Bigamy? Who in God’s name had she married? Or thought she married?
Maybe it was all a lie. But what would be the point?
But she’d check, check all of it.
She pushed to her feet, pulled out her phone as she walked to call Tracey and check on Callie.
By the time she got to the salon she was fired up again.
“I’m sorry, Granny.”
“What kept you? And put the wrath of God in your eyes?”
Shelby shoved her purse under the front counter. “I need to talk to you and Mama, soon as you’re both free. I’m sorry, Mrs. Hallister, how are you doing today?”
The woman in Viola’s chair—that Hallister boy’s grandmother—smiled. “I’m doing right well. I came in for a touch-up, and here Vi’s talked me into highlights. Let’s just see if Mr. Hallister notices.”
“It’s nice, brightening things up for spring. Granny, I’ve just got to make a quick call, then I’ll check supplies.”
“Towels should be ready to fold.”
“I’ll see to that.”
Over the shop talk they exchanged a look. Viola nodded, and held up a hand behind the chair back. Five minutes.
Shelby went back into the laundry and supply room, and called her brother Forrest.
13
She couldn’t think about it. Callie was safe, and Tracey would keep her that way. She didn’t know one damn thing about any stolen jewelry, and wouldn’t know a rare stamp if someone stuck it to her forehead. If this Natalie person thought she did, she’d just have to live with the disappointment.
But it upset her how easily she could believe Richard—or Jake, or whatever his name was—had been a thief, a liar.
But never her husband, she thought, as she folded and stacked towels. In a terrible way, now that the weight had settled in, she took comfort from that.
She’d do her work, smiling and chatting with customers, restocking supplies. Then she’d go home, have dinner with her little girl before heading to the bar and grill to give Tansy and Derrick their money’s worth.
She wouldn’t let anyone down again, including herself.
Forrest found her at the end of the day while she swept the little courtyard.
“Did you find her?” Shelby demanded.
“No. Nobody by that name or description in the hotel, the lodge, in any of the cabins, the B&Bs. She’s not staying in the Ridge. And I’ve got nothing so far about a Natalie Sinclair doing time for fraud in Dade County.”
“It’s probably not her real name, either.”
“Probably not, but a good-looking brunette’s bound to stick in somebody’s memory if she’s staying in the Ridge, or poking around. We’ll take a look further out if she comes back, if she bothers you again.”
“I’m not worried about that.”
“Then start. You tell Mama?”
“I told her, and Granny, and they’ll tell the rest of the family. I’m not taking chances, Forrest, but I don’t know anything about these jewels or stamps she says she’s after.”
“You may know more than you think. Don’t get your claws out,” he said as she whipped around to him. “Christ’s sake, Shelby, I don’t think you had anything to do with it. But along the way he might’ve said something, done something, you overheard something that didn’t click at the time. Now this is all planted in your head, maybe something will click. That’s all.”
Tired, she rubbed a spot between her eyebrows where a headache wanted to brew. “She put me on edge.”
“Imagine that.”
Shelby let out a short laugh. “Is it crazy for me to be glad somewhere down deep finding out I was never married to him?”
“I’d say it’s about as sensible as it gets.”
“Okay then, I’m going to be sensible. I’m finished up here, so I’m going home. Mama picked Callie up already from Chelsea’s. I’m going to be with my girl awhile, make sure she has a good supper. Then I’m going to change and fix up so I look like somebody who should be singing on a Friday night.”
“I’ll follow you home. Safe’s better than sorry every time,” he said before she could object.
“Okay, thanks.”
Did she know something, something buried deep? Shelby wondered as she drove home with Forrest cruising behind her. It was true enough she could look back now, see little signs Richard was up to something. The phone calls that ended when she walked in or walked by, the locked doors and drawers. The dismissal of any question she had about what he did, where he went.
The Liar Page 20