Why Lie? (Love Riddles #2)

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Why Lie? (Love Riddles #2) Page 24

by Carey Heywood


  They aren’t only firing me; they’re forcing me to make my own box to carry out my stuff. As she watches me, I decide what to take. Although the stapler is technically mine, will she assume I’m stealing it? I grab the framed picture I have of Mike and me.

  I look up at her after grabbing my purse. “Does Mr. Fulson know you’re firing me?”

  When she nods, I take a deep breath. I had thought to myself, there was no way he would let them do this. Apparently, I was wrong. People are looking and whispering. Eyes of people I have talked to everyday dig into my shoulder blades.

  Not one of them says a word to me. I’m not sure I’ve ever been so embarrassed in my entire life. Beth walks me to the main door. Our lobby is empty, almost as though they timed my exit to avoid any clients seeing it.

  I’m half way out the door when she says, “Your key?”

  I have to set my box on the floor to get my keys out of my purse. I slip the office key from my ring and hand it to her. “This isn’t right.”

  She offers me no reply, just takes the key and turns, letting the door close without a backward glance. I have been a good employee. What the hell just happened?

  Embarrassment propels me toward the exit. I clumsily shift my box to my hip to open the door. My steps are awkward across the parking lot. My ankles seem to have forgotten how to hold me upright. I stumble and find every imperfection in the asphalt. I make it to my car somehow.

  My eyes are misty, but I refuse to cry. Shoving my box into the back seat and slamming the door, I climb into the driver’s side. With shaky hands, I pull my cell phone out to call Mike. He doesn’t answer so I hang up and text him to call me right away.

  I’ll break my no phone in the car rule when he does. I start my car. I’m hyper-sensitive to each action I take, hands on the steering wheel at ten and two, turn wheel to the left, blinker on, look right, glance at my cell after each movement. I was just fired. I was just fired. There is no way I did what they said I did. I didn’t steal money.

  I’m halfway home when my car jerks to the right. Thankfully, not the left or I would have hit the Ford in the lane next to me. I brake and ease onto the shoulder. I’ve had a blowout. I can see from my rearview mirror the remnants of what was my tire all over the road. I try to call Mike again. No answer.

  Can this day get any worse? I groan and unbuckle my belt. I smack my steering wheel a couple times before apologizing to it.

  My spare is in the trunk. I peel off my suit jacket and toss it into the passenger seat before timing traffic to get out without having my door hit. I get the lift set before it starts raining. There’s the answer to my ‘can it get worse’ question. Great.

  I stop to check my phone, hoping Mike has called, texted, or something, and grumble to myself when I see he hasn’t. The rain has done nothing to kill the heat of the day. It’s as if I’m in an outdoor shower in my clothes. The wayward hairs, which frame my face, have escaped the rubber band and now are plastered to my cheeks.

  I want to cry. I want the rain to disguise my tears. Some stubborn piece of me refuses to allow myself that relief. Every car that passes I both hope and worry that they’ll stop. No one does stop though. My wet hands on the crow bar make removing the lug nuts holding the rim of my now destroyed tire a nightmare. My hands slip more often than not.

  Squatting there in the rain, a wet mess, I realize it’s not so bad. This is the worst of it. My spare tire is now on. I can get a new tire, and I can get a new job. The new job part might be difficult without a reference, but I can do it. I get back in my car and shake some of the rain from my hair like a dog. I search for the closest mechanic on my phone and find one at the next exit. I slowly make my way to it, hazards on.

  It’s a small garage called Pete’s. I clamor back into the rain to the front office.

  Seeing no one there, I tentatively call out, “Hello?”

  “Be right with you.” A voice returns from a back room.

  The air conditioning has me shivering in my wet clothes. I cross my arms and rub my hands up and down them attempting to warm up. A moment later, an older man with a backward baseball cap walks out.

  “Got caught in the rain,” he remarks sympathetically.

  I nod. “I blew my tire and had to put the spare on.”

  “You don’t have roadside assistance?” He sounds surprised.

  My shoulders sag and I groan. “I didn’t even think to call them.” I glance back up at him. “It’s been a rough morning.”

  He pats my shoulder. “I can get you all fixed up from here. Want me to check your other tires while I’m at it?”

  I shake my head. “Honestly, I want to get home, crawl into bed, and pull my covers over my head.”

  “That bad?” he asks.

  I nod and give him a small smile. I pass him my keys and he directs me to the ladies room telling me to use as much of the paper towels as I want to dry off. The ladies room bulb blinks in refusal before fully illuminating the small bathroom. A roll of paper towels sits on a small table between the sink and toilet.

  I wring my shirt and hair before even trying to dry them further. The soles of my wedge dress shoes are soaked. I make a squish sound with every step I take. By the time, I’m back in the front office the rain has stopped. Stupid summer downpours. I try Mike again. At this point, I don’t know whether to be angry or worried.

  The older man, who I assume is Pete, has my new tire on in no time. I thank him profusely as he rings me up, passing him my debit card. He runs it through the machine twice before cringing and looking up at me.

  He rubs his chin, passing my card back to me. “It was declined.”

  My jaw drops, my lower lip shaking. “That can’t be right.”

  He hesitates. “Do you have another card?”

  I shake my head. “I don’t.”

  I don’t want to cry. “Let me try to call,” my voice trails off as I try Mike again.

  To avoid his kind eyes, I turn my face attempting to hold myself together. When it goes to voicemail, I fall into an uncomfortable plastic chair and hold my head in my hands. Fired, flat tire, rainstorm, and now my debit card is being declined. I don’t know what to do. I start to call my mom, but stop myself when I see my battery is almost dead.

  “Can I use your phone to call my bank?” I quietly ask.

  He walks over to me, my bill in his hands. Standing right next to me, he tears it in half.

  “I can pay. I just need to…” I say.

  “Don’t worry about it.”

  He helps me up, patting me on the back as he walks me to my car. After opening my door for me, he tells me to go home and get some rest. That everything will seem better tomorrow. Once I’m far enough away that he can’t see me, I pull over so I can cry. His kindness and his generosity on this being maybe the second worst day of my life gives me hope.

  Tomorrow I will call Mr. Fulson and ask them to provide proof. I will call a lawyer and find out if I can get my job back because I have been wrongfully terminated. I dry my tears and get back on the road.

  I’ll be home early enough to make something nice for dinner. Moreover, I have to call the bank to find out why my card wouldn’t work. Even if I have to stop by my branch and pull out cash, I am going to pay that nice man back.

  When I pull into our complex, I see a car in my spot and Mike’s car still in his spot. I park in a visitor spot further down and slowly walk up to the stairs to our condo. Having a car in my spot has happened before. This car seems familiar somehow. When I’m passing the car, it comes to me. It’s Stacy Callahan’s car. Her father is Mike’s boss.

  Stacy is a sweetheart; we’ve all hung out before. I hurry up the stairs and into the condo. Our front door opens right into the living room and I’m surprised I don’t find them in there or in the kitchen that feeds off it. I start to wonder if they’re even here when I hear it, a moan, Mike’s actually. The sound he always makes right before he comes.

  I stand outside the doorway of my bedroom, froze
n. I know what they’re doing, and I now know why every call and text I have sent my fiancé today has been ignored. I deliberate whether to confront them or not. Do I want to see the man I have spent the last eight years of my life with, the man who asked me to marry him, making love to another woman?

  I decide another eight years may need to pass before I want to see his face again or hear his excuses. I grab a sheet of paper and write a quick note. “You sounded busy.” I sign it and leave my engagement ring with it on the kitchen counter. I can figure out how or when or if I want anything from this condo another time.

  The Carolina Days Series

  The Other Side of Someday

  Yesterday’s Half Truths

  Chasing Daylight

  The Him & Her Series

  Him

  Her

  Them

  Him & Her Box Set

  Sawyer Says (Spin off)

  Being Neighborly (Spin off)

  The Love Riddles Series

  Why Now?

  Why Lie?

  Standalones

  A Bridge of Her Own

  Uninvolved

  Stages of Grace

  Better

  Standalones: A Collection

  Table of Contents

  Dedication

  Prologue

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Epilogue

  Acknowledgements

  About the Author

  Preview: The Other Side of Someday

  Other Books Available Everywhere

 

 

 


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