by Gun Brooke
Grey_bird: I don’t think that’s what I was doing. I was trying to point out that taking care of yourself is important too. And a selfless act.
Sheri_star: That doesn’t make sense. Being selfless for me is to put the company first. To honor my inheritance.
Grey_bird: That’s bull. That’s absolute bull. There’s no one in your family, dead or living, that expects you to kill yourself in order to keep the business happy. I don’t believe that for a minute.
Sheri_star: You don’t know anything about me, or my family, really. You don’t know what it means to be the fourth generation in a highly prominent and successful family.
Grey_bird: You know, you really can be quite full of yourself. What on earth are you talking about? I may come from slightly humble beginnings, but I’m well aware of your world, and how it works. And as for successful and prominent, I know what it is to live up to expectations.
Lark was furious now, and a cold lump of ice in her stomach continued to grow.
Sheri_star: You do. Yes, of course. Well, I don’t see how this is going to help anything. We’ll just end up angrier if we keep chatting.
Grey_bird: So you quit. Like you always do.
Sheri_star: You don’t know what I always do.
Grey_bird: I know how you think! You were the one who called me a closeted flirt, remember?
There was a moment of no communication, when Lark’s heart hammered, no, roared in her chest.
Sheri_star: Actually I didn’t say that to you.
Grey_bird: Yes. You did.
More cyber silence, drawn out, which made Lark’s fingertips grow icy cold.
Sheri_star: No. I joked with her about that. Lark.
Oh, my God. Lark sobbed, dryly and painfully.
Sheri_star: How could I be so fucking stupid? Bird. Grey_bird. Lark.
Clinging to the laptop, Lark shivered as chilling beads of sweat formed on her forehead. It was impossible to move her frozen fingers.
Sheri_star: I guess I don’t have to wonder any more. Your silence speaks volumes.
Forcing her fingers to move, Lark stared back and forth between the screen and the keyboard, panicking, aching, and hardly breathing.
Grey_bird: I can explain.
Sheri_star: Sure you can.
Grey_bird: I can. It may not be good enough, but I can.
Sheri_star: Well, Bird, I don’t want to hear it.
Grey_bird: Please. I know you’re mad and you have every right to be. But please. Can I come over?
Sheri_star: I don’t think that would be wise right now.
Grey_bird: Will you let me explain here then?
Sheri_star: I’m logging off now.
Grey_bird: No! Please!
Sheri_star has left the conversation.
Chapter Twenty-Two
Sheridan slammed down the lid of her laptop. Her hair was still wet after the shower, and she shivered in her robe as she pushed herself farther up on the bed. Lark’s betrayal, her out-of-the-blue devious attempt to…do what? Fly under Sheridan’s radar? Fish for useful information, to use how? Tears of fury clung to Sheridan’s eyelashes, but she refused to let them fall. Was this what Fiona referred to? Sheridan doubted it. This was by far much more serious than a “run-in.”
A knock on the door made her gasp aloud.
“Sheridan? Can I come in?” Lark asked, her voice low and short of breath.
“Go away.” Sheridan’s throat hurt.
“We have to talk.”
“We’ve talked enough. More than enough.”
“Please. Let me explain. Let me in.”
“I said, go away.”
To Sheridan’s dismay, the door opened and the dim light from the corridor fell into her bedroom. “You just do what you want, no matter what, don’t you?”
Lark rushed up to Sheridan’s bed and fell to her knees next to it. “Please, just hear me out.”
“Do I have a choice?” Sheridan felt bitterness curl the corners of her mouth. “It’s not like I can dash out of here, is it?”
“I was desperate to reach you. You shut me out when I began to work here, and I wanted to get to know you. I wanted to be able to find my way to you, to help you any way I could. You know there’s something between us, something more than just physical therapist and patient. I just wanted…to help, to see you through this time…like I did. Eventually.” Lark sobbed in short bursts.
“And when did you plan to reveal your little plot? When, Lark? When I admitted in the chat to my new buddy, Bird, just how fantastic, sexy, wonderful, caring, and loyal my physical therapist is, and how I couldn’t even imagine facing any more days of my life without her?” Sheridan wanted to scream the words, but they came out as menacing growls. One by one they tore through her vocal chords, sliced through the air, and hit Lark.
Gasping for air, Lark put her hands up, palms forward. “No! I never meant for it to come to this!” She leaned forward, her hands now on the bedspread. “I wanted to see if I could find out why you were stonewalling me like you did. There was no obvious reason for it, other than your own fear. I wanted to know how deep that ran, so I could help you erase it, help you become independent and trust that you had a future.”
“Trust?” Sheridan hissed and scooted sideways. “You cannot possibly talk about trust when it comes to how you lied to me. When I came groveling back to you, that day in Boerne, and you took me into the midst of your family, your very wonderful family, I was humbled by how you rose to being the bigger person. If I had known then, what I know now—”
“—then you wouldn’t be as strong as you are, as fit as you are.”
“Or as screwed!” Sheridan leaned forward and captured Lark’s chin between her thumb and index finger. “You thoroughly screwed me over, and nobody, nobody, does that to me and lives to tell about it. Ever.” She lowered her voice to a cold purr that her employees had learned to fear. “You’re cute and sexy, that’s true. You’re obviously good at your job. It doesn’t make sense that you’d stoop to such an insane plan in order to coax information out of me…unless it wasn’t about my health at all, but something entirely different.”
Lark blinked and a frown marred her forehead. “What are you talking about?”
“If you really got under my skin, you’d be able to find out things that might prove valuable to—just about anybody.”
“What?”
“Industrial espionage comes in many shapes and forms.”
The expression on Lark’s face, even before she spoke, dispelled any such notions for Sheridan. “Sheridan! I admit I was wrong. I was dishonest and I wish I could take it all back. I never meant to hurt you, or us, and I want all this to just go away, to recapture the feeling we had at the lake. But never, ever, have I acted in a criminal way. I’m no industrial spy. I wouldn’t know what to do with that information, and we never talk business. Online or otherwise. You know that!” Lark was visibly shaking, trembling from head to toe.
“I know.” Sheridan did. This was personal. Hurtful and deeply personal. “We have the stockholders’ meeting coming up in a few days. I can’t afford to lose any ground when it comes to my physical endurance. We have to work together, and train, these last few days. We don’t have much time, and in retrospect, the less time we spend together…the better.” Sheridan sighed and turned on her side. “Go to bed, Lark.”
“Sheridan—”
“Just go.”
Perhaps it was the finality in her voice that made Lark quit objecting. Sheridan heard her rise.
“All right. See you tomorrow morning,” Lark said without expression, which didn’t help alleviate the pain.
Sheridan heard the door click shut, and she groaned into the pillow. The next few days were going to be hard. Worse, they were going to be heartbreaking.
*
Lark’s fingers trembled as she pressed the speed dial for her sister. “Fiona?”
“Lark? What’s up?” Fiona answered sleepily.
“Sorry to
wake you. I need to talk to someone, someone who knows. Damn, I fucked up.”
“Oh, Lark. She found out. Or you told her?”
“She guessed. I slipped before I had a chance to find the courage to tell her. Oh, God, Fiona. She’s furious. And devastated.”
“That’s a good sign.”
Lark tugged the pillow closer. “What? What can possibly be good about it?”
“She’s devastated because she really cares about you. If she didn’t, she’d be furious, fire you on the spot—again—and be done with you. Did she fire you?”
“No. Not in so many words. She wants me to keep working with her until the shareholders’ meeting. After that I’m history, probably. She hates me.”
“And you love her.” Fiona’s tender words made Lark break down at last.
“Yes. Yes.” Lark hugged the pillow close and pressed her cell phone tight against her ear. “I messed up so badly, Fee. I thought I had more time to help her understand. I thought if I could just explain at the right moment, when all the pieces of the puzzle fit…then she’d understand.”
“I know, Lark. I know. It just doesn’t work that way. Life’s idiosyncrasies interfere, and rarely do so in our favor.” Fiona spoke quietly, her clear, bright voice unusually low. “But all isn’t lost, sis. She’s hurt and offended right now, and she has every right to be. You have to acknowledge that and give her time. As hard as it seems, this wasn’t an unexpected reaction, was it?”
Lark knew Fiona was right and had no problem imagining how she would have acted, if the situation had been reversed. “I know,” she said huskily. “You’re right. Of course you’re right.”
“Try to sleep. I know it sounds like a cliché, but things could look very different tomorrow.”
Lark doubted it. Sheridan’s low growl, so disgusted and yet so devoid of feelings, still rang in her ears. “I’ll try.”
“Give me a call tomorrow. Anytime, really.”
“Okay.”
“Lark, sweetie, don’t give up on Sheridan yet. This is as bad as it gets. Trust me. She just might surprise you.”
“She hates me.”
“No, she doesn’t. She may hate what you did. She may even hate feeling like a prize fool. But I find it very hard to think that she could hate you.” Fiona sounded so sure. “We’ll talk more tomorrow. Try to relax and go to sleep.”
“You too.”
“Sure. ’Night, ’night.”
“’Night.”
Lark curled into the bedcovers and buried herself in the small pit she’d created with the pillows. The room was completely dark, except for the dim green light from her cell phone. She had kicked her discarded laptop under her bed, wanting the damn thing out of her sight. Lark had no idea how she’d make it through tomorrow, but knew she would, no matter what it cost her. She wasn’t going to leave in disgrace or resign for some after-the-fact contrived reason. But facing her will kill me. Over and over.
*
“God almighty. What’s going on, Sheridan?” Mrs. D stopped on the threshold to Sheridan’s study. “You look like hell.” The unusual outburst from Mrs. D made Sheridan glance up, knowing full well that her smile was nothing more than a pained grimace.
“That obvious, huh?”
“You could say that.”
“Well, I don’t want to talk about it. Is everything packed? I want to leave for the hotel directly after work tomorrow.” The stockholders’ banquet would take place at the Marriott River Center Hotel, and Sheridan knew from experience that staying at the hotel saved both time and energy. Especially now.
“Everything’s ready. All you have to do is show up and do your thing.”
“Did you reserve a room for Lark?” Just saying her name out loud made Sheridan’s scalp prickle.
“Yes, I did. She’ll have a room on the same floor as you, a few doors down. Good enough?” Mrs. D raised an inquisitive eyebrow as she walked up to Sheridan.
“Yes. I might need her…services.”
“And something is definitely the matter, Sheridan. You look like a nervous racehorse as soon as you say her name. Did the two of you have another fight?”
“You could say that.”
“Don’t tell me you’re thinking of firing her again?” Mrs. D looked alarmed. “She’s good for you. In more ways than one.”
“I used to think that too. Guess I’m not perfectly correct all the time. What a bummer.” Sheridan didn’t like the bitterness in her voice, but it seemed impossible to pretend that everything was all right.
“Goodness, what happened?”
“I don’t want to talk about it.”
“Whatever it was, it can’t be worth throwing her out in the cold again, can it?”
“I won’t have to. I’m sure she’ll quit as soon as the stockholders’ meeting is over.”
“And where does that leave you—or Lark?”
Sheridan pinched the bridge of her nose. “God damn it. I have no idea. If I did—” She shrugged.
“You wouldn’t sit here looking like a ghost.” Mrs. D folded her arms. “Listen. Whatever has happened, and I’m not going to snoop, I still think Lark is the best thing that ever happened to you. If she made a mistake, or if you did, please, just think twice. That’s all I ask.” She stepped closer and ran a quick hand through Sheridan’s hair. “I hate to see you so unhappy, honey.”
The term of endearment, uttered with Mrs. D’s usual matter-of-fact tone, nearly made Sheridan crumble. She caught her hand and held it briefly against her cheek. “I know. Thanks.”
“And do you promise?”
Sheridan closed her eyes hard and forced her breath to become even. “Yes.”
“Good.” Mrs. D walked toward the door. “I think it’s important.”
The door closed behind her, and Sheridan pivoted on her chair, looking out into the garden. The sun poured down on the vast lawn, and something to the far left caught its rays. Moving closer to the patio doors, Sheridan saw reflections of light and squinted through the scorching sunlight. Lark was sitting with Frank near the patio railing, their two golden-brown heads close together. Sheridan pushed the patio door open and wheeled outside. The heat, so familiar and so scorching, washed over her, and she inhaled the familiar scent of home. She glanced at Lark and Frank again and frowned when she noticed how Lark was clinging to the dog. Sheridan rolled closer, her wheelchair soundless on the patio tiles.
“Frankie…oh, damn, damn, damn…”
Lark was crying, sobbing like a child into Frank’s fur. The dog seemed to endure being on the receiving end of Lark’s tears with a remarkable calm. Feeling like a Peeping Tom of the worst kind, Sheridan was about to wheel back to her study when she heard Lark speak again. Against her better judgment, she stopped with her hands still resting on the wheels.
“It’s all messed up, Frank. I can’t stand how it…is…and I can’t make…it…right. She hates me. And I don’t blame her…” Lark pressed against the dog, and Sheridan could barely hear her words. “I don’t want to be here, but I can’t let her down again. It hurts so bad to be around her. I just want to go home.”
When Lark’s tormented words seared her, Sheridan swallowed repeatedly. She managed to turn the wheelchair around and go back inside, unable to listen any more. She looked over her shoulder, but neither Lark nor Frank seemed to have heard her. Sheridan doubled over when the pain behind her eyelids sent flashes before her eyes. Four more days. They would leave for the hotel tomorrow morning and get ready for the opening banquet, and that meant keeping a cool appearance for the rest of the weekend. Surely she could pull that off. Sheridan sighed and straightened up. But from what she’d just witnessed—could Lark?
Chapter Twenty-Three
The faint whispers died out gradually as Sheridan began her solitary journey up the aisle between the round tables. Some of the luncheon guests at the luxurious hotel obviously didn’t know whether to look away or stare openly at her.
Her gray eyes dared all the people pres
ent at the stockholders’ banquet to pity her. She propelled her wheelchair through the vast ocean of people, her back ramrod straight and a half smile on her firm lips. She wore her hair in large locks swept back from her face, which looked deceptively devoid of makeup. Dressed in a Saville Row black suit over a silver gray shirt, she appeared immaculate.
Lark waited in the wings by the head table, cursing everyone who gawked at Sheridan. Don’t they realize how hard this is for her? Why the hell did she have to make her usual entrance? But Lark knew why. True to tradition, Sheridan, like her father and grandfather before her, opened the yearly stockholders’ meeting by hosting a banquet for all major participants. Tradition also meant “marching past the troops” as the Wards had always done. I wonder how many even tried to dissuade her. I know I did, and she bit my head off. Lark shuddered at the memory. Sheridan had merely stared disdainfully at her, a scornful eyebrow raised to make it clear to Lark that she was way off base.
The banquet was the opening point for a week of events, crowned by the Ward Enterprises Inc.’s stockholders’ meeting. Sheridan’s personal staff had prepared for this event for months, and in a way it was liberating to start the show. Lark sighed in silent relief as Sheridan approached the head table, managing the ramp without problems before she elegantly circled the long, elevated table and wheeled to her seat in the middle. The two men who flanked her rose quickly, looking quite forlorn since there was no chair to hold out for her. Sheridan parked the chair and engaged the brakes. “By all means, take a seat, gentlemen.”