A hand on her shoulder brought her lashes fluttering open to see Kerry’s concerned green eyes watching her. “You look really washed out.

How’s your head?”

“Reminds me of a certain day during a certain storm.” Dar managed a wry smile.

“That bad?” Kerry put the menu down. “Why didn’t you say something? I’ve got some stuff in my bag. Hang on.” She gently slid out from under Dar’s head and padded over to the chair, rummaged in her bag and returned with a pill bottle. “Shoot. You’ve got to eat something before you take this, Dar, or you’ll get sick.”

“I am sick.”

“Sicker.” Kerry grabbed the phone and glanced at the menu. “Hello.

Yes, room 322. I need a bowl of the chicken soup.” A dark eyebrow lifted at her. “Two of the club sandwiches, and...” The blue eyes gazed at her sadly. Kerry sighed. “And a bowl of chocolate ice cream.” She put the phone down and set the menu aside. “Have some soup and you can take this stuff. I figured that was fastest.”

“Okay.” Dar rolled over and rested her head on her folded arms, feeling completely drained. “Mind turning that light down?”

Kerry turned off the light closest to the bed. “Sure.” She rubbed Dar’s back lightly with her fingertips, eliciting an incoherent sound from her friend. “Want me to see if I can loosen those up a little?”


82 Melissa Good

“Uh.”

Kerry slid over and sat cross-legged in front of Dar, flexing her hands before carefully kneading the painfully tense muscles. “Ooo.” She winced, touching the back of Dar’s neck. “This must be driving you nuts.”

It was easier just to grunt, so Dar did, curling her body up a little and trying to concentrate on not throwing up. It was too much for one day, she decided. Three meetings, two of them fairly adversarial, then the flight which usually gave her a headache anyway, then the funeral. Add to that the knowledge she was going to have to deal with an inquisitive Ankow next week, and what she really felt like doing was taking off to the Keys and disappearing.

She thought about that for a bit.

C’mon, Dar. You never backed down from anything. Don’t go starting now, just because a few bad apples hit you on the head in the same day. A slight grin tugged at her lips at the sound of her father’s voice echoing in her head and turned, letting her eyes crack open and observe the attractive kneecap inches from her face.

Experimentally, she licked it.

“Yeow!” Kerry almost levitated off the bed. “Dar! What are you trying to do, scare me to death?”

“With a single measly lick?” Dar opened one blue eye fully and raised its brow. “You flatter me.”

Kerry turned an appealing shade of crimson, which made her fair hair and eyebrows stand out vividly. “You must be feeling better,” she accused, leaning over to continue her work.

Dar rocked a hand back and forth. “A little.” She exhaled, warming Kerry’s knee. “Just the peace and quiet’s helping,” her finger touched Kerry’s calf, “and having you here.”

“Thanks.”

“Mmm.” Dar closed her eyes again.

“Tell me something. I mean, I’ve met people like your mother’s family before.”

“Ungh.”

“How on earth did she and your father hook up? I’m trying to figure out where they could have met. Did they crash into each other on the highway or something?” Privately, Kerry had been imagining a combination sushi bar/shooting range.

“Ah. Well, that’s a tale,” her lover acknowledged. “I wondered, myself, after I got old enough to realize just how different they really were.” She tilted her head. “Like us.”

Kerry burst out laughing. “Not. Dar. We are not anywhere near that different. C’mon now.”

“No, we are.” The blue eye regarded her. “You grew up with a silver spoon, didncha?”

She thought about that. “I guess. Yeah. If you mean my family always had money, sure. But you’re worth a heck of a lot more than I Eye of the Storm 83

am.”

“I’d firmly disagree. But in dollars, right now, okay,” Dar acknowledged. “That’s only been in the last few years, though. Growing up, we were living on my dad’s military pay. It’s why I started working so young.”

“Mmm.” It was Kerry’s turn to be thoughtful.

“I have this,” Dar’s brow creased, “outer veneer of…I mean, I learned how to buy the right clothes and all that, but underneath I’m still a scruffy military brat, who’s more comfortable barefoot on the beach than dressed in the boardroom.” She paused. “I think that’s why I’m so…why my mother’s family gets to me so much. They know that and they’ve all got that old money thing going. I always felt...”

“Like they were looking down on you?”

Dar nodded.

“You kicked their attitude right up through their nostrils today, you do realize that, right?” Kerry pronounced, with an understanding grin. “I remember the first time I saw you, and let me tell you something, Dar, you knocked my socks off and I am old money. I can smell a bourgeoisie at twenty paces.”

“It was the power suit,” Dar mumbled, faintly embarrassed. “And the first time you saw me, I was going to fire you. That doesn’t count.”

A soft knock at the door caused Kerry to roll up to her feet and answer it, allowing the room service waiter to enter and put the tray down on the small table. “Thanks.” She signed the bill and closed the door after him, then went to the tray and examined its contents. “I don’t know, Dar. There’s something very appealing about the thought of you sitting in that kazillion dollar condo munching on a bowl of Frosted Flakes and milk. I like that about you.” She uncovered the soup bowl and brought it over to the bed, sitting down carefully so she wouldn’t spill anything. “C’mon. Roll over.”

With a sigh, Dar complied, sitting up and pulling her body closer to accept a spoonful of the broth. It was tasty and she readily took the bowl from her lover and discarded the spoon, sipping it directly from the side as Kerry shook her head and chuckled. “You got a problem with me drinking from this here utensil, young lady?” Dar produced a reasonable facsimile of her father’s growly tones.

Kerry laughed.

“In a bus station.” Dar glanced at her.

“Huh?”

“You asked where they met.” Dar swallowed the pill Kerry now offered her, chasing it down with a little more soup. “It was in a bus station. My mother had…I don’t know, I guess she was in a rebellious stage herself. She’d decided to run away from home and ended up in the local Greyhound stop.”

Kerry leaned her chin on her fist. “Really?”

“Mmm. Dad had gotten caught between transports and decided to switch to the bus because it was going to take half of forever for him to 84 Melissa Good get back to Atlanta otherwise.” Dar smiled. “He just had enough cash for the ticket and he was sitting in there with his gear, in his uniform when she came in.”

“Uh huh. Then what?” Kerry got up, retrieved the sandwiches and put the plates down on the bed.

“Depends on which one you ask,” Dar responded. “Dad says ‘musta been the damn uniform, all them shiny things blinded her butt.’”

Kerry giggled. “And your mother said?”

“She said she looked into those eyes and was lost.” Dar’s lips tightened slightly. “She asked where his ticket was for and that’s where she went.” She took a breath. “She never looked back.”

They regarded each other quietly for a moment.

“Wow.” Kerry finally sighed, gaining an unexpected understanding of someone she barely knew. “That sounds really intense.”

A slow nod. “It was. Her family tried everything to get her home.

Finally they just gave up.”

“And accepted it?”

Dar shook her head. “They never did. He was always an outsider to them.”

Kerry pulled a bit of turkey out of her sandwich and chewed it slowly and thoughtfully. Dar took a bite of her own, and they ate in silence. “Wow,” the blonde woman finally said, as she studied the angular face opposite her. Even given their different genders and age, and Andrew’s scarring, she could see the uncanny similarities, from the dark hair, and pale eyes, even to the shape of her friend’s jaw. “She must miss him a lot.”

A serious nod.

What would it be like, Kerry wondered, to have that kind of ache, and be reminded of it every time you looked into someone’s eyes? “Are you going to tell her, Dar?” The question neither of them had brought up all week surfaced unexpectedly from her lips.

The blue eyes lowered. “I gave him my word I wouldn’t.” She could ask the same vow of Kerry, she knew.

But she didn’t.

Dar raised her head to find Kerry looking back at her with quiet intelligence. “Can I come with you tomorrow?” the blonde woman asked, with just a hint of a smile. “I think I have more in common with your mother than she realizes.”

“Could be,” Dar agreed softly, glad of the offer. She eyed Kerry and produced a smile. “Wanna share some ice cream?”

Kerry chuckled and retrieved the bowl.


Chapter

Ten

THE PHONE, WHEN it rang, was a thin, discrete warble. It echoed gently off spotless tile floors and the eggshell walls that bore only abstract, thinly drawn art. After a moment, soft bare footfalls scuffed against the tile, and the phone was answered.

“Yes?”

“Ceci. Are you there?”

“Of course I am. Do you think this is the machine?” Cecilia sighed.

“What is it, Richard? I have things I have to do this morning.”

“Did you arrange to talk to Dar?”

Another sigh. “For all the good it’s going to do for either of us, yes.”