“None of your business.”
“But it’s
someone,
” she says, and too late I realize that my response was a tacit acknowledgment that she got it right.
“It’s no wonder something like this happened,” Crystal remarks. “He’s a handsome man, and with all those young, pretty students around—”
“Oh, for God’s sake, Crystal, stop it,” I snap. “Dean didn’t do anything wrong. One of his students is upset that he wouldn’t approve her thesis proposal, and she’s using this charge as a weapon of revenge.”
“That’s what he told you?”
“That’s what I know.”
Her mouth compresses. “Jesus, Liv, he has you snowed, doesn’t he?”
“No! Believe it or not, Crystal, there are good men in the world. And Dean is one of the best.”
“You don’t have to defend him. I know you don’t want my opinion, but I’ve learned a lot about men over the years, and it seems to me like your husband isn’t all that you think he is.”
“You’re right.” My shoulders tense. “I don’t want your opinion.”
“He’s the only man you’ve been with, right?”
I don’t respond. Can’t. How does she know that?
“I’ve known men like him,” Crystal continues. “He’s older than you. Way more experienced. Good-looking. Good talker. You met him when you were young and struggling with school and work. He has plenty of money and promised to take care of you. He gives you whatever you want, and in return you give him what
he
wants, right?”
I can’t breathe past the tightness in my throat. “You don’t know anything about it.”
“I do know something about manipulative men who force you to do exactly what they want.”
“Dean has never forced me to do anything.”
“Of course you don’t think so,” Crystal replies. “A man like him would make you believe you’re the center of his world. You think he’d never use you. But then you follow him wherever he goes, let him take care of you, while you keep him happy in the bedroom. He knows how good he has it. But you can’t see the truth of it, which is that he’s manipulating you.”
My chest aches. Every cell in my body is fighting Crystal’s ugly, twisted assessment of my marriage.
“You need to either shut up or get out.” My voice, cold and knife-sharp, doesn’t sound like my own.
“Don’t get angry with me,” she says. “I was young and naïve once too. That’s exactly how I ended up pregnant with you. And it upsets me to think that my daughter, that thirteen-year-old girl who had one helluva backbone, has ended up with a sugar daddy and still nothing of her own.”
Oh, shit.
I can deflect what she said about Dean and me. I know the truth of our marriage. I know the truth of my husband. But this arrow flies past my defenses and hits me where I already hurt. And she knows it.
“All of what you’re saying is bullshit,” I tell her. “You were the one always looking for a man to take care of you. You’re the one who still has nothing of your own.”
“And yet you were always ranting about how you never wanted to end up like me.”
Shit. Shit. Shit.
“I’m not like you,” I retort. “I’m nothing like you. I own a business now, goddammit. I have a life here. I’m putting down roots. And if you’re trying to make me doubt my marriage and my husband, good luck with that. Because I never will.”
“I’m not trying to make you doubt anything, Liv. I can read the signs. The miscarriage, your husband being gone for so long, leaving you alone, this business with a lawyer… you’re obviously having marital problems, and you’re blind to what your marriage really is. I want you to see it and to know you still have a way out.”
“You can’t make me
see
anything. You don’t even know me! I don’t want your opinion or advice or anything, okay? And I sure as hell don’t want a way out.” I force myself to approach her. “You need to leave, Crystal. I don’t want you here anymore.”
She holds up her hands. “Okay, fine. But I’m worried about you. And the offer to come with me to Phoenix still stands. You just need to grow a spine.”
An ice-cold shiver rattles through me. I know exactly what she’s trying to do. She can’t stand the thought that I have what she doesn’t. And she wants me to believe all this shit she’s throwing at me so I’ll feel the need to escape with her again.
“Conversation’s over,” I tell her. “It’s past time for you to find somewhere else to stay. Either start looking for a hotel room or leave for Phoenix now. You can’t stay with me anymore.”
I no longer care where she goes, as long as it’s
away.
I go to the TV stand and grab the VHS tape that contains the video of Crystal’s cereal commercial.
“And you can take this with you.” I throw the tape on the coffee table, then stalk to the bedroom and slam the door so hard the hinges rattle.
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
Dean
April 22
don’t want you to talk to her.” I tighten my grip on the phone. Anger seethes in my gut. Just because I agreed to this doesn’t mean I have to like it. On the contrary. I fucking hate it.
“Your wife actually saved me some time by contacting me first,” Ben Stafford says on the other end of the phone. “I’d intended to call her soon to set up an appointment. I just need to ask her some basic questions to verify everything you’ve already told me.”
“There’s no way you can leave her out of it?”
“It’s procedure, Professor West. When will you be back in town?”
“I don’t know. I’m chairperson of a Medieval Studies conference that’s taking place in July. I have to be back for that. I want to come back sooner.”
“I’ve gotten pretty busy with several other cases, but I should have yours wrapped up well before the end of the semester so I can make my recommendation to the board.”
Which could be even more of a disaster for me. I end the call and dial our home number, clenching my teeth when Crystal’s voice comes over the line.
“Olivia West’s residence,” she says.
“It’s Dean,” I tell her. “Where is she?”
“At the café, I suppose. How’s Italy?”
“Italian. Tell Liv I called.”
“Of course,” Crystal says. “Did she relay the message from the lawyer?”
My heart seizes. “What lawyer?”
“Sterling and Fox,” she replies. “I took the call. I thought maybe Liv had contacted a divorce lawyer.”
“No, goddammit.” Though I hate letting Crystal get to me, the words
Liv
and
divorce
crash in my brain like missiles.
“Well, all evidence points to you having marital problems,” Crystal continues, “but I saw that’s not Sterling and Fox’s area of specialty.”
Cold foreboding prickles my skin. I want to hang up, but I can’t. I need to know what she knows.
“What did he say?” I ask.
“Just asked for you to return his call.” She pauses. “I imagine sexual harassment is like a rape charge for a man. No matter the outcome, the stigma never goes away. And Liv will have to deal with being married to a man whose reputation is ruined.”
A red haze coats my vision. My voice drops to a dangerous level. “I want you out of my house. Away from my wife.”
“
My
daughter,” she says. “Look, I’ve been in… compromising positions before, Dean. I’m sure Liv has too. If you just—”
I hang up on her before my fury unleashes. My hand shakes as I try Liv’s cell again. I could give a shit what Crystal Winter thinks of me. But if she knows what happened to Liv at Fieldbrook, if she uses it against her—
I throw the phone on the bed.
The arrows are flying at my wife from all directions. And I’m five thousand goddamned miles away.
I want to be back with Liv right now. I
need
to be. The urge to shield her from this shitstorm is visceral, instinctive. It’s the only thing I can do.
Shoving aside my anger, I sit down and try to work for the next hour. I stare at a photo of Liv above my desk, one of the more modest pictures of her I’d taken at the Butterfly House.
I told her once that I’d move heaven and earth to give her whatever she wanted. I still would. I’ll fight forever to give her all the things she never had as a child—love, safety, happiness, protection—but now there’s something else, a desperate urge to give her a marriage filled with
more,
to give her things she didn’t even know she wanted.
To give her a life beyond what either of us has ever expected.
Need boils inside me. I fumble for my phone again and push the speed dial button.
“Dean?” Liv’s voice, breathless. “What time is it there?”
“Uh… eleven, I think. Where are you?”
“At home.”
“Is your mother there?”
“No, she’s out looking for another place to stay. She’ll be gone before you get back.”
“She wants you to leave with her, get on the road again.”
“I’ll never go anywhere with her, Dean, you know that.”
“When did she find out about Sterling and Fox?”
Her breath catches. “Yesterday, but how did you—”
“She answered the phone when I called earlier.”
“I’m sorry. I was at the grocery store.”
“Why didn’t you tell me she knows about the goddamned charge?”
“I didn’t know she’d figured it out until this morning. What did she say to you, Dean?”
Liv will have to deal with being married to a man whose reputation is ruined…
My throat tightens. I can’t push any words past it.
“Are you okay?” Liv asks.
No, I’m not okay. I’m not okay five thousand miles away from my wife. I’m not okay with my career and reputation hanging in the balance. I’m not okay with being powerless.
“Dean?”
“I need to be with you. I need to do something.”
“I know you do.”
“Liv.”
“I’m here.”
“Tell me you know this is all bullshit. That Maggie Hamilton is lying.”
“Of course she’s lying.”
“You never thought it could be true?”
“What?”
“Not once did you wonder if it was possible?” My heart is suddenly pounding hard. “That I could have hit on a student?”
“No, of course not. Why would you ask me such a thing?”
“I’ve lied to you before.”
“Oh, Dean, don’t.”
“How can you just trust that I’m telling you the fucking truth?”
“Because I know you, you ass! You’re the man who looked up the university
rules
before you asked me out.”
“Years ago.”
“So, what, you think I’m suddenly going to doubt you
now?
After all we’ve been through?”
“It’s happened before.” I can’t stop, have to get it out. “Other female students, professors… some of them have come on to me over the years.”
“I know.”
“You know?”
“Of course! You’re so handsome, successful, intelligent, so…
you.
Women have always fallen over themselves for you, and I’m not so naïve to think they don’t still flirt with you.”
“I’ve never—”
“Dean.” Her voice sharpens. “You don’t even have to say it.”
“Why do you just believe me?”
“
Because I know you.
I’m your girl, dammit.”
Of course she is. That’s an unbreakable, rock-solid truth.
“Dean, please. My mother has been trying in her insidious little way to convince me that there are cracks in our marriage, but—”
“What the fuck? What has she said to you?”
“Nothing that means anything. Nothing I
believe.
But this is why I knew you had to leave again. I need you to understand that I meant it when I said I could handle my mother alone. Just like I can handle talking to Ben Stafford. I know the truth. So don’t you dare lose your faith in me or in us.”
“I never will, but I can’t stand this.” My chest feels like stone. “I know what you’ve been telling me. I can’t protect you from everything. I get it. But goddammit, Liv, I’m not supposed to be the one hurting you again.”
“You’re not! The only thing hurting me is that we have to be apart.”
“Then I’m coming home.”
“Dean, you—”
“I talked to Simon this morning about figuring out a way I can do the work from home. Maybe with one or two short trips to Altopascio. I’ll make it work. I can’t stay away from you until the end of July. I won’t.”
My heart hammers as I wait for her response. She was the one who wanted me to leave in the first place, convinced it would be good for me, for us. And I’ve been okay with going on the dig—been grateful for the job, even—and the dating thing Liv and I are doing has admittedly been fun.
But ultimately it all means that I’m away from my wife. When the only place I want to be is
with
her.
“Oh, Dean,” Liv says. “You know I want you to come home. We
need
to be together, but—”
“No. There’s no
but
in this conversation, Liv. I’m coming home.”
“Frances told you to stay, that it was good for your career.”
“I don’t care what Frances said.”
“She knows you’re doing well there.”
“Yeah, I’m doing well here.” I shove off the bed and start to pace. “I’m doing well because I know how to work. But nothing I do here is going to make a damned bit of difference if I have to abandon you. And I’m sick of it. I’m sick of being away from you, not seeing you, talking to you only once a day, jerking off every night because I can’t be with you… No. Fuck this, Liv. I’ve never hidden before. I’m not going to start now.”
My chest heaves. I press a hand to the wall and suck in a hard breath.
“Liv.”
Suspicious silence on the other end.
Oh shit.
“Liv, don’t cry.” I bang my forehead against the wall. “Please don’t.”
“I’m not.” Her voice sounds thick. “Dean, please… look, I know it seems like nothing is within your control, but—”
“It doesn’t
seem
that way,” I interrupt. “It
is
that way. It’s been that way since last fall when things got so fucked-up and I couldn’t fix them. Then that mess with my parents, the miscarriage, this bogus charge against me, the suspension… Jesus, Liv. I told Frances I’d quit my job to stop this whole thing.”
“You told her you’d
quit?
”
“What the fuck else can I do? Stafford’s forcing me to sit on my ass until he finishes his investigation. You’re getting dragged into this shitstorm right when you’re starting a new business. And I can’t give you anything, Liv, not even a guarantee that I’ll still have my job next year. At least if I quit, I can stop it from getting worse.”
“For God’s sake, Dean, you’ve never quit anything in your life. But you’re going to let that girl force you out of a job that you love?”
“Damn right I will, if it’ll—”
The words stop abruptly in my throat.
Silence vibrates.
“If it’ll protect me,” Liv finishes.
Goddammit.
Anger breaks inside me. I grip the phone harder.
“Look, I’m not going to apologize anymore,” I snap. “Yes, I want to protect you. You’re my wife. I’d fucking kill for you, Liv, and if that makes me a possessive bastard of a husband, then fine. That’s what I am. I’m not going to change either. I love you too goddamned much.”
“I know you do!” she cries. “I know you would. That’s why it scares the crap out of me to think of you back in Mirror Lake before the investigation is over.”
I stop. “What?”
“Dean, I wanted you to leave because I knew you wouldn’t be able to stand doing nothing here, but I also…”
“What? You wanted to stand on your own, right? Well, you have. Now you still don’t want me to come back?”
“No! That’s not what I—”
“Not what you meant?” I stalk across the room. A thousand sharp edges cut into my chest. “What did you mean then, Liv? That I should stay away until it’s convenient for you that I come back? That I should jerk off and talk dirty to you until you finally decide it’s okay for us to be a married couple again? That you don’t want me to come back because you need to do everything by yourself now?”