With a huge sigh, he stared down at his feet. He couldn’t risk breaking in a second time with the PI in there. He needed privacy, damnit, to talk some sense into his Lainie.
Cop had to leave sometime, Jack reminded himself. He’d find a place to stash the car, and wait.
It was a testament to her love, Laine concluded, that
nudged her into altering her morning routine in order to see Max off at five forty-five A.M. She liked to think it also demonstrated she was flexible, but she knew better.
Her routine would snap right back into place once she and Max became more accustomed to each other. It might take on a slightly different form, but in the end, it would be routine.
She was looking forward to it and, thinking just that, gave him a very enthusiastic kiss at the door.
“If that’s the goodbye I get when I’m only going to be gone a day, what do I have to look forward to if I have to be out of town overnight?”
“I was just realizing how nice it’s going to be to get used to you, to take you for granted, to have your little habits and quirks irritate me.”
“God, you’re a strange woman.” He took her face in his hands. “Am I supposed to look forward to irritating you?”
“And the bickering. Married people tend to bicker. I’m going to call you Maxfield when we bicker.”
“Oh, hell.”
“I think that’ll be fun. I really can’t wait until we fight about household expenditures or the color of the bathroom towels.” And as that was perfect truth, she flung her arms around his neck and kissed him enthusiastically again. “Travel safe.”
“I’ll be home by eight, earlier if I can manage it. I’ll call.” He pressed his face into the curve of her shoulder. “I’ll think of something to bicker about.”
“That’s so sweet.”
He eased away, leaned down to pet Henry, who was trying to nose between them. “Take care of my girl.” He hefted his briefcase, gave Laine a quick wink, then walked to his car.
She waved him off, then, as promised, shut the door and locked it.
She didn’t mind the early start. She’d go into town, take a closer look at her stock to see what she might want to transfer to her home. She’d take Henry for a romp in the park, then make some calls to see about repairing some of her damaged furniture, and make arrangements to have what she considered a lost cause removed.
She could indulge herself by surfing some of the bridal sites on-line, drooling over gowns and flowers and favors. Laine Tavish was getting married! Delight had her doing a quick dance that inspired Henry to race in mad circles. She wanted to buy some bridal magazines, but needed to go to the mall for that, where she could buy them without causing gossip in town. Until she was ready for town gossip.
She wanted a big, splashy wedding, and it surprised her to realize it. She wanted a gorgeous and ridiculously expensive dress. A once-in-a-lifetime dress. She wanted to spend hours agonizing over flowers and music and menus.
Laughing at herself, she started upstairs to dress for the day. Snapping back into place, she thought. Her normal life had taken a hard, unexpected stretch, but it was snapping right back into the normal. Was there anything more normal than a woman dreaming about her wedding day?
“Need to make lists, Henry. Lots and lots of lists. You know how I love that.”
She buttoned up a tailored white shirt, slipped on trim navy pants. “Of course, we have to set a date. I’m thinking October. All those beautiful fall colors. Rusts and umbers and burnt golds.
Rich
colors. It’ll be a bitch to get things organized in time, but I can do it.”
Imagining, she twisted her hair into a single French braid, tossed on a jacket with tiny blue-and-white checks.
A romp in the park first, she decided, and slipped into comfortable canvas flats.
She was halfway downstairs when Henry gave a series of alarmed barks and raced back up again.
Laine froze where she was, then rolled to her toes as her heart slammed against her ribs. Before she could follow Henry’s lead, Jack strolled out of the living room to the bottom of the steps.
“That dog go to get his gun?”
“Dad.” She shut her eyes, caught her breath. “Why do you
do
this? Can’t you just knock on the damn door?”
“This saves time. You always talk to the dog?”
“Yes, I do.”
“He ever talk back?”
“In his way. Henry! It’s all right, Henry. He won’t hurt you.” She continued down, letting her gaze pass over the dyed hair, the rumpled suit. “Working, I see.”
“In my way.”
“Looks like you slept in that suit.”
“I damn well did.”
The bite in his tone had her lifting her brows. “Well, don’t snap at me, Jack. It’s not my fault.”
“It
is
your fault. We need to have a talk. Elaine.”
“We certainly do.” Voice crisp, she nodded, then turned on her heel and marched into the kitchen. “There’s coffee, and some apple muffins if you’re hungry. I’m not cooking.”
“What are you
doing
with your life?”
His explosion had Henry, who’d bellied in to test the waters, scramble back to the doorway.
“What am
I
doing with my life? What am I doing?” She rounded on him, coffeepot in hand. Her heated response tore through Henry’s fear to find his courage. He barreled in, glued himself to Laine’s side and tried out a snarl in Jack’s direction.
“It’s all right, Henry.” Pleased, and considerably surprised by his defense, Laine reached down to soothe the dog. “He’s not dangerous.”
“I could be,” Jack muttered, but some of his temper faded into relief that the dog had some spirit.
“I’ll tell you what I’m doing with my life, Dad. I’m
living
my life. I have a house, a dog, a business, a car—and payments. I have a plumber.” She gestured with the pot, and nearly sloshed coffee over the rim. “I have friends who haven’t actually done time, and I can borrow a book from the library and know I’ll actually still be here when it’s due back. What are you doing with your life, Dad? What have you ever done with your life?”
His lips actually trembled before he firmed them and managed to speak. “That’s a hell of a way for you to talk to me.”
“Well, it’s a hell of a way for you to talk to me. I never criticized your choices, because they were yours and you were entitled to make them. So don’t you criticize mine.”
His shoulders hunched; his hands retreated to his pockets. And Henry, vastly relieved that his valor wouldn’t be tested, stood down. “You’re spending nights with a cop. A
cop
.”
“He’s a private investigator, and that’s beside the point.”
“Beside the—”
“What I’m doing is spending nights with the man I love and am going to marry.”
“Ma—” He made several incoherent sounds as the blood drained out of his face. He gripped the back of a chair, slowly sank into it. “Legs went out. Lainie, you can’t get married. You’re just a baby.”
“I’m not.” She set the pot aside, went to him and put her hands gently on his cheeks. “I’m not.”
“You were five minutes ago.”
Sighing, she slid onto his lap, rested her head on his shoulder. Henry tiptoed over to push his head through the tangle of legs and lay it sympathetically on Jack’s knee.
“I love him, Daddy. Be happy for me.”
He rocked with her. “He’s not good enough for you. I hope he knows that.”
“I’m sure he does. He knows who I am. Who we are,” she said, and drew back to watch Jack’s face. “And it doesn’t matter because he loves me. He wants to marry me, make a life with me. We’ll give you grandchildren.”
The color that had come into his cheeks faded away again. “Oh now, let’s not rush that far ahead. Let me settle into the idea that you’re not six anymore. What’s his name?”
“Max. Maxfield Gannon.”
“Fancy.”
“He’s from Savannah, and he’s wonderful.”
“He make a good living?”
“Appears to—but then, so do I.” She brushed at his dyed hair. “Are you going to ask all the clichéd father-of-the-bride questions now?”
“I’m trying to think of them.”
“Don’t worry about it. Just know he makes me happy.” She kissed his cheek, then rose to deal with the coffee.
Absently, Jack scratched Henry behind the ears, and made a friend for life. “He left pretty early this morning.”
She glanced over her shoulder. “I don’t like you watching the house, Dad. But yes, he left early.”
“How much time do we have before he gets back?”
“He won’t be back until tonight.”
“Okay. Laine, I need the diamonds.”
She took out a mug, poured his coffee. She brought it to the table, set it in front of him, then sat. Folded her hands. “I’m sorry, you can’t have them.”
“Now you listen to me.” He leaned forward, gripped the hands she’d folded on the table. “This isn’t a game.”
“Isn’t it? Isn’t it always?”
“Alex Crew, may he rot in everlasting, fiery hell, is looking for those stones. He’s killed one man, and he’s responsible for Willy’s death. Has to be. He’ll hurt you, Laine. He’ll worse than hurt you to get them. Because it’s not a game to him. To him it’s cold, brutal business.”
“Why did you get mixed up with him?”
“I got blinded by the sparkle.” Setting his teeth, he eased back, picked up his coffee. Then just stared into the black. “I figured I could handle him. He thought he had me conned. Son of a bitch. Thought I bought the high-toned game he was playing with his fancy fake name and patter. I knew who he was, what he’d been into. But there was all that shine, Lainie.”
“I know.” And because she did know, because she could remember how it felt to be blinded by the shine, she rubbed her hand over his.
“Had to figure he might try a double cross along the way, but I thought I could handle him. He killed Myers, the inside man. Just a greedy schmuck who wanted to grab the prize. That changed the tune, Lainie. You know I don’t work that way. I never hurt anybody, not in all the years in the game. Put a hole in their wallets, sure, a sting in their pride, but I never hurt anybody.”
“And you don’t understand people who do, not deep down, Dad.”
“You think you do?”
“Better than you, yeah. For you it’s the rush. It’s not even the score itself, but the rush of the score. The shine,” she said with some affection. “For someone like Crew, it’s the score, it’s about taking it all, and if he gets to hurt somebody along the way, all the better because it only ups the stakes. He’s never going to stop until he gets it all.”
“So give me the diamonds. I can lead him away from here, and he’ll know you don’t have them. He’ll leave you alone. You’re not important to him, but there’s nothing in this world more important to me than you.”
It was truth. From a man skilled as a three-armed juggler with lies, it was perfect truth. He loved her, always had, always would. And she was in the exact same boat.
“I don’t have them. And because I love you, I wouldn’t give them to you if I did.”
“Willy had to have them when he walked into your shop. There’s no point in him coming in, talking to you, if he didn’t plan to give them to you. He walked out empty-handed.”
“He had them when he came in. I found them yesterday. Found the little dog. Do you want that muffin?”
“Elaine.”
She rose to get it, set it on a plate. “Max has them. He’s taking them back to New York right now.”
He literally lost his breath. “You—you
gave
them to the cop?”
“PI, and yes, I did.”
“Did he hold you at gunpoint? Did you have a seizure? Or did you
just lose your mind
?”
“The stones are going back where they belong. There’ll be a press release announcing the partial recovery, which will get Crew off my back.”
He lunged up, pulling at his hair as he circled the room. Thinking it was a game now that they were friends, Henry scooped up his rope and pranced behind Jack. “For all you know he’s heading to Martinique. To Belize. To Rio or Timbukfuckingtu. Sweet Baby Jesus, how could my own daughter fall for a scam so old it has mold on it?”
“He’s going exactly where he said he was going, to do exactly what he said he was doing. And when he gets back, you and I are going to give him your share, so he can do exactly the same thing with them.”
“In a pig’s beady eye.”
To settle the dog, Laine got up and poured kibble into a bowl. “Henry, time to eat. You’re going to give them to me, Jack, because I’m not going to have my father hunted down and killed over a sack of shiny rocks.” She slapped her hands on the table between them. “I’m not going to lie to my own children one day when they ask what happened to their granddaddy.”
“Don’t you pull that shit on me.”
“You’re going to give them to me because it’s the only thing in my life I’ve ever asked of you.”
“Damn it, Laine. Damn it to hell and back again.”
“And you’re going to give them to me because when Max turns them over and collects the fee, I’m going to give you my share. Well, half my share. That’s one and a quarter percent of the twenty-eight, Dad. It’s not the score of a lifetime, but it’s not sneezable. And we’ll all live happy ever after.”
“I can’t just—”
“Consider it a wedding present.” She angled her head. “I want you to dance at my wedding, Dad. You can’t do that if you go to prison, or if Crew’s breathing down your neck.”
On an explosive sigh, he sat again. “Lainie.”
“They’re bad luck for you, Dad. Those diamonds are cursed for you. They took Willy away from you, and you’re on the run, not from the cops but from someone who wants you dead. Give them to me, get the monkey off your back. Max will find a way to square it with New York. The insurance company just wants them back. They don’t care about you.”
She came to him, touched his cheek. “But I do.”