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I cave in to my emotions, collapsing to the pavement. My palms are ski

Meanwhile, people form a circle around me, watching and wondering what my problem is. I know that look. I’ve given that look.

They think I’m crazy.

“You don’t understand!” I tell them, tell anyone who’ll listen or even stare down at me with a look of disdain. “You don’t understand!”

My father’s been dead for twelve years.

6

Chapter 32

ANYWAY, AFTER SEEING my dead father, I can’t get home fast enough, though it’s the very place I had to escape from less than an hour ago.

In the cab back to my building, all I do is stare at my camera and wonder about the film inside. I squeezed off three, maybe four shots of my father. I can’t remember exactly.

But all I need is one.

What’s scarier – that it’s really him or that it’s all in my head?

Practically busting through the front door to my apartment, I make a beeline for the darkroom. And hopefully some answers.

“Hurry up!” I implore the film as it stews in the processing tank. “Move it!” I think this is the only time I wish I owned one of those instant cameras.

I’m so single-minded about getting these shots developed that for a few minutes I don’t pay the slightest attention to what’s all around me. Pi

But once I notice them, I can’t keep from looking at them.

Bad idea.

Also, on one corkboard are some old shots from my days growing up in Concord, Massachusetts. My mother, my father, my two sisters. And one shot of my boyfriend from college, Matthew, with his head cropped off – which is so richly deserved.

“Hurry up!” I yell again at the developing film.

Finally, there’s something to see.

I pull up one of the shots, staring hard at the image. The gray coat, the hunched-over posture – the man whose casket I saw lowered into the ground back home with my own eyes.It’s my father.

My eyes tear up as I grab another shot and then another, poring over every detail.

Suddenly, it’s as if I’m chasing him all over again. I’m out of breath, my chest burning. The room feels as though it’s caving in, and I reach out for the wall to steady myself. So this is what a panic attack feels like…

Desperate for air, I flee the darkroom, and when that’s not enough, I run around opening all the windows in my apartment.

I try to breathe normally, but I can’t.

C’mon, Kristin, keep it together. Somehow, some way, this has to start making sense. You just have to find the organizing principle.

It wasn’t my father, I tell myself, just someone who looks like him. Maybe someone’s trying to mess with my mind. It’s got to be something like that.

Christ, how insanely paranoid can I get? Someone messing with my mind? Who?

Out of nowhere, a sharp pain shoots straight up from my feet. My thighs and calves are throbbing, and I can’t stand it anymore. Not any of this.

Balling my hands into fists, I begin to pound at my legs. I’m literally beating myself up.

“Stop it! Stop it! Stop it!”

Closing my eyes, I let go with a primal scream, and yet at the same time I have a very sane thought. This is no time to be alone.

Chapter 33

I CALL MICHAEL.

Actually, I page him. That’s how we work it on the weekends. The arrangement between us.

I’m the supposed big client to whom he gives direct access 24/7, so Penley doesn’t raise a tweezed eyebrow when he disappears into his study to call me back on his private line. I even have a name. Carter Whitmore. Sort of sounds like a guy in finance.

Two minutes later, my phone rings. I don’t bother with hello and cut right to the chase. “I need to see you.”

Before Michael can respond, I realize how that sounds, or at least how he might interpret it. Sexually.

“I mean, I need to talk to you,” I tack on. Strangely, I’m feeling better now. Calmer.

“Okay, so let’s talk.”

“Where can I meet you?”

“Oh,” he says haltingly. “We can’t do this on the phone?”

“I’d rather not.” Tell you that either I’m cracking up or it’s a whole lot worse than that.

“You sound stressed. Is everything okay?”



“No,” I answer. “Can’t we meet somewhere?”

“That’s the problem. I’m about to take Dakota and Sean to the Central Park Zoo.”

“Perfect. I’ll meet you there. Ten minutes.”

Silence.

“What is it, Michael?”

“The kids,” he says.

“What, don’t you think they’d like to see me?”

“Of course I do. That’s my point, Kristin. They’ll like it so much it will be the first thing they tell their mother when they get home.”

“Then what if I just happen to bump into you guys?”

He chuckles in a way I immediately don’t like. Almost condescending. He can be that way, but not with me.

“I think you’re reaching,” he says.

Now I’m a little pissed. And yes, I am stressed, okay?

“You’re right, Michael, I am reaching. I’m reaching out to you now, and you’re not there for me.”

“C’mon, don’t be so melodramatic, Kris. Take it all down a notch.”

I press him. “What about later? Are you free after the zoo?”

The silence again says it all. “I can’t,” he responds. “I would if I possibly could. Penley made plans tonight with another couple.”

I’m about to vent the mother lode of frustration and a whole lot worse on him when he abruptly clears his throat.

“I’ll check on those figures for you, Carter. I’m on it,” he says in his best business voice.

Shit.

“Penley just walked in, didn’t she?” I say.

“Yes, Carter, that’s correct. You have such a good feel for these things.”

I listen to Michael babble on about debt ratios and the nonfarm payroll report. Give him credit, the switch over was seamless.

“Okay, she’s gone,” he says seconds later.

“What did she want?”

“The kids are waiting on me, so she was pointing at her watch and making an incredibly bitchy face – then again, what else is new?”

I can’t help a slight smile. I am calmer now, and I love it when he dumps on Penley. All the better for my Dump Penley campaign.

“So where were we?” he asks.

“Your not being there for me,” I answer.

Michael sighs. “I’m so sorry, honey,” he says. “Tell you what. How’s this? We’re supposed to drive out to Co

“Can you really do that? ”

“Sure. We can spend the whole day together, maybe drive upstate and have a picnic somewhere, and you can tell me whatever it is you want to talk about.”

The thing is, I want to tell him now -right now. At least I think I do. Which raises an interesting question. How much do I really trust him? This much?

“Michael, I – ”

“Oh, shit,” he interrupts, sounding rushed. “Penley’s heading back this way. I’ll call you tomorrow morning, okay?”

There’s no time to respond.

He’s gone.

I hang up as if in slow-motion. It’s hard to put the feeling into words. Empty? Numb?

Still alone?

Usually, just the thought of being with Michael makes everything better. No longer. At least not today. Because tomorrow isn’t soon enough for me.

Right away, I pick up the phone again.

There’s somebody else I need to call.

Actually, this should have been my first call.