Escaping Reality
down?
Maybe it’s not about his archeological finds. He sat on government
committees and became involved in international relations, and not long
before he died there was talk of his retirement from field work and a
political appointment in Washington. I shake my head. I don’t know where
this is taking me. I was young, and uninvolved in that part of his life. I know
nothing about it. If I’m still a target, and I am, then someone thinks I know
something I shouldn’t. It’s only logical. They can’t hurt my father by killing
me. He’s already dead.
I decide to make a list of everyone I ever knew or knew my family to
know, here and overseas, when my brother and I would go on digs with my
father. Next, I cross-reference it with the Google searches. I stare at the list.
It’s sixty names long and I don’t even know what I’m looking for. My first
instinct is to mark everyone off that has nothing to do with my father, but I
change my mind. I’ve hyper-focused on this being about him and his work.
It’s not about the money. It was never about the money. My mother’s
voice flashes through my mind. My mind was trying to tell me something,
but what? Who was she talking to?
Who was there that day?
***
Remarkably, I do not have a flashback while doing my research, and I
wonder if that has something to do with feeling like I’m taking control and
finding answers. At 5:00 I force myself to pack up and head to my meeting
with Meg. Finding Earl’s Restaurant and Bar is easier than I expect, and I
arrive at 5:15. A waitress points me to the left and I enter a bar area with
huge booths that sit on pedestals above rows of tables, and directly
opposite the huge wooden bar. I choose the booth at the very back where I
can see Meg when she enters, and I have plenty of room to put my
computer to use while I wait.
I’ve barely settled into my seat when a waitress appears to take my
order of a house red wine. I open my computer and look directly in front of
me and go still. Jared is sitting at the next booth over, facing me, his
computer open and a beer by his side.
I swallow the dryness in my throat and he motions to my table,
asking to join me. I nod, unsure why this makes me guilty. He’s a neighbor,
not my new lover, but I know Liam wouldn’t approve—and honestly, if I
found him having drinks with some hot woman, I wouldn’t either.
He slides into the half-moon-shaped booth, and to my relief, remains
directly across from me. “Past due we get some quality time together,” he
says, as the waitress sets my wine down beside me.
“I wasn’t aware we were trying to get quality time together.”
“Well, now you are,” he says with a smile, and there is this casual
sexy thing about him that screams completely relaxed and comfortable in
his own skin. And I’m sure many women would be comfortable in it too. But
not me. I prefer the edgy, dark thing Liam wears like a second skin.
“You really are a smartass, aren’t you?” I ask, but it’s really not a
question. He is.
“Most of the time.”
“Why?”
“Comes natural, like being arrogant does for your boyfriend.”
Boyfriend? Is that what Liam is to me? And somehow it seems too
small a word for him.
“I’d defend him, but I don’t think it would do me any good.”
“Good call.” Amusement fills his dark eyes and he is absolutely Mr.
Bad Boy Sexy in this moment. “What are you working on?”
“Just playing around while I wait for a friend to join me.” There.
Avoidance. I’m still good at it with everyone but Liam. “What about you?”
“I’m doing high-tech work on contract.”
“High-tech work? You don’t seem like a computer geek.”
“What do I seem like?”
“The long hair and ripped jeans and…well, something more…rowdy.”
He laughs. “Rowdy. I’m not sure how to take that, but basically I’m a
professional hacker. I’m hired to try to hack a site, and if I can, they then
pay me to make sure no one else can. I do a lot of defense contractor
work.”
Bad-boy hacker. That fits him. “Thus the Boeing shirt?”
“Thus the Boeing shirt. Normally I’m holed up in a hotel for a month
or so on a job, but a friend was laid off and had to relocate for a job, which
stuck him with the apartment. At six grand a month in rent, he was eager to
have someone supplement the cost.”
“Six grand? How big is your place? I only pay two.”
He laughs. “You must have a fan
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