Buried in a Book (15 page)

Read Buried in a Book Online

Authors: Lucy Arlington

At this point, it became clear that the final workday of the week would once again be the most memorable, as my first email of the morning read,

I received your form rejection letter yesterday. You couldn’t take five minutes of your precious time to tell me why you were passing on such a unique idea? It took me five years to write this book, but you can’t be bothered to give even a single sentence of feedback? I will be sure to tell all of my many writer friends to forget about querying your agency because you clearly don’t recognize talent when you see it.

That email was better than the one that came next, which was much more direct in its hostility:

Dear Ms. Wilkins,

Thanks for nothing, you stupid bitch.

Instinctively, I reached out to delete the message and then paused. I needed to add these two writers to my Agents Beware file. Shaking my head over their lack of professionalism, I printed out copies of their emails and stuffed them into my red file folder. Zach caught me frowning as I dropped the folder onto the surface of my desk.

“Zach Attack!” he shouted and leapt across the threshold, his arms outstretched as though he expected applause from a studio audience. “What gives, Pretty Woman? Writers be-having badly?”

I nodded and gave the folder a dismissive wave. “I’m immune to these kinds of snarky comments. I have a teenage son.”

Zach laughed. “Cool. I’ll have to take him to a hoops game this fall. Is he into sports?”

“Definitely. He’s a huge Tar Heels fan.” I gave Zach a grateful smile, but the exchange reminded me that the ebullient agent carried a strong grudge against Marlette for chasing off Taylor Boone. If she hadn’t been repulsed by Marlette’s appearance, Boone might just have become Zach’s star client. The young agent had undoubtedly looked forward to a long and lucrative relationship with the reality show star until Marlette had spoiled his plans.

As I searched for a way to bring up the subject, Luella breezed down the hallway. She gave me the ghost of a grin
and a wriggle of her fingers but turned a dazzling smile on Zach, trailing her pinkie seductively down his cheek. She then kissed the finger and placed the kiss on his lips before continuing to her office. Zach forgot all about me and drifted in Luella’s perfume-scented wake, a dreamy look on his face.

Resolving to ask Zach to join me for lunch next week in order to grill him about Marlette, I got back to work. So far, I’d only found one interesting nonfiction query, and since I needed a break anyway, I walked it down to Franklin’s office. I rapped lightly on his door and, when he didn’t answer, opened it a crack. Franklin was seated at his desk, the back of his swivel chair to the door. He had a phone held to his ear and was murmuring softly to the person on the other end.

I knocked again, louder this time, and waited on the threshold. I didn’t want to interrupt an intimate conversation, but Franklin swiveled around in his chair and slammed the phone into the cradle as though he’d been overheard saying something monstrous. His face was flushed, and his jaw clenched in what was either anger or embarrassment or both. I took an involuntary step into the hall, and Franklin tensed like a leopard preparing to spring.

“Excuse me,” I said apologetically as I tried to suppress my trepidation at Franklin’s extreme reaction. “I didn’t mean to intrude.” I raised the sheaf of paper in my right hand. “This seems like a promising query on decorating with vintage items. The author has run an antique mall for twenty-five years and recently expanded her business to include interior design. She’s local,” I continued, despite the fact that Franklin hadn’t spoken a word. “I’ve been to her shop—a renovated tobacco warehouse that’s been divided into various
rooms. Each room has a theme, like an art deco living room or a 1950s kitchen, for example.”

Franklin blinked and allowed his shoulders to relax. The pink left his cheeks, and the look of animal wariness disappeared from his eyes. He made a show of tidying his already neat desk and said, “Won’t you sit down?”

After handing him the letter, I complied, but I was unable to sink back into the chair’s soft leather. The tension that had left Franklin’s body seemed to have entered mine like a parasite in search of a host.

Franklin Stafford was a man with a secret. I had seen it just now, that flash of guilt followed by a flicker of menace? Fear? I didn’t know exactly what I’d observed, but I’d have to drum up enough courage to find out, since it could have something to do with Marlette.

As Franklin read the query, I considered how the days had passed without my managing to confront any of my coworkers other than Flora about their feelings toward Marlette, but the agents weren’t readily accessible. Between their staff and client meetings and my succession of long phone conversations and various errands, there wasn’t as much socializing as I’d imagined. The agents popped into one another’s offices throughout the day—only Bentley remained closeted at the end of the hall for the entire week purportedly finessing Carson Knight’s contract—and I exchanged small talk with all of them in the break room. But for the most part, we worked independently of one another.

I was used to this atmosphere from my years at the
Dunston Herald
, but we reporters operated in a large room divided by cubicles. The setup of Novel Idea created more privacy and yet did not prevent genuine camaraderie
between the agents. I certainly saw what a close-knit group they were during Wednesday’s staff meeting.

It started off with Bentley walking into the room with a tray of coffee and a bag of lemon ginger scones from Espresso Yourself.

“I thought you’d appreciate a little pick-me-up,” she announced, placing them on the table. “For all your hard work this week.”

“Woo hoo!” Zach exclaimed. “Did you get me a triple espresso?”

“Yes, Zach. I had Makayla make all of your favorites.”

During the meeting, the agents shared which of their clients’ manuscripts had received offers by editors or had been passed on and were now with another publishing house awaiting review.

When it was Luella’s turn to speak, she announced smugly, “Do you recall Gillian Lea’s new romantic suspense series? The one featuring shape-shifters?” She waited as those around the table nodded their heads. I recognized Gillian Lea as a successful romance writer but had not read any of her books. “The manuscript is in the midst of a major bidding war,” Luella continued. “I aim for the winning publisher to end up paying the author an advance of seventy-five thousand dollars per book.”

My jaw nearly came unhinged, but I tried not to show my surprise, as none of the other agents seemed awed by this number.

“Congratulations, Luella,” Jude said, raising his coffee cup. The other agents followed suit.

At the end of the meeting, Bentley stood. “I’d like to note that Lila, our newest intern, has had a very promising beginning. Thank you, Lila.”

“Yes, I concur,” Flora said. “Lila is a wonderful addition to our little group.”

And then we adjourned.

No one mentioned Marlette or the investigation. No one whispered the word “murder.” It was as if the unusual man had never climbed the stairs with his wilted flowers and hopeful face.

I hadn’t mentioned Marlette, either, and though I kept looking at the newspaper for an article on his death, the crime pages were still focused on the arson case in Dunston. More than once over the course of the week, I flirted with the idea of calling Sean, but something held me back.

By the time I’d finished my daily allotment of queries, proposal critiques, and mailings that Friday afternoon, I was ready for the weekend. My mother picked me up and drove me the short distance to Inspiration Valley’s organic food store, How Green Was My Valley. It was my intention to whip up a tasty meal for Althea and Trey. My mother had generously offered to make supper every evening, but last night’s lasagna had been so undercooked that I nearly chipped a tooth on a noodle. On Tuesday night, she’d grilled hamburgers until they resembled miniature manhole covers. Althea’s talents in the kitchen were truly restricted to banana bread, coffee, and comfort.

In addition to bagfuls of fresh local produce, I picked up a copy of Charlaine Harris’s latest Sookie Stackhouse novel. After a week’s worth of query letters, I wanted to read something fun over the weekend.

“Have you heard from Trey?” my mother asked me after I’d loaded the groceries into a box in the truck bed.

“No.” I shot her a confused glance. “I thought he was going to borrow the truck and continue his job hunt today.”

My mother shook her head. “I never laid eyes on the boy this mornin’. His bed is as wrinkled as one of those Shar-Pei puppies, and it looks like a tornado blew in his window, lifted up all his clothes, and sent ’em flyin’ to every corner of the room. Doesn’t he know what folks use hangers for?”

“Sorry, Mama. He’s always been untidy.”

My mother snorted. “Kindergartners are
untidy
. That son of yours is a flat-out slob. But his room won’t put me off my supper. I just don’t like not knowin’ where he is, and the cards say he’s bein’ drawn away from the familiar. Somethin’ powerful has a hold on the boy, and I can’t tell if it’s a positive or negative influence. Things go all cloudy when I close my eyes and try to search him out.”

Ignoring the psychic mumbo jumbo, I said, “He’s probably hanging out at the Red Fox Co-op. You saw how he looked at Iris. Totally thunderstruck.”

“Yeah, I saw. I just wonder how far he’ll go to turn that girl’s head,” my mother murmured enigmatically.

With the exception of Makayla’s remark about the co-op folks growing marijuana as one of their crops, I wasn’t too concerned about Trey being up the mountain. The people there seemed charitable and kind, if not a little spellbound by Jasper. Trey would be home by nightfall. He didn’t enjoy roughing it much.

Back at my mother’s, I put the groceries away and then popped the cap off a bottle of beer. After my long week, the cool liquid slid down my throat like cold honey, and I sighed in contentment. Althea turned on a Johnny Cash CD, and the two of us belted out “Daddy Sang Bass” as I breaded chicken cutlets and fried them up in peanut oil. In true Paula Deen style, my fried chicken was seasoned with a splash of hot sauce, and I served it with slaw and buttered corn on the
cob. I made enough for three, but Trey didn’t show up for dinner. I hoped he was consuming more than beer with his new Red Fox friends.

The sky had turned a bruised blue and gray by the time my mother and I finished supper and began to clear the table.

“It’s gonna rain,” she said, raising her nose into the air like a dog catching a scent.

Leaving the dishes to soak, we went out to the back porch and settled into a pair of rockers. My mother was having Jim Beam over ice for dessert, and I was going to digest a bit before attacking the quart of mocha chip I’d stashed behind a large bag of peas in the freezer. We’d barely set the wooden rockers in motion when my cell phone rang. The number wasn’t familiar, but I answered anyway.

“Lila?” Ginny Burroughs, my Dunston real estate agent, sounded agitated. Her strained voice immediately put me on alert.

“Good evening, Ginny. How are you?”

A pause. “Well, I was just coming over to your house to put the lockbox on—two agents are planning on showing it tomorrow—when I saw something…strange on your front door.”

I waited for her to continue, but she clearly wanted me to ask what she meant, so I played along. “Strange?”

She hesitated, drawing in a deep, fortifying breath. “Lila, someone’s spray-painted a red skull and crossbones on your white paint!”

“What?” I jerked upright in the seat.

“Bright as a cardinal, but not at all cheerful,” she added for dramatic flair. “My husband wouldn’t mind slapping a coat of paint over it for you, but I thought you should know in case you wanted to call the police. The vandal added
some letters, too, but I can’t make them out. For some reason, he painted those a shade of white. A black light might help you read them. Luckily, I’ve got one you can use.”

After thanking Ginny and ending the call, I rubbed my throbbing temples and tried to stay calm.

“There’s trouble at your house,” Althea stated, but I knew she wanted details.

I eased myself out of the rocker. “Someone played graffiti artist on my front door. Can I borrow the truck? I need to get over there and deal with this tonight.”

My mother scrutinized me, the corners of her mouth pinched in concern. “This wasn’t some hip-hop gangster wannabe, Lila. Mark my words. It’s a warnin’.”

“Okay, Mama. Please call me if you see or hear from Trey.” I gave her an indulgent smile and headed inside for the truck keys.

On the drive to Dunston I began to feel the effects of my full week. The last thing I wanted to do was meet Ginny at my half-empty house. I knew that the darkened windows and the silent rooms would depress me, the
For Sale
sign and vacant garage serving as reminders of my dismal financial situation. Why would anyone vandalize my house? I’d been friendly with all of my neighbors, and we hardly had gangs of spray-paint hooligans living in our backyards.

Ginny was waiting in her sleek Lexus convertible when I arrived, but the moment I rumbled up the street in Althea’s turquoise truck, she raced to my door, black light in hand.

“I’ll shine it for you,” she offered. “You stand back a few feet. Maybe you can read the writing that way.”

In the time it had taken me to drive from Inspiration Valley, the resourceful Realtor had managed to find an extension cord. The cord trailed out from inside my house like a
long orange worm, still very visible in the shadows cast by the encroaching night and the gathering thunderclouds.

Ginny angled the black light so that when she switched it on, the front door was thrown into a wash of spectral purple light.

I gasped. The skull, which had gaping eye sockets and an openmouthed snarl, radiated hostility. Part of me had been expecting a cartoonish pirate skull, but there was nothing childish or playful about this drawing. My heart racing, I had to force myself to meet its menacing gaze. I knew it was irrational, but I felt a presence behind those eyes. A wickedness lingering from the vandal like a powerful perfume. However, my need to decipher the writing below the crossed bones won out over my trepidation, so I steeled myself and drew close to the door.

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