Read Taking Stock Online

Authors: C J West

Tags: #Suspense, #Thriller

Taking Stock (22 page)

Melanie pulled back.

“Did you check if anything was missing
?

Eric
a asked.

She hadn’t. She still clutched the phone. She was probably too scared to do anything but huddle in the living room and wait for help.
Eric
a left her there and checked her room. There were sixty-eight dollars in her purse and the checkbook was in its usual hiding place at the back of her underwear drawer. She didn’t own any jewelry worth stealing, but what she had was in and around the inlaid wooden box on her dresser.

Melanie watched from the hall. “Gregg should be here any minute.”

“Why
?

“My mom didn’t answer, so I called him. He was running for his car before I hung up.”

“Great.”
Eric
a hustled to shower off three miles of sweat and get presentable. She heard voices in the kitchen before she finished toweling off. Her jeans and white tank top were a bit too form fitting. The boy didn’t need encouragement, so she detoured into the bedroom and slipped on a white button-down with thin pink stripes.

Gregg and Melanie were on the couch with their backs to
Eric
a as she approached. He stood up as she reached them and met her eyes with a look of grave concern. “Are you ok
?
” he asked.

He reached out for her hand and she let him hold it a second before sitting down next to Melanie. “Fine. Nothing’s missing.” She left only a sliver of the couch to her left, expecting him to shift over to the low chair facing them.

He squeezed in, their thighs pressing together. The two women shifted like dominoes, wobbled by his choice of seats. “Has anything like this happened before
?
” he asked.

“Nothing. It’s a great neighborhood.”

“You need to call the cops.”

“Not a chance,”
Eric
a blurted. She’d hated cops since the night they pried her away from her mother. It was over a year before mother came home; a year
Eric
a spent as an orphan. She’d learned to take care of herself since then and she knew most cops were decent, but she’d never call one unless she was bleeding to death and out of options.

Gregg looked confused by the venomous reaction. Cops were different back home on the farm for sure. “You need to call,” he said. “What if this guy breaks in somewhere else
?

“This is
Boston
. There are break-ins every day. What are the cops going to do besides ask annoying questions and rifle through our stuff
?
That’s if they even show up.”

“You should still call.”

Eric
a massaged the muscle above his knee and turned to face him squarely. “It’ll be fine. We’ve got you to take care of us. Nothing to worry about.” Gregg was strong, especially through the shoulders, but
Eric
a wasn’t sure which of them would be more useful in a brawl. She was fifty pounds lighter, but ten years of karate had to account for something.

Eric
a kissed him gently and eased back into her space on the couch. There’d be no sending him home tonight, but there’d be no calls to the Boston Police either.

The three of them sat in relative silence for over an hour. Melanie couldn’t shake the jitters. She asked Gregg to stay and he was overjoyed. He’d brought an overnight bag and, ever the gentlemen, he’d left it in the car so he wouldn’t seem presumptuous. He went outside to fetch it, probably dancing all the way down the stairs.

While he was gone Melanie admitted she was spooked. She was glad Gregg was staying, but with the semester almost gone, she was thinking about going home to her parents.
Eric
a would miss her. She’d been an ideal roommate, though how much of her good nature had to do with
Eric
a paying her room and board,
Eric
a would never know. She was a mature twenty-two, forced to cope with the realities of life when her father was laid-off and she nearly had to drop out.
Eric
a had been forced to grow up much sooner.

She’d be sad to see her go in the morning.

Gregg tried to lighten the mood when he got back. He suggested an early trip to the farm, a long weekend to meet his family and see how the rural folks live. Oddly, a weekend with his parents seemed more inviting than a weekend alone in
Boston
.

Chapter Thirty-one
 

Gregg spent the early morning hours watching the red numbers on the desk clock and listening to sporadic comings and goings outside. He’d lived five years in the city and still hadn’t grown used to the constant commotion of cars and voices at all hours of the night. The insect and animal noises around the farm were different, life affirming sounds of one partner calling for another. Here the noises were sharp, chaotic, dangerous; drunken revelers returning home or men like the one who let himself in yesterday.

Gregg hadn’t slept more than an hour at a stretch when Melanie perched on the opposite chair clutching a cup of coffee. Warm in his sweatpants and the blankets
Eric
a had laid out, he surveyed Melanie without getting up. Her hands shook and she leaned close like she wanted to lie down next to him so he could wrap his arms around her and keep her safe. She acted like this was her first brush with harm. Odd she’d chosen journalism as a profession. If she couldn’t handle a break-in, how would she report the sorts of things that qualified as news
?
Being the victim had far more impact and maybe the encounter would bring a more humane perspective to her reporting.

Eric
a showed no ill-effects from the break-in when she came down the hall an hour later. She hadn’t been inside when it happened and she wasn’t as vulnerable as Melanie. Still, she seemed genuinely glad to have him in the apartment and that was a relief. He’d worried that staying the night might be a strain that would push them further apart, not that things could move any slower.

She snuggled herself midway on the couch, forcing him to roll to his side to make room. She had left no doubt about where he’d sleep last night, so her coziness was a complete surprise. Melanie was the one who’d asked him to stay, but
Eric
a was glad he was here. Melanie had said she had feelings under there. He hoped they were starting to break free.

After breakfast Melanie announced she was going home and wouldn’t come back until graduation. Embarrassed by
Eric
a’s generosity and ashamed to leave her alone when she might need help, Melanie wanted to stay, but she was too frightened. She gushed thanks to
Eric
a and credited her for receiving her bachelor’s degree on time. Gregg wondered if
Eric
a had been giving her more than a free room these last few months.

Gregg called the office and took the rest of the week off. He lugged a few boxes down for Melanie and by the time the car was loaded,
Eric
a had agreed to spend a long weekend at the farm. She packed for three days, a long time away on very short notice. She’d lost her zest for work. He wished her feelings for him had dimmed her dedication, but he knew better. Something had affected her deeply. The odds were on the break-in or her problems with Brad.

Her Cross Country only had fourteen hundred miles. She rarely had a chance to drive it in the city and he was glad to let her break it in on the trip to the farm. He guided her down the highway and through a series of turns that all looked the same to anyone who didn’t live here.

The first of his father’s corn fields came into view and he pointed out the long flat row that stretched over a mile, interrupted only by the pond he’d fished in as a boy and the cranberry bogs on the far end. They rounded the corner and climbed a steep hill past the cow barn. She slowed down expecting the driveway and he motioned her to keep going. He pointed out the fields on both sides of the road and she looked back in disbelief that they could still be circling his father’s property. The apple trees on the left were surrounded by piles of brush from the late-winter trimming. She finally turned in past the stand of pine trees, down the long dirt drive and up alongside the massive red corrugated barn. The surprise registered on her face as she looked out over the corn fields below and the roads they’d traveled. They gazed over brown fields, the crimson rectangular bogs and the tall stands of pine trees where the Turner’s property blended into the forest. The bright green fairways of the golf course peeked out of the trees in one corner of the sprawling landscape. She’d lived in the city her entire life and she’d probably never had a yard of her own. Three square miles was unfathomable to her.

“This whole place is yours
?

“My dad’s,” he corrected.

“You don’t even have neighbors.”

“We do. They’re just a bit further apart than you’re used to.” Gregg indicated the Miller’s house on the opposite side of the field.
Eric
a squinted, but the asphalt shingles were hard to make out among the pines. His brother’s house was closer, a hundred yards down the main road, though he didn’t qualify as a neighbor. She turned in circles, taking in the vastness of the farm.

Gregg hoisted the bags from the trunk and led her across the dirt parking lot toward the modest ranch he’d grown up in. Gregg’s father, Frank, stood on the back of a pickup and pushed against the huge new heater as Gregg’s brothers guided and pulled from either side. He led
Eric
a over and made introductions. Frank explained what they were doing. Everyone was polite in front of
Eric
a. His brothers would have plenty of comments later.

He led her through the unlocked front door. Mom had all she could do to stay in the kitchen until they walked the length of the hall. She wore a pale dress covered with a white apron that featured an apple pie with a piece missing on the front. She’d dressed up for
Eric
a.

She left the wooden spoon in the pot she was stirring, came over and threw her arms around him. After he kissed her cheek, he turned and introduced
Eric
a.

“Hi, Mrs. Turner.”
Eric
a began to extend a hand and looked baffled when mom hugged and kissed her like a long lost daughter. He should have warned her about that. He’d never seen
Eric
a hug anyone except him.

Mom held
Eric
a at arms length and looked her up and down. “It’s nice to finally meet you. Gregg’s told us so much about you.”

“Really.”
Eric
a fired an accusatory look.

“Why don’t you help me finish up
?
We can get acquainted. I’m sure Frank and the boys could use Gregg’s help outside.”

Eric
a flashed a ‘don’t you dare leave me’ look.

“I should at least be here to defend myself.”

“Nonsense.” Mom made a sweeping motion to shoo him from the kitchen. He made a quick appeal to
Eric
a, who gave him a look that said, ‘I’m trapped and you’re going to pay.’

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