These jokers would like to have my head on a platter. Sorry I have to hustle you in this way. I don’t want you to get hurt if this gets ugly.”

“How are you involved with them?”

“A company I work for is doing some testing they aren’t crazy about,” he explained. “I’m only one of a dozen lawyers working on paving the way for business to continue. The world has to progress, right?”

Peggy recalled the signs outside. “Keep the bay clean! Find an alternative to oil!” “I don’t know, Park. Not all progress is good progress. Are you sure you’re on the right side?”

He laughed and put his arm around her shoulder. “I’m on the side that makes the most money, like always. That usually decides who’s right. How long are you in town? Would you like to have dinner tonight? I have a reservation at the Fountain Restaurant here in the hotel.”

“I’m afraid my flight leaves at three.” She glanced at her watch. When she looked back at him, she was appalled to notice how gray his complexion was. “You look exhausted. Maybe you should take a vacation with Beth and the boys when you get home.”

He rubbed his hand over his face. “I haven’t been sleeping well. Damn bed’s too soft. The hotel is booked up so I can’t trade. I’m only here for a few more days. I’ll be okay. But you’re looking fine. I’d say that new man in your life is good for you. I still haven’t had a chance to meet him.”

“That’s because you’re always so worried about being on the side that makes money. Sometimes you have to be on the right side because it’s right. It’s not always about the money.”

She knew Park long enough and well enough to speak her mind. She knew he was driven to succeed by some inner demon that poked him with a sharp pitchfork every time he tried to sit down and rest. He wasn’t a bad man, just misguided sometimes. Knowing his parents, she was surprised he wasn’t much worse.

Looking away from his red-rimmed blue eyes as they stepped into the elevator to go to their rooms, she pushed number six for her floor. She sighed at their personal differences that were mostly ignored in the light of their long-standing friendship.

They knew each other in college. He grew up with her husband, John Lee. John was a police detective for twenty years. They consulted on many police cases over dinner at one of their houses. Park didn’t leave her side for three days when John was killed two years ago. “I guess I’ll have to make an appointment for you to meet Steve.”

“Don’t be that way, Peggy. Let’s go ahead and make plans to get together for dinner. I’m back in Charlotte on Thursday. Can you do dinner Friday evening at seven? I know Beth is free that night. I talked to her this morning.”

“I think I can manage that.” She smiled at him, not liking the terrible darkness in his eyes. He looked more than tired to her. It had probably been years since he’d even thought of having a medical checkup. “Steve and I will be there. Take care of yourself. Don’t leave Beth alone so much if you don’t have to.”

He hugged her, shifting his expensive alligator briefcase to his left hand as the elevator reached his floor. “You worry too much. Have a good flight, Peggy. I’ll see you back in Charlotte. Friday night. Don’t forget now.”

She watched as Park walked toward his room down the elegantly appointed hallway. A tall, scraggly looking young man in ripped jeans and a red T-shirt approached him as he took out his key card.

“What are you doing here?” Park asked, visibly drawing back.

“You know why I’m here,” the young man returned before the elevator doors closed on the scene.

Peggy stabbed her finger on the three button to return to Park’s floor, but the elevator went to her floor first, then back to his. By the time the doors opened again, both men were gone. She thought about trying to find his room but decided against it. Whatever was going on between them was none of her business. That alone wouldn’t usually stop her. But there was a long line of doors to knock on since she didn’t know the right room number. She didn’t want to miss her flight. And Park could take care of himself.

She went back to her floor and used the key card to open her hotel room door. After putting down the insulated bag that held the tobacco plant and her pocketbook, she noticed the flowers that had been delivered while she was gone. They were beside a large gift basket from the hotel that she hadn’t opened yet.

She didn’t need to read the card on the flowers to know they were from Steve. He was the only one likely to send Queen Anne’s lace as a gift. He already knew her so well she felt like they’d been together for years rather than months. Where he’d managed to find the flowers in the dead of winter was another story. She suspected Sam had something to do with it. He had access to most of the greenhouses in and around Charlotte.

She opened the card and saw the broad, masculine handwriting. “Shakespeare and I miss you. We hope you enjoy this ‘fantasy.’ Come home soon. Love, Steve.” She brushed her hand across the broad top of the flowers. They were one of her favorites. Most Americans refused to see it as anything but a weed. In England, however, it was cultivated for its lacy beauty. Its traditional meaning in floriography, the language of flowers, was fantasy. Steve must have looked that up.

Seeing the flowers and reading the card made her eager to get on the plane and go home. The Potting Shed was in capable hands while she was gone, but she missed being there, helping her customers get ready for spring. Some gardeners got depressed in the winter. She knew spring was always just around the corner. In Charlotte, North Carolina, the temperate climate meant an early spring. After the one or two obligatory ice storms in January, February was mild, and March would be warm, already beginning the spring growth cycle.

Just thinking about the Potting Shed . . . and Steve . . . made her pack her single bag quickly. The flight home would only be about an hour. Steve and Shakespeare, her adopted fawn-colored Great Dane, would be waiting for her. She couldn’t think of anything more likely to get her moving.

Sirens and shouting disrupted her train of thought. She went to the window that overlooked the street and watched as police clashed with the demonstrators on the steps of the hotel. Had she known what was going on, she might’ve joined them. Being a botanist and a gardener, she had a stake in keeping the major corporations from trampling on everything living to keep their stockholders happy. It wouldn’t be the first time she’d taken to the streets to protest, but it had been a while. Like thirty years . . .

She thought about Park again. Was he moved at all by the protesters’ sincerity that made them willing to go to jail for their cause? Was he watching from his window and questioning his values? Probably not. His single- minded, bullheaded determination made him a top corporate attorney. If it meant he couldn’t look from side to side, she was sure he’d find a reason why that was better.

They’d decided a long time ago to keep their individual politics from affecting their friendship. Not that her friend had any ideals or issues he wouldn’t compromise for the right price. She didn’t know what happened to the free-spirited young man he’d been in college, sneaking away from his tyrannical mother’s watchful eye and spurning his father’s racial bigotry with already enviable debating skills.

John remained idealistic until he died, despite terrible things he’d seen on the street. Park grew more interested in the bottom line. He could be witty and charming, always gave good parties to the right people, and had a soft heart for his family and friends. But he changed, became harder, more ruthless.

She suspected the three of them had remained friends more because of their shared past than what went on in their present lives. Sometimes those things happened. She always hoped something would open Park’s eyes one day. She realized she loved him for what he had been, not for what he’d become.

When her bag was packed, she called the front desk to let them know she was leaving. The concierge offered to call her a taxi since her rental car was blocked by the protest in the street. “No charge to you, of course.”

She thanked him and took a last look around her room. She’d already pressed her flowers into some damp newspaper and stuck them in a plastic bag for the flight. The food-filled gift basket she left untouched on the bedside table. Maybe they could give it to the next visitor.

Drawn by the angry scene on the sidewalk and in the street, Peggy walked outside to wait for the taxi despite warnings from the hotel staff. She watched the police load the angry protesters into vans. There weren’t many of them, but they were tough and resilient. They didn’t so much fight as resist. Most of the signs were lying in the street now, but several television cameras were videotaping the disturbance. She knew they’d scored some airtime for their cause.

The scraggly young man from Park’s room ran toward her, wild-eyed. He looked anxious to get away from the hotel. He carried a banner, dropping it at her feet. She couldn’t tell what it said anymore. The fat, wet snowflakes had blurred the marker he’d used to make his statement.

He was running from two policemen, who were yelling at him to stop. Peggy started to step aside until she

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