Waters shrugged. “Nothing.”
“Nothing but banging the bejesus out of Eve Sumner. Which would be fine by me, except you ain’t doing any
A flash of temper covered Waters’s shock. “I do more than my share of work around here, and you know it.”
Cole’s face reddened. “And you make more money.”
Waters dismissed this with a flick of his hand. He should have known Cole would be on to him. It wasn’t hard to figure out. For no apparent reason the partners had suddenly swapped lifestyles. Cole, usually absent from the office during the odd hours he catted around town, was coming in early every day, making phone calls, evaluating producing wells for possible purchase and workover. Waters, the obsessive workaholic, arrived at nine but usually left by ten, and sometimes didn’t return until four. When he was in the office, he locked his door and took no calls.
“Come to think of it,” Cole said, leaning back and crossing his legs, “your banging Evie isn’t fine by me for another reason. ’Cause you’re breaking rule number one.”
“What would that be?”
“Don’t lose your perspective. That gets you in big trouble. And you have a lot on the line, John Boy.”
“I should take advice from you?”
“In this case, yes. That chick ain’t worth it.”
Waters stiffened. “What do you know about Eve?”
Cole looked incredulous. “What do I
The words stung Waters like the lash of a whip. The knowledge that Cole had been inside Eve nauseated him. He knew how ridiculous he must look. He was like a young soldier in love with a whore, defending her honor to a laughing village. But he couldn’t control his feelings.
“She’s not the same woman you slept with,” he said quietly.
“No?” Cole’s eyes narrowed. “What do you mean?”
“Nothing.”
Cole shook his head, his eyes filled with amazement. “Holy shit. At first I thought you meant she’d reformed or something. Changed her ways. Got born again. But that’s not what you mean, is it?”
Waters looked away, not sure just what he had meant.
“You’re still on your Mallory kick, aren’t you?” Cole leaned forward, his forehead knotted in thought. “Don’t tell me you were right about ‘Soon,’ and all that? Eve’s not actually trying to run that line on you? That she’s Mallory?”
Waters said nothing. A saying of his father’s had always stuck with him:
“Eve knows things,” Waters said softly. “Things no one but Mallory ever knew.”
“We talked about that, John. You don’t know what Mallory told people about you. She lived for, what? Nine years after you two split as a couple?”
“I know. But that’s not all. Eve…”
“What?”
“She kisses the way Mallory did.
Cole barked a laugh. “Do you really remember how Mallory kissed? Does a guy remember that? There aren’t really any unique ways to do it. This is
“I remember how she kissed. It was unforgettable. It’s like muscle memory. Like riding a bike. You can’t forget it. It’s deeper than conscious thought.”
“You’re losing your mind, Rock. You need a week in Cabo.”
Waters shook his head. “I’ve seen her handwriting. It’s identical to Mallory’s. She left me a note at the cemetery, just like Mallory used to, and the handwriting was exactly the same.”
For the first time, Cole looked intrigued. “Do you have this note?”
“No. I think I left it at the cemetery. I may have put it back in the jar.”
“Back in the jar.” Cole nodded like a cop humoring an escaped mental patient. “I see. And this note was signed ‘Mallory’?”
“Yes.”
“John, Eve Sumner is either batshit crazy or running a scam on you.”
Waters thought of the scars on Eve’s arm and thighs, but he did not want to mention them. Since he had never told Cole about Mallory’s self-mutilation, Cole might think he had made it up on the spot.
“Personally, I think it’s a scam,” Cole asserted. “She’s looking for money, baby.”
Waters shook his head. “She doesn’t want money.”
“What, then? You think that forty-one-year-old dick of yours is different from the last ten she had? She wants your money, boy, nothing else.”
“Eve doesn’t want money!” Waters snapped. “
It was a reflexive blow, but Cole snapped back as though he’d been dealt a mortal wound. After a stunned moment, he stood and walked to the door, but before he went through, he turned and spoke in a quavering voice.
“I’m going to forget you said that, partner. And you’re right about one thing. Where you dip your wick is your own business. I just don’t want to see you lose Lily and Annelise. You’re not me, and Lily isn’t Jenny. Lily won’t take this well if she finds out. She won’t look the other way. And if you keep this shit up, she
Waters stared out the window until Cole closed the door. He knew his partner’s advice was the fruit of bitter experience, but he didn’t much care. All he cared about right now was the cell phone on his desk. He wanted it to ring.
It didn’t. It lay there like an insult for an hour, then two, its silence a goad to his pride and to his faith in Eve. Like a junkie going cold turkey, he fought the urge to call her office. He tried a dozen distractions, but none worked.
Ten minutes before noon, it finally rang. With two chirps of the ringer, he was back on the crest of the wave, Cole’s warnings forgotten. But when he answered, Eve did not say, “Ten minutes.” She said, “We’ve got a problem. Don’t say anything.”
It was a measure of how much perspective Waters had lost that her words did not cause him panic.
“Some film producers are flying in from Los Angeles,” she explained. “The ones who bought Penn Cage’s novel. They’re considering shooting the film on location here.”
“Uh-huh.” Waters had no idea what this could have to do with him.
“The Historic Foundation is coordinating the visit, and they’re putting the producers up in Bienville for the week.”
“Ahh.” The strung-out addict’s feeling returned with a vengeance as he wondered if they would miss today’s rendezvous.
“Today’s no good,” Eve went on, confirming his fear. “But check the jar.”
He started to say something, but she’d already clicked off. Locking the portfolio in his bottom drawer, he got his keys and walked quickly to the back stairs, his mind already at the cemetery.
When he arrived at Catholic Hill, he parked and ran behind the wall to dig up the mason jar. Inside lay a piece of blue notepaper and a hotel key card. When he unfolded the paper, he saw Mallory’s flowing script.