“I’m fine.” Isaac hated lying to her. She thought her husband was in Phoenix. She thought her brother was in Chicago. Yet they were both in Idaho, of all places. But, guilt or no guilt, he wasn’t about to admit the truth yet. First, he needed to understand more about what was going on, figure out a way to soften the blow. “Have you heard from Keith?”
Isaac knew she had to wonder at his sudden preoccupation with her husband. Other than the usual felicitations, they didn’t talk about Keith a whole lot. But Isaac couldn’t help asking. He wanted to know who Keith really was. Obviously, his brother-in-law wasn’t the man Isaac thought he knew. Hell, he wasn’t even the man Liz thought she knew—and she’d been living with him for eight years!
“Unless there’s a problem with the kids and I leave a message that I need him to call me, I usually don’t hear from him till he gets home, remember?”
She’d already told him that, but she didn’t sound impatient.
Isaac watched the lights from passing cars flicker behind the drapes, thinking that Keith’s calling habits seemed pretty damned convenient. “Where do you leave a message?”
“On his voice mail.”
“Could you give me that number?”
“You want to talk to Keith?”
It wasn’t going to help anything at this point to further rouse her suspicions, so he tried to defuse her surprise. “I have a friend who’s planning a visit to Phoenix. I thought maybe Keith could tell him a little about the area.”
“He should be able to tell him plenty. He goes there often enough. You got a pen?”
Isaac turned on the lamp, then squinted against the sudden brightness. “Go ahead,” he said when his vision cleared and he’d located the pad and pen provided by the motel.
She rattled off the number, then yawned again. “I’m beat. I’ll let you go.”
“Liz?”
“Hmm?”
“Do you ever think about Luanna?”
His sister sounded more awake and slightly wary when she answered. “I try not to. Why?”
“Just wondering.”
A pause. “Has Dad tried to call you or something?” she asked.
“Not recently. Have you heard from the asshole?”
“Don’t call him that, Isaac. He wasn’t the best father, but…we’re not kids anymore.”
“You’ve forgiven him?”
“I don’t see the point in holding a grudge. I’m older now. I have Keith, the kids. All’s well that ends well, right?”
Isaac wished she’d become a little jaded so he wouldn’t have to worry about her as much. All’s well that ends well…. It hadn’t ended yet.
“I mailed Dad a picture of the kids for Christmas,” she was saying.
“How’d he respond?”
“He sent them each twenty bucks.”
“Generous of him.”
“It’s an acknowledgment,” she replied defensively.
Isaac dropped the sarcasm. “I guess.” Another pause. “What about Luanna? She have anything to say?”
“She wasn’t part of the exchange. Dad’s note was brief. A simple ‘Merry Christmas,’ and the money.”
“Well, she’s got her own precious child to worry about, right?”
Some rustling came through the line before she spoke again. “I bumped into Joe Stearns a few weeks ago.”
“Marty’s best friend?”
“Yeah. He said our stepbrother’s getting divorced.”
“Couldn’t happen to a nicer person.”
“We haven’t talked to Marty for eight years. Maybe he’s not so bad anymore.”
Isaac doubted that. It’d take someone like Marty forever and a day to change enough to become tolerable, but he didn’t want to get into an argument with Liz. Better to change the subject. “Tell me something.”
“What?”
“What would you do if things suddenly…went wrong in your life?”
“In what way?”
“I don’t know. Say…you and Keith split up.”
“Where is this coming from?”
“Don’t you ever imagine worst-case scenarios? What you might do if you faced a sudden reversal?”
“No, Isaac, I don’t. I’m trying to bury the old fear. To trust. To believe in good things. I’ve had enough nightmares.”
Isaac covered his eyes with his free hand. “Right. Well, it’s late. I’d better let you go,” he said. Before I really upset you.
“Are you okay?” she asked, obviously worried.
“I’m fine. Everything’s fine,” he said. Then he hung up and dialed Keith’s cell phone. He couldn’t leave things exactly as they were. The devil in him wanted to see his brother-in-law sweat.
As expected, his call went straight to voice mail. Not surprisingly, Keith didn’t pick up when he was with “the other woman.”
“You’ve reached Keith O’Connell at Softscape, Inc. Please leave your name and number, and I’ll get back to you as soon as possible.”
Bastard. “Hey, Keith. A friend of mine has business in Phoenix and has invited me to come along and do a little golfing. I told him you were there already and might be able to show us around,” he said, expanding the lie he’d given Liz. “We arrive—” he thought quickly for a date that would be soon yet plausible: it was already Thursday “—on Monday. Give me a call, okay?”
He left his number and disconnected, wondering how long it’d take for Keith to respond—and what excuse his brother-in-law would offer.
“SO WHAT DO YOU SAY?” Reenie leaned up on her elbows and grinned at her husband, who’d awakened her by kissing her neck a few moments earlier. She loved it when his hair was ruffled from sleep and his whiskers created a dark shadow on his jaw. He looked younger then, less like the corporate type he’d become and more like the boy she’d fallen for at the Homecoming Dance.
“Reenie, please,” he said, throwing an arm over his eyes. “I just got home. Don’t start in on me already.”
Her hopes fell a little. “But the traveling is killing me.”
He peeked at her. “You’re not traveling. I am. If I don’t mind, I don’t see why you should.”
“Are you kidding?” she said. “I’m tired of having you gone. Of spending half the night waiting up for you. Of worrying about plane crashes and terrorist attacks.”
“I have more of a chance of getting killed in a car accident than a plane wreck. And I telecommute when I’m home, so I rarely leave the house. You probably see more of me than most wives see of their husbands.”
Frustration caused Reenie to clench her jaw. They’d had this argument so many times she was beginning to feel as though they were on some kind of merry-go-round. She missed him, he came home, they made love, they argued, he left. And then it started all over again.
She needed to stop the cycle.
“That’s not true,” she said. “You might stay home, but you’re still working when you’re