“Want me to stay on the phone until you fall asleep?”
The sheets smelled like fabric softener and the mattress was exactly the right combination of hard and soft. “I’m not six.”
“I know. And I know you hate sleeping alone.”
“Yeah, my life sucks. Gran’s up to something and all I get is a business, an apartment…”
“An assortment of sex toys.”
“I’m going to regret telling you about them, aren’t I?”
“Probably.”
“Good night, Michael.”
She hung up before she could tell him she missed him and eventually fell asleep with the phone cradled in her hand.
“There’s a Gale staying in the apartment?” Heavy black brows met in a vee over his nose. “You’re certain of that?”
He shrugged. “Alysha Gale ordered take-out this evening. I just got word from one of my sources. She had it delivered to the store.”
“I knew it was too good to be true when the old woman disappeared. Damn. Damn. Fucking damn!” One scarred fist pounded the words into the desktop, hard enough the silver letter opener slid off the pile of paper.
He caught it before it hit the floor.
“We’re too close to the day,” his boss continued, ignoring both the letter opener’s fall and its subsequent retrieval. “We have no choice but to stay and see it through. No choice for me but to stay and face the danger inherent in yet another fucking Gale!”
“All right.” He kept his voice low, calming. Things happened when his boss lost his temper. Things that could attract attention, and—right now—attention was the last thing they wanted to attract. He knew that for a fact because not attracting attention had been a part of every conversation they’d had since Catherine Gale had first appeared on the scene and, for the last month, not attracting attention had moved to the top of the agenda. “I’m still not exactly clear on just what you think she’ll do.”
“There’s no way of knowing what she’ll do. That’s the fucking problem! You say black, and they’re likely to say white just to be contrary. Controlling harpies, the whole lot of them!” Nostrils flaring, he took a deep breath, then another, and finally growled, “We need to know if she’s here because of me. If Catherine Gale got suspicious before she disappeared and passed those suspicions on.”
“This Alysha Gale could be here merely to take over the store. Or because of
“I know what I told you!”
He held up a hand in apology as the vein in the older man’s forehead throbbed.
“I need to know what Alysha Gale knows.”
“About you?”
“About everything! The last thing I need is to have them stumble on the situation and destroy me all unknowing with their incessant need to meddle. Wouldn’t those controlling harpies love that. Find out what she knows!” A beefy finger jabbed the command toward him.
“And what happens then?” He rested his hand on his weapons case.
“That depends on
THREE
It took her a moment to realize the sound dragging her up out of sleep was her phone and a moment after that to find it in the bed.
“Alysha Catherine.”
Only the aunties ever used both names. Half asleep, it was impossible to narrow it down any further. “Auntie…?”
“Bea, Alysha Catherine. It’s Auntie Bea.”
Auntie Bea was one of the
“Don’t curl your lip at me, young lady. Why are you still in bed?”
She took the phone away from her ear and peered at the time. “It’s twenty after five.”
“It’s twenty after seven.”
“Calgary,” she sighed. “Time difference.”
“That’s no reason to be lying about.”
Allie considered it a very good reason to be
“Have you figured out what your grandmother is up to?”
“No.”
“Why not?”
“I just got here yesterday evening.”
“And you’re still in bed?”
“Twenty after five,” Allie repeated, yawning. “Good-bye, Auntie Bea.”
There may have been a protest, but Allie barely heard it as she closed the phone. No one should have to deal with an auntie at five twenty in the morning.
Or at five twenty-three.
Or five thirty.
Her body, still on Ontario time, insisted it was time to get up…
Five forty-five.
… and refused to be convinced otherwise no matter that the room was dark and the bed, although empty, was comfortable.
“Fine.”
Auntie Vera called as she got into the shower. Auntie Meredith called during her not entirely successful attempt to make coffee with the space age coffeemaker she found in one of the kitchen cupboards. Allie wasn’t willing to agree with her father that the aunties were frightened, but this level of annoying meant they were definitely worried.