The Elliotts: Secret Affairs. Susan CrosbyЧитать онлайн книгу.
become friends as well as lovers.
It was a dangerous situation for both of them. How had he put it at the beginning—a game with potentially disastrous outcomes? She’d been led by her heart. His mind had presented a more realistic view of the future—then, anyway.
Could she give him up before she had to?
Applause erupted around her as the lights came up. Intermission already?
Georges stopped beside her grandfather’s aisle seat and chatted for a moment. Fin stood behind him, expressionless. She wouldn’t make eye contact with Gram. Scarlet hated that most.
The Frenchman moved on. It appeared Fin would, too, then she stopped next to her father and in a low voice said, “If there’s something you want to know, just ask me. Don’t recruit spies.”
“I don’t know what you mean,” he said calmly.
“Liar,” Fin fired back before she went to catch up with her escort.
Gram’s hands were clenched. Scarlet laid a hand on hers, but her grandmother couldn’t even smile.
“Want to attempt the line at the ladies’ room, Gram?”
She shook her head. “I see an old friend. I’ll go off and visit for a few minutes. Stretch the kinks out, then.”
After she left, her grandfather turned to Scarlet. “Do you know what Finola was talking about?”
“Yes. Don’t you?”
He looked away, saying nothing. Scarlet didn’t know whether he was telling the truth or bluffing.
Scarlet wished John was beside her, holding her hand, defusing the situation. He was diplomatic. He would know how to change the mood. She was too emotionally involved and didn’t dare get into it. Instead no one spoke the rest of the evening beyond necessary, polite words.
When she climbed into bed later, she eyed her phone. She knew John’s number by heart now. She wanted to hear his voice, but needed to come up with a reason to call ….
Food. Food was always a safe topic. She would ask him if she should pick up something to eat tomorrow on her way to his place. He would have appetizers at the gallery, but not dinner, and she wasn’t planning to stay for dinner at JoJo’s, just to have a drink and show her face.
She dialed. The phone rang four times, then his answering machine picked up. She didn’t wait for the beep, but hung up. She glanced at the clock—almost midnight—and tossed the phone out of reach.
Neither of them ever questioned what the other had done on nights when they weren’t together, but this was the first time she’d called and not found him at home.
Jealousy reared up. She tamped it down. He’d said they didn’t have an exclusive arrangement, but she didn’t buy it. He wasn’t a player. But she was curious about why he wasn’t home yet.
Of course, she had no business calling him at midnight on a work night, when most people were sleeping, and especially to ask a question she could talk to him about the next day. He would see through her ploy. It didn’t matter. She didn’t care. Let him think what he would.
The phone rang. She leaped across the bed to grab it.
“Hey!” Summer said. “Where’ve you been all night? I’ve been calling for hours.”
Scarlet settled into her pillows, the phone tucked between her shoulder and ear as she adjusted the bedding. Her disappointment that it wasn’t John disappeared. “At the symphony with the Grands. What’s up?”
“I just wanted to let you know that we’re coming home a day early. The twenty-eighth instead of the twenty-ninth.”
One less night. “How come?”
“I’m homesick.”
“Really?”
Summer laughed. “No. Well, kind of. Zeke’s got a meeting in New York on the twenty-ninth. This is not for public broadcast yet, but he’s going to do the music and lyrics for a rock musical.”
“Good for him!”
“We think so, too, especially since it means we’d get to live close to home.”
“You’re going to live together?” Scarlet had assumed they would, but having it confirmed—
“Well, yes. What did you think?”
“Are you coming back to work?” She recalled her grandfather assuming Summer wouldn’t return to the job, and had wondered, herself.
“I don’t know yet. I’m still figuring things out. Scar?”
“What?”
“You’ve seemed really distracted every time I’ve talked to you. This whole month. Longer than that, even. What’s going on?”
“Nothing worth talking about.”
Static crackled in the silence. “When I get home, we’ll catch up. When I can see your face, I’ll know whether there’s something I should know.”
She was right, of course. Nothing Scarlet could say or do would prevent Summer from seeing into her soul—her broken heart at that point, since her relationship with John would have ended.
“Are you planning your wedding yet?” Scarlet asked, changing the subject.
“Not yet. We don’t feel we need to hurry. Maybe at Christmas.”
“You’ll want the fairy tale, I think. It takes time to plan.”
“You’ll design my dress, won’t you?”
Scarlet smiled. “I already have.”
Summer’s voice softened. “I love you.”
“I love you, too,” Scarlet managed to say before her throat swelled shut.
“See you soon.”
“Okay. ‘Bye.”
Scarlet could never do anything to alienate her sister. Watching Fin tonight with Gram and Granddad settled that in Scarlet’s mind. Family came first. Always and forever.
There would be another man to love someday, she told herself as she turned off her bedside lamp.
Then she lay there in the dark, alone, denying herself the luxury of tears.
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