If Only in My Dreams (17 page)

Read If Only in My Dreams Online

Authors: Wendy Markham

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Fantasy, #Historical, #General, #Time Travel, #Paranormal, #Contemporary Women

BOOK: If Only in My Dreams
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As usual, she has begun the day in worn jeans, a warm parka, and sneakers that are a blessing on her wounded, blistered feet. She also wears a ski cap pulled low over her forehead to obscure the lovely purplish-black bruise that lingers above her brow; she’s counting on Jesus to work his cosmetic magic to conceal it.

In the shopping bag she’s toting are the suit and shoes she wore yesterday. Everything could stand a good cleaning; the stockings, of course, are in the garbage can back home.

Lisa isn’t going to be happy with her. Oh, well.

You can’t please all of the people all of the time
, Clara thinks philosophically.

Ironic, then, that it is distinctly possible to please none of the people none of the time… and yesterday, she managed to do just that.

But this is a fresh start
, she thinks as she dutifully heads over to check in with K.T., the second assistant director.

Tall and broad-shouldered, with sun-streaked shaggy brown hair and a perpetual tan—a real one—he looks like he should be in front of the camera rather than behind it.

He smiles when he sees her, which is a good sign.

With any luck, Michael was exaggerating the on-set reaction to her disappearance yesterday. He does have a tendency to be quite the drama queen.

“How are you feeling today?” K.T. asks, looking her over as he signs her in. “Everything okay?”

“Everything’s great.”

“You sure?”

Maybe Michael wasn’t exaggerating.

Clara can’t help but discern that K.T. seems a tad… overconcerned.

“I’m positive,” she assures him, hoping he can’t hear the waver of doubt in her voice.

She gives him her breakfast order: coffee, tomato juice, fruit, and oatmeal. Healthy, healthy, healthy.

“No Diet Coke today?”

“No Diet Coke today,” she replies, surprised K.T. would even have taken note of her usual morning quirk—or its absence.

“Okay, well, here are your sides.” He hands her the thin sheaf of script pages that cover the material they’ll be shooting today. “Take care.”

Leaving him to radio the first assistant director that she’s on the set, she heads to her trailer, wondering what he meant by
Take care
. Does he think she’s in some kind of trouble? What did he hear about her?

You need to relax
, she scolds herself.
You’re just paranoid. Everything is fine. Everyone has probably forgotten all about your taking off yesterday
.

Denton’s assistant, Andre, is waiting outside her trailer, wearing his trademark impractical shiny black shoes and, beneath his wool coat, a bright pink shirt—Denton’s trademark wardrobe color.

My father always said it takes a real man to wear pink
, he likes to say.

Maybe Denton can get away with it based on star stature alone, but Andre certainly isn’t a real man
, Clara can’t help but think.

His weaselly little body is wrapped in a black cashmere scarf that’s longer than he is, and he’s smoking a clove cigarette with gloved fingers. An arrogant, terminally pretentious recent film-school grad who’s here by virtue of being related to someone who knows someone who slept with someone, Andre is by far one of Clara’s least favorite people on the crew.

“Denton wants to see you right away,” he says importantly.

Uh-oh
. “Do you know what about?”

“No. He’s in his trailer.”

As Clara makes her way through the early morning chill, she wonders if Denton is going to fire her. She wouldn’t be surprised. Her upcoming treatment is going to mean reshuffling the January shooting schedule to accommodate her.

She climbs the three metal steps and knocks tentatively, mentally rehearsing what she’s going to say.

No time for that—the door is thrown open almost instantly by Jack, the director of photography. He nods a greeting and gives her a long, curious once-over before telling Denton he’ll see him in a little bit.

The crew is definitely gossiping about me
, Clara realizes, slipping past him into the trailer. She wonders if they know about her breast cancer diagnosis, or if other rumors are spreading.

“Come on in.” Clad in jeans and a rose-colored designer sweater that looks luxuriously soft—and ridiculously expensive—Denton is seated at the table.

He’s a small man, wiry, and usually wears a pair of thick, wire-rimmed glasses. He doesn’t have them on now, which makes his face look oddly naked. He blinks several times as he looks up from the lined script spread before him, each page marked with different-colored ink that indicates which material has been shot.

“You’re looking well this morning, Clara,” he greets her. “At least, from here… without my glasses. Meaning I probably can’t see much beyond a foot from my head, so you might very well look like hell,” he adds with classic Denton quirkiness.

“I probably do,” she informs him, knowing there are dark circles under her eyes, thanks to a restless—and dreamless—sleep. At least she’s still wearing the hat, meaning he has no hope of spotting the bruise on her forehead.

“I’m sure I’ll look better after makeup,” she tells him.

“Right, and I’m sure Jesus is anxious to get started on you. Just have a seat for a few seconds, will you?” He pulls out a chair adjacent to his, blinks, and takes a sip from a white porcelain mug.

“Vanilla soy latte.” He raises the mug in her direction. She nods, knowing Denton’s quirks well enough to realize that he’s merely informing, not offering.

Stifling a yawn, she tells herself she’ll swing by the catering tent and grab a cup of real coffee on her way back to her trailer, lest she fall asleep in the makeup chair. Breakfast won’t come until later.

Denton sets down his mug and steeples his fingers beneath his chin. “So Bobby told me what’s going on.”

She nods, uncertain what to say to that.

When Denton doesn’t make it easier for her by continuing, she says, “I’m going to be fine, it’s just… the next few months will be a challenge. Personally, I mean… not professionally. I’m a hundred percent on board here, Denton. Just so you know that.”

“Good. And we’re a hundred percent behind you, just so you know that. Look, what happened yesterday is…”

She holds her breath, wondering what he’s going to say.
Unconscionable? Deplorable? Grounds for dismissal?

“Forgiven,” he concludes, and she exhales in relief.

“Thank you. It won’t happen a—”

“I know you’re under a lot of pressure, and I understand that you may have needed to get away,” he continues, talking over her. “I just wish you had asked for a break, instead of just taking off in the middle of blocking. That cost this production—”

“I know, I’m so sorry. It won’t happen again.”
Whatever
it
even was
, she thinks uneasily. “I promise I’ve got my act together, and I’m ready to get back to work.”

Denton sips his vanilla soy latte thoughtfully. “What about your treatment? What’s going on with that?”

“I’ll know more next week, after I’ve consulted with the doctors again.” She doesn’t want to tell him too much. Not yet.

“Surgery? Radiation? Chemotherapy?”

All of the above
, she thinks grimly. Aloud, she says only, “I’ll let you know as soon as I know.”

“Do that.” He raises two fingers to his temple, then thrusts them away in a mock salute, clearly dismissing her as he turns back to the script.

She pushes back her chair.

“Thanks for coming by, Clara.”

“Thanks for understanding.”

He nods, not looking up from his notes. “Good luck.”

She exits the trailer, wishing she had a pair of dark sunglasses to hide the tears welling in her eyes.

This is so damned hard. All of it.

A cancer diagnosis is traumatic under any circumstances.… You wouldn’t be human if you weren’t just a little bit insecure about your ability to face the challenges ahead
.

Okay, so maybe Karen was right. Maybe she’s feeling more insecure, deep down, than she realized.

And maybe she does have a subconscious longing to be rescued from the nightmare her waking hours have become.

Not, of course, by her mother.

But it’s going to take more than an imaginary hero to do the job
, she tells herself.
Jed Landry isn’t going to pop up and rescue you no matter how nice that would be
.

She might as well stop feeling sorry for herself and get it together. She’s got a job to do, and she’s going to prove to Denton Wilkens that when it comes to her work, she’s a pro, just like she said.

Sniffling, Clara bows her head against the brisk air and the curious stares of the crew as she hurries off to makeup and wardrobe.

Jed runs his fingers over the lacy slip, reminding himself that he has every right to be going through the contents of the suitcase for the third time since he first opened it late last night.

Yes, but his patriotic duty shouldn’t involve imagining what Clara might look like in this lingerie—or any of the other items he’s stacked neatly on his newly made bed. On the nearby table lie the contents of her pocketbook, including the strange device he found.

But other than that, to his relief, he’s uncovered no further evidence that she’s a spy.

Nor, to his dismay, has he found any evidence of her last name or address.

That’s not all that’s eating him.

There’s something strange about the collection of clothing in the suitcase. The garments are all in different sizes, which doesn’t make sense if they belong to one woman. Which, ostensibly, they do.

But why would one woman have a dress in size ten, another in size fourteen, and another in a twenty?

Having three sisters as well as running a store, Jed is perhaps more familiar with ladies’ clothing than your average fella, and he’d swear that slender Clara is no bigger than a size twelve… if that.

Even more intriguing—or perhaps, incriminating—the clothes she packed aren’t all suitable for the same season. Several blouses and playsuits are unmistakably meant for warm weather, and there’s even a bathing suit.

A bathing suit?

In Glenhaven Park, in
December?

It’s almost as if…

Well, if he had to come up with a plausible explanation for the eclectic assortment of clothing, Jed would guess that she might have packed in a hurry, throwing everything in—inadvertently including her much larger roommates’ or sisters’ clothing—and paying no heed to the weather where she was going.

Or…

The luggage could be a dupe, its contents mere filler, and its carrier masquerading as an guileless young woman on an innocuous journey.

Jed greatly prefers the prior scenario… though why she might be forced to pack in a haphazard rush is beyond him.

Was she running away from something?

Someone?

Again, he remembers the bruise over her eye.

She said nobody hit her; she claimed to have bumped her head. Was she lying?

Is she the victim of some vicious aggressor? An abusive husband?

Or is she some kind of undercover informant committing an act of treason?

Slowly, he repacks her suitcase, trying to come up with sound arguments for Clara’s innocence. It would be a heck of a lot easier if her bags had yielded more answers than they did questions.

So. He can either go right to the police…

Or he can keep her things here for her for another twenty-four hours, in case she comes back.

You’re a fool, do you know that? Here you are, mooning over a woman who’s most likely up to no good. A woman who might even be an international spy
.

Yes, but the idea seems preposterous, despite the so-called evidence before him.

Clara seemed as American as he is—though there was something unusual about the way she spoke that set her apart from anyone he’s ever known.

It wasn’t an accent—rather, the slightest hint of an unfamiliar dialect. She sure didn’t sound like any of the city girls he’s ever met, and she claimed to have been born and raised there. He wants to believe her.

Why? Why do you care? She’s a complete stranger, for crying out loud
.

But he can’t help himself. He needs to give her the benefit of the doubt. When—
if
—she does return in the next twenty-four hours, he’ll demand an explanation. If it’s satisfactory…

What will you do?

Ask her to go dancing?

Maybe
, he thinks stubbornly, and all but quivers at the mere thought of whirling around a swanky nightclub with Clara in his arms.

And if her explanation isn’t satisfactory…?

Then I’ll have to report her
.

What matters, above all, is that this time, he won’t let her slip away.

But she has to come back to him, first. Back to Glenhaven Park.

He returns to the table, picks up the pocketbook, and opens it, about to replace its contents.

In the depths of the lining, something catches his eye. Something that blends right in to the satiny gray taffeta.

He reaches in. His fingers encounter a rectangular piece of cardboard, one edge wedged in to a frayed seam. He has to tug on it a bit before it comes free. No wonder it didn’t fall out when he dumped the bag upside down.

What is it?

“Jeepers creepers,” he breathes, realizing he’s holding a small black-and-white photograph. A woman gazes up at him: a woman with long, loose, wavy hair, very little makeup, and a natural-looking smile.

It takes him a moment to realize that it’s Clara, looking drastically different than she does in person. Her hair… her face… her expression…

She’s so casual. Utterly relaxed. Not a trace of tension or fear in her clear, wide-set eyes.

Scribbled across the photo is the name
Jezibel
, followed by a series of numbers separated by hyphens.

Jezibel? Is that her name?

Jezibel
.

It doesn’t seem to fit. But…

Turning the card over with a trembling hand, Jed sees that something is printed on the back.

Clara McCallum
.

That must be her name—her full name.

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