Mind Slide (14 page)

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Authors: Glenn Bullion

BOOK: Mind Slide
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Lucy ran across his chest and jumped off the couch.

He grabbed the phone from the coffee table.

“Hello?”

“Mason? Hi, it's Kelly. Did I wake you up?”

“No, not at all. I was just, uh...So how are you?”

She laughed. A very sexy laugh. “I just got off work. I wanted to call, see how you're doing.”

He sat up, and forgot all about the post mind slide nausea. He put a hand to his head and let a out a low groan.

“Are you okay?” she asked. “We can talk later.”

“It's okay. I'm fine. How did you get my number?”

She was quiet for a moment. He could almost see her turning red in her car.

“I looked you up. You have a website. You don't mind, do you? We never really traded numbers or anything last weekend.”

Mason felt his confidence go up. “Yeah. Sorry about that. I'll be honest. My social skills aren't exactly the best.”

“I know what you mean. Listen, what are you doing tomorrow?”

“What's tomorrow? Sunday?”

“Yeah.”

“Cleaning.”

She laughed. “Let's do something after you're done cleaning.”

“What are you doing right now?”

“Driving home.”

“Let's go get a midnight snack.”

She was quiet. “Really?”

“Sure, if you're not tired. I can come get you. We'll grab a quick bite. I'll drop you right back off.”

She thought it over. “That sounds like fun. Give me a half hour to get changed.”

She hung up.

Mason gave Lucy a look as she watched him from the dining room table.

“That wasn't as hard as I thought.”

*****

Kelly was excited as she stood in front of the mirror and brushed her teeth.

It wasn't only the fact that she was getting ready to ride in a Jeep with a good looking guy, although that certainly didn't hurt. She was actually
doing
something. She wasn't sitting back and watching everyone else have fun.

She knew there wasn't a good chance of romance happening between Mason and her. That was fine. But just to have someone to talk to, someone to laugh with. That was enough.

Still, she wanted to look good.

There was a knock at the front door.

“Just a minute!” she shouted, not sure if he heard her.

She adjusted her blouse one more time and jogged down the stairs to the living room.

She paused as she passed by the couch.

There was another knock.

She slung her purse over her shoulder and kept it unbuttoned. Her pepper spray sat on top of her compact. She could grab it in a split second if needed.

She cracked the door open slowly.

It was only Mason.

“Hi.”

She breathed a sigh of relief.

“Everything okay?” he asked.

“Yeah. Sorry. I was just getting ready in the bathroom.”

Mason stole a look at her as they walked down the sidewalk. He spent three hours of his Saturday night watching her work, but that wasn't enough for him.

She looked great in a pair of tight blue jeans and a light blue blouse. The blouse had a wide neck, showing off her slender shoulders. He could imagine that beautiful skin under her clothes. She wore a little makeup, some eyeshadow.

They drove to a diner near Mason's apartment that was open all night. Kelly loved the open Jeep, the feel of the wind in her hair.

A waitress stopped by to take orders. Kelly noticed she gave an extra long look to Mason. She wasn't the only one who found Mason easy on the eyes.

After the waitress walked away Kelly gave Mason a smile.

“I saw you on TV at work.”

Mason tried to act surprised. “Really?”

“Yeah. At a news conference.”

He nodded. “A father tried to take his thirteen-year-old across the state line. He didn't hurt her. But he was a little...off-balanced.”

“And you saved her.”

Mason blushed.

Kelly thought he was so cute.

“I found her. I called Brian, and he and his boys did all the real work.”

Kelly wished someone like Mason would have looked for her when she was missing for two days.

As she drank her coffee, she felt small. Mason spent his day basically being a hero. She spent her day dreading work.

“You must think I'm a sad little person,” she said. “Waiting tables. No plans on a Saturday night.”

He laughed to himself. She was no more sad than a man who spent his Saturday night watching the Discovery Channel and spying on a gorgeous woman.

“Of course you had plans. So did I. We planned to meet up and talk.”

She smiled warmly. After years alone, it unnerved her that she was so comfortable around Mason.

Why he was in the mental health center?

She was afraid to ask.

“I was always a loner, I guess,” she said. “Ever since my last few years of high school.” She shuddered at the memory of what changed her forever. “Something happened, and I kept to myself.”

Mason could see her fighting her emotions. “Kelly, there's nothing you could tell me that would surprise me.”

She loved it when he said her name.

“Don't be so sure.”

He smiled and took a sip of tea. “Try me.”

“I've hated you since I was nine years old.”

He choked on his tea. Kelly laughed.

“I take it back. Nine years old? I didn't even know you knew me.”

“I don't hate you anymore. My father would come home, and all he would talk about was you. It made me so jealous.”

Mason had to wonder what was said exactly.
Hi Kelly. How was school? Today, I shoved a syringe into Mason and made him shoot his mind over to China.

“So, I was a bitter little kid growing up, all thanks to you,” she said with a smile.

Mason had to wonder where the humor ended and the seriousness began.

“I'm talking too much. I'm sorry. Tell me about your time in school.”

He laughed. “Are you sure?”

“Yeah. I want to get to know you, and I'm doing all the talking.”

“I only completed first grade.”

She lifted her eyebrows, but kept quiet. She waited for him to continue.

He was a little uneasy. He had only shared his early years with Brian.

He knew he was taking a chance in scaring Kelly away.

“My parents died when I was five years old. I don't remember it at all. We were hit by a bolt of lightning in the park.”

Kelly set her coffee down and leaned forward. She reached her hand across the table, but stopped short of his.

“Anyway, I don't know what Doc told you, but there was no in and out of Yingling for me. I was there from when I was seven all the way to eighteen. I never went to school at all.”

They were both quiet. Mason felt guilty. He shouldn't have dumped all of that on Kelly. The sad part was that wasn't even the half of it.

He probably came across like a lunatic. Only a crazy person would need to spend most of their life in a mental health center.

He wouldn't blame her if she got up and called a cab outside.

“I'm actually smart though,” he said, suddenly unable to take his eyes from the table.

He couldn't believe he was still talking. He willed himself to shut up.

Kelly's hand closed the space between them and grabbed his. He looked up to see her staring at him intently.

“You probably think I'm crazy, don't you?”

She smiled. “My father never said a bad thing about you. I don't think you're crazy at all.” She rubbed his hand before pulling it back to grab her coffee. “Don't take this the wrong way. But I feel like I've known you a long time.”

“I feel the exact same way.”

Seven years, to be exact.

They continued to learn more about each other as they laughed at their stupid jokes. Kelly liked action and romance movies, loved Italian food, especially lasagna. She loved tuna, running, and was allergic to cats. She didn't have a desire to travel, a fact Mason found ironic, since he could mind slide anywhere in the world. She also freely admitted to hating her pale complexion.

Mason smartly kept to himself how he thought she was the most beautiful woman he'd ever seen.

Kelly had to laugh at Mason. She could tell he wasn't comfortable talking about himself, but he did open up a little. He talked about how Brian and Lisa basically adopted him when he turned eighteen. He slept on their couch for almost a year while he collected his first checks as a private investigator.

“So you knew you wanted to find children even when you were eighteen?”

Mason took a long drink of his tea to stall for time. He could see where this was headed.

“Yeah.”

“I have to ask. What got you into that? What eighteen-year-old wants to be a private eye?”

“Wow. Would you look at that?” He pointed behind her.

She turned to see a nearly empty diner. “What?”

“The clock on the wall. It's almost two in the morning.”

Kelly took that as it was time to leave. She flashed him a smile.

“You can't play mysterious forever.”

“Sure I can. I can't tell you all my secrets in one night.”

They left the diner. He held the door open for her, then opened the passenger's door to the Jeep. She rubbed the tops of her shoulders as he circled to the driver's side.

“Cold? Want me to put the top up?”

She shook her head. “It's a short drive to my house.”

“I'll go slow, so the wind doesn't kill you.”

That was as good a lie as any for driving slow.

He liked spending time with her.

They both climbed out of the Jeep after he parked in her driveway. She gave him a puzzled look.

“Just walking you to your door,” he said. “Not trying to make any moves or anything.”

Kelly nodded. At least his intentions were finally clear. No romance. She knew it was ridiculous, but she was relieved and disappointed at the same time.

“My front door's ten feet away.”

He smiled. “A lot can happen in ten feet.”

He walked her to her front door. There were goosebumps on her shoulders. He wasn't quite sure what he was supposed to do. Did they just have a date? It didn't feel like a date. Were they really friends? Were they supposed to shake hands or bump fists or something?

He settled for a simple nod of the head.

“I had fun,” he said. “Have a good night.”

Kelly stared at his back as he walked away. He was the most strange, and most interesting, man she'd ever met.

“So,” she said. “Give me a call tomorrow after you're done cleaning?”

He turned around, confused. They had spent two hours together, and she wanted to see him again. Rather soon, as well.

“Really?”

She laughed. “Yeah, really. My number should be on your cell phone from when I called earlier.”

Mason smiled and waved as she disappeared into her house. She didn't know Mason already had her number in his memory after seeing it on a piece of paper in Barry's office.

He would definitely call her.

Chapter 14
 

Mason had every window in the apartment open. The breeze blew through his sanctuary. A string symphony played quietly on the stereo. He vacuumed the carpet, and was in the middle of wiping the coffee table when an annoying ferret jumped on the side he just finished spraying.

“Lucy, are you kidding me? Do you not see me cleaning?”

He could have sworn he saw Lucy smile before jumping from the table and running into the bedroom.

The phone rang. He checked the caller ID to see it was Brian.

“What do you want, old man?”

“Funny, funny. Hey, Lisa saw us on the news yesterday.”

Mason laughed. “She wasn't the only one.”

“Kelly?”

“Yeah. She noticed us.”

“She probably noticed me more than you. Listen, the game is coming on in two hours. Lisa is making homemade lasagna. You're coming over, right?”

“Believe it or not, I might actually have plans today. Kelly and I might do something.”

There was a pause. “Seriously? You're actually chasing her? Good for you.”

“I'm not
chasing
anybody. We're just friends. But she's nice. She's fun.”

“Bring her on over. Does she like lasagna?”

“Yeah, she does.”

“Perfect. I'll see you later.”

Brian hung up before Mason could say anything else.

He shook his head, and wondered if Kelly would mind some time at Brian's house. She seemed to get along well with his family the one time they met.

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