|
 |
Second Chances
by Sandra Barret |
 |
|

"You can't be
serious. This is the best assignment you can
give me?" Kenya Babineau sat across from her
boss, fiddling with his name plate on the old,
steel desk - Jeff M. Treng.
The owner of
the name plate stared back at her, a deep
frown forming over his Asian eyes. "Look,
Babineau. It's not like you can have your pick
right now, not after the last fiasco with your
client's boyfriend."
"That was just
a misunderstanding," said Kenya.
"Yeah, so you
say. Just a communications issue. Well, it
landed the guy in the emergency room with a
broken nose." Jeff leaned on his elbows. "It's
just a temporary assignment. A couple of
months to ease this new client's nerves and
get you a good recommendation. Then, you'll be
back in the thick of it."
Jeff pushed a
yellow folder across the desk. Kenya picked it
up and opened it. A black and white photo fell
into her lap. She studied the picture for a
few moments, fascinated by the dark, spiked
hair and wide-set eyes of the woman in the
photo. The woman had not smiled for the
picture, and something in her expression told
Kenya that the woman did not find much to
smile about. Kenya stuffed the photo back into
the folder and scanned the info sheet. She
summarized the situation in less than a minute
and slammed the folder shut again. "She's rich
and paranoid, but that doesn't mean she needs
Chicago's finest body guard at her beck and
call."
"One of
Chicago's finest," Jeff corrected. "And the
rich part is a good thing. It pays the bills.
You remember bills, don't you, Babineau?"
Kenya folded
her arms across her chest, refusing to answer
the obvious. "It's lame, and you know it. Look
at the sheet yourself? She claims to be
stalked by some woman." Kenya leaned over to
open the folder again and re-read the sheet.
"Lois Kirst. But she can't even convince the
La Grange police department to help her with a
restraining order against this woman. We'd
just be taking Roslyn's money for no good
reason."
Jeff grinned.
"I fail to see the problem with that."
"The problem?
How about it's a waste of my time? How about
I'm better than this." Kenya felt her temper
rising, but she didn't try to hide it. Jeff
had seen her at her worst, and still they were
best friends. She looked at Jeff, seeing anew
the subtle signs of aging on his face, the
creases around his dark brown eyes and the
gray streaks taking over his short,
salt-and-pepper hair. Kenya was ten years
younger than Jeff, but already the fear of
what age would do to her in her physically
demanding profession crept into her thoughts.
Especially after she blew the last assignment
by mistaking a boyfriend for a mugger. She
reacted without thinking, and that had nearly
gotten her arrested.
Jeff leaned
back and propped his boots up on top of the
desk. "You're right. You are better than this.
Hell, you're better than this whole business
I'm running here, and I've told you that
before. So why are you still here?"
Kenya shrugged,
not wanting to get into the old argument
again, but Jeff had other plans.
"The NSA job is
still open, you know," Jeff prompted. "My
brother-in-law could have you in there in a
flash. You've got all the right credentials.
Masters in Criminology and Investigation, top
security clearances, and an ace recommendation
from your's truly."
Kenya held up
her hands. "No, thanks. I may be forty, but
I'm not ready for early retirement, yet." And
the thought of a desk job scared her. Kenya
needed the physical activity and requirements
of being a body guard. She reached over and
scanned the yellow folder again. "Two months,
you promise."
"Two months.
Then you're back on the real cases," said
Jeff. Something about the half-smile on his
face made Kenya think that her boss had pulled
out the NSA trump card just to convince her to
take the lame assignment. And it worked.
Kenya read the
cover sheet again. Roslyn Hullet, age
twenty-eight. Occupation – self-employed. Too
much money and not enough sense, thought
Kenya. But, for two months, she could handle
it. She had to handle it and get a
recommendation out of the rich brat.
#
Roslyn sat in
her cluttered office, staring at the
technicals for Hansen's Natural on her laptop
screen. A fast-growing stock with good
fundamentals and a rising 200-day moving
average, but it just didn't hold her
attention. She'd made a fortune big enough to
support twenty women her age during the
high-tech boom, and unlike alot of her former
associates, she'd pulled enough profits off
the table before the big bust that she could
live comfortably on Dow Jones dividend
companies for the next three hundred years.
But where was
the thrill in that? she pondered as she
scanned the key stats for Hansen's. The
company was good, no doubts, but it had none
of the thrill of an early Ebay or even the fun
of Google's IPO. Roslyn slammed the lid down
on her laptop and pushed back from her desk.
She looked at the clock – three hours until
the market closed. Maybe she'd come back in
the final twenty minutes and play some
options, just for old time's sake. Meanwhile,
she had an appointment in a half hour, and she
hadn't showered yet.
Roslyn padded
up the wide staircase to the second floor and
her master bedroom. Opening up the white oak
doors to the walk-in closet, she scanned for
just the right outfit to wear. Blue was out of
the question, so she grabbed a fushia sweater
and a pair of black jeans and tossed them on
her king-sized bed. She stripped off her
clothes and stepped into the bathroom,
tip-toeing across the cold tiles to stand on
the plush white bath mat and turn on the
shower. As steam slowly filled the expansive
bathroom, Roslyn mentally noted that she'd
have to get a contractor in to install heated
pipes under the tiles. A waste of money, her
mother would say, but Roslyn didn't care. She
and the old bitch were only on speaking terms
since Roslyn had made her first million. And
Roslyn only heard from her mother when she had
something new that she wanted Roslyn to buy
her. As the hot water massaged her shoulder
muscles, Roslyn began to relax and forget
about her homophobic mother. She had a minor
interview to hold and then maybe she'd visit
the shooting range she had installed under the
back yard. She finished up her shower and
dressed with enough time left over to grab an
energy drink from the fridge.
At exactly
1:30pm, the security system buzzed. Roslyn
walked over to the video display and saw a
black SUV waiting at the gate. "Who is it?"
she asked.
"Kenya Babineau
from Treng Security."
The voice
sounded deep, almost sultry, piquing Roslyn's
curiosity. She pressed a switch and watched as
the steel gate slid open automatically.
"Please park by the side entrance Ms. Babineau,
and I'll meet you there." Roslyn waited for
the SUV to proceed beyond the range of the
video camera and then walked through the
diningroom and kitchen. She opened the side
entrance door to a blast of cold air, just as
the SUV pulled to a stop in the covered drive,
parking just behind her silver porche.
A tall,
darkskinned woman wrapped in a heavy leather
jacket stepped out, her short tightly-curled
black hair framed an angular face, but the
most startling feature was the woman's
sea-green eyes. She paused in front of Roslyn,
holding out her hand. "Hello. I'm Kenya
Babineau."
#
Kenya wrapped
her hand around the offered pale, pink hand.
The firmness of the handshake startled her,
considering the owner of the hand was a head
and shoulder shorter than she was, and not at
all what Kenya had expected, based on the
woman's info sheet.
"Nice to meet
you, Ms. Babineau. I'm Roslyn Hullet."
Kenya followed
Roslyn back into the mansion, trying not to
stare at the smaller woman's spiked
electric-blue hair or the incomprehensible
artwork that lined the hallway. They walked
past a wide, stainless-steel kitchen, through
another long hallway and finally into what
Kenya assumed was the living room. A pair of
matched white leather sofas formed an L in the
corner of the room. A wide, flatpanel screen
hung from the opposing wall and between the
two was a series of long picture windows
looking out over an indoor swimming pool
encased in a glass room.
"May I take
your jacket?" asked Roslyn as she paused in
front of one of the sofas.
Kenya handed
over her jacket and straightened out her
off-white turtleneck. She felt as if she'd
melt into the background compared to Roslyn's
brilliant sweater and hair. Way too much
money, thought Kenya as she took a seat on the
opposite end of the sofa from Roslyn. Feeling
out of her element, Kenya compensated by
controlling the conversation. "Let's start
with the basics. What household security do
you have?"
Roslyn sat with
her legs folded under her, twirling the ends
of her spiked hair as she spoke. "You saw the
access gate as you entered. The fence
surrounds the full fifteen acres here. Besides
that, I have an alarm system installed in the
house. Every window and door has sensors
attached to detect when it's opened. Also,
these picture windows and the glass doors off
the kitchen and my bedroom balcony have glass
shattering sensors."
Paranoid much?
thought Kenya. "I see. And you live here
alone?"
"Yes. I have a
cleaning staff in twice a week, and a gardener
for the external maintainence. They each have
special access codes for the gate and the
internal alarm system."
"Okay. In your
request, you said you've had problems with a
potential stalker. What can you tell me about
that?"
Kenya watched
as Roslyn's easy attitude shifted. The woman
pulled her legs up and wrapped her arms around
them, staring into the distance. What little
color there was in Roslyn's pale face drained
as described her situation.
"Lois Kirst."
Roslyn gave a weak half-smile as she turned to
Kenya. "I realize the police department
doesn't believe me, but she is dangerous."
The intensity
in Roslyn's eyes pulled at Kenya, despite her
doubts. "Go on," she urged.
"She came to
one of my seminars. I hold classes in the
basics of stock market analysis. I guess I
spoke with her after the seminar, but I can't
remember. She thinks I did anyway."
"And what has
she done since then?" Most of the information
was already in Rolsyn's report to Jeff, but
Kenya preferred to hear the story from the
source. There was always more than could be
covered in a few paragraphs on paper.
"She's been at
every seminar I've had in the past two years.
Not actually in most of them anymore, because
I've blocked her admissions. But she's always
there at the hotel or convention center. Every
seminar, every city across the US."
"And?" Kenya
asked. She could feel the tension surrounding
Roslyn and knew whatever the issue, this woman
had gotten under Roslyn's skin.
"And she's been
here. I think she moved here about six months
ago. I looked up her original registration,
and she came to her first seminar in Tulsa,
Oklahoma."
"So she looked
up your home address."
Roslyn shook
her head. "No. I'm unlisted. My business
address is in Delaware. The only way she could
have found out where I lived would be to
follow me."
Kenya wasn't
convinced that was how Lois had found Roslyn.
Private information always had a way to be
discovered by those with the drive to search
for it. But still, nothing suggesting Roslyn
was a danger. There had to be more. "What has
she done since she's been here?"
Instead of
answer, Roslyn stood up and walked to the
mantlepiece above the fireplace and picked up
an envelope. She handed it to Kenya. "It's all
in there. The letters she puts in my mailbox.
Not sends in the mail, but drops off herself.
There's never a postmark or a seal on the
envelopes."
Kenya slid a
few of the letters out of the larger envelop.
She randomly opened one and read it.
Dear Roslyn,
You left
your blinds open last night. Do you know how
dangerous that can be? Anyone on the street
can see you walking around. What if someone
had a rifle? You'd be an easy target.
Yours
forever,
Gardian.
"Gardian?"
Kenya asked.
"It's what
she's called herself since she started leaving
letters. When I see her at the seminars, she
uses her real name, but I know it's her."
Roslyn's hands
trembled, and she tucked them underneath her
legs. Kenya rested a hand on Roslyn's
shoulder, feeling the other woman relax under
her grip. "I understand. Anonymous letters are
never really anonymous. The writer always puts
hints in there so you can figure out who's
writing them."
"Yes, but just
try to convince the police of that."
Reluctantly,
Kenya let her hand drop from Roslyn's warm
shoulder. She could smell the other woman's
perfume now, an alluringly light scent that
made Kenya want to lean closer, but she
resisted the urge. This was work, not play
time. "You've convinced me and Teng Security.
We should be able to convince Ms. Kirst to
take her attentions elsewhere."
Roslyn clasped
her hand around Kenya's. "Thank you. I can't
express how much of a relief it is to have
someone who just believes me."
Roslyn's cheeks
turned pink, and Kenya felt the heat rising in
her own face, but she didn't pull away. "How
about you show me the house and surrounding
area to start and then we can go over your
normal routine?"
Standing up,
Roslyn let go of Kenya's hand. She lead the
way through more rooms than Kenya had ever
seen in one house before. But the walk around
the property beyond the house proved even more
fascinating. Besides the indoor pool with a
retractable roof, there was a small outdoor
icerink, perpetually frozen in Illinois' harsh
winter, and a reasonably complete private gym
in the basement. The most startling feature
was accessed from a long hallway in that
basement. When they'd walked longer than Kenya
thought the house was, Roslyn opened a lone
door and flicked on a light. Kenya couldn't
suppress a wide grin when she saw a vast
underground shooting range, complete with
retractable targets and multiple side-arm
selections. She didn't question Roslyn's
choice of hobby, but obviously, the other
woman had deep-set feelings of insecurity.
People like Lois Kirst used those kinds of
insecurities to prey on their victims.
When the tour
ended and Roslyn finished listing her regular
and semi-regular activities, Kenya summed up
what she saw as Roslyn's physical security
needs. "I recommend that you hire out for
short term personal security during your
seminars for sure. You could also contact us
when you have other public events to attend."
Roslyn sat
beside her on the sofa again, close enough
that their legs touched. Kenya ignored the
warmth that flooded her because of Roslyn's
proximity and focused clarifying her
assignment. "What are your thoughts?" she
asked.
"I'd prefer
that you provide fulltime coverage." Roslyn's
brown eyes held Kenya transfixed.
"Excuse me?"
Kenya asked. She could not comprehend what
Roslyn wanted.
Roslyn looked
down at her hands, which played at the edges
of her sweater. "I'd hoped you would stay with
me for a time."
Kenya didn't
know how to take Roslyn's offer. She was sure
that Jeff had not contracted for twenty-four
hour survellience. But if Roslyn was going to
ask for that level of security, it would
certainly be easier to do it from within the
house than alternating security agents from
outside. "Are you certain you want that? You
seem to have a more than adequate alarm system
here."
"But they
aren't infallable, are they? I mean, I can't
have it turned on all day when I'm going in an
out."
"No, I suppose
not." Kenya considered the amenities that
would be available to her, assuming Roslyn
would let her use the shooting range and pool.
But did she really want to dedicate every hour
of her next couple of months playing
babysitter? Kirst might be a nut, but she was
a harmless nut. Still, the pleading look in
Roslyn's eyes made up Kenya's mind. "So, do I
understand correctly that I would stay here in
the house?" she asked.
"Yes. There are
ample spare bedrooms you could choose from.
And you would of course be compensated
appropriately."
Way more money
than sense. "I see. Well, it will take a few
days to make the appropriate arrangements,"
said Kenya, unsure why she was giving in so
easily. It would be a hell of an imposition to
move out of her apartment for two months. And
how could she stand sitting around a rich
woman's house day in and day out, pretending
to be a bodyguard? She envisioned herself
spending hours in the gym and shooting ranch.
Not for the first time, she cursed herself for
losing her temper on her last assignment. This
was karmic payback for that slipup, she
thought as Roslyn went over the details of
moving Kenya in the house for an extended
stay.
Roslyn watched
the black SUV leave her driveway. She leaned
against the doorway, ignoring the cold blast
of wind blowing into her house. She wasn't
sure why she'd changed her plans and asked
Kenya to move in for a time. It was definitely
out of character for her to have any longterm
guests. Her home was her private refuge. How
would she handle living with a veritable
stranger? But something about the dark woman
pulled at Roslyn, and she wanted time to
explore that feeling. She would also feel much
more at ease having a qualified body guard
living with her.
She'd let Kenya
take all of Lois's letters when she left, but
Roslyn hadn't passed over the photos that Lois
had taken of her. There was something too
personal about some of them. Especially when
the pictures proved just how unaware she was
of Lois's presence at times. Her vulnerability
gnawed at her. Having Kenya around all the
time guaranteed that Lois would never find her
alone again. At least for a time.
#
Kenya settled
into a comfortable rountine a lot faster than
she'd imagined she would. Roslyn kept a very
active schedule, enough so that Kenya had to
squeeze in enough time to keep fit in the gym.
For a tiny woman, Roslyn was a bundle of
frantic energy. Her work schedule had them out
of the house for multiple hours a day, but
Kenya had yet to catch her first glimpse of
Lois Kirst. Survellence of the house provided
photos of Lois driving by at least three times
since Kenya had moved in, but the
stalker hadn't made any contact with Roslyn
in that time.
For lack of any
real, mental stimulation, Kenya got in the
habit of interrupting Roslyn's work in the
early afternoon. Roslyn seemed to welcome the
disturbance, to the point of actually
explaining her work to Kenya. But that wasn't
enough to keep Kenya occupied for long.
Eventually, she turned to Jeff for ideas, and
Jeff started passing her some analysis work.
To Kenya's surprise, what she considered dull
paperwork turned out to be more interesting
that she'd thought. By the evening dinner,
she'd had her fill of mental stimulation. But
she still needed physical activity.
And being in
close proximity to Roslyn wasn't helping.
Unlike Kenya, Roslyn was a physically
attentive individual. If the other woman had a
personal bubble, it was deflated. She seemed
to find any excuse to touch Kenya. If Roslyn
were a man, Kenya would have smacked him down
long ago. But Roslyn's attention excited her,
and she couldn't deny the chemistry they
shared.
After seven
weeks, Kenya relaxed her insistence on keeping
a professional distance from Roslyn and asked
the woman to go to a dance club with her. Not
that Kenya wasn't certain about Roslyn's
sexuality, but she made sure Roslyn understood
that it was a lesbian club that Kenya wanted
to go to.
"And even
though it's Valentine's Day, this isn't a
date," Kenya added.
Roslyn laughed,
ignoring Kenya's discomfort as she looped her
arm through Kenya's. "Of course not. Shall I
drive, or you?"
Kenya chose to
drive. It might not be a date, but she wasn't
in the habit of letting another woman drive
her around. It just wasn't right.
#
The flashing
multicolored lights on the dance floor rattled
Roslyn's already frayed nerves. She hadn't
been out on a date, or non-date as Kenya
insisted it was, in over a year. She'd slowly
let the situation with Lois Kirst turn her
into a recluse. Part of her reason for
agreeing to go out with Kenya was to prove
that she could still function in a social
environment outside her work. The other part
was of course that Kenya had asked her at all.
Roslyn hadn't exactly been subtle about her
attraction to her stoic bodyguard. And the
opportunity to see Kenya relax was something
Roslyn relished.
Unfortunately,
the dark club, combined with flashing lights,
left Roslyn incapable of clearly seeing the
faces around her. More than once, she thought
she'd seen Lois in the darkness. But each
time, it turned out to be a different
dirty-blond butch woman with glasses. Kenya
must have sensed some of Roslyn's discomfort,
because she asked twice if Roslyn wanted to go
home. But Roslyn had a stubborn streak that
wouldn't let her give up so easily. While she
refused to drink, she did accompany Kenya to
the dance floor multiple times. Watching the
lean woman's rythmic movements caused a rush
of heat through Roslyn's body.
Roslyn used the
excuse of the crowded dance floor to slide her
hands along Kenya's biceps. She felt the
muscles flex beneath her fingers. Taking that
as a sign of encouragement, Roslyn maneuvered
closer. She felt Kenya's hand slide to the
small of her back, pulling her closer.
Roslyn's heart pounded as she inhaled the
scent of Kenya's cologne. The music slowed,
and the dance floor openned up, but Kenya
didn't let her go. Instead, she wrapped both
arms around Roslyn and rested her head on top
of Roslyn's. Roslyn was never so glad for her
two inch heels, giving her just enough added
height to place her lips on Kenya's collar
bone. She thought she felt the other woman
shudder. The room and the lights disappeared
for Roslyn as she shut her eyes and focused on
the sensation of Kenya's body touching hers.
Kenya's strong thigh slid between her legs,
and Roslyn felt as if a fire burned there. She
bit her lip to stifle a moan. How long had it
been since a woman had held her like this? And
how long would it last before something or
someone broke the spell around them?
Kenya felt the
intense heat of Roslyn pressed against her
thigh. All thoughts of professional distance
melted away with the sensation of the smaller
woman wrapped in her arms. Kenya wanted her.
She hadn't let herself fall for a client
before, but Roslyn touched her like no other.
When the music switched back to a fast beat,
Kenya leaned down to press her lips to
Roslyn's ear. "Can we go home?"
Roslyn turned
her head to look into Kenya's eyes. "Yes,
please."
Taking Roslyn's
hand, Kenya led her off the dance floor. She
retrieved her leather jacket and Roslyn's
long hunter green coat, and they walked out
into the cold, wintery night. Light snow
flurries greeted them as they walked hand in
hand to Kenya's SUV. Kenya unlocked the
passenger side and opened it for Roslyn.
Stepping close to Kenya, Roslyn looked up
into Kenya's eyes and moistened her lips.
Kenya took the hint and leaned down.
The feel of
Roslyn's warm lips on hers sent a rush of
desire through Kenya. She cursed the cold
weather that forced heavy jackets to separate
their bodies. Kenya cupped Roslyn's head and
flicked her tongue across Roslyn's lips. The
other woman moaned, then opened to Kenya. The
wintery breeze couldn't penetrate the heat
growing between them, but the need for air
eventually forced them apart. Puffs of steam
escaped Kenya as she tried to catch her
breath. Roslyn smiled up at her, but then her
expression changed dramatically as she looked
past Kenya's shoulder.
"What's the
matter?" asked Kenya.
"It's her,"
said Roslyn, her hands tightening on Kenya's
arms. "Lois. She's in the blue Taurus idling
in the next row."
Kenya moved to
turn around but Roslyn held her tightly. "No,
don't go over," said Roslyn. "Let's get out of
here."
"Nonsense,"
said Kenya, brushing off Roslyn's grip on her.
"It's about time Lois and I met, don't you
think?"
"Kenya, no!"
hissed Roslyn. But Kenya was already walking
toward the car in question. She could just
make out a driver in the older model car, but
as she approached, the driver shifted the car
in gear and pulled out of the parking spot,
heading in the opposite direction. Kenya tried
to peer inside the dirty window, but all she
saw was a caucasian woman with glasses. While
it could have been anyone, Kenya knew from the
survellence photos that it was Lois's car. Or
to be more accurate, Lois's sister's car.
Kenya hadn't told Roslyn yet, but Jeff had run
a trace on the car after the first series of
photos were taken, and they knew that Lois
lived with her sister in an apartment complex
in Chicago.
When the car
left the parking lot, Kenya turned around and
walked back to Roslyn, who stood with her arms
crossed and her face in shadow.
"She's gone
now," said Kenya. Roslyn wouldn't look at her,
but plopped down on the passenger seat and
slammed the car door shut.
Kenya shrugged
and walked around to the driver's side and let
herself in. She started the engine and flicked
on the heat, though it would take a few blocks
before it warmed up. Roslyn stared out the
side window, not saying a word as Kenya drove
back to the house in silence. It wasn't until
they were both inside and Roslyn had turned on
the alarm system that she finally spoke, and
the anger in her voice shocked Kenya.
"Don't ever do
that again," said Roslyn, standing before
Kenya with her fists clenched at her sides.
Kenya could see
the smaller woman trembling, but she wasn't
sure if it was from leftover fear or anger.
"What did I do wrong?" Kenya asked.
"You've just
pissed her off, you know."
"It's about
time someone confronted the weasel."
"No, you don't
understand." Roslyn was nearly in tears.
Kenya wanted to
hold her, but the icey look in Roslyn's eyes
kept her away. "Then explain it to me."
Roslyn's fists
loosened, and she walked away. Unsure what to
do, Kenya followed her until Roslyn slumped
into one of the sofas in the back living room.
Before Kenya could sit down again, Roslyn
jumped up and frantically pulled the blinds
shut to all the windows in the room. Kenya
waited until Roslyn sat down again. Then she
risked reached out and covering Roslyn's hand
in hers. She was grateful both that Roslyn
didn't pull away, and that the trembling in
Roslyn's hand lessened. "Can you tell me
what's going on?" Kenya asked.
Roslyn shifted
so that she was closer to Kenya and rested her
head on Kenya's shoulder as she spoke. "An old
girlfriend of mine confronted Lois once, about
nine months ago. Things got... worse after
that for a time."
Kenya frowned.
This was new information. "Worse how?"
"She went after
my friend. I mean, we can't prove anything,
but my friend's tires were slashed the next
night, and her windshield was smashed. That's
when Lois, she started leaving pictures.
Photos of me in the mailbox."
"What kind of
photos?"
"Pictures of me
whenever I was alone. And, pictures of the
house."
Roslyn shook as
she spoke, and Kenya wrapped her arms around
the frightened woman. "From outside?"
Roslyn shook
her head.
"Inside? She's
been inside the house?"
"Yes. It was
before I had the alarm system installed. I've
also changed all the locks since then."
"Why didn't you
tell me about this before?" Breaking into the
house was an escalation in Lois's behavior. If
Kenya could prove it, the creep could be
tossed in jail.
"I don't know.
It was such a personal invasion. I mean if you
can't feel safe in your own home, what have
you got?"
Kenya had no
real answer to that question. She brushed her
fingers through Roslyn's short hair.
Roslyn looked
up, her brown eyes glistening in the
lamplight. "Promise me that you won't go after
her again like that?"
"But, isn't
that why you hired me? To get rid of Lois?"
Roslyn's voice
shook as she spoke. "Don't you see? If you
antagonize her, she'll go after you next."
"Good. Then
I'll get rid of her for good." Kenya hoped
Lois would come after her. She had more than a
little agression to work out on that sappy,
weak face.
"No! Please.
She's not that bad. It's not like I'm in
danger or anything."
"Come on, you
don't believe that, do you?" asked Kenya.
Roslyn looked
down. "She hasn't done anything to hurt me
directly."
"Yet," Kenya
added. "She's got all the signs of an obsessed
stalker. Sooner or later, she'll escalate. And
she has no right to control you as it is."
"She's never
been violent to me, but I don't know what
she'd try to do to you. Especially after
seeing us together in the parking lot."
"Do you regret
that we kissed?" Kenya's heard pounded as she
waited for the answer. It had all felt so
right at the time, but did Roslyn object to
the change in their professional relationship?
"No, but it
changes everything," said Roslyn, brushing a
tear from her eye. "I can't bear the thought
of you in danger."
"This is my
job, hon. To take on the risks."
Roslyn pulled
away from her. "Not anymore."
"Excuse me?"
The conversation continued to twist in ways
that left Kenya unbalanced and unprepared.
"You're fired."
"What do you
mean, I'm fired?" Kenya felt an entirely
different kind of heat in her face now. The
heat of her unchecked temper.
"I can't have
you in danger. It's too much," Roslyn pinched
the bridge of her nose. "I'm sorry. I just
can't handle this."
"Fine," said
Kenya, pushing off the sofa. "I guess that
means you can't handle me right now either."
She turned away from Roslyn and stomped across
the livingroom. She heard Roslyn calling to
her, but Kenya needed to get out of the house.
To go from being so close, to having her
actions thrown back at her was too much for
her. It was her job to get rid of Lois, she
raged silently.
Kenya slammed
the door on her SUV and kicked it into
reverse. A grim satisfaction trickled through
her angry mood at the sound of her tires
screeching in the driveway as she spun around
and drove out, barely giving the auto-sensing
exit gate a chance to open fully before she
was past it. Then she sped down the isolated
street and onto the main intersection leading
to the highway. It wasn't until she was a few
miles away that it even registered she was
heading to the office and not her apartment.
She hadn't been in her own apartment for
nearly two months, and it held no comfort for
her right now. Not that the office would, but
at least she expected it to be a cold, austere
and most importantly, neutral setting.
Roslyn slumped
back down in the sofa after watching Kenya's
car escape from the driveway. Alone again, the
silence in the empty house suffocated her. She
got up and turned on the stereo, letting a
wave of classical music wash over her. How had
she screwed up so dramatically? And with such
finality, she thought, remembering the cold
glare in Kenya's brown eyes. Eyes that would
never turn to her again with the darkness of
desire in them. Roslyn felt tears forming, but
she refused to give in to them. It was her own
fault, she thought, driving away her chance
for love because of her paranoia.
No, she
thought. Because of Lois. For once, she didn't
blame it all on herself. She never asked for
Lois's attentions. And how much had she
already compromised on or given up on entirely
because of the other woman's obsession. A
simmering anger brewed inside Roslyn as she
realized she'd given up again. That by
letting Kenya go, Roslyn had once again let
Lois run her life.
She got up off
the sofa with a sense of renewed purpose.
She'd call Kenya up and apologize. Hell, she'd
do anything to get Kenya back. Including
letting the other woman decide how to get Lois
out of Roslyn's life. She leaned over the arm
of the sofa to grab the phone off the side
table. She punched in Kenya's cell phone
number and waited for the first ring. But when
she heard the back kitchen door open, Roslyn
hung up the phone.
"Kenya? I'm so
glad you came back." Roslyn stood up and
tossed the phone on the sofa as she rushed to
the kitchen. At the doorway, she froze.
"Hello,
Roslyn," said Lois Kirst as she pushed the
kitchen door shut behind her.
Kenya was
surprized to see a light on in Jeff's office
when she unlocked the front office door to let
herself in. At well past midnight, she
wondered what was keeping her boss hard at
work. Kenya debated going in to talk to him,
but instead, she went to her own cluttered
desk and flicked on the desk lamp. Sitting in
the chair, she stared at the mountain of
paperwork waiting for her. She wanted to kick
it all to the floor and to hell with it, but
she didn't. Her temper had gotten her into
enough trouble, and it was time she learned
some self control. Past time, she thought,
remembering her outburst in front of Roslyn.
Kenya rested her head in her hands, cursing
herself. Why did she have to fly off the
handle like that? During the drive, she'd
calmed down enough to see it all from Roslyn's
perspective. Kenya had compromised her
position as security guard, and she certainly
didn't regret that. But Roslyn had a point
that Kenya could no longer maintain the degree
of professional detatchment that was necessary
to do the job. And confronting the stalker at
night without a weapon was a dumb move. Kenya
padded her side, realizing she'd left her gun
in her bedroom at Roslyn's. Another stupid
mistake to berate herself for. What else could
go wrong?
Kenya's pity
party was interrupted when Jeff's head popped
out of his office door. "Kenya? Dammit girl,
don't you ever answer your cell phone?"
She pulled the
small phone out of her jeans pocket and looked
at its dark face. "Sorry, Jeff. I turned it
off before I went out with Roslyn."
Jeff rushed to
her side with an urgency he usually reserved
for emergencies.
"What? What's
wrong?" she asked.
He grabbed a
piece of paper off the top of her desk and
waved it at her. "This is what's wrong. Read
it."
Kenya scanned
the fax sheet. When she saw Lois Kirst's name
in the same line as the alarm company that
Roslyn used, she threw the paper down. "Lois
works for the same company?"
"Yes. Hell of a
coincidence, isn't it?"
"Okay, let's be
rational here. I mean, it doesn't necessarily
mean Lois has the access code. It's a top
notch system." Kenya's rationalization felt
weak. Roslyn's alarm system could be
compromised, and Kenya had left her alone.
"Did Roslyn
change the default access code for the alarm?"
asked Jeff.
Kenya flicked
on her phone. "I don't know, but I'm going to
find out."
"You think
she's still up?"
"I hope so."
Kenya ignored the flashing message light and
dialed Roslyn. Come on, pick up, she urged
silently as she listened to the second and
third ring. After the fourth, she gave up and
hung up. "No answer," she mumbled.
On impulse, she
scanned her phone log and saw that she'd
missed a call from Roslyn not more than ten
minutes before. She jumped up. "I'm going
back."
"Is something
wrong?" asked Jeff. "Do you need backup?"
"No, it's
probably nothing. But I don't want to leave
her alone if that alarm system is useless."
She didn't add that she'd pissed off Roslyn's
stalker already that night. She hurried out of
the office building and hopped into her car.
Pulling out of the parking lot, she turned and
sped down the dark streets to the highway.
She'd be
alright, Kenya thought. But as she raced down
the highway, she couldn't remember if she'd
locked the back door or not. Cursing, she
drove faster, determined to shave off as much
of the fifteen minute drive as she could.
Roslyn stood in
the hallway, her heart and mind racing. How
did Lois get past the alarm? And what could
Roslyn do to get the frightening woman out of
her house? She'd never felt so lost and
helpless.
"So who is
she?" asked Lois, sitting on the edge of the
livingroom sofa. Roslyn's thoughts were a gray
fog. Nothing registered but the pounding of
her heartbeat in her ears.
"Well?" Lois
pulled off her glasses and cleaned them on the
edge of her gray shirt.
Lois's interest
in Kenya jolted Roslyn out of her shock.
"She's gone," said Roslyn. She wouldn't let
Lois get to Kenya. No matter what. Her mind
churned on what Lois wanted from her, and
slowly, a plan formed. "She's gone for good. I
fired her."
Lois raised her
pale eyebrows. "You employed that woman?"
Roslyn nodded.
"Yes, but she overstepped her bounds by making
a pass at me." The look of relief on Lois's
face encouraged Roslyn. "So I got rid of her."
Roslyn forced herself to take a seat next to
Lois. She needed to convince the other woman
that Kenya wasn't a threat.
The phone rang,
making Roslyn jump. Lois dug the phone out of
the sofa cushion and handed it to Roslyn.
Roslyn scanned the caller ID and recognized
Kenya's cell phone number. She couldn't answer
it, but she held the phone in her hand, just
incase Kenya started to leave a message. It
stopped just before the answering machine
clicked on.
"It's nobody
important," she said to Lois's inquiring look.
Thank God, thought Roslyn as she put the phone
down again. She gave Lois what she hopped was
a convincing smile. "I don't think you've ever
really seen this place. Do you want the grand
tour?"
Lois stood up
and offered a hand to Roslyn, who forced
herself to place her hand in Lois's. She
couln't suppress a shudder at the sensation of
the other woman's clammy hand wrapped around
hers. It felt cold and weak So unlike Kenya's
warm, solid hand. Roslyn had only the
flimsiest of plans.and they depended on
getting Lois to relax and trust her. Maybe
she'd ask Lois to join her for dinner some
time. Anything to gain her trust and keep her
from Kenya.
Tires squealing
in protest, Kenya nearly spun out as she raced
off the highway exit ramp. Three blocks to go,
she thought, resisting the urge to call
Roslyn's number again. Mentally, she tried to
convince herself that it was just a minor
glitch, that Roslyn was probably saftely in
bed, asleep. Kenya considered how she would
explain coming back after the fight that they
had. But she'd think of something. Probably
something involving a lot of apologizing and
grovelling for forgiveness. Hell, she'd let
Roslyn fire her and give the assignment over
to someone else. Jeff had multiple contacts
that could take over from Kenya and deal with
Lois. Her professional pride would not get in
the way of exploring what she and Roslyn
shared. Assuming Roslyn would take her back,
that is.
Kenya pulled up
to the security gate and punched in her entry
code. The gate slid open painfully slowly, but
Kenya saw no sign of a blue Taurus. A sense of
relief flooded her, and she felt foolish for
her earlier panic. She could see the lights on
in the house, and even a light in the room she
stayed in. She prayed that Roslyn was in there
because she missed Kenya, and not that she was
packing Kenya's bags for her.
She pulled into
a stop outside the front door. Pausing, she
contemplated whether she should ring the
doorbell, or just enter. In the end, she
decided to do both.
"The upstairs
has three bedrooms besides the master
bedroom." Roslyn led the way down the narrow
hallway, regretting her decision to show Lois
the house. They'd walked through the first
floor, some of the outdoor gardens, and part
of the basement already. Roslyn hadn't shown
the gun range, but now all she had left to
show were the bedrooms. Her hand was opening
Kenya's bedroom door before she had time to
realize the affect it would have. But she
couldn't change direction without raising
Lois's suspicion. So she pushed the door open
and flicked on the light.
The bedroom had
a definite lived-in look. Roslyn bit her lip
as she tried to control her frayed nerves.
Seeing Kenya's clothes tossed across the base
of the bed, including a sweater that Roslyn
had given her threatened to crumble Roslyn's
facade. Then she caught sight of Kenya's gun
halter peeking out of the half-closed top
drawer in her bureau. Roslyn spun around and
gave the room a casual wave. "All of this will
be returned or tossed out," she said with a
fake smile. "Depending on my mood."
Lois laughed,
but it was cut short when the doorbell rang.
The both froze for an instant, then, as the
sound of the door opening downstairs
registered, Lois shoved Roslyn into the room
and closed the door behind them.
"Roslyn.
Roslyn!" Kenya's deep voice drifted up through
the closed door, and Lois cursed. She wrapped
a smelly hand across Roslyn's mouth and
dragged her to the back closet. Fear gripped
Roslyn, crippling her ability to think. Before
she could react, Lois pushed her into the dark
closet, hissed at her to keep quiet, and then
shut the door. Roslyn's heart pounded. She
heard Lois drag something across the carpet
and push it against the closet door, then Lois
turned off the light and left the room.
Roslyn pushed
against the door, but something blocked her.
She was terrified of what Lois would do to
Kenya. Had the other woman seen the gun, too?
Roslyn pushed harder. She had to get out.
Kenya probably had no other weapon, and who
knows what Lois might have. Roslyn lowered
herself to the floor, braced her back against
the door and her feet on the back wall of the
closet and pushed harder.
Kenya went to
the kitchen first and checked the back door.
It was safely locked. Relaxing, she went back
into the livingroom. She picked up Roslyn's
phone and placed it back in the recharger.
Turning to head upstairs, she looked straight
into Lois's pale blue eyes.
"I don't think
you are welcome here anymore," said Lois, her
voice sickly sweet.
Where was
Roslyn? ThoughtKenya. She took a steadying
breath. She had to force herself to relax, to
think before she reacted. Instinct told her to
dive at Roslyn and beat the woman senseless,
but she had no idea what Lois had done to
Roslyn or if the stalker had a weapon.
"I just came to
get some of my stuff," said Kenya. Her words
had the opposite affect than she'd expected
when Lois pulled out a gun from her jacket and
pointed it at her. Kenya exhaled slowly,
shifting to the balls of her feet. She had no
weapon, no idea where Roslyn was or if she was
injured, and Lois stood in the way of her
finding out.
Her first
priority was discovering Roslyn's wearabouts.
"Hey," she said, holding up her hands. "I'm
not here to give you any trouble. Just let me
see Roslyn."
Lois laughed.
"You can't protect her. You never could."
"But you can."
Kenya played to the other woman's pride. "You
beat me at my own job."
"Job?" Lois's
smile waivered, and Kenya regreted her words.
Maybe Lois didn't realize that she was a
security guard. Was Lois just jealous that
Kenya had kissed Roslyn?
"Look," said
Kenya, changing her tactics. "I don't know
what's up with you and Roslyn."
Another voice
interrupted their conversation. "Nothing's
going on with me and Lois." Roslyn emerged
from the dark, aiming Kenya's gun at Lois.
Lois looked
between Kenya and Roslyn. She kept her gun
pointed at Kenya but spoke to Roslyn. "Put
that down, sweetie. You don't know how to use
it."
"Yes, I do."
Roslyn's voice held an icy certainty that
Kenya was sure Lois would pick up on.
Lois frowned,
her gun hand lowering slightly. "But that's
not right. You don't need a gun to protect
you. I can do that."
Kenya bit her
tongue. She had to trust Roslyn now. There was
nothing she could do to help the situation,
but being useless grated on her. She kept
alert, waiting for an opportunity to act.
Roslyn's gaze
flicked to Kenya and then back to Lois.
"I see," said
Lois, lifting her gun again. "She told you to
get a gun. It's her fault."
"No," said
Roslyn, but Lois ignored her.
Kenya felt as
if time slowed to a crawl. Lois's face twisted
in anger as she turned to Kenya again.
Instincts took over, and Kenya dropped to the
floor, rolling to the side as a shot rang out,
followed by three more in rapid succession.
Pain laced across her shoulder as she looked
up. She watched red blotches spread out on the
front of Lois's tan jacket. Then Lois
collapsed to the floor.
Roslyn kept the
gun pointed at Lois's falling body. The bang
of the gunshots rang in her head, but it
wasn't until she saw Kenya rise up on one knee
that Roslyn finally let go of the gun and ran
to Kenya. Had she been shot? Roslyn dropped to
her knees. "Are you alright?"
"I'm fine."
Kenya cupped Roslyn's face in her hands. "Did
she hurt you?"
Roslyn placed
her hands over Kenya's. She couldn't control
the tears that spilled down her cheeks. "I'm
so sorry. I'm so sorry."
Kenya pulled
her into her arms, ignoring the pain in her
shoulder and slowly rocked back and forth.
"Shh, honey. It's over now. It's all over."
Roslyn sank
into the embrace, letting the scent of Kenya's
cologne calm her. When she could breathe
normally again, she lifted her head. Kenya
brushed away the tracts of her tears. Roslyn
held Kenya's hand and kissed the open palm.
Then she saw the red stain on Kenya's
shoulder. "You are hurt!" She moved too fast,
causing Kenya to wince. "I'm sorry," said
Roslyn. "How bad is it?"
Kenya showed
Roslyn the tear in her sweater, where the
blood was already drying. "Not that bad," she
said. "Just barely nicked me."
"I'm sorry,"
Roslyn repeated.
"That's enough
of that," said Kenya, a smile lifting her full
lips. "If you hadn't acted, I'd probably be
dead now."
"It's not just
that," said Roslyn, feeling her body start to
shake. She wasn't sure if it was from Lois or
seeing Kenya again. Maybe both. "I'm sorry
about earlier. About upsetting you."
Kenya covered
Roslyn's hand in hers. "So am I. I should
never have left like that. I thought you were
mad at me for kissing you."
"Never," said
Roslyn, staring into Kenya's brown eyes. She
heard the distant sound of police sirens as
she continued. "I was frightened and confused.
But not about us. Just her." Roslyn tried to
look past Kenya's broad shoulder to see Lois,
but Kenya pulled her close.
"Don't look,"
Kenya said. "It's just better if you don't."
Roslyn nodded.
The reality of the night was taking hold of
her. She wanted to stay more, to tell Kenya
how important she was to her. The sirens
screamed closer. Kenya slowly stood up,
helping Roslyn off the floor. "Please," said
Roslyn. "Don't go. I don't want you to go."
Kenya wrapped
her good arm around Roslyn, leading her into
the kitchen. "It's okay, babe. I'm not leaving
you ever again." Kenya led them to the alarm
panel and keyed open the gate. Red and blue
lights flashed harsh patterns through the side
door windows. Kenya felt a heaviness come over
her. She just wanted to sleep, but she knew
they had a long hours to go before the police
would be satisfied. She prayed that her solid
presence at Roslyn's side would calmed her.
She wouldn't let Roslyn face the future alone.
Not anymore. They had a second chance
together, and Kenya wouldn't let that slip
away. She looked down at Roslyn's sleepy eyes
and knew that they'd both fight for that
second chance and a future that promised far
better Valentine's days than this one was.
The End
Copyright © February 2006 by
Sandra Barret
|