~ Legacy Of Lies ~
by
Cindy A. Christiansen
Katelynn slipped on her suit jacket, grabbed her purse and suitcase, and stepped
into the hall, half expecting to see her letter writer. Only the almond walls
with beautiful ivy stenciling greeted her. She peeked back into the room one
last time and ran a mental check to make sure she hadn’t forgotten anything.
When she heard the door across the hall open and felt someone step up behind
her, a shiver ran up her back. She swung around, accidentally hitting her
suitcase into the man’s leg.
“You’re not only dangerous with a car, but you’re tough with a suitcase as
well.” Walt reached down and rubbed his shin.
Sparkling gold flecks lit his brown eyes, making them dance. Her surprise at his
clean-cut appearance, after seeing him dirty and disgusting the previous night,
left her gawking. His wild, curly roan hair was neatly combed into place. His
clean-shaven face exposed two deep crevices in his cheeks that joined his
chiseled, dimpled jaw. Her heart started pounding, and she went weak inside. His
tight black jeans and white shirt revealed his excellent physique. She cleared
her throat.
Oh, Katelynn. You hate him, remember?
Even though he’d hurt
her, she still had a hard time getting over him. In fact, standing next to him
now, she wasn’t certain she had. He was so alive, so masculine, so every bit a
man. She had found him an attractive boy, but now, he stirred something deep
inside that she’d never felt before.
Katelynn picked up her bag and moved to the right to go around him. “You’ll be
happy to know I’m leaving.”
He
stepped in front of her, crossing his arms over his chest. “Just came into town
to kill a lamb, huh?”
She
wanted to say something, but her throat felt totally constricted. It was
happening again. She just couldn’t handle these kinds of situations, especially
not back here in Comstock.
Think of some retort, Katelynn. What’s the matter
with you?
Walt
didn’t budge an inch to let her by, and she didn’t want to retreat from her
position. A fresh gauze bandage covered the cut on his forehead, already soiled
by a spot of blood the size of a dime.
The
thought of him in pain made Katelynn feel sick and quivery inside, making her
feel even more vulnerable. She pushed back her shoulders and took a deep breath.
“Look, Mr. Jeffries--” she spat through her teeth.
“Mr.
Jeffries?” Walt laughed. “It definitely wasn’t a nightmare I had last night
after all,” he said, with rude sarcasm threading his voice. “You really are
here. I thought wild horses couldn’t drag you back to Comstock.”
Katelynn tried to gather every bit of strength and composure she could muster.
“I didn’t come back by choice.”
“We
always have choices, Freckles.”
Katelynn blushed at hearing his nickname for her. “My choice is to leave right
now. Do you mind?” She smiled her phoniest smile and attempted to push past him.
He
reached down, firmly grabbing her left hand. “Little Freckles grew up and went
to the big city. It doesn’t look to me like you’ve found another knight in
shining armor yet. Don’t they make real men in California?”
Slipping out of his grasp, she fumbled around in her purse as though she were
looking for something, all the while trying to think of some retort to make.
“Don’t flatter yourself. I suppose you think lying in the street passed out
drunk constitutes a real man.” She watched his jaw tighten and then pushed past
him down the hall. Oh, if she could just cut him down a few notches.
“For
your information, I wasn’t drunk, at least not yet.”
“Honestly, Walt, I can’t believe you’d go through all this trouble to see me
again; first the letter, then the phony accident. You must have missed me madly.
Did my leaving drive you to drink?”
“What the devil are you talking about?” Walt asked.
“It
doesn’t matter now. I’m leaving.”
“Why
did you come back, Kate? It’s too late to make amends with your father. He died
eighteen months ago.”
His
burrowing eyes stopped her from leaving. “I just found that out last night.”
In
disbelief, he waved his hands in the air. “I don’t believe that.”
“I
don’t care what you believe.” She tore herself away and stumbled down the hall
with her suitcase.
“Why
didn’t you come back when he died?”
“I
just told you. I didn’t know until last night.”
“Is
that it then? You came back to see him, thinking he was alive?” He reached out
and gently touched her, a chill racing up her arm.
“Yes.”
“And
so now what are you going to do?”
“I
told you that, too. I’m leaving.”
“Without anything?”
Katelynn’s mind swam with confusion. “What do you mean?”
“You
aren’t worried about what inheritance he might have left you?”
“I…I hadn’t even thought about it.” The only thing she had ever wanted from her father was love.