Название: Tidings of Fear
Автор: Ericka Scott
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Короткие любовные романы
isbn: 9781616503352
isbn:
TIDINGS OF FEAR
ERICKA SCOTT
LYRICAL PRESS
KENSINGTON PUBLISHING CORP.
http://www.kensingtonbooks.com/
To my best friend, Linda. You’ve been a huge fan from the very beginning so the least I could do was to put you into one of my books.
Acknowledgements
To Piper, my editor extraordinaire, who cracked the whip, made me reword lazy sentences—grimace—and polished my story to a shine. I owe you one!
Foreword
Camel Cove is a fictional town in the California bay area located on the north bank of the Carquinez Strait. And yes, Virginia, there were once camels in California!
Chapter 1
He loved the hunt, always chock full of possibilities. His prey could come in today, tomorrow, maybe next week, but rest assured, she would come into the shop eventually.
The bell on the door jingled, and out of the corner of his eye, he glanced at the mirror he kept angled toward the entrance. Foggy and cold. Only the sparkling green and red lights in the shop window reminded him it was Christmas and not Halloween. A woman ushered in a child and gave him a shy smile. Plain, rotund and dressed in a too-tight pink sweater and jeans that did, indeed, make her butt look big, his artistic soul shuddered. In contrast, her adorably plump son was all boy, toting two toy trains and hooting like a train whistle while he played.
The approaching Christmas holiday had brought in a sudden rush of customers. If he were truly in this business to make money, he would have been more than happy to see the schedule fill up. He’d been turning customers away, hoping to leave room in the schedule for her. Momentary doubt assailed him. Had he left everything too much to chance? Perhaps. Surely, the coupon he’d mailed would bring her in.
After delaying for five minutes, he greeted the woman and her son and led them to the area behind the counter he had set up as a studio. A fake Christmas tree and fireplace, the most popular backdrop this time of year, hung at the ready. Still, a few of the customers preferred the snowy evergreen scene, so he rolled that one out for display as well. The woman confided that although a pagan, her parents would be disappointed if they didn’t get a holiday shot of their grandson. He seated the little guy on a stool in front of the Christmas tree and handed the boy a ribboned box to hold.
As he worked, he chatted her up, even flirted a little. Practicing for the day, the time, when she would walk in the door with her son. The bell jangled as he took his first photo of the boy and his nerves tingled with anticipation. Was it her? From where he stood, he couldn’t see the door, so he quickly snapped two similar shots and then swung the camera display around to let the tub of lard mother pick the picture she preferred. When he glanced over his shoulder, his mouth went dry.
Glory be, she’d come! He bit back a smile as he surveyed the tall, strikingly beautiful African-American woman. A small boy fidgeted beside her.
She captured his attention so completely that he dismissed the short, fat woman from his mind. He noticed her undisguised puzzlement, but couldn’t control his impatience, and rushed her through the photo selection process.
Printing up the poses she’d requested seemed to take an eternity, and inside, he fluttered with frustration. With a squeak, the machine spit out the last eight-by-ten and the Hispanic woman and her irritating toddler left. Now he could concentrate on her.
With her finally within reach, he contrarily felt the need to delay, to savor the anticipation. He cleared his workspace, filing bundles of pictures into waiting envelopes while the backdrops whirred up to the top and into position for the next set of portraits.
The woman gazed around, her eyes narrowed. He bit back a smile. Did she sense something was off in the atmosphere of the shop? Would she guess he’d laid the snare especially for her?
She fancied herself a security expert, but he’d crack her defenses as easily as an egg. He gauged her response, waiting until she was on the verge of walking out, before greeting her. He beckoned her to the counter and then his real work began.
Adopting a clipped British accent, he greeted her and her son. “Are you in for Christmas piccys today, love?”
His quarry shook her head. “I’d like a simple portrait of the both of us, together.” She motioned toward the young boy.
Whirring a plain smoke-colored background down, he set up the lifts he’d need under a darker gray blanket.
“Have you been here long?” the woman asked.
“I’ve been working here for eight months,” he answered vaguely.
“I meant how long has the studio been open?”
“I’m not sure, mum. I’m only the shop assistant, but the owner will be in later.”
“Do you know what time?”
He gave a short laugh. “Not exactly. She doesn’t clear her schedule with me.”
The woman gave him a tight-lipped smile in response, not that he expected more. No, her bestselling book, Safe and Sane Rules for Single Women, discouraged women from sharing too much information or interest in subjects for which they had an emotional investment. Well, he had news for Miss Security Expert. People, especially women, enjoyed talking about themselves; they only needed an audience. If he asked the right questions, he could learn everything he needed to know.
As he seated and posed them on the stools, he started into his standard patter. He’d carefully gleaned the questions from her book. It would be interesting to find out if she followed her own rules. “So, have you lived in San Francisco long?”
“All my life.”
“You don’t sound like you’re from around here. I’d have guessed you were from somewhere back east.”
“Oh, originally I’m from here. I moved away and then came back to California for the sunshine. Too bad it doesn’t look like we’re going to get too much of that today.” Friendly, but still vague. Her phrasing of moved away didn’t come close to confirming his guess of the east coast. Interesting that she also only referred to California, not the specific city, not wanting to commit to admitting she was local and not a tourist. Well, she was good, but he was better.
He glanced down at the questionnaire she’d filled out. There were no answers in the blanks requesting last name, address and phone number.
“I have some coupons for the circus over there by the register. Perhaps you’d like to pick up СКАЧАТЬ