knowing that. âYou came to my door this afternoon, saying that my agent sent you. I admit Iâm out of my depth here, but my memoryâs not exactly Swiss cheese. I remember you from this afternoon.â
She made no comment on his response. Instead, she went straight to the part he needed to hear. âWe went to school together.â
His eyes narrowed as he focused on her face. ââWeâ as in you and I?â he questioned suspiciously.
She nodded, then added, âAnd Amy.â
Kenzie watched as her clientâs face darkened. She could tell that he thought she was making this up. That for some perverse reason, she was using his sister to get him to trust her or open up to her.
Nothing could have been further from the truth.
âI donât remember you,â he told her in a low, somber and dismissive voice. He meant for it to terminate the conversation before it went any further.
But it didnât.
âI was in Amyâs homeroom and a few of her classes. We were friendly.â She could see that he still didnât believe herâmost likely because he still didnât recognize her. In an odd way, she took that as a compliment. It had taken her a long while to learn how to play up her assets, how to style her hair and perform all the other small tricks that it took to make a silk purse out of what had been, in her opinion, a sowâs ear.
Taking out her phone, Kenzie began to flip through something on the bottom of her screen.
âAre you planning on calling someone to back you up?â Keith asked.
âNo, I thought this might jar your memory a littleânot that we exchanged more than about five or six words in high school.â It had been the classic scenario. âYou were the sophisticated senior at the time, and I was the klutzy sophomore.â
What she was flipping through were the photographs on her phone. Most of that space was devoted to the merchandise she had acquired and was attempting to sell in her store.
But in addition to those photographs, she also had a good many photographs of her family. And she had made it a point to have one photograph of herself in that collection. The photograph captured the way she looked back in high school. She kept it to remind her never to allow herself just to coast along. Appearance, success and everything in between required constant work.
Settling for a status quo eventually led to failure.
âThis was me in high school.â Turning her phone around, she held it up for his perusal. âNow do you remember me?â
Heâd only meant to glance at it and dismiss what she was saying. But the second he looked down at the screen on her phone, a memory began to stir within the recesses of his mind.
The distant memory that been elusively playing hide-and-seek with his brain was back again. He stared at the photo for a handful of minutesâand then the light bulb went off in his head. Stunned, he looked at her in disbelief.
âYouâre Clumsy Mac.â
The wince was automatic. She hadnât heard that name in years and would have thought she had risen above reacting to it.
Obviously not.
âNot the most flattering nickname, but yes,â Kenzie admitted, âI was called that.â
Taking the phone from her, Keith stared at the screen, then looked back at her before looking down at the photograph again.
There was only one word that was applicable here. âWow.â
Kenzieâs generous mouth curved. âIâll take that as a compliment.â
He hardly heard what she said. He was having a great deal of trouble believing that Clumsy Mac and the woman standing before him were one and the same person. He asked the obvious.
âDid you have surgery done?â
She tried not to pay attention to the fact that his question could be taken as an insult. She sensed he hadnât meant it that way, which was all that counted.
âActually, no. This is the result of
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