her armpits, so they were like two little wings sticking out of her back. Zebra-patterned wings with stilettos. He was right, the current was nothing to fear, although she worried that the water itself was dangerous, filled with bacteria. Luckily sheâd had a tetanus shot just two years ago, when she stepped on a rusty nail. And the man was nice, waiting to help her scramble up the banks on the other side, taking hold of her wrists. He wasnât that much taller than she was, maybe five seven to her five three, and his build, while muscled, was slight. He was almost handsome, really. He had green eyes and even features. The only real flaw was his nose, narrow and pinched. He looked as if the world smelled bad to him, although he was the one who smelled a little. B.O., probably from shoveling on such a hot day. His T-shirt showed sweat stains at the armpits and the neckline, a drop of perspiration dangled from his nose.
âThank you,â she said.
He didnât let go.
âThank you. Iâm fine now. I can stand just fine.â
He tightened his grip on her wrists. She tried to pull away,and her boots fell, one rolling dangerously close to the water. She began to struggle in earnest and he held her there, his face impassive, as if he were watching all of this from a great distance, as if he had no part in holding her.
âMister, please .â
âIâll take you where youâre going,â he said.
7
ELIZA HAD NEVER GOOGLED HERSELF What would have been the point? Eliza Benedict was not the kind of person who ended up on the Internet, and the story of Elizabeth Lerner was finite, the ending written years ago. Peter was all over the Internetâmost of his work behind a pay wall, but nevertheless there ârepresented by almost a decadeâs worth of his own words, probably more than a mil-lion when one included his Houston Chronicle days. And since taking his new job with the venture capital firm, he was even more omnipresent in this shadow world: a source, a personage, someone to be consulted and quoted on these new financial products, which Eliza didnât understand. She didnât even understand the term âfinancial product.â A product should be real, concrete, tangible, something that could be bagged or boxed.
However, Eliza knew, even before Walter had written her, that she showed up at Peterâs elbow in the occasional image, especially now that Peter had crossed over to the dark sideâhis termâand they had to go to functions. That was her term, but it made Peter laugh. âYou couldnât call that a party,â she said after her first foray into his new world. âAnd they didnât serve dinner, only finger food, all of it impossible to eat without dribbling. No, that was truly a function.â
Sitting on their bed, Peter had laughed, but his mind wasnât on the party, or on what to call it. âLeave your dress on,â he said. âAnd those shoes.â She did. But even Peterâs admiration for her that night hadnât been enough to send her searching for her own image, despite the knowledge that they had been photographed repeatedly. She hated, truly hated, seeing photographs of herself. A tiresome thing to say, banal and clichéd, but more true of her than it was of others who professed to feel the same way. Her photographic image always came as a shock. She was taller in her head, her hair less of a disordered mess. She and Peter looked terribly mismatched, like an otter and aâ¦hedgehog. Peter was the otter, with his compact, still hard-muscled body and thick, shiny hair, while she was the hedgehog. And not just any hedgehog, but Beatrix Potterâs Mrs. Tiggy-Winkle. Even dressed up in expensive clothes, she gave the impression that she had just been divested of an apron and a bonnet, a happy little hausfrau who couldnât wait to get home and put the kettle on.
Which, in a way, was pretty close to the
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