identification was simply an initial, L.
A shiver traveled down my spine.
The dark complexion. The oval shape of the face. Anyone might have easily made the mistake. Anyone who had been watching us . . . perhaps from the hotel bar.
I was staring at someone who looked a lot like me.
CHAPTER NINE
J amie, Taylor. Can you move forward, please?â
Lauritzia Velez got the kidsâ attention as they waited for the elevator on the third floor of the Westchester Mall.
Not her kids, actually. The Bachmansâ. Lauritzia had only taken care of them these past two years. Taylor was nine, and was texting her friend Cameron, all excited about running into Michael Goldberg at the Apple store in the mall, and Jamie, eleven, was already completely obsessed with the new PlayStation 3 game he had just bought with a birthday gift certificate.
âYou know, when we get back home, that game is on the shelf until you finish your homework.â
âBut itâs Peyton Manning,â Jamie muttered, his eyes still glued to the box.
âAnd you too, Miss Fancy Fingers.â She pushed Taylor forward, the girlâs fingers continuing to text at warp speed.
A heavyset woman carrying two shopping bags next to Lauritzia smiled at her sympathetically, as if to say, Itâs no use. Iâve got my own .
Lauritzia was twenty-four, dark-haired, with pretty dark-brown eyes that were the color of the hills at dusk where she was from, and she had worked for Harold and Roxanne Bachman since she had moved here from Mexico two years earlier. For the first time, sheâd been able to put the hardships of the past few years behind her. She loved Mr. and Mrs. B; theyâd been so good to her. They treated her like part of their family. They took her on vacations, encouraged her to call them by their first names, which she still wasnât comfortable with. They even paid her tuition at the community college where she was taking classes. Maybe one day she would have a degree. In retail merchandising. Perhaps sheâd even open her own store. In the meantime, she looked at Taylor and Jamie as if they were her own. Like her younger cousins, whom she had always taken care of back home. With what had happened to her own family, they were practically all she had now. For the first time since everything started, she actually felt she had a new life. A life she trusted. Not to mention a home.
The elevator door had opened, but the kids just stood there.
âLetâs go, Jamie, please.â Lauritzia pushed them forward. Out of the corner of her eye she noticed a Hispanic-looking man in sunglasses leaning against a railing. She thought he seemed to be watching them. Things like that always gave her a shudder. âTaylor, take my hand.â
They stepped inside, along with the woman with the shopping bags and two or three others. The doors closed and the elevator stopped at the second floor. A young couple got on, along with two black guys in the usual team sweatshirts and baggy pants.
âKids,â Lauritzia said, pulling them to the rear, âlet every-one in.â
âLauritzia, can we stop at Five Guys?â Jamie asked. His favorite burger place.
âWeâll see.â
The doors closed and the elevator went down to the first retail floor, then on to Level 1, where they had left the car. Lauritzia let her mind drift to what she would make them for dinner. The Bachmans said they were going out. She had some chicken she could thaw. And there was leftover macaroni.
Maybe Five Guys wasnât the worst idea . . .
The doors opened on the ground level. âCâmon, guys.â Lauritzia placed her hands on their shoulders and started to push them forward.
That was the moment when her life was rocketed back to her own private hell.
A man stood in the doorway. A man who looked like a thousand men she had seen in her past: dark skin, black hair knotted into a roll, sunglasses; the
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