Inner Harbor
Page 34
"An ice cream cone, double scoop."
"You got off cheap. The kid's an operator. How about dinner tomorrow night, a bottle of champagne to celebrate our mutual successes?"
"Speaking of operators."
"I've been thinking about you all week."
"Three days," she corrected and, picking up a pencil, began to doodle on her pad.
"And nights. With this account settled, I can get out a little earlier tomorrow. Why don't I pick you up at seven?"
"I'm not sure where we're going, Phillip."
"Neither am I. Do you need to be?" She understood that neither of them was speaking of restaurants. "It's less confusing that way."
"Then we'll talk about it, and maybe we'll get past the confusion. Seven o'clock."
She glanced down, noticed that she'd unconsciously sketched his face on her notepad. A bad sign, she thought. A very dangerous sign. "All right." It was best to face complications head-on. "I'll see you tomorrow."
"Do me a favor?"
"If I can."
"Think of me tonight."
She doubted she had any choice in the matter. " 'Bye."
in his office fourteen stories above the streets of Baltimore, Phillip pushed back from his slick black desk, ignored the beep on his computer that signaled an interoffice e-mail and turned toward his wide window.
He loved his view of the city, the renovated buildings, the glimpses of the harbor, the hustle of cars and people below. But just now he didn't see any of it.
He literally couldn't get Sybill out of his mind. It was a new experience for him, this continual tug on his thoughts and concentration. It wasn't as if she was interfering with his routine, he reflected. He could work, eat, brainstorm, do his presentations as skillfully as he had before he'd met her.
But she was simply there, he decided. A tickle at the back of his mind through the day, that inched forward to the front when his energies weren't otherwise occupied.
He wasn't quite sure if he enjoyed having a woman demand so much of his attention, particularly a woman who was doing very little to encourage him.
Maybe he considered that light sheen of formality, that cautious distance she tried to maintain, a challenge. He thought he could live with that. It was just another of the entertaining and varied games men and women played.
But he worried that something was happening on a level he'd never explored. And if he was any judge, she was just as unsettled by it as he.
"It's just like you," Ray said from behind him.
"Oh, Jesus." Phillip didn't spin around, didn't goggle. He simply shut his eyes.
"Pretty fancy office you got here. Been a while since I got in." Ray prowled the room casually, pursing his lips at a black-framed canvas splashed with reds and blues. "Not bad," he decided. "Brain stimulator. I'd guess that's why you put it in your office, get the juices going."
"I refuse to believe that my dead father is standing in my office critiquing art."
"Well, that wasn't what I wanted to talk about anyway." But he paused by a metal sculpture in the corner. "But I like this piece, too. You always had high-class taste. Art, food, women." He grinned cheerfully as Phillip turned. "The woman you've got on your mind now, for instance. Very high-class."
"I need to take some time off."
"I'd agree with you there. You've been up to and over your head for months. She's an interesting woman, Phillip. There's more to her than you see, or than she knows. I hope when the times comes you'll listen to her, really listen to her."
"What are you talking about?" He held up a hand, palm out. "Why am I asking you what you're talking about when you're not here?"
"I'm hoping that the pair of you will stop analyzing the steps and stages and accept what is." Ray shrugged, slipped his hands into the pockets of his Orioles fielder's jacket. "But you have to go your own way. It's going to be hard. There's not much time left before it gets a lot harder. You'll stand between Seth and what hurts him. I know that. I want to tell you that you can trust her. When it's down to the sticking point, Phillip, you trust yourself, and you trust her."
A new chill skidded down his spine. "What does Sybill have to do with Seth?"
"It's not for me to tell you that." He smiled again, but his eyes didn't match the curve of his lips. "You haven't talked to your brothers about me. You need to. You need to stop feeling you have to control all the buttons. You're good at it, God knows, but give a little."
He drew in a deep breath, turned a slow circle. "Christ, your mother would've gotten a kick out of this place. You've done a hell of a job with your life so far." Now his eyes smiled. "I'm proud of you. I know you'll handle what comes next."
"You did a hell of a job with my life," Phillip murmured. "You and Mom."
"Damn right we did." Ray winked. "Keep it up." When the phone rang, Ray sighed. "Everything that happens needs to happen. It's what you do about it that makes the difference. Answer the phone, Phillip, and remember Seth needs you."
Then there was nothing but the ringing of the phone and an empty office. With his gaze locked on where his father had been, Phillip reached for the phone.
"Phillip Quinn."
As he listened, his eyes hardened. He grabbed a pen, and began to take notes on the detective's report on the most recent movements of Gloria DeLauter.
Chapter Nine
"she's in hampton." phillip kept his eyes on Seth as he relayed the information. He watched Cam lay a hand on the boy's rigid shoulder, an unspoken sign of protection. "She was picked up by the police--drunk and disorderly, possession."
"She's in jail." Seth's face was white as bone. "They can keep her in jail."
"She's there now." How long she would stay there, Phillip thought, was another matter. "She probably has enough money to post bond."
"You mean she can pay them money and they'll let her go?" Beneath Cam's hand, Seth began to tremble. "No matter what?"
"I don't know. But for now we know exactly where she is. I'm going down to talk to her."
"Don't! Don't go there."
"You got off cheap. The kid's an operator. How about dinner tomorrow night, a bottle of champagne to celebrate our mutual successes?"
"Speaking of operators."
"I've been thinking about you all week."
"Three days," she corrected and, picking up a pencil, began to doodle on her pad.
"And nights. With this account settled, I can get out a little earlier tomorrow. Why don't I pick you up at seven?"
"I'm not sure where we're going, Phillip."
"Neither am I. Do you need to be?" She understood that neither of them was speaking of restaurants. "It's less confusing that way."
"Then we'll talk about it, and maybe we'll get past the confusion. Seven o'clock."
She glanced down, noticed that she'd unconsciously sketched his face on her notepad. A bad sign, she thought. A very dangerous sign. "All right." It was best to face complications head-on. "I'll see you tomorrow."
"Do me a favor?"
"If I can."
"Think of me tonight."
She doubted she had any choice in the matter. " 'Bye."
in his office fourteen stories above the streets of Baltimore, Phillip pushed back from his slick black desk, ignored the beep on his computer that signaled an interoffice e-mail and turned toward his wide window.
He loved his view of the city, the renovated buildings, the glimpses of the harbor, the hustle of cars and people below. But just now he didn't see any of it.
He literally couldn't get Sybill out of his mind. It was a new experience for him, this continual tug on his thoughts and concentration. It wasn't as if she was interfering with his routine, he reflected. He could work, eat, brainstorm, do his presentations as skillfully as he had before he'd met her.
But she was simply there, he decided. A tickle at the back of his mind through the day, that inched forward to the front when his energies weren't otherwise occupied.
He wasn't quite sure if he enjoyed having a woman demand so much of his attention, particularly a woman who was doing very little to encourage him.
Maybe he considered that light sheen of formality, that cautious distance she tried to maintain, a challenge. He thought he could live with that. It was just another of the entertaining and varied games men and women played.
But he worried that something was happening on a level he'd never explored. And if he was any judge, she was just as unsettled by it as he.
"It's just like you," Ray said from behind him.
"Oh, Jesus." Phillip didn't spin around, didn't goggle. He simply shut his eyes.
"Pretty fancy office you got here. Been a while since I got in." Ray prowled the room casually, pursing his lips at a black-framed canvas splashed with reds and blues. "Not bad," he decided. "Brain stimulator. I'd guess that's why you put it in your office, get the juices going."
"I refuse to believe that my dead father is standing in my office critiquing art."
"Well, that wasn't what I wanted to talk about anyway." But he paused by a metal sculpture in the corner. "But I like this piece, too. You always had high-class taste. Art, food, women." He grinned cheerfully as Phillip turned. "The woman you've got on your mind now, for instance. Very high-class."
"I need to take some time off."
"I'd agree with you there. You've been up to and over your head for months. She's an interesting woman, Phillip. There's more to her than you see, or than she knows. I hope when the times comes you'll listen to her, really listen to her."
"What are you talking about?" He held up a hand, palm out. "Why am I asking you what you're talking about when you're not here?"
"I'm hoping that the pair of you will stop analyzing the steps and stages and accept what is." Ray shrugged, slipped his hands into the pockets of his Orioles fielder's jacket. "But you have to go your own way. It's going to be hard. There's not much time left before it gets a lot harder. You'll stand between Seth and what hurts him. I know that. I want to tell you that you can trust her. When it's down to the sticking point, Phillip, you trust yourself, and you trust her."
A new chill skidded down his spine. "What does Sybill have to do with Seth?"
"It's not for me to tell you that." He smiled again, but his eyes didn't match the curve of his lips. "You haven't talked to your brothers about me. You need to. You need to stop feeling you have to control all the buttons. You're good at it, God knows, but give a little."
He drew in a deep breath, turned a slow circle. "Christ, your mother would've gotten a kick out of this place. You've done a hell of a job with your life so far." Now his eyes smiled. "I'm proud of you. I know you'll handle what comes next."
"You did a hell of a job with my life," Phillip murmured. "You and Mom."
"Damn right we did." Ray winked. "Keep it up." When the phone rang, Ray sighed. "Everything that happens needs to happen. It's what you do about it that makes the difference. Answer the phone, Phillip, and remember Seth needs you."
Then there was nothing but the ringing of the phone and an empty office. With his gaze locked on where his father had been, Phillip reached for the phone.
"Phillip Quinn."
As he listened, his eyes hardened. He grabbed a pen, and began to take notes on the detective's report on the most recent movements of Gloria DeLauter.
Chapter Nine
"she's in hampton." phillip kept his eyes on Seth as he relayed the information. He watched Cam lay a hand on the boy's rigid shoulder, an unspoken sign of protection. "She was picked up by the police--drunk and disorderly, possession."
"She's in jail." Seth's face was white as bone. "They can keep her in jail."
"She's there now." How long she would stay there, Phillip thought, was another matter. "She probably has enough money to post bond."
"You mean she can pay them money and they'll let her go?" Beneath Cam's hand, Seth began to tremble. "No matter what?"
"I don't know. But for now we know exactly where she is. I'm going down to talk to her."
"Don't! Don't go there."