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Authors: Judith Arnold

BOOK: Hidden Treasures
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“What was that all about?” Fern asked, staring after him.

Erica didn’t answer. Staring at Jed’s receding back, she felt a piercing pain in the vicinity of her heart, but
she wasn’t sure if Rockwell or Jed had bitten her. He’d never offered her a damn thing, he didn’t know what he wanted or why—and he was walking out of her life.

This was not her definition of heaven.

CHAPTER SIXTEEN

J
UNE IN
M
ANHATTAN
was usually hot and humid. The rich folks made their weekly escapes to the Hamptons or the Berkshires, leaving behind the teeming masses, whose tempers generally soared right along with the heat and humidity. When Derrick Messinger had been at the top of his game, he used to escape to the Hamptons, too. He’d never owned a beachfront estate, but he’d been able to rent a cottage about a mile north of the shoreline—not the most posh address, but worthy of a certain degree of prestige.

Then, of course, his career had fallen apart and the Hamptons had been out of the question.

They were in the question now. He was soaring once again. But if he wanted to flee the city for a weekend, he’d just as soon head north to, oh, say, the Moose Mountains of New Hampshire.

Rockwell might not have much going on, but if he was going to be a mile from the beach, anyway, what difference did it make? He’d enjoy better dining in the Hamptons, of course, but those restaurants were outrageously expensive, and there was always a chance someone famous would be seated at the next table just when you were knocking over your glass of wine or choking on your
pâté de foie gras
. Plus, in the Hamptons, there was always an A-list party going on, and if you weren’t invited, you’d feel terribly un-A. A person
didn’t ever have to worry about anyone hosting an A-list party in Rockwell.

He hadn’t been back to that hole-in-the-wall town since he’d hit the airwaves with his scoop on the antique box and its glittering contents. But he’d heard the tourist business continued to thrive there. In fact, he’d heard that from the owner of the silkscreen company that produced the town’s commemorative T-shirts and, thanks to some clever negotiations, paid Derrick a ten-cent royalty on every shirt sold, that the town was planning to open a museum of some sort dedicated to the box. The box itself would not be featured at this museum, but photos of the box and its discovery would be on display for the numerous visitors who trooped through its doors. Derrick had suggested that Sonya look into a deal with the museum to show repeated broadcasts of the
I’m Just the Messinger
program he’d done on the subject. They could earn a fee for every showing. Money was money, after all.

Even without the subsidiary deals, that show had drawn a large enough audience in its original airing—especially when compared with Derrick’s Jimmy Hoffa show, about which the less said the better—that Sonya had been able to jack up the price of his syndication contracts by a factor of three. Months after the broadcast, people were still coming up to him on the street and saying, “Hey, ‘I’m Just the Messinger!’ How about that box?”

Not just people—
women
. His failure to connect with that redheaded sprite—what was her name? Some plant. Heather, maybe—was all but forgotten. His vibes seemed to be back in full working order, detecting signals far and wide. There he was, after all, on a sunny brink-of-summer day, taking lunch in a pleasant
midtown
trattoria
with a sparkling gem of a young lady named Adrienne, who had the most charming giggle and world-class knockers. He’d just wrapped up work on a new story, a bit of intense investigative journalism tracking down rumors that the Flatiron Building was haunted by the ghost of a dentist who’d lost his life’s savings in the depression and somehow committed suicide with his pedal-powered drill. Derrick had brought a spiritualist into the building at night. They’d filmed auras with special cameras. Sonya had laid down a track of appropriately eerie music. Dr. Hufferspoin’s ghost was not found, but the search had turned up some interesting objects, including a mangled Barbie doll jammed into an air-conditioning vent and a package of American cheese petrified to the consistency of Sheetrock in a storage room in the basement. The show was scheduled for broadcast next week. Predictions were that it would perform strongly, especially since June wasn’t a ratings-sweep month and most of the network shows were in reruns.

Adrienne leaned across the table to spear a taste of his scampi. He didn’t mind—she could eat the whole damn portion, as long as she kept leaning forward like that, affording him such a terrific view of her cleavage. His gaze followed her as she settled back in her chair, and then it slid past her to the window overlooking the sidewalk. “Excuse me,” he blurted out, astonished to have noticed, strolling past the restaurant, a pedestrian wearing a Rockwell—the Town of Hidden Treasures T-shirt. One didn’t expect to see that in midtown Manhattan. “I’ll be right back, sweetheart.”

He bolted from the table, leaving Adrienne chomping on his shrimp, and raced to the door. He hadn’t caught the face of the person in the shirt, and now she
was nearly to the corner, her back to him. She was tall, with a small, nicely curved butt and long, dark hair.

“Hey!” he shouted, charging after her.

West Forty-fourth Street was clogged with pedestrians, as usual, but either they recognized him and assumed he was chasing a major story or else they took him for a madman, because most of them hastily moved out of his way. Fortunately, the light at the corner was red, and he was able to catch up to her. Before she could step off the curb, he clamped a hand on her shoulder.

She screamed and spun around.

Erica Leitner!
He couldn’t remember her friend’s name, but hers was emblazoned on his heart, since she’d done so much to salvage his professional reputation. “Well, hello!” he said in his smoothest interview voice. “Small world!”

“Derrick Messinger?”

“I was just having lunch,” he said, refraining from air-kissing her. He was a TV personality, but she was a Harvard alum dwelling in a small Yankee town. He didn’t think making kissy-kissy would go over well with her. “I glanced through the restaurant window and saw your T-shirt.”

She peered down, as if to refresh her memory of the T-shirt she was wearing. It was tucked neatly into a straight, knee-length khaki skirt. A purse was slung over her shoulder, and simple sandals protected her feet. No pedicure, he noticed, but then, they probably didn’t know what pedicures were in Rockwell. Her fingers curled around the handle of a wheeled overnight bag.

“Well,” she finally said. “I succumbed and bought a T-shirt.”

“I’m sure you made Glenn Rideout very happy.” He remembered the bartender’s name, too, for some reason.

She smiled and shook her head. “I bought it from Pop Hackett. After Glenn sicced his slimy lawyer on me, I wasn’t going to give him any of my money.”

“Really? He pursued a legal case against you?” Maybe there was a story in that. A juicy small-town-scandal follow-up.

“His lawyer sued for ownership of the box. A judge in Manchester told him he was too greedy for words and threw out the suit. I’m afraid there’re some bad feelings between Glenn and me.” She looked mildly troubled by this.

“So, what brings you to New York?” Derrick asked, tucking Erica’s hand around his elbow and leading her back toward the restaurant. He still sensed potential for a follow-up show on Rockwell’s most famous citizen. It wouldn’t hurt to cultivate her.

She gently slid her hand free and drew to a halt. “I need to see Jed Willetz. I know he’s got a store somewhere in the city—downtown, I think he said. I can’t remember the name of it, though. And I don’t know my way around Manhattan very well.”

“You’re a Boston girl. Of course you don’t know Manhattan.” He dug into an inner pocket on his silk-blend blazer, pulled out his cell phone and speed-dialed. “Let me buzz Sonya. She arranged to keep in touch with Mr. Willetz when we got back to New York. She thought he might serve as our liaison with Rockwell. I’m not sure he agreed to, but she might—Sonya!” he said brightly into the phone when she picked up. “I’m a block from Times Square. You’ll never guess who’s standing here next to me.”

“A hooker?”

“Don’t be silly. They’ve cleaned up the neighborhood. No, Sonya, I ran into Erica Leitner, of all people. She’s in town, and she’s trying to locate Jed Willetz. You wouldn’t by any chance know the name of his store, would you?”

“Erica Leitner? Listen, Derrick,” Sonya said, the words spitting out as fast as bullets from an Uzi. “You find out where she’s staying and do anything you can for her. We want exclusive rights to her. I don’t want anyone else getting their hands on her—
Today
or
Nightline
or
Letterman
. She’s ours.”

“Don’t worry about it. Can we help her out?”

“Of course we can help her out. I’m going through my files even as we speak—okay, here it is—City Resale. The address is in SoHo. You got a pen?”

Derrick pulled a business card from the gold-plated card case he’d treated himself to as a Father’s Day gift, since he had no children that he knew of and couldn’t expect anyone to buy a gift for him. He plucked a pen from the pocket where he kept his good-luck rubber band and, on the back of the card, jotted down the address and phone number Sonya dictated. Then he handed the card to Erica.

“Escort her down there yourself,” Sonya instructed him. “Treat her like a visiting dignitary. Flag down a cab and see her into the store, okay? I’m thinking part two, Derrick. ‘Rockwell Box, the Sequel.”’

Picturing Adrienne and her bosom waiting for him back at the restaurant, Derrick winced. “Sonya, I can’t. I was in the middle of something when I spotted Erica.”

“Something more important than your career?”

He sighed. “All right. I’ll do it.” Before Sonya
could issue more orders, he disconnected the phone. “I’ll take you to Jed Willetz’s store,” he said, pantomiming a gallant bow.

“That’s not necessary.”

“You’re a visitor to my town. It’s the least I can do.” He tucked her hand into the crook of his elbow again and hustled her down the street toward the restaurant.

“This isn’t downtown, is it?” she asked skeptically.

“We’ll be taking a cab. I just have to do one thing.” He steered her into the restaurant’s vestibule, then released her hand. “Wait here—I’ll be right back.” Before she could object, he darted into the dining room, hurried over to the window table where Adrienne was busy scarfing down his scampi and said, “I’m so sorry, sweetheart, I’ve got to run.”

“Why?” Adrienne asked, a buttery pink shrimp curled over her lower lip.

“It could be the biggest scoop of my career. You know how it is for us journalists. Here’s fifty dollars.” He dropped a few bills onto the table. “That should cover everything, including dessert. Try the
tiramisu
. It’s supposed to be incredible here.” He kissed her on the crown of her head to avoid the shrimp, then sprinted back to the vestibule.

Erica was gone.

 

S
HE DIDN

T NEED
Derrick Messinger accompanying her to Jed’s store. More important, she didn’t
want
him accompanying her. That he’d glimpsed her while having his lunch had been pure coincidence. It was a huge, crowded city, but he’d chosen to eat at a restaurant just a block from the Port Authority Bus Terminal.

She hadn’t driven to the city. Not knowing her way
around, she wouldn’t risk navigating through such a traffic-clogged place, and she suspected that parking the car in a garage for any length of time would wind up costing more than the bus fare. She’d figured she would find a telephone directory somewhere, and in the Yellow Pages, under “Furniture, Used” she’d get Jed’s store address. Or she’d try the White Pages and get his home address. She’d hoped to track down his address via the Web, but Internet service was iffy in Rockwell, and after she’d gotten disconnected six times she’d given up. She’d also tracked down his father at the Moosehead, but he’d insisted he didn’t have Jed’s address. “I got his cell phone number,” Jack had offered between slurps of beer.

Erica had Jed’s cell phone number, too. But she didn’t want to phone him. If she did, he’d either beg her to come—not terribly likely—or ask her not to come—fifty-fifty odds, she calculated. If she came, it might be to spend a little time with him, or a lot. This trip to New York couldn’t be just about him, though. If she was truly prepared to step into a new life, it was the
life
she had to evaluate, not a man who might or might not be a part of that life.

So she’d traveled to Manhattan to feel it swirling around her, to hear it, smell it, wander among the shadows of its towering buildings. She’d come to compare it with Rockwell. She’d come because a public school on the Upper West Side had been very impressed with her résumé and wanted to offer her a position on its faculty.

Why not? she’d thought. She could be impulsive. She could dream new dreams if the old ones weren’t coming true.

She’d come to check out the job, the city, the en
vironment. She’d come to find out if this was a place where her new dreams could take root. But for some reason, she couldn’t concentrate on any of those reasons for this trip until she saw Jed.

As the cab swept her downtown to the address she’d read from the back of Derrick Messinger’s business card, she closed her eyes and took deep breaths. She had no idea what to expect. He could have a girlfriend here, or several. He probably did. His invitation for her to join him in New York was more than two months old. He might not even remember her anymore.

Oh, but she remembered him. She remembered everything about him—his eyes, his smile, his chronically mussed hair, his low voice. His protectiveness, not just when she’d been fighting off Toad Regan but when she’d been inundated by reporters shoving microphones and cameras into her face. She remembered his humor, his blunt candor and his refusal to use his lousy relationship with his father as an excuse for everything that might be wrong in his life. She remembered his willingness to listen when she wanted to talk, and to kiss when she wanted to be kissed.

The more she’d remembered in the weeks since he’d left Rockwell, the more convinced she grew that she loved him.

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