Mirror Image (46 page)

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Authors: Sandra Brown

BOOK: Mirror Image
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"I have no designs on Jack, Dorothy Rae."

"Because he's not the one in the limelight." Her hand clenched Avery's arm like a claw. "He never is. Never was. You knew that. Why didn't you just leave him alone? How dare you play with people's lives like that?"

Avery wrenched her arm from the other woman's grip. "Did you fight me for him?"

Dorothy Rae wasn't prepared for a counterattack. She stared at Avery with stupefaction. "Huh?"

"Did you ever fight me for Jack's attention, or did you just drink yourself into a stupor every day and let it happen?"

Dorothy Rae's face began to work convulsively. Her red-rimmed eyes got redder, wetter. "That's not a very kind thing to say."

"People have been kind to you for too long. Everybody in the family turns a blind eye to your disease."

"I don't have a—"

"You've got a disease, Dorothy Rae. Alcoholism is a disease."

"I'm not an alcoholic!" she cried tearfully, echoing the denials that her own mother had used for years. "I have a few drinks—"

"No, you drink to get drunk and you stay drunk. You wallow in self-pity and then wonder why your husband lusts after other women. Look at yourself. You're a mess. Is it any wonder that Jack has lost interest in you?"

Dorothy Rae groped for the door handle. "I don't have to sit here and listen to this."

"Yes, you do." Turning the tables on her, Avery grabbed her arm and refused to let go. "It's time somebody got tough with you, woke you up to a few facts. Your husband wasn'tstolenfrom you. You drove him away."

"That's not true! He swore I wasn't the reason he left."

"Left?"

Dorothy Rae looked at her blankly. "Don't you remember, Carole? It wasn't long after you and Tate got married."

"I. . .of course I remember," Avery stammered. "He stayed gone about. . ."

"Six months," Dorothy Rae said miserably. "The longest six months of my life. I didn't know where he was, what he was doing, if he was ever coming back."

"But he did."

"He said he needed time alone to sort out a few things. He had so many pressures."

"Like what?"

She made a small, helpless gesture. "Oh, Nelson's expectations for the law firm, Tate's campaign, my drinking, Fancy."

"Fancy needs a mother, Dorothy Rae."

She laughed mirthlessly. "But not me. She hates me."

"How do you know? How do you know how she feels about anything? Do you ever talk to her?"

"I try," she whined. "She's impossible."

"She's afraid that no one loves her." Avery drew a quick breath. "And I'm afraid she might be right."

"I love her," Dorothy Rae protested adamantly. "I've given her everything she ever wanted."

"You threw her play-pretties to keep her occupied so that rearing her wouldn't interfere with your drinking. You grieve over the two children you miscarried at the expense of the one you have."

Dorothy Rae had mentioned the babies she had lost the night Carole's abortion had come to light. Later, Avery had gleaned the details from Fancy. So much of Dorothy Rae's unhappiness was now understandable. Avery leaned across the plush car seat, appealing to Dorothy Rae to listen. "Fancy is courting disaster. She needs you. She needs her father. She needs someone to take a firm hand. If Jack weren't so worried about your drinking, maybe he would devote more time and attention to being a parent. I don't know.

"But I do know that unless you do something, and quickly, she'll keep on behaving the way she does—doing outrageous things just so she'll get noticed. One of these days, she'll go too far and harm herself."

Dorothy Rae pushed back a strand of lank hair and assumed a defensive posture. "Fancy's always been a handful—more than Jack and I could handle. She's got a willful personality. She's just being a teenager, that's all."

"Oh, really? A teenager? Did you know that she came home the other night after having taken a beating from a guy she picked up in a bar? Yes," Avery emphasized when she saw Dorothy Rae pale with disbelief.

"I'm being an armchair psychologist, but I believe Fancy thinks she deserves no better than that. She thinks she's unworthy of being loved because no one has ever loved her, though she's tried every means she knows to get your attention."

"That's not true," Dorothy Rae said, shaking her head in obstinate denial.

"I'm afraid it is. And there's more." Avery decided to throw caution to the wind. She was, after all, pleading for a young woman's life. "She's sleeping with Eddy Paschal."

"I don't believe you," Dorothy Rae wheezed. "He's old enough to be her father."

"I saw her coming out of his hotel room in Houston weeks ago."

"That doesn't mean—"

"It was dawn, Dorothy Rae. You could tell by looking at her what she'd been doing all night. I have every reason to believe the affair is still going on."

"He wouldn't."

It was a sad commentary that Dorothy Rae didn't question her daughter's morality, only that of the family friend. "He is."

Dorothy Rae took several moments to assimilate this information, then her eyes narrowed on Avery. "You're a fine one to cast stones at my daughter."

"You miss my point," Avery said. "I'm not judging Fancy's morals. I'm worried about her. Do you think a man like Eddy is interested in her except for one reason? In light of his friendship with Tate, do you think he'll continue this relationship for any length of time or let it develop into something more meaningful? No.

"What really concerns me is that Fancy considers herself in love with him. If he dumps her, the rejection would only reinforce her low opinion of herself."

Dorothy Rae laughed scornfully. "If anything, my daughter has a high opinion of herself."

"Is that why she picks up strangers and lets them work her over? Is that why she hops from man to man and lets them use her any way they like? Is that why she has set her cap for a man she can't possible have?" Avery shook her head no. "Fancy doesn't like herself at all. She's punishing herself for being unlovable."

Dorothy Rae picked at the shredding tissue. Softly, she said, "I never had much control over her."

"Because you don't have control over yourself."

"You're cruel, Carole."

Avery wanted to take the woman in her arms and hold her. She wanted to say, "No, I'm not cruel. I'm not. I'm telling you this for your own good."

Instead, she responded as Carole might. "I'm just tired of being blamed for the lousy state of your marriage. Be a wife to Jack, not a sniveler."

"What would be the use?" she sighed dejectedly. “Jack hates me."

"Why do you say that?"

"You know why. Because he thinks I tricked him into marrying me. I really did think I was pregnant. Iwaslate."

"If Jack hated you," Avery argued, "would he have stayed married to you all these years? Would he have come back after a six-month separation?"

"If Nelson told him to," she said sadly.

Ah. Jack always did what his father told him to. He was bound to his wife by duty, not love. He was the workhorse; Tate was the Thoroughbred. The imbalance could breed a lot of contempt. Maybe Jack had figured out a way to get back at his brother and the parents who favored him.

Avery looked at Dorothy Rae from a different perspective and admitted that she might drink, too, if she were caught in a loveless marriage that was held together only by patriarchic decree. The situation was especially demoralizing to Dorothy Rae, who obviously loved Jack very much.

"Here," Avery said, taking a fresh tissue from her purse and passing it to Dorothy Rae, "blot your eyes. Put on fresh lipstick."

Just as she was finishing, Fancy pulled open the car door and got in. She sat on one of the fold-down stools facing them. "God, this campaigning shit really sucks. Look what that frigging wind did to my hair."

Dorothy Rae glanced at Avery with uncertainty. Avery kept her expression impassive. Dorothy Rae took courage and turned to her daughter. "You shouldn't use that kind of language, Fancy."

"How come?"

"Because it's unbecoming to a lady, that's how come."

"A lady? Right, Mom," she said with an audacious wink. "You just go on deluding yourself. Have a drink while you're at it." She unwrapped a stick of Juicy Fruit and folded it into her mouth. "How much longer is this going to take? Where's the radio in this thing?"

"I'd rather you left it off, Fancy," Avery said. "It will wake up Mandy."

She swore softly and tapped the toes of her red boots together.

"You'll need to wear something more appropriate to the rally tonight," Dorothy Rae said, glancing down at her daughter's shapely bare thighs.

Fancy stretched her arms out on the seat behind her. "Oh, yeah? Well I don't own anythingappropriate.Thank God."

"When we get back to the hotel, I'll go through the things you brought and see—"

"Like hell, you will!" Fancy exclaimed. "I'll wear whatever I damn well please. Besides, I already told you I don't have anything—"

"How about going shopping this afternoon to buy something?" The two of them looked at Avery, clearly astonished by her sudden proposal. "I'm sure you could find a dress that is suitable but still funky. I can't go, of course, but the two of you could take a cab out to one of the malls while Tate's doing that TV interview. In fact," she added, sensing their hesitation, "I have a list of things you could pick up for me as long as you're going."

"Who said I was going?" Fancy asked crossly.

"Would you like to, Fancy?"

Fancy looked quickly at her mother, who had spoken quietly, almost shyly. She was clearly astonished. Her eyes were mistrustful, but curious as well. Avery detected a speck of vulnerability behind the worldly facade.

"Why don't we?" Dorothy Rae urged in a wavering voice. "It's been ages since we've done something like that together. I might even buy a new dress, too, if you'll help me pick it out."

Fancy's lips parted, as though she was about to nix the idea. After a moment's hesitation, however, she resumed her I-don't-give-a-damn smirk. "Sure, if you want to, I'll go along. Why not?"

She glanced out the window and spotted Eddy as he led the group back toward the waiting limousines. "There sure as hell isn't anything better to do."

FORTY

 

"Hello, Mr. Lovejoy." Van was bent over, diddling with his camera. He raised his head and shook his long hair out of his face. "Oh, hi, Av. . .uh, Mrs. Rutledge."

"It's good to see you again."

"Same here." He inserted a blank tape into his camera and hoisted it onto his shoulder. "I missed you the first week of this trip, but the family has been reunited, I see."

"Yes, Mr. Rutledge wanted us with him."

"Yeah?" Van leered with insinuation. " Ain'tthat sweet?"

She gave him a reproving look. Although she'd seen Van at various times during the day and they'd nodded at each other, she hadn't had an opportunity to speak with him until now. The afternoon had passed in a blur, especially after her enlightening conversation with Dorothy Rae.

"How's it going?" Van asked her.

"The campaign? It's exhausting work. I've shaken a thousand hands today, and that's a fraction of what Tate has done." It was little wonder to her that he had been so tired when she arrived in Fort Worth the evening before. Yet in front of every crowd he had to appear fresh and enthusiastic.

This was the last appearance of the day. Even though the banquet was officially over, the dais was thronged with people who had cheered his speech and now wanted to meet him personally. She commiserated with the demands being placed on him after such a long day, but she was glad for the opportunity to slip away and seek out Van.

"Heard he fired those buzzards from Wakely and Foster."

"News travels fast."

"Paschal already released a statement to that effect. If you ask me, Rutledge didn't oust them a minute too soon. They made it almost impossible to get close to him. It was like screwing with a steel belted radial on your dick instead of a regular rubber."

Avery hoped no one nearby had overheard the simile. It was one he would use with a co-worker, but hardly one suitable for the ears of a congressional candidate's wife. She hurriedly switched subjects. "The commercials you taped at the ranch are running on TV now."

"You've seen them?"

"Excellent photography, Mr. Lovejoy."

His crooked teeth showed when he smiled. "Thanks, Mrs. Rutledge."

"Have you seen anyone here that you recognize?" she asked, casually scanning the milling crowd.

"Not tonight." His emphasis on the second word brought her eyes snapping back to his. "There were some familiar faces in the crowd this afternoon."

"Oh?" She had monitored the crowds carefully, but to her vast relief, hadn't spotted Gray Hair. Obviously Van had. "Where? Here in the hotel?"

"At General Dynamics and again at Carswell Air Force Base."

"I see," she said shakily. "Is that the first time this trip?"

"Uh-huh," he said, nodding his head yes. "Well, you must excuse me, Mrs. Rutledge. Duty calls. The reporter's signaling me, so I gotta split."

"Oh, I'm sorry I detained you, Mr. Lovejoy."

"No problem. Glad to oblige." He took several steps away from her, then turned back. "Mrs. Rutledge, did you ever stop to think that someone's here to see you and not, uh, your husband?"

"Me?"

"Just a thought. But worth considering." Van's eyes telegraphed a warning. Moments later he was sucked into the ebb and flow of people.

Avery stood very still and rolled the chilling theory over and over in her mind. She was impervious to the motion of the crowd, to the noise and commotion, and oblivious to someone watching her from across the room and wondering what she and the disheveled television cameraman had found to talk about for so long.

"Jack?" "Hmm?"

"Did you notice my new hairdo?"

Dorothy Rae was admiring her reflection for the first time in so long she couldn't even remember. In her youth, when she'd been the most popular girl at Lampasas High School, primping had been her number-one pastime. But for years there had been little to admire when she looked into a mirror.

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