Revenge
By Karen Singer
Chapter 37 – Part 1
of 2
It was pink shirt day, along with
his tie and jacket of course. No,
actually it was pink blouse day.
No! Not a blouse, it was a shirt! It was just…a damn woman’s shirt. At least that’s how Steve was trying to look
at it. It was the best his mind could do
for the situation he was in.
Damn witches! Why did they insist on continually playing
such perverted games with him? And they
never seemed to stop or even back off. And
that included crazy Diane who had spent much of the afternoon and evening tied
up in his apartment – at her own request.
Crazy! But then weren’t all
witches crazy? He was sure they were. And they each seemed to prove that to him
every single day. Especially crazy
Diane.
It had been fun with her
though. And for once, he had been in
control of her, not the other way around.
Damn witch! Even though Diane
claimed she wasn’t a witch. He knew
better. Maybe she didn’t have the power
that Monica had, but she was still one of them.
She was still part of their magic – coven!
But as powerful as Monica was, as
powerful as they all were, because no doubt the sum of the parts was greater
than the individual pieces, Steve still contemplated grabbing one last piece of
revenge against all of them. He might
not survive it if he did do it, but it would still be a very sweet revenge
indeed. And totally worth it! He just had a few things to figure out first
– like how to actually do it.
His phone beeped signaling a text
message coming in. He checked it and
wasn’t the last bit surprised. Why was
it usually Carla who asked about pictures of what he was wearing each day? With a shake of his head, he got up from his
desk and headed for the men’s room to photograph himself – again.
---
§§§§§§§§§§ ---
Mel stood in the doorway to her
husband’s nursery/office combination. He
didn’t see her, but she watched him intently.
Over the years she’d had several dozen different baby dresses made for
him to her specifications. Today he was
in another one – red with only bits of white lace trimming. He had a dozen different pairs of little girl
Mary Jane shoes as well. Today’s were
also red – patent leather. Not that she
cared just then, and she was sure he only marginally cared as well – just then.
She stood there watching him, a
frown of concern on her face. He was
sitting on his rocking horse, rocking back and forth agitatedly. This was not play. His face was screwed up with a look that she
knew from long experience meant he was wrestling with a problem – and not one
that was most likely in the back of his diapers. She had seen him doing this exact same thing
before when he was trying to figure something out for her, so it concerned her,
but not greatly.
As odd as her husband was, as odd
as their shared lifestyle was, she knew him and trusted him implicitly. She was a lawyer, and a damn good one. But he had an analytical mind that once set
on a problem, just didn’t quit. And
obviously, he had a problem just then.
“Sissy!” she said as she finally
strode into the room. She saw him stop
rocking and look at her. “What’s wrong?”
He removed his pacifier and let it
dangle from the strap attached to his dress.
“Twying to figuwe thumthin out.” He replied.
“What?” she asked with more than a
note of kindness in her voice.
“Wuth,” he said, “did a weawy good
job wif evewyfing.”
“Ruth told me she’s an engineer, at
least she was trained as one. I would
expect her to do a good job with everything.”
He nodded. “But I’m wondewing if maybe there ith a
bettew way to owganithe what thee hath.”
“A better way to organize what she
has? What’s wrong with the way she had
it?”
“Noffing. I’m just wondewing if we thouldn’t mofe fingth
awound.”
“Move things around.” She had no idea what he was thinking about,
but she trusted him and his ability.
“Andrea said you were done with it
and it was ready for me. Do you want me
to hold off looking at it?”
He looked at her. “Would you mind if you waited juth a wittwe
whiwe? Wet me fink some mowe?”
She smiled. “No.
Of course not. You know
that. Just let me or Andrea know when
you think you’re done.”
“Fanks,” he replied. “Oh!
One offer fing.”
“Something else? What?”
He went over to his desk and
plucked a piece of paper from it. He
held it out to Mel. “Pwobabwy not
impowtant,” he said, “ethpeciawwy thinth I down’t fink ith pothabwe.”
“What’s not important? And we’re not calling anything impossible
yet, even though I already know what that one thing is.”
He nodded and pointed to the paper
she was now holding. “Copy,” he
said. “Not owiginaw.”
Her eyebrows went up as she looked
closely at the document in front of her.
It was the signed confession of someone named Steve Harrison who Ruth
had also named in the suit. And
evidently her husband had noticed what nobody else had so far. “So this is a photocopy?” she said as she
examined the paper critically.
He nodded.
“As you said, it’s probably not
important, but I’ll take this and ask Ruth about it anyway. Thanks Sissy.
And let me know when you have it all ready for me.”
---
§§§§§§§§§§ ---
Ruth’s phone rang and she checked
the caller ID. Her attorney! Melissa!
She answered it, but she needed to be careful about talking openly where
someone might hear her. “Hello?” she
said cautiously.
“Ruth, this is Melissa,”
“Oh hi Mom,” Ruth replied
happily. “What’s up?”
Mom? But Mel quickly figured out that Ruth wasn’t
in a position to speak. “Ruth can you
call me back when you get the chance?”
“Sure, you bet, Mom,” Ruth
replied. “I’ll take care of it for you.”
“Good,” Mel replied. “Talk to you later.”
“Bye Mom,” Ruth said into her phone
before hanging up. She turned as the
company president’s secretary entered the conference room. “Now who did you say was going to be here
this afternoon?” she asked.
Twenty minutes later, Ruth called
Mel back from a place where nobody could hear her speaking.
“Hi Ruth. Thanks for getting back to me,” Mel told her.
“No problem. Sorry about earlier. The company owner’s secretary was a bit too
close.”
“No problem. And if she was around, then it’s best that you
didn’t say anything else.”
“So what can I do for you?”
“That confession letter you gave me…”
Mel started.
“Yes? What about it?”
“It’s not the original. My husband noticed it earlier today.”
“Your husband! Him?”
“Don’t knock him. He’s brilliant!”
“Could have fooled me,” Ruth
muttered.
“Ruth, I still don’t know if it
will help, but is there any way you can get me the original instead?”
Ruth thought about that. “I’m not sure. I’ll have to let you know.”
“That’s fine, even if you
don’t. To be honest, the one thing that
it would help with, is the one thing that I still think is the least likely to
happen.”
But Ruth knew what that one thing
was, and it was still important to her.
Very close to the importance of ten million dollars. “I’ll…do what I can,” she promised.
---
§§§§§§§§§§ ---
Later that evening, Ruth knocked on
Monica’s apartment door. Monica answered
only moments later.
“Ruth!” Monica exclaimed, surprised
to see her there. “What brings you
here? You didn’t tell me you were
coming.”
“No, I didn’t,” Ruth replied, a
seriousness in her voice that immediately concerned Monica.
Monica stood back a bit. “Come on in Ruth.”
Ruth entered the small apartment
and looked around. It looked as spotless
as the last time she had been there. But
then, Monica didn’t have a husband and a couple of young kids running around to
constantly keep her place messed up. “Monica,”
she started, “do you still have that confession that Steve signed?”
“The confession? Uh…absolutely! Why?”
But Ruth wasn’t about to tell her
why. “Can I see it?”
“Uh…sure.”
Monica headed into her
bedroom. Ruth followed. In her bedroom, Monica dug around in one of
her dresser drawers moving things aside.
She pulled out a folded piece of paper and handed it to Ruth. “Here it is.
What’s wrong?”
Ruth examined the paper. There was no doubt that it was the
original. She folded it again. “I need this,” she said as she turned and
headed for the door.
“Ruth?” Monica said with some
alarm.
Ruth didn’t stop. “I’ll bring you something in return
tomorrow.”
“Ruth! I need that!”
“No! I need it more right now.” She hurried toward the door with Monica right
on her heels,
“Ruth!” Monica said, trying to get
the woman to stop.
Ruth reached the door, opened it,
and finally stopped. Only then did she
turn around. “I need this!” she
said. “It’s important! Just don’t ask why. I’ll bring it back to you tomorrow.” She started out the door, but again she
stopped and turned. “Monica, I’m not a
witch anymore. I’m out. Finished!
And you should do the same. I
recommend you stop playing with Steve now.
Leave him alone.”
Before Monica could ask her
anything, she turned and hurried as fast as she could for her car.
Monica was left wondering what was
going on. She was surprised that Ruth no
longer wanted to be part of their little group to annoy Steve. That was fine. But what else was going on. And Ruth’s warning to leave Steve alone now? Why?
She watched as Ruth’s car drove quickly out of sight. What the heck was going on?
---
§§§§§§§§§§ ---
Diane’s phone rang. “Hello?”
“Diane? This is Steve.”
“I know, dummy! My phone told me that!”
“Yeah, well…”
“What do you need? Me to come over for a bit?”
“Uh…no. Not really.
I was wondering something else.”
“Okay, what?”
“Uh…the shoes I have to wear
tomorrow?”
Diane giggled. “Yes?”
“Can I wear the ones I wore last
week?”
Diane’s giggling became an outright
laugh. “Oh heaven’s no! We bought you those booties to wear. And I already know all the ladies are looking
forward to seeing you in them.”
It was absolutely not the answer
that Steve wanted to hear. Damn those
witches! All of them! Including crazy Diane.
---
§§§§§§§§§§ ---
1 comment:
So much for being friends.
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