Daddy's Girl
happened.”
    “It’s okay. At least it wasn’t a student.”
    “Either way, it’s awful. I’ll figure out a way to make it up to you, but right now, I’ll just get you home. You’re not going back to school, are you?”
    “No. I just want to go soak in a bathtub and get lost in a big, thick book.”
    “You read in the tub?” Angus smiled. “My sister used to do that.”
    “Sure, it’s the best place. All my favorite books have bumpy pages. A day like this calls for period fiction. Everybody wearing frills and all the talk over teacups.”
    “Okay, then tell me where you live, and I’ll get you to your tub.”
    “Thanks.”
    “Do you guys live together?”
    “Sort of.”
    “What’s your boyfriend’s name, by the way?”
    Nat told him, but all the time, she was thinking of a different name.
    Ron Saunders.

CHAPTER 9

    N at closed her apartment door and stepped into the cozy living room, never happier to be home than at this moment, even as a Major Homebody. She ran a loving eye over the cushy beige couch and matching chairs, which fit neatly on a square sisal rug. Soft, indirect light flooded the room from the window, which overlooked a scenic fraction of the Schuylkill River. Bookshelves surrounded the room like literary insulation. A pile of novels sat stacked on one teak end table, her Priority To-Be-Read pile, and the other end table held her Secondary To-Be-Read pile. A mug sat so often next to the stack that it had made a faint ring on the coaster, like a wedding band.
    She dropped her purse at the door, kicked off her pumps, and padded down the hall to the tiled bathroom, large enough for only a downsized tub, toilet, pedestal sink, and two Emergency To-Be-Read piles. One pile sat atop the back of the toilet, and the other on the floor next to the tub, mostly paperbacks, which floated better.
    She turned the bathwater on, letting it run while she took off Tanisa’s jacket. She made a mental note to return the jacket and tried not to think about blood or last words. She shed her ripped shirt and bra without dwelling on how they’d gotten that way, then slipped off her pants and underwear, eyeing the stack of paperbacks beside the tub. Josephine Tey, Wilkie Collins, Dorothy Sayers. It was a familiar crowd, but Nat needed a mood elevator. She reached for the new Janet Evanovich, then caught sight of her naked body in the mirror and dropped the book. Hideous scratches crisscrossed her breasts and stomach. Red raised welts swelled like fingernail rakes, leaving snakes of bruises.
    Buford. His nails. His hands. On me.
    Nat grabbed the bar of soap and a white washcloth, and began washing her chest. The water was cold but she wasn’t waiting for hot. The scratches stung, and she scrubbed harder, anywhere and everywhere his hands had been, the sting and the cold water a tonic. She didn’t stop until her chest had gone so red she couldn’t see the scratches anymore, then she grabbed a soft white towel and patted her chest dry, covering the sight, even from herself.
    Nat needed a bubble bath and two great chapters to restore her to normal. She’d washed her hair gingerly because of the bump on the back of her skull, and her head had started throbbing again. She’d put Neosporin on her ugly scratches, changed into a soft white T-shirt, a blue J.Crew cashmere sweater, and jeans, then padded into the spare bedroom she used for a home office.
    Books lined the room, a costly collection of first-edition mysteries, including her Erle Stanley Gardner. Nat loved to collect, getting a thrill from the penciled-in prices on the flyleaves or the occasional embossed stamp. She haunted library sales and loved when she scored the older books, from the day when people actually signed books out of the library in their own handwriting. She scanned with satisfaction her row of faded blue Nancy Drews. Today she was doing some amateur sleuthing of her own. She took a seat behind the computer and logged onto whitepages.com,

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