enough to fight to me.â
âGet lost, Graystone. Iâm not in the mood.â She turned her back on him and spotted her wedding ring on the dresser. Shit. Perfect. She stalked over, laid a hand over it and drew the chain into her fist.
âThe Callie Dunbrook we all know and love is always in the mood to fight.â He sauntered toward the bed as she jammed the ring and chain into her pocket. âWhatâs this? Looking at family pictures?â
She spun around and went pale as ice. âWhy do you say that?â
âBecause theyâre on the bed. Whoâs this? Your grandmother? Never met her, did I? Then again, we didnât spend a lot of time getting chummy with each otherâs families.â
âItâs not my grandmother.â She tore the photo out of his hand. âGet out.â
âHold on.â He tapped his knuckles on her cheek, an oldhabit that had tears burning the back of her throat. âWhatâs wrong?â
âWhatâs wrong is Iâd like to have some goddamn privacy.â
âBabe, I know that face. Youâre not pissed off at me, youâre upset. Tell me whatâs wrong.â
She wanted to. Wanted to pull the cork and let it all pour out. âItâs none of your business. I have a life without you. I donât need you.â
His eyes went cold, went hard. âYou never did. Iâll get out of your way. Iâve had a hell of a lot of practice getting out of your way.â
He walked to the door. He glanced at the cello case in the corner, the sandalwood candle burning on the dresser, the laptop on the bed and the open bag of DoubleStuf Oreos beside the phone.
âSame old Callie,â he muttered.
âJake?â She stepped to the door, nearly touched him. Nearly gave in to the urge to put a hand on his arm and pull him back. âThanks for the beer,â she said and closed the door, gently at least, in his face.
Four
S he felt like a thief. It hardly mattered that she had a key to the front door, that she knew every sound and scent of the neighborhood, every corner and closet of the big brick house in Mount Holly.
She was still sneaking in at two in the morning.
Callie hadnât been able to settle after Suzanne Cullenâs visit. She hadnât been able to eat, or sleep or lose herself in work.
And she had realized sheâd go crazy sitting around a dumpy motel room obsessing about a strangerâs lost baby.
Not that she believed sheâd been that baby. Not for a minute.
But she was a scientist, a seeker, and until she had answers she knew sheâd pick at the puzzle like a scab until it was uncovered.
Leo wasnât happy with her, she thought as she pulled into the driveway of her parentsâ suburban home. Heâd blustered and complained and asked questions she couldnât answer when sheâd called to tell him she was taking the next day off.
But sheâd had to come.
Along the drive from Maryland to Philadelphia sheâd convinced herself she was doing the only logical thing. Even if that meant going into her parentsâ house when they were away, even if it meant searching their files and papers for some proof of what she already knew.
She was Callie Ann Dunbrook.
The elegant neighborhood was quiet as a church. Though she shut her car door gently, the sound of it echoed like a shot and set a neighborâs dog to barking.
The house was dark but for a faint gleam in the second-story window of her motherâs sitting room. Her parents would have set the security system, putting the lights on a changing pattern of time and location while they were in Maine.
Theyâd have stopped the newspapers, had the mail held, informed neighbors of their plans to be away.
They were, she thought as she crossed the flagstone walk to the big front porch, sensible, responsible people.
They liked to play golf and give clever dinner parties. They enjoyed each otherâs