case that would make it more likely to come true.
âGibbs?â Simon laughed. âGibbs makes no effort to speak to me when Iâm sitting next to him. Heâs not going to go to the trouble of tracking me down in Spain. Why would he?â
âAll it would take would be for something a bit less mundane than usual to come up at work, and everyone would think, âIf only Simon were here, if only we could ask him what he thinksâ¦ââ
âNo, they wouldnât. Theyâd think, âThank God Waterhouse isnât here to over-complicate things.ââ
âYou know thatâs not true. Sam Kombothekra doesnât think like that. And if Gibbsââ
âFor fuckâs sake, Charlie! Olivia isnât going to tell Gibbs where we are, Gibbs isnât going to tell Sam, Sam isnât going to stumble over a problem in the next fortnight that he needs to talk to me about. Okay? Relax.â
He was right; it was unlikely theyâd be disturbed by anyone from home. So why couldnât Charlie shift the anxiety that was taking up space in her lungs, space she needed for breathing?
âIâm all yours for a fortnight, so count yourself unlucky,â said Simon. âWhatâs that Mark Twain quote? âIâve worried about thousands of things in my life, a few of which have actually happened.â Or words to that effect. Look.â He pointed to the gap between two trees, to a large mountain in the distance.
âWhat am I supposed to be looking at?â Charlie asked.
âThe mountain. See the face?â
âThe mountain face?â
âNo, an actual face. It looks like itâs got a face.â
âI canât see anything. What, you mean like eyes, nose, mouth?â
âAnd eyebrows, and I can see an ear, I think. Canât you see it?â
âNo.â Charlie tried not to sound cross. âI canât see a face in the mountain. Is it attractive?â
âItâs got to be a trick of the light, butâ¦I wonder whetheritâll change as the sun moves. It must be something to do with the shadows cast by the rocky ridges.â
Charlie stared for a long time, but no face made itself apparent to her. Stupidly, she felt left out. Simon and his boat had floated to the other side of the pool. Might as well do a few lengths, she decided, keep herself fit. She resolved not to panic from now on when she saw Domingo coming her way, even if she did have a startlingly clear image in her mind of him ambushing her and Simon with the words, âPhone, England,â waving his mobile in the air.
âCharlie?â
âMm?â
âWhat would you do ifâ¦?â Simon shook his head. âNothing,â he said.
âWhat would I do if what?â
âNever mind. Forget it.â
âI canât forget it, and you know I canât,â she said. âTell me.â
âThereâs nothing to tell.â
â
Tell
me!â
What would you do if I asked you for a divorce? What would you do if I said I wanted us to sleep in separate rooms?
âIâm imagining bad things here. Do you want to put me out of my misery?â
âItâs nothing bad,â he said. âItâs nothing to do with you and me.â
Meaning that if it was something relating to the two of them it would, by necessity, be bad?
Stop creating problems where none exist, Zailer.
Charlie swore under her breath. She knew she was about to spend at least the next two hours trying to make him tell her, and she knew she would fail.
âYouâve got to
go
,â Olivia told Gibbs, pressing her hands against his ribcage. For the past hour sheâd been trying to push him out of her bed, but he was stronger than she was, and resisting.
âNo, I havenât.â He was lying on his back, arms folded behind his head.
âYes, you have! Weâve got to start pretending not to be wicked Godless
J.A. Konrath, Bernard Schaffer