Читать книгу Sophie's Secret - Tara Quinn Taylor - Страница 9
Chapter Three
Оглавление“HE ASKED YOU TO MARRY HIM?” Annie squealed, but not so loudly that other patrons looked over at them, thank goodness. “See, he’s not worried at all.”
Sophie didn’t share her friend’s excitement. “He’s asked before.”
“How many times?”
“I don’t know. Maybe six. Or seven. He knows I’m going to say no.”
But he didn’t know her middle name. And she hadn’t asked his.
She hadn’t asked to see his condo, either.
Duane had his place in her life. Nice. Neat. Clean. Controlled.
“And?” Annie asked again, as their waitress refilled their glasses of tea.
“He’s always relieved when I do.”
“He is? You sure about that?”
“Of course. I’m not alone in my fears, Annie. Duane feels them, too. Why do you think we’ve been seeing each other for two years and you’re only now hearing about him? Other than Will Parsons, he hasn’t told any of his friends, either. And he wouldn’t have told Will except that we see each other in Shelter Valley, which meant Will was going to hear about it anyway.”
“He’s been keeping you a secret?” Annie’s words held accusation.
“We decided together to keep quiet about our friendship.” No one would understand. But their choices suited them. Until they didn’t.
“Do Matt and Phyllis know?”
Like Sophie, Annie had taken several classes with Matt Sheffield—the Montford Performing Arts Center director and instructor who Sophie had once tried to sleep with. Annie knew his wife, Phyllis, too.
“Of course.”
Phyllis, a psychology professor at Montford, had been largely responsible for Sophie’s chance at a healthy life. While Sophie had been busy convincing herself that Matt was in love with her, Phyllis had been diagnosing Sophie’s bulimia.
“So you’re still seeing them as much?”
“Mmm-hmm. We go back and forth with each other almost every day when I’m home. I can’t seem to go much longer than that without seeing the twins.”
“You’ve been here two weeks and haven’t even mentioned Calvin and Clarissa. How are they?”
“Good,” she said, wondering how soon she could excuse herself and go back to her hotel room. She had some serious business to attend to. A head to get under control. Immediately.
And maybe a decision to make? Was her relationship with Duane coming to an end? They’d both known it would have to happen eventually.
Hadn’t they?
“They’re six and a half now, can you believe that?” Sophie said, to continue the innocuous conversation.
“No way!” Annie’s surprise mirrored Sophie’s own. Even seeing the kids so often, it was hard to believe how quickly they were growing up. How quickly life passed. Phyllis had just found out she was pregnant when Sophie had first met her.
Sophie grabbed her digital camera from her purse, clicked in view mode and scrolled through the photos. “Here,” she said, handing the camera to her friend. “That was taken Christmas afternoon.” Only a few weeks ago. The kids, with Sophie in between them, were standing in front of their Christmas tree.
“Clarissa’s a looker already, with those big brown eyes and that long hair.”
“Yeah, she turns heads everywhere she goes. A real princess, but you wouldn’t know it by talking to her,” Sophie said, not that she was proud of the kids or anything. “Phyllis has them both in karate.”
“I’m not surprised after everything Calvin went through.” The boy had been abducted when he was two—by another ex-student of Matt’s. “What happened to that girl? Shelly was her name, right?”
“Yeah, Shelly Monroe.” Sophie had never met the girl, but had a love-hate relationship with her. In some ways, she’d been a clone of the girl—clinging to Matt for security in the aftermath of an abusive childhood. But thankfully, that was where their resemblance ended. “She’s in prison, doing twenty years for an assortment of charges. I missed the day of sentencing so I’m not sure what she was convicted of.”
“Her twelve-year-old son had been killed in a gang shooting, right?”
“Apparently, she was living in a pretty rough area and somehow blamed Matt for all of her unhappiness because he hadn’t saved her from herself. She figured he owed her, and took Matt’s son to replace the one she lost.”
There’d been a car wreck as she’d fled. But other than bruises and a broken arm, Calvin had been okay.
“What about Phyllis’s newfound twin sister—Caroline, wasn’t it? Is she still around?”
“Oh yeah, she and John were over for Christmas dinner along with their three-year-old daughter, Sara, and Caroline’s son, Jesse. He’s twenty and just graduated from Harvard.” When Sophie had told Duane about him later that evening, during their own private holiday celebration at her house, he’d asked too many questions, stopped just short of making an accusation that would have changed the tenor of their relationship. Hard to imagine he’d been jealous of a twenty-year-old kid.
Sophie didn’t want to think about that right now. “Caroline’s this really shy woman from Kentucky, and I thought she was going to melt to the floor when she heard her three-year-old ask for more presents.”
“Kind of like the girl I knew who wanted to sink beneath a front porch one Christmas day after the older man she’d just publicly confessed her love to confessed his love to their pregnant hostess?”
Annie was referring to Sophie and Matt and Phyllis Sheffield before they’d been married. Almost eight years ago. The worst—and best—day of Sophie’s life.
They caught her throwing up the Christmas dinner Phyllis had prepared and Sophie had consumed in humongous quantities.
“Until tonight I hadn’t thrown up once since then,” she said now, softly.
“And you’ve been friends with Duane for two years,” Annie said. “So why now?”
Sophie wasn’t sure. Or didn’t want to be. But she had learned a lot of painful lessons on her road to recovery. The first and foremost being you didn’t hide from anything. Didn’t push anything away. Because issues, problems, really didn’t go. They stayed buried inside you where they could attack from the inside out.
“Duane’s said a few things…I don’t know. I just get the idea he’s worried that if there are hard times, I’ll revert to the…woman I was.”
“What? A bulimic? He might get bronchitis someday, too. So you treat the illness and move on. I don’t—”
“It’s not about the bulimia,” Sophie interrupted. “Or, at least, not really. I think he’s afraid that I’m emotionally weak, and sees the bulimia as evidence of that. But that’s not the part that bothers him. He knows that I’m responsible and would get help if it ever arose again.”
But would he really stand by her? What would Duane say if she called him right now? Told him what had happened tonight? Would he still be at her house tomorrow? As he’d promised during their last intimate call?
“Then what—”
“I think he’s afraid that deep down I get my confidence and self-worth from men. That he can’t trust me to be faithful to him.”
“What makes you think that?”
“He gets really quiet sometimes. Usually when I’ve mentioned talking to some other man. Then I don’t hear from him for a day or two.”
“Do you ask him about it?”
“Of course. He always says nothing was wrong, and he’s got an excuse as to why he didn’t call. They’re usually good excuses.”
“You were never once unfaithful in a relationship.”
“I was never in any real relationships.” Duane was the first. Hard to believe from a woman with her experience. “And, considering how many lovers I’ve had, how can I expect him to see me as anything but a woman who needs multiple men?”
“You haven’t had a lover, other than Duane, since Matt and Phyllis helped you acknowledge the bulimia, have you?” Annie asked.
“No.”
“Does Duane know that?”
“I told him.”
“And?”
“He says he believes me. He says my past is past.”
“But you don’t believe he means it.”
Sophie shrugged. “I wouldn’t blame him if he doubted me.”
Annie watched her. “Is that because you doubt yourself?”
“I know I can be faithful to him.”
“Of course you can. You know your worth now, Soph. You know that it’s not found in some man’s arms. Or in any man’s opinion of you.”
She’d thought so—until the fear of losing Duane had started to take hold of her. She’d seen the writing on the wall—several times—over the past months as Duane’s political backers became more obvious in their intentions to name him as their candidate in the upcoming election.
People would want to know about the man who sought the power to pass laws in their state. The press would start to dig.
Her and Duane’s safe little world would be exposed. Her past would be exposed.
And she’d lose him. Would be completely alone again.
And she’d started to be more concerned about how she looked. Needing to be certain, if she was going to be single again, that she was still attractive.
She didn’t feel attractive.
“So why do I suddenly feel so unworthy? So…ugly?” she asked, a question reminiscent of the olden days. Certainly the Sophie she’d become would never have allowed herself to be so vulnerable.
Another sign of the depths to which she’d sunk?
Annie’s gaze grew shadowed and she leaned forward. “It has nothing to do with the way you look. You couldn’t be ugly if you tried, Soph. You’re one of the most beautiful women I’ve ever known. You always have been. Those long legs and flat stomach are the envy of every dancer on your stages. And your features are classically perfect.”
She liked her nose. The rest was too…this. Too that.
“You have all those things going for you, but it’s never enough,” Annie continued. “You seem to think you have to be physically perfect to be good enough, and that’s a lost cause. No one is perfect. We’re all flawed. And we’re all beautiful, too.
“What matters is what’s inside the package,” Annie said, her eyes softening. “You know that. And you’re beautiful there, Soph. Even more than on the outside. You keep to yourself too much these days, but the you that’s in there still comes out through your work. You know precisely what lights to use, precisely what shadowing or backdrop, what depth, what timing, what colors to make everything onstage look like more than it is. You take the art we work so hard to perform and make it magic.”
“I went to school to learn how to do that.”
“So did a million other people and no one does a show like you do. Even you can’t argue with the amazing success of Sophie Productions. Your shows have heart, depth. They speak to every single sense every single minute, engaging the audience’s full attention. Performers, directors want you for a reason, Soph, and it’s not your great bod.”
“What about Sam Wynn?” Sophie interjected, needing to distance herself a little bit from Annie’s intensity. An intensity that matched the emotions churning inside her.
“He’s a jerk and should be arrested for the way he came on to you.”
Sam wasn’t the only one. He’d happened to be working on a show Annie was in, so her friend knew about that one.
Mostly the advances, the come-ons, didn’t matter to Sophie. She’d learned to take them in stride, to blow them off, years ago. Mostly.
A guy she’d once slept with told her she “exuded.” She couldn’t remember the guy’s name. Couldn’t really even remember what he looked like. But she remembered those words.
“Exuded what?” she’d asked.
He hadn’t been able to tell her.
She’d watched herself over the years, pulled inside herself more and more in an attempt to make sure she didn’t keep doing whatever it was she did. But it seemed to happen anyway.
And so she’d made certain that no one got too close. No one saw all of her.
Duane came closest. Sort of.
And he knew she exuded. He saw whatever it was she missed. He reacted to it.
Not that he’d said so.
But Sophie knew.
Was it also what drew him to her?
Was he, in his own sweet way, just like all the rest?
Sophie didn’t know, but she had a feeling that whatever it was she did around men was something she’d been doing since birth. Inadvertently inviting them, tempting them, to hurt her.