The older woman tilted her head. "Bodie? What on earth are you doing here?"
Portia's world spun.
"I heard they were handing out free drinks," he said. And then he pressed a kiss to Colleen's papery cheek.
Colleen slipped her hand into his big paw and said peevishly, "I got that dreadful birthday card you sent me, and it wasn't one bit funny."
"I laughed."
"You should have sent flowers like everyone else."
"You liked that card a hell of a lot more than a bunch of roses. Admit it."
Colleen pursed her lips. "I admit nothing. Unlike your mother, I refuse to encourage your behavior."
Bodie's gaze drifted to Portia, recalling Colleen to the amenities. "Oh, Paula… This is Bodie Gray."
"Her name is Portia," he said. "And we've met."
"Portia?" Her forehead wrinkled. "Are you sure?"
"I'm sure, Auntie Cee."
Auntie Cee?
"Portia? How Shakespearian." Colleen patted Bodie's arm and smiled at her. "My nephew is relatively harmless, despite his terrifying appearance."
Portia wobbled ever so slightly on her needle-sharp heels. "Your nephew?"
Bodie reached out to steady her. As he touched her arm, his soft, menacing voice slid over her like inky silk. "Maybe you should put your head between your knees."
What about the trailer park, and the drunken father? What about the cockroaches and the trashy women? He'd made it all up. This whole time he'd been playing her.
She couldn't bear it. She turned and pushed her way through the crowd. Faces flashed by as she dashed into the hallway, out of the restaurant. The night air hung thick and heavy with heat and exhaust. She set off down the street, past the shuttered shops, past a graffiti-splattered wall. The Bucktown restaurant edged the border of less fashionable Humbolt Park, but she kept walking, not caring where she was going, only knowing that she had to keep moving. A CTA bus roared by, and a punk with a pit bull gave her a sly, assessing eye. The city closed around her, hot, suffocating, filled with menace. She stepped off the curb.
"Your car's the other way," Bodie said from behind her.
"I don't have anything to say to you."
He caught her arm and dragged her back up on the curb. "How about apologizing for treating me like nothing more than a piece of meat?"
"Oh, no, you don't. You're not turning this back on me. You're the one who lied. All those stories… The cockroaches, the drunken father. Right from the beginning you lied to me. You aren't Heath's bodyguard."
"He can pretty much take care of himself."
"This whole time you've been laughing at me."
"Yeah, sort of. When I wasn't laughing at myself." He pushed her into the recessed doorway of a shabby flower shop with a dirty window. "I told you what you needed to hear if the two of us were ever going to have a chance."
"Lies are your idea of how to start a relationship?"
"They're my idea of how this one needed to start."
"So this was all premeditated?"
"Now, there you've got me." He rubbed his thumbs over her arms where he'd been holding her, then let her go. "At first I was jerking your chain because you pissed me off. You wanted a stud, and I was more than happy to comply, but it didn't take me long to start resenting being your dirty little secret."
She squeezed her eyes shut. "You wouldn't have been a secret if you'd told me the truth."
"Right. You'd have loved that. I can just imagine how you'd have paraded me in front of your friends, letting everybody know that my mother and Colleen Corbett are sisters. Sooner or later you'd have found out that my father's family is even more respectable. Old Greenwich. That would have made you real happy, wouldn't it?"
"You act like I'm some terrible snob."
"Don't even try to deny it. I've never known anyone as frightened of other people's opinions as you."
"That's not true. I'm my own person. And I won't tolerate being manipulated."
"Yeah. Not being in control scares the hell out of you." He ran his thumb down her cheek. "Sometimes I think you're the most frightened person I've ever known. You're so afraid you'll come up short that you're making yourself sick."
She shoved his hand away, so furious she could barely speak. "I'm the strongest woman you've ever known."
"You spend so much time trying to prove how superior you are that you've forgotten how to live. You obsess over all the wrong things, refuse to let anybody see inside you, and then you can't figure out why you're not happy."
"If I wanted a shrink, I'd hire one."
"You should have done that a long time ago. I've lived in the shadows, too, babe, and I don't recommend staying there." He hesitated, and she thought he'd finished, but he went on. "After I had to quit football, I had a big problem with drugs. You name it; I tried it. My family convinced me to go into rehab, but I told everybody the counselors were assholes and left after two days. Six months later Heath found me passed out in a bar. He banged my head into the wall a couple of times, told me he used to admire me but that I'd turned into the sorriest son of a bitch he'd ever seen. Then he offered me a job. He didn't give me any lectures about staying clean, but I knew that was part of the deal, so I asked him to give me six weeks. I put myself in rehab, and this time I paid attention. Those counselors saved my life."
"I'm hardly a drug addict."
"Fear can be an addiction."
Even as his poisoned dart hit home, she refused to blink. "If you have so little respect for me, why are you still around?"
He slipped a gentle hand into her hair and pushed a curl behind her ear. "Because I'm a sucker for beautiful, wounded creatures."
Something broke apart inside her.
"And because," he want on, "when you let down your guard, I see someone who's brilliant and passionate." He brushed her cheekbone with his thumb. "But you're so afraid to lead with your heart that you're dying inside."
She felt herself coming apart, and she punished him in the only way she knew how. "What a bunch of crap. You're still around because you like to fuck me."
"That, too." He kissed her forehead. "There's a hell of a woman hidden away behind all that fear. Why don't you let her come out and play?"
Because she didn't know how.
The tightness in her chest made it hard to breathe. "Go to hell." Pushing past him, she took off down the street, half walking, half running. But he'd already seen her tears, and for that, she would never forgive him.
Bodie heard the sound of a baseball game coming from his television as he let himself into his Wrigleyville condo. "Make yourself right at home," he muttered, tossing his keys on the mission-style table that sat in the foyer.
"Thanks," Heath said from the big sectional sofa in Bodie's living room. "Sox just gave up a run in the seventh."
Bodie sank into the armchair across from him. Unlike Heath's house, Bodie's was furnished. Bodie liked the clean design of the Arts and Crafts period, and over the years he'd bought some good Stickley pieces and added Craftsman-style built-ins. He kicked off his shoes. "You should either sell your fucking house or live in it."
"I know." Heath set down his beer. "You look like shit."
"A thousand beautiful women in this town, and I've got to fall for Portia Powers."
"You set yourself up for grief that first night when you blackmailed her with that bodyguard bullshit."
Bodie rubbed his hand over his head. "Tell me something I don't know."
"If that woman ever realizes how scared you are of her, you'll really be screwed."
"She's such a pain in the ass. I keep telling myself to walk away, but… Hell, I don't know… It's like I've got X-ray vision, and I can see who she really is underneath all the bullshit." He shifted in his chair, uncomfortable with saying so much, even to his best friend.
Heath understood. "Tell me we're not sharing our feelings, Mary Lou."
"Fuck you."
"Shut up and watch the game."