Bed of Roses Page 0,38
they feel."
"Maybe not, but they do. And Emma is the softest of soft touches. She's a whiz at handling men - I bow in awe - but she really feels for them if she doesn't . . . feel for them. You know what I mean."
"Yeah." Because they approached the garage, Parked slipped back into the shoes she'd slipped off when she'd gotten in the car. "She'll end up going out with a guy a second, third, fourth time even when she figured out from the first date she wasn't interested. She doesn't want to hurt his feelings."
"Still, she dates more than the three of us put together. Pre-Carter," Mac added. "And she nearly always manages to shake a man off without denting his ego. I tell you, she's skilled."
"The trouble is, she's closer to Jack. She loves him."
"You think - "
"We all love him," Parker finished.
"Oh, that way. True."
"It has to be hard to break off a relationship with someone you really care about. And being Emma, she's trying to work that part of it out before they up the relationship. Hurting him isn't an option for her."
Mac considered as she waited at a light. "Sometimes I wish I was as genuinely nice as Emma. But not very often. It's too much work."
"You have your moments. Me? I'm intimidating."
Mac snorted. "Oh yeah, you scare the shit out of me, Parks." She eased through the light. "But you are pretty scary when you put the Parker Brown of the Connecticut Browns cloak on. And if you give it that little swirl, many fall dead."
"Not dead. Temporarily stunned perhaps."
"You knocked Linda cold," Mac commented, speaking of her mother.
"You handled that yourself. You stood up to her."
Mac shook her head. "I'd stood up to her before. Maybe not like this last time, not as tall and straight. But if I started it, you finished her off for me. You add in Carter, and the fact that as, God, kind as he is, he's not susceptible to her bullshit - then the fact she's getting pampered by her rich fiance in New York? My life's gotten a lot smoother."
"Has she contacted you since?"
"Funny you should ask. This morning, in fact, and as if we'd never had that really ugly last scene. She and Ari have decided to elope. Sort of. Those crazy kids are jetting off to Lake Como next month, and they'll be married at the villa of one of Ari's dear friends once Linda's planned all the details - which is her version of eloping, I guess."
"Oh God, if you say George Clooney, I'm going to go."
"If only. I don't think we're invited anyway. She mostly called to make sure I understood she's doing a lot better than Vows for her wedding."
"What did you say?"
"Buona fortuna."
"You did?"
"I did. It felt good. And I actually meant it. I do wish her luck. If she's happy with this Ari, she'll leave me the hell alone. So . . ." She turned, turned again, and pulled into the lot of Kavanaugh's. "It's all good. Do you want me to wait, just in case?"
"No, you go on. I'll see you back at the house for tonight's consult."
Parker got out, adjusted her grip on her portfolio bag as she checked the time. Right on schedule. She scanned the long building that housed what appeared to be offices attached to a large garage. She heard the whoosh of some sort of compressor as she approached, and saw through the open garage doors the legs, hips, and most of the torso of the mechanic who worked on a car on a lift. She caught glimpses of shelves, which she assumed held parts and other paraphernalia, racks of tools. Tanks, hoses.
She smelled oil and sweat, not offensive to her mind. Work odors, productive scents. She approved of them, especially since she saw Emma's car sitting in the lot, very clean and very shiny. Curious, she detoured to it. The chrome glinted in the sunlight, and through the window she noted the signs of meticulous detailing.
If, she mused, the car ran as good as it looked, she'd bring hers here instead of to the dealer for its next regular service.
She crossed the lot toward the office to settle the bill and get the key. Inside, a woman with hair more orange than red sat on a stool at the short leg of an L-shaped counter, pecking with two fingers at the keyboard of a computer.
Her brow furrowed, her mouth twisted