“We were working,” she finally mumbled.
“Oh, I’m sure,” Dawn replied.
Sandra reached out to pat her arm. “Well, Charlie, we’re just happy to see you on the right track again.”
The right track. Sure. That was why she’d come back here, wasn’t it?
For a few months, she’d been lost. Utterly lost. Shut up in an apartment in Tahoe she could no longer afford and terrified about her future. But she was setting it right now. Working hard, toning down her life. Losing the heels. Keeping her head down. Biting her tongue and biting it hard.
“I’m doing my best with her,” Dawn said, as if Charlie was her new pet project. Considering the effort she put into spying, the idea wasn’t too far off. But Charlie couldn’t be her project anymore. Anger was boiling beneath her skin. She wanted to bolt, but she couldn’t.
She was trapped, and the urge to fight back was getting harder to suppress. But she couldn’t lose this job. She couldn’t.
Her phone vibrated just in time, providing a reason to escape. “Excuse me. I’d better get this. It might have something to do with work.”
Before she was out of earshot, she heard Dawn saying, “I just don’t know what happened to her. She had so much promise.”
Charlie closed her eyes, took a deep breath and answered her phone. It was her knight in shining armor, otherwise known as her cousin Nate, calling with exactly the news she needed.
“Oh, my God,” she whispered. “You really did it? I’ll be there in twenty minutes. Don’t move!”
This time when she turned back to the party, it wasn’t hard to smile. Not at all.
“Sandra!” she called out, hurrying back for one last fake hug. “I have to run, but congratulations again. You’re going to make a great mom.”
She was. Sandra seemed great at everything. Unlike Charlie, she’d actually lived up to her promise.
Before Dawn could ask where she was going, Charlie made her escape and rushed out to the valet to get her car. She pulled away with a groan of relief. Freedom. For a few hours, at least.
When she’d moved back to Jackson, she’d thought reconnecting with old friends would be good for her. After all, she really was trying to get back on the right track. At first, she’d been so beaten up, she’d thought that track had started back with high school and the girl she’d been then. Hardworking, studious and so worried about becoming her mother that she’d never even gone out on a date.
She’d obviously gone wrong somewhere, so why not start where everything had been good?
But she was realizing now that everything hadn’t been good. In fact, she’d spent all of high school scared to be herself.
Muttering a few choice curses, Charlie struggled out of the cardigan, holding the steering wheel with her knees as she yanked off the sweater and tossed it into the backseat.
“Screw this shit,” she said triumphantly as she pulled up to the resort.
Five minutes later she was back in the car in the clothes she’d worn back in Nevada. Tight jeans and he
eled boots and a pretty little striped T-shirt.
Today she was going to get her groove back, damn it, and the clothes were only the first tiny step.
Charlie turned on some music and drove into town with the windows down. The breeze was too cold, but she didn’t mind. It was the first time her nipples had been hard in months. She had to take her thrills where she could get them.
When she pulled up to the address Nate had given her, she saw that the apartment building was right next to the Crooked R Saloon. Her cousin greeted her from the sidewalk with a wave.
Thank God for Nate. Charlie had a brother in town, but he never offered any help unless it could benefit him, too. Nate, on the other hand...
Charlie jumped out of her car and threw her arms around his neck to squeeze him tight. “Thank you, thank you!”
“Hey, calm down. It’s no big deal. I’m sorry the place at the resort fell through.”
“Well, you know...” She let him go and crossed her arms to hide the nervous flutter of her hands. She didn’t want to lie to him, but she didn’t know how to explain. “Construction on the hotel is behind schedule. Naturally, the last big push goes into the rooms people are actually paying for. Hopefully my apartment will be ready in a few months.”
“I think Rayleen wants to rent this place out through the winter. Six months, Jenny said.”