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Red Blooded Murder
Red Blooded Murder
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Red Blooded Murder

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I almost laughed. I thought I’d tried just about every position, and I thought that had made me sexually progressive. “I’m not even sure I get it, Jane. Is it dangerous?”

She blew out a puff of air. “If you’re stupid about it, yes, or if you’re with someone you can’t trust, but it’s safe when you do it right.”

“And what happens?”

“It cuts off some of the blood flow to the brain, and you have these intense …”

“Orgasms.” At least I had one word to contribute to the conversation.

“Amazing. Like you’ve never had before.” She exhaled. Her gaze slid to the scarf on the floor, a red ring, like a circle of blood. “But you want to know something? I don’t think I figured this out until right now, but the scarf thing? I think it’s something I like to do because it’s punishing. Don’t get me wrong. I do love sex and the asphyxiation thing does get me going. But it’s also like I’m taking a penalty for cheating.”

We stared at each other.

“Boy, I’m messed up,” she said.

“You could probably use a little therapy.”

We both broke into nervous laughter that seemed to make the room lighter. But then our eyes fell again on that red noose.

“How many people have you done that with?” I vaguely pointed to it.

She shrugged. “More than a few.”

A shrill bleat cut through the air, making both Jane and me jump.

“Jesus,” she said, a hand on her chest. “It’s my cell.” She scampered in her bare feet to the nightstand, where she looked at the display on the phone. “Zac.” She sounded nervous. She threw a look at me over her shoulder, and I saw that fear again.

She answered. “Hey, hon,” she said. “Yeah, I’m all right. What happened? Well, we had a break-in. Sort of. No, nothing was taken. Not a thing. Whoever it was left something.” She quickly told him the story, leaving nothing out. She really did tell Zac everything. “Okay,” Jane said, “I’ll see you soon.” She turned around with a sigh. “He’s coming home. He’ll be here in an hour and a half.”

“We’ll stay until he gets here.”

She smiled, and it made her face light up. “Thanks,” she said simply.

I hugged her. I could think of little else to do to make her feel better, to feel safe.

“Please don’t tell Sam,” she said, her words muffled by my shoulder. “You know, about the scarf thing.”

“I told you, I won’t say anything to anyone.”

We pulled apart and went downstairs. Sam was standing by the unlit fireplace. He and Charlie were talking about rugby, but I could tell by the way Sam looked at me—eyebrows expectantly up, asking a silent, Are we ready to go?—that he’d had enough family and friends for the night.

I gave him an apologetic look. “If it’s okay, we’re going to stay until Jane’s husband gets home. They had a break-in.”

“Are you serious?” Sam looked alarmed. His arms tensed. He had a bulldog’s way of wanting to protect people that I’d always adored.

“It’s okay,” Jane said. “It wasn’t like a robbery. In fact, they didn’t even really break in. Someone came in the house using a key, as far as I can tell, and they left some flowers and … well, a gift.”

Sam’s face registered confusion. He frowned at me. There was more to the story, and he knew it. And I knew that he knew it. And yet here I was doing the same thing to him as he’d done to me—promising someone I wouldn’t tell anyone about a secret. And keeping that promise. All of a sudden, I felt both closer to Sam, and yet more distant, than ever before.

Jane brought glasses of water for us into the living room. We all sat on her couches for an hour, during which Charlie, who was oblivious to even a hint of social awkwardness, quizzed Jane about her broadcasting career, as if he were meeting her at a local pub.

Jane answered him openly, laughing at stories she must have told a thousand times, but seeming to enjoy them just the same. It reminded me of when I’d seen her with fans at the restaurant—Jane honestly appreciated the attention people gave her.

At 11:30 p.m., we heard a door opening at the back of the house. Jane flinched at the sound. Then said, simply, “Zac.”

Aside from the phone call the other day, I’d never met Zac Ellis before. But I’d seen recent spreads on him and his work in the New York Times and Michigan Avenue magazine.

He came into the living room. He was a short man, definitely shorter than Jane, with wavy, light brown hair. And he was sexy. You could see that from across the room. He wore gray jeans and a leather jacket that probably cost thousands, but was somehow beat-up and tough-looking on him.

“Hi.” He threw a glance at us before turning to Jane. “You okay?”

“I am now that you’re home.” Jane introduced us.

He shook our hands, but in a terse way. He glanced at Jane. “Can I talk to you in the kitchen?” He left.

“Be right back.” Jane followed after him.

I looked at Charlie and Sam. “Sorry about this, guys.”

Sam picked up my hand and rubbed it. “Don’t be. You had to be here for your friend.”

We sat in silence for a while, the only sound the ticking of the mantel clock which looked like a miniature grandfather clock.

When ten minutes had gone by, I stood. “I’m going to tell Jane we’re leaving.”

I walked to the kitchen, but stopped when I reached a pair of pocket doors that were closed most of the way. Through the six-inch crack I saw Jane and Zac standing close together. Her back was to the countertop on the left side of the room. With a wide-legged stance, he stood in front of her. She had her arms crossed, her head bowed. Her face looked splotched, as if she’d been crying, but now it was expressionless, almost devoid of emotion.

I must have made a sound, because both of them looked at me.

“Sorry,” I said. “Sorry, I was just coming to tell you—”

Zac stormed to the pocket doors and pushed them open.

Surprised, I backed up. He strode past me, the leather of his coat brushing me, and marched into the living room.

He looked at Charlie and Sam, then over his shoulder at me as I trailed after him. “Thanks for coming,” he said. “I appreciate you being here for Jane. But it’s time for you to leave.”

14

“Chilly,” Charlie said when we were on the street. He tilted his head at Jane’s house. He meant Zac. But that was about as negative as Charlie could get. “Weird night,” he said simply. “See ya, guys.”

He kissed me on the cheek, clapped Sam on the back and loped off down the street.

Sam and I stood on a now deserted street next to my silver Vespa.

“What was with the husband?” Sam said. “Just worked up about the break-in?”

“I guess.” And probably worked up about his wife’s stepping out. The whole thing made me wonder about Zac and why he had put up with her behavior for so long.

I stared at Sam, thinking how incredibly complicated relationships were. Such complications had never been so plain to me until the last six months.

“Why were you asking me earlier about cheating?” Sam said. “Is it because of Jane?”

Surprised, I hesitated. Then, “Why would you say that?”

He shrugged. “Just a feeling I got in there.”

I darted my eyes lower. “I don’t want to break a confidence.”

“You shouldn’t. I definitely don’t want you to do that.”

I met his eyes again. “Thanks.” I thought about Jane and Zac for a second. “What do you think about open relationships?”

“You mean where you’re together but you can date other people?”

“I guess. Or sleep with other people.”

He looked up toward the sky, as if he was thinking hard about this. His green eyes returned to mine again. “I don’t think they can work. I mean, monogamy is hard. It’s a major sacrifice, but I think that’s the only way marriage or a long-term relationship can work.”

“But what about all those long-term relationships that fail, even though both people are faithful?”

He said nothing for a second. I knew we were both thinking, Like our relationship.

“I think there’s a better chance of things working out if you’re monogamous,” Sam said.

“But there’s no guarantee.”

I glanced over his shoulder at the outline of the Sears Tower, its top lit with pink lights. It made me think of last spring, only a year ago, an uncomplicated time when we were happy, in love, almost boring in our contentedness. We would sit on my rooftop deck, Blue Moon beers on the table in front of us, and Sam would play guitar, the lights of the skyline behind him.

As much as I missed that, and as much as I was afraid of the lack of guarantees in the world of love, there was something about this new complexity that I liked, that made me feel alive.

Sam kissed my forehead. “Let’s go to my place.”

I was about to say yes, but then I remembered, after I’d met the Fig Leaf manager, Josie, today, she’d “hired” me immediately, but we both knew she was only giving me the gig because her boss said she had to. I started the next morning. At 7:00 a.m., and I’d been told to wear only black or white.

“I can’t.” I told Sam about the store job. I’d already told him about the Trial TV gig earlier.

He raised his eyebrows. “Lingerie, huh? I just don’t want you to lose your drive for the law. I mean, the Trial TV thing is fun, and at least you’re still in the legal field in some way, but c’mon, Iz, you’re a lawyer, and you’re amazing at it.”

“Thanks, but no one is paying me to be an amazing lawyer right now.”

I wanted to tell Sam that aside from the money that I needed to make, the other reason I was about to specialize in bras was because Mayburn would also be paying me. I would, essentially, be conducting surveillance on Josie and the Fig Leaf. I’d be studying how she ran the business, how the store was handled while the owner wasn’t there—keeping my eye out for, as Mayburn had told me, “anything that smells even a little bad.”

But I also remembered his cautions about telling no one, and although I’d told Sam before when I’d worked for Mayburn as a freelancer, Mayburn hadn’t been happy about it, and he was insistent I not tell anyone this time. And so there I was, standing in front of Sam, another secret in the tiny space between us.

“Come to my place?” I said.

He shook his head. “I told a guy I’d run sprints with him early. I don’t have any of my gear with me.”

Sam privately coached some high-school rugby players, often at the crack of ass on Sunday mornings.

“Call you after practice tomorrow?” he said.

“Please.”

He kissed me hard. He kissed me in a way that told me how much he loved me. I kissed him back exactly the same way. And then we split apart, that space between us widening even more.

The air felt cool and cleansing on my skin as I drove my Vespa home. I’d driven a scooter since my mother bought me one in high school, too nervous to have me waiting at city bus stops. I had thought that when I started practicing law, I’d get rid of it, but there was something about driving the Vespa that invigorated me, had never allowed me to let it go.

Ten minutes later, I was back at my Old Town condo on Eugenie Street. The building was a converted brick three-flat. Mine was the top unit, which I loved because of the rooftop deck where Sam and I used to spend so much time. The downside of my place was the three flights of stairs.

By the time I reached my condo and let myself in, I was exhausted—from the lack of sleep last night, from Jane’s confessions and the creepy break-in, from the weight of having to keep things from Sam.

The small living room had pine floors and a turn-of-the-century marble fireplace with a swirling bronze grate. I slumped into my yellow chair and tried to let the whirlwind of the last few days drain away.

My phone dinged, telling me I had a new text. I picked it up, expecting something from Sam, something about how he was missing me already.

But it was a number I didn’t recognize, one with a 773 area code.

It’s Theo, the text read. I’ve stopped myself 300 times from texting you today. I give.

I smiled. I’ve thought about you a few times today too, I wrote. It was the truth. I was aware, distantly, of how quickly I had swung from Theo to Sam and back again.

What are you doing? he wrote.

Just got home. Weird night.

Meet me out? There’s a great band playing in Bucktown.

I looked at my watch. It’s almost midnight.

So?

Can’t, I wrote. Have to get up early tomorrow.

Then let me come over, he wrote.

I laughed, then typed, Nothing like cutting to the chase.

You’ve taken over my head. Let me see you.

I thought of Jane saying, I get different things from different people … When I’m with them, I get to see myself in a different way than I do every other day.

Now I knew what she meant. Being with Theo, with someone younger and edgy and tattooed, was, quite simply, different than being with Sam, a blond, rugby-playing financial guy. And it was captivating to get a chance to see myself differently, to see myself through someone else’s eyes.

I ignored the memory of Q saying, This thing is going to be a train wreck. Instead, I sat forward on my yellow chair now, holding my phone, and I let that captivation sing through my body.

I lifted the phone. I texted, I’ll open the front door.