Shay frowned as the light turned red ahead. “I’ve already told you why I won’t do that. If my past is revealed—”
“A restraining order wouldn’t cause anyone to check into your past. I’m a cop. I know how this goes. He won’t stop until you stop him.”
Shay sighed. “I know you mean well but I’ll have to think about it. It’s my life.”
James couldn’t argue with that. He knew how to back people into corners and make them say and do things they didn’t want to. Yet Shay was the last person with whom he wanted to use that kind of manipulative bullshit. As worried as he was for her, he wouldn’t undermine her just when he was winning back her trust. But he didn’t have to be happy about it. At least Eric was gone for the week.
“I’ll be back in Raleigh on Friday. Meanwhile, you think hard. If there’s any problem, anything at all, you call me. Okay?” His colleagues would shit their pants with laughter if they could hear him backing down like this. The things we do for … like?
“Okay.” She sounded relieved. “See you Friday.”
“Right. And, Shay? Be careful.”
*
Not even the sight of the fa?ade of Halifax Bank could ruin Shay’s mood. She wasn’t wrong. Something was shifting in her life. Something better than this temporary pain-in-the-butt job. She could feel it like the touch of the sun on her face as it emerged from behind the last wisps of morning fog. Best news of all, Eric would be absent all week.
She paused to let a car pass by before crossing the street. It slowed as it came even with her to allow another pedestrian to cross a little farther along. A little boy in the backseat waved. She waved back. And then he put a metal handgun to the glass of the window and aimed it at her.
It’s a toy, her brain said. But her heart leaped and her feet propelled her backward in recoil even before common sense could register. She saw him laughing wildly as the car moved on.
“Kids!”
She looked to her right to find a male bank employee she only knew by sight standing next to her.
“It—it looked so real!” She was stammering.
“Yeah. I could tell you thought so.” He shrugged. “Who can be sure these days, right?”
Shay swallowed and gripped the strap of her bag tightly as she crossed the street. Her flawless day now had a ding in it.
An hour later, she glanced up at the clock. Even for a Monday the calls were coming thick and fast. It was the last full week before Thanksgiving. People were double-checking their balances and moving money from account to account as they made plans to travel and Christmas shop. She didn’t have reason to do either. Angie had invited her to her family’s house, as usual, but she was getting a bit weary of spending holidays with people who thought turkey should be served by noon so that it didn’t interfere with football. Angie claimed she only watched for the close-up shots of all those tight ends.
What would James’s Thanksgiving be like? Not that she would get a chance to find out. He had lots of family to celebrate with. Must be nice. But too intense for her taste. Maybe she would volunteer to serve the holiday dinner at a soup kitchen.
She was only half listening to the next caller when she suddenly frowned.
“Excuse me, ma’am. Did you say you need to move fifty thousand dollars from your account?” Her gaze shifted to the guideline sheet she kept close by for backup. It stated that large sums were to be run by a superior if there was any hint of a possible problem. The caller, who sounded elderly, couldn’t remember her password.
She glanced at the name on the account. “Just one moment, Mrs. Leggett. I will need to put you through to a personal banker. This might take a minute but don’t hang up. I promise someone will answer. Thank you for your patience.”
Shay’s finger punched a key that would put her in touch with a superior. The instant she heard a pickup, she launched into her request. “This is Customer IT. I need verification on a customer’s withdrawal. It’s—”
“Shay Appleton.” Eric’s voice was practically a snarl.
Shay felt herself flush, her heart rate accelerating. “It’s for a fifty-thousand-dollar transfer. And the customer doesn’t have her password.”
She heard him swear under his breath. “Haven’t you learned anything while you’ve been here? Stick to bank policy. Call a personal banker.”
“Transferring call now.” Shay had connected Eric with Mrs. Leggett. The click echoed so loudly in her earphones she flinched.
Oh God. Shay had stared at the keypad and realized she had punched the wrong extension. Even so, Eric wasn’t supposed to be here. Now he knew she was here, too.
Follow bank policy. That was what he’d told her.