I sauntered off, telling myself that I was playing a part but knowing that I had enjoyed my little femme fatale flirting. Which was stupid because it was obvious to me that Griffin Moon had been around the block a time or twenty. For heaven’s sake, he knew the pretty blonde hostess from nights at bars. The big, handsome man drew the eye of every woman under the age of ninety. Which, come to think of it, made him a bad choice as my fake date. Ruby had screwed up on that one. I should have taken the UPS guy with his potbelly and no butt. No one would have looked twice at him, bless his heart.
The restroom was located in the middle of the far wall, putting Scott to my left. No one sat with him, and for a moment, my heart leaped with relief. But then I remembered that I needed to catch him with Stephanie. I needed the photos. I scooted by a table with a few guys wearing zip-up overalls and stained ball caps. They looked like they were straight in from working a job that gave them brown necks and dirty trucks.
One said, “Hey there, sugar. We gotta extra chair.”
I looked at him like he’d lost his damned mind before I realized I wasn’t tight-assed Cricket with her Lilly Pulitzer and day planner. I was Maddie of the revealing shirt and sassy, short hair. So I said in a register two tones lower, “I got my own chair. But thanks.”
And I kept moving, watching Scott out of the corner of my eye. His attention was on his cell phone, which he was typing on. Just as I reached the restroom door, another man in tan trousers and a blue sport coat arrived. Scott rose with a smile, extending his hand and slapping the guy on the back as he pulled out the adjacent chair.
Poop balls.
No Stephanie.
This was an actual business meeting, which meant for the third, or maybe fourth, time, I had struck out. No proof. Empty hands. Stupid Cricket.
I pushed into the bathroom because to change my mind might have invited something more from the oil-field guy and his friends. The bathroom was empty, thank God. So I went to the sink and stood, looking at myself in the mirror.
Except it wasn’t me.
I touched the hair framing my face, liking the darkness. Maybe my hair would be close to this color if I stopped coloring it golden honey. It looked good against my skin and made my blue eyes stand out. Of course, that could have been the colossal lashes framing my eyes. The sparkly shadow helped with deepening the sky blue. Or maybe they looked brighter because of the tears pooling in my lower lashes.
I bit my lip and channeled my emotions somewhere besides my utter failure. Again. I now had as much confidence as a fiftysomething dude with erectile dysfunction . . . and an empty bottle of Viagra. Just dead in the water on this whole venture.
“Damn it,” I said to my reflection before washing my hands and jerking out a chunk of paper towels. I exited the bathroom, glancing once again at Scott, who was pulling papers from the leather portfolio I had engraved with his initials for Father’s Day a few years back. He hadn’t even tossed one glance my way.
I skirted the flirty good ol’ boys and made my way back to the bar, where Griffin nursed his beer.
“We can go now,” I said, sinking onto the barstool with a sigh.
“Why? I thought you wanted a table near the windows?” Griffin looked over at me, his dark eyes searching and seemingly finding what he was looking for. “Oh. She’s not with him.”
“No. Just a regular meeting and a huge waste of time. I’m sorry Ruby got you involved in this. It’s pretty obvious that I’m going to get hosed in this whole thing. It’s the way the world works. You think that the good guys could win every now and then, but the dickheads just keep—”
“Whoa, did you just say dickhead?” His mouth twitched.
“You know what? I can cuss. I can. I do it all the time. I say horrible things, but this is not the time to convince you that . . . that I’m not lame.” And dang it if the tears didn’t come back. And my stupid lip trembled.
“Hey,” Griffin said, reaching out and rubbing my back. “It’s going to be okay.”
I should have felt comforted, but his sympathy only made me feel worse. The tears that threatened slipped past their barrier. I dashed them away with a furious brush of my hand and picked up my lukewarm beer and took too big of a gulp. Fire shot up my nose. And that fire was beer.
Griffin dropped his hand and grabbed a fistful of napkins as I gasped and started coughing. Beer dripped from my nose, and I made quite a spectacle of myself, pushing away from the bar, drawing everyone’s attention as I tried to expel the invader from my sinuses. So much for being covert. Turns out Maddie Holt wasn’t good at stealth. No, she liked everyone looking at her, with her big boobs and beer shooting out of her nose.
“Oh God,” I said, mopping at my face between intermittent coughs.
Griffin watched me, looking like he wanted to pat me on the back again but was perhaps afraid of my bodily fluids. I blew my nose rather loudly and then held up my hand in apology to everyone who was watching me try not to die.
Griffin held the stool as I slipped back on it. The bartender set a glass of water in front of me and went back to pouring drinks.
“Sorry.”
Griffin handed me another napkin. “Your eyelash is on your cheek.”
“Dang it,” I said, feeling my face. Sure enough. I pulled the other one off, too, wincing as I might have removed a few of my own real lashes. “I really suck at this.”
“No, you don’t. But you should probably just forgo beer.”
“Yeah,” I said, pushing the half-full can away.
“Look, if he’s screwing around, he’ll mess up eventually. They all do.”
They. Not we. There was some comfort in his words. Griffin Moon, for all his dourness, wasn’t like Scott. “But I need the proof now. I have a meeting with my attorney on Wednesday, and I can’t keep pretending that I’m happy with Scott sleeping next to me. I want him out. I want to move on, progress, be . . . I don’t know . . . competent at something other than making cupcakes for the PTA and selling old furniture.”
“I’m pretty sure you’re competent at a lot of things.”
I pulled out my phone and accessed the picture I had taken of Scott’s schedule. “Maybe I can prove it tomorrow. Tonight he has a grant meeting, so I doubt he’ll go see Stephanie for a roll in the hay, but tomorrow he has a meeting at some place called the Channel Marker. I don’t know where that is, but maybe—”
“Wait.” Griffin held up a hand. “The Channel Marker?”
“Yeah.”
“That’s out on Caddo Lake. And a local dive. Why would he be meeting someone there?”
“I don’t know, but he’s up to something else besides cheating on me. I know that. I overheard him talking to some guy about a deal. And Scott was worried about ‘going down’ for something. Maybe I won’t need proof of his cheating if I can get proof of something else. I just need some leverage. He’s cleaned out our savings and retirement. I want that back before I file for divorce.” I really shouldn’t have been telling a stranger my business, but Griffin was already involved. He knew my husband was cheating, and he’d escorted my alter ego to this bar and grill. Too late for involving him. He might as well know what a douchebag my husband was.
Griffin’s expression darkened, his fist on the bar clenched. “Okay. Tomorrow. We’ll try again. Come to my office at the yard. I’ll go with you up to the Channel Marker. Wear the same thing. You look nothing like yourself in that getup.”