I kept Jessie close by and Linc was watching us, just as I’d hoped. Once the lecture broke up, I sent her to the opposite side of the room to answer questions while I stayed on my side to observe. Sure enough, within minutes, Linc was monopolizing her and she seemed to be swayed by his charm. Perhaps it was the fact that he looked so much like me but had the bad boy demeanor that women seemed to like.
I avoided watching them, not wanting to give anything away, but saw them leave from the corner of my eye before the evening had concluded. The bait had been set. I felt tremendous relief and hurried home, hoping Auggie would be there, but she was nowhere to be found.
I called her cell but there was no answer, then tried her dad’s. He said she wasn’t there and he hadn’t seen her for a couple of weeks.
Sinking into my chair, it was like a fist had closed around my throat. Where was she? Who was she with?
I decided to wait things out one more day. If she didn’t come home on Friday, I’d be free over the weekend to find her and get to the bottom of whatever was going on.
Saturday morning dawned and still no Auggie. No answer on her phone and no response to my texts. She was obviously avoiding me.
I dressed and grabbed toast on my way out. Not knowing where to start, I headed toward her dad’s to have a talk with him first. He seemed to know her mind better than anyone, and I thought he would at least be rational. As I drove, I passed by my father’s farm and felt faint when I spotted Auggie’s Escalade parked out front. I kept going, even though my heart was beating so hard I thought it would burst through my chest. When I reached her dad’s farm, I pulled in and as usual, he was sitting on his patio enjoying a cup of coffee. He must have recognized the look on my face because he put down his paper and rose to shake my hand.
“I take it you found her,” he began and I nodded. “I had a strange feeling about it after you called and checked. I saw it too.”
“What’s she doing there?” I was hoarse with incredulity.
“Well,” he began, crossing his legs and sighing deeply as one does before you’re about to speculate about something you’d rather not talk about. “Her mother is there, you know.”
“Auggie hates her mother,” I reminded him, trying to be logical.
“Yes, she thinks she does,” he agreed, “but Auggie is a stubborn young woman. She will form an alliance with the devil if it gets her closer to her goal.”
“What kind of goal could she have?” I asked. “I’m really out of the loop here. I’ve been so busy, I haven’t spent much time with her and really don’t know what’s going on. She hired an assistant. Bernie – something.”
“Yes, Bernie Livingston. Nice young man. I recommended him as a matter of fact,” he elaborated. “He comes from a good family and has the right combination of skills to be a real help to her.”
“I’m glad to hear that, but I think there’s more to it than that.”
He lifted a brow. “Oh? What makes you say that?”
“He’s very, very good-looking,” I pointed out, a little surprised that I had to bring up something so obvious. There was a silence that was filled only with the buzz of bees searching the flowers that climbed the trellis next to me.
“Worth, he’s not like that,” Mr. Langford said in what sounded like an uncomfortable voice.
“Oh, that I know. I saw him at the park with his friend and it was clear that he wasn’t interested in female companionship for anything other than friendship. I still say there’s more to it than that.” I was trying to make a point.
“Such as?”
“Such as I think Auggie hired him to make me jealous.”
He crossed his arms over his chest, that damn eyebrow still raised. “Why would she need to do that, Worth?”
“Shit,” I uttered as I realized I’d walked into my own trap. Auggie’s dad was no fool. He never interfered but waited patiently for the guilty to come to him in confession. That’s how he dispensed his wisdom and I had to admire him for not only his patience but for the inevitably good advice he had to offer.
“What is it?” he asked, patiently as I’d predicted.
“Okay. You know about this mess with Linc, right?”
He nodded.
“So, I was trying to come up with some way to get him to leave. I couldn’t defy him face to face or the law would come down on me, and consequently Auggie and everyone else involved. That includes some very unwelcomed associates from Chicago that I don’t care to meet.”
His eyes were stern, but he said nothing.
I continued on. “So, I realized that Linc was after everything he thought he’d been cheated of. In other words, everything I had. It was his birthright, but he’d been cast off and it all came to me. I know that’s why he turned wild and that makes him dangerous.”
“Go on,” he urged me.
I ran my hand through my hair in a gesture of frustration. “Sometimes I’m too smart for my own good, I know. I knew that Linc would systematically try to take everything of mine he could, or ruin it. I had to protect Auggie and Ford. Of course he couldn’t take her from me; she’s his sister. So, I had to throw out a decoy. I hired this good-looking, smart psychologist to work at my Cincinnati clinic and made sure to make a lot over her when he was looking. That’s why I let him attend the Derby party and he was at a function I held Thursday night. Linc thinks I’m having an affair with her and he went after her like a fish after a June bug. Well, it worked. They left together Thursday night. With any luck, he’ll give up on this local scheme and move up there to be with her.”
Walter Langford looked at me with something akin to pity in his eyes. He shook his head a bit and looked out over the yard before answering me. I noticed he had aged. There were deep wrinkles from frowning I’d never seen before. “Son, you sure don’t know Auggie very well, I can tell that. What makes you think she didn’t pick up on the hints you were leaving for Linc? I’ll bet she’s up to something to get back at you. The fact that she’s at his place should tell you that much.”
It hit me like a bucket of ice water. Of course! That explained so much. The feigned illnesses, the stunt with dinner and the suggestion of poison. The disappearance now and refusal to answer my calls. Auggie was jealous! I remembered then that I’d had those pictures of Jessie and myself posted on social media for Linc to see. How stupid was I to think that Auggie wouldn’t see them too? Naturally, she had hired Bernie because of his looks; well, at least those didn’t hurt. I knew how her mind worked. She was trying to make me jealous.
On one hand, I was furious with her for so little trust and on the other hand, I couldn’t blame her one bit. I’d given her ever reason to be jealous. I’d let it be there like breadcrumbs leading to the natural assumption. I was the fool here, not her.
“You’re absolutely right, sir. I’ve done this to myself. I didn’t give her credit for who she was. That’s the part she’s really going to be pissed at me for. You know how she hates condescension.”