Undressed. HEATHER MACALLISTER

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Undressed - HEATHER  MACALLISTER

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hit the edge of the slang dictionary, which smacked into her cup of nearly flat champagne, and ended up knocking both onto her keyboard. As a guitar strummed the “two bits” part of the jingle, the remnants of a moderately priced California sparkling wine fizzed and sizzled over her laptop. No, the wine didn’t sizzle—that would be her computer sizzling. In the throes of electronic death, the screen flashed and went dark.

      “No!”

      “I’m telling you it is. BBIAF is ‘be back in a few.’” The voice was male and deep and so loud, it sounded as though he was standing right beside her. He had to be in the fitting room of the tux shop next door.

      “I don’t care!” she shouted at him.

      Turning the keyboard upside down, Lia shook droplets of liquid from it and tried to reestablish the connection with Zhin.

      Nothing. The thing was dead. “No. No, no, no, no.”

      “I’m telling you, it is.”

      “I’m not talking to you, whoever you are. Go back to cleaning.” At this hour, he had to be part of the cleaning crew.

      “What happened?”

      “You scared me and I knocked my drink all over my keyboard while I was talking with China, thankyouverymuch.”

      “Bummer.”

      Bummer? “Oh, it’s a lot more than a bummer.” Who was she talking to, anyway? She knew the staff next door, but she didn’t recognize this voice.

      Where was he? Lia stood and walked toward the end dressing room. When she opened the door, she heard soft singing.

      I was talkin’ to China

      And drinkin’ a lot.

      But I spilled my drink

      And then I was not.

      “This isn’t funny!” She heard rustling. So that’s what it had been.

      “Who the hell are you? Where the hell are you?” She was swearing. She never swore. Never. Made it a point not to because Elizabeth fined them for coarse language, as she called it. But sometimes…sometimes it was called for. Like now.

      Lia heard strumming.

      I was sleepin’

      In Tuxedo Park

      It’s nice and quiet

      When it’s dark

      But then I heard

      An angel swear

      And I wished

      I wasn’t here.

      Lia inhaled. And exhaled and inhaled again. “You do realize that I’m so angry right now that I am about to punch through this very thin wall and strangle you?”

      “I didn’t mean to startle you.”

      “Well, you did!”

      “Sorry, darlin’.”

      In spite of her anger, Lia couldn’t help noticing that the rich bass voice vibrated right through the wall and into her middle. Truthfully, slightly south of her middle, but she wasn’t going to admit it.

      She didn’t like big bass voices that sounded like actors picked to play the Almighty in movies and commercial voice-overs.

      She didn’t like being called darlin’.

      And she didn’t like the way this voice made her strain to hear more and ignore her poor wine-soaked keyboard and—

      Zhin. Today’s orders!

      Lia yelped and scuttled back to the computer. She shook it upside down some more and then tried to reboot.

      Nothing.

      Okay. No time to panic. She’d just plug into one of the sales associates’ units.

      Did that work? Of course not. That would have been too easy.

      “Oh, come on!” She blew on the keyboard and then got one of the portable fans they used when the salon became too warm.

      Women experiencing high emotion were hot and she didn’t mean sexually. Not to mention most of the mothers were of the hot-flash age. Small fans were in all the dressing rooms. Sometimes more than one.

      After turning on the fan, Lia propped the laptop next to it. And stared. And waited. And hoped.

      She was going to have to call Zhin. It was far easier for Lia to place an international call than it was for Zhin to get permission to do so. It wasn’t easy to actually get Zhin, herself, to the phone, but it was possible. Sometimes. Depending on who answered the phone and how well they spoke English and how well Lia could garble out the Mandarin Chinese phrase Zhin had taught her and she’d written out phonetically.

      Yeah, the phrase she’d carefully stored in a flagged file—in her dead laptop.

      With a sick feeling, she saw the recharging units the staff had used to record their orders and remembered that she’d erased their contents after she’d downloaded to the laptop propped next to the fan. No backups on fancy, expensive paper. And she’d stopped Zhin from accessing the network because she’d wanted to discuss the pinks first.

      “I hate pink,” she said savagely.

      “What did that poor sweet color ever do to you?” came from the dressing room.

      “It’s not what it did, it’s what you did,” she shouted. “And stop listening. Don’t you have cleaning to do?”

      “Nope.”

      Lia marched over to the back dressing room and spoke next to the wall. “What are you doing in there?”

      “Playin’ my guitar.” He strummed as he spoke.

      Lia still didn’t recognize his voice. She would have remembered that voice. “Are you part of the cleaning crew?”

      “Nope.” He plinked out a phrase, repeated it, and then changed a couple of notes.

      “Who are you? Does anybody know you’re there?”

      He chuckled. “You do.” Strum, strum.

      She did not have time for this. “Give me a reason not to call the police.”

      “You’re not a poker player, are you? You should have told me you’d already called the police. Now I know I’ve got plenty of time to get away or, even worse, come over there and tie you up…empty the till…steal a few wedding gowns…I could get up to all sorts of mischief.”

      Lia felt no threat from him based on nothing more than his voice and, well, the fact that he’d used the word mischief. Not that she’d

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