The Maddening Model. Suzanne Simms

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might call it that.”

      “I take it I passed.”

      “With flying colors. Like I said, you’re unflappable.”

      “Not unflappable. Determined.” She folded her lips in a soft, obstinate line. “It’s the only way I know how to be. It’s got me where I am today.”

      “Which is where?”

      “Successful beyond my wildest dreams.”

      He stared at her intently. “What brought you to Thailand, Sunday Harrington?”

      She told him the truth. “I want to see the City of Mist.” She met and held his gaze. “What brought you to Thailand a year ago, Simon Hazard?”

      “I was looking for something.”

      So was she.

      “Have you found it?” she inquired.

      “Yes.” The samlor came to a halt. “We’re here,” he informed her.

      “Where?” she asked as she took his proffered hand and stepped out of the taxi.

      “Wat Po.”

      Three

      “The Temple of the Reclining Buddha,” Simon translated as they entered the grounds near the Grand Palace with its complex of exotic buildings, dozens of pagodas and distinctive gilded spires.

      Sunday stopped, put her head back and stared up at the colossal golden Buddha resting on its side. “Why, it’s...it’s...huge!”

      “One hundred and fifty feet long, and fifty feet high,” Simon informed her.

      Sunday had never seen anything like it before. “It’s magnificent!” she exclaimed.

      He agreed. “Yes, it is. There are nearly four hundred Buddhist temples in the city of Bangkok, and countless statues of the Buddha. The Emerald Buddha is the most revered. The Golden Buddha is the most valuable—it’s solid gold and weighs more than ten thousand pounds. But the Reclining Buddha is the most unusual.”

      Sunday was no expert, but she’d done her reading before traveling to Thailand. “I thought the Buddha was always depicted in a meditative sitting position.”

      “Usually, but not always. That’s the primary reason the Reclining Buddha is considered unique.” Simon reached for a stick of incense and lit the end in a brazier at the base of the statue. A thin trail of scented smoke spiraled up from the altar toward the ceiling. “The statue is gold leaf over plaster. The feet are inlaid with gemstones representing the one hundred and eight attributes of the Buddha. And why the reclining position? It’s the final stage of the Buddha’s passage to nirvana.”

      “To heaven,” Sunday murmured.

      “To heaven,” he echoed.

      They stood in silence for several minutes, and then left the temple to stroll among the guardians—huge stone warriors standing at attention before the royal buildings—the saffron-robed Buddhist monks, those who had come to offer their prayers and homage, the merely curious and the tourists.

      Sunday glanced at Simon out of the corner of her eye. “Why did you bring me here?”

      “I told you. I wanted to take you someplace where we were less conspicuous.”

      She snorted softly. “There isn’t anyplace where a man like you and a woman like me are going to be inconspicuous.”

      “You have a point,” he conceded.

      “I had to face facts a long time ago,” she admitted to him. “I wasn’t going to be cute.”

      “Did you want to be cute?”

      “Yes. For a week or two, anyway.” She laughed at the short-lived girlhood dream. “But I quickly realized I was never going to be cute or dainty, petite or fragile. I was never going to pass unnoticed in a crowd. I was always going to stick out like a sore thumb.”

      She knew Simon was watching; she could feel his eyes on her. “How old were you when you reached this conclusion?” he asked.

      “Thirteen.”

      He grimaced. “An awkward age.”

      “Especially awkward for a girl who stood a head taller than anyone else in her class at school,” she related with an emotional detachment that had come with experience and maturity.

      “So—” he shrugged “—you were tall.”

      “It was more than that,” she confessed. “I had the neck of a giraffe. My shoe size was a ten, extra narrow. And I was covered from head to toe with freckles.”

      “You may have been an ugly duckling, but you turned into a swan in the end,” he said appreciatively.

      She deftly changed the subject. “When did you realize you were different?”

      “Am I?”

      She laughed out loud again. “Of course, adolescent boys want to tower over everyone else, don’t they?”

      “I didn’t.”

      “You didn’t what?”

      “I didn’t realize I was different.”

      “Why not?”

      “My family.”

      “Explain.”

      “All the Hazard men—that adds up to nearly a dozen if we count uncles, cousins, nephews and brothers—are tall.”

      They both knew there was more to it than height. It was height and a commanding presence.

      She was genuinely curious. “Don’t you have any women in your family?”

      Simon frowned. “Only those we’ve convinced to marry into the clan.” He went on. “My nephew, Jonathan, married a brilliant Egyptologist just before I left the States.”

      Surely any nephew of this man’s would still be a boy. “Your nephew would be how old?”

      He thought for half a minute. “Thirty-seven. Maybe thirty-eight by now.”

      Sunday was baffled. “How...?”

      “It’s one of those generational-gap things,” he said inconclusively.

      She arched one eyebrow. “What is a generational-gap thing?”

      Simon lifted his massive shoulders, and then dropped them again. “My father married five times and had five sons. Avery is the oldest. I’m the youngest. There’s a thirty-year gap between us. Avery’s two sons, Jonathan and Nick, are both older than I am.”

      “I

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