Daddy's Home. Pamela Bauer
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She looked at him then, her eyes filled with uncertainty. “None of the others had a chance to escape,” she said quietly. “Why us?”
Tyler knew exactly what she was saying. He would have been lying if he’d told her he didn’t ever question the reason for their survival. But it was a subject he kept tucked away in the back of his mind in a file he didn’t want to access. That’s why he breathed a sigh of relief when his pager beeped.
“Is there a phone I could use?” he asked.
She pointed to the one on the end table, then stood. “I’ll be in the kitchen.”
Tyler waited until she was gone, then phoned the number showing on his pager. It was the security guard at the plant wanting to let him know that a missing set of keys had been found. Nothing that needed his immediate attention.
Kristen didn’t know that. He could easily have said he was needed at the plant and left. He didn’t. He wandered into the kitchen where he found her filling a kettle at the sink.
“I thought I’d have a cup of tea. Would you like one?” she asked over her shoulder.
He glanced at the counter and saw a can of clam chowder for one. He had a pretty good idea that it was going to be her dinner as soon as he was gone.
“You like seafood?” he asked her.
“Yes, why?”
“I know a great place where they make good clam chowder.” He saw her glance at the can of soup. “Want to come with me?” The words were out before he could question their wisdom.
“Now?”
“You haven’t eaten, have you?”
“No, but—”
“So let me buy you a bowl of real soup.”
“That’s not necessary,” she said, blushing.
“You don’t need to eat?” he asked, trying for a lighter tone.
It didn’t work. “You don’t have to buy me dinner.” She set the kettle on the stove.
“I’d like to.”
“It’s a nice gesture, but...” She paused as if considering whether or not she should tell him the reason for the “but.” Finally, she said, “I find it’s better if I don’t go out in public”
“Better how?”
She looked a bit uneasy as she said, “Being on television makes me the object of attention. I prefer to stay home rather than have people staring at me.”
“Did you feel this way before the crash, too?”
“Not really. With a job like mine, I expect to be recognized, but what I don’t want is pity.” She hugged herself as if suddenly cold.
“Then you’ll like this place with the great clam chowder. It’s small, and all the people who go there only want a quiet dinner.”
She raised an eyebrow. “Really.”
“Really,” he repeated. “So will you come?”
From the way she hesitated, he thought she was about to turn down his offer. Then to his surprise, she said, “I’ll get my coat.”
KRISTEN DIDN’T UNDERSTAND why Tyler had asked her to dinner. Even worse, she didn’t understand why she’d accepted. She didn’t want to go out in public, yet here she was in his car on the way to a restaurant where people would stare at her.
Even though the swelling had gone down and the bruising had disappeared, the surgery had left subtle differences in her face that seemed more noticeable to her than to others—at least that’s what Gayle told her. And although she could hide most of the scarring with makeup so the rest of the world didn’t see, she knew what lay beneath the creams and powders.
As they pulled into the parking lot across from an old warehouse in downtown Minneapolis, Kristen felt her muscles tense. Neon signs identified several bars and restaurants in the building. Tyler led her through a door with an overhead sign flashing Eddie’s in red lights with an arrow pointing up.
They climbed two flights of stairs before he pushed open a door that led into the restaurant. The atmosphere was casual, the lighting dim. Piano music drifted across the room, muting the sound of clinking silverware. They checked their coats at the small counter inside the door, then waited to be seated.
Judging by the maitre d’s enthusiastic greeting, Tyler was a regular guest. Their host led them to a table for two in a corner of the room, smiling knowingly as he held Kristen’s chair for her.
Before she could sit, however, Tyler said softly, “Why don’t you take this one. That way you can see the piano player.”
Kristen knew a better view wasn’t the real motive for his suggestion. In his chair, her left side would be hidden from the other guests.
“Thank you,” she said, changing places with him. Suddenly self-conscious, she fumbled with her napkin, adjusted the silverware and took a drink of water. Then she glanced across the room to where a woman sat at a piano playing a medley of pop tunes. “This is an interesting place.”
“I like it because you can hear yourself talk and because Eddie makes the best clam chowder in town.”
“Then you come here often?”
“Not anymore. At one time, Brant Electronics used to be just around the corner, so we spent a lot of time here.”
They hadn’t been sitting there long when a couple walked by. Kristen reached for her purse on the floor.
When she straightened and looked at Tyler, he asked, “What bothers you more? That they’ll recognize you as the Channel 12 anchor or that they’ll see your scars?”
She looked into his eyes expecting to see pity, but there was none. There was merely an interest she found comforting.
“Both,” she answered honestly. “Before the accident I knew people often thought I looked different from the way I looked on television, but maybe now they’re wondering if that difference isn’t because of the accident. Everyone knows I’ve had plastic surgery.”
“That sounds like a normal concern someone in your situation would have.”
“I haven’t been out in public much since the crash.” She toyed with her silverware again and finally said, “Look. Maybe this wasn’t such a great idea.”
“Wait Give me a couple of minutes,” he said, getting up from the table. He was only gone maybe two or three minutes before he returned with the maitre d’. He bent and whispered in her ear, “We’re moving.”
They followed the host to a door marked Private. It was a banquet room with several long tables. Tyler pulled out