Trust Fall
Book One of The Trust Trilogy
Tess Quince
Chapter Three
BEN SHEPPARD KNOCKS ON MY front door instead of ringing the bell. It's loud and firm and startles me. I'm already nervous and the surprise of his knock makes me a little more flustered.
I'd been thinking of this moment all day. The moment when he rings my bell or, as it turns out, he knocks on my door. I primp myself in the mirror. The night will be cool so I've put on a nice pair of black jeans and a turtleneck with a long gold chain that hangs across my breasts. I didn't want to go overboard. I didn't want to do too much. I chide the furrow in my brow. It seems deeper in this light. I try to rub it out. I close my eyes and press both thumbs across the ridge of my brow then open them. Nothing. Still the furrow. The rock is still in my belly, but it's surrounded by butterflies.
I spent the day at an off-site my bank required I attend at a hotel banquet center with about two hundred other bank employees. It is was an eight hour day of being lectured on diversity and its importance for a productive workplace and corporate success. I learned that I'm not supposed to judge people based on their sex, age, race, religion, sexual-orientation or any combination of the aforementioned. It's all good stuff that most of us learned as kids and if you didn't learn it as a kid, I can't see how eight hours in a hotel banquet center is going to teach you to not be an ass.
The entire day my thoughts kept drifting away from diversity and drifting to Ben Sheppard. I used my phone to do a little internet research. There's not much there. I found a nice general profile on his company's website. I looked up the letters that are behind his name on the business card. They're engineering designations, but I have trouble understanding even their definition. I take it to mean he's certifiably smart.
When our Chief Diversity Officer dismissed us for lunch, I grabbed a muffin left over from the morning spread and a diet cola from a vending machine and tried to find a quiet place alone to eat and think. I found it on the third floor stairwell.
I felt guilty for all those thoughts of Ben Sheppard. I really should have been thinking of Danny. I'm also getting a little pissed that Josh hasn't called to check in. I want to give them space, to let father and son bond. I have a hope that Josh will stay in Danny's life and not lose interest and drift off to other things. A boy needs his father and Josh is so likely to drift away from anything that involves work.
Screw it.
I dialed Josh's number.
"Hello Mommy!" Danny shouted into the phone. "Daddy let me answer the phone. Yesterday we saw a big arch. I wanted to go to the top. I did, but Daddy said we didn't have enough money and we really had to get to see Grandma and Grandpa in SanCisco... SanFrankco... in California and we're gonna see mountains soon but now it's not mountains it's all flat and there's farms and farms and a, oh, Mommy, a big truck honked its horn at me."
I laughed in the stairwell. My Danny is a-okay and he sounds happy and my irritation with Josh subsided.
"Okay, you need to talk to Daddy now."
I heard the phone handed off.
"Hey," Josh says.
"You know I don't allow him sugar or caffeine, Josh."
"Then I guess the pancakes and Coke for breakfast were a treat for him."
"Well, he's bouncing around your car and not mine."
"He'll be fine. We're having fun. He's just excited."
I didn't agree but let it pass.