Suddenly One Summer (FBI/US Attorney #6)
Page 10“So . . . you appear to be set here,” Charlie said teasingly. “I guess Tuck and I will see you later, then.”
Just then, the brunette and her two friends stood up from the table and made their way to the front door.
Sitting in the back of the bar, Ford felt a flicker of disappointment as he watched her leave.
Tucker commiserated with a shrug. “Well, you win some, you lose some.”
“Or in Tuck’s case, you lose some, and then you lose some more,” Charlie said.
Tucker shot Charlie a glare, and then pointed to the table of women who’d invited them over. “On the bright side: bachelorette party.”
Ford considered this. Having been friends with Charlie and Tucker since their freshman year of college, he suspected this fascination with the bachelorette party was, in some part, their attempt to distract him and have fun after everything that had happened with his father last week. And, seeing how he was more than happy to be distracted, he settled up their tab and followed his friends over to the table of women, who cheered at their arrival.
There definitely were worse ways to spend a Friday night.
Four
VICTORIA GOT BACK to her loft shortly after ten o’clock that night. Deliberately ignoring the remaining unpacked boxes—she would deal with them later—she headed straight to her bedroom. After stripping out of her bar clothes, she changed into shorts and a T-shirt and practically rubbed her hands with glee as she eyed her bed.
She couldn’t wait to crawl in.
With that in mind, she set the e-reader on her nightstand, next to her trusty phone. She turned off the lamp and pulled up the covers, feeling more relaxed and comfortable in bed than she had in a month. As exhausted as she was, she could probably sleep right through to Sunday.
She drifted off with a smile, thinking that would be just fine.
* * *
A DOOR SLAMMED shut.
Victoria shot up in bed when she heard footsteps on hardwood floors. Disoriented by the relatively unfamiliar surroundings, it took her a moment to remember that she was in her new place, the loft. She heard muffled voices, several of them, and instinctively reached for her phone.
Then she realized the sound wasn’t coming from inside her place, but rather through her bedroom wall, the wall she shared with the unit next to hers.
She flopped back down onto the bed and exhaled in relief.
The footsteps on the hardwood floors sounded like high heels, several pairs of them, and she could hear both men and women talking and laughing. She hadn’t met her next-door neighbor yet—someone named “F. Dixon” according to the mailbox next to hers in the lobby—but from the sound of things, he or she was having a late-night get-together.
As if on cue, the acoustic guitar intro of Peter Gabriel’s “Solsbury Hill” began to play, and a woman—who sounded more than a little tipsy—yelled out, “I LOVE this song!”
Victoria covered her head with a pillow and tried not to weep.
“Who wants a penis pop?” someone shouted.
And . . . that was her cue to take her leave.
She had no clue what a “penis pop” was—although it sounded kinky and quite possibly a little painful for all parties involved—but these were not things she needed to be musing over at two A. M. With a huge sigh of annoyance (not that the people next door could hear her given all their damn racket), she grabbed her pillow (yes, she was fussy and couldn’t sleep without her special pillow) and dragged herself out to the living room. She flopped onto the couch and tried to get comfortable.
Then tried some more.
Granted, when she’d bought the couch, she’d been going for style. Silly her, to not have presumed that one night she’d need the Edwardian-era sofa with its low-rolled arms and arched back for a campout in her living room because her neighbor would be throwing a raucous late-night sex soiree complete with penis pops.
She tossed the sofa’s too many damn throw pillows to the floor in frustration.
Then she got up and grabbed her iPad to Google “penis pop” because, seriously, what was that?
Ah . . . lollipops. Got it.
After tossing and turning for nearly an hour on the couch, she heard a door shut, and then several voices out in the hallway. When the voices faded, she got up to check on the situation in her bedroom.
Silence.
Victoria’s eyes opened.
Next she heard a man’s deep voice—his words muffled—followed by the sound of something bumping against the other side of the wall. A headboard.
The woman moaned.
Oh . . . that was just great.
Not needing to hear any more, with an angry huff, Victoria carted her special pillow back into the living room, flopped onto the couch, and hunkered down for a long night.
* * *
EARLY THE FOLLOWING morning, grumpy and bleary-eyed after a less-than-ideal night spent sleeping on her sofa, she went on a quest in her new neighborhood for some much-needed coffee.
Fortunately, she didn’t need to walk far. Just around the corner from her place she found a café called The Wormhole that looked promising enough. She opened the door and blinked in surprise when she saw all the 1980s movie posters on the walls, as well as an actual DeLorean—yes, the car from Back to the Future—parked on the loft upstairs.
Wow. It was safe to say they took their ’80s seriously in these parts.