Page 16 of Simply Lies


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“I hadn’t thought of that.”

“That’s okay. Together, we can get there,” replied Gibson encouragingly.

“Our interests are probably not perfectly aligned.”

“That never stopped people from working together before. Andyoureached out to me. Can you at least give me a hint as to what business you two were involved in?”

The line went dead again.

On impulse Gibson threw the phone across the room. But then she rushed over, picked it up, and hit the redial button. It rang and rang. Finally she clicked off.

That evening, after Silva had left, Gibson got to be a mom again. She made dinner for the kids and they played in the living room for about an hour. This usually involved Gibson’s giving the kids rides on her back, which wasn’t great for her spine, and then reading to them or letting them toss a ball back and forth. She tried to teach Tommy how to dribble a basketball, but his coordination just wasn’t there yet. Tommy also had a toy computer that he liked to peck on while his sister kept pestering him for a turn.

Tommy cracked silly jokes and said things that made Darby howl with laughter, and that, in turn, made Gibson laugh, too. This was the best part of being a mom. Just spending time with her kids. No agenda, no to-do list, no vomit hurling, or tears spilling, just…fun.

Then will come the teenage years when I’ll have to stop being a friend and really become a parent and lay down the law.

Gibson thought of the stupid shit she had done as a teen, which had driven her parents crazy with worry, and caused her dad’s hair to gray prematurely, or so the family lore went. She looked at her own kids.Slow down, don’t grow up so fast. I don’t want white hair in my thirties.

She put them to bed after reading them another story about a kindly farm animal that helped her friends get out of trouble.

I could use a friend like that, thought Gibson as she closed the book and put it on the shelf.

She was about to leave after turning off the light, but then Gibson lingered by the door, the moonlight from the window illuminating the sleeping forms of her kids. It was a perfect vision of peace and security in an imperfect and often violent world.

The dead Daniel Pottinger in his secret little room.

The mysterious lying lady on the phone.

Gibson’s entanglement in something she couldn’t understand.

She felt like a little girl again, alone, and afraid of unseen dangers lurking for her. As a single woman and a cop she had felt equipped to take on anything. As a mother of two little kids with her athletic and cop days behind her, she felt small and unsure and vulnerable.

She walked downstairs and called her father.

Rick Rogers answered on the second ring and said in his naturally gruff voice, “I was wondering when you were going to call, Mick.”

“Why?”

“Your mother told me some police detective was at your house that you had business with. And before that you had her come and babysit on the spur of the moment. What’s going on?”

Gibson told him about the call from Arlene Robinson, the journey to Stormfield, finding the body of Pottinger, meeting with Detective Wilson Sullivan, and then the revelation that she had been duped by the very same Arlene Robinson.

“And now she’s calling me on this phone that she or someone else left on my front porch.”

“You really need to let this guy Sullivan know about those calls, honey.”

“If I sic Sullivan on her I might lose the only shot I have at solving this sucker.”

“First of all, it’s notyourjob to solve thissucker. You’re not a cop anymore. And, second, you’ve got two little kids who depend on you. So let the people with the badges and guns handle this and you go back to your nerdy computer stuff.”

The way he said this last part made Gibson’s face flush. Her father had been the most vocal critic of her ex-husband. He had lectured his daughter over and over that the man was a scumbag and she should never, ever consider marrying him.

And I didn’t listen to him. I sided with the guy who ended up breaking my heart.

She knew this had hurt her father deeply, because they had always been close. She didn’t know if it was because she was his first child, or because their personalities were similar—everyone had called her a chip off the old block. Growing up, she had confided in her dad far more than in her mother, telling him things that were intimate and sometimes embarrassing. And her father had taken it all in stride and never betrayed her confidences. As a cop he had no doubt seen far worse, and he understood how imperfect the world and those inhabiting it were. And to his credit, after being proved right about her ex-husband, her father had never once said,I told you so. Though his criticisms had been delivered in more subtle ways.

But in speaking with him now, she wondered if he held it against her for quitting the police force and becoming, basically, a computer geek looking for bounty.

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