The Golden Couple(21)



Marissa waves goodbye as she exits the office. She peers through the glass door of the school entrance, hoping the rain is tapering off. But it’s coming down even harder.

She’s about to brave it and run to her car when she notices another parent approaching the building. The woman’s face is shielded—she didn’t forget her umbrella—but her distinctive walk and the outline of her hourglass shape in her cream-colored belted raincoat make her immediately recognizable to Marissa.

It’s Natalie.

It isn’t surprising that she has bumped into Natalie this morning; they often cross paths at the small school.

Marissa waits until Natalie reaches the door, then pushes it open for her.

“Thanks!” Natalie closes her pretty polka-dot umbrella as she steps inside. “Were you here to help with the auction class gifts, too? I’m getting the first-graders to paint their handprints on the rocking chair. It’ll be so cute!”

“Oh, fun!” Marissa summons the energy to enthuse, even though she feels a little wilted in Natalie’s presence. Marissa takes in Natalie’s shiny black hair, perfectly made-up face, and impractical but gorgeous high heels. Natalie always looks good; her job selling high-end real estate probably requires it. But who appears so polished to spend a morning painting with a bunch of six-year-olds?

“I just had to drop off something for Bennett.” Marissa runs her fingers through her own hair. She feels dampness and frizz; so much for her blowout.

“I’ve been meaning to check in with you.” Natalie puts a hand on Marissa’s forearm and leans in, her voice lowering to a husky, confidential whisper. “Matthew told me the firm lost the Coleman account. You okay?”

Marissa blinks in surprise: Matthew lost one of his biggest clients?

Maybe it just happened. Perhaps he didn’t mention it to her because he’s barely speaking to her these days.

But why does Natalie know?

Natalie is watching her carefully, Marissa realizes. She forces her lips to curve up into a smile. “Yes, everything is fine,” she lies.

“Oh, good.” But something in Natalie’s eyes confirms a suspicion that has been building in Marissa: Natalie wants her to feel uncomfortable about the history Matthew and Natalie shared.

Don’t give Matthew the opportunity to be alone with her, Avery had warned.

Avery already seems to have Natalie’s number. Maybe the marriage consultant knew of Natalie’s existence even before her name came up during the session. Marissa was more than a little unsettled to learn that Avery was skimming through the details of their lives, but if Matthew is okay with it, how can she object?

Hiring Avery was risky. Marissa wonders, not for the first time, if it was the right move.

“Have a great day,” Marissa tells Natalie, then pushes through the door and hurries to her car. Cold raindrops pelt down on her nose and cheeks, and she’s shivering by the time she reaches her Audi.

She slides into the driver’s seat, then twists around to grab the blanket she always leaves in the car—in case she gets chilly at one of Bennett’s baseball games—and tries to dry herself off. She turns on the engine and watches the windshield wipers arc back and forth, taking an extra moment to gather herself before she backs out of the visitor’s spot.

Perhaps business worries are contributing to the ruptures in her marriage. Matthew rarely discusses problems at work with Marissa. She’d like to put it down to a misguided sense of chivalry: he wants to protect her from any financial blips or unpleasantness. But she is complicit in the arrangement, too. She has always worked, from those early days at her family’s store—named after their surname, Conner—to waitressing to help pay her way through college, to running her boutique. Still, her earnings pale in comparison to Matthew’s. Even though she insists on handling some of the bills—Bennett’s private-school tuition and her car, for example—he absorbs the bulk of their expenses.

Marissa glances at her dashboard clock: 9:48 A.M. Rush-hour traffic is over, so she should make it to Coco in twenty minutes. She’d rather not call the florist while she’s on the road, but neither does she want to wait until she reaches her boutique, since she might be interrupted by Polly or a customer. She compromises by driving toward Coco and, as soon as the clock hits ten, pulling into a parking lot of a CVS.

She dials the number for Bloom and listens as it rings once, twice, three times. She’s about to hang up and try again when a woman answers, sounding a little breathless. “Bloom Florist. This is Cathy, may I help you?”

“Cathy, hi, this is Marissa Bishop. I received the most beautiful arrangement of yellow roses from your store last night.”

“I’m so glad to hear that.”

“Yes, but there’s just one little thing. I couldn’t find a card, and naturally I want to thank whoever sent them. I was wondering if you could help me?”

“Of course, can you give me your name again?”

Marissa spells it out.

“Hang on just a second.…”

Marissa can hear the clicking of computer keys. She watches a mother enter the drugstore holding a wailing toddler in one arm and an umbrella in her free hand.

“Oh, hmm, this is interesting. The order came in online. I actually don’t have the sender’s name.”

Marissa’s stomach twists. “Wouldn’t he have provided a credit card? Or she, of course?”

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