"I would do the same thing all over again," she whispered, and her voice caught slightly. Caught on the pain. Caught on the regret.
"Are you still carrying on about Brand?" Aimee demanded unsympathetically.
Erin nodded.
"Trust me, all of womankind is better off without men. They use and abuse, in that order," Aimee said, and snickered softly. "I’m beginning to sound a bit jaded, aren’t I? Sorry about that. You’ve been in the dumps all week, and I haven’t been much help."
"Don’t worry about it. You’re having problems of your own."
"Not so much anymore. Steve and I have come to terms. The final papers are being drawn up, and the whole messy affair is going to be over. At last. I didn’t think this was ever going to end."
"Are you doing anything after work?" Going home to an empty, dark house, even with a grand piano to greet her, had long since lost its appeal. Before she’d written the final letter to Brand, she’d hurried home, praying there’d be a letter waiting there for her. But there wouldn’t be any more letters. At least not from Brand. Once she realized that, she’d suddenly started looking for excuses not to go home after work.
"What do you have in mind?" Aimee asked.
"James Bradshaw, the famous divorce attorney, is giving a workshop on prenuptial agreements. I recommended it to the women in my class. I thought you might like to join us."
"Hey, sorry, I can’t do anything tonight," Aimee answered in a preoccupied voice. She shuffled a couple of files before she continued. "Prenuptial agreement? Good grief, Erin, you’re not even married and you’re planning for a divorce."
"Not me," Erin replied. "It’s for the women in my class. After seeing what’s happened to Marilyn and women like her, and now you, I think it’s smart to have everything down in black and white."
Aimee busied herself at her desk. "Personally, I don’t think it’s a good idea to start out a marriage by planning for a divorce."
Erin stared at her friend, not knowing what to think. Aimee was at the tail end of a divorce that had cut her to the quick. If anyone understood the advisability of prenuptial agreements, Erin thought, it should be her friend.
"Listen – " Aimee rolled back her chair and sighed. "Forget I said that. I’m the last person in the world who should be giving romantic advice. My marriage is in shambles and… I feel like one of the walking wounded myself. Maybe the lecture isn’t such a bad idea after all."
"Go on," Erin urged. "I’d be interested in hearing your opinion."
Aimee didn’t look as if she trusted her own thoughts. "As I said, I don’t think it’s a good idea to start off a marriage by planning for divorce. I know that’s an unpopular point of view, especially in this day and age, but it just doesn’t feel right to me."
"How can you say that?" Erin cried. "You’re going through a divorce yourself. Good grief, you’ve been through hell the last few months, and now all of a sudden you’re making marriage sound like this glorious, wonderful state of being. As I recall, you and Steve can’t carry on a civil conversation. What’s changed?"
"A lot," Aimee announced solemnly. "And you, my friend, have the opportunity to gain from my experience."
Feeling uncomfortable, Erin looked away.
"We’re both here day in and day out, working with women who are making new lives for themselves," Aimee continued. "But finding them a decent job is only the beginning. They’ve been traumatized, abandoned and left to deal with life on their own. If you want the truth, I’m beginning to believe our thinking’s becoming jaded. Not everyone ends up divorced. Not everyone will have to go through what these women have. It’s just that we deal with it each and every day until our own perception of married life has been warped."
"But you and Steve – "
"I know," Aimee argued. "Trust me, I know. I pray every day I’m doing the right thing by divorcing Steve."
Erin was praying the same thing herself for the both of them. "But if you’re having second thoughts, shouldn’t you be doing something?"
"Like what?" Aimee suggested, her voice flippant. "Steve’s already involved with another woman."
"You don’t know that."
"Deep down I do. You saw him the day we went to court. He wore that stupid green tie just to irritate me, and the looks he gave me… I can’t begin to describe to you the way he glanced at me, as if… as if he couldn’t believe he’d ever been married to me in the first place. He couldn’t wait for the divorce to be final."
"But I thought this was a friendly divorce."
Aimee’s gaze fell to her hands. "There’s no such thing as a friendly divorce. It’s too damn painful for everyone involved."
"Oh, Aimee, I feel so bad for you and Steve."
"Why should you?" she asked, the sarcastic edge back in her voice. "We’re both getting exactly what we want."
Erin knew nothing more that she could say. She didn’t have any excuse to linger around the office. The lecture wasn’t until seven, and it was optional as far as her class was concerned. She didn’t have to be there herself, but she thought it would help kill time, which was something that was weighing heavily on her these days.
Erin’s thoughts were heavy as she walked outside the double glass doors of the fifteen-story office complex. The wind had picked up and was biting-cold. She hunched her shoulders and tucked her hands inside her coat pockets as she headed for the parking lot on Yesler.
With her head down, it was little wonder she didn’t notice the tall, dark figure standing next to her car. It wasn’t until she was directly in front of him that she realized someone was blocking her path.
When she looked up, her heart, in a frenzy, flew into her throat.