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After Hours

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by Rochelle Alers




  ROCHELLE ALERS

  After Hours

  With gratitude to Noemi Victoria who saw the vision

  for After Hours. Thank you for Dina, Karla, Sybil

  and the men who love them.

  CONTENTS

  CHAPTER 1

  CHAPTER 2

  CHAPTER 3

  CHAPTER 4

  CHAPTER 5

  CHAPTER 6

  CHAPTER 7

  CHAPTER 8

  CHAPTER 9

  CHAPTER 10

  CHAPTER 11

  CHAPTER 12

  CHAPTER 13

  CHAPTER 14

  CHAPTER 15

  CHAPTER 16

  CHAPTER 17

  CHAPTER 18

  CHAPTER 19

  CHAPTER 20

  CHAPTER 21

  CHAPTER 22

  CHAPTER 23

  CHAPTER 24

  CHAPTER 25

  CHAPTER 26

  CHAPTER 27

  CHAPTER 28

  CHAPTER 29

  CHAPTER 30

  CHAPTER 31

  CHAPTER 32

  CHAPTER 33

  CHAPTER 34

  CHAPTER 35

  CHAPTER 36

  CHAPTER 37

  CHAPTER 38

  CHAPTER 39

  CHAPTER 40

  CHAPTER 41

  CHAPTER 42

  CHAPTER 43

  CHAPTER 44

  CHAPTER 45

  CHAPTER 46

  CHAPTER 47

  CHAPTER 48

  CHAPTER 49

  CHAPTER 50

  CHAPTER 51

  CHAPTER 52

  CHAPTER 53

  CHAPTER 54

  CHAPTER 55

  CHAPTER 56

  CHAPTER 57

  CHAPTER 58

  CHAPTER 59

  CHAPTER 60

  CHAPTER 61

  CHAPTER 62

  CHAPTER 63

  CHAPTER 64

  CHAPTER 65

  CHAPTER 66

  CHAPTER 67

  CHAPTER 68

  CHAPTER 1

  Inserting the key card into the slot, Adina waited for the green signal and pushed open the door. The motel room was small, clean and functional. It wasn’t a four-star Four Seasons or Ritz-Carlton, but it would serve her well until she found permanent lodging. The modest motel would become her sanctuary and temporary home.

  She wasn’t certain why she’d gotten off the bus in Irvington, New Jersey, but there was something about Irving that called to her. Perhaps it had something to do with the boy who’d sat next to her in third grade. He was the kindest boy she’d ever met or known. There wasn’t anything Irving Gordon wouldn’t do for her, and that included sharing his lunch and letting her cheat off his paper during a test.

  The neighboring state of New Jersey was far enough away from Brooklyn that she wouldn’t have to keep looking over her shoulder or duck out of sight when spotting someone who could possibly recognize her.

  Dropping her bag on the floor near the closet, Adina hung the Do Not Disturb sign outside the door, closed it, then slid the security latch into place. She hadn’t slipped the backpack off her shoulders when the telephone rang. Going completely still, she stared at the instrument, her heart pounding painfully against her ribs. Had someone followed her from Brooklyn to Irvington?

  The backpack hit the carpeted floor with a soft thud. Moving over to the bedside table, she picked up the receiver. “Yes?” Her query was a whisper.

  “Ms. Jenkins, this is Ravi at the front desk. Do you find the room to your liking?”

  An audible sigh escaped her as she sat on the side of the bed. “Yes—yes. It’s very nice.”

  “Remember, if you need anything, just call the front desk.”

  “Thank you. Good night, Ravi.” She hung up, smiling.

  The woman covering the front desk when she’d arrived had refused to rent her a room because she didn’t have a credit card. Short of making a scene, Adina had asked to speak to the night supervisor. She became the consummate actress when she told Ravi that she was running from an abusive boyfriend, that she hadn’t taken her credit cards because he would’ve been able to trace her whereabouts and that she’d left everything behind except money she’d hidden from him and a week’s change of clothes.

  It was only after she offered to show him the burns on her thighs where the abusive monster had put out his cigarettes that the manager took over and checked her in. She paid a weekly single-room rate—in cash. Of course, there were no burns or boyfriend, but she’d counted on not having to substantiate her passionate lie with physical proof.

  She’d spent the bus ride from New York to New Jersey reinventing Adina Jenkins and rehearsing her script: she was a battered woman who’d finally gathered enough courage to flee her abusive drug-addicted boyfriend after he kicked her in the belly and she miscarried. She’d told the police and emergency room doctor that she’d fallen down a flight of stairs because he’d threatened to kill her. After leaving the hospital she knew she had to leave because the beatings were becoming more frequent and brutal.

  Lying came easy to Adina. Most times the lies rolled off her tongue without thought or hesitation. After a while she’d acknowledged that she was a pathological liar, but it was quick thinking and falsehoods that’d kept her alive for the past decade and she knew she would tell more lies before she achieved her lifelong dream.

  She didn’t need a psychologist to tell her why she’d taken to hustling men with the ease of a duck taking to water: every man she hustled became her father, and it gave her extreme pleasure to set him up to be stripped of his worldly goods.

  Adina had envied the girls who held the hands of their fathers when walking along the sidewalks, those who escorted their children to the ice cream trucks and paid for whatever they wanted. She’d hated Father’s Day because if she made a handmade card with her favorite crayon colors, she had no one to give it to. The men who’d come to visit her mother and who’d occasionally spent the night were always Uncle So-and-So but never Daddy.

  Even when she’d sought to seduce flamboyant hustler Terence Yancey she’d known he eclipsed her tender age of thirteen by fifteen years. At twenty-eight, he would’ve been charged with statutory rape for sleeping with her, but Adina had refused to tell her mother or grandmother his name.

  A wry smile twisted her mouth as she stared up at the swirling designs on the stucco ceiling. Unknowingly Terence had given her life and had saved her life. She lay across the bed until her breathing deepened and her eyelids fluttered as she struggled not to fall asleep. Reluctantly she sat up and prepared herself for bed.

  Tomorrow was another day—the first day of her new life.

  CHAPTER 2

  Adina stared out the train window each time it made a different stop before reaching her destination. Before boarding the train, she’d dropped the PDA down a sewer, severing all communication with Payne Jefferson.

  It had taken only three days of hiding out in Irvington for her to devise a plan that would eliminate Adina Jenkins—forever. The idea had come to her after countless hours of television viewing. Aside from taking her meals at a diner half a mile from the motel, she’d spent all of her time dozing and half watching late-night infomercials, news and talk shows, soap operas, documentaries and cartoons.

  A documentary on the History Channel chronicling American gangsters captured her undivided attention. It was footage of a mobster who’d cooperated with federal authorities where he’d identified members of his syndicate, giving up names and dates of robberies, murders and contract hits. His reward for selling out his former cohorts was a new identity in the Witness Protection Program. The government relocated him to an undisclosed location and set him up with a new name, birth certificat
e, driver’s license and social security number.

  It had taken hours to search through telephone books to find a law firm willing to give her an appointment to talk to an attorney about a “personal matter.” The one willing to grant her a consultation was based in Trenton. The only thing she knew about the Jersey capital was that it wasn’t far from Philadelphia, a city she’d visited several times as mistress to a man who operated a prostitution ring in Atlantic City and Philadelphia.

  Adina got off the train in Trenton and took a taxi to the address she’d programmed into her BlackBerry. When the driver pulled up outside the law offices of Siddell, Kane, Merrill and King, housed in a two-story stucco building painted a soft sand color with black shutters, she was prepared for the performance of her life. She’d rehearsed what she intended to say over and over until she could repeat it verbatim.

  The building was one of several along a bucolic tree-lined street claiming a post office, a florist, a sweet shop, a bank, a dry cleaner, a mom-and-pop-type luncheonette and a gift shop. There was no litter in the gutters, abandoned cars, boarded-up storefronts or vagrants sitting on parked cars, lounging against buildings or loitering on street corners. Those wishing to linger sat at tables shaded by umbrellas outside awning-covered businesses.

  And what affected Adina more than seeing young mothers pushing baby strollers and elderly couples greeting each other was the dearth of loud noise. There were no honking horns from passing vehicles or raised voices. Even the dogs on leashes walking along the immaculate sidewalks stopped frequently to sniff at a tree or shrub. She noted from the smiling faces and serene expressions on those who either lived or worked in the hamlet that the lack of noise, dirt and pollution—and, no doubt, a low crime rate—attributed to a comfortable existence.

  She hadn’t been living but existing; an existence that included ear-shattering decibels of loud voices and music, dirt, grime and the stench of rotting garbage, weed, crack, discarded baby diapers and unwashed human bodies. Most times she prayed for colder weather so she wouldn’t have to navigate the residents hanging out in and around the projects where she lived. It was only during the frigid weather that most of them stayed indoors. The exception was the dealers selling their illegal shit to addicts who believed they couldn’t survive without their drugs.

  Adina walked up to the gleaming black door and opened it. An attractive brunette sitting behind a cherrywood workstation smiled at her. “Good morning. I’m Adina Jenkins and I have an appointment to see Mrs. King.”

  The receptionist glanced at a telephone console on her desk. “Mrs. King is on a call, but I’ll let her know you’re here as soon as she hangs up. Please have a seat, Ms. Jenkins.”

  She sat and glanced around the reception area. Recessed lighting cast a soft glow on walls covered with a wheat-colored fabric. The black leather love seat on which she sat was like butter. The rosewood table cradling a large bouquet of fresh flowers was exquisite. The furnishings in the law office’s reception area were more tasteful than what she’d seen in some living rooms.

  The receptionist had addressed her as Ms. Jenkins. Adina couldn’t remember the last time someone had referred her as Ms. or Miss. But, if luck was with her, then she wouldn’t be Adina Jenkins much longer.

  CHAPTER 3

  Karla King drew interconnecting circles on the legal pad in front of her, half listening to the whining of a client she’d inherited from an older senior partner. The voice was akin to fingernails on a chalkboard. Now she knew why she’d been given the case. The client, whose grandfather had set up a trust for her, wanted to give her latest boyfriend a quarter of a million dollars to start up his own business.

  “I’m sorry, Miss Evans, but your grandfather’s agreement stipulates you can only invest in Wall Street-traded companies.” She rolled her eyes when the woman started to cry. “Yes, I know it’s not fair, but…” Her voice trailed off as she waited for the woman to compose herself. It took all of a minute. “I’m sorry, but I’m going to have to hang up because I have another client waiting for me.”

  As soon as Karla ended the call, her intercom buzzed. “Yes, Valerie.”

  “Ms. Jenkins is here to see you.”

  “Please send her in.”

  Reaching for her suit jacket draped over the back of a nearby chair, Karla stood up, slipping her arms into the sleeves. She’d moved over to the door and opened it at the same time she watched Adina Jenkins approach. Her sharp gaze took in everything about the woman in one sweeping gaze.

  She was young; Karla doubted whether she was thirty. Adina Jenkins was blessed with a beauty that most men, regardless of their age or race, would find attractive. Her petite figure was shown to its best advantage in a black pencil skirt, tailored white silk blouse and a pair of high-heeled sandals. As she came closer, Karla saw that her raven-black wavy hair, secured in a ponytail with a narrow black grosgrain ribbon, ended inches above her tiny waist.

  Karla hadn’t made it a practice before she consulted with a prospective client to prejudge them but a sixth sense told her that Adina was unlike most clients represented by Siddell, Kane, Merrill and King because Valerie had reported that Ms. Jenkins had been very evasive when she’d called for a consultation. Yet she’d set aside time to see her.

  She extended her hand, studying the tiny woman. Up close, Adina’s bare face made her appear as if she were barely out of her teens. “Good morning, Ms. Jenkins. I’m Karla King.”

  Adina grasped the slender, well-groomed hand of the tall woman with flawless sable-brown skin, prominent cheekbones and blunt-cut, chemically straightened chin-length hair. Karla King’s penetrating dark brown eyes glowed with an intensity that appeared to miss nothing. The lawyer’s grip was firm and confident.

  Adina’s smile was slow in coming. She took a quick glance at the rings on the lawyer’s left hand. “Good morning, Mrs. King. I’m hoping you’ll be able to help me.”

  Karla pointed to a round table with several pull-up chairs. “Let’s sit down. After you tell me what you want, I’ll let you know whether I’ll be able to help you.”

  Adina sat down, placing her purse on the table. Leaning over, she left a shopping bag on the floor beside her chair. She’d gone to a mall to buy an outfit she felt suitable for discussing business with an attorney. While there, she’d stopped at a nail salon and had the silk wraps removed. Colorful airbrushed nails no longer figured in her future.

  Sitting opposite Adina, Karla reached for a legal pad and a pencil from a supply on the table. “Would you like something to drink before we begin?”

  “No, thank you,” Adina said, shaking her head. Crossing her bare legs at the ankles, she took a deep breath, held it, and then let it out slowly. She had to play it just right to get Mrs. King to believe her.

  “I need to change my name from Adina Jenkins to Dina Gordon.”

  The pencil in Karla’s hand was poised over the blank page. “You need to change your name.” The question came out like a statement.

  Adina nodded, her gaze fixed on a tray cradling bottled water and cellophane-covered glasses. “I need a new identity because I’m hiding from my boyfriend.” She glanced up, her gaze meeting and fusing with Karla’s. “I’m tired of him using me as a punching bag. If I say something he doesn’t like, he slaps me. If I cook something and it doesn’t come out the way he thinks it should, he punches me. And if I don’t let him…touch me, then he rapes me. The last time, he beat me so badly that I couldn’t get out of bed for a week. It was when I lost my baby that I realized I had to get away before he got me pregnant again. I waited until he went to visit his mother and left with whatever I could carry with me.”

  Everything she’d said was a lie, including miscarrying a baby. After giving birth to one child, she’d made certain it would never happen again. She’d had a procedure that assured her that she would never conceive again. This was not to say that she didn’t practice safe sex. Getting pregnant was preferable to contracting an STD or, even worse, HIV. No matter how m
uch the men she slept with professed to be disease-free, she didn’t trust them enough to engage in unprotected sex. And her distrust of the opposite sex forced her to use her own condoms.

  Karla leaned closer. “Where does your boyfriend live?”

  “Brooklyn.”

  “Have you reported him to the police?”

  Adina paused. “I can’t.”

  “Why not?”

  “Because he said he’d kill me.” Adina saw Karla King jot down O.P. on the pad, deciding it was time she go on the offensive. “I get an order of protection and then what, Mrs. King? Once he’s released for violating the order, then he’ll beat me again.”

  Karla sat up straighter. “I’d like to help you, Ms. Jenkins, but I can’t. What I can do is refer you to someone I know in New York City who’d be willing to take your case.”

  “Why can’t you take it? You’re a lawyer, aren’t you?”

  A lifting of her eyebrows was the only indication of Karla’s reaction to the younger woman’s acerbic query. “I am an attorney, but you’ve come to a firm specializing in wills, taxes and estate planning.”

 

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