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Photographs of Claudia

Page 3

by KG MacGregor


  Leo, but it raised another about why Sandy would invite her to

  such an event. “It sounds like fun, but honestly, I don’t want to

  horn in on you and your friends.”

  Sandy scowled. “Oh, that’s bullshit. One thing Leo and I have

  in common is that I don’t invite people unless I want them to

  show up. I’ll run interference and make sure they all know you’re

  just a friendly. Just wave that rock under their noses.”

  She looked self-consciously at the diamond on her hand. It

  was a whole lot bigger than it needed to be, but Mike didn’t do

  anything on a small scale. “Maybe I should leave this at home.”

  “I wouldn’t do that if I were you. You’ll be fighting off horny

  dykes all night.”

  She could feel herself start to blush. Getting hit on wouldn’t

  bother her as long as they respected her response, but she

  couldn’t imagine they would waste their time on someone who

  was straight. “I doubt that.”

  “Trust me, Claudia.” Sandy hooked her purse over her

  shoulder and flipped off the lights, signaling an end to their

  workday. “They’d be on you like flies on honey.”

  Chapter 4

  Leo spread the photos out on her coffee table. The rest of

  her film from the job at Melrose Elementary had gone to the lab

  for developing and wouldn’t return for another five weeks, but

  she had saved the roll from her Nikon to develop at home. It held

  only the three photos of Claudia Galloway.

  She stared at the images with brazen interest, her eyes settling

  on the outline of Claudia’s breasts in the pink shirt. The dip of

  her neck revealed a small jade pendant, which Leo remembered

  from their meeting but hadn’t allowed herself to study. From the

  boyfriend, she surmised.

  She set the photos aside and propped her feet beside them.

  After shooting a wedding all day on Saturday, it was nice to

  relish a Sunday afternoon with nothing to do, nowhere to be

  and no one to see. She had spent the morning in her basement

  darkroom and now was toying with the idea of calling the number

  Claudia had given her to say her photos were ready. A creeping

  nervousness had stopped her, similar to what she typically felt

  before the handful of blind dates Sandy and Maria had arranged.

  There was no good reason to put her feelings about Claudia into

  the same category with those girls. This wasn’t a test to see if

  romance could blossom between them. But for some reason it

  was imperative that she make a good impression on Claudia.

  A sudden thud sent the photos sliding across the coffee

  table.

  “Hello, Madeline.” She scooped her calico kitten into her

  lap. “You can’t stand it when I pay attention to something else.”

  The cat responded with a steady purr as she pushed her head

  into Leo’s chin. Her tail twittered in anticipation of her back

  being scratched.

  “How did you get to be so rotten in just six months?”

  She swiped at the cat, a birthday gift from Patty, who had

  joked at her party that Leo needed a little pussy. It was an

  embarrassing pronouncement made all the worse by its obvious

  truth. Leo hadn’t made love with anyone in over four years, but

  that wasn’t for lack of trying on Patty’s part. She proclaimed her

  undying lust nearly every time they saw each other. Leo played it

  down with humor, refusing to take her overtures seriously. That

  only increased Patty’s flirtations, but it let her save face while Leo

  dodged her advances. Patty wasn’t her type.

  “What do you think, Madeline? Do I even have a type?” She

  clutched the kitten to her chest as she leaned down and retrieved

  one of Claudia’s photos from the floor. “What do you think of

  this one? Cute, huh?”

  Yes, Claudia could be her type…or someone like her. Leo

  didn’t need to be fantasizing about someone with a boyfriend,

  but that didn’t mean she couldn’t use Claudia to figure out what

  kind of girl she did want. Something about her was intriguing,

  something that might give Leo a clue about romance. This

  fumbling through blind dates and talking with friends of friends

  at parties hadn’t gotten her anywhere.

  When it came to romance she had been a late bloomer, not

  fully realizing until her second year at the community college

  in Monterey that she was attracted to women. It hadn’t come as

  a complete surprise because the two dates she’d had with boys

  from her high school had fizzled in mutual awkwardness, and

  neither had aroused her sexual curiosity. Not so with Melissa, a

  classmate and off-and-on lover for two years. Melissa had been

  fascinating and experienced, and had shown Leo the pleasures

  of lesbian love, but she wasn’t long on monogamy. Frustrated by

  Melissa’s dalliances with other women, Leo finally broke things

  off. No one since had interested her sexually, but what she missed

  far more than sex was the sheer joy of having someone to care

  about.

  Claudia stared back at her with gorgeous hazel eyes set deep

  above high cheekbones. Her light brown hair was fine, with soft

  curls that looked like they defied control. Overall, it was a gentle

  look that fit nicely with the calm yet commanding way she had

  handled her third graders.

  “I’m going to call her,” she told Madeline, reaching for the

  phone. She pressed the first six numbers and then took a deep

  breath. “No, I’m not.”

  Why was she being such a chicken? It wasn’t rational at all to

  be stressing about calling someone to say her photos were ready.

  She did it twenty times a week. What was the worst that could

  happen? Her boyfriend could answer the phone and drill her

  with a million suspicious questions. It was just photos. Calling

  now would get this over with. Claudia could stop by for a quick

  tour and pick up her packet, then run off to spend the rest of the

  weekend with Romeo.

  With new resolve, she dialed the number, and was about

  to hang up after six rings when a ragged female voice suddenly

  answered. An image of Claudia sweating amidst rumpled sheets

  filled her head as her mouth went dry.

  “Hello? Is anyone there?”

  “Uh, Claudia?” The wheels in her brain spun in search of what

  to say. “This is Leonora Westcott, from Westcott Photography.”

  Way too formal. “Leo, from the school.”

  0

  “Leo!” Claudia gasped for breath. “I almost didn’t get to the

  phone. I was coming up from the laundry room when I heard it

  ring.”

  So she hadn’t been in the middle of heated sex after all. “I’m

  sorry. I can call back if you’re busy.”

  “No, no. I’m glad you called. What’s up?”

  Leo smiled with relief. “I just wanted to let you know your

  photos are ready if you want to stop by sometime and pick them

  up. Or I can mail them if you want to give me your address.”

  “You have them already? The paper I sent home with the

  kids said five weeks.”

  �
��Yeah, that’s because theirs went off to the lab. I switched

  cameras for you, remember? If I’d used the one on the tripod,

  it would have lopped off the top of your head.” Talking about

  her work relaxed her. “Anyway, I had some other shots on that

  roll”—a lie—“and I developed everything this morning.”

  “Am I funny-looking?”

  “No, you look great.” Madeline bobbed her head against the

  corner of the photo. “Even my cat likes them.”

  “Your cat, huh? I guess that’s a good sign, but I was counting

  on something I could put on the door to scare burglars away.”

  Leo chuckled, enjoying Claudia’s self-deprecating humor.

  It was hard to believe she didn’t realize how attractive she was.

  “These won’t work for that, I’m afraid. It’s hard to scare somebody

  when you’re wearing pink.”

  “So you think I should wear something else for

  Halloween?”

  “I believe it usually calls for black and orange.” She wondered

  if Sandy had followed through with an invitation to her party.

  “I’m embarrassed to be caught at home doing laundry on a

  Sunday afternoon. You must think I have no life at all.”

  “Then that’s two of us, because I’m sitting here on the couch

  with my cat. But I worked a wedding yesterday, so I don’t feel so

  guilty about putting my feet up for a change.”

  “It sounds like you work all the time.”

  “Not really, just odd hours. No one gets married at eight

  o’clock on a Monday morning.” She leaned back on the couch

  and stretched her foot out to scratch Madeline’s chin. This was

  exactly what she had hoped for, a casual conversation. No tests to

  pass, no one to impress.

  “I was about to suggest that I come over this afternoon, but I

  don’t want to ruin your day off. Why don’t you tell me what day

  works and I’ll stop by after school?”

  The idea of seeing Claudia today stirred both excitement and

  anxiety. “This afternoon would be fine. Maybe we can get a bite

  to eat or something.”

  “Now you’re talking. I’m so tired of take-out, but I hate to sit

  in a restaurant by myself.”

  Why would she be by herself? Where was the boyfriend?

  “Then come on over. I’ll give you the nickel tour and we can walk

  down to Old Fisherman’s Wharf. I have two customer parking

  spaces on the side of the house, so pull on around the corner. My

  Volvo will be there.”

  “I’m only about ten minutes away,” Claudia said. “But I have

  to wait for my clothes to finish drying, or someone else will

  dump them on the floor of the laundry room. Is an hour from

  now okay?”

  “Perfect.” Just enough time to straighten up and grab a

  shower, but not enough to get herself worked up.

  Leo paced the parlor, stopping occasionally to peek through

  the beveled glass that lined her front door. Everything was in

  order with five minutes to spare. Five minutes she would spend

  worrying whether she looked okay.

  A quick check in the full-length mirror by the studio door

  helped to settle her doubts. The tips of her hair were still wet

  from her shower, leaving a damp ring along the collar of her gray

  T-shirt. Her black jeans fit snugly and her sneakers finished the

  casual look. Overall, she was satisfied. Not too dressy, not too

  sloppy.

  A car slowed in front of her house and turned into her

  customer parking area. It wasn’t just any car—it was a white

  Nissan 300ZX and it looked brand new. Its top was open, the T-

  bar bisecting the cockpit.

  From the side window she watched Claudia remove her

  headband and fluff her hair in the rearview mirror. Then she

  brushed her sweater, a light blue crewneck that was considerably

  dressier than Leo’s T-shirt. Leo grew suddenly self-conscious

  when Claudia climbed from the car to reveal navy slacks and

  polished shoes. It was too late to run back upstairs to change.

  She could only hope Claudia wouldn’t think her a slob.

  Abandoning all pretense of nonchalance, she stepped outside

  as Claudia walked up the five stairs to the porch, her heels landing

  with a sharp click. Alligator boots. Expensive. “Glad you could

  make it.”

  Claudia eyed her up and down. “Damn, I was afraid I’d be

  too dressed up. I didn’t know what you had in mind at the marina

  so I decided to play it safe.”

  “You look great. If it’s any consolation, I had the same

  conversation with myself, but obviously it took me somewhere

  else.” She couldn’t resist brushing her fingers on Claudia’s

  cashmere sweater. “It wouldn’t have mattered anyway. I’m not

  sure I own anything this nice.”

  “Maybe we should just swap tops,” Claudia said with a grin,

  briefly gripping the hem of her sweater. “I don’t think we could

  trade pants. Mine would only come to your knees.”

  Leo chuckled as Claudia pushed past her into the circular

  parlor, which was the turret on the front left corner of the Queen

  Anne house.

  “Wow, this is so cool! I love old houses. My grandmother’s

  house in Cambria was just like this. It had all this elaborate

  woodwork and high ceilings. What I remember most was a whole

  bunch of tiny rooms.”

  “That’s how this one used to be, but we’ve made a few changes

  over the years.” She was proud of her home, which had been

  handed down from her grandfather to her father, and now to her.

  “I’m the third generation in this house. Except it isn’t much of a

  house now…more like a studio with an apartment upstairs.”

  “Now that’s what I call an easy commute. I wonder if I could

  get them to let me live over the school?”

  Leo tipped her head in the direction of the parking area. “If I

  had a car like yours I wouldn’t mind a commute. Those are some

  nice wheels.”

  “Yeah, I have sort of a weakness for sports cars. I’m just not a

  four-door kind of gal. You know what I mean?”

  She nodded mindlessly, deciding it was rude to ask how a

  teaching intern could afford such a car. “I have to haul things

  when I go out on shoots, so I need to drive a station wagon.”

  “That Volvo? It looks like a classic.”

  “I don’t know about that, unless it’s just a polite way of saying

  ‘old car.’ It was my dad’s.”

  Claudia studied the detail of the beveled glass that framed

  the door. “This is exquisite. They don’t make houses like this

  anymore.”

  “Let me show you around.” Leo gestured to the antique

  chairs and davenports. “This is technically a parlor but I use it as

  my waiting room in case my appointments get backed up.”

  “I love these antiques. Are they heirlooms?”

  “Antiques…heirlooms.” She tried her best to keep a straight

  face. “You sure have a lot of pretty words for my old junk.”

  Claudia’s eyes went wide before she realized Leo was joking.

  Then she sneered. “You almost had me there. Show me more.”

  She charge
d into the next room.

  Leo caught up with her and scurried in front to show off her

  office. “This front part is where we used to have the studio but

  now it’s where I do all the boring stuff, like ordering supplies

  and sending out bills.” A large round table stacked with catalogs

  and tablets sat between the front window and a fireplace, and an

  L-shaped oak desk filled the far corner. Samples of her work—

  among them, family portraits, babies and brides—were mounted

  on all four walls.

  The alligator boots clicked again on the worn hardwood

  floor as Claudia inspected the displays. “These are beautiful. I

  bet your customers love you.”

  “I don’t know about love, but most of them appreciate what

  I can do.”

  “Does that mean you fixed my pointy chin?”

  Leo was accustomed to dealing with her subjects’ insecurities

  about their looks, many of them exaggerated. It was hard to

  imagine someone as attractive as Claudia being insecure about

  anything. “I bet you’re the only one in the world who thinks you

  have a pointy chin,” she said seriously. “You have a very beautiful

  face.”

  Claudia’s face turned a light shade of pink. “Thank you. I

  didn’t mean to go fishing for compliments. It’s just that growing

  up all I heard was how much I looked like my father. He’s a

  handsome man, but what girl wants to be handsome? Maybe if I

  had a goatee like his…and a little moustache.”

  Leo laughed and shook her head. “I can give you both of

  those if that’s what you really want.”

  “Now you’re scaring me.” She pointed to the next room.

  “What’s in there?”

  “Right, the tour. That was the parlor, this was the formal

  sitting room, and this in here”—she turned on the lights to her

  studio—“used to be the dining room. For obvious reasons it’s

  now my favorite room in the house.”

  Claudia walked to the center of the room and twirled

  slowly, studying the slate-gray backdrop, the modeling lamps,

  the reflector umbrellas and the camera tripod. A stylist chair sat

  before a mirror in the corner. “There’s hardly anything in here.”

  Leo looked around the room and shrugged. “I have different

  props and backdrops depending on who I’m shooting, but I

 

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