Chapter 1
Trudy Maxwell pushed her way through the crowded old toy store, fed up with Christmas shopping, Christmas carols, Christmas in general, and toy stores in particular. Especially this toy store. For the worst one in town, it had an awful lot of people in it. Probably only on Christmas Eve, she thought, and stopped a harried-looking teenager wearing an apron and a name tag, accidentally smacking him with her lone shopping bag as she caught his arm. âOh. Sorry. Listen, I need a Major MacGuffin.â
The kid pulled his arm away. âYou and everybody else, lady.â
âJust tell me where they are,â Trudy said, not caring she was being dissed by somebody who probably couldnât drive yet. Anything to get a homicidal doll that spit toxic waste.
âWhen we had them, they were in the back, row four, to the right. But those things have been gone since before Thanksgiving.â The kid shrugged. âYou shoulda tried eBay.â
âAnd I would have, if I hadnât just found out I needed it today,â Trudy said with savage cheerfulness. âSo, row four, to the right? Thank you.â
She threaded her way through the crowd, heading for the back of the store. Above her, Madonna cooed âSanta Baby,â the ancient store speakers making the carol to sex and greed sound a little tinny. Whatever had happened to âThe Little Drummer Boyâ? That had been annoying, too, but in a traditional way, like fruitcake. Sheâd be happy to hear a ârum-pa-pum-pumâ again, anything that didnât make Christmas sound like it was about getting stuff.
Especially since she was desperate to get some stuff.
The crowd thinned out as she got to the back of the store. Halfway down the last section of the fourth row, she found the dusty, splintered wood shelf marked with a card that said: Major MacGuffin, the Tough One Two. It was, of course, empty.
âDamn,â she said, and turned to look at the shelf next to it, hoping a careless stock boy might haveâ
Six feet two of broad-shouldered, dark-haired grave disappointment stood there, looking as startled as she was, and her treacherous heart lurched sideways at the sight.
âUh, merry Christmas, Trudy,â Nolan Mitchell said, clearly wishing he were somewhere else.
Yes, this makes my evening, she thought, and turned away.
âTrudy?â
âI donât talk to strangers,â Trudy said over her shoulder, and tried to ignore her pounding heart to concentrate on the lack of MacGuffins in front of her. Sheâd been polite and well behaved with Nolan Mitchell for three dates and heâd still dumped her, so the hell with him.
âLook, Iâm sorry I didnât callââ
âI really donât care,â Trudy said, keeping her back to him. âIn October, I cared. In November, I decided you were a thoughtless, inconsiderate loser. And in December, I forgot all about you.â
Madonna sang, âBeen an awful good girl,â and Trudy thought, Like I had a choice. The least he could have done was seduce her before he abandoned her.
âItâs not like I seduced and abandoned you,â he said, and when she turned and glared at him, he added, âOkay, wrong thing to say. I really am sorry I didnât call. Work got crazyââ
âYouâre a literature professor,â Trudy said. â Chinese literature. How can that get crazââ She shook her head. âNever mind. You didnât like me, you didnât call, I donât care.â She turned back to the shelf, concentrating on not concentrating on Nolan. So it was empty. That didnât necessarily mean there were no MacGuffins. Maybeâ
âOkay, Iâm the rat here,â Nolan said, with the gravelly good humor in his voice that had made her weaken and agree to go out the fourth time heâd asked her even though he was a lit professor, even though sheâd known
authors_sort
Pete McCarthy
Isabel Allende
Joan Elizabeth Lloyd
Iris Johansen
Joshua P. Simon
Tennessee Williams
Susan Elaine Mac Nicol
Penthouse International
Bob Mitchell