Emergency Contact Read Online Lauren Layne

Categories Genre: Contemporary, Funny Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 80
Estimated words: 77389 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 387(@200wpm)___ 310(@250wpm)___ 258(@300wpm)
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Nope. Can’t have that. Not letting her sleep is half the reason I got into this mess in the first place. I nudge her shoulder. Nothing. Setting a hand on her arm, I give her a little shake, and she waves me off.

“Katherine,” I whisper. “Wake up.”

“Go away,” she mutters in her usual voice, but again, nobody even looks at her, much less scolds her. Clearly, this train is operating in an alternate universe in which everything is backward.

I’m the likable one.

She’s . . . Katherine.

I am not enjoying this role reversal.

I give her cheek a tiny flick gentle enough not to hurt, sharp enough to have her eyes flying open in outrage.

“I know you’re tired,” I say because I feel exhausted myself. “But we’ve got a few more hours before you can go to sleep.”

“Right,” she says wearily, lifting a hand toward her head and flinching when her fingers brush over the spot that clearly still hurts.

“You can sleep soon,” I whisper, feeling an unavoidable surge of sympathy. “I promise.”

She makes a quiet grumbling sound but nods.

I close my eyes for a second, then give her a sheepish smile. “I don’t suppose it would be fair if I slept?”

She spares me only a brief, withering glare, but a moment later I hear a weird puffing noise and look over to see Katherine blowing up that stupid inflatable pillow from the airplane.

She hands it over with a smile. “Here. I’ll wake you when we get to our stop.”

“Thanks,” I say in genuine surprise, and I kid you not, everyone on the train turns to glare at me.

I shake my head in bemusement and tuck the pillow around my neck. In what universe does everyone seem to prefer spiky Katherine to likable Tom?

An even more vexing realization is quick to follow:

I like Katherine’s spikes.

A lot.

I always did.

TWENTY

KATHERINE

December 23, 9:39 p.m.

“Hey, Flo-Jo. You think you could slow down a bit?” I call to Tom, who is hurtling himself through the Buffalo train station at what feels like a near run.

He gives me an incredulous look over his shoulder. “Flo-Jo? Did you seriously just compare me to a female track star from the eighties? And I told you not to wear your stupid high heels for once.”

“Okay, you know stilettos are an essential part of my personal brand. And it’s not the Jimmy Choos making it hard to keep up with you so much as the concussion.”

Tom slows his pace immediately.

“Thank you,” I say, shoving away the guilt at my teeny-tiny fib. The headache isn’t all that bad right now. The blister on my heel, on the other hand . . .

He grunts in response to my gratitude.

I look up at him as I fall into step beside his more manageable pace. “I don’t know why you’re so grumpy. Those nice people on the train could just not have been any more pleasant.”

“You don’t know why I’m grumpy?” he asks as we descend an escalator to the platform where we’ll catch our connecting train. “Really?”

“Can you believe that man on the train recognized me from the news?” I say, smiling at the memory. “I told you that Jacobsen case would put me on the map. Do you remember when I told you that?”

“Yeah, Katherine,” Tom says, his tone sharp as we step off the escalator again. “I remember. I remember that we were at dinner at Boulud. I was trying to tell you that we hadn’t seen each other for more than five minutes in two weeks because you were always working, but couldn’t fit it in around your brush-with-fame story. When I finally did manage to tell you what I was feeling, you asked the server for a box of tissues. For me.”

My smile falls off my face. I’ve been in a surprisingly good mood given the day I’ve had, but it definitely falters as I hear Tom’s version of that long-ago night.

I don’t remember it quite like that, but I also can’t claim that he’s wrong.

I’m sure I owe him an apology. Not just for that night. For a million nights, and that’s the crux of the problem. Not any one mistake, but the sheer quantity of them. If I open that can of worms, if I go looking into the well of wrongs on both our sides, I’m not sure either of us will ever climb out.

Instead, I force a smile back on my face. “I still can’t believe that guy asked for my autograph. I think that’s a first.”

Tom squints. “Is that what happened? Because the way I remember it, you pulled a wadded-up Starbucks napkin out of your purse, scribbled your name on it, and shoved it at him. He seemed visibly startled and a little grossed out.”

Usually Tom’s zippy little retorts fill me with a puzzling combination of annoyance and delight. This time, however, his mention of my purse causes a rush of soul-shattering panic.



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