Page 15 of The Atonement

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“I will be, once I leave. His company will only let him add me if I’m uninsured.”

“Good.” I tried to slow my breathing as my head throbbed. “Great. Okay, then.”

“Okay.” She stood, patting her legs. “I’ll, uh, I’ll see you next week, right? We can talk more.”

“Mhm.” I couldn’t say any more, couldn’t correct her. The stress coursing through me was making it difficult to catch my breath. Training a new teller was going to be hard enough, but training someone to do all of the head teller responsibilities would take weeks, if not months. I had no time at all if I was going to miss all of the next two weeks, but what choice did I have?

At one point, I’d summoned the strength to work through a literal murder investigation, but I couldn’t do that this time. My children needed me too badly.

I closed out my email and stood from my desk, picking up my purse and double-checking that the envelope of cash was still there.

I needed to take care of my children.

For now, the rest would have to wait.

CHAPTER EIGHT

PETER

Ichecked off a list of possibilities for where my wife might be. She was home now, that much was obvious, so the list of places I’d need to check was growing smaller.

I drove to Glennon and Seth’s first, though I didn’t truly believe she’d be naive enough to go there. But maybe… No doubt she still thought I was seeking her out in Florida, or on my way back up the same path she’d traveled.

Seth and Glennon’s was as empty as it had been for months. Ainsley’s car wasn’t in the bank parking lot, and the school secretary said the kids weren’t there.

The list was dwindling.

She had nowhere to go. Nowhere to run to.

No family she could count on.

Thanks to me, her only friends were now halfway across the country.

I was it.

She needed me.

And soon enough, I’d get her to admit that.

I’d checked the bank account that morning—the credit cards, too—but there were no new transactions. No hotel or restaurant charges. Wherever she was, she was lying low. I had to respect that.

But soon enough, I’d find her.

I was a bloodhound on her scent, and I’d run myself ragged until she was home with me. And she would be home with me. Once she’d calmed down. Once her fit had been thrown and her anger had subsided.

She needed me, maybe more than I needed her. I’d learned that recently, and now I was realizing she could use some reminding.

Luckily, I was up for the task, and there was just one place left on my list to check.

CHAPTER NINE

AINSLEY

With the cash I’d withdrawn in hand, I stopped by the store. I’d gone a little overboard, but the clothes we had in our bags were meant for Florida weather and I planned to take us somewhere much cooler next. I’d picked up a box of hair dye, too—a painful purchase both because I’d always loved my red hair and because I hated how damaging box dye was, but I didn’t have a choice. Back at Mom’s, I’d dye it dark and cut it to just below my chin. The fact that Peter had always loved my long hair was a sweet little bonus.

With new hair, I’d feel safer about moving through our town without being noticed. He’d never expect me to be so drastic. It would buy me time and security. At least until I managed to find him and decide my next move.

My phone buzzed in my pocket as I slammed the trunk of the car shut. I pulled it free as I pushed the cart into the corral. Seeing Mom’s name on my screen causedmy throat to tighten. I swiped my thumb across the screen and pressed it to my ear.