“I’m sorry. I only just found out that he’d be accompanying me during all my outings.” I watched Miller look behind another painting. He’d been so normal last night. And now he was acting like a guard dog. Was he sniffing that vase for a bomb?
“All your outings?” Felix asked.
“There’s a whole list of rules about who I’m allowed to hang out with. Luckily you made the cut, because it doesn’t seem like Mr. Pruitt is ever going to let me hang out with Kennedy again. He has some grudge against people that aren’t in his zip code or something. Which is why I need to ask you a favor,” I said, lowering my voice.
“What do you need?”
“Can you distract Miller for me for a few minutes so I can make a run for it?” Actually, I wasn’t sure if I’d need Felix for this. Miller seemed plenty distracted all by himself. Seriously, what was he looking for?
Felix looked over at Miller and then back at me. “Where are you going to go? Why don’t you just stay here?”
“I’m supposed to be back for dinner with Mr. Pruitt tonight. Miller wouldn’t let me stay here, he’d drag me out of here when the time came. He already dragged me away from the funeral. I have to get away from him in order to pull this off. I’m going to go to Kennedy’s. I’m pretty sure Mr. Pruitt would never follow me there. He’s repulsed by it.”
“Doesn’t mean he won’t send Miller.”
Good point. “Then I’ll just…go somewhere else. Please, Felix, you have to help me. I can’t spend another night there.”
“Well you don’t have to make a run for it just yet. Come in and relax for a bit and we can strategize.”
He was right. I didn’t have to flee this second. Mr. Pruitt would be gone for hours. At least, I thought golf took hours. Whenever I saw it on TV, it certainly felt like I’d been watching for hours.
“I’ll let Kennedy know you’re here too.” Felix pulled out his phone and shot her a text. “Wait, you texted me.” He looked up at me. “Does that mean you got a phone?”
“Yeah. And a laptop. And a new wardrobe. And an Amex card for…something. I don’t know.”
He laughed. “I like your outfit.” He put his hand on my shoulder and gently ran it down to my elbow. “Your sweater is really soft.”
Miller cleared his throat. “Everything looks good here. Can we maybe choose one room to hang out in so I don’t have to do this all day?” His voice practically echoed. The last time I’d been to Felix’s there were students everywhere dancing and drinking. It was weird seeing it so empty. But empty was a lot better than haunted.
“Sure,” Felix said as he threw his arm around my shoulders. “Right this way.”
I was pretty sure Miller was glaring at us as Felix pulled me to the family room. Yeah, I could definitely feel Miller’s eyes burning a hole in the back of my head. I knew this was going to be awkward. Miller had insisted it wouldn’t be, but he was the one being weird. And I hadn’t even run away yet. At least he was the third wheel instead of me.
“Is this okay?” Felix asked.
“Yeah it’s…”
“It’ll take me a few minutes to make sure,” Miller said, cutting me off. “Just stand there for a second.” He lifted a couch cushion and inspected the zipper.
“Welcome to your new life,” Felix whispered.
I laughed. My life for the next few hours maybe. Because this? The weird precautions. The security detail. The clothes. None of it was me. “Is this normal?” I asked. “Do you have a security guard that goes into people’s houses and acts like this?”
“No, I have a driver. And a chef. And a maid. No security. But even if I did…this would be a bit extreme.”
Miller picked up a lamp and looked under it.
“Scratch that,” Felix said. “This is very extreme.”
It really was. “Do they have this many precautions with Isabella too?” I asked Miller.
He looked up from the magazines he was overturning on the coffee table. “I don’t know. I’m not on her security detail.”
“Does Mr. Pruitt have you do this with every room he walks in?”
“No.”
What? “So why are you doing it now?”
“Because he asked me to.”
“What does he think is going to happen to me?” I laughed.
Miller didn’t respond. He just kept examining pieces of furniture.