Once upon a time there was a beautiful girl. She had a tall, willowy body, a bright smile, and the belief, strong and frighteningly certain, that she was the most beautiful woman in the world. As she got older, and time marched over her like an invading army, raping and pillaging the fresh skin and pouting lips, the girl lost many things: her husband, her career on the stage, and her ever-loving mind, but never her belief.
When her grandchildren, twin boys, were born, she had them marked with the symbol of her new life—the mask, the divided face—and vowed that no other woman would ever have their hearts. They were hers, body and soul.
This was true, for a time, but then one of the boys fell in love.
“You’re shitting me. The mayor’s daughter?”
“Yep.”
“She killed him over that?”
“Apparently he wanted to leave the carnie life behind and get a real job.”
“Yeah, right,” I snorted, “like her daddy would go for that: the princess and the carnie.”
“Don’t be cynical,” Marshall ordered, tapping my nose with a finger dripping champagne.
I sucked it, smiling as his eyes heated.
“So when he told her,” I continued, smiling at him and shrugging out of the straps of my top, “she shot him.”
He nodded and leaned over to place a wet kiss on my collarbone. I shivered.
“And then bathed him, washed the blood from his body, and ordered her other grandson to get rid of the evidence,” I said breathlessly as his kisses moved lower.
“Umm-hmm”—he nuzzled the slope of my breast—“but not before telling him to visit his brother’s girl. Visit her and convince her that the man she loved was really a complete bastard.”
“I guess he managed it,” I choked out. He was suckling one nipple through the pink silk of my camisole while rolling the other between his fingers.
He lifted his head, staring at the dark rose spot his mouth had left on the fabric. “Okay, I’ve told you the details. Now answer the question.”
“Could you run it by me one more time?”
“I’ll run something by you one more time,” he growled, and pounced on me.
“No!” I shouted, convulsing with laughter. “No tickling!”
“Then tell me,” he ordered, pinning my hands above my head, “or I’ll have to get the cuffs.”
I wiggled my hips under him and smiled my lazy half-smile.
“Promise?”
THE NIGHT AT the fair had taken on a stunning unreality in my mind—almost as if it happened to somebody else (maybe that strange girl I see in the mirror every morning), but it was nothing compared to the dreamworld I was floating in now.
“Are you sure I look okay?” I asked Sara, turning to face her.
“You know you look beautiful, stop asking.”
“But do I look like me? Like the Debbie you used to know?”
“No, actually.”
“No?” I said, turning back to the mirror.
She hugged me from behind, careful not to wrinkle my gown. “You look like beauty itself.”
“Oh,” I said, tearing up, “that’s sweet.”
“That’s me, sweet as honey. Now let’s get your ass down that aisle so we can get on to the reception. I want first pick of the groomsmen.”
I linked arms with her and headed slowly for the door and the long hallway where my sister and the rest of the bridesmaids were waiting for Sara to lead them down the aisle. My mother was there, too, undoubtedly wringing her hands and crying and smiling all at the same time.
I stopped Sara in the doorway and smoothed her nametag. I’d had them printed up for everyone in the wedding and most of the guests. Tacky, but effective.
“Just so you know,” I said casually, “all the names of the single cops are printed in blue foil, the married ones are in black. I’ll let you decide which ones you go after.”
She smiled. “So I have my pick of them all, huh?”
I nodded and started walking again, knowing that at any minute I would take the hand of my detective and promise to love, honor, and cherish.
“Just don’t touch the one in the gold. He’s all mine.”