Maybe it fell off,” Bellamy said over the phone.
“How could it have just fallen off?” Kelly said. “Clasps don’t just come undone. Do they?”
“Sometimes.”
“Oh no.”
“Are you sure you didn’t take it off at the party? We were pretty out of it.”
“No,” Kelly said. “I didn’t take it off. I would never take it off.”
“Hey, relax. It’s just a necklace.”
“Not to me.”
“Huh?”
“Nothing. I’m just . . .” She exhaled, breath shaky. “It was my sister’s.”
“Oh, Kelly, I’m sorry.”
“She asked me to keep it. Right before she . . . I feel like I let her down.”
“You didn’t, okay? You were a great sister.”
“You don’t know that.”
“Kelly?”
“Yeah?”
“You are a great sister. No matter what stupid jewelry you’re wearing.”
She swallowed hard. “Thank you.”
“Listen. It’ll probably turn up. And if not, I’ll buy you a new one . . . Flora, keep your shirt on! I’m coming! Kelly, I’ve got to go to school, okay? The housekeeper’s totally screaming at me. I’ll call you when I get home.”
Kelly hung up. She was standing in Jimmy’s empty room. She stared at her reflection in the mirror—her tired eyes, the streak that Bellamy had put in her hair a week ago, now just a remnant, the platinum now just a slightly lighter shade of sand. Kelly touched the base of her throat, the spot where the diamonds used to be. “You’re gone,” she whispered. “I can’t talk to you anymore.”
Bellamy was wrong. She had to find the necklace.
Retracing her steps was hard to do without a car or any money, but there was a jar of quarters on Jimmy’s nightstand. Kelly poured a bunch of them into her hand, ran out of the house, caught the bus to Sunset and Gower, and ran the five blocks to Vee’s apartment building. The whole trip, she kept tapping her fingers against her bare neck, as though if she did that enough she might magically be able to bring them back, the two little diamonds. Catherine and me.
THE FRONT DOOR TO VEE’S CASTLE WAS LOCKED. KELLY HAD FORGOTTEN to call and tell him she was coming back and so she pounded on it, again and again with the side of her fist, hoping someone would hear. Finally, a little old lady came to the door. “You are a friend of the young actor’s,” she said.
“Yes,” said Kelly. “How did you know?”
“I opened the door for you last night.” She gave her a look—half amused/half disgusted. “You’re wearing the same outfit.”
“Oh. Um . . . Well . . . I uh . . . forgot something at the party . . .”
“That doesn’t change facts. Or, for that matter, your clothes.”
“Huh?” Kelly gave up. She headed up the stairs, fast as she could, rounding five, six, seven, eight flights. She knocked on the door. “Vee!” she called out. “I think I left something here!” Did it again, harder. “Vee!”
The door opened halfway. It took Kelly a few seconds to register that it wasn’t Vee standing there—hair mussed, oxford shirt buttoned wrong, half his chest exposed. It was Vee’s father. “Didn’t I just give you a ride home?”
“Um . . .” She tried not to look at his chest, the thick patch of hair at the center.
“Let me guess. You’re looking for Vincent.”
“Yeah.” She forced herself to smile. “I think I might have left something.”
“You ran up one flight too many.”
“Oh. I’m so sorry.”
“It’s fine, but Vincent’s not at his place anyway. He had a breakfast meeting with some TV people.” He smiled. “I know because I arranged it.”
Kelly closed her eyes, opened them again, breathing through her nose, that panicky feeling returning. “Mr. McFadden?”
“Yes?”
“You didn’t happen to find my necklace, did you? Last night or this morning? I . . . I think it might have fallen off at the party.”
“I didn’t see anything.”
“Are you sure?”
His blue eyes narrowed. “Tell me what it looks like so Vincent and I can keep our eyes out for it.”
She blinked at him. “It was the one I was wearing last night.”
“I didn’t notice.”
“Yes you did.”
“Excuse me?”
“You were staring at it the whole time I was talking to you.”
His smile dropped away. “What are you talking about?”
She cringed. Had she really said that out loud? “Sorry.”
“Are you all right?”
“I’m just . . . I really liked that necklace. It was very special to me . . .”
“Obviously,” he said.
“I guess . . . When we were talking . . . It seemed like you noticed it.”
“Any reason why you aren’t in school today?”
“I . . . uh . . . I’m on my way.”
His jaw tightened. His eyes went hard, and for a second, his face looked familiar in a way she couldn’t place. “Are you on drugs, Kelly?”
“No, sir.” Her gaze dropped. On his neck, she saw a long scratch—angry and red. She heard movement in the apartment behind him. Light footsteps. A female sigh. “The . . . the necklace was gold,” she said quickly. “A heart, with two little diamonds on it.”
“Okay,” he said.
“I just thought you might have . . .”
“I’ll let Vincent know you were here.”
“Thank you,” she said. “Bye.”
Kelly tore back down the stairs, face burning, footsteps landing hard. How could she have spoken to Vee’s father like that? What was wrong with her? It’s just a necklace. It isn’t Catherine. Catherine’s dead and she always will be, whether you find it or not.
Kelly made it down the final flight and through the lobby, apologizing in her head to John McFadden. As she pushed open the door, she tried not to think about the way he had looked at her, the coldness in his eyes. She thought of the fingernail scratch on his neck and the movement in his apartment and realized that on top of everything else, she’d interrupted him and a woman—probably that model, Cynthia Jones.
Great going.
She pushed open the front door and stepped out into the bright day and fished around in her pocket for more quarters. At least she had bus fare home.
What a dumb idea, coming here. She ventured one last look up at John McFadden’s apartment. Again she saw the female figure behind the sheer draperies, the arms stretching up like a dancer . . . Kelly kept watching. She pulled the draperies open, gazed out at the street below, and for a few seconds, Kelly got a clear look at her—John McFadden’s apartment guest. Her stomach dropped. She squeezed her eyes shut, as though they’d stopped working properly, and when she opened them again, she hoped and half-expected to see someone else. But there she was, peering out the window, then letting the drapes fall closed. Had she seen Kelly watching her?
It hadn’t been Cynthia Jones standing in John McFadden’s window, wearing a big T-shirt, nothing else. It had been the startle-eyed girl from the Mounds commercial. She couldn’t have been more than thirteen years old.
BACK AT HOME, KELLY CALLED VEE THREE TIMES BUT HUNG UP BEFORE the phone started ringing. She couldn’t talk to him, couldn’t talk to Bellamy either. She didn’t know what to say. Maybe she’d seen the girl wrong. Maybe it had been some kind of optical illusion created by reflections and the angle of the sun at that hour of day and her own panicky thoughts and it hadn’t been the Mounds girl at all in John McFadden’s window—just some skinny red-haired model who looked young but was actually grown up.
Maybe.
That had to be it. It would be too weird otherwise, and Kelly’s life was so very weird already. She thought of the promise Mom had asked her to make. “I don’t want you spending time with that girl,” she had said.
Would that have been such a bad thing? Without Bellamy she’d be friendless, yes. But she wouldn’t have an arrest record, wouldn’t have gotten suspended. She wouldn’t have ever done cocaine or pot or mushrooms or speed or downers or acid. She wouldn’t have learned how to shoot a gun and she wouldn’t be flunking out of school, she’d still be getting Cs. She wouldn’t have ever met Vee—perfect Vee, who had been weeping in her arms last night, Kelly couldn’t remember the reason, though she did know it had made her profoundly, immeasurably sad . . .
She heard the door opening, Jimmy coming in. “Kelly?” he said. “You awake?”
His voice was like a punch to her gut. She caught a glimpse of herself in her mirror—her bare neck—and she fell apart.
“Kelly? Are you crying?”
Jimmy knocked softly on her door. She answered it, tears rolling down her cheeks. She looked up into her dad’s tired, kind eyes. She hated herself for ever thinking John McFadden was a better father.
“What’s wrong?” Jimmy said.
She hugged him, crying into his chest for a long time before she was able to speak. “I’m so sorry, Dad,” she said.
“For what?”
“I . . . I . . .” I didn’t go to a girlfriend’s house last night. I went to a party and I got drunk and did drugs and met some horrible people and . . . She couldn’t say any of that—not because it would get her in trouble. Jimmy had no idea how to punish Kelly. Both of them knew that. She couldn’t say it because it would hurt him too much. “I lost the necklace,” she said.
Jimmy pulled away. He watched Kelly’s face. “That’s why you’re crying?”
“Yes.” She swatted at her eyes. He pulled a cloth handkerchief out of his pocket, handed it to her—her dad giving her a handkerchief—which made her cry more.
“Honey, it’s okay.”
“It’s not.”
“It is.”
“Get mad at me,” she said, her throat clenching up. “Please get mad at me. I need you to.”
“Listen,” he said. “You want the truth? I’m not the one who gave Catherine that necklace.”
She caught her breath, looked at him. “What?”
“I told you that whole story because I promised her I would. She made me swear that if anybody ever asked, the necklace was from me.”
“But . . . why?”
“It was from . . . a friend,” he said. “She didn’t want your mother to know. She didn’t want you to know either.”
“What friend?”
Jimmy shoved his hands in his pockets. “Please don’t ask me that.” Kelly watched Jimmy, his slumped shoulders, his fried-egg eyes, starting to well. “I’m no good at keeping secrets,” he said. “The few I have sometimes hurt worse than all my injuries put together.”
“Me too,” Kelly said.
“You’re too young to have secrets, honey,” he said. “By the time you’re my age, you’ll forget ’em anyway.”
Kelly thought about the girl in John McFadden’s window—a girl even younger than Catherine had been two years ago. She touched the spot on her neck where the diamonds should be, hoping what Jimmy said was true.
“Don’t worry about it,” he said. “You lose things. You survive. It’s what life’s about.”
He patted her on the shoulder, said good night, and headed off for his own room. Kelly kept looking in the mirror, thinking about lost things—necklaces and people and also those little parts of yourself you lose when you see things you shouldn’t—some of them more lost than others.