Two

There’s no sign of the paparazzi—I hope they’re still camped out at the airport waiting for me to come back out—but I leave the burqa on and drape the veil over one arm just in case I need it to slip out of the house later. I do have a few other disguises packed away, but if no one’s figured out this one yet, I might be able to pass as a Middle Eastern nanny or distant family member. Shrugging into my backpack, I scoop Dustin out of his car seat and settle him on my hip so that I can carry in a bag of camera gear.

My son’s huge brown eyes crane upward to take in the impressive house that was little more than a ruin the first time I saw it. “Bella Flora,” I say carefully and watch him consider the words. “You were in my tummy the first time you came here.”

“Buhfora,” he says solemnly, trying it on for size. Dustin started talking really early, but sometimes you have to focus to figure out what he’s saying. When his smile flashes in satisfaction he looks just like Daniel, but there’s a gentle happiness at the center of Dustin that I envy sometimes. And an occasional gravity that makes me think he understands a lot more than a one-year-old possibly could.

The kitchen door is unlocked and I wrangle it open, drop the gear on the floor, and manage to close the door with my foot. My mother is there puttering and organizing, which is not too surprising. If you look in the dictionary under the word mother, you’ll probably find a picture of mine. Hearing us, she turns and smiles. Dustin gives a little squeal of happiness. I know the feeling.

I hope I look like my mother does when I’m in my fifties. She complains about gravitational pull and all that, but she looks like a mother should, soft and warm and inviting and maybe just a little faded around the edges. It’s only in the last year and a half that I found out there’s a steel rod that runs right through her.

“There you are!” She hugs us both and takes Dustin out of my arms. I know my mother loves me, but ever since I gave birth I’m definitely coming in second. “Hello, little man,” she coos. “Would you like some juice?”

Dustin’s smile gets bigger. “Duce!”

“Sorry I didn’t get there,” she says. “Did you have any trouble getting a car?”

“No. Eet was not too hard.” I hold the veil up just beneath my eyes and bat my lashes at her. “Although I have been in theese country many years I am still working on my Eengleesh.”

“God, I hate that you have to disguise yourself just to be left in peace. Daniel Deranian has a lot to answer for.”

I shrug. As much as I’d like to blame everything on Daniel, I made my choices and I need to make the best of them. I’m learning how to navigate the circus, but that doesn’t mean I like it. It’s kind of like having a permanent skin condition. You don’t have to hide inside all the time. You can go out in the world with it, but you’re always aware of it. And it colors everything. Someday I probably won’t be tabloid-worthy, but I’ll always be the production assistant who got kicked off her very first feature film for having Daniel Deranian’s baby.

“Where is everybody?” I ask.

“Avery and Deirdre are in the family room discussing the right spot for the Christmas tree. It could take a while.”

Avery’s a trained architect and completely competent in construction because she grew up on her father’s construction sites; there would be no Do Over without her. She’s small and curvy with blond hair and blue eyes, which annoys the hell out of her and makes her all about trying to command respect. Her mother, Deirdre, left for a long stretch of Avery’s life to become an interior designer to the stars in Hollywood. My mother actually gave Deirdre mothering lessons while we were in South Beach, but Deirdre tends to pick and choose the parts that appeal to her.

“Nicole went out for a run,” my mother continues. “When she gets back we’re going to decorate the tree. Then we’ll have our traditional drinks out around the pool at sunset.”

“Sounds great. Where should I put our stuff?” I’m already halfway out the door toward the pool house when she says, “You and Dustin will bunk with me. I already set up the portable crib.”

I turn. “But Dad’s going to be here.”

My mother shrugs and hands Dustin the juice cup. “Oh, I figured he and Andrew would be more comfortable out in the pool house.” She doesn’t exactly meet my eyes when she says this.

This is weird. Except for the time my dad spent on the couch with the remote glued to his hand after he lost his job and all our money—and the time they were apart while she helped renovate Bella Flora and The Millicent down in Miami—my dad and mom have always slept together. I mean, I don’t know what they do in bed—that would be TMI—but they’ve always shared one. One of my earliest memories is racing into their bedroom and jumping between them on weekend mornings when I was little.

“That way I can help with Dustin if he wakes up at night. And Avery and Nicole won’t have to share a bathroom with your dad. Or vice versa.”

“Okay.” I guess after you’ve been married for more than a quarter of a century, sleeping apart isn’t exactly the end of the world. With a quick look outside to make sure nobody—especially nobody with a camera—is hanging around, I head back to the rental car to get the rest of our stuff, which I carry up to my mom’s room at the front of the house. Avery, Mom, and Nicole, who are the primary owners along with Chase Hardin, the hunky contractor who headed up the renovation and is now Avery’s main squeeze, each have a room. Deirdre, who somehow nabbed the master bedroom the day she arrived uninvited and still hasn’t given it up, has a huge suite all to herself.

I haul our stuff up the front stairs and I can’t help remembering the first time I saw them. The wood balustrade was scarred and damaged, the plaster walls were gouged and stained, and a Frankenstein monster labeled MALCOLM DYER was hanging over the banister in effigy. Of course, nobody knew then that Malcolm Dyer was Nicole’s brother. If my brother ever stole everything from me, I’d do more than help put him in jail. I’d make sure he was sleeping with the fishes or having birds peck out his eyeballs or some other fitting cinematic retribution.

I lean out the open bedroom window and look down the beach. Sunshine glints off the gulf and a stream of people walk near the water’s edge. Boats bob out in the distance and a few people are fishing off the pier. Down near the Don CeSar, someone’s parasailing, just dangling in the harness. It looks like a summer day out there, but if he’s smart, he’s wearing a wet suit.

By the time I get down to the salon that stretches across the back of the house, my mom has Dustin playing with a box of wood blocks and is mediating the tree placement. Avery and Deirdre stop arguing long enough to give me hugs. Avery’s practically a mirror image of her mother, though we’re all really careful not to point this out. They both have chests that are too big for the rest of them, but Avery, whose first network turned her into the Vanna White of the DIY set, tries to hide hers, while Deirdre is all about tasteful showcasing.

“Every time I disagree with her she rubs her arm like it still hurts,” Avery complains as she tightens the tree stand.

“I never said it hurt,” Deirdre replies, standing back to eye the tree, which as far as I’m concerned is in the perfect spot in the exact middle of the run of floor-to-ceiling windows. The view of the pool and the pass, where the bay and the gulf meet, is spectacular from here.

“No, but you’re forever reminding me that you took a bullet for me,” Avery says.

“I am not.” Deirdre turns to Mom and me. “Can I help it if it aches a little bit now and then?”

“Like when I don’t immediately do whatever she wants.”

“You never do what I want.” Deirdre rubs her arm where the bullet entered when she threw herself in front of Avery just as the gun went off down in South Beach. I hold on to the box I brought down with me.

Nicole Grant comes in through the French doors that open onto the loggia. She’s tall and willowy with deep red hair and great skin. She always runs in designer running clothes and she looks good even when she’s sweating. Her eyes are a sharp green that can cut right through you and any bullshit you might be slinging. I’m not sure how old she is—somewhere between forty and fifty, but I don’t know which end. She used to be a famous dating guru and A-list matchmaker until her brother stole everything she had in his three-hundred-million-dollar Ponzi scheme and the press got hold of the fact that they’re related. I guess her bullshit-ometer works better on strangers than family. Though come to think of it, it didn’t work all that well on Parker Amherst IV, the alleged matchmaking client in Miami who was looking for revenge on her brother and not, as Nikki thought, a wife. It was his bullet that landed in Deirdre’s arm. And ended Max Golden’s life.

Crap. Every time I think about Max my eyes get all wet. He might have been ninety but he had so much life left in him. And he did take the bullet that was intended for Dustin.

I open the box I brought down with me and pull out the menorah and candles I bought in Max’s honor. The menorah has candle holders shaped like comedy masks because Max and his wife Millie were once the George Burns and Gracie Allen of Miami Beach. I set it on the mantel. Just looking at it makes me smile.

“Are you thinking about converting?” Nicole asks when she notices the menorah and sees me opening the box of candles.

“No. I just thought we might light the candles tonight after the sun goes down,” I say.

“I’m pretty sure Hanukkah’s already over, sweetie. It’s not always at Christmas.” My mom says this gently like she does most things. All of us were attached to Max and The Millicent, his cool Nautical Art Deco home that we renovated for the first full season of Do Over. I wonder if they miss him as much as I do.

“Yeah. I know. But I want Dustin to know who Max was and how much Max cared about him.” Max had already been teaching Dustin about comedy and timing. “And, I don’t know, I just thought it would be a cool thing to do.”

“I’m in as long as I don’t have to eat potato pancakes,” Nikki says. “I’m still trying to get rid of the pounds I put on at the Giraldis’ Thanksgiving. I’m not used to celebrating all these food holidays.” Joe Giraldi’s the FBI agent who tried to use her to help track down her brother. How twisted is that? He’s completely hot for an older guy and she’s been living in Miami with him since we finished renovating The Millicent. They’ve got something going on; I just don’t know exactly what.

“If I spend another holiday with the Giraldis, I’m going to end up on The Biggest Loser.”

“How was it?” my mom asks.

“It was good,” Nikki says. “If you like eating massive amounts of food and fending off questions about your intentions. As if I’m going to somehow hurt Joe when he’s the one who carries a gun and tries to catch bad guys.” Her cheeks are all pink, and I don’t think it’s from running.

“Are we set?” My mother looks at the tree and then turns her steely-eyed mom gaze on Avery and Deirdre. They nod without looking at each other. “Good.” She hands out packages of tinsel and boxes of ornaments that I recognize from home. There are candy canes and long strings of popcorn just like we used to make when I was little. The box she hands me has the ornaments I made in kindergarten and elementary school.

“Come here, Dustin.” She smiles and reaches a box out toward my son. “These are yours.” His eyes light up and I watch her help him put them on the lowest branches; there’s a fire truck and a snowman and a palm tree that says PASS-A-GRILLE on it. My heart does a weird kind of thump when I realize that in a few years he’ll be bringing ornaments home from school. My mom brings out a pitcher of eggnog and some glasses and Dustin’s refilled sippy cup of juice. Somebody, I think it’s Nicole, puts on some holiday music. It’s way too warm for a fire in the fireplace, but we go to town on the tree. After a few cups of the eggnog, even Avery and Deirdre are harmonizing to the Christmas carols.

I can practically feel Bella Flora wrapping her arms around us, gathering us close, and telling us how much she’s going to miss us.