Chapter Forty-Nine

Jessie gripped the edge of the passenger seat as Philippe whipped his Lexus SUV into a parking space—too fast for the slippery conditions.

Under the half moon, the Capital Yacht Club didn’t look as dazzling as its name or as dubious as its reputation. More than several notorious legislators who lived aboard their boats here had been convicted of various crimes, including disorderly conduct, taking illegal gifts, and bribery.

Philippe came around the Lexus and opened her door. “This parking lot is a mess.” He took her hand, turned it over, and looked at her palm. “Just about healed.”

She nodded. “Almost like new. Maybe a little scar.” Nothing like the ones she had on the inside. She stepped out of the SUV and into a sea of dirty slush.

He took her arm and led her along a metal-mesh security fence to a locked gate. A rectangular white sign hung on the gate, plain except for the name of the club in small font and a giant, bright red D.

“Do you know about the D Dock curse?” he asked.

“Yes. How many of your infamous D Dock neighbors are under federal investigation, indicted, or doing time?”

He smiled wryly, shrugged, and unlocked the gate. “I lost count.”

Beyond the fence, houseboats, speedboats, and luxury yachts were battened against the winter, bobbing in the choppy water of the Washington Channel. Sharp-edged plates of ice floated on the surface, and the air was tinged with a briny scent.

Jessie shivered.

They made their way down D Dock, their footsteps sounding hollow on the pier’s wooden planks. Gusts of wind lashed at them, whipping in one direction, then another. Chimes clinked and gonged.

The marina was a maze of watercraft and decking, the nautical version of a cube farm. Jessie couldn’t imagine living cramped inside a boat, only yards from the neighbors—especially in the winter. But lights burned and shadows stirred in several boats along D Dock, and in the docks beyond.

She reconsidered when the J’aime L’eau came into full view. Philippe gestured proudly toward the sleek luxury yacht, moored at the end of the pier because it was too large to fit in an average slip. The yacht swayed in the murky waves.

“Wow,” she said, wide-eyed until a wind gust thrashed her hair across her face. She anchored it with her hand. “She’s beautiful.”

Philippe’s proud expression almost matched the one she’d seen every time he mentioned Liam. Jessie just couldn’t look at him the same way, knowing what she did about Elizabeth and Liam.

“The snow looks good on her, but I prefer the sun.” He stepped onto the boarding ramp, steadied his stance, and held his hand out to her.

“Permission to come aboard?” She playfully followed protocol, trying to hide her skittishness. A good gust or sudden swell could send her plunging into the icy channel.

He nodded. “Careful.”

After a moment’s hesitation, she took his hand. He gripped tightly and pulled her aboard behind him. They got their feet beneath them and walked along the gangway to the deck, stopping at a bank of tinted sliding-glass doors that spanned the width of the yacht.

Philippe unlocked the center door and slid it open. They stepped inside and he flipped on the lights.

Now Jessie understood how people could live aboard a boat. The J’aime L’eau could have been lifted straight off the pages of Architectural Digest. Streamlined teak furnishings, ivory upholstery, walls of windows with a view of the water shimmering under the moon. Across the channel, the lighted dome of the Jefferson Memorial glowed in the darkness.

“This is plain decadent,” she said as the yacht subtly tilted from side to side.

“Let me show you around.”

They took off their coats and he led her through the finely appointed rooms—a nursery for Liam, a chef’s kitchen. He saved the master cabin for last.

She stepped inside and turned away quickly.

“Are you all right?” He cupped his hand on her elbow.

“This is where Sam…seduced…” Jessie couldn’t even say the senators without thinking about last night with Talmont. She recognized the details of the room from the pictures. Art Deco wall sconces cast soft light on the king-sized bed, where pillows in sea-foam green, sky blue, and taupe were stacked several deep against an ivory suede headboard.

“You’re right,” Philippe said, his tone contrite.

“Can we go back to the main cabin?”

As he led her away from the bedroom, he said, “Sam thought the yacht was a perfect solution to the privacy problem she would’ve had if she’d conducted her business at a hotel.”

“Her business? As if what she did was an everyday method of lobbying.” Jessie sank onto an upholstered banquette in the living area.

“Theoretically, it is. Whether it’s sex or money, an ambassadorship or an appointment to the bench, transactions like that happen every day.” Across the room, he leaned against a built-in teak cabinet, his ankles crossed, a huge television behind him. “Just ask some of the guys from D Dock—like the one who kept a document on his yacht that prosecutors called the ‘bribe menu.”

Jessie shook her head. “Can an ethical person survive in this city? And accomplish anything good?” She didn’t expect answers. She already had them—had already lived them. “It makes sense that you would bring me here tonight,” she said.

“How so?”

“I seem to be coming full circle. Today I went back to the National Gallery of Art, where Sam’s memorial was. Now I’m aboard the yacht where she launched her personal Hope Campaign. The beginning of the end.”

“Getting some closure?”

Not until Nina calls. “Trying,” she said. “I still have questions.”

“About Sam’s death?”

A sustained gust of wind howled around the yacht.

“Do you think Ian accidentally killed her?” she asked. “That what he wrote in his suicide note was true?”

Philippe’s handsome features bunched into a grimace. “Yes. Ian had an unusual attachment to Sam. He always played it off like he was some kind of father figure to her, but I didn’t buy it.” The boat swayed. Philippe planted both feet on the floor and crossed his arms. “He took advantage of her, she died, and he was too much of a coward to face what he had done.”

Jessie imagined how angry Philippe would be if he knew Ian had been having an affair with Elizabeth, and if he knew Ian was the father of the son he thought was his. She’d let them sort out those secrets. But there was one she was willing to share.

“Ian’s semen wasn’t a match. He didn’t have the same blood type as the man Sam had sex with the night she died.”

Philippe squinted beneath lowered brows. “What?”

“The man Sam was with has a rare blood type. Ian’s was Type O, the most common.”

“You’re sure there wasn’t a mistake? A mix-up in the lab?”

She thought about Nina and her dedication to details. Jessie never doubted her. But Nina hadn’t been responsible for all of the testing, and Sam’s original tox report had been revised.

Could she have come on to Talmont based on false information?

“No,” she said, uncertain. “The lab tests were official.”

She was too rattled to tell him about Talmont, too worried there’d been a mistake.

Philippe pulled his phone from a clip on his belt and began typing with his thumbs. “Don’t be fooled, chérie. It’s all an illusion. Nothing’s official in Washington.” He looked up and smiled sorrowfully.

Her limbs felt heavy, weighed down by the gravity of her possible error in judgment. She had to keep hoping that Nina would call and that Talmont was a match.

“It was interesting to see your father with Helena after Ian died,” Philippe said. “Regardless of what happened in the past, it looks like they’re civil with each other now.” Numb to it all, Jessie didn’t care. The sway of the yacht lulled her deeper into apathy.

Outside, a man walked up D Dock. He cast a large, dark shadow, stiff against the wind.

Jessie’s phone vibrated and rang. She yanked it from her pocket and checked the screen, managing a sliver of hope when she saw Nina’s name. “Sorry,” she said. “I have to get this.” She raised the phone to her ear. “Hi.”

“Sorry it took so long.”

“Have you got the…” She stopped before she said too much.

“I hate to tell you this. Talmont’s blood is Type A. He’s not a match.”

Jessie’s mind reeled. From the corner of her eye, she saw movement out on the dock. “But—”

The window across from her shattered. Shards of glass rained on her, propelled by the rushing wind. Adrenaline shot through her veins. She dropped her phone and covered her face with her hands.

A clanking thud sent a tremor through the floor, and she scrambled away from the impact.

Between her and Philippe, a spark exploded into a raging fireball. Black smoke billowed from hellish orange flames. Jessie let out a shrill cry and leapt toward the sliding glass doors. Her nose stung with the smell of gasoline. The boat’s smoke alarms blared.

Heat surged against her as the fire spread quickly, spanning the width of the cabin. Clouds of thick smoke choked her and she tried to hold her breath.

“Jessie!”

She barely heard Philippe, but she couldn’t see him. “Get out,” he yelled, “onto the deck.”

“What about you?” She glanced behind her, beyond the doors. Smoke scorched her eyes.

Another clanking thud. A burst of fire engulfed most of the deck.

Frantic, she looked one way, then the other, encroaching walls of flames on both sides.

“Philippe?” she yelled.

No response.

She prayed that he’d escape through the front of the yacht. Her only choice was to go out the back.

Wind swept the flames across the deck, quickly consuming her path to escape. Jessie gasped for air and coughed. She grabbed the door handle and pulled hard.

It didn’t budge.

She gripped the handle with both hands and leveraged all of her weight. The door slid open a crack but more air swept in, fueling the blaze. She held her breath and tugged harder, making just enough space to squeeze through.

Out on the deck, she sucked in a smoke-tinged gulp of air. Pressing her back against the glass, she sidestepped to the port side of the yacht. Flames licked at her feet.

She reached the side and peered over into the icy, churning water.

Oh, God.

Her body shook. Her heartbeat thundered in her ears.

Fire or freezing water?

A hungry yellow flame leapt from the fire and ignited the hem of her coat, consuming the fabric fast.

Her skin stung, then seared.

Tears trailed down her face.

“Jessie, jump!” She could have sworn she heard Michael’s voice.

She closed her eyes and jumped.