TWO
Vaughn was still tired. Normally an early-morning run and an hour or two at the boxing gym left him wide awake, ready for the day. But not today. This Monday, his lower back ached and a vague sense of anxiety plagued him, clouding his mind and causing him to drive right past the entrance to his apartment building. He made an illegal u-turn on Meadow and swung into the gated lot, cursing his lack of focus.
He parked, jammed the BMW’s manual transmission into neutral, and sat back against the seat. Problem was, he couldn’t say what, exactly, was bothering him. The last months had been good to him and Jamie. He and Mia were still together, if you could call what they had “together.” His brother was gainfully employed by the police and he’d recently received his certification as an ethical hacker. Jamie even agreed to leave the apartment on occasion for purely social reasons, not seeming to mind as much the machines and contraptions that had to travel with him in the handicapped-equipped van. Actually, if Vaughn was honest with himself—and since the drug deal gone bad more than a decade ago that left his identical twin paralyzed and both of their lives shattered, Vaughn tried real hard to always be honest—Jamie seemed downright happy.
So then what the hell was eating at him?
Even things at First Impressions had calmed down since the Benini crisis. His boss seemed content for the first time since he’d met her. Although she and Jason weren’t officially living together, Jason was there most days—and nights—and Allison was focused on work. Allison’s second how-to book, Underneath It All, the sequel to her bestseller, From the Outside In, was due out in a few months. And they had more clients than they could handle at the moment.
All good stuff.
So why the anxiety? Vaughn shook his head, grabbed his gym bag, and pushed open the car door. He’d learned to trust this sense of restlessness, this heightened intuition, since he was a young kid in juvenile detention, but now maybe he’d crossed some line and was making shit up in his head. Hadn’t the Vaughn men been known to do such things?
His father sure had.
Inside the apartment building, Vaughn jogged the three flights of stairs to his apartment, unlocked the door and headed down the hall to check on Jamie. It was only seven in the morning, and he didn’t want to awaken his brother or Jamie’s nurse, Angela. Jamie had two primary caretakers besides him: Mrs. T, a sweet older woman who cooked for them and shared Jamie’s love of detective novels, and Angela, a younger nurse with a radiant smile and glossy black hair. They both took good care of Jamie. They both slept over whenever it was their shift.
Quietly, Vaughn dropped his duffle bag on his own bed. He passed the closed door to the guest room where Angela would be sleeping and gently pushed open the door to Jamie’s room, expecting to see his brother dozing quietly, the respirator humming like unwanted white noise. Jamie was asleep. But he wasn’t alone. Snuggled next to him, her head on his shoulder, her lithe body wrapped around his brother’s skeletal contours, was Angela. Her eyes were closed, her hair fanned across Jamie’s chest, and her right hand cupped his brother’s shoulder in a gesture much more intimate than that of nurse and patient. They both looked serene.
Heart pounding, Vaughn shut the door. He still didn’t know the root of his anxiety, but now he knew the reason for Jamie’s happiness. His brother was in love.
The Fairweather house was a modern abstraction of the American farmhouse. It was situated on two acres of golf-course emerald lawn and surrounded by no-muss shrubs and strategically placed ornamental grasses. The home’s beige exterior matched the beige exterior of every other house in the neighborhood. A former farm, the development, Lofty Acres, was situated on the highest spot for miles around. Allison had a clear view of a sprawling strip mall in one direction and the Pennsylvania Turnpike in another.
She turned her attention to the house in front of her. The two cars in the driveway, an Escalade and a BMW sedan, said someone was home. The car seat in the Escalade said Leah was likely one of them. Allison took a deep breath. She opened the door to her Volvo and stepped out into the frigid morning air. She’d fought with herself over making this trip, but a bitter mix of curiosity and guilt convinced her she needed some answers. Had she ever really had closure with Scott? She didn’t think so. Certainly not three weeks ago when she’d seen him downtown. And now this.
Allison paused on the front porch, unable to knock. Maybe it was the wreath of pink and peach dried flowers on the front door. Maybe it was the baby swing tucked next to the white wicker chairs on the small front porch. When she’d known Scott, he’d lived in a townhouse. After that, she’d heard that he and Leah moved to the city, had purchased a half million dollar rehab in a trendy neighborhood. From hipster to suburbanite? The thought made her wonder about the years that had passed. Was she wrong to come here? She felt like she was breaking a unspoken truce. Only she didn’t know whether the truce was with the Fairweathers…or herself.
She forced her arm up, her fist to clench. Before she could knock, the front door swung open and she came face-to-face with Leah Fairweather. Or at least a shell of the Leah Fairweather Allison remembered. This Leah had aged. The long white-blond hair was now a yellowed bob that lay in an unwashed circle around her head. Her face, once pretty in a plain, haughty way, was lined. Her features looked pinched and tired. A loose-fitting gray sweater hung limply down sloping, hunched shoulders. The eyes that met Allison’s, once full of intellectual arrogance and unabashed hatred, flashed from surprise to anger to a sad resignation that told Allison coming here had been a mistake. But it was too late to turn away now.
Allison took a reflexive step back, pulling her coat tighter around her torso. She said, “We should talk.”
“I don’t think that’s a good idea—”
“About your call the other night, Leah. I’m sorry. About what happened to Scott.”
Leah glanced behind her. She frowned, but opened the door wider so Allison could come inside. “My sister is helping me. The police just left. This is the third time they’ve been here.” She sighed. “Let’s go in the study. We can be alone.”
Leah turned and Allison followed. The house was gloomy, the lights off and window shades drawn. A house in mourning. Aside from the gloom, though, the house was the epitome of the American suburban dream house. New construction, vaulted entryway, hardwood floors, Persian area rugs. Someone—Leah? A decorator?—had once taken care to fill the home with high-end furniture and designer touches, but now the tired edges said no one had cared in quite some time.
A baby cried and Allison saw Leah’s shoulders tense. She didn’t stop, though, and instead opened a set of glass French doors, and then closed them furtively after Allison entered the room.
Unlike the rest of the house, the office was bright and orderly, despite what Allison assumed had been a sweep by the police. Vivaldi’s “Four Seasons” played from speakers that sat on a mahogany bookshelf otherwise lined with business treatises. A massive mahogany desk sat against one wall, its top clear of clutter. A leather swivel chair had been tucked under the desk, and two armchairs, their cushions upholstered in navy blue and ecru stripes, a small mahogany coffee table between them, took up the empty wall of the office. It was an interior room with no windows. If there had been a computer on the desk, it was gone now, likely taken by the police. Papers and envelopes sat on a credenza, arranged in tidy piles.
Leah stood by the desk, looking unsure of herself. Finally, she sat in one of the armchairs and offered the other to Allison.
“I shouldn’t have called you.” Leah glanced down at hands clasped firmly together in her lap as though they belonged to someone else. In fact, her whole persona gave the air of someone in a trance-like state. Shock, Allison knew. After four years of graduate school in psychology, she was glad she remembered something. Leah said, “You shouldn’t have come.”
“You sounded so upset, Leah. I wanted to reassure you. And I want to understand what happened, why my name was in Scott’s calendar.”
“Don’t be so naïve, Allison. Isn’t that obvious? He still loved you.” Allison heard the anger nipping at the heels of Leah’s grief. To be deceived by a dead man, when there can no longer be answers? That seemed to Allison the ultimate betrayal. Even if it wasn’t true, Leah believed it was. Sometimes fantasy was more damaging than the truth.
Allison said gently, “Leah, Scott was not in love with me. I have no idea why my name was in his calendar. Truly, I don’t.” When the other woman didn’t respond, Allison asked, “What happened to Scott? The papers made it sound like he was involved in something…illegal.”
Allison waited for a response. She felt uncomfortable in this room. The scent of Scott’s aftershave lingered, the same one he’d worn so long ago. Or maybe she was imagining it. Allison tried to picture him here, working at the austere desk, sorting through these papers, but couldn’t. The room seemed barren: no family photographs, no memorabilia. Another casualty of the police investigation, or did Scott prefer the antiseptic feel of the bare office, clear of sentiment? If so, what did that say about the man he’d become?
“I don’t know. I don’t know anything anymore,” Leah said finally. “Scott was found on a street off Broad, in North Philly. Two gunshot wounds to the head. Money and wallet gone. It was early in the morning.”
“Did anyone see it happen?”
“An older woman out walking her dog claimed she saw a group of kids running down the street sometime after Scott was killed.”
“But she didn’t witness anything more than that?”
Leah shook her head. “Not that I know of.”
Allison wondered whether the older woman would talk, even if she had seen it happen. Witnesses to murder didn’t always fare well, especially if it had been a drug-related murder. Or if a gang was involved. “Who found him, Leah?”
Leah twisted the sleeves of her sweater around her fingers. “Teenagers. A group of them.”
“How old?”
Leah looked up. “The cops didn’t say. Does it matter?”
“I don’t know,” Allison said. But she thought it did. Older teenagers made it seem more likely that they were the perpetrators rather than a random group of passersby.
Leah looked toward the desk. Her hands were now fully entwined in the gray wool of her sweater, and her fingertips kneaded the inside of the cloth. “Scott ran every day. Avoided red meat. Flossed.” She shook her head, and a tear escaped. She untangled her hands long enough to wipe it away. “Why would he want drugs? Why?”
Allison didn’t know why. The Scott she knew had been fit and athletic, a six-foot-four bastion of clean living. Could the stress of his job, or something in his personal life, have pushed him to recklessness? She reminded herself that he’d lied to her and cheated on his fiancé. Risk-taking behaviors. If his desire for risk had grown, she supposed anything was possible.
“Can I see the appointment book, Leah?”
“The police have it.”
Allison thought. “Is it possible he had an appointment with another Allison?”
“Hardly.” Abruptly, Leah stood and left the room. She came back a minute later with a sheaf of papers in her hand. She flipped through them, and then pulled one out and handed it to Allison.
It was a photocopy of Scott’s daily calendar. Indeed, the words “Allison Campbell” had been scribbled in the margin in Scott’s tight, slanted printing.
Allison shook her head. “I swear to you, Leah. We had nothing arranged for Saturday night. For any night.”
But Leah refused to back down. “Then why are you in his appointment book?”
Allison didn’t know why, and she said as much. She thought of her chance meeting with Scott a few weeks before. The way he looked at her. They’d both been at Thirtieth Street Station, downtown. She’d been in line to board an Amtrak train to New York City. He’d been rushing through the concourse, toward her. He’d mouthed something she didn’t understand. Still hurt, still angry, and wondering what those feelings meant all these years later, Allison had descended the steps to the waiting Acela. Security had blocked Scott’s path. At the time, Allison assumed it was a chance encounter, that he’d seen her across the great hall. Had it been more than that? Had Scott Fairweather been trying to tell her something?
Suddenly the Vivaldi was too much.
Allison was rising to leave when the French doors opened and another woman walked in. She was the spitting image of Leah that day Leah had stormed into Scott’s townhouse and found Allison and Scott in the dining room. A younger, prettier, fresher version of the widow standing before her now. It was déjà vu. Allison’s stomach tightened.
“Someone wants Mommy.”
Someone was the infant in this other woman’s arms. Chubby. Tow-headed. Adorable. The little girl stared wide-eyed at Allison.
The woman said, “I’m Leah’s sister, Heather. And you are?”
But Allison was no longer listening. Vivaldi’s violins rang out, a melody echoed by the deeper tones of cellos. Allison’s chest felt heavy. To Leah, she muttered, “I’m sorry to have bothered you.”
Leah opened her mouth to speak, but Allison didn’t wait to hear what she had to say. She left that house quickly, more confused now than she’d been when she arrived.
Vaughn showered quickly, changed and drove to First Impressions. By the time he arrived at the office, he saw Allison’s Volvo in the parking lot, next to a pearl white Cadillac Seville. He recognized that car. Midge Majors.
Inside, he walked past the client room, trying hard not to listen to Midge’s high-pitched voice going on about something and pulled on the door to his office, leaving it open just a crack. There was a stack of mail on his desk and he began sorting through it, filing away bills, fan letters and the occasional circular. He came to a 6” x 9” brown envelope clasped shut and then taped. Someone had typed “Allison Campbell” in black blocky letters across the front. The envelope was smudged and dirty, with two square indentations, as though it had been rescued from beneath a heavy chair or caught in a door. Probably some hand-delivered fan mail. Vaughn figured the cleaning crew had left it on his desk. But where had they found it?
Before he could give it another thought, he heard Allison calling for him. She opened the door to his office, gave him a quick, quizzical look—it was unusual for his door to be closed—and then pointed to the woman standing behind her. Midge Majors was dressed in a powder blue button down dress and matching heels. A small black hat perched on her ebony-dyed hair, and circles of red rouge graced the sagging skin of her cheeks. There was a twinkle in Midge’s eyes, though, a mischievousness that had to be the cause of the amusement on Allison’s face.
“Tell him, Midge,” Allison said. “He’ll give you an honest opinion.”
“Tell me what?”
Midge cleared her throat. “Sexy seniors.”
“Sexy what?” Vaughn looked from Allison to Midge and back again. What were they up to now?
“Sexy seniors,” Midge repeated.
“It’s Midge’s new group idea. The next phase for some participants in the recently divorced group.”
Midge nodded with such vigor that her cap nearly flew off her head. “You know, for those of us over sixty who are ready to get back in the dating pool. We can help each other. Seniors have some special issues in this area, and it would be good to talk about them. Learn, you know…techniques.”
Her face flushed beneath the garish rouge. Vaughn swallowed. It was nowhere near Valentine’s Day, but already everyone was thinking about love, love, love. He smiled and nodded, because that was what Midge wanted. These groups of Allison’s were always a hit, but he didn’t know how she’d find time to squeeze in another.
“Sexy seniors.” He made a note on the pad on his desk. “I’ll set it up and include an invitation in the next client newsletter.”
Midge clapped. “So you like the idea?”
Vaughn smiled again. He saw Allison staring at him and shifted his eyes toward the window. “Midge, what’s not to like?” he said a little too heartily. “Sexy seniors. You may have given Allison a new book idea.”
Thirty minutes later, Midge was gone and Allison was standing before Vaughn while he signed checks at his desk.
“You okay?” she asked.
She was letting her blonde hair grow, and it fell in soft waves around her face. He noticed a few crow’s feet around her eyes, a crack in her armor and a sign that neither was as young as they used to be. He felt a sudden and protective surge of affection toward his boss. She was as lovely as the day he’d met her.
“Vaughn?”
Vaughn sighed. “It’s Jamie.” He recounted the scene he witnessed at his apartment.
Allison sat on the edge of his desk.
“Are you sure she hadn’t simply fallen asleep while she was in there with him? They could have been watching television or something equally as innocent and just dozed off.”
“She was in her pajamas, Allison, and she was holding him. Not like a nurse or a sister. Like a lover.” The lover his brother could never have, Vaughn thought. And with that he knew why he felt so unsettled.
As though reading his mind, Allison’s face softened. She said, “Hey, there are many ways to be someone’s partner. Sex, in the typical manner, isn’t the only way to be intimate, Vaughn. Just because…well, just because not everything works doesn’t mean he can’t satisfy a woman.”
Vaughn was sure Allison was right, but he didn’t want to see his brother get hurt.
Remembering the odd brown package, and grateful for a change in topic, Vaughn opened his top drawer and pulled the envelope from inside. “This was mixed in with yesterday’s mail when I arrived this morning.”
Allison looked alarmed. She snatched the envelope from his hand with a too-casual “cool” and stood to leave.
“Aren’t you going to open it?”
Allison shrugged. “Later. It’s probably just something from one of the group members. They’re always leaving me articles and recipes.”
Recipes? Vaughn raised his eyebrows, glad Allison didn’t see the expression. She was already out the door, that envelope gripped in her hand. His boss needed recipes like he needed a bra. She rarely cooked—Jason did that. And when she did cook, everyone was grateful that she did it so infrequently. So either Allison had caught an unlikely case of the Becky Home-eckies or she was lying. Vaughn, who was not generally a betting man, would wager on the latter.