“Oh, Jesus, Mom …” Kate gasped, latching onto her mother’s shoulders. They took a look at each other, then melted uncontrollably into each other’s arms.
“Kate …”Sharon squeezed her tightly, pressing her hair. “Oh, God, I can’t believe it’s you.”
Kate couldn’t help it. She just started to sob.
It was seeing her mother’s face, at last, at the end of this impossible, nerve-racking journey. Everything simply gave out. Emily and Justin crept from the shadows then, too, Em hugging Kate giddily, trying to keep it together. Justin couldn’t stop smiling.
Kate couldn’t believe she was actually seeing them. They couldn’t believe they were actually staring at her. Sharon pressed an index finger to her lips for everyone to keep their excitement down.
“How did you find us?” Em asked.
“It was you.” Kate embraced her. She told them about the Third Eye Blind e-mail and how she’d tracked the tour, how she’d been to three cities in the past three days, showing Em’s picture at all those squash clubs … never knowing if she was actually ever going to find them.
And now she was here.
“I don’t care how you found us.” Sharon clutched Kate closely. “I’m just so happy you did. Let me look at you.” She took a step back.
Kate swept the hair out of her eyes. “You had me sneaking around the back, and then I slid into the lake. I must look like a swamp creature.”
“No.” Sharon shook her head, eyes beaming, even in the dim light. “You look beautiful to me.”
“You all look beautiful, too.” Kate grinned. They hugged one another again.
Justin had grown to almost six feet, long and lanky, his hair still bushy. Emily had filled out like a young woman. Her hair was shoulder length, with a little streak of blond running through it that Kate thought looked pretty cool—and she had two small silver hoops in her left ear.
And Mom … It was dark, eight o’clock at night. She didn’t have a stitch of makeup on. She was wearing a light blue Fair Isle sweater and a corduroy skirt. Kate noticed a few crow’s-feet around her mouth and eyes that she couldn’t remember being there before.
But her eyes were sparkling and wide. There was a warming smile on her face.
Kate hugged her. “You look great, too, Mom.”
They threw a lot of questions at her. How was Tina doing? And Greg? Kate shook her head guiltily. “He doesn’t even know I’m here.”
Then there was a pause. They all looked at her, reality creeping back in.
“What are you doing here, Kate?” her mother asked numbly. “You know what a risk it is to be doing this now.”
“Have you heard from Dad?” Kate asked, nodding.
“No. They’re not telling us anything. We don’t even know if he’s alive or dead.”
“I think he’s alive, Mom. I found something. Something I have to show you.” She didn’t want to say everything, not in front of Justin and Em. “At first I thought they must be lying and covering something up. They broke into my apartment and bugged my phones.”
“Who, Kate?” Sharon asked, mystified.
“The WITSEC people. Cavetti. The FBI. But I found this photo, from a folder full of Dad’s things you left back at the house.” She started to reach inside her jacket. “It changes things, Mom. It changes everything.”
Her mother put a hand to her arm. “There are some things we have to talk about Kate. But not here.”
They heard some movement emanating from the house. The agent Kate had seen now stepped down from the back porch. He shone a flashlight broadly around the yard.
Pushing Kate back from the light, Sharon whispered, “You can’t be here, honey. I’ll meet you tomorrow. In the city. I’ll call you. But right now you need to go.”
“I’m not leaving,” Kate said, “not now.” She locked her arms around Em and Justin. “I don’t know when I’ll get to see everyone again.”
“You have to, Kate. We’ll call Cavetti. We’ll let him know you tracked us down, that you’re here. He’ll have to let you stay a few days. In the meantime I’ll come into town tomorrow. We’ll go over some things.”
Kate pulled Em and Justin against her, nodding reluctantly. “Okay.”
“Who’s out there?” one of the agents called. The beam of a flashlight came a little closer.
Sharon pushed Kate toward the boathouse door. “You’ve got to go!”
She touched her hand affectionately to Kate’s face. Then her eyes lit up. Gently, she lifted something from Kate’s neck.
“You’re wearing your pendant.”
“I never take it off,” Kate said. They hugged each other one last time, and then Kate jumped off the pier and slid down the embankment to the lake.
“Tomorrow I’ll tell you something about it,” her mother said.