“We have to get to the airport.”
“You don’t want me to get them by myself?” he asks, getting up.
“No,” I say. “I want to give them a proper greeting.”
Bert purses his lips and slowly shakes his head, looking away from me and down toward the water.
We take the black Suburban to the private airport in Syracuse. The day is warm enough for Bert to put on the AC. The G-V is landing as we pull into the terminal, long and gleaming white with its super-size engines and its upturned wingtips. It streaks past, then taxis quickly around, meeting us out on the tarmac. The pilot hurries out and hands down my guests while one of the ground crew pulls the suitcases out of the plane’s cargo hold and places them in the back of my truck.
Rangle’s wife, Katie Vanderhorn, is first off in a cloud of perfume. I take her hand and kiss her cheek, then say hello to the former congressman himself. Allen Steffano and Dani Rangle step down to join us. Finally, the Villays appear in the cabin door. His curly blond hair has faded to the color of frozen butter over the last twenty years, but the odd tears in his pupils still give him that faraway look. He steps down and grips my hand firmly, showing his white teeth and introducing his wife, Christina, who is lean and creamy-skinned with lustrous black hair. She looks like a model from Victoria’s Secret and stands two inches taller than her little husband. Her big eyes are looking past me when she offers a limp hand. On her face is a small frown.
“Christina swore she’d never come back to Syracuse,” Villay says. “Hates it here.”
“I like the city,” she says, offering a small smile.
“Well, I’m honored that you’re willing to indulge me,” I say with a slight bow. “I think you’ll like it. My lake house has been completely remodeled. You’ll think you’re at the Four Seasons.”
“Until I go outside and smell some farmer spreading manure,” she says. “Oh, don’t mind me. I’m sorry. I’m almost as excited about this Supreme Court appointment as Dean.”
“We’re a long way from that,” Villay says. “But even the possibility was enough to get her to come.”
“You’re a lawyer as well, I understand?” I say to her.
“Bankruptcy,” she says. “Latham amp; Watkins.”
“Excellent. Well, this is Bert and we should get going.”
When we get off the interstate and onto the Thruway, it is Villay who says, “I thought we were going to Skaneateles.”
“There’s some construction on the bypass,” I say, “and it’s actually quicker to take the Thruway and get off at Weedsport.”
“I think that’s a lot longer,” Villay says, but he shrugs and closes his mouth and looks out the window.
The drive is pleasant enough. Rangle and Villay don’t try to hide the fact that they know of each other and there’s no tension between the two of them. If they were co-conspirators, their acting would be brilliant. For a moment, I am swamped with a sensation of uncertainty, as if my mind has been bent by prison, my reality imagined. But I remind myself that although they both are guilty of destroying me, neither knows about the other.
For his part, Bert is quiet. His eyes are blank and his face sags like a glob of dough. The only sign of his hatred for Villay is the way his fingers clench the steering wheel.
From Weedsport, we go south. When we crest the hill of State Street in Auburn, I can see the guard towers. My stomach twists and I can hear a sound like waterfalls in my ears. It isn’t until we are right alongside the looming walls that Rangle’s wife asks, “What is that thing?”
“Auburn Prison,” Villay says, before I can answer. “The worst of the worst. Mass murderers. Rapists. Maximum security.”
“It’s actually a landmark,” I say. “Bert, drive around the wall.”
Bert crosses the bridge where Lester lost his life. I look down into the Owasco Outlet at the water glinting in the sunlight. We go right on Route 5, separated from the south wall by the outlet. Everyone looks at the long gray canker rising up from the center of the town.
“Imagine,” I say, “we’re only seven miles from the most pristine and exclusive waterfront in the state.”
“The Hamptons are farther than that,” Rangle’s wife says.
I look in the back to see Rangle nodding with a smug smile, beaming at his wife’s comment.
“Of course,” I say.
We pass the powerhouse and turn right again on Washington Street where the road runs right smack beside the west wall.
“How high is it?” Allen asks, craning his neck.
“Forty feet,” I say.
“My God,” Villay’s young wife says in disgust, and no one speaks until we are on our way out of town.
When we get into the village of Skaneateles, Bert turns right on West Lake Street. Villay goes bolt upright and grabs the back of Bert’s seat. When I look back at him, his yellow eyes are wide and the skin on his tan face is pulled tight.
“Where are we going?” he asks.
“To the house,” I say.
His hand is on his young wife’s leg and she is clutching it as if he’s not squeezing her hard enough.
“But you’re on the east side,” he says, forcing a smile. “That’s what you said.”
“Oh, I don’t really know,” I say with a shrug, not taking my eyes off of him. “East, west, I don’t pay too much attention.”
“You said the sunsets. You get the sunsets. I said that and you said you did.”
“Did I?” I say, raising my eyebrows and glancing at Bert as if he might know. “I’m sorry. I didn’t know it mattered.”
“No,” he says, eyeing his wife. “I’m just…”
As his voice fades, tension fills the truck. No one speaks.
“Pretty homes,” Rangle’s wife says with a sigh. “I suppose if I’ve got to be here, this is the right street.”
“That place belonged to Teddy Roosevelt’s sister,” I say, pointing to the classical white monster on the hilltop between the lake and us.
We’re almost there now and I wonder if Villay will feel anything close to the shock I experienced on the night I was to be given the party nomination twenty years ago. Bert begins to slow and I hear Christina Villay suck in a mouthful of air as we turn into the two stone gateposts and start up the winding drive. The big yellow Second Empire house appears through the trees, and a small moan escapes Villay. I look back. His and his wife’s faces are frozen and their bodies have gone rigid.
“Are you all right, Christina?” I ask.
“I’m… I think carsick. The motion.”
Bert pulls to a stop in front of the house.
“Let’s get you out,” I say, jogging around to Villay’s side of the truck. I open the door and Villay slides out. I hold out my hand to his wife. But she isn’t moving.
“I’ll… just… sit here for a few minutes,” she says, staring straight ahead. Her creamy complexion has a green cast and her teeth are clenched.
“Honey, come on,” Villay says, wedging in beside me and taking her arm. “You’ll be all right.”
She snatches her arm free and glares at him. “You let me go!”
Dani gets out on the other side, looking away. She pushes the seat forward. Allen, Rangle, and his wife slip out of the truck and make their way to the front steps, where they pause to look back at the scene.
“She’ll be all right,” Villay says to me, wide-eyed. “She’s not feeling well. Please, you all go on in. I’ll stay with her for a minute.”
I shrug and turn to the others, pointing up the steps. Bert is unloading the luggage from the back.
“Come on,” I say, “I’ll show you to your rooms and you can change before lunch if you’d like. Bert will take care of the bags.”
“I’ll get mine,” Allen says. He hurries back, pulls his bag out of Bert’s hands, and takes Dani’s too.