“Don’t let yourself end up like Chuck Bell. Run!”
“Ivy, please-”
A loud crack on the line stopped me cold. It sounded like a gunshot.
“Ivy?”
The line was dead. My heart was in my throat.
My God, Ivy!
41
MALLORY POURED HERSELF ANOTHER GLASS OF WINE, EMPTYING THE bottle. She needed a shoulder to lean on-even cry on a little-and she found it in her friend Andrea.
“Let’s open another,” said Andrea.
Mallory grabbed a key from a hook on the wall. “Here,” she said, sliding it down the bartop to Andrea. “Michael’s personal stash is locked up in the cellar.”
“No offense, but do you really want to drink the good stuff in your condition?”
“Yesh,” Mallory said, slurring. “And the bottles we don’t drink we can pour down the drain. Bottom’s up, Michael.”
Andrea walked inside the climate-controlled cellar behind the bar, came out much too soon to have made an intelligent choice, and placed her selection on the bar.
Mallory made a face. “Damn, girl. You picked the twenty-dollar bottle of Italian toilet water that Michael’s grandfather gave us for our first anniversary.”
Mallory started to get up, but the effects of too much wine rushed to her head. She lowered herself back onto the bar stool, suddenly guilt-ridden. “Sorry, Papa. I shouldn’t take this out on you.”
“You’re sloshed,” said Andrea.
“I had a few glasses before you got here.”
Andrea smiled as she came around the bar and cozied up. “Good. Now I get to hear all the secrets.”
“You want to know a big one?”
Andrea leaned in closer, her eyes eager. “How big?”
“Huge,” said Mallory. “Get this: I think Michael’s first wife is still alive.”
“Ivy what’s her name? I thought you said she was eaten by a shark.”
“I don’t think so. Not anymore.”
“Have you lost your marbles?”
“I’m totally serious,” said Mallory.
“Okay, I’ll bite, no pun intended. What makes you think Ivy has literally risen from the depths?”
Mallory attempted to cross her legs, and Andrea grabbed her just in time to keep her from falling off the stool. Mallory gathered herself, speaking with the forced precision of a drunk trying to sound sober.
“Do you have any idea what it feels like when your husband sleeps around?”
“I’ve never been married, but it can’t be good.”
“It’s horrible. When I caught Don-asshole number one-with his second girlfriend, I said, ‘Never again. I am never going to let a man make me feel like this again.’”
“But you said Michael wasn’t cheating on you.”
“He wasn’t. But I was getting that same horrible feeling. Like I wasn’t his one and only. That was when I started sleeping with Nathaniel.”
“What does that have to do with Ivy being alive?”
Mallory blinked hard, fighting through the alcohol to get back on track. “Ah, excellent question. I was paranoid that someone would find out about Nathaniel and tell Michael. So every night when Michael went to sleep, I crawled out of bed and checked his voice mails, his text messages, his e-mails-just to see if anyone snitched on me. Sure enough, he got one two weeks ago. A text.”
“He got a message you were cheating?”
“Yeah, but I deleted it. He never saw it.”
“What did it say?”
“Something like ‘Mallory is cheating on you,’ and then ‘beware the naked bears.’” She drank more wine, then continued. “I’ve never heard anyone call someone’s lover a ‘naked bear,’ have you?”
“No,” said Andrea. “Definitely not.”
“I Googled it, and all I found were old gay men with hairy bodies. Gross.”
Andrea’s glass was empty, so she took a sip from Mallory’s. “Focus, Maclass="underline" How does any of that make you think Ivy is alive?”
Mallory walked around the bar, hanging on to the rail as she came to Andrea’s side.
“Because it was signed ‘Just Between Us.’ And I happen to know that the song ‘Just Between Us’ had special meaning to Michael and Ivy.”
“You know what their song was?”
The way Andrea had said it made Mallory feel pathetic. People just didn’t understand. “You think I’m sick, don’t you?”
“No, not at all,” said Andrea.
“You’ve never seen Ivy’s picture. She was beautiful. Smart, too.”
“So are you, Mallory.”
“But I didn’t use my brain to build a successful career in Michael’s world. I quit teaching dance and spent all my energy on something much more difficult: trying to make him want me.” She shook her head. “What a mistake.”
“Don’t go there,” said Andrea. “You sound jealous of Ivy.”
“I wasn’t jealous. I just needed to understand. So I snooped through Michael’s stuff. I read every card and every letter Ivy ever sent him. That’s how I discovered the special meaning of ‘Just Between Us.’”
“So the message was signed ‘Just Between Us,’ and you knew it was from Ivy.”
“Mmm…no. At the time, I figured it was someone Michael was friends with when he and Ivy were together. Someone who didn’t want to get involved but who was trying to tell him that his new wife was no Ivy Layton. It just set me off.”
“What did you do?”
“I could have kept it to myself, bottled it up like I always do. But this time I was so pissed that I used it in a special birthday e-mail I sent him.”
“Used it how?”
Mallory did her best in her state to effect the posture of a vintage-1960s sex symbol. “Nathaniel filmed me singing like Marilyn Monroe.”
“How funny.”
“It wasn’t just a joke. In the subject line of the e-mail I wrote ‘Just Between Us.’”
The doorbell rang.
“I’ll get it,” said Mallory, but she had trouble rising from her bar stool. Andrea told her to stay put and answered it.
“Hey, Mallory?” Andrea called out from the foyer.
“Yeah?”
“It’s the police,” said Andrea, sounding worried. “They have a search warrant.”
42
JASON WALD WAS DIPPING INTO PLOUTUS INVESTMENTS’ PETTY CASH. The thick envelope atop the small, round cocktail table contained ten thousand dollars in hundred-dollar bills.
Boy toys like Nathaniel didn’t take credit cards.
The two men were in the lobby of the Plaza Hotel, seated at a table near the plate-glass window overlooking Grand Army Plaza, away from the marble stairway that led to a noisy nightclub on the second floor. For Wald’s money, the Plaza just wasn’t the same since the condo conversion, and he had agreed to meet there only because Nathaniel had “other business” upstairs: cheering up a new resident who had a slightly less-than-perfect view of Central Park from the multimillion-dollar suite that her Russian husband had foolishly bought for her, sight unseen.
Such punks Wald had to deal with-important work, to be sure, all of it totally underappreciated by his uncle Kyle. No nephew could fill the void of a lost son, especially when the old man had elevated him to sainthood in death. His uncle seemed to forget that he’d never even set foot in Marcus’ lower schools when the boy lived at home, never visited him at Andover when he went away in ninth grade, never took his son on a family vacation that wasn’t for all practical purposes a summer office for Ploutus in the Hamptons or the south of France.
“Does this payday come with a Wall Street bonus?” asked Nathaniel.
Wald knew he wasn’t joking. Nathaniel was cockier than a porn star with a foot-long tool-his previous job description-and more trouble than he was worth. Wald could have hired any number of handsome men to fool a rich, lonely Wall Street wife into thinking that her pleasure was this young stud’s reason for living. But there was no denying that Nathaniel had delivered the goods. He filmed Mallory’s “happy birthday” video, and it was Nathaniel who-without Mallory’s knowledge-embedded the spyware in the video before Mallory e-mailed it to her husband. The spyware monitored Michael’s keystrokes and yielded the passwords to his investment accounts. There were other ways to plant spyware, of course, but the beauty of this plan was that it hid the identity of the true spy and made the whole thing look like just another symptom of a failing marriage.