“I’m still not sure about the set list,” Barbie said. “I mean, I love the rap version of ‘O Jerusalem,’ but as an encore?”
“It’s pretty dope,” Ken said.
She smiled. “I love when you talk all gangsta.”
“Word.”
“But still. As an encore? I think it should be mid-set, don’t you?”
“We have four months until camp starts, and you want to figure this out now?”
“I like being organized. A place for everything and everything in its place.”
Ken grinned. “Must be that overdeveloped hippocampus of yours.”
“Ha-ha. But seriously, if we open with-”
Barbie stopped when she saw the Pierces’ front door open. A man came out. He wore a dark business suit and carried a backpack in one hand. His hair was thinning. He looked tired, his shoulders slumped. There was someone-a woman-at the door behind him. It might be his wife-hard to tell from this angle.
“He’s mad at her,” Ken said.
“How can you tell?”
“The body language.”
“You’re exaggerating.”
But just then the woman reached out for the man’s arm. The man pulled away, spun, and started down the path.
The woman shouted, “Wait, hold up a second.”
He ignored her. The woman stepped outside, into full view, so that Ken and Barbie could see her clearly now. That was when Barbie squeezed Ken’s hand and heard herself gasp out loud.
“Isn’t she…?”
Ken nodded. “Yes.”
“From last night at that law office?”
“Yes, I know.”
Silence. The man got into his car and tore down the street. The woman disappeared back into the house.
“She’s seen us,” Barbie said. “She could identify us.”
“I know.”
“We’re supposed to keep this contained.”
“We have no choice now,” Ken said.
“So how do you want to handle it?”
Ken thought about it a moment. “The husband,” he said.
“What about him?”
“They just had a fight. A neighbor probably witnessed it. Maybe we can pin what happens to her on him.”
Barbie nodded. It made sense.
A few minutes later, a teenage girl headed out the front door and got onto a school bus. A few minutes after that, a woman with two kids came up the walkway. The Pierces’ front door opened again. A boy who looked about ten or twelve kissed his mother good-bye and left.
Ken and Barbie waited until the street was clear.
“She’s alone now,” Barbie said.
Ken nodded, opening the car door. “Let’s get in position.”
“So why were you in Atlantic City?”
Dave’s words landed like a body blow. Megan stood there, stunned. Dave didn’t wait for an answer. He turned away. She snapped out of it and reached for his arm. “Dave?”
He pulled away and hurried down the path.
“Wait, hold up a second.”
He didn’t. She debated giving chase, but from behind her she heard Kaylie call, “Mom? Can I have lunch money?”
Dave was all the way down the path now. When he slipped into his car, Megan could feel her heart sink.
“Mom?”
Kaylie again. “Take a ten from my wallet. I want change.”
The car pulled out quickly and sped down the street with a tire squeal. The sound startled the Reale kids. Barbara and Anthony Reale both turned at the exact same moment and watched Dave shoot down the street with disapproving glares. So did Sondra Rinsky and her dogs.
“I only see a twenty,” Kaylie said. “Mom? Can I take that?”
Still reeling, Megan stepped back inside and closed the door.
“Mom?”
“Yes,” she said, her voice sounding far off in her own ears, “take the twenty. That should cover you for the rest of the week.” She headed back into the kitchen. Kaylie rushed out to catch the bus, leaving her dishes in the sink-as always. Megan wondered how many collective man-hours parents had wasted asking their children not to leave their dishes in the sink, to simply put them in the dishwasher, and wondered what sort of nation could have been built with said hours.
Jordan walked to school every morning with two friends, the parents rotating who made the walk with them. It was the Colins’ week. This arrangement had always driven Dave nuts. In his day, Dave would whine, you just walked to school with your friends-no helicopter parents necessary. “It’s three blocks away!” Dave often cried. “Let them have some independence.” But you just don’t do that anymore. Kids were under constant surveillance. It was easy to bemoan and criticize, but Megan still did it because the alternative was too horrible to contemplate.
How had Dave known about her being in Atlantic City?
She hadn’t used the E-ZPass. She hadn’t even used her credit card. So how did he know? And if he knew where she was, what else did he know?
Dread filled her chest. Once Jordan was out of the house, she called Dave’s cell phone. No answer. She called again. Still no reply. She knew that he was just ignoring her. His car had Bluetooth, and she had called it enough times to know that the cell service was fine for his entire drive. She called one more time. This time she waited until she got his voice mail.
“Call me,” she said. “Don’t be like this.”
She hung up. On one level, Megan realized that she just had to give him space, let him blow off steam, whatever. But another part of her didn’t like this at all. Dave knew that his wife hated the silent treatment. She tried his phone one more time. Nope, no answer. Terrific. So that was how he was going to play it. Anger started creeping in. Figured. He was all Mr. Understanding last night. He probably just wanted some. Men. In a sleazy nightclub or the comfort of a suburban mini-mansion, it didn’t really matter-men are the same. People are shocked when politicians or celebrities blow themselves up, but regular men do it too. It is a constant, and so maybe Dave was being nice to her because…
No, she wasn’t being fair.
She was the one who had vanished. She was the liar, after all.
So now what?
Megan started to clean up the kitchen-Dave might cook on occasion, but the job of cleaning always seemed to fall on her. She had her tennis group in an hour-doubles at the indoor Kasselton Tennis Club. She wanted more than anything to skip it, but you can’t play doubles with only three, and it was too late now to find a replacement. How bizarre. From the club called La Creme to the club called Kasselton Tennis-quite the leap.
She started up the stairs to change into her tennis whites. The club was old-world with a strict dress code-all players had to wear only white. Ridiculous, really. She thought about her mother-in-law, Agnes. Maybe after tennis she’d go over and see how she was doing. Agnes had been so agitated during Megan’s visit yesterday. Wow, was it only yesterday? It felt as though she hadn’t seen Agnes in a month.
She let herself think of Ray. The warmth started so she pushed it away with the important logistics: If Ray hadn’t killed Stewart Green, then what had happened that night?
Forget it, it didn’t matter anymore. It wasn’t her concern. She had to put it behind her. She took another step, as if to signify the distance that she was putting between herself and that horrible night, when the doorbell rang.
She stopped. No one just came to the door nowadays. People called or texted or e-mailed. No one just stopped by except maybe the FedEx and UPS guys but it was too early for them.
The doorbell sounded again, and Megan knew, just knew, that whoever was ringing that bell was going to tell her something horrible, that all her attempts at self-comfort were nonsense, that now that the past had found her again, it would not be so easy to shake.
The doorbell rang a third time. Whoever it was, he or she had no interest in patience or waiting.
Megan headed back down the stairs and reached for the doorknob.
23
The doorbell rang a fourth time. Megan looked out the window by the door, frowned, and opened it.