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“Nothing.”

He gave her a look of disgust.

“I told you, I am not drinking,” she said.

“Are we going to go through this all over again?”

She shook her head, closing her eyes.

“Carolyn?”

Silence.

“Carolyn, look at me. We were able to keep it quiet last time, but I don’t know if I can-”

“Tucker, just leave me alone,” she whispered.

Tucker was quiet. She hoped he had moved away. But then he said, “We’re leaving in fifteen minutes.”

She didn’t open her eyes until she heard the bedroom door close.

Finish your makeup. Get dressed. Go downstairs. Get in the car. Go on.

But the woman in the mirror didn’t want to move. The woman in the mirror was still back there in the dark, crouched in the weeds, watching, watching, watching.

Running to the cow pen and watching Sam slit Byrne’s throat. Then hiding behind the fence, clutching the gun but unable to bring it up and point it at Sam and do what needed to be done. That had been her plan, to go along with what Sam wanted, let her kill Byrne, and then just kill her and get away. That had been her plan from the moment she got the call from Bianca to come to the flower shop. Because she knew that everything had fallen apart and that she had to take control of the situation.

But then the cop in the yellow raincoat had appeared, and she watched in horror as Sam shot him. She didn’t know why the cop was there or what was happening. Then the other man had appeared, that black man who had been at her house, the one who had been asking all those questions all over the island. She had watched as he chased Sam into the dark.

She had heard the pop of a gun somewhere back in the woods, but she was too frozen to move. Then the black man emerged from the shadows, and she watched him walk into the headlight beams, face bleeding, gun at his side.

She knew Sam was dead. There was no one left to talk, no one left to betray her, no one left she needed to control. So as the moon emerged from the clouds, she used the light to find her way out to the asphalt road. She ran with burning lungs down the dark road to the cinder-block store with the name MARY LOU’S over the door.

Greg’s blue Camry was parked in shadows. It had all been set up before they got to the flower shop, because by that point in this whole mess, she couldn’t be sure what Sam was capable of doing. Greg said nothing when she got in his car, just put the gun under the seat and drove north on the deserted road.

They were ten miles east of Clewiston by the time they passed the first Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office cruiser going the opposite way, lights blazing, sirens wailing.

The next morning, Greg had brought her a copy of the Palm Beach Post. It was the front-page story, bumping the big news of the day-a train hitting a truck- down the page. It took two days for the Shiny Sheet to catch up, with a small story on the front page, leaving out most of the details. But there was a color photograph of Tink and Dickie Lyons taken years ago at the Cancer Ball.

Tink, poor Tink.

Carolyn had always understood she could never control Sam. But she was certain that once everything was over, once they got back to the island, she could bring Tink under her sway.

Poor, sad Tink.

But sometimes sacrifices had to be made.

Carolyn gathered up the last of her makeup, put it into its bag, rose slowly, and went to the bed. The Vuitton train case was open and she put in her makeup tote and snapped the case shut.

She went back to the dressing table and picked up the crystal bottle of perfume. She pulled off the stopper, closed her eyes, and took a drink. She opened her eyes and wiped the scotch from her lips. She put the stopper back and carefully set the bottle back in its place on the dressing table.

All she to do was act normal and just get away. That was all. Get away and hope that when Tucker realized his gun was missing, he would blame it on the servants, fire someone, and go back to just leaving her alone.

“Senator?”

She looked up. Greg stood at the door. The sight of him was strangely reassuring. His trips back and forth to the car with luggage had kicked up the cowlick in his hair.

“Your schedule is clear today for travel,” he said.

She nodded as she pulled on her suit jacket.

“Tomorrow, you have a ski lesson at ten, your sons arrive at noon, you have a phone meet at two P.M. with Governor Martinez, and then Mr. Denver’s cocktail party at eight.”

“Yes, thank you,” she said. “You can take that case now, please.”

Greg closed his appointment book and crossed the bedroom to pick up the case. But he seemed in no hurry to take it downstairs.

“Is there something else?” Carolyn asked.

“I just wanted you to know,” he said softly, “that I reserved an hour for us tonight at eleven.”

She turned to him slowly. “Excuse me?”

“Just one hour, Carolyn.” Greg gave her a small smile and walked out of the bedroom.

What had he meant-one hour? And why had he called her Carolyn?

The little bastard. How dare he make any assumptions?

She turned and looked to the perfume bottle, but she didn’t reach or it.

The hell with him.

Once she got away, away to the clean snow and air of Aspen, she could forget all this, get the drinking under control, get back to Washington, get her life back under control.

Voices… outside.

She went to the French doors and looked out but there was no one there except the pool boy skimming leaves.

Greg. It was Greg and another voice she didn’t recognize, coming from the front of the house. She went to the other window, which looked down on the driveway.

Through the palm fronds, she could just see the back of the Bentley. The trunk was open, several Vuitton bags still sitting out on the bricks. Then she caught a glimpse of Greg’s red hair in the sun, but she couldn’t see whom he was talking to.

Then the other person moved into her view.

It was the black private eye. He was talking to Greg, and Greg was shaking his head, holding up his hands.

Suddenly, the black man looked up, right at her window. He was wearing sunglasses so she couldn’t see his eyes, but she knew he had seen her. Greg looked up, too. Her heart began to hammer and she pulled in a deep breath. She couldn’t trust Greg; she had to go down there and take control.

Louis heard the front door open and looked beyond Greg’s shoulder.

“Looks like your boss has better manners than you do, Greg,” Louis said.

Greg spun toward the house just as Carolyn emerged. She came down the driveway to stand beside him at the back of the Bentley.

“Can I help you?” she asked.

“Your assistant here tells me you’re leaving,” Louis said.

“Yes, we always go to our home in Aspen for Christmas. It’s a family tradition.”

“So you’re not hanging around for the funeral today?” Louis asked.

“Funeral?”

“Tink Lyons.”

Carolyn didn’t blink. “I’m sure all her friends will be there.”

Greg edged closer to Carolyn’s side. “We have to get going, Senator, if you want to make your flight.”

Louis took off his sunglasses and stared at the guy, but Greg wouldn’t look him in the eye.

“I just got back from the hospital,” Louis said. “You were there, weren’t you, Greg?”

Greg stayed silent, but a flush of red began to creep up his neck. Carolyn’s face, Louis noted, remained a perfect mask, and for a second he felt a begrudging kind of respect. He had seen a lot of liars in his job, but she had it down to an art. A quote-some long-lost fragment from the Bible school his foster mother Francis had made him attend-flashed into his head. Something about liars and murderers having to suffer a second death.