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“But why—why would you mind if I looked into Lily’s death?” Phoebe asked. She took a breath, trying to calm herself.

“Because it just wasn’t any of your business. And then you still couldn’t stop, could you? You were out today, making more trouble.”

Today? Frantically she wondered what he was talking about. She hadn’t been out of the house—except for her trip to Rossely’s. And she hadn’t even had a chance to tell Glenda about that. But wait, she had told her, she suddenly realized. She’d left a message about it on Glenda’s answering machine.

“Do you mean my trip to Dr. Rossely’s?” Phoebe said. She was totally confused. She couldn’t understand why Mark would care about that.

“Very good, Phoebe,” Mark said. “Maybe you’re a little smarter than I give you credit for.”

“But what do you have to do with Rossely anyway?” My God, she suddenly realized, this might be about OxyContin. “You’re not taking drugs, are you?”

“Oh, is that what you think?” he snapped. “That I’m just some kind of junkie? Is that why you went there? To check up on me?”

“No, it had nothing at all to do with you,” Phoebe said. Don’t push any buttons, she warned herself. “I found out that members of the Sixes are going to him. I’m wondering if some of them might be addicted to drugs he’s giving them.” Hutch’s words echoed in her ears again: Eighty dollars a pill. “Or maybe—” she added, thinking out loud, “maybe they’re getting prescriptions and selling the pills. On the black market.” Was that the sixth circle, she suddenly wondered. Dealing drugs? “If Rossely’s helping these girls deal drugs . . . ?”

“Rossely?” Mark said disdainfully. “You think he’s in charge?”

He let out another exasperated sigh. “That’s so typical of you, Phoebe—and Glenda too. I might be standing in the room, but you always assume someone else is in charge.”

Then suddenly, she knew. “You’re involved with the Sixes, aren’t you?” she said. It can’t be true, she told herself and yet she knew now that it was. She was in even graver danger than she’d realized.

“Ahh, you’re finally catching on.”

“But why, Mark? What could they possibly offer you?”

“Let your imagination run wild for a change, Phoebe,” he said. “Or are you so used to spewing out the blabbering words of movie stars that you can’t?”

Thoughts ricocheted in Phoebe’s head. The fifth circle—seduce and exploit. The sense that Jen and Alexis both had that Blair was consulting with someone.

“Blair approached you, didn’t she?” Phoebe said. “You had an affair with her.”

“I hope you’re not going to go all indignant on me for it, Phoebe. I deserve a woman who respects me.”

“And did Blair cook up the drug scheme?”

“Blair? You think it was her idea? You love underestimating me.”

“Mark, please,” she said. He was becoming unhinged, but she had to keep him talking. Surely, at some point, people would pass by this part of campus, maybe even the campus police. “Whatever your reasons, you need to stop all this. If not for Glenda’s sake, then for Brandon’s. The Sixes are going to be exposed.”

“Oh, that’s right, you’re on your little mission, aren’t you? You just won’t let go of the past.”

“What do you mean the past?” Phoebe asked. She could feel something strange stirring in her, something beneath the fear.

“You’ve always had a hair up your ass about girls doing their thing. Your life would have been much less complicated if you’d just backed off years ago.”

“You mean Fortuna, don’t you?” Phoebe said, startled. “But Glenda said she’d never told you about Fortuna.”

“Of course she told me,” he said, cocking his head up. But Phoebe sensed he was lying.

“How do you really know about Fortuna?” Phoebe said. “Is there someone here, on campus, who was part of it?”

Mark said nothing. The gun jiggled slightly in his hand and Phoebe felt her knees buckle again. And then a thought rammed her brain, like an explosion.

“Omigod,” Phoebe said. “When you were at school—you knew about Fortuna. You knew what happened to me.”

Mark snickered. “Even back then, you were the girl who didn’t know when she should just leave things fucking alone. You were just always asking for trouble.”

The ground seemed to fall away beneath her.

“You were one of the boys, weren’t you?” Phoebe said, nearly choking over her words. “One of the boys who buried me in the crawl space.”

“Shut up, Phoebe,” Mark said. “Just shut the fuck up.”

She could see from his expression that she was right, though.

“Come on,” he said, tightening his grip on the gun and pointing it straight at her. “Like I said, you need to come with—”

And then there was a rustling off to their right.

“Mark, put the gun down,” someone shouted.

It was a woman’s voice, coming from near the trees. They both looked up in surprise as Glenda burst into the halo of light from the lamppost.

“Go away, Glenda,” Mark shouted. “What are you doing here?”

“You have to stop, Mark. If you kill Phoebe, what do you think that does to Brandon? Are you going to ruin his life, too?”

Mark began to flick the gun back and forth in his hand, like someone crazed. Suddenly he pointed it directly at his head.

“Mark, please no,” Glenda called.

He took two steps backward and lowered the gun.

“Just so you know,” he said hoarsely, “I was the one who called the police and told them where the crawl space was.”

Then he pulled back his arm and hurled the gun toward the baseball diamond. A second later he took off running into the dark.

34

AT JUST AFTER seven on Friday night, as Phoebe was standing on her porch locking the front door, she heard a car pull up and instinctively she spun around. It was Glenda. Phoebe quickly crossed the yard to greet her.

“Hey,” Phoebe said as Glenda stepped from the car. She was dressed in jeans and wearing almost zero makeup. Phoebe reached out and hugged Glenda with her good arm. “I’m so glad to see you.”

“Did I catch you coming or going?” Glenda asked.

“Going. I was headed down to Tony’s for dinner. Want to come?”

“I just never saw you as a Tony’s girl. But, no, thanks. I need to get home and start organizing. I just dropped by to say hi.”

“How was your trip? Phoebe asked. A week and a half ago, Glenda had resigned from the college and driven up to Boston with Brandon to visit former colleagues and figure out a strategy for herself.

“Okay,” Glenda said. “I thought of jumping off the Prudential building a couple of times, but I guess I’m just not that morose of a chick. At least I got some decent advice while I was there.”

“Are there people other than me who think you shouldn’t have resigned?”

“I appreciate you having my back, Fee, but at some point resigning became a foregone conclusion. Do you remember how I took off that day, saying I was going to see a donor? I didn’t want to lay too much on you at the time, but I actually drove to New York to talk to a lawyer about my situation. Even then he said that because of everything that had happened, I’d be lucky to keep my job, and when the truth about Mark came out, it was like I’d hit the third rail. Better to resign and avoid the extra trauma of being canned.”