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But then on her desk, a scrawled note from someone, almost illegible, the words tumbling to the edge of the page.

Meeting. Mr. B’s office. NOW. Hurry.

Now Ella stood behind Collins Munson, trying to make herself invisible. A dozen staffers were crowded into the ornate room, maybe more, so maybe no one noticed when she came in. She pressed her back against a lofty bookshelf, feeling the spines of the leather volumes against hers.

“As you might be aware, the police visited us at the Brannigan this morning,” Brannigan continued.

Ella felt the blood drain from her face, she really did, and her knees went so jelly she almost fell against a big upholstered chair. Catching herself, she knocked into Collins Munson’s navy blazer and pointy elbows.

“Sorry,” she whispered. Mr. Munson glared down at her, frowning even more than usual behind his horned-rims before turning his attention back to the front of the room.

“It is with much sadness that I tell you…” Brannigan paused, looked at the floor, then looked up at them. “… the police informed me that sometime last night, our dear Lillian Finch passed away.”

Oh sweet mother of… What could have happened? She couldn’t breathe. She couldn’t. Maybe this was her payback. Maybe God telling her she should not have interfered in what was not her business. Ella felt the fear and the guilt creep up the back of her neck and tighten her throat.

Ms. Finch was dead? Ella felt the scream, threatening, but knew she had to stay silent, had to think. Not now, she thought. Hail Mary, full of grace…

“I don’t have many answers for you, my dear colleagues, but if you have any questions,” Brannigan finished, “I shall try to answer.”

Yes, I have questions, Ella yearned to say. Why had Ms. Finch made the Call to the wrong woman? Did she know what she’d done? But now was not the time to ask. Maybe that time would never come.

Collins Munson cleared his throat. Ella looked up at him. So did everyone else. Munson, who “had the keys” as Lillian always put it, to the History and Records department, might be the only one who dared ask the first question. Or any question at all. He’d been around forever, since before Ella arrived three years ago. He had a parking space of his own. He’d placed hundreds of children, Ella knew. Reunited hundreds of families. Kind of a legend.

“Mr. Brannigan? Do the police know”-Munson cleared his throat again, his words catching in grief-“how she died?”

“Ah, Collins. This is difficult for all of us.” Brannigan shook his head. “The authorities may know. I asked, of course. But they did not choose to inform me, and insisted they had to end our conversation and continue their investigation. Please cooperate with them, all of you, as they do. And please keep me informed if they contact you.”

How she died? How she died? Ella’s mind raced, calculating. Of course, well, of course, that was the question. The police? Came here? If Ms. Finch had died of natural causes, that’s what they called it on her TV shows, it wouldn’t have been the police who came. Would it?

What if Ms. Finch knew she’d… made a terrible mistake? What if she couldn’t live with it? Would the police have come to tell them that? If she’d… killed herself? But that was a mortal sin. Lillian would never-

“In closing, let me acknowledge, we shall all miss her,” Brannigan was saying. “But we must continue our good work, and know she would have wanted it that way.”

Ella stared at the rug, its colors blurring with her tears of sorrow and confusion and panic and fear.

*

“Tacos,” Keefer said.

Her brothers hadn’t budged from the couch. Kellianne stood in the hallway, hands on hips. Beyond mad. Now the two were watching a music video, blasting the speakers, something with stuff blowing up. She’d like to blow them up, the morons. Her fingers were raw from the stupid duct tape, and she’d lugged about fifty plastic bags of carpeting squares-okay, maybe five-to the barrel at the front door. Why Kev insisted she yank up the carpet from the bedroom when the body was in the kitchen seemed ridiculous. But she was too-whatever-to argue. Get it done, right? Then it would be over.

Besides, now that she’d figured things out, now that she’d had her good idea, the more they left her alone the better.

“No way, asshole.” Kevin sprawled on the couch, his white-bootied feet still plonked on the dead woman’s coffee table. “I’m not eating one more frickin’ taco. I could go for a meatball sub, though. The ones from down the street. I’ll buy if you fly.”

“Let’s get the princess to fly,” Keefer said. “She’s always whining for food.”

She?

“I’m right here, assholes. And I’m not hungry.” Kellianne was dying in the Tyvek suit. But now it didn’t matter. She smoothed a sleeve, then the zippered front, making sure it looked flat enough. “You go. I’ve gotta finish in the back.”

“But you gotta bill for lunch,” Kevin said. “Or it makes us look bad.”

“Put down that I got a sub and a soda, big shot,” she said. “Dad’s gonna kill you if you get caught padding the bill, though, ya know.”

“Caught by you and what army?” Keefer said. He jabbed his brother with an elbow. “Pretty funny, huh? And like we’re afraid of Dad.”

“Shut up about Dad,” Kevin said. “We going for the frickin’ subs or what?”

Leave leave leave. They have to leave. Or this will never work. The landlord was an out-of-state, according to the Afterwards paperwork, so that was good. The insurance company knew the drill, they were cool with whatever up to the policy limits. No annoying relatives had called or showed up demanding to take stuff, like sometimes happened. The cops had cleared the scene. So seemed like no one would be snooping in here.

All good for Kellianne. All very, very good.

24

“I’ll tell if you will,” Jane whispered. They’d almost arrived at pizza guy’s floor, and Jane didn’t want to let go of Jake’s hand. But Jake had to be going somewhere. In about two seconds, he’d have to declare a floor. After that she’d know whether he was headed for Maggie Gunnison. Whether he knew about “Brie.”

“Tell what?” Jake’s voice went into her hair.

He smelled like citrus, and cinnamon, and coffee. “Why you’re here,” Jane said. “You first.”

The elevator stopped at ten, the doors sliding open. The pizza guy got out, leaving them alone. Jane didn’t move.

Jake didn’t, either.

The door closed, and they were alone.

“Wonder what’ll happen if no one presses a button?” Jane turned, slowly, looking up into Jake’s eyes and not letting go of his hand. She remembered his touch from that one night last summer. The night of Jake’s apartment and his hands on her skin and their clothes on the floor and-the night she said no. They’d done the math-reporter plus source equals disaster. They thought they’d nipped this in the bud. In reality, it was way past the bud.

She dropped her tote bag to the floor, and stepped so close to him she could feel his chest rise, then fall. The elevator beeped, signaling its impatience. You’re in an elevator, Jane Elizabeth.

“Is this your idea of sharing a room? Hmm?” Jake touched a gloved finger to her face, gave that smile she missed every day. “Want me to push the stop button? Or maybe… stopping isn’t what you had in mind.”

She felt the sleek leather slide down the side of her cheek. Almost couldn’t breathe. And then she burst out laughing.

“Jacob Dellacort Brogan.” She batted his hand away. The elevator’s beep grew more insistent. “I could have you arrested. For like, incorrigibleness or something.”