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Question was-what was Aaron doing?

She took out the lease for the millionth time, tried again to find some clue. It was so standard, the header actually said “Standard Lease Form.” She smoothed out the two creases in the legal-sized document, read the boilerplate language, customary lease stuff, tenant at will, blah-blah, address, rent payment of $2,950 per month, payable on the blah-blah.

The lessee signature line had a scrawly felt-tip name, which Lizzie decided was the Frank Something guy Mo Heedles had mentioned. The ridiculous illegible squiggle above the typed-out “for the lessor” hardly had any decipherable letters, let alone a name. It was only a line with a loop on the end. Someone writing fast.

Or writing to deceive.

Someone who figured no one else would ever look at the lease, and if someone did, the signature was 100 percent deniable.

Why did her analysis always seem to go in circles?

Because-wait. There was one possibility. One explanation that meant maybe Aaron thought he was doing a good thing, too.

Maybe they just had different ways of going about it.

And if that were true-speaking of circular-then maybe the best option was to leave it alone.

She picked up her ball-point pen, clicked the end of it, up and down, and up and down.

Leave it alone. It’s what she’d want him to do if he ever found out about her-not that he ever could.

Click, click.

Leave well enough alone, her father always said that. Well, what if this was “well enough”?

Click, click.

Lizzie put the pen back into the leather container. She folded the lease once, twice, and smoothed the wrinkles.

She’d decided.

She’d take the lease back to that house tomorrow. Stick it in the mailbox, with a note saying “All is correct and current, sorry for the confusion.”

Type it, so there’d be no handwriting.

Lizzie tapped her fingers on her desk, weighing the pros and cons. The girl in the house was an airhead. No one could easily connect Lizzie to any of it.

Now she could meet Aaron, as planned. She was late, but still acceptably late. She’d had to work later than she’d expected. Right? He’d understand.

Maybe tonight she could find out what he was doing.

Confirm what she suspected.

She popped her computer screen to black, grabbed her linen jacket, and her briefcase, clicked off the lights, locked her office door.

She punched the elevator button P for parking. If she had it right, what was Aaron’s motivation?

By the end of tonight, she’d know.

* * *

At least she hadn’t had to answer Peter’s impossibly complicated “do you know Jake Brogan” question. Jane opened the kitchen door for Harley, and the Lab bounded into the lilac-filled backyard, and headed to a patch of manicured shrubs across the lawn. White impatiens blossomed in ceramic pots, two hunter green Adirondack chairs and a charcoal grill were arranged comfortably on a modest wooden deck. Someone loved this yard. Anyway, by now maybe Peter had forgotten his question. But Jane hadn’t forgotten her question.

She watched the dog snuffle around, quiet for a moment in the twilight of the May evening. Jane couldn’t see into the neighbors’ yards on any side, fences and greenery blocked the way. She took a breath, drawing in the fragrance of the lilacs, trying to erase the car accident and the fear. Replacing it with beauty. Boston could be gorgeous this time of year, she thought. Well, this was a suburb, but same difference. She rarely missed the Midwest, where her father and sister still lived. Lissa. She shook her head. Lissa’s wedding in June. Looming. She’d think about that later. The lilacs were here and now, and so was she, and all of today’s bad stuff was over.

Harley was occupied, and she guessed she could leave him outside. Jane went back in, closing the kitchen door, which clicked shut behind her. She could hear the upstairs shower.

She found the downstairs bathroom-clean, a couple of framed museum prints, Kandinsky, on the walls. No toothbrushes. She fussed with her hair-hopeless, why’d she leave her purse in the living room?-resisted the urge to open the mirrored medicine cabinet, and headed back to the living room couch.

She blinked, not quite understanding.

“Ah, hello,” she said.

Did someone else live here? Peter hadn’t mentioned a roommate, but how else would this guy have gotten in? Maybe this was the person who loved the garden. Seemed pleasant enough, older, thin, ill-fitting jean jacket. Scragglier than Peter. Not really what she’d have predicted as his roommate type. But then, who knew. The shower water continued.

“Who’re you?” the man said. He must have just come in the door, and stood facing her at the edge of the entryway. She hadn’t heard a car.

“I’m so sorry,” Jane said. “I’m-”

“Are you a lawyer, too?” the man asked. He shifted, one foot to the other.

Maybe he was embarrassed to see her here. Maybe since Peter’s wife had died, there hadn’t been any other-well, whatever.

“Oh. No.” Jane smiled. “I’m a colleague of his. He’s upstairs, taking a shower.” She paused, realizing how that might sound. Shook her head. “Long story. No, we’re-”

She didn’t need to explain herself, Peter’s roommate was simply startled to see anyone. She would be, too, if she walked into her own home and saw a strange woman.

“Peter and I are working on a-project. Together.”

“Are you?” the man said.

Jane didn’t quite like the tone of his voice, but then she wouldn’t have to be around him long. She wished Peter would hurry. There was no protocol for this. Or maybe the guy was socially awkward, and she should be more friendly. Make conversation.

“Are you Peter’s roommate?” she asked.

“Nope,” the man said.

Jane could hear Harley, barking, in the backyard. Barking, and barking. She turned, ready to go let the dog in. She’d feel better with Harley here, for some reason she couldn’t quite put her finger on.

“Nope, you don’t want to do that,” the man said. “Stay right here, miss.”

“What?” He hadn’t threatened her, exactly. But it felt-off. She wished for Peter, she wished for Harley, she wished for the cell phone in her faraway tote bag, for whatever good that would do. “I’m sorry, who are you again?”

“Shouldn’t you know? You’re a reporter, right?” The man almost smiled. “You’re Jane Ryland.”

Jane took a step back, toward the stairs. Closer to where she hoped Peter would soon be. Wait a minute. The front door had been open. The garage door had been open. The alarm was off-she’d watched Peter disarm it. Harley was in the backyard. But she was used to being recognized from TV, so maybe he was a fan. “Yes, that’s-so you know who I am?”

“I also know your address, and your Amex number, and that you used to have fifty-two dollars in cash in your fancy wallet.”

Jane took one more step back. The man took one step closer to her. This was no fan.

“You shouldn’t leave your purse around,” he said.

“Peter!” she yelled. But all she heard was water.

30

Jake reached up, punched the orange call button. The woman in 6B was on her second Sudoku. The ones in Jake’s in-flight magazine had already been done, half-done, badly done, by the previous passenger. Rain pelted the Plexiglas porthole windows, and the 737 had moved away from the gate, then stopped. Hadn’t budged an inch on the tarmac since then.

“Yes?” The attendant appeared, all smiles.

“Can we at least use our phones? While we wait?” Jake asked.

Six-B looked up. “How long is it going to be, do you know?”

The flight attendant peered from under her eyelashes, squinting at the new torrent against the window, the multicolored lights of passing equipment glaring red and yellow on the drops, then fading to black. A crack of thunder rumbled, then a flash of lightning. Jake could see the Reagan terminal building, the multi-story panes of glass, the passengers inside peering out at the planes. They were grounded. He was grounded. Everyone was grounded.