PLAN B
Kelley Armstrong
Monday, August 10
Deanna lifted the charm bracelet and shifted closer to
the bedside lamp for a better look.
'Oh, God,' she said. 'Reminds me of the bracelet my
dad bought me when I turned thirteen. I asked for the new Guns N' Roses
tape, and he gave me one of these. Bastard.'
Gregory double-checked his tie in the mirror. 'Think
Abby will like it?'
'Shit, yeah. If any grown woman was made for charm
bracelets, it's Abby.' Deanna rolled on to her back and draped the bracelet
round her breast. 'Looks better on me, though, don't you think?'
Gregory chuckled, but continued adjusting his tie.
Deanna slid the bracelet down her stomach, spread her legs and dangled it
there.
'Wanna play hide and seek?' she asked.
She wrapped the bracelet round her index finger and
waggled it closer to her crotch. Gregory stopped fussing with his tie and
watched. Before the bracelet disappeared, he grabbed her hand.
'Uh-uh,' he said. 'Tempting, but no. I've heard of
giving your wife a gift smelling of another woman's perfume, but that would
go a bit far.'
'Like she'd notice.' Deanna flipped on to her stomach.
'Probably doesn't even know what it smells like. The only time Abby lets her
hand drift south of her belly button is when she's wiping her twat, and
she'd probably avoid that if she could.'
'That, my dear, sounds remarkably like jealousy.'
'No, my dear, it sounds
remarkably like impatience.'
He shrugged on his jacket. 'These things take time.
Every detail must be planned to perfection.'
'Don't pull that shit on me, babe. You aren't dragging
your heels plotting how to get away with it. You have that figured out. Now
you're just trying to decide how you want to do it. You're in no rush to get
to the reality, 'cause you're too busy enjoying the fantasy.'
He grinned. 'This is true. Shooting versus stabbing
versus strangulation. It's a big decision. I only get to do it once, sadly.'
'At this rate, you'll never get around to doing it at
all.'
'How about Friday?'
Deanna popped up her head, then narrowed her eyes.
'Ha-ha.'
'I'm quite serious.' Gregory patted his pockets, and
pulled out his car keys. 'Does Friday work for you?'
She nodded, eyes still wary.
'It's a date, then,' he said. 'I'll see you tomorrow
and we'll talk. I'm thinking stabbing. Messier, but more painful. Abby
deserves the best.'
He smiled, blew her a kiss and disappeared out the
door.
Deanna sat up and looked out of the window. The
cottage Gregory had rented for her was perched on a cliff overlooking the
ocean. When she cast her gaze out across the water, it looked mirror-smooth,
with brightly coloured yachts and sailboats bobbing about like children's
toys. Cotton-candy clouds drifted across the aquamarine sky. Farther down
the shore, a freshly painted red-and-white lighthouse gleamed like a
peppermint stick. It was a picture so perfect that if you painted it, no one
would believe it was taken from life. Yet if she looked down, straight down,
she found herself staring into a maelstrom of mud and garbage. All the trash
those distant boats tossed overboard wound up here, at the bottom of the
cliff, where beer cans and empty sunscreen bottles swirled in whirlpools
crested with dirty foam.
Be not deceived, for as ye sow, so shall ye reap. The
Bible quote came so fast it brought a chill, and she shivered, yanking down
the window shade.
For as ye sow, so shall ye reap. How deeply the
lessons of youth burrow into the brain. She could still see her father in
the pulpit, his lips forming those words. The lessons of youth, driven in
with the help of a liberally wielded belt.
At fifteen, Deanna had run from those lessons, run all
the way to Toronto, and found the hell her father prophesied for her. At
seventeen, she mistook Satan for saviour, becoming a wealthy businessman's
toy in return for promises of gold rings and happily ever after. After two
years, he discarded her like a used condom.
Before he could pass her apartment to his next toy,
she'd broken in, intent on taking everything she could carry. Then she'd
found the photos he'd taken of them together. And they'd given her an idea.
For as ye sow, so shall ye reap. There had to be consequences. A price to be
paid . . . but not by her.
It had been laughably easy. Of course, she hadn't
asked for much. She'd been naive, having no idea how much those photos were
worth to someone who valued his family-man reputation above all. But, with
practice, she'd learned. For ten years now, she'd made her living having
affairs with wealthy married men, then demanding money to keep her mouth
shut.
Now, finally, that had all come to an end. One last
mortal sin, and she'd be free.
Deanna opened the drawer of her bedside table and
reached inside. Beneath the pile of lingerie was a post-card of the French
Riviera. She didn't pull it out, just ran her fingers over its glossy
surface. She closed her eyes and remembered when they'd bought it. She'd
seen it in the display rack and pulled it out, waving it like a flag.
'Here! This is where I want to go.'
An indulgent smile. 'Then that's where we'll go.'
He'd said Friday. Did he mean it? Could she book the
tickets now? She stroked the postcard. No, not yet. Give it another couple
of days. Make sure he meant it this time.
'How retro,' Abby said, waving her wrist above the
plate of mussels.
She snaked her hand over her head and wriggled in her
seat like a belly dancer, her laughter tinkling chime for chime with the
bracelet. The tiny dock-turned-patio held only a half-dozen tables, but
every male eye at every one of those tables slid an appreciative look Abby's
way, and an envious one at Gregory. He snorted under his breath. Fools.
He stabbed through his chowder, looking for something
edible.
'It's so cute,' Abby said. 'Did you pick it up in
London?'
'You could say that. So, you like it?'
'Love it.' She fingered the charms. 'Which one's for
me?'
All of them.'
'No, silly, I mean: which charm did you buy for me?
That's the tradition, you know. If you give someone a charm bracelet, you
have to buy them the first charm, something meaningful.'
Like hell. He wasn't about to waste money on another
trinket. Not when it'd be lying on the ocean floor by the weekend. He peered
at the charms. A key, a train, a saxophone . . .
'The lighthouse,' he said. 'I bought you the
light-house.'
'Oh?' she said, nose wrinkling as she examined the
charm. 'That's . . . interesting. Why'd you pick that?'
He waved his hand at the ocean. 'Because it made me
think of here. Your favourite restaurant.'
'But the lighthouse isn't—' She leaned as far back in
her chair as she could. 'Well, I guess maybe you could see it from here. On
a clear day. If you squint hard enough. Well, it's the thought that counts,
and I do love it here. The lights over the
water. The smell of the ocean. Heaven.'
Heaven. Right. They lived in a town with two four-star
restaurants, and Abby's idea of heaven was a wharf-side dive where the
specialties were beer, beer, and mussels soaked in beer. At least in town he
could hope to see someone, make a contact that would lead to a sale. But
none of the summer people came here. Only locals, and no local bought a
thousand dollar painting of the Atlantic Ocean when they could see it
through their kitchen window.
The screen door leading to the patio creaked open. Out
of habit, he looked, half hoping it might be one of the American celebrities
who summered in town. He caught a flash of sun-streaked blond hair and a
male face hidden by the shadows of the overhang.
The man scanned the patio, then stepped back fast. The
door squeaked shut. Gregory's eyes shot to Abby as her gaze swivelled back
to the harbour.
'Was that Zack?' he asked.
'Hmmm?' Her bright blue eyes turned to meet his, as
studiously vacant as ever.
Gregory's jaw tightened. 'Zack. Your summer intern.
Was that him?'
'Where, hon?'
Gregory bit off a reply. This wasn't the time to start
sounding like a jealous husband, not now, when all it would take was one
such comment passed from Abby to a friend to give him motive for murder. If
Abby wanted to cheat on him, she'd had plenty of opportunity to do so before
now. As lousy as their marriage was, Abby was satisfied with it. She was
satisfied with him. And why not? She had not only a wealthy, handsome
husband, but a husband who owned a successful art gallery, where every
pathetic seascape she daubed on to canvas found a prominent place on the
walls. The perfect catch for a pretty, young art student of mediocre talent.
The moment he'd laid eyes on Abigail Landry at a
Montreal art show, he thought be had found his
perfect catch. A beautiful, lauded young painter, the ideal showpiece artist
for his new Nova Scotia seaside gallery, and the ideal showpiece wife for
him. The trouble had started three months after the wedding, when she'd
refused to paint a custom-ordered portrait of a Schnauzer wearing
sunglasses. He'd lost his temper and smacked her. She'd said nothing, just
gone into her studio and started the dog's portrait. Then the next day she'd
waltzed in on a private meeting with two of his best clients, her black eye
on full display, smiling sweetly and asking if anyone wanted iced tea,
leaving him stammering to explain.
Before long, divorce was out of the question. Her
silly seascapes accounted for seventy per cent of the gallery's income.
Then, two years ago, when the stock market plunge had wiped out his
finances, she'd glided to his rescue with her own well-invested nest egg,
offered as sweetly and as easily as the iced tea. So he was trapped.
'But not for long,' he murmured.
Another vacant-eyed 'Hmmm?'
He smiled and patted her hand. 'Nothing, my dear. I'm
glad you like the bracelet.'
Wednesday, August 12
Abby lifted the crimson-coated brush, in her mind
seeing the paint move from the bristles to the canvas. No, not quite right.
She lowered the brush and studied the picture. The red would be too harsh.
Too expected. She needed something more
surprising there. She laid the brush aside. Tomorrow she'd be better able to
concentrate on finding the right shade. Tonight . . . She smiled. Well,
tonight she had other things on her mind.
She moved the painting to the locked room in the back,
then picked up the canvas propped against the wall and placed it on the
now-vacant easel. She looked at the half-finished seascape. No room for
surprises there. Blue sea, blue sky, white and grey rocks. Assembly-line
art. This was what her talent was reduced to, putting her name on schlock
while her true work was shipped out of the country and sold under a false
name so Gregory didn't find out. Seascapes made money. Money made Gregory
happy. So Abby painted seascapes, seascapes, and more seascapes, with the
occasional crumbling barn thrown in for variety.
She glanced at the clock. Soon, very soon.
She lifted the brush to clean it, then stopped, and
stared at the painting. As if of its own accord, her hand moved to the
canvas and the bristles streaked red across the surf. Too much red. She
daubed the tip in the white and brushed it lightly through the red, thinning
and spreading it until it became a pink clot on the wave. The surf tinted
with blood. A small smile played on Abby's lips. Then she took a fresh brush
and blotted out the red with indigo.
As she painted, a blob of blue fell on her arm. She
swiped at it absently, then stopped, seeing the blue swirl against her pale
skin. It looked like a Maori tattoo. She dabbed her finger in the paint and
accentuated the resemblance. There. Cheaper than henna, less permanent than
ink. As she laughed, she caught a glimpse of herself in the mirror across
the room and grinned.
Any minute now she'd hear the key turn in the back
lock. And then . . . A rush of heat started in her belly and plunged down.
She looked at her reflection again, gaze dropping to the twin dots pressing
hard against the front of her sundress. She rolled her shoulders and sighed
as the fabric brushed her nipples. Still looking in the mirror, she unzipped
her dress and let it fall. She grinned at her reflection. Not bad. Not bad
at all.
Her eyes went to the blue tattoo on her forearm. An
unexpected burst of colour. She turned to the easel, lifted the paint brush
and grazed it lightly across one hardened nipple. She sighed, then tickled
the brush hairs around the aureole of her other nipple.
Another dip of paint, ochre this time. She stroked
lines down her torso, shivering at the cool touch of the paint against her
skin. Next the red, on her stomach, drawing lazy circles and zigzags. She
parted her legs, lowered the brush and swirled it across her inner thigh. As
she painted lower, she let the end of the brush dart between her legs,
prodding like an uncertain lover's finger, hesitant yet eager. Each time it
made contact, she caught her breath and glanced at her expression in the
mirror. She forced herself to finish her work, painting the other thigh to
match the first, letting the brush tip probe her only when it came in
contact naturally. Then, when she finished, she took the brush and turned it
around, so her hand wielded the plastic tip instead of the paint-soaked
bristle. She spread her legs and used the tip to tickle the hard nub within.
The back door clicked open. Abby grinned and lifted
the brush, painting one last stroke of red from her crotch to her breasts. A
bustle of motion in the doorway, silence, then a sharp intake of breath.
Abby looked up, and flourished a hand at her painted
body.
'What do you think?' she said. 'A work of art?'
'A masterpiece.'
Friday, August 14
Gregory switched the cellphone to his other ear and
took his keys from the ignition.
'Yes, that's right, a room on the west side. Not the
east side. There was construction on the east side last time and it kept me
up all night.' He paused. 'Good. Hold on, there's more. I want extra towels.
Your house-cleaning staff never leave enough towels.'
The hotel clerk assured him everything would meet his
satisfaction. It wouldn't, though. Gregory would make sure of that. He'd
find something to pester them about at the front desk, raise a little fuss,
just enough so that when the police asked the clerk whether she remembered
Gregory, she'd roll her eyes and say 'Oh, yes, I remember him'.
Once he'd finished here, he'd stop by Deanna's cottage
and make sure everything was ready. He chuckled. Deanna was ready, that was
certain. Ready, willing and chomping at the bit. She wanted to be free of
Abby almost as much as he did. Last night when he'd gone by to finalize the
plans, he'd barely made it through the door before she'd pounced and given
him a taste of what life would be like post-Abby. He felt himself harden at
the memory. A remarkable woman, Deanna was. He only hoped everything went
well tonight. It would be a shame to lose her.
Last night she'd suggested – not for the first time –
that she join him at the hotel, so she could corroborate his alibi. He'd
gently reminded her that this wasn't a wise idea. When the police dug into
his personal life, he knew they'd find he had a history of infidelity, but
there was no sense doing their homework for them. Or so he'd told Deanna.
The truth was that Gregory didn't want anyone seeing them together tonight.
Better to leave her behind . . . in close proximity to his
about-to-be-murdered wife.
Not that he had any intention of offering up Deanna as
a scapegoat. But, well, if things went bad, it always helped to have a plan
B. Deanna had bought the weapons and the tools, so it would be easy enough
to steer the police in her direction. If the need arose, he had a speech all
prepared, the heart-rending confession of an unfaithful husband who had
realized he still loved his wife and told his mistress it was over, then
made the tragic mistake of leaving on a business trip to Halifax that same
day, never dreaming his scorned lover might wreak her revenge while he was
gone. He'd practised his lines in front of the mirror until he could choke
up on cue.
He pushed open the door to the gallery. A muted laugh
tinkled out, followed by a deep chuckle that grated down Gregory's spine. He
paused, holding the door half shut so the greeting bell wouldn't alert Abby
and Zack. The murmur of their voices floated out from the back room. Zack
laughed again. Gregory eased the door open, trying to slide in before it
opened wide enough to set off the bell. He was halfway through when it
chimed.
The voices in the back room stopped suddenly. Zack
peeked around the corner, saw who it was, then said something to Abby, too
low for Gregory to hear. The intern backed out of the studio.
'Ab? I'll grab coffee on my way back, OK?'
Abby appeared from the back room, carrying a wrapped
canvas, and beamed a smile at Zack. 'Perfect. Thanks.'
As Zack strode out the front door, he slid a
half-smirk Gregory's way, as if being allowed to play errand boy for Abby
was some great honour Gregory could only dream of. Art student, my ass. The
kid looked as if he should be riding the waves, not painting them. Not that
Gregory cared. If Abby wanted to play teacher with California's Picasso, she
was welcome to him. He only hoped the kid wouldn't cause trouble later.
'I sold the new Martin's Point oil,' Abby said, laying
the canvas on the counter. 'Got the asking price, too. A couple from
Chicago. Once they heard the exchange rate, they didn't care to dicker.'
'Good, good. I just stopped by to make sure everything
was OK before I left for my meeting.'
'You'll be staying for the weekend, I assume.'
Being little more than an hour from Halifax, there was
no need for him to stay the weekend, and they both knew it, just as they
knew that he usually stayed, and why he usually stayed. Yet Abby asked as
casually as she'd ask whether he'd take Highway 3 or 103, a matter of no
interest to her either way. The thread of anger that rippled through him
surprised him, as it always did, and, in surprising him, only angered him
more.
'Yes, I'll be staying the weekend. With a friend.'
He hated himself for tacking that on the end, hated
himself for studying her reaction, and hated her even more for not giving
one.
'Don't forget we're having dinner at the Greenways' on
Sunday,' she said. 'Eight o'clock.'
'I'll be there.'
She nodded, then disappeared into the back room. He
stifled the urge to call out a goodbye, turned on his heel and left.
'You've reached the voice-mail of Gregory Keith—'
Abby sighed and hung up.
'Still no answer?' Zack asked as he flipped the
gallery 'OPEN' sign to 'CLOSED'.
'He must have turned off his cell. Maybe he's still in
a meeting.'
Zack cast a pointed look into the darkening night.
'Uh-huh.'
'Sometimes his meetings run late,' she offered lamely.
'I'll try once more from home, then call Mr Strom back and tell him we're
still considering his offer.'
She turned off the main lights as Zack locked the
front door. He followed her into the studio, and trailed out the back door
after her.
'Go,' Gregory hissed.
Deanna lurched from behind the bushes as Abby parked
at the top of the long drive. Gregory had to squint to see her. For a
half-mile in either direction, the only lights were the security floods
beaming on to the renovated farmhouse.
Abby climbed from her car. She started to lock it,
then stopped, seeing Deanna stumbling up the drive-way, her clothes torn and
bloodstained. From this distance Gregory couldn't see his wife's expression,
but he could imagine it. Eyes wide, mouth dropping open, a whispered 'oh'.
Abby jogged down the driveway towards Deanna.
Smatterings of their conversation drifted to him.
'—accident – help—'
Abby gestured at the house. '—911 –?' She didn't have
a cellphone, hated them.
Deanna grabbed Abby's arm, her voice shrill with
panic. '—son – trapped – please—'
Then Abby did what Gregory knew she'd do. She followed
Deanna. When Deanna stumbled, Abby grabbed her arm and draped it around her
shoulders, supporting the injured woman. Very heroic. Also very stupid,
because, when she reached the shadows of the cedar hedge, all Deanna had to
do was trip Abby then throw her weight on top of her, and Abby went down.
Deanna shoved a chloroform-soaked cloth over Abby's mouth and nose, and she
stayed down.
Deanna turned towards Gregory's hiding spot, but he
didn't step out. Not yet. First, he was making damned sure Abby was out
cold. If anything went wrong, Deanna's face would be the only one she
remembered seeing. He motioned for Deanna to slap Abby. She did. When Abby
didn't move, Deanna slapped her again, the sound cracking through the
silence.
'I think that's enough, my dear,' Gregory said,
stepping from the bushes.
He tossed Deanna the rope and watched her tie Abby up.
Then he took over.
Deanna slapped Abby again, the sound echoing the
rhythmic smack of the waves against the boat hull. Gregory shifted, fighting
the growing worm of pique in his gut. She wasn't waking up. What if she
didn't? He'd have to go through with it, of course, killing her, but he'd
really hoped she'd be awake. He wanted her to see who wielded the knife, to
regain the power she'd sucked from him over the years.
Gregory grabbed the knife.
'I'll wake her—'
Deanna snatched it from his hand. 'No, let me.'
Deanna lowered the knife tip to Abby's cheek and
pressed it against her pale skin. A single drop of blood welled up. Abby's
eyes flew open. Gregory reached for the knife, but Abby bucked suddenly,
startling them both, and the knife clattered to the deck. Abby jerked
against her bonds, wriggling wildly. Deanna dived to hold her down. In the
struggle, Deanna's foot knocked the knife across the deck.
'Don't!' Gregory said. 'She's tied. She's not going
anywhere.'
Deanna nodded and pulled back from Abby. She looked
around, gaze going to the knife by the cabin door.
'I'll get that,' Deanna said.
As she pushed to her feet, Gregory took her place, and
loomed over his terrified wife.
'Ah, now she's afraid,' he said, smiling down at her.
'Smart girl. Don't worry. This won't hurt a bit.' He grinned. 'It'll hurt a
lot.'
'Gregory?' Deanna said behind him.
His lips tightened at the interruption. He turned to
her. 'What?'
'Yesterday you asked if I was looking forward to this.
I said I wasn't.' She bit her lip, looking sheepish. 'Well, I just wanted to
let you know, I lied. We are looking forward to this.'
'Good. Now—' He stopped. 'We –?'
Deanna smiled. Her gaze moved over his shoulder.
'Yes,' she said. 'We.'
He turned, following her gaze. Behind him, Abby sat
up, tugging the rope from her wrists.
'Wha—?' he began.
Something cracked against the side of his head. He
stumbled and managed to turn just enough to see Deanna raise the fire
extinguisher again. She swung it.
Abby and Deanna stood at the side of the boat,
watching Gregory's body sink into the inky water. A late-night fog was
rolling in, a dense grey blanket barely pierced by the distant lighthouse
beam.
'You're sure he won't wash up on shore?' Deanna asked,
nibbling her thumbnail.
'Which way is the tide going, hon?' Abby asked gently.
'Out. Right. You said that. I forgot. Sorry.'
'That's OK. You did a good job.'
Good, but not perfect, Abby thought as she bent to
wipe a smear of blood from the deck. She'd have to treat that later. If the
first blow had succeeded, there wouldn't be any blood. It took a second hit
to the head to induce bleeding. But Deanna hadn't known that and Abby hadn't
thought to mention it and, really, it wasn't as if Abby would have changed
her mind when the first blow failed.
She stood to see Deanna frowning as she squinted
overboard, trying to see Gregory's body through the fog.
'It's OK, hon,' Abby said. 'He's definitely heading
out to sea and will be for a few hours yet. Even if he does eventually wash
up on shore, it won't be near here.'
'But they'll identify him, won't they?'
'Yes. But then what? He wasn't shot. He wasn't
stabbed. He hit his head and drowned. Happens all the time. Even if they
suspect something, it can't be linked to us. We were careful.'
'You're right,' Deanna said, forcing a small smile.
'You're always right.'
Abby walked to Deanna, smiling. 'Not always. I married
that bastard, didn't I?'
She put her arms around Deanna's neck and leaned in.
Their lips met. Deanna's parted, hesitant at first, as always, as if unsure,
maybe still a little shocked at herself. A minister's daughter in spite of
everything, Abby thought. She kept the kiss gentle and tentative, their lips
barely touching. After a moment, Deanna tried to pull Abby closer, but she
held back, teasing Deanna with modest kisses.
Abby reached down to the bottom of Deanna's blouse and
began to unbutton it, her hands moving as slow as her lips. Deanna gave a
soft growl of impatience, but Abby only chuckled. Only when the blouse was
fully unbuttoned did Abby let her hands touch Deanna's skin. She pressed her
fingertips against Deanna's stomach, then traced twin lines up her ribcage.
She cupped Deanna's bare breasts, and slid her thumbs over her hard nipples.
Deanna groaned, grabbed the back of Abby's head and kissed her, all shyness
gone. As Abby returned the kiss, heat throbbed through her. Perhaps just
once more . . . But no. She couldn't.
She wrapped her hands in Deanna's hair and eased her
back a step. Deanna's balance faltered. She tore her lips from Abby's to
shout a warning that she was too close to the edge of the boat. But Abby
already knew that.
She put her hands around Deanna's wrist and thrust her
away. Deanna started to fall. She grabbed blindly and caught Abby's charm
bracelet, but the clasp came apart. Deanna's arms windmilled as she fell
over the edge.
Abby walked to the back of the boat and pulled up the
anchor. In the water below Deanna thrashed and screamed. As Abby headed to
the cabin, she looked down to see Deanna frantically trying to get a hold on
the smooth side of the boat.
'I can't swim!' Deanna shouted.
'Yes,' Abby said. 'I know.'
She walked into the cabin and started the engine. She
moved the boat out of Deanna's reach, then waited and watched as Deanna's
blond head bobbed like a beacon through the fog. When Deanna finally sank
and didn't resurface, Abby pushed the throttle forward and headed for shore.
Thursday, August 20
Abby parked at the top of the driveway and she rubbed
her hands over her face. God, she was so sick of playing the distraught
wife. How much longer did she have to do this? The last week had seemed
endless. Pretending to look up expectantly each time the bells chimed over
the gallery door. Murmuring 'I'm sure he will' whenever someone reassured
her that her missing husband would come home soon. Enduring Zack's constant,
mooning 'I'm here for you' glances.
It hadn't taken long for the police to discover that
her missing husband had been renting a cottage outside town for his
mistress, who was, conveniently, also missing. A quick check of their shared
bank accounts showed that Gregory had slowly drained out nearly ten thousand
dollars over the last month. That had been Abby's idea, passed through
Deanna to Gregory's ear. As Deanna had warned Gregory, he couldn't be seen
dipping into the money right after his wife's murder. Better to siphon some
out early so they'd have celebration cash during the mourning period. Now,
with a missing husband, a missing mistress and missing money, it didn't take
a genius to realize Gregory had cut his losses and left. Too bad all their
assets were jointly held, meaning his abandoned wife could now use them as
she wished. She even had the ten grand in cash Deanna had squirrelled away
for them.
Abby grabbed the pile of mail from the passenger seat
and climbed out. As she circled around the front of the car, she leafed
through the bills, flyers and notes of sympathy. An unfamiliar postage stamp
caught her attention. France? Who did she know in France? When she looked at
the handwriting on the front she froze. It wasn't possible. It
wasn't.
Hands trembling, Abby tore open the envelope. In her
haste, she ripped it too fast and the contents flew out. A postcard sailed
to the ground.
'No,' Abby said. 'No!'
Deanna stood by the water's edge, her arms wrapped
around her, shivering as a cool night breeze blew off the Mediterranean.
Behind her the lights of the French Riviera flickered in the darkness, a
scene that nearly matched the one on her postcard . . . the postcard Abby
now had.
Deanna felt the sharp edges of the charms biting into
her palm. She looked down at the bracelet in her hand. When she'd dived into
the ocean, leaving Abby to think she'd drowned, Deanna had still clutched
the bracelet. She'd kept it, thinking maybe she'd send it back to Abby as
proof that she was alive. But then she'd decided the postcard would be
enough . . . the postcard they'd picked out together, when they'd first
hatched their plan, when Deanna had still thought – hoped – that Abby and
her promises had been real.
Deanna fingered the charms on the bracelet, stopping
at the lighthouse. She remembered her last evening with Abby, sitting behind
the cover of the lighthouse, dipping their feet in the surf, their clothing
strewn over the rocks and bushes. Abby had asked, oh so casually, how well
Deanna could swim. And, as accustomed as she was to lies and deceit from her
lovers, Deanna still almost fell for it. The truth had been on her lips,
ready to tell Abby that she'd been captain of the swim team before she'd
dropped out of school. Instead, when she opened her mouth, she heard herself
say, 'Me? Can't swim a stroke. Never learned how.'
Deanna had tried to look past it, told herself she was
too suspicious. And yet . . . Well, it never hurts to have a plan B.
She let the lighthouse charm fall from her fingers.
That had been her lucky charm that night, when
the unexpected fog rolled in. She'd followed its beam back to shore. Then,
before she'd left town, she'd returned to the lighthouse one last time, to
leave something for Abby. On the postcard, she written only one line,
instructing Abby to look for further 'correspondence' at the 'charmed'
place. There, in the very spot where she'd deceived her lover, Abby would
find detailed instructions on how to make her penance, on the exact penalty
she must pay. The demand was fair. Not enough to send Abby into bankruptcy,
just enough to hurt. For every action, there is a price to be paid. Deanna
knew that, and, now, so would Abby.
Deanna drew back her arm and pitched the bracelet into
the water. Then she turned and headed back to the hotel.