The idea of him being murdered because of money or drugs was so bloodless against the raw hatred that still burned in her gut when she thought of him. But she couldn’t discount the possibility. Whatever was on that flash drive, it was something her mother wanted hidden. The evidence she claimed to have, Emma could only assume. But the flash drive was long gone. She’d lost it that night.
The night they died.
27EMMA
Then
She shows up on Gabriel’s doorstep after dark with her eye already swelling and red, her nose snotty from crying.
“What happened?” he asks, and she tries to tell him, but fresh tears well up and she finds herself sobbing and trying to force words out as he draws her inside and pushes her firmly and gently down onto the couch. “Wait here.”
He returns moments later with a bag of frozen peas wrapped in a kitchen towel. He sets it to her eye and guides her hand up to it, because she can’t seem to remember what to do by herself. His jaw is tense and his eyes sorrowful as he sits on the coffee table, his knees knocking against hers. They have never been this close, she thinks, and of course it’s now when she’s the furthest thing from lovely, with the peas against her swelling eye and her face red and puffy.
“Are you hurt anywhere else?” he asks. She shakes her head; it’s all she can manage. “Who did this? Your father?”
“They ruined it all. They took everything,” she says.
“Who?” he asks, confusion written on his features. “What happened, Emma?”
“I can’t go back,” she manages. “I can’t go back. They’ll kill me. Please, Gabriel, I can’t—you have to—”
He hushes her. He shifts to the couch and gathers her in his arms and she sobs against his chest as he murmurs meaningless things andstrokes her back. She can hear his heartbeat, steady and strong within the cage of his ribs.
“Nana’s still in the hospital, but you can stay here as long as you need to,” he says. “I won’t let anything happen to you.”
When she is done crying, he takes her to his bed. It’s a bed in Lorelei Mahoney’s house, and so it is firm and has fresh sheets and smells of fabric softener, and he draws a blanket up over her. He sits on the end of the bed, leaning forward with his elbows on his knees. She shuts her eyes. Eventually, she drifts into a sleep unencumbered by dreams.
She doesn’t know how much later his weight shifting on the bed wakes her. She keeps her eyes closed and her breathing even, letting him think she is asleep as he draws near.
“It’s going to be okay,” he tells her. She wonders if he knows he’s lying. “You’re safe here.” He bends over her and brushes a kiss lightly at her temple.
He leaves. She holds still, fearing he’ll know she’s awake, that it will somehow ruin this moment. The front door opens, closes. Outside, a car starts. She pulls the blanket aside and pads out to the front room in time to watch his headlights disappearing. She stands alone in the house, shivering despite the warm night.
Gabriel is wrong. He is kind, but he is wrong—nothing will be okay. Nowhere is safe. Not unless she does something.
She slips on her shoes and heads out.
She leaves Lorelei’s house with half a plan wrapped in fierce conviction. She can’t go back home. She has to get away. And so shehasto go back home, because she ran out of the door with nothing and she has nowhere to go. She needs clothes, needs supplies. Most of all, she needs money.
And she knows where she can find it.
It’s after eleven o’clock as Emma walks up Grant Lane, then cuts through the woods past the Saracen house. There are flashlights and lanterns on inside and a couple of kids out front trying to stoke a sad-looking fire. One of them looks her way as she walks, but at this distance she’s sure she’s nothing but a dim silhouette. There is a lightin the tree house as well, at the edge of the lawn. She skirts around it, giving it plenty of room so she won’t be spotted.
Emma creeps her way through the house without turning on any lights and takes the stairs silently, well practiced. She looks behind her once at the sliver of light at the bottom of the study door, barely visible at the end of the hall. There’s no sign of movement. At the top of the stairs she hooks a right to go to her parents’ door. Here she hesitates. If she’s wrong, and her mother is awake, the whole plan will fall apart.
But when she opens the door her mother is, as usual, sleeping soundly. The glass on her bedside table still has half an inch of white wine in it, and beside it is one of her migraine pills. Irene is sleeping half-twisted, the side of her face pressed against the pillow and one hand up next to it, the other flung behind her. It does not look restful, her face contorted as if she is having a bad dream. Emma stands watching her for a moment as her mother’s eyes roll under her lids. She has thought many times about killing her parents. Finding a way to get a gun from the case or a knife from the kitchen, pressing a pillow to her mother’s sleeping face. Irene Palmer is a slim woman who has stayed that way through deprivation; there is no substance or strength to her. If Emma wrapped her hands around that thin neck—
But every time, that’s where it ends. There is noafterto that fantasy.
Using only the tips of her fingers she opens the drawer in the nightstand and reaches all the way to the back, snagging the loop of a single small key. She draws it out and retreats. She doesn’t glance back; she doesn’t realize this is the last time she will see her mother alive, that their last words to each other have already been spoken.
The lockbox is where she remembers, nestled beneath layers and layers of pink and yellow sweaters and caps. Their mother keeps all of their baby clothes in spotless condition, though it became clear long ago that their father was never going to agree to have another child. Irene Palmer loved having babies. Loved their cooing and laughter and smiles, loved how she alone could soothe their cries.
She wanted more than anything to have that version of motherhood back. The one where she was the world, and she understood every need.
Emma claws aside the clothes and pulls out the lockbox. It opens readily to the key. Inside is a small envelope, a thick roll of bills, and the flash drive.
Emma peers inside the envelope. It contains her mother’s passport, Social Security card, and birth certificate. There is also a green Post-it note with a phone number scrawled on it in an unfamiliar hand. Emma doesn’t recognize the number.