fingertips. She’d never noticed things like this in her father’s
 
 house, but then, her father’s house hadn’t been old, and it
 
 certainly hadn’t looked like this. No one could own this much
 
 real estate in New York without being a multi-millionaire.
 
 Cassia couldn’t believe Adalynn had bought the house for
 
 under a hundred grand. No wonder she had money left over to
 
 fix it up.
 
 Adalynn was in the kitchen. Humming.
 
 Cassia froze when she heard the lilting melody. Something
 
 about it reminded her of her mom, but she swallowed thickly
 
 at the rush of bittersweet memories. She only wanted to think
 
 of her mom as she remembered her. She didn’t want to think
 
 of her father. Of the man who had killed his own wife, a
 
 woman who was the mother of his children. Her father should
 
 be in jail, probably a thousand times over for the things he did.
 
 It occurred to Cassia as she walked to the fridge and took
 
 out the plastic container of orange juice while Adalynn
 
 hummed over a frying pan with eggs in it, that if Adalynn had
 
 ever entered her name into a search engine, she probably knew
 
 all about her father.
 
 It made Cassia nervous to ask, but as the eggs crackled and
 
 popped—scrambled and semi-burned was about as far as
 
 Adalynn ever got with making anything—she found herself
 
 voicing her thoughts anyway.
 
 “You know who my father is.” Okay, maybe she wasn’t
 
 being very subtle. Was she supposed to be? Maybe it was
 
 better to just come out with it, even if it did seem to be coming
 
 out of the blue.
 
 Adalynn froze. She looked like a suburban goddess in a pair
 
 of skinny jeans which were dusty from the day before and