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The Perfect Stranger
  • Текст добавлен: 12 октября 2016, 00:37

Текст книги "The Perfect Stranger"


Автор книги: Wendy Corsi Staub


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Текущая страница: 5 (всего у книги 22 страниц)

All the lights in the house extinguish one by one until everything is dark except a pair of bedroom windows.

It seems safe, after a reasonable wait, to make a move and slip into the kitchen. Safer than waiting outside, where someone from a neighboring house might spot the shadowy figure in the yard and call the police.

Get inside. Go. It’s time.

Open the folding knife, the one with the tortoiseshell handle.

Slice through the screen.

Crawl through the window.

Tiptoe, tiptoe, across the linoleum, one measured step at a time.

No turning back now.

But wait!

Footsteps overhead.

Creaking stairs.

Move back toward the window to escape.

Don’t run. Slow and steady, slow and steady.

The footsteps have stopped.

Meredith has paused halfway down the stairs. Why? Does she sense something?

Wait . . .

Wait . . .

Footsteps again, descending.

Meredith comes into the kitchen, turns on the light above the sink, opens cupboards  . . .

Don’t move. Don’t breathe.

Stay in the shadowy corner of the room, hiding in plain sight, a turtle lurking beneath its shell on a rocky landscape.

Wait . . .

Wait  . . .

Meredith turns.

But she doesn’t see. She isn’t wearing her glasses.

She goes back up the stairs.

Wait . . .

Wait . . .

At last, there hasn’t been any movement overhead for at least an hour, probably longer.

Only then is it safe to creep up the stairs clutching the towel-wrapped cast iron pan, a weapon chosen after careful research because it would have been, should have been, merciful.

Not as merciful, generally speaking, as an injection that would simply stop her heart from beating, but that would be needlessly cruel. Meredith hates needles.

Not as merciful, either, as a simple gunshot to the head, but . . .

I don’t have a gun. And I can’t get one—legally or illegally—without involving someone else.

And so, in the grand scheme of things, this was the best choice. An everyday household object as a weapon.

Flashlight beam swings across the shadowy bedroom.

Meredith, lying in her bed with her eyes closed.

She appears to be sleeping . . .

I thought she was sleeping! Really, I did! But she surprised me—again.

Meredith’s eyes open.

Only for a fleeting second, perhaps just long enough to see a human shadow standing over her, but . . .

There’s a chance that she saw me. That she knew.

Even if she saw, though, there would have been no time for her to comprehend.

It’s over in the next second.

The towel swishes over her head, her face . . .

Not for the purpose of covering her eyes, but to contain the inevitable spatters caused by the pan crashing down on her skull.

Blunt force trauma to the head.

She isn’t dead yet. Just unconscious. She has a faint pulse when she’s moved to the floor.

The towel comes off and the job is swiftly finished with another strategic blow.

It had to happen, and yet . . .

It’s hard to see her lying there like that when it was over. So hard . . .

But there’s no time for remorse.

The plan. Stick to the plan.

It can’t appear as if she’d been attacked in her bed while she was sleeping. No ordinary robber would do something like that. That would be a red flag for the police that the motive for the break-in had been murder.

It has to look as though Meredith interrupted a robbery, provoked the intruder.

The headboard is clean, thanks to the towel, but the bedding has to be changed.

The sheets are replaced with a clean set from the cedar chest at the foot of the bed. A brand new pillow and identical bedspread—purchased just yesterday at Macy’s—are swapped for the slightly bloodied bedding. There’s a small spot of blood on the mattress, too, but bleach takes care of that.

When they investigate, they’ll have no reason to strip off the spotless sheets and test the mattress for blood, will they?

Will they?

Too late to second-guess now.

The plan. Stick to the plan.

The soiled bedding is hastily packed into a garbage bag, to be tossed into a Dumpster a hundred miles away.

The final touch: a new necklace to replace the thin silver chain visible beneath the open placket of Meredith’s nightgown. That one had a heart-shaped locket with a photo of her three children when they were young.

It’s tempting to leave it on, but that might arouse suspicion. Meredith conveniently informed the blogosphere that she always sleeps in her jewelry, but two necklaces?

No, she just needs one.

For good luck.

“It’s going to be okay. You’ll be at peace now, and someday we’ll see each other again . . .”

Off comes the locket. It goes into a bag, along with the contents of the jewelry box on the bureau, and—of course—her laptop and phone.

Those are key. The files need to be purged of any damaging evidence, communication that might prove incriminating down the road, if things don’t go according to plan.

The plan.

Jewelry . . . electronics . . .

What else might a burglar want to steal?

There aren’t many valuables in this modest household.

Slowly, steadily, the crime scene is staged.

Slow . . .

Steady . . .

At last, it’s over.

Only now are nagging details popping up, triggering second thoughts.

Only now does the necklace left around Meredith’s neck, with its small cameo made of delicate tortoiseshell, seem like a bad idea.

It was a vintage piece. Rare. Valued by collectors.

Only the most discerning eye would know that, but still . . .

It was a risk, leaving that final gift behind with Meredith.

Looking back, perhaps it was a foolish one.

But it was a risk I had to take. I had to protect her.

And now . . .

Now I have to protect myself.


“We Need to Go Beyond a Cure. We Need to Stop People from Ever Getting Breast Cancer in the First Place.”

The title of this post is a quote from Dr. Susan Love. Fitting, because today, October 1, the Dr. Susan Love Research Foundation is launching HOW, the Health of Women Study. A worldwide, long-term online study open to women and men eighteen years and older with or without breast cancer. By compiling and studying answers to questions about one’s health, family, job, and other topics, researchers will gain a better understanding of breast cancer and its possible causes.

By registering online at HOW you can help put awareness into action. There is no cost or permanent obligation. Once registered, you’ll receive periodic questionnaires that you can fill out at your convenience. If you’d rather not participate at any point, you can opt out of further communication. There’s no down side. Your privacy is protected and your answers may contribute to the future prevention of breast cancer.

For the most part, breast cancer takes us by the hand and leads us down a path of its own choosing. We stare it down with treatment and surgery, hoping for many more years, but by participating in HOW, we’re doing something more than waiting.

We’re actively helping researchers figure out a way to stop breast cancer once and for all.

So no one need look over their shoulder ever again.

—Excerpt from Jaycee’s blog, PC BC


Chapter 5

It’s been a long day and a longer night, with Rob golfing after work and the kids out of the house. They both left right after gobbling down the pizza Landry ordered for dinner. She herself couldn’t eat a thing. Her stomach has been churning all day.

After rattling around the place alone for a few hours, unable to lose herself in mindless housework, magazines, or TV, she decides to see if a good book might make her forget about Meredith for a little while.

Curled up in the corner of the living room, in a lamplit overstuffed reading chair, she picks up the e-reader Rob and the kids bought her for her birthday in March.

Until then she’d resisted digital books, insisting that she preferred to hold good old-fashioned bound paper pages in her hands.

“Come on, Mom, get with it. You’ve learned how to do everything else electronically. You’re even blogging!” Addison pointed out. “You’ve come a long way from the person who couldn’t figure out how to check our elementary school homework assignments online.”

That was true. And while she continues to buy print books as well, she’s been surprised to find that the electronic device has come in handy for reading in bed on restless nights or when Rob turns out the light earlier than she’d like. Even better, it allowed her to pack a pile of beach reads into her carry-on for Easter week in Playa Del Carmen.

The thought of that trip brings to mind, yet again, the prospect of traveling up to Cincinnati for Meredith’s funeral.

She manages to resist the urge to check the Web for updated information about the arrangements, or updates on the investigation. She’s been looking every so often—more often, perhaps, than is healthy—and so far there’s been nothing.

This afternoon she had a brief e-mail from Elena, who thanked her for sharing the grim news. She said she has to work straight through until tonight and will call if it isn’t too late when she gets home.

There’s been nothing more from Jaycee. She’d tried calling A-Okay again right before she ordered the pizza. Once again the line went into voice mail.

Forget it. Stop thinking about it for a few minutes, will you?

She focuses on the e-reader. Last night she’d left off in the middle of a trashy celebrity tell-all she’d been too self-conscious to buy in Page & Palette, her favorite bookstore in Fairhope, where everyone on the staff knows her name and probably expects her to purchase more highbrow literature. She’s been fascinated by Hollywood gossip from the time she was a little girl playing Movie Star dress-up games in her mother’s closet.

But tonight, distracted, all she can think about is Meredith. Meredith frightened, Meredith hurt, Meredith dying.

It’s so wrong, so unfair.

Come on. Who are you kidding?

Violent death at the hands of someone else is always, always wrong and unfair. But for it to happen to someone who’s been through cancer—someone who already stared the prospect of terminal illness in the face, not once, but twice, and won—it seems even more cruel.

On the table beside her chair, her cell phone rings.

Landry pounces on it, hoping it’s one of her blogger friends at last.

But the number in the caller ID window belongs to her cousin Barbie June.

Their mothers are sisters and they’d grown up like sisters themselves, born just ten months apart and raised right across the road from each other. They looked so much alike they were often mistaken for twins. They ran with the same crowd in high school, became roommates in their college sorority house, maid of honor at each other’s weddings and godmother to each other’s firstborns.

Ordinarily, Landry would pick up her cousin’s call, but not tonight. She just isn’t in the mood to try to explain about Meredith to someone who won’t understand—and there’s no way Barbie June will understand.

Her cousin has lots of great qualities.

Subtlety and empathy aren’t among them.

“I know you’re scared,” Barbie June told Landry when she opted for a preventative mastectomy over a lumpectomy, “but why put yourself through major surgery? Why disfigure yourself when you don’t have to? How are you going to wear that darling strapless dress you bought last month at Dillard’s?”

Landry bit back her anger and frustration, explaining why it was the right choice for her, despite the fact that her cancer was stage one—microscopic cells limited to one breast, with relatively low odds for a relapse.

There were no guarantees even with the surgery, but she had a husband and two young kids who needed her, and she intended to do everything within her power to take control and perhaps further reduce her chances of a recurrence.

Barbie June just didn’t get it.

“But look at Grammy,” Barbie June said. “She didn’t do anything so drastic, and she was just fine.”

Their maternal grandmother had been diagnosed with breast cancer a good forty years ago. She’d survived it with just a lumpectomy, minor treatment, and faith that God would let her live to a ripe old age. He did.

Unfortunately, she passed away just a year before Landry’s diagnosis. The quintessential steel magnolia, she’d have been a godsend: a fellow wife and mother who knew what it was like to face your mortality one day out of the clear blue sky.

That was why it was such a relief to her when she found Meredith and the others.

Naturally, Barbie June had since made her share of comments about her blog and social networking in general, hinting that it was for people who don’t have anything else to do.

Landry had always thought pretty much the same thing—until the day she went searching online for information about reconstructive surgery and stumbled across an irreverent breast cancer blog on the subject.

Back then, she barely knew what a blog was.

“I think it’s a sort of online daily journal,” she explained to Barbie June when she made the initial mistake of telling her about it.

When she described the post—an account of nipple reconstruction that managed to be simultaneously poignant and hilarious—her cousin reacted with an incredulous, “Why on God’s green earth would any halfway decent person put something like that out there in public for just anyone to read?”

“I don’t know,” she’d said. “I guess for the same reasons people keep diaries. Because sometimes it’s cathartic to write about things you can’t find the nerve to talk about. It’s an outlet.”

“Yes, but you write a diary for yourself. Not for perfect strangers to read.”

“Well, then, maybe they do it to help other people cope. Or maybe because they’re shy, and they can hide behind anonymity online, or because they’re lonely and socially isolated . . . who knows?”

Undaunted by her cousin’s disdain, Landry began to follow the cancer blogs daily, along with the usual barrage of comments from other readers.

Like a would-be pledge wistfully eavesdropping on a chatty cluster of sorority sisters, she noted not just the easygoing banter among the regulars on Meredith’s blog, but also their genuine compassion for each other. Nearly all were fellow breast cancer patients or survivors, and many were bloggers themselves. Landry clicked their links and began to follow their posts as well, on blogs that had clever titles like Yes, Ma’am(ogram) or Making the Breast of It.

Finally, she worked up her nerve to post a comment somewhere—was it on one of Meredith’s entries? Or Whoa Nellie’s?

She no longer remembers the details, only that she was welcomed so warmly that her shyness evaporated—kind of like the first time she stepped over the threshold of her college sorority house.

Barbie June didn’t understand that reference either. She knew her cousin would never understand why she was initially drawn to the online community, or why she was still there. Barbie June has asked, time and again, why she “still bothers” with her cancer blog now that she’s “cured.”

“Don’t you want to put the whole nasty thing behind you and move on?”

Landry sighs. How do you answer a question like that?

“I think she’s in denial,” she confided in her friend Everly. “She’s afraid that if it happened to me, and to our grandmother, then it could happen to her, too, and she doesn’t want to face—”

“Oh, please, she’s just jealous,” Everly cut in, “same as she always was back in high school whenever you got invited to a party without her. She wants to be front and center in your life, just like the old days. I’ve always thought it’s a wonder she doesn’t resent me—or resent Rob, even, for taking you away from her.”

“Don’t be silly,” was Landry’s response, though Everly had a point.

Barbie June’s possessiveness had occasionally reared its head during their formative years whenever Landry spent time with other friends, or when she had a boyfriend and her cousin didn’t. But by the time Rob came along, Barbie June was already engaged.

Now, she and her husband live in a waterfront home less than a mile away with their two children, a son and daughter born in reverse order of Addison and Tucker but almost exactly the same ages. The new generation of cousins isn’t nearly as close as their mothers and grandmothers had been, and their husbands aren’t particularly fond of each other, but despite traveling in different social circles with disparate lifestyles, Landry and Barbie June have maintained a connection over the years.

If she picks up the phone to talk to her cousin tonight, there will be no concealing the fact that something’s wrong. And if she were to tell Barbie June what happened to Meredith, she’s certain she wouldn’t be met with much sympathy.

The phone goes silent, and after a long pause, it beeps to indicate a new voice mail message.

Moments later the home phone begins to ring.

Barbie June again. If her cousin doesn’t get an answer on one number, she always tries the other—and sometimes she’ll even call Rob’s phone, trying to reach her.

Landry ignores the ringing, letting it, too, go into voice mail.

Guilt settles over her as she tries to go back to her book. What if the call was about a family emergency rather than the usual chit-chatty check-in?

Worried, she reaches for her cell phone to listen to the message.

“Hello there, darlin’. That was a divine picture of you and Rob and the Sandersons in the paper on Sunday, and I’ve been meanin’ to call you ever since I saw it. I know it’s Rob’s golf night so I figured you might be lonely. But—you’re not pickin’ up. Where the heck are you without your phone? I’ll try you at home. Buh-bye.”

Ah, the usual chit-chatty check-in—laced with a slight hint of accusation.

Landry deletes the message.

Beck leans back, rubbing her eyes.

She’s just spent hours sitting at the kitchen table on her laptop, alternately reading every entry and subsequent comment on her mother’s blog and still trying to figure out the password to her e-mail.

She’s tried every combination of her parents’ initials, plus her own and her brothers’, along with various symbols and phone numbers and birthdates in chronological and reverse order . . .

Nothing has worked.

She’s been keeping track, at least, on a yellow legal pad, so that she won’t waste her time on duplicate guesses. Now she flips the pages, scanning the list of everything she’s tried, feeling as though she’s missing the obvious.

Hearing a floorboard creak in the next room, she looks up. It’s either her father or Keith. Her brothers again drove back home for the night, promising to come back first thing in the morning.

After they left, Keith said he was going to bed and disappeared up the stairs, ever-present phone in hand. Since there’s only a twin bed in her old bedroom, he’s sleeping across the hall, in one of the bunk beds that once belonged to her brothers.

Dad adjourned to the den around the same time, presumably planning to spend the night in his recliner once again. Beck had offered him her room, pointing out that she can sleep in the other bunk in the boys’ room where Keith is, but Dad turned her down.

That was fine with her—and not just because she understood how hard it would be for her father to climb the stairs to go to bed, no matter which bedroom he was sleeping in.

She’s just not eager to share space with Keith right now, and she’s pretty sure he feels the same way.

“What did you tell them?” she asked him after he spoke to the detectives this afternoon.

“What do you think I told them?”

“I have no idea. Why do you think I’m asking?” she said aloud.

To herself, she thought, Jackass.

Thank God she never confided in him about her father—about what she saw, that one time.

The incident did nag at her for a few weeks after it happened, and at the time she considered telling Keith about it, but she kept it to herself in the end.

Thank God. Thank God.

The floorboard creaks again.

“Hello?” she calls.

As much as she hopes her father is finally getting some sleep, she’d prefer to see him pop up in the kitchen doorway right now, rather than her husband.

“Dad? Keith?”

No reply. She’s just starting to think she imagined the creaking when a shadow falls across the floor.

Keith.

“What are you doing?” she asks.

“Why are you still up?” he asks, simultaneously.

He’s still dressed—or perhaps dressed again—in jeans and a T-shirt. And he’s wearing shoes, she notices.

“I’m hungry,” he says with a shrug. “Is there any more of that chicken casserole from dinner?”

She looks from his face to the phone in his hand to the fridge.

“Help yourself.”

He crosses over to the refrigerator and opens the door. “So what are you doing up, Rebecca?”

He always calls her by her full name, unlike her family and friends. That never really bothered her until now. In fact, when she first met him she thought it was sweet and refreshing.

But lately—especially here in her childhood home, where she’s been referred to as Beck all her life—her given name, particularly on her husband’s lips, seems stiff and formal.

“I was just rereading my mother’s blog,” she tells him.

And trying to hack into her e-mail account . . .

But Keith doesn’t need to know that. For some reason, she feels like he might not approve.

“Why?” he asks.

“Why, what?”

“Why are you reading her blog?”

“I was just looking for . . .” She trails off, watching him lift a corner of foil off the casserole dish in the fridge, peer inside, and fold it back down.

“What were you looking for?” he asks.

“I was just looking to see what she’d written lately. That’s all. It makes me feel close to her.”

“Oh.” He opens the crisper drawer, takes out an apple, closes the fridge.

“I thought you were hungry.”

“I am. I’m having an apple.”

“I thought you wanted that chicken casserole.”

“So did I, but . . . it’s congealed.”

“You can heat it in the microwave.”

“No, thanks. This is fine.”

You weren’t hungry at all, she thinks, watching him wash the apple at the sink.

In all the years they’ve been married, he’s never been a midnight snacker. If anything, she’s the one who gets up and roots around the fridge in the wee hours.

Besides, when she served the chicken casserole the neighbor dropped off for their dinner, he picked at it. The recipe was probably straight off the label of a can of cream soup, and Keith—who works for the department of animal and food sciences at the university—isn’t big on packaged foods as ingredients for anything.

She’d bet anything that he has his car keys in his pocket. He was probably going to sneak out of the house like a wayward teenager, probably thinking he could rendezvous with . . . whoever . . . and be back at dawn.

Sorry, pal, she thinks, watching him crunch into the apple. Guess I foiled your plan.

At last Landry hears the garage door going up.

Rob is home, thank goodness. He might not understand about Meredith, but he’ll listen patiently, and he’ll care. Or at least pretend to.

“Which one is she?” he’ll ask, never able to tell her online friends apart when she talks about them.

If Landry explains, “She’s the older woman who lives in Ohio,” or “She’s the one who writes the Pink Stinks blog,” he’ll murmur as if he knows who she means, but he won’t. He’ll be sympathetic, though he won’t understand how the loss of a woman she’s never met can hit so hard.

That’s how he reacted in January, when Nell died.

She, too, was a blogger. She lived in England.

“Whoa Nellie died today,” Landry told Rob when he walked in the door that night.

Concern immediately etched his face. “Who?”

“My friend Nell. Whoa Nellie. That’s the name of her blog.”

The concern dissipated and she could see the wheels turning: No one I know. No one in real life.

Landry can hear him in the kitchen, going through his nightly ritual: electronic beeping as he sets the alarm on the panel beside the door, water running as he washes his hands at the sink, the fridge door opening and closing as he grabs a bottle of water, footsteps creaking the wide old floorboards as he makes his way through the dining room, calling, “Anybody home?”

“In here.”

He walks into the living room. Tanned, lean, and handsome, he’s wearing khakis and a golf shirt, carrying his briefcase and a garment bag containing the suit he’d worn to work this morning.

“What’s going on?” he asks, setting the bags on a chair and walking over to her lamplit reading nook. “Where are the kids?”

“Tucker’s playing video games at Jake’s. Addie’s at a movie with her friends. She’s going to pick him up at ten and drive him home.”

“So you’re here all by your lonesome?” He perches on the arm of her chair and kisses the top of her head. “Why are all the shutters closed?”

She follows his gaze to the wall of windows facing the bay. Ordinarily, they don’t bother to draw the plantation shutters at night. The boardwalk is sparsely traveled after dark, and though anyone out there would ostensibly have a clear view into the house, it’s not, typically, a troubling thought.

Tonight is not typical.

“I just . . . I didn’t want to sit here thinking that anyone could see in,” she admits to Rob.

“You feeling okay?”

“Not really.”

Feeling him stiffen, she reads his mind, quickly saying, “No, not that. Physically, I’m fine.”

“For a second I thought—”

“I know.” He thought cancer. “It’s just . . . I got some bad news today about one of my online friends.”

“I’m sorry. What happened?”

She hesitates, remembering the first time she’d ever introduced him to Meredith—online, of course.

She remembers how Rob studied the photo of a smiling woman with grayish blond hair and glasses, and read over the brief bio beneath it.

“How do you know that’s really her?” he asked—of course he did, because as an attorney, he rarely accepts anything at face value.

“Because this is her Web page.”

“No, I mean . . . anyone can post any picture online and claim it as their own. For all you know, this Meredith person might actually be a twenty-year-old tattooed jailbird.”

“She’s not. This is her.”

“You don’t know that.”

“I do.”

Meredith’s entries resonated too sharply to be anything but authentic.

“What happened?” Rob asks again, and he strokes Landry’s hair while she tells him the tragic news, shaking his head and wearing a grave expression.

“So her husband was away on business when it happened?”

“Not on business—he was out of town taking care of his mother.”

“How do you know that?”

“She told me.”

“She told you—or she wrote about it online?”

Realizing where he’s going with this line of questioning, she bristles. “She blogged about it.”

Rob shakes his head but says nothing.

He’s always worrying about what the kids are doing online, equating social networking Web sites with letting them walk into a room filled with predators.

Landry opens her mouth to tell him that Meredith wasn’t murdered because she blogged personal details about her life, then closes it again.

Oh, really? How can you be so sure about that?

She’d been assuming that her friend had been killed by an intruder who randomly broke into her house . . .

But there is a chance—however slight—that Meredith might have been targeted by someone who knew her, or at least, knew that her husband was out of town, leaving her alone and vulnerable.

Maybe he overheard Meredith talking about it at the supermarket, or in a restaurant, or . . .

Or maybe he read it on her blog.

It’s not very likely—but it could have happened, she supposes.

“Her husband must be devastated,” Rob says.

“I’m sure he is. And she has kids—they’re grown and married. Two sons and a daughter. There are grandchildren, too. Three, I think, with another one due in October. She called them her stinkerdoodles.” She smiles, remembering the affection Meredith had for her growing family.

“She wrote all of that on the Internet?”

“Yes, but . . . it’s not like that. We’re basically just friends who share things online, just like friends do in person.”

“But in person, we’re careful about what we say when other people can overhear. Online, it’s easy to forget that there’s an audience. People shouldn’t post anything they wouldn’t be comfortable sharing with millions of perfect strangers, including opportunistic rapists and murderers.”

“I would consider rapists and murderers imperfect strangers, wouldn’t you?” she quips to lighten the topic.

He offers a sort-of smile, but he’s still shaking his head. “It’s just basic Internet Safety 101. You’re inviting trouble when you—”

“Are you saying Meredith brought this on herself?” she cuts in. So much for lightening things up.

“No. I’m just saying . . . I’m worried. I’ve seen social networkers post way too much personal information.”

“So have I. But I’ve never put down our last name or even our first names, or where we live . . .”

No, but many of the other bloggers—Meredith included—do share all those details. Rather than calling her spouse and children DH, DS, and DD—widely used Internet shorthand for Dear Husband, Darling Son, and Darling Daughter—Meredith referred to her family members by their first names. Hank was her husband; her kids were Neal, Teddy, and Beck, short for Rebecca. She occasionally posted photos, too . . .

Landry feels sick to her stomach remembering that Meredith had proudly posted pictures of her master bedroom last fall, with the new king-sized bed and bedding and curtains she’d just bought on sale at Macy’s.

And then there was a more recent picture accompanied by a caption: View of our home, sweet home from the street with the lilacs in full bloom.

There were plenty of compliments in the comments section from the usual followers: Pretty! . . . Love Lilacs! . . . Ooh, wish it was scratch and sniff!

But how many other pairs of eyes had also seen the photo of the modest house? How many silent lurkers had noticed the dense shrub borders along the property lines, which, as Meredith had cheerfully pointed out to her online friends, offered privacy and shielded her house from the neighbors’ views?

Landry thinks back over her own posts, wondering if she’s inadvertently been just as careless.

“You didn’t write on your blog that I’m going away on a golf outing Father’s Day weekend, did you?” asks Rob the mind-reader.

“Of course not!”

She did, however, mention it to Meredith in a private message exchange just last week. They were going back and forth about how having a husband away can be a mixed blessing—more so, Meredith thought, when you have kids still at home.


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