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When my father came out of Grace’s room, he moved slowly and nodded at me as he sat. “Hello, Adam.” He turned to Miriam. “Will you sit with her for a while?”

She looked at me once and then disappeared down the hall. My father patted me on the knee.

“Thanks for being here.”

“Where’s Dolf?”

“We’re taking turns.”

We settled back against the wall. I gestured after Miriam. “Is she doing all right? She seems…”

“Dark.”

“I beg your pardon?”

“Dark. She’s been like that since Gray Wilson’s death. He was a bit older, a bit rougher, but they were close, ran with the same group in school. When you were tried for his murder the group cut her off. She’s been very alone since then. She couldn’t handle college. Came back from Harvard after one semester. But that just made it worse. Grace tried once or twice to bring her out of it. Hell, we all did. She’s just…”

“Dark.”

“And sad.”

A nurse passed us. A tall man rolled a gurney down the hall.

“Do you have any idea who might have killed Danny?” I asked.

“No clue.”

“He was heavy into gambling. His father is a drug dealer.”

“I don’t like seeing it that way.”

“Who is Sarah Yates?” I asked.

He went rigid, and the words came slowly. “Why do you ask me that?”

“Grace was talking to her shortly before the attack. They looked like they might be friends.”

He relaxed marginally. “Friends? I doubt it.”

“Do you know her?”

“No one really knows Sarah Yates.”

“That’s pretty vague.”

“She lives on the fringe. Always has. She can be warm one day, mean as a snake the next. As far as I can tell, there’s not much that Sarah Yates cares about.”

“So, you do know her.”

He faced me, lips tight. “I know that I don’t want to talk about her.”

“She says that I was a lovely boy.” My father turned in his seat, and his shoulders squared up. “Do I know her?” I asked.

“You should stay away from her.”

“What do you mean?”

“I mean that you should stay the hell away from her.”

I went shopping for Grace. I bought flowers, books, and magazines. None of it felt right; it was all guesswork, and I had to face the truth of it once again. I didn’t know her anymore. I felt restless, and drove around town for a bit. Every road was layered in memory, so textured that the past was physical. That was another thing about home.

I was almost back to the hospital when my cell phone rang. It was Robin. “Where are you?” I asked.

“Look in your mirror.” I looked and saw her car twenty feet behind me. “Pull over. We need to talk.”

I hung a left into a quiet, residential area that had been developed in the early seventies. The houses were low with small windows. The yards were neat and trim. Two blocks down, kids rode bikes. Someone in yellow pants kicked a red ball. Robin was all business.

“I spent the morning making very quiet inquiries,” she said. “Reached out to people I trust. Asked them to keep me in the loop. I just got a call from a detective friend who was about to testify in Superior Court when Grantham showed up and spoke to the judge.”

“Judge Rathburn?”

“Yeah. Rathburn called a recess and took Grantham into chambers. Ten minutes later he canceled court for the day.” She paused.

“You know why, don’t you?”

“This came from one of the clerks. It’s solid. Grantham presented the judge with an affidavit in support of an arrest warrant. The judge signed off on it.”

“A warrant for whose arrest?”

“Unknown, but given what we know, I suspect that it has your name on it.” Distant laughter rolled over us, the high squeal of children at play. Robin’s eyes were filled up with worry. “I thought that you might want to call that lawyer.”

Grace was sleeping when I returned to the hospital. Miriam had left and my father was in the room with his eyes closed. I put the flowers by the bed and the magazines on a table. I stood for a long minute, looking at Grace and thinking of what Robin had told me. Things were coming to a head. “You okay?” my father asked. His eyes were red from sleep. I pointed at the door, and when I left, my father followed me out. He scrubbed a hand over his face.

“I’ve been waiting for you to get back,” he said. “I told Janice that I want to have everyone to the house for dinner. I want you to come.”

“Janice didn’t like that, I bet.”

“It’s what families do. She knows that.”

I looked at my watch. Afternoon was upon us. “I need to speak with Parks Templeton,” I said.

My father’s face twitched with sudden worry. “What’s going on?”

“Robin thinks that Grantham has an arrest warrant with my name on it.”

He understood immediately. “Because they’ve identified your prints on Dolf’s gun.”

I nodded.

“Maybe you should leave.”

“And go where? No. I’m not running again.”

“What are you going to do?”

I looked at my watch again. “Let’s have a drink. On the porch. Like we used to do.”

“I’ll call Parks from the car.”

“Tell him he should get here sooner rather than later.”

We walked outside and turned for the parking lot. “There’s one more thing I’d like for you to do,” I said.

“What’s that?”

I stopped and he did, too. “I want to speak with Janice. In private. I want you to make it happen.”

“May I ask why?”

“She testified against me in open court. We’ve never talked about that. I think we need to get it behind us. She won’t want to have the conversation.”

“She’s scared of you, son.”

I felt the familiar anger. “How do you think that makes me feel?”

Back in the car, I pulled out the postcard sealed in its plastic bag. Danny never made it to Florida; I was pretty certain of that. I studied the photo on the card. Sand too white to be real, and water so pure it could wash away sin.

SOMETIMES IT’S JUST RIGHT.

Whoever killed Danny Faith had mailed this postcard to try and hide the crime. It could very well have prints on it. I wondered for the hundredth time if I should tell Robin about it. Not yet, I decided. Mostly for her own good. But it was more than that. Somebody, for reasons unknown, had killed Danny Faith. Someone pointed a gun and squeezed the trigger; lifted Danny up, and dumped him down that great dark hole.

Before I went to the cops, I needed to know who.

In case it was someone I loved.

We gathered on the porch, all of us, and though the liquor was expensive, it felt thin and false, like the assurances we traded. None of us believed that everything would be all right, and when the words dried up, which they often did, I studied faces that were naked in the hard rays of the bright, falling sun.

Dolf lit up, and loose tobacco settled on his shirt. He flicked at the small, moist pieces with an utter lack of care. Yet he wore his larger concerns like he wore his boots, as if he’d be lost without them; my father could have been his brother in that regard. They were pared down, the both of them, scoured clean.

George Tallman watched my sister like some part of her might fall off, and he’d need wariness and great speed to catch the piece before it struck and shattered. He kept an arm pressed against her, and leaned low when she spoke. Occasionally, he looked at my father, and I saw adoration in his face.

Jamie sat darkly next to a row of empty bottles. His mouth dipped at the corners, and hard shadow filled the sockets of his eyes. He spoke infrequently and in a low rumble. “It’s not fair,” he muttered once, and I assumed that he was speaking of Grace; but when I pressed, he shook his head, and tipped back the brown bottle of whatever foreign beer he’d chosen.

Janice, too, looked tortured, with chipped nails, dark circles, and hollow eyes. She’d deteriorated even over the past day. Her words came often and forced, and they were as brittle as the rest of her. She played the role that my father had imposed upon her, that of hostess, and, to her credit, she tried. But it was a brutal thing to see; and there was little mercy in my father’s eyes. He’d told her what I wanted and she did not like it. The fact of it was all over her.