I fully expect Mom to cancel the party.
I listen to Benโs miniepisode in disbelief the first time, and with more than a little amusement the second.
I didnโt know Mom had it in her.
I should maybe be a little miffed on Savvyโs behalf, but she was never that serious about Colin, and I honestly think sheโd be amused as well.
I wait, clenched, for Mom to explode.
But she doesnโt. The next morning, I come downstairs to find her cheerfully sewing lace onto a baby blanket she made for one of the girls from church.
Denial always did work well for her.
So, I say nothing, send Ben a text message that just saysย damn, son, and pretend like nothing happened.
Mom insists we get to the restaurant an hour early so we can micromanage the employees in charge of setting up the party. They donโt seem particularly put out by this, like theyโre used to women in loud flower-print dresses fussing over the exact placement of mason jar candles.
Mom missed her calling as a wedding planner. She would have been so good at projecting a happy image for one day.
Weโre in a large room for special events at the back of the restaurant. Theyโve set up a long picnic-style table, with said mason jar candles and flower arrangements dotting the middle.
Mom doesnโt mention the daisies. Probably because they look so nice.
Or sheโs totally forgotten that they were supposed to be pink roses.
Grandma arrives right on time, escorted by Ashley and Brian (my cousins, the asshole grandchildren). Theyโre both younger than I amโearly twentiesโand neither of them look particularly happy to be there. Brian barely looks up from his phone to say hi.
Their parents, Keith and Janice, follow them inside. My aunt Karen, the youngest of my momโs siblings, sulks in after them, the usual sour expression on her face. She has an unfamiliar man in an ill-fitting suit with her.
I donโt know when they all got into town. Mom mysteriously disappeared a few times over the last couple of days, so I assume theyโve been here for a while. No one had any interest in seeing me early, apparently.
They all glance at me and then quickly away. Except for Ashley, who looks me up and down and then squints, like she disapproves.
I look down at my dress. Itโs black, which is out of place with the rest of the colorfully dressed guests. It also has a plunging neckline, which would be more exciting on someone with bigger boobs. Still, the waiter circling the room, offering appetizers, seems to appreciate them. I do what I can.
Grandma hustles over to me, her purple sequins hustling with her. The birthday dress is very flapper-like, with a nod to a Vegas showgirl.
She squeezes my arm. โEverything looks lovely.โ โYou know Mom did most of it.โ
Uncle Keith and Aunt Janice appear behind her and give me loose hugs and tight smiles.
โLovely to see you, Lucy,โ Uncle Keith says, rubbing a hand over his beard.
โIโm surprised you havenโt gotten remarried,โ Aunt Janice says with a frown.
โWell, it wasnโt so great the first time.โ I laugh. She doesnโt.
โWow,โ Ashley says. Her hair, which was light brown last time I saw her, is dyed a really nice auburn color, and I might have complimented it if she werenโt staring at me like I was an alien.
โHi, Lucy.โ Brian looks up from his phone long enough to glance at my boobs.
โBrian, youโre looking so handsome!โ Mom is just telling outright lies now, I guess. She pushes his shaggy brown hair out of his eyes, and he reels back like this is the worst thing to ever happen in his twenty-one years.
The smile on Momโs face fades to open-mouthed horror as she spots something behind me.
I turn. Itโs Ben, holding a present with a giant pink bow, wrapped much too nicely for him to have done it himself. Heโs wearing a blue button-up shirt, the sleeves rolled up to his elbows, and I notice that Ashley doesnโt disapprove of anything she sees there.
I canโt blame her, honestly.
โBen!โ Grandma exclaims at the same time Mom says, โWhat are you doing here?โ
Ben lifts one hand in a wave. If heโs surprised that Mom didnโt know he was coming, he doesnโt show it.
I canโt help but think that he could have saved the miniepisode for tomorrow. He posted it before the party, when he knew he would see her after it went up.
I am both impressed and a little scared.
โKathleen, donโt be rude,โ Grandma says, waving a hand at Mom. โI invited him.โ
โYou invited him?โ Mom practically screeches, and then looks at me, like I should also be horrified by this.
I smile at her, and then walk to him. I pluck the present from his arms. โBen. Youโre looking smug as usual.โ
He lets out a short, startled laugh. โThanks?โ
Mom gapes at me as I deposit the present on the table with the rest.
Keith, Janice, and their offspring look confused.
โEveryone, this is Ben Owens,โ Grandma says loudly. โHeโs the host of that podcast. You know the one.โ
Ashleyโs mouth falls open. Brian starts furiously texting. Keith and Janice look like theyโre still waiting for the punch line.
I steal a glance at Dad. Heโs glowering in the corner. Karen rushes over to Mom and whispers something in her ear.
A group of older ladies with matching poufy permed hairdos appear at the door, and Grandma walks over to greet them. Mom joins her, pointedly avoiding looking at Ben.
Everyone else is staring at him, so I stroll over to stand beside him. Usually everyone is staring atย me. Us being next to each other makes it easier for them.
Weโre both silent for a moment.
I point to the small bar set up on the far wall. โDrink?โ โGod, yes.โ
An hour later, Iโm sitting in the middle of the table with Grandma on one side and Ben on the other, an arrangement Grandma insisted on. (โItโs my birthday, I get to decide where we sit!โ sheโd gleefully declared, ignoring Momโs protests.)
Iโm on my second glass of wine and the room is pleasantly blurry around the edges.
They squeezed every possible chair they could up to this table, and my arm keeps brushing against Benโs. He is not blurry. In fact, he is in too sharp a focus, and I do my best not to look at him at all.
Iโm suddenly reminded that itโs been at least a month since I had sex, since Nathan and I had been in a dry spell preโmurder revelation. Itโs been much longer since I had reallyย greatย sex (thanks for nothing, Nathan).
The waiter stops behind me and refills my nearly empty wineglass. Well, thatโs not going to help me stop thinking about sex.
I reach for the glass, and then change my mind. Instead, I use two fingers to push it away a few inches.
Ben watches me, and our eyes meet as I sit back in my chair. I quickly look away.
Betsy is across from usโthe friend of Momโs who brought the excellent 285-calorie brownies to tea/wineโand sheโs openly staring at Ben. Heโs pretending not to notice.
โBruce,โ Betsy says.
โBen,โ I correct, and reach for my water.
โBen. You know that saying, he had a face for radio?โ I laugh mid-sip, nearly choking on my water.
โBetsy!โ Mom exclaims.
โWhat? We were just talking about it the other day!โ โIโve heard that, yes.โ Ben looks amused.
โYou donโt have that. In fact, Iโd say itโs a damn shame you decided to work in radio.โ
Laughter rises up from the table. Even Dad chuckles.
โThank you.โ Ben reddens like he isnโt often complimented on his good looks. Like he hasnโt visited r/Podcasts on Reddit and seen the threads discussing how cute he is.
โHow did you get into that?โ Keith asks. โPodcasting?โ
โI loved podcasts. I was obsessed with them, actually. Especially true crime. So, I decided to try one myself.โ
โJust like that?โ Karen asks. โYou werenโt even a crime reporter before, were you?โ I can tell she doesnโt actually need him to answer this question. Sheโd googled him extensively earlier. Probably made it all the way to page five.
โNo, I covered mostly lifestyle and entertainment as a journalist. True crime was more like a โฆ hobby of mine. I actually had a bunch of cases that Iโd dabbled in over the years, participated in those sites online where amateur sleuths try to solve stuff. When I decided to do my first case, I picked the one that I had the most information on already, just to try and make it easier on myself.โ
โDid you solve it?โ Keith asks.
โOf course he did.โ Janice bats his arm. โI told you all about it.โ
Keith frowns like he has no memory of that conversation, or maybe most things his wife has said to him.
โI did,โ Ben says.
โYou remember,โ Janice says to her husband. โThe teenager who was killed on prom night out in South Carolina. They found her body in the
trunk of a teacherโs car, but the guyย sworeย up and down he didnโt do it? Plus he had no motiveย andย an alibi.โ
Keith shakes his head, still clueless. โDid he do it?โ
โNo,โ Ben says. โThe girlโs boyfriend did. He put her in the trunk because he thought she was flirting with the teacher and maybe something was going on. There wasnโt, as far as I could tell.โ
โThat was easy though,โ Ashley says, eyebrow cocked in a way that seems flirty. โItโs always the boyfriend or the husband.โ
Her eyes flick to me and then quickly away.
Always the boyfriend, except when itโs the best friend.
โI have an idea!โ
Not now.
โI did have a feeling, going in,โ Ben admits.
โGot a feeling this time, Ben?โ I ask. โThink youโre going to solve it again?โ
โOh, good, dinner is here,โ Mom says loudly. Two waiters walk into the room, plates in arm.
I meet Benโs gaze. His lips twitch up but he says nothing.
I eat quickly, because the wine really is starting to go to my head. A waiter hovers, ready to refill my glass again at a momentโs notice.
The wine is flowing freely, actually, and I hold mine but donโt drink it as I glance around the table. Keithโs cheeks are red. Ashley is laughing loudly.
I think this is supposed to be fun. Or, perhaps, itย isย fun. For everyone else. They could take a photo and put it on Instagramโ#dinnerparty #sofun #lovemylifeโand it wouldnโt be a lie.
โAre you going to write a book, Ben?โ Grandma asks, apparently continuing a conversation I wasnโt paying attention to.
โA book? No.โ He glances at me. โSomeday, I might, but I donโt have any plans right now.โ
โPeople are saying youโre going to.โ โWhich people?โ
โYou know.โ She waves her hand. โTwitter.โ
โGrandma, youโre on Twitter?โ Brian looks so startled that I wonder suddenly what kind of shit heโs been posting on Twitter. Something he doesnโt want his grandma to see, clearly.
โYouโre a good writer,โ Janice says. โI read some of your pieces in the
Atlanticย andย Vanity Fair.โ โThank you,โ he says.
โLucy, didnโt you want to be a writer once?โ Keith peers at me as if Iโve disappointed him, this relative I barely know. โWhat ever happened to that?โ
I wasnโt that good, I guess, is what I should have said. People love that sort of shitโhumility and honesty, tied together to make everyone feel more comfortable after a rude question.
I smile. โWell, you know. No one wants to read a book from a murderer.โ
Keith reddens. Dad rolls his eyes. โLucy,โ Mom says wearily.
โWhy didnโt you ever write a memoir?โ Ashleyโs clearly been waiting all night to ask that question.
โBit hard to write a memoir about something you donโt remember.โ โYou could write about everything else.โ
I shrug.
โLetโs killโโ
โYou never tell your side of the story,โ Ashley presses.
Iโve told it more times than I can count. No one believed me. โIโm telling it to Ben.โ I take a sip of my wine.
Dadโs head pops up. His eyes spark with anger and questions.
โYouโre telling it to Ben?โ Mom says the words so slowly. Perhaps theyโre even interpreted as calm by the rest of the table.
Maybe theyย areย calm. I take a quick glance around and no one else seems nervous.
Iย shouldnโt be nervous. Iโm a grown-ass woman free to give interviews to whichever smug podcaster I choose.
โI have an idea. Letโs killโโ
I clench my fingers into a fist and will the voice away. โYeah. Iโm doing an interview with Ben soon.โ
โWe already talked about a few things,โ Ben adds. โThatโs an interesting decision, Lucy,โ Dad says.
Ashley snort-laughs and then claps a hand over her mouth. Others giggle nervously as well.
โEveryone has extremely high expectations of Ben.โ Iโm trying to sound casual. โJust trying to help where I can.โ
โI appreciate it.โ Ben is also trying to sound casual. Iโm better at it.
Dad opens his mouth like he has more to ask, then seems to think better of it.
โIt seems like Lucy should tell her own story instead of me telling it for her, wouldnโt you say?โ Ben asks.
โThatโs true,โ Ashley says with wide-eyed sincerity.
โWhat a load of shit.โ
The voice in my head is so loud that I barely stop myself from jumping.
โLetโs kill her.โ
I eye my knife, but Iโm too buzzed to kill Ashley. For real or otherwise.
โOr him?โ
I shift in my chair. The conversation has moved on without me, and Mom is staring at me.
โRight?โ she says. โWhat?โ
โI have an idea!โ
โThe truth,โ Mom says. โThatโs all any of us have ever wanted. To just find out the truth.โ
โYes.โ I nod. โThe truth.โ
I take a long sip of my wine, which I shouldย notย do, but I want to quiet the voice. It works.
โAnd the truth involves digging up peopleโs personal lives?โ Keithโs face is even redder. Anger and alcohol coming together to make one very crimson man.
โKeith,โ Janice says quietly, putting a hand on his arm.
He shakes her off. โIโm sorry, but why are we all acting like this man is welcome here? Heโโ
โYouโre very welcome, Ben,โ Grandma interrupts, patting his arm. He looks at her in amusement.
โMom!โ Keith throws his hands up. โFor godโs sake. He went on that podcast and he said thatโโ
โKeith,โ Mom snaps.
โโKathleen slept with a twenty-year-old in a car!โ โWow,โ Ashley says.
โOh my god.โ Brian actually puts down his phone. โDammit, Keith,โ Dad says.
โWhat? Itโs not even true!โ Keith points a furious finger at Ben. โYou just get on that little podcast of yours with your fake news, and you spout these accusations from โanonymous sources.โโ He does finger quotes aroundย anonymous sources.
โMaybe itโs time for the pie?โ Mom asks.
Keith ignores her, his attention locked on Ben. โWho are these sources?โ
โIโm sorry, I canโt reveal that.โ โOr presents?โ Mom suggests.
โOf course you canโt! Because they donโt exist!โ
โOr more wine?โ Grandma suggests, holding up her glass. A waiter scurries over to refill it.
Betsy leans across the table. โMaybe I should go,โ she whispers.
โAre you kidding? Things are just getting good!โ Grandma exclaims gleefully.
Keith has both hands on the table, ready to fight. โAnd you implied that she and that boyโโ
โColin,โ I supply.
โWow,โ Ashley says.
โโthatย Colinย boy killed Savannah! We all know who did itโโ I raise my hand. Betsyโs mouth drops open.
Grandma pulls my hand down. โNot the right crowd for that kind of joke, hon.โ
โNo offense, Lucy,โ Keith says. โReally, Dad?โ Brian asks.
โBut we all know who did it, and youโre throwing around lies and telling people Kathleen killed her!โ
โIโm just trying to get a handle on everyoneโs alibis.โ Ben seems remarkably unrattled.
In fact, his lips are twitching. The smug bastard might be enjoying this. โThat is notโโ
โOh, for fuckโs sake!โ Mom yells. Everyone freezes. โYes, I had sex with Colin in my car the night of the wedding! Are you happy, Ben? You got me! I slept with the twenty-year-old, and to be honest, I enjoyed it.โ
โWow.โ
โSo thatโs where I was when Savvy was murdered,โ Mom finishes calmly. She smooths a hand over her perfectly coiffed hair, and it barely moves. โHeโs my alibi.โ
Uncle Keith gapes at his sister like he just realized she knows how to have sex. Dad lets out a long-suffering sigh.
โOh, give it a rest, Don,โ Mom says. โLike you have any room to talk.โ I try so hard not to laugh, but a snort-giggle escapes my lips.
Neither of my parents has ever been all that discreet about their affairs. Dad used to leave his laptop open on the kitchen table and walk away while it dinged with messages, until Mom would scream for him to come answer his girlfriend. Mom, Iโm pretty sure, only started sleeping around to get back at Dad, but it sounds like sheโs enjoying the hell out of herself now. Good for her, I guess.
Iโll never understand why theyโre still married. I thought for sure that they were just waiting for me to move out before they split, but itโs been over a decade since I left for college. I guess theyโve decided that tormenting each other for the rest of their lives is preferable to divorce.
Grandma puts down her wineglass and reaches across the table for Momโs hand. โKathleen, I just want you to know that I mean this sincerely
โIโm deeply proud.โ
We eat pie in near silence. Grandmaโs friends try to liven things up again while sheโs opening presents, but weโre all still stuck on โI had sex with Colin in my car.โ
Everyone scurries out as soon as they can, and I help Grandma into a sleek black car that has shown up to whisk her away. Itโs another mystery man, this one at least ten years younger than she is. His fancy car smells too strongly of cologne, but his smile is friendly as he nods at me.
Grandma pats my cheeks as she settles into the front seat. โI told you Iโd ruin your birthday,โ I say.
โMy dear, you made it the best birthday ever.โ
I shake my head in amusement and close the door. She waves as they drive away.
I trudge back into the restaurant. Itโs nearly empty, the waitstaff clumped together around the hostess stand. They abruptly stop talking as I walk by.
I head to the back room to grab Momโs mason jars and the rest of the cake. I hear murmured voices as I approach, and I slow as I reach the door.
Dad stands near the end of the table with Ben, his arms crossed over his chest. Smoke from a recently extinguished candle billows up next to them. I stand back, out of view, absolutely shameless about eavesdropping.
โI know you donโt care about this, but I implore you to consider whatโs best for Lucy,โ Dad says.
โHow do you mean?โ Ben asks. He drank far less wine than the rest of us. His voice is much clearer than Dadโs.
โSheโs told her story several times. It doesnโt need to be repeated.โ Dadโs already frustrated.
โSheโs never told her story.โ โOf course she has.โ
โNot directly. It was always filtered through the police or you and her mom or her lawyer or the media. No one has ever heard directly from her.โ
โBut why do you think that was?โ
โBecause you were protecting her?โ โYes!โ
โAnd thatโs what youโre doing now?โ Ben asks. I wonder whether Dad hears the skepticism in his voice.
โOf course.โ
โIโd love to interview you, if youโd like to go into more detail,โ Ben says.
โIโm not doing an interview,โ Dad snaps. He starts to turn, and I quickly backtrack a few steps. I wait until heโs coming out of the room to start down the hallway again. He frowns as he passes me.
Ben is typing on his phone as I grab a box and head to the table for the mason jars.
He looks up, and then walks over to grab a few of the jars. Our eyes meet as he puts them in the box.
My story is still being filtered through him. I wonder whether he realizes that. Savvyโs story is being filtered through him. Through everyone heโs interviewed who has sanded off the edges of the real girl to present the world with a perfect victim.
โIโll see you Monday,โ he says softly. He heads to the door but pauses, looking over his shoulder at me. โYou know Iโm only interested in finding the truth, right? For Savannah.โ
โI know.โ
He nods and starts to walk away. โWait, Ben.โ
He looks back at me.
โThatโs what I want too,โ I say. โThe truth.โ In my head, the voice snorts.
โTo figure out what happened to her,โ I amend. โIโm going to help you figure it out, no matter what those dumbasses say.โ I gesture vaguely to the table, where the dumbasses (my family) were seated a few minutes ago.
Ben smiles. โIโm glad to hear it. Weโll figure out the truth together, Lucy.โ
I swallow nervously as he waves, then turns and walks away. I listen to his footsteps fade.
The truth.
โThe truth doesnโt matter.โ The voiceโSavvyโs voiceโis so clear now, clearer than itโs been in years.
Itโs always been Savvy talking to me. Since the first few days after she died, when her screams were so loud I thought my head was going to explode, to later, when she quieted to a murderous constant companion.
To now, when sheโs apparently had enough of me ignoring her.
โLetโs killโโ
I close my eyes, willing the memory away, but it wonโt go. Sheโs been there for days now, on the edge of every thought I have, yelling at me to notice her.
The memory forms, bright and clear, like it sharpened over the years instead of fading.
LUCYโ
FIVE YEARS AGO
“I know the truth doesnโt matter,” I said, sitting at the empty bar. Laughter echoed distantly from the kitchen where the staff were gathered. The restaurant had just opened, and the dining room was deserted. It was just me and Savvy.
She stood across from me on the other side of the bar, leaning her forearms against the counter. Her tank top revealed her tattoosโflowers on one arm and Harley Quinn on the other. She had a thing for supervillains. No one ever mentioned it. Maybe they thought it wasnโt important.
She was beautifulโbig, downturned eyes, and dark blond hair tied up in a messy bun. Her eye makeup was almost always smudged. I was pretty sure she rarely remembered to take it off at night. She just touched it up the next day and called it good.
A guy once said to her, โYou look like the fun kind of mess.โ Rude, but not wrong.
I, on the other hand, was a mess and not even a little bit fun.
I had a small bruise on my cheek. I could easily cover it with makeup, but Iโd wanted Matt to see it and feel bad. He hadnโt. Instead, he had pointedly held up his hand to show where Iโd scratched him.
Savvy was right. It wouldnโt matter if I said Iโd scratched him because I was defending myself. That he started it.
Well, no, heโd dispute that. Matt would say I started it by screaming at him again. โDonโt start shit you canโt finish,โ heโd always say.
โHe said heโd tell my parents I pushed him down the stairs if I went to stay with them,โ I said.
โYou didnโt push him down the stairs,โ Savvy said.
I hadnโt, but I was fairly certain Matt actually thought I had. Heโd said the lie so many times heโd started to believe it himself.
Hell, I was starting to believe it. The (fake?) memory of me violently shoving him now played next to the (true?) memory of me flailing out my arms in anger and him tripping because he was drunk again.
โBut the truth doesnโt matter,โ she said again.
โI should have controlled my temper,โ I said softly. I should have just cried. Taken the hits and crawled away to show my scars. I should have been a better victim. The truth doesnโt matter if you fight back.
โI have an idea.โ Savvy leaned closer to me, meeting my eyes. Her mouth was set in a hard line, her gaze steely and serious. โLetโs kill your husband.โ