30
ON TUESDAY NIGHT, I fill in my notes from my session in the garden with Margaret, adding details from my outside research as I go.
Back in the sixties, when all of this happened, no one knew for sure what Laura had given the authorities to earn her own legal protections.
Most people took it for granted that, after the groupโs arrest, sheโd flipped and agreed to be a witness for the prosecution, a deal offered to her only because of her familyโs wealth and power.
Iโd never read anywhere about the extortion, or the tense diner meeting.
I wonder now why the lid had been kept so tightly shut on that. If it was the preference of the government or if the Iveses themselves had pushed to keep Lauraโs role in the raid a secret.
Based on everything Margaretโs told me, the trial was hard on Laura.
Even in the quick and loose courtroom sketches, she looks terrified. It wouldnโt surprise me if she was too afraid of retribution to allow David Atwood to find out sheโd done more than turn on him. Sheโd set him up.
I flip between web browsers until I get back to an old article from the New York Times. Front page. In the grainy photograph to the right of the article, Laura walks with her head down out of the courtroom, surrounded by lawyers and bodyguards. Several paces behind her, I spot half of a face I didnโt notice before. A man in a three-piece suit, with oversized glasses, turning to speak with someone else in the crowd. Heโs only partially visible, but itโs enough to send a zing down my backbone.
I recognize him.
From more than one place. I click back to the browser where I was analyzing courtroom sketches. I scroll down, checking my hunch.
There, just like I thought.
A loosely scrawled cartoon version of the man in the suit. Round face, a gap between his teeth. The associated documents describe him as Dr. Cecil Willoughby, testifying on the medical state of Laura Ives during her involvement in the Peopleโs Moment Plot.
Iโm shaking with adrenaline as I pull out my phone from my sleep- shorts pocket and flip to the picture Cecil Wainwright texted me.
I zoom in, close enough to get his long hair out of the frame.
Round face. A gap-toothed smile. The same man.
I feel almost dizzy as another wave of dรฉjร vu hits me. Because Iโm fairly certain this isnโt the only time Iโve seen Dr. Willoughby in the news.
In a new window, I pull up the infamous press conference video, the one filmed outside the hospital, announcing the death of Cosmo Sinclair.
There he is again, clad in a white coat, his hair short and slicked neatly
down.
Dr. Cecil Willoughby.
Captain Cecil Wainwright.
The guy who owns Fish Bowl. The one who throws himself yearly not- birthday parties and never leaves home without a bucket hat. The one whoโs been incredibly interested in the presence of not one but two writers on Little Crescent Island.
With shaking hands, I text Hayden: Holy shit.
I know, he says. Iโm coming over.
โข โข โข I SCOOP COFFEE into a fresh filter. โWhat does this mean?โ
โI still donโt know,โ Hayden replies, leaning against the counter. He braces his hands on it, on either side of his hips, and a tiny sliver of his stomach shows when his shirt rides up.
I pull myself back to the task at hand. โI mean, itโs too big of a coincidence, right?โ I fill the pot at the sink. โThereโs no way this doctor and Margaret end up in the same place, both using different names, and donโt know about each other.โ He opens his mouth to respond, but I get there first: โIf you donโt want to talk about thisโโ
โI do,โ he says. โAnything I say, youโd get to anyway. Itโs faster if we just do this together.โ
I nod, chest warming at the thought, and pour the water into the coffee makerโs tank, then drop the pot on the warmer and hit brew. โI mean, theoretically, is it possible she doesnโt know heโs here? Or vice versa?โ
โSure,โ Hayden says. โAnythingโs possible. But it still feels like weโre being played here somehow, and I canโt figure out how or why.โ
I frown. โSame.โ I want to trust MargaretโI mean, I keep asking her to trust me, so I should be giving her the benefit of the doubtโbut somethingโs strange about this. โSheโs never mentioned Cecil to me. I mean, she talked about the doctor who testified at the Atwood trial, but she didnโt use his name, and sheโs definitely never suggested she has friends on the island. As far as I know, itโs just her and Jodi, in that house, all day, every day. And lately Jodi hasnโt even been there.โ
โSame for me,โ he says.
We fall into silence while the coffee burbles. Then I pour each of us a mug. โHave you asked her about it?โ I say. โAbout him, I mean?โ
Hayden shakes his head and sets his mug on the counter. โI didnโt want to press her if thereโs some explanation that sheโs working up to. But like I said, somethingโs been off about this job since the beginning.โ
His head cocks, his lips parting.
โJust to say it again,โ I chime in, โthereโs no pressure to tell me anything.โ
โNo, itโs not that,โ he says. โItโs justโฆyou know when someoneโs lying to you, right? Or when they think theyโre telling you the truth, but thereโs more to it?โ
โSometimes, yeah.โ And then after a second of thought: โA lot of times.โ
โItโs just that feeling. All day, every day. Even when sheโs telling me things that are verifiably true. And for someone whoโs gone so far out of her way to concoct this whole ridiculous scenario,โ he says, โsheโs weirdly reticent actually talking about herself.โ
โSheโs quiet during your sessions?โ I say, shocked.
He snorts. โNo. Never quiet. Justโฆevasive. Sheโs fine to talk about books and movies and recipes and the fucking weather, but sheโs so guarded about the rest. Sometimes she cancels last minute even though, ostensibly, she doesnโt go anywhere.โ
An idea clangs through me, something we already visited once long ago. โMaybe she really is sick. Maybe Cecilโs here because heโs a doctor, someone she trusts. And heโs taking care of her.โ When Iโd asked her why now, the only answer sheโd given me was If not now, when?
โWhy keep that from us though?โ Hayden asks. โItโs not uncommon for people to decide to do things like this right at the end of their lives. I mean, three-quarters of every meeting Iโve taken since I wrote about Len is with some aging celebrity who sees the end coming and wants a chance to tell their story. Weโve signed NDAs. If sheโs sick, why not tell us?โ
โBecause people arenโt always logical or practical,โ I say. I think back to being a teenager, to Audrey and me finally going to public school, all of her surgeries safely ensconced in the past.
We couldโve shut up some of the bullies if they knew what my sister had been throughโwhy weโd been homeschooled and isolated up to that point. But Audrey was adamant no one know. โWould you mind if I ask her
outright?โ
โWhat, if sheโs sick?โ Hayden says.
I shake my head. โAbout Cecil.โ
He grimaces. โItโs up to you, butโฆโ
โBut?โ
He sighs, rakes a hand through his dark hair. โI donโt know. Itโs possible she wonโt take it well. Weโre so close to the end of this. If you want this job โโ
โI want this job because I want to tell her story,โ I say. โBut if she canโt
be honest with us, there is no job.โ
โOkay.โ He nods. โSo we ask her.โ
โWe ask her,โ I agree.
I hold my hand out as if to shake on it, as if itโs a deal. As soon as he clasps it, though, I yank him close, wind my arms around his neck, and kiss him. His hands slide back along the counter on either side of me, his chest pressing into mine as he deepens the kiss.
โYou taste like coffee,โ I whisper.
โSo do you,โ he says.
โYes, but I always taste like coffee,โ I point out.
He slides my shorts down. โMaybe I wanted to taste like you.โ He kneels in front of me, work forgotten, everything forgotten except that thing that weโre not saying. That we love each other. That when he looks right at me, the world stops turning.
โข โข โข ON WEDNESDAY NIGHT, I meet Hayden at his hotel room at the Grande Lucia.
He opens the door before Iโve even knocked. On the table just inside sit a pizza box and a salad from the place right behind Little Croissant.
Thereโs a heaviness in the air, and I know we can both feel it: the hotel walls closing in on us, the sand pouring through the hourglass, the back half of the book thinning with every turned page. His balcony drapes are drawn to one side, the door open and the ocean beyond painted purple, pink, and blue by the setting sun. Even this feels like a reminder that our days, our hours left together in this bubble, are numbered.
Hayden snatches the remote and turns off the muted TV before facing me, our hands linking together. He kisses my forehead once, then draws back to gaze at me through the half-light of the bedside lamp. โDo you want to know what she said about Cecil?โ he asks me.
My gut clenches. I know heโd tell me, and Iโm dying to hear, but with how little time we have left and how many rules weโve already broken, this
feels like a line I can avoid crossing.
Iโll ask her myself tomorrow.
โTonight, I want it to just be us.โ No thinking about the job, or about our lives on opposite sides of the country, or how heartbroken I might be come Saturday night.
โJust us,โ he agrees softly, lifting my hands to kiss the tips of my fingers. When our lips next meet, every ounce of my restraint cracks. I reach for the buttons on his shirt. He slips mine over my head and lifts me against him, my thighs wrapping around his bare waist, his heart and mine pounding in sync. He carries me to his bed and we tumble onto it, the rest of our outer layers coming off as we bury ourselves in the blankets, the soft smell of almond everywhere and still not enough. I press my nose against his neck and inhale, his low laugh vibrating through me.
He skims my underwear down my legs, leaving trails of goose bumps behind, and I push his briefs down too. We tangle together, a knot of heat and electricity. โIs this okay?โ I whisper, my hands on his jaw, his on my hip bones as he settles his weight on top of me.
โItโs just us tonight,โ he whispers.
My heart thrills, but I still ask, โIs that a yes?โ
He kisses me more deeply as his hand wanders over to his wallet on the bedside table. โYes,โ he says, pulling a condom out and kissing me once more before sitting back on his heels.
โThank god,โ I breathe, watching him work the condom on. I pull him back to me hungrily, my whole body tightening in anticipation of the moment he presses against me, then relaxing to make room for him as he pushes into me with a rough groan.
โOh, god,โ I cry out, a little too loud, but Iโve never been great at playing it cool, and it feels so good to finally have him. He shivers over me, holding still until I urge him closer, gradually taking more of him, little sparks flying across the corners of my vision from the sensation. He bucks his hips once, a test, and I cry out again.
โYou okay?โ he asks, cupping my jaw in one hand.
โIโm amazing,โ I breathe.
โYou are,โ he replies. My laugh is cut short when he moves again. The pleasure whites everything else out. I arch up under him, and his hands scrape down to my thighs, gripping hard as he thrusts into me. โI want you on top of me,โ he says.
We roll together until I am. I sit up on my knees, then slowly lower myself onto him, my eyes falling closed at the hot slide of our bodies together. He folds me over him, kissing me deep, his tongue stroking into me as I lift myself slowly and sink back down.
โGod, Alice.โ He grips my waist, hard enough that his nails will likely leave marks but still not hard enough. No part of him could ever be deep enough in my heart or body to satisfy me.
I grind myself against him; knot my hands into his dark, overgrown hair; bite down on the side of his neck to keep from crying when he grabs my ass and pulls me even harder against him. He catches my breast in his mouth, and everything in me tightens. I sit back, gasping for breath before I come undone.
โSit up,โ I tell him, pulling on his shoulder, and he does, his back pressed to the headboard. I shuffle closer, his hands gently guiding me onto him in this new position.
โAlice,โ he hisses against my throat as I move with him, slowly now, almost delirious. A small noise rises in my throat, a hm? that turns into something more like a purr.
โI canโt get enough of you,โ he whispers, his lips moving in a light, teasing pattern along my neck. โI thought Iโd been in love before, but this is different.โ
โI know,โ I whisper back, still moving in that languid rise and fall, the need in me mounting with every glide, my voice thin and breathless. โI feel like youโre mine. Like youโre mine in a way no one else ever has been.โ
โI want you to be mine,โ he murmurs, gripping me harder. We move faster.
I try to tell him I am, to explain to him that all the things we donโt know about each other, all the time we havenโt spent together, couldnโt possibly weigh more than this feeling in my bones, the joy of being close to him.
But I canโt. The feeling swells within me, too big for words.
We flip over again, him stretched out on top of me, one of his hands holding both of my wrists above my head.
โI love you,โ he tells me again, and I try to say it back, but the only thing I can get out is his name, again and again, like Iโm begging him for something. Begging for him.
And then his name breaks into a wordless cry as I bow up under him, the waves of sensation pummeling me, his hiss of my name my only tether through the dark wash of pleasure.
He breaks too, and I tighten my thighs around him, holding him to me as we crest. I have no idea if it goes on for seconds or for hours, that feeling. But finally it draws back, and he slides clear of me and drops beside me onto the bed, pulling me into a curl against his sweat-slicked body.
We lay there, catching our breath in a heap, the blankets kicked off and his arm a loose coil around me, so long that we start to drift off.
โWill you stay?โ he murmurs sleepily.
โWe havenโt even eaten dinner,โ I tease. โYou canโt kick me out yet.โ
โTonight, I mean,โ he says.
โIf you want me to,โ I say.
โI want you to,โ he says. โI always want you here.โ
โHere?โ I sit up and straddle him again. โOr here?โ
He smiles. โThereโs good for me.โ He pulls me back down to him.
Dinner will have to wait.





