2
I SPEND MY first night at the Grande Lucia Resort eating Twizzlers and googling Hayden Anderson while convincing myself the world isnโt ending.
First I read a dozen rave reviews of his book. Then I stumble across a Publishers Weekly article that estimates its first yearโs US sales to be upwards of two million. Lastly, just to torture myself, I watch an interview with Hayden and the bookโs subject, Len Stirling, wherein Len informs the interviewer that heโd already considered nine writers before Hayden even threw his hat in the ring. Hayden, without any trace of humor or irony, leans
forward to add, โIโm very competitive.โ
I cut my own groan short.
Thereโs still a chance Margaret will choose to work with me.
Maybe sheโd rather work with a woman. Maybe she always roots for the underdog. Maybe she just has a natural distaste for tall, muscular, talented men who write the kind of biographies that not only donโt make a person fall asleep but also go so far as to make said person weep multiple times while sheโs reading alone at the bar of her neighborhood taqueria back in Highland Park.
There could be lots of reasons why she doesnโt want to work with Hayden, and surely there could be at least several why she would want to work with me.
I nod to myself, more enthusiastically than I feel, as I flop back on the cheery gingham bedspread, gazing out the window, upside down, toward the beach beyond the hotelโs courtyard.
I shouldโve known a secret like Margaretโs whereabouts couldnโt last forever.
It had all started four months ago, when my profile on the former child star Bella Girardi came out. That piece was the thing I was absolute proudest of in my career thus far. I had a full folder of sweet emails from former colleagues and glowing screenshots of online chatter about the story after it went live.
And all of that, in itself, wouldโve been more than enough to make the weeks of writing and rewriting and back-and-forths with my fact-checkers and editor all worth it.
But at the bottom of one very short email there was also a little something extra.
Loved the piece, LindaTakesBackHerLifeAt53 wrote. P.S. That Cosmo Sinclair song about Margaret Ives that u and Bella talked about is one of my all-time faves. Did u know Margaretโs living down on an island in Georgia now, selling art under a fake name?
That was it. No more information. And when I emailed Linda back, I got no reply.
I spent two weeks researching any connection Margaret might have to Georgia (none that I could find), and googling combinations of her name with โartโ and โisland,โ to no avail. Margaret Ives vanished entirely from public view in the early two thousands, and mostly the rumor mill seemed to suggest sheโd married an Italian olive farmer half her age and settled down on the opposite side of the Atlantic.
At first, I was ninety percent sure Linda was lying or misinformed.
There was no way Margaret Ives was in Georgia, on a little island that survived on local tourism, within a long dayโs drive of the west Tennessee hometown of her late husband, Cosmo Sinclair.
But the idea wouldnโt let go of me. The rumor had to come from somewhere, I thought, even as I tried to talk myself out of my innate optimism.
I started trawling online message boards. Anything to do with Cosmoโs music, with the illustrious Ives family, with Margaretโs disappearance.
Nothing. On any of them.
And then I found the conspiracy theorists. People posting pictures of โElvisโ at a mall in Tuscaloosa. Or JFK wearing a bucket hat and a barely buttoned shirt, white chest hair spilling out around his gold chain necklace, in Miami. It took a while to find the Margaret post, just because the mystery of what happened to her had faded with time.
People knew about Ives Media, and they knew about the familyโs palatial estate (now owned by the state and open for tours). They of course knew about the whole snafu with Margaretโs sister and the cult, and they could probably instantly call to mind the famous black-and-white photograph of Margaret and Cosmo running, hand in hand, up the courtroom steps the day that they eloped, his blond hair slicked back and hers teased into the beehive style of the time.
But after Cosmoโs tragic death, his widow had largely retreated from the glare of the spotlight. So that when she disappeared altogether, twenty years ago, no one was quite so interested as they mightโve been.
Most people had simply accepted that weโd never find out what happened to her. Just another Amelia Earhart, a woman lost to time.
But there were still some active Margaret Ives online communities dedicated to the rumors surrounding her vanishing. To debunking or proving them, depending on the posterโs point of view. They were treated like true-crime-junkie communities, bits of old interviews trotted out as evidence for or against a favorite theory.
Those specific message boards got me nowhere.
The Not So Dead Celebrities message board, however, led me here, to Little Crescent Island.
And if I could find her through that post, thereโs no telling how many other Hayden Andersons might be flying cross-country to Little Crescent Island this very minute.
My phone buzzes on the mattress beside me, and I feel around until I find it. My stomach rises expectantlyโmaybe Margaretโs already made a decisionโbut then I see the screen.
Theo. Now, a different sensation rumbles in my stomach, that anxious flutter I still get when I hear from my on-again, off-again not-boyfriend.
Howโd it go with the heiress? he asks. Iโm touched he remembered.
Probably too touched. I havenโt talked about much else the last few weeks.
But still! He reached out to check inโthatโs something!
I hesitate over how to phrase it and settle on: Sheโs intriguing and her house is a dream and I want the job so, so, so badly.
All true. It wouldnโt do me any good to add and Iโm terrified Iโm not going to get it, because a six-foot-three rock face of a man with a Pulitzer and a scowl to freeze a Gorgon is on the scene.
I watch the phone for a minute, two, three. I set it aside. I was drawn to Theo for his easy confidence and his laid-back, carefree way of moving through the world. Thereโs something so appealing about a person who doesnโt take anything too seriously. Until you have to text with one. Theoโs terrible at it. To be fair, Iโm not amazing myself, but heโs the king of sending a message, to which I immediately reply, and then waiting a full day to acknowledge my response.
By then I may have lost my dream job and also fully melted into this bed, the puddle formerly known as the writer Alice Scott.
โGet yourself together, Scott!โ I cry, pitching myself back onto my feet and slapping my laptop shut.
โYouโre on a beautiful island with a growling stomach and an open schedule,โ I tell myself, snatching my phone and stuffing my feet into my sandals. โMight as well make the most of it.โ
โข โข โข LITTLE CRESCENT ISLAND is a vacation destination, but itโs not a nightlife hot spot. Most of the people here seem to be either retirees or families with kids, and itโs nine oโclock on a Tuesday night, so pickings are slim on the main drag.
The first open restaurant I come to is called Fish Bowl, and the menu posted out front seems to be ninety percent alcohol and ten percent seafood.
Inside, itโs cramped and wonderfully kitschy, with bamboo wall paneling and fishnets suspended from the ceiling, all manner of colorful plastic fish and glow-in-the-dark seaweed caught in them. A ponytailed server in a tight white shirt and short shorts whisks past me, tray in hand, and says cheerfully, โSit anywhere you want, hon. Weโre slow tonight.โ
There are plenty of open tables, but two older gentlemen in matching bowling shirts are sitting at the bar, and Iโm feeling kind of chatty, so I head their way. Right as Iโm sidling onto a stool two down from them, though, theyโre tossing money onto the glossy, dark wooden countertop and standing to go.
One catches my eyes, and I flash a smile.
He smiles back. โHighly recommend the Captainโs Bowl!โ
โIโll take that under advisement,โ I promise, and he tips an invisible hat before shuffling off after his companion. On the way out, the two of them stop to have a word with the ponytailed server, and she gives the lover of the Captainโs Bowl a peck on the cheek, so either theyโre all locals or this place just has over-the-top service.
I go back to perusing the menu, resuming a practically lifelong debate of mine: whether to order fish tacos or fish and chips.
Iโm still working on this when someone plops a massive bowl of startlingly blue liquid, ice, and roughly five fruit spears down in front of me. I look up, surprised, to find the ponytailed server smiling at me from behind the bar. โCaptainโs Bowl,โ she says. โCourtesy of the captains themselves.โ
โOh?โ I glance toward the front door, the gentlemen from earlier long gone now. โWhat are they the captains of?โ
โUncle Ralph is the captain of the bowling team, and Cecil is the captain of this restaurant,โ she muses. โEach has his own seat of power, but Cecilโs carries a bit more weight here, understandably.โ
โWell, next time you see him, thank him for me,โ I say.
She nods once. โWill do. Now, are you eating too tonight or just swimming?โ She tips her chin toward the gargantuan bowl of violently unnatural blue, and I burst out laughing.
โWhatโs even in this?โ I ask.
โEverything,โ she says. โPlus some Coca-Cola.โ
I take a tiny sip through the neon-pink straw, and it feels like I just inhaled sugar, then poured gasoline down my throat, but in a fun way.
โFood?โ the womanโher name tag says Sheriโasks again.
I tell her my predicament, tacos versus fish and chips.
โTacos,โ she says decisively. โAlways go with the tacos.โ
โPerfect.โ I set my menu down, and she whirls off through the door behind the bar. I look down at my drink and burst into laughter again. Iโve never been a big drinker, but Iโd give this concoction a ten out of ten on presentation alone. I snap a picture and text it to Theo while I start nibbling on the first spear of fruit. You as a drink, he replies immediately. Have fun!
I will! I tell him, then set my phone down and give the restaurant another once-over. Other than me, there are two parties present at the moment: a family of five at the table under the front windows, and a guy nursing an ice water and eating a salad at the tiny booth back by the bathroom hallway.
He looks up from his water at that exact moment.
Nearly black hair, angular nose, a stern brow.
I whip back around to face the bar, nearly capsizing my stool in the process. I grab the edge of the counter to steady myself, heart racing. It probably isnโt even him. Itโs probably my mind and the glow-in-the-dark ceiling playing tricks on me, forming Hayden Andersons out of random shadows.
I take another small sip of Captainโs Bowl to steel myself and then slowly, casually, throw a glance over my shoulder toward the booth.
Heโs no longer looking this way. Instead heโs staring down at something in front of him, his brow tightly furrowed. Hunched over the tiny table like that, he gives the impression of a bear at a tea party, everything around him
just a little too small and breakable.
Definitely him.
And seeing him now, a not-so-small part of me wants to run and hide.
Which makes no sense.
Heโs not a grizzly. Heโs a guy who happens to want the same job as me.
A guy who wrote a book I loved!
Itโs ridiculous to treat him like some kind of enemy, just because we both want to write Margaretโs story. And itโs ridiculous to sit here and
ignore him when weโre ten feet apart.
I should say hi.
Just one more sip of Captainโs Bowl for good luck, and then I hop down from my stool and cross the restaurant to stand in front of Haydenโs table.
He doesnโt look up. I give him a second to finish his page, but even after he taps to the next one, he doesnโt peel his eyes off his e-reader.
โHi!โ I chirp.
He flinches at the sound of my voice, then slowly, very slowly, drags his eyes up to mine from beneath a creased brow.
โWe met earlier?โ I remind him. โIโm Alice.โ
โI remember,โ he says, his voice a flat rumble.
โI actually already know who you are,โ I say.
One of his dark eyebrows arches.
I slide into the booth, across from him, our knees bumping together. Iโd always wondered why it seemed like enormously tall men tend to date adorably tiny women, and now I have my answer, apparently: A man as tall as Hayden Anderson canโt comfortably sit opposite anyone over five three.
Iโm about six inches into the red here.
I turn to perch sideways instead. Heโs still staring at me with that brow arched, the visual equivalent of a question mark.
โBecause of your book,โ I explain. โOur Friend Len. I loved it. I mean, obviously. Everyone who read it loved it. After the Pulitzer, hearing that from a random woman in a bar probably feels a little anticlimactic, but still, I wanted you to know.โ
His shoulders relax, just a bit. โAre you a friend or family?โ
โWhat?โ I say.
โOf Margaretโs,โ he clarifies.
โOh, neither.โ I wave a hand. โIโm a writer too.โ
His gaze dips down me again, sizing me up now that he has this new information. His irises are lighter than I thought. Still brown, but a pale shade of it.
โWhat sort of things do you write?โ he asks.
โAll sorts,โ I say. โA lot of human interest, and pop culture stuff. I work at The Scratch.โ
His face remains completely impassive. I try a different tack: โHave you
ever been to Georgia?โ
โFirst time,โ he says.
โReally?โ I say, surprised. โWhere are you from?โ
โNew York,โ he says.
โThe city or the state?โ I ask.
โCity,โ he replies.
โBorn and raised?โ I say.
โNo,โ he says.
โThen whereโd you grow up?โ I ask.
โIndiana,โ he says.
โDid you like it?โ I ask.
His brow sinks into a scowl, his wide mouth still keeping to an utterly
straight line. โWhy?โ
I laugh. โWhat do you mean why?โ
โWhy would you want to know if I liked growing up in Indiana?โ he says, face and voice perfectly matched in surliness.
I fight a smile. โBecause Iโm considering buying it.โ
His eyes narrow, irises seeming to darken. โBuying what?โ
โIndiana,โ I say.
He stares.
I canโt fight it anymore. The amusement wins out, and another laugh escapes me. โIโm just trying to get to know you,โ I explain.
He sets his forearms on the table, his posture very nearly a challenge.
His head tilts to the left, and he says, quite possibly, the last thing Iโm expecting: โThis isnโt going to work.โ
I draw back, surprised and confused. โWhat isnโt?โ
โYou, trying to throw me off my game,โ he growls.
โAnd what โgameโ exactly are we talking about here?โ I say, glancing around the now totally empty Fish Bowl. โWait, Sheri?โ I spin back to face him, our knees colliding again.
โWho is Sheri,โ he says, with some distaste.
โOur server!โ I drop my voice, in case she pops out of the kitchen. โIf youโre trying to make a move, all you had to do was say so, and I wouldโve gone right back to my fishbowlโโ
โNot the server,โ he interrupts. โThe book.โ
โThe book?โ I repeat. Then it dawns on me. He means the book.
Margaretโs book.
Hayden goes on: โI donโt know what thisโโhe waves one large hand between usโโis supposed to accomplish exactly, but this is Margaret Ives weโre talking about. I want this job and Iโm not going to back off, so you can stop.โ
At first, it stings, being talked to like this by a stranger. That someone whose work I admired has just accused me of trying to somehow professionally thwart him when I actually was just trying to get to know him.
But underneath the sting, thereโs another feeling growing, getting
traction all through my limbs.
Hope.
In life, Iโve learned thereโs almost always a silver lining. Hereโs one now.
Haydenโs brow furrows, his arms sliding off the table. โWhy are you
doing that?โ
โDoing what?โ
โSmiling,โ he says dryly.
I snort out a laugh and slide out of the booth to stand, practically floating back to the bar, because his reaction has told me one important thingโI mean, aside from the fact that heโs a mistrustful cynic. โBecause,โ
I call to him, โnow I know I still have a chance.โ
He rolls his eyes, and I plop back down on my stool, buzzing with excitement, just as Sheri bumps the kitchen door open with one hip and marches out with my basket of fried fish tacos. โI see that Captainโs Bowl got you grinning,โ she says.
โItโs great,โ I tell her with another big, appreciative slurp. Probably one of the last few Iโll be able to handle, honestly, unless I plan on being hospitalized or arrested later.
โGlad to hear it,โ she says. โYouโre not driving, are you?โ
โNo, Iโm over at the Grande Lucia, so Iโm on foot tonight,โ I tell her.
โAw, my husband, Robbie, and I honeymooned there,โ she tells me.
Sheri doesnโt look quite old enough to be married, but I guess thatโs going by Los Angeles standards. Most of the girls I went to high school with are married now, and my mom and dad were married by the time they were twenty-three, though they didnโt have my sister or me until much later.
โGet you anything else?โ she asks, one hand on her hip.
โActually,โ I say, โIโd like to send a drink to someone, if you donโt mind.โ A little something to brighten his mood the way he just brightened mine.
Sheriโs eyes wander over my shoulder and back to the corner, locking onto the only other patron in this fine establishment. โWhat are we thinking here? Whiskey? Beer?โ
โDo you have anything bigger or bluer than this?โ I ask, pointing down toward my bowl.
โAside from the freshly cleaned toilets, no,โ she says, โbut I can throw in some candied hibiscus to spice things up if that helps.โ
โThat,โ I say, โwould be perfect.โ





