Chapter 2
OPHELIA
Present Day
Iunlock the front door of my childhood home.
I haven’t lived here for over three years, but it’s always been home.
Now, though, since Dad’s arrest and very public trial, since the federal agents trampled through every room, pried into every corner, and dissected every aspect of our lives, I feel more like a stranger here than ever.
It’s almost like they somehow erased the past. Like that past doesn’t belong to me.
I leave the lights out for a minute and lean against the closed door. I take a deep breath in, exhale. I need a few minutes. I want to hear the stillness of this place, smell the familiar smell of the house, and memorize it all before it is no longer mine.
Moonlight shines in through the windows, illuminating the multitude of boxes packed and ready to be moved into storage. Whatever the FBI didn’t seize, that is.
It’s only slightly warmer inside than outside.
The central heating has been switched off for weeks.
I unwrap the scarf from around my neck and set it, along with my keys, on top of a box near the door, then walk toward the kitchen at the back of the house.
My heels click, and I glance out through one of the windows to see the realtor’s sign in the front lawn with the big SOLD sticker proudly spanning it.
The sale is almost finalized, just waiting on the last of the signatures.
We had to sell it. We had no choice. I would have loved to have held on to it. Dad would have loved that too. I always thought I’d move back home after college once I got married. I’d have my own kids and raise them here with Dad and Tonia. Childish, I know.
Now, it’s all different. It doesn’t feel at all mine. Standing here, I feel like an intruder.
In the kitchen, I switch on the light. This was Tonia’s domain.
She’s living with her sister in Portsmouth now.
She stuck around as long as she could and kept the house running while Dad was on trial and I was away at school.
She didn’t complain when we couldn’t afford to pay her anymore, didn’t say a word.
She just hung on and lived off her savings until she couldn’t.
I miss her.
I miss Dad.
I miss my life.
It’s selfish, I know. I still have so much, and so many have far less, but it’s how I feel.
Soon, the moving truck will come, and all the boxes will go into storage. Soon, I’ll be standing at this kitchen counter where I ate most of my childhood meals with Tonia for the last time.
I walk out into the hallway and head upstairs. There are two things I want before the movers come. First, I go into my dad’s room and switch on the light. It feels so strange being here. As I look at the stripped mattress, I wonder where he is right now, if he’s in his cell. I guess so. It’s late.
I wonder if he can sleep. If he’s afraid. If he has a plan.
When I called his lawyer, John Higgins, to ask about his options, about an appeal, he told me what I already knew. In a last-minute turn of events, Dad had changed his testimony. He took a plea deal. There is no appealing that.
Truth is, I haven’t been there for him like I should have been. It’s been hard, knowing what I know about the charges, about the money that’s missing, that my dad allegedly embezzled and stole the life savings of so many people.
To top it off is what he tried to do to Sullivan Fox, who was once his best friend and business partner—not to mention the father of my fiancé. He dragged Sullivan’s name through the mud, almost destroying him.
It’s a complicated situation and one I’m struggling to navigate.
With a deep sigh, I sit on the edge of the mattress and turn the engagement ring on my finger. The princess diamond on the platinum band is heavy and bigger than I’d have chosen for myself. I remember the night Ethan gave it to me, remember what happened afterwards.
Complicated doesn’t begin to cover it.
Not only am I engaged to Ethan, but when we lost everything, Sullivan Fox didn’t turn his back on me like I’d fully expected him to. Instead, he’d taken me in like I was his own daughter.
When Dad implicated him, Mr. Fox didn’t treat me any differently.
He paid my college tuition and let me live in the apartment they own in Boston.
He bought my books and made sure I had everything I needed.
He gave me a place in his home, a family to turn to.
He took care of me as if I was his own family, telling me it was important to focus on my studies and not to worry about anything else.
He waved away my offers to pay him back and told me that no matter what my dad had done, I would always be like a daughter to him.
Yeah. Complicated doesn’t begin to cover it, really.
My phone buzzes, alerting me to a message.
I glance at it and check the time. I am expected at dinner with the Foxes in an hour.
Ethan is texting that he’s stuck in traffic and will be late picking me up.
I text a quick reply, telling him I’m running late too and not to worry.
I don’t mention I’m late because I’m in my old house.
I slip the phone into my back pocket and open the nightstand drawer to take out what I came for, the framed photo of Mom and Dad.
I look at it, see his smiling face and Mom’s, although her smile is less wide.
There’s a sadness in her eyes, eyes I inherited.
A face I inherited. Except her eyes are hollow, like something is missing.
I touch their faces and wipe away a tear because how I wish I could turn back time.
How I wish we could take back these last three years and have a do-over.
But do-overs don’t happen in real life.
“Suck it up, Phee,” I tell myself because I’m not the one who will be spending the next decade of his life behind bars. I’m not the one who lost everything.
I stand up and go into my old bedroom. The moon is bright in the bay window. I spent hours here reading when I was a kid.
From the little hiding spot beneath the seat, I lift out my binoculars and train them on the Fox house. Well, not the Fox house. The Cruz cottage. Although I guess it’s technically the Fox cottage, and no Cruz has lived there for a long time.
A hopelessness, a sense of utter loss, twists my belly. I recall Silas’s words to me that first day I’d met him. He was seventeen, gruff and angry. He’s been much the same every time I’ve run into him since that day.
Well, most times, at least.
A light goes on in the cottage and I jump, remembering how he’d caught me watching them that first day when they all moved in. What he’d said to me, his cryptic message to a twelve-year-old girl:
Some things are better left unknown.
Thinking back on it now, it’s like he was reading my future.
Someone moves around inside. I guess it’s the new staff who live on site. Esmerelda Cruz was staff, and often, Silas was treated as staff. I’m not sure how Mira could stand having them on their property, actually.
I turn to go, not wanting to be here any longer.
It’s all too much. I set the binoculars on top of one of the boxes, deciding I don’t want them after all.
I take the photo with me and walk out of my house and into my car.
I put the things inside, grab my dress out from the back and walk across to the Fox house.
There, I climb the stairs to the imposing front door. When I look at the sculpture beside it, I remember how Dad had lifted the heavy thing out of the arms of the women who were struggling with it when the Foxes were moving in.
I miss my dad. I miss the way we were. Now, I’m torn between the Foxes and my father because they are very firmly enemies, and I am stuck dead center.
Shaking my head to clear it, I unlock and open the door. They’ve long since told me to treat it like it’s my home, and I am used to slipping in and out. I even have my own key and a room here, for when I stay over.
I walk inside. The house is silent. Mr. and Mrs. Fox are already in town and will meet Ethan and I at the restaurant.
The light over the stove is on in the kitchen, but other than that and the moonlight glinting off the pool, it’s dark. The sliding door is open a crack, letting in cool air. Someone must have forgotten to close it.
I drape my dress over the back of a chair and cross the hall into the living room. It’s cooler for the breeze blowing in. An owl hoots in the dense grove of trees beyond the cottage. I don’t hear that sound much in the city, and I pause to listen before pulling the door closed.
“Been a while,” comes a deep voice from the corner.
I jump, spinning to face the man sitting in Mr. Fox’s armchair, watching me.
My stomach flutters, heart racing.
He holds up his glass in a sort of toast. Ice clanks against crystal as he brings it to his mouth, never taking his eyes off me, his gaze sending shivers down my spine.
I steel myself. Those eyes are cruel now. I used to think they were so very beautiful once upon a time.
“What the hell are you doing here?” I ask when I can speak again. The moon illuminates Silas Cruz’s face. He’s twenty-seven now. He looks older though, his dark hair cut shorter so it doesn’t flop into his eyes like it used to when he was a boy. Although he was never a boy, not really.
He sets his drink down and stands up. “That’s no way to greet your soon-to-be brother-in-law, is it, Phee?” He crosses the room in that way he has, like he’s eating space, devouring it.
I press my back against the door, my hands still wrapped around the handle at my back. “Are you still sore about that?” I ask, hoping he can’t hear the hurt in my voice because it’s still there. However much I want to hate him, that hurt is still right there.
Silas comes to stand a foot from me. I look up at him. He’s right. It has been a while. The last time I saw him was almost a year ago. The last words he spoke to me were to insult me.