Myron frowned and typed: Why?
Jeremy will be here soon. He wants to see you.
Chapter Seventeen
The first thing Emily said when she opened the door was, “I knew Greg wasn’t gay.”
She was in a very-white nightgown at her very-white summer house in the tony (very-white?) Hamptons. She and Greg had bought the beach house for $18 million. Myron knew this because Win had helped with the financing.
“Where’s Jeremy?” Myron asked.
“Where’s your car?”
“I took a car service. Where’s Jeremy?”
“His plane landed half an hour ago. He should be here soon.”
“Where is he flying in from?”
“He would only tell me it was someplace overseas. You know his rules of engagement.” She backed up so Myron could step inside. “So what happened?”
“I searched for Greg.”
“Right, I figured that.”
“The feds were tracking me. When I found him, so did they.”
“And he was with a woman, right?”
“Yes.”
“So my husband ran off with another woman.”
Myron looked at her. “I thought you were married in name only.”
“We were, but I was — am? — still his wife. Why not tell me he met someone? I would have been fine with it. Why would he just run off like that?”
“I don’t know. He said something about running away and escaping.”
“Do you think he killed Cecelia?”
Myron ignored the question. “I need you to think, Emily.”
“About?”
“What’s Greg’s real connection to Cecelia Callister?”
“You asked me that on the phone. I’ve been racking my brain.”
“And?”
“I don’t think he was sleeping with her.”
“Okay.”
“But he might have been.”
“Helpful,” Myron said.
“Hey, what do you want from me? I don’t know.”
“If it matters, Greg told me he hadn’t.”
“Yeah, what else is he going to say? But...” Emily hesitated. “This is probably a big nothing.”
“But?”
“But you know how everyone keeps talking about how Cecelia the supermodel was murdered?”
“Right.”
“I was thinking — what about her son? Clay. Clay was killed too.”
“The theory is that he was trying to defend her.”
“Right, I know. And that’s why I don’t think this is a big deal.”
“But?”
“But I’m just trying to connect all the dots,” Emily said. Then, thinking better of it, she said, “I don’t mean connecting. There’s no connection. Just dots.”
“But?” Myron tried again.
“Cecelia was married to Ben Staples. Greg and I went out with them a few times. I told you that.”
“Right. And you said Greg liked him.”
“Yes. Look, you’re asking for something, right? Anything?”
“Go ahead.”
“Cecelia and I had lunch at the Palm Court. This was, what, twenty-five years ago? She told me she’d been raped. That wasn’t the word she used. I mean, being a supermodel back in that era. The shit men did to you. The shit she took.”
“Who raped her?”
“She wouldn’t say.”
“Did you ask?”
“Of course I asked,” Emily snapped. “But it was a different world back then. Cecelia was trying to move into acting. A producer invited her up to his hotel room. Now we know all about it, but back then? Me Too wasn’t even a glimmer in the eye. Cecelia actually tried to laugh it off. Like it was no big deal. I remember taking her hand, telling her we should go to someone. Get her help. She shook me off. She forced up a smile on that beautiful face and insisted she was fine. But she wasn’t. She withdrew. I tried to call her a few times, but she stopped talking to me. Next thing I know she’s pregnant and getting divorced from Ben.”
“So you think...?”
“I don’t think anything,” Emily said. “But you asked me to rack my brain, and I started thinking back. I should have done more for her. Why did she confide in me, Myron? We weren’t all that close. It had to be because she wanted help, right? I should have made her go to the police, but the truth is, nobody would have cared. She’d have been ruined. That’s what I thought too at the time: If she goes forward... I mean, they would have said she went to a man’s hotel room voluntarily, what did she expect?”
Emily hugged herself then, standing there in the very-white nightgown, looking up at Myron with something he couldn’t quite read in her eyes. Myron wasn’t sure how to play it, so he went with the obvious straight-up question.
“Did you tell Greg about it?”
“About Cecelia being raped?”
“Yes.”
“No, not a word. She told me in confidence. But when Cecelia and Ben got divorced, like I said, Greg liked Ben. We got him in the divorce, as they say. Ben couldn’t believe she’d do something like this to him — divorce him while having his child.”
Myron said nothing.
“Anyway, Greg was pissed off about it.”
“But not so pissed off he’d carry a grudge for, what, more than two decades and then kill her?”
“Uh no. Like I said, dots. Nothing connecting them.”
Myron nodded. “Thanks. I appreciate you telling me.”
“Sure.”
“Any idea where Ben Staples lives now?”
“I think he’s in the city.”
They both saw the headlights as a car pulled into the driveway. They walked together toward the front door. Emily opened it and stepped out onto the front yard. Myron followed her. They stood side by side as the back car door opened and their son stepped out. Jeremy wore a blue suit. The driver popped the trunk. Jeremy circled to the back to retrieve his duffel bag. As he did, Emily, her eyes on her son, her only son, tapped Myron’s hand with hers. Myron looked at her now. There were tears in her eyes. There were tears in his too. He knew what she was thinking because he was thinking the same thing. They had messed up. They had done some terrible wrongs in their life. But if they hadn’t, if they had done the right thing back then, this boy, this spectacular boy, would not be here.
Jeremy thanked the driver and started up the walk. When he spotted his biological parents standing side by side in the front yard, he pulled up. First, he looked at Myron. Then he looked at Emily.
“Ooookay,” Jeremy said, stretching the word out. “This is weird.”
Then Jeremy’s face broke into a smile, a huge smile, a smile that echoed the best part of both of his parents.
“Don’t worry, guys. It’s a good weird.”
Myron and Emily sat on opposite ends of the couch and waited in silence while Jeremy quickly showered and changed into jeans and a T-shirt. When he was ready, he came tripping down the stairs fast. Myron watched him. His hair was military-cropped and that made his ears stick out a little. Myron’s ears stuck out a little too. When Jeremy hit the bottom step, he looked straight at his mother.
“Mom, do you mind if Myron and I talk alone for a minute?”
“Oh,” Emily said. “Uh, sure.”
“It’ll only be a second.”
“Okay, no rush. You two talk.”
Emily rose from the couch. She kissed her son on the cheek as she passed him. Jeremy gave her a hug in return.
“I love you,” she said to him.
“I love you too, Mom.”
“I’m happy you’re home.”
“Me too.”
She headed up the stairs. Jeremy watched her until he heard her bedroom door close. Then he turned back to Myron with the hazel eyes of Al Bolitar, his paternal grandfather. Myron tried to turn it off, his constant searching for genetic echoes. He hadn’t seen his biological son in three years. The rules of the relationship had been set when Jeremy first learned the truth at the tender age of thirteen: