I walked back out into the living room to find Daniel alone.
"Lindsey manage to set herself up another meeting?" I sat down on the sofa beside him. "She’s been a busy little bee lately."
"I keep telling her she can go home, but she won’t." Daniel shrugged. "Says I need the moral support."
"Well, she’s very sweet. I’m glad she can at least get some work done while she’s here."
Daniel nodded, a little absently.
I picked at a loose thread on my shirt. I’d been meaning to replace it forever, but for some reason I’d just never quite gotten around to it. "Have you guys always been close?"
He seemed a little surprised by the question.
"Yes," he said. "Well - on and off. We’ve had our moments. I think most siblings do." He cleared his throat. "It was - difficult when she left for college, and I stayed back for a while longer finishing high school. Suddenly she just wasn’t there anymore. The silence at home was deafening." He smiled. "Things always tend to get quieter when Lindsey’s not around."
I had to agree.
"I’d be lying if I said I never got sick of it." He leaned back, reaching over and draping his arm across my shoulders. "But it’s pretty refreshing, most of the time. She never really lies or keeps secrets, unless you ask her to. She’s pretty much an open book. What you see is what you get. It takes a very particular sort of courage to go through life that way, and I honestly have no idea where she cultivated it, or how. I wish I could say I have it, but I don’t."
"I know what you mean," I said. "I guess it sort of comes from a place of…not really caring what people think. But not in a mean way, just in a way of like…why does it matter, you know? You just live your life. You do right by people, but you don’t need to spend all your time worrying about leaving the wrong impression."
Daniel nodded, slowly. "She has faith in herself," he said, softly. "That’s what it boils down to, really. She doesn’t need to spend any time worrying, because she trusts that no matter what happens, no matter what situation she finds herself in, she’ll handle it. I remember, as a kid…" he paused, and laughed a little. "I used to get so, sort of - nervous, and embarrassed, every time we watched a movie or a TV show that had a wedding scene in it. My dad didn’t notice, of course, but Lindsey did. At first she thought it was just that typical aversion to romance that little boys often have, but I didn’t react that way to kissing scenes or anything else. Finally, one day we were all invited to a wedding, and I had a complete breakdown. Lindsey actually asked me, for the first time, what the problem was.
"I tearfully confessed that I was afraid of getting married someday, because I didn’t know how. I didn’t know what you were supposed to say, or when you were supposed to say it. How was I supposed to know when to walk down the aisle? When to say ‘I do?’ When to recite my vows? I could tell it was a very important ceremony from the reverence everyone gave to it, and my biggest fear was being suddenly thrust into that situation and f**king it up. Even as a kid, I was thinking decades forward and dreading the humiliation that I was sure would come.
"I could just picture the whole crowd, men in tuxedos and the women in their elegant dresses, pointing and laughing at me. That’s how I was then, and it’s how I always was. But Lindsey? The thought would never occur to her. Even if she was dropped into that nightmare scenario I had as a child, she’d manage to give a beautiful, impromptu speech that would have the whole crowd applauding on its feet." He was grinning. "I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t jealous of her. But we can’t all be born so lucky."
I shot him a wry smile. "If only you’d known then what you real wedding would be like. You would have had a whole new set of things to worry about."
Daniel laughed, and wrapped his arm around me tighter.
***
A few evenings later, I happened to be downtown, picking up some takeout I’d been craving for weeks, when my phone suddenly rang. By this time, I recognized the number.
"Kelly?" I said, as I picked up.
"I just texted you an address. Florence just arranged one final meeting with the broker, and that’s where she’s leaving from." She sounded distracted, rifling through papers on her desk. "It’s at a new location. She didn’t say where it was, over the phone. I think she might suspect."
"So what am I supposed to do? Go there? Follow her? Confront her?"
"Call the police," said Kelly, firmly. "Have them meet you there."
"The police don’t care about something like this," I said. "That’s why I hired you."
"She might be dangerous," Kelly insisted. "She’s unpredictable. I don’t have to tell you that."
"All right, fine." I took the phone away from my ear briefly, to glance at the address as it came in. It was only a few blocks away from where I was now, but I had to admit that Kelly was right. Flo was dangerous and unpredictable. I didn’t want to go into this alone.
And really, there was only one person I could call.
***
Daniel’s phone only rang twice before he picked up.
"Hey," I said. "Are you at home?"
"No," he responded, sounding slightly hesitant. "Why?"
"I’m at…" I hastily glanced at the street signs and rattled off the names. "I need you to get down here, as soon as you can."
"Why? What’s happening?" His voice was tight with anxiety, and I could hear his keys jangling as he shoved them in his pocket.
"It’s a long story. I’ll explain when you get here. Just hurry."
"I am hurrying. I’m coming now. Will you just tell me?"
I took a deep breath. "Okay. Don’t be mad, but I hired a private detective."
"You hired a private detective," he echoed. "For…what?"
"To investigate, you know. Everything." I cleared my throat. "The pictures. I wanted to find out for sure if it was Flo."
"Jesus Christ, Maddy." I could picture him, pinching the bridge of his nose. "You didn’t think it might be a good idea to tell me about this, before you go around blabbing secrets to everyone?"
"Hey. She takes her detective-client privilege very seriously."
He sighed. "That’s not a real thing. Listen - okay. So what’s happening, then? What am I walking into?"
"Well, it turned out it was her. She’s meeting with your broker again," I said. "And she’s leaving from here, and if you hurry we might be able to catch her in the act."
Suddenly, I heard the roar of an engine around the corner, loud enough to make me jump a little. I turned to look - it was sleek, black affair, some kind of make I didn’t recognize - European probably, a sports car, definitely. The windows were tinted dark. Annoyed, I lifted the phone back to my ear.
"Sorry, some self-important a**hole-" I stopped as the car idled up beside me, and the window rolled down.
"You were saying?" said Daniel, craning his neck over from the driver’s seat.
"Oh, for…" I climbed in, grimacing as I sank down into the ridiculously low seat. "Really?"
"It’s what I had when you called." He shrugged. "You said to hurry. Now, where is she?"
As if on cue, she came out of the door of one of the nearby buildings and started walking towards a gray sedan parked on the street. Daniel quickly rolled up my window. The light changed, and a steady flow of traffic started. At first it seemed like we’d both be stuck here for ages, but Flo saw a dubious opportunity and took it, maneuvering herself into the flow.
"Shit. Shit." Daniel threw the car into gear, pealing out into a tiny gap in traffic. A few people behind us leaned on their horns, but he seemed completely oblivious. Flo made it through the next light, but stopped at a yellow, so she must not have spotted us.
"Does she know what this car looks like?" I asked, sliding down in my seat.
"No," said Daniel. He shook his head. "Yes. I can’t…I’m not sure. I don’t remember."
"How many cars do you have?"
The light turned green, and he didn’t answer. He was staying two or three cars behind, almost as if…
"Have you done this before?" I asked, incredulous.
"Is that really an important question right now?" He was staring at the stoplight as if he could force it to change through sheer will power. "Ten. I have ten various automobiles. Not all of them are in drivable condition. Some are antiques. I keep them in a garage in Brooklyn. And no, I’ve never been in a car chase before." The light changed, and he started to creep forward with everyone else.
"I was just cur - shit!" He’d just taken a turn so sharp that I hit the passenger door and almost slid completely down onto the floor. "Jesus, calm down. We’ll find her one way or another. I’ll get Kelly on the case."
"Kelly," he said. "That’s your private detective, then, is he?"
"She," I corrected. "And yes, she is."
We were flying down an alleyway so narrow I was sure he’d scrape the car, or at least knock over a garbage can. But he was surprisingly skilled, especially for someone who barely ever seemed to drive at all.
"I’m going to be honest," I said. "What with John and everything, I wasn’t even sure you had a license."
"Will you please stop talking?"
We emerged just before another busy intersection, and Flo was the first at the light, tapping her fingers impatiently on the wheel. I hunkered down again.
"Will you stop that?" Daniel shot me a look, sidelong. "She’ll recognize me before she’ll recognize you."
"I just want to minimize the risk," I grumbled, straightening up, with my arms crossed.
Finally, she pulled into an anonymous parking lot down an alley. Daniel waited a few beats and then followed her. Dusk was settling heavily over the city, and I knew it would be dark soon.
We parked on a low level and got out as quietly as we could, walking slowly up the ramps. My heart was beating thunderously in my chest. As it turned out, I needn’t have been nervous - not at that moment, anyway. We seemed to spot her long before she spotted us, tucking something into her purse, framed by the lights of the city that were starting to switch on, one by one.
And then, she turned and saw us.
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
"I knew it," I shouted, practically spitting venom. But Flo just had a smug smile on her face, and I realized after a few moments that I looked like the crazy one. I took a deep breath and shut my mouth.
"Well done," said Flo. She was still smiling, arms crossed.
"It’s so sad," said Daniel finally, softly. "After all this time, you’re still trying to…do what, exactly? Ruin my life?"
"Oh no, honey." She looked so unnaturally calm that it sent a shiver through me. She was putting on the same play-act she’d been using for years when we were co-workers, fooling me into thinking she was normal. "No, you did a pretty good job of that on your own."