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Authors: Karina Bliss

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CHAPTER FOUR

R
OSS ITCHED TO TAKE HIS
sister-in-law to task for telling the cops he was SAS but the presence of his nephew stopped him. He reminded himself he had more important priorities. Like telling Charlie his mother was dead.

Holy crap, he needed a drink. Heading to the liquor cabinet in the lounge, he poured a finger of whiskey into a crystal tumbler. Despite his father’s efforts, this place had never been home. Even now, with Linda beyond caring, Ross felt like a trespasser. Behind him, he heard the diaper bag hit the carpet. Harry on her hip, Meredith held out a hand. “Oh, God, yes, please.”

Passing his glass over, he poured himself another. Harry made a grab for his mother’s tumbler and Ross distracted him with a shiny stainless-steel cocktail measure.

Meredith raised her glass. “To Linda,” she said with a faint tremor in her voice.

Ross wouldn’t be a hypocrite so he simply chinked glasses. They tossed back their drinks in one gulp. “I owe you an apology,” he said, while the whiskey was still a smoky afterburn on his tongue. Might as well get this over with. “For venting on you after an argument with Linda.” Though come to think of it, Meredith had given as good as she got.

“She was angry but not clutching her chest or anything when I arrived,” she offered, putting her empty glass on the cabinet. “In case you were feeling guilty.”

He glanced at where the picture used to hang and resisted the temptation to pour another shot. He had caused Linda’s fall—indirectly. Cleaning up he hadn’t seen the sampler; it didn’t matter. Ross never wanted to set eyes on it again.

Because of the sampler, his brother would suffer losing his mum and Ross would suffer for him. In the saddest of ways, Linda had had the last word.

Steeling himself, Ross pulled out his BlackBerry. “I’ll phone Charlie while you’re changing Harry.” He considered asking Meredith to call—a woman might break the news more gently—but dismissed it.

His brother was finally getting over his ex, although dating Harry’s day-care teacher was just plain dumb. God knows how Harry’s baby brain was making sense of it.

But Ross had long since given up pointing out emotional minefields in favor of standing clear. Only once had he stepped over his self-imposed line—deterring his brother from starting a turf war over custody. Women rarely came first in Ross’s world but kids always did. He knew firsthand how an acrimonious divorce affected a child.

He waited until she and Harry were out of earshot before punching in Charlie’s number. “The cell phone you have called is either turned off or outside the coverage area.” Damn it. Ross considered a moment, then snatched Meredith’s handbag from the sideboard and went upstairs, following the sound of her voice. She sounded fraught.

“Sweetie, second time’s lucky, I promise.”

“Meredith.”

She jumped and turned guiltily from the change table. Two diapers lay discarded, one used, one fresh. “The tabs wouldn’t stick,” she said. “This one seems okay.” She finished fastening Harry’s diaper and stood back. “There.” Anyone would think she’d painted the Sistine Chapel.

Impatiently, he lifted her handbag. “I need the number of the camp where Charlie and Tilly are staying.”

Her eyes widened, she darted forward to grab it just as Harry dropped the cocktail shaker and started to roll. Ross dived forward and scooped him off the change table before he fell. “Oh, no, you don’t.” He turned to his sister-in-law. “Relax, I wasn’t going to open it.” Though now he wondered what she was trying to hide.

She clutched the bag to her chest. “The zip’s faulty…. It splits open sometimes and spills everything.” She hadn’t even registered Harry’s near tumble. “The camp is called Findlay Park. You’ll have to look up the number.”

He gave her the baby. “Where is it?”

There was a long pause. “I’m sorry, my brain’s stopped working. I need to get out of this house.” She set Harry back on the change table and snapped the domes closed on his overalls. “All I can remember is that tonight they were doing some sort of wilderness camping thing…I’ve been worrying that Tilly’s sleeping bag won’t be warm enough.”

Typical. She’d always been a helicopter mum. Ross did a search for Findlay Park on his BlackBerry. “Karapiro,” he said, “just over two hours’ drive away. Did Charlie take his car?”

She had to think about it. “No, everyone met at the school and took the bus.”

“I’ll drive down, break the news in person and bring them home. Are you ready to leave?”

Meredith picked up Harry, who’d begun to fuss. “I need to call a cab…my vehicle’s getting serviced.”

Ross looked at his grumpy nephew. “I’ll give you a lift.” He led the way downstairs. “Where’s Harry’s car seat?”

“Umm.” She glanced around helplessly, clearly flustered.

He tamped down his impatience. Meredith hadn’t liked
Linda any more than he did but she had a soft heart. “I’ll check Linda’s car.”

He found the car seat in the garage by the small door into the house, still holding half a cracker from an earlier journey. Picking off the fluff, Ross handed it to Harry, then strapped the happier toddler in the Range Rover while his mother went round the house collecting baby stuff.

When he returned to the front door, she was standing in the hall, looking at the spot where Linda had fallen. “I feel we should say something,” she mumbled.

It was a civilian preoccupation, wringing meaning from death, and in this case he had no patience for it. “She was a terrible woman,” he said bluntly. “You know it, I know it. We’re going to have to pretend otherwise for Charlie but between ourselves we can be honest.”

“And yet you worked so hard to resuscitate her.” His sister-in-law, normally so reserved, seemed to stare right into him.

For Charlie.
“Maybe I just wanted Linda beholden to me for saving her life.” It occurred to Ross how much she would have hated that and he smiled grimly.

“Why do you talk like that?”

He shrugged. Death didn’t make saints out of sinners even if he’d seen the bereaved reinvent loved ones until they were unrecognizable. And wasn’t that the ultimate irony? “I’m sorry she’s dead because it will hurt my brother and Tilly. But Linda wouldn’t have cried over me and I’m not sugarcoating the truth for the sake of political correctness.”

“Whatever she did to you, you need to forgive her,” she said.

Ross snorted. “Turn the other cheek? Personally I’ve always found an eye for an eye works a hell of a lot better.”

“You’ve changed, Ross,” she said slowly. “I mean you were always a hard-ass but…” Meredith brushed a loose
strand of hair off her cheek and he noticed her nail polish exactly matched her lipstick. Earlier he’d suspected she’d come from a lunch date.

“Yeah, well, I’m equally disappointed in you,” he said. Ross did a visual check on Harry in the Range Rover. The baby was happy with the cracker.

Meredith stared at him. “Why would you be disappointed in M—me?”

The innocent act again. “Look, say a few words if you have to, but make it snappy. I’ve got a long night ahead of me.”

She opened her handbag and pulled out a thick gilt-edged book the size of an index card.

“Is that a bible?”

“No, a saints book.” Meredith flipped through the pages. “Here’s one. Saint Barbara covers sudden death… Oh dear, she also looks after ammunition workers. You can’t help but think the two are connected.”

Maybe she
was
still in shock. “Meredith, this is a waste of—”

“Found one.” Closing her eyes, she took a deep breath and bowed her head. “Linda, there’s no point pretending you were a nice person. But without you there wouldn’t be Charlie or Tilly or Harry so we thank you for them.” Ross found himself bowing his head. “And for their sake, we ask Saint Joseph, the patron saint of happy, holy death, to make a case for you at the pearly gates.” His mouth twitched. The timbre of Meredith’s voice seemed huskier than usual.
She must really be upset.
“Rest in peace,” she finished. “Amen.”

He lifted his head and met her expectant look. “Amen.”

They didn’t talk much on the drive to her house. Harry finished his cracker and began fussing again. His mother couldn’t soothe him. “He’s hungry.”

“Any food left in the baby bag?”

“I’ll check.” She found a half bottle of milk and Ross caught a faint scent of honeysuckle as she unfastened her seat belt and leaned over the seat back to pass it to Harry. Since when had he noticed his sister-in-law’s perfume?

“I’ve been thinking,” she said as he turned onto her road. “If you time your arrival at Findlay Park after all the kids are in bed then Charlie can adjust to the shock before he has to tell Tilly. And she gets a good night’s sleep before she has to deal with it. You could drive back first thing in the morning.”

Ross examined the idea. “I’ll do that.”

As they got out of the Range Rover, Salsa started barking, which just showed how long it had been since he’d visited. Any contact with the kids these days was through Charlie.

Meredith unstrapped Harry from his car seat. “Could you…ah…grab the seat while I take Harry?”

“Sure.” Dumping her bags in the car seat, Ross picked it up in one hand and opened the gate with the other. “Sit,” he ordered the barking dog and, with an apologetic whine, Salsa complied. “Yeah, you’ve forgotten your manners.” Ross bent to give him a rough pat. Salsa’s stubby tail wagged at Harry, in Meredith’s arms.

“So, Harry’s the key to the dog,” she said behind him.

“What?”

“Can you hold Harry while I find the key?”

Her cell rang as she rummaged in her bag, with a zippy tune he recognized as “New York, New York.”

“Hello…oh…hey.” With her other hand she fumbled the key in the lock and opened the door. “I…can’t talk right now.”

Stepping inside, Ross put Harry down and the baby toddled over to Salsa who was licking a brown-red streak off
the windowpane beside the front door. If he didn’t know better, he’d say it was dried blood. “No, I’m not putting you off.” She glanced over at him. Clearly she was lying and the male caller knew it, too, because Ross could hear his volume rising.

“Look, I’ll call you later…yes…we’ll talk about this, I promise. Goodbye.”

Ross distinctly heard the sound of blown kisses. He folded his arms and reminded himself that it was none of his business that his sister-in-law was a goddamn hypocrite for pretending she was still heartbroken over Charlie.

Meredith hung up. “Telesales,” she said brightly.

He raised his brows. “And you’re calling them back?”

“Who doesn’t need another insurance policy?”

Ross glanced around for Harry and saw he’d wandered into the playroom. “Liar,” he said in disgust. “You’re still playing doctors and nurses with the guy you screwed Charlie over with.” Her mouth fell open. “Don’t worry I won’t tell my brother. He’s got enough to deal with.”

“I would
never
have an affair.”

“See here’s where you and I part ways on our definition of fidelity,” he said. “I think tonsil hockey with another man is off the agenda for a married woman. Call me old-fashioned.”

Her fury was unexpected. “Who started that rumor…
who?

“What are you talking about? You admitted it.”

She looked at him blankly. No hint of remorse. Ross felt a wave of protectiveness toward Charlie.

Ross had been twelve when his mother died and he’d had to move in with his father and Linda. Charlie had been six and his mother’s baby, which meant he dressed like a sissy and had no practical skills because Linda did everything for him.

Ross had expected to hate him and he did. Hated the kid’s homemade sympathy cards, hated how he shared his lame computer games and really hated being told earnestly that even though his mother had gone to heaven, he didn’t have to worry, because he still had a brother.

Charlie was like one of those weighted punching-bag toys…bouncing up smiling after every smackdown.

Walking home from middle school his first day, Ross saw his half brother being bullied at the adjoining junior school. He did nothing. Let Mummy sort it out. But Charlie didn’t tell Mummy that night. Or Daddy, who spent most of his time working to support his second wife’s lifestyle. Instead Charlie said he’d fallen over. Seemed he was accident-prone.

Ross resisted intervening for three days—that’s how badly he wanted to protect himself from caring. On the fourth, he told the bullies he’d beat the crap out of them if they ever touched his little brother again.

“But I’m perfect,” Meredith protested. “Perfect wife, perfect mother, perfect everything.”

Over the past few months, this woman had pummeled Charlie emotionally, and Ross had stood back and let his little brother fight his own battles. Metaphorically it was day four.

He narrowed his eyes. “I don’t know what game you think you’re playing but I’m not letting you give Charlie any more grief than he’s already facing. Pull your head in and behave yourself for the next few days, you hear me?”

“Or what?” She’d lost some of her bravado.

“Your ex is about to come into money, honey,” he pointed out. “Imagine the edge that would give him if he renewed his bid for full custody. He listened to me once. I’m sure I can get him to listen to me again.”

CHAPTER FIVE

L
UGGING
H
ARRY IN HIS CAR SEAT
, Viv walked into Merry’s room at Waikato Hospital Orthopedic Unit at six-thirty the following morning, her eyes gritty from a three-thirty start. And her brain reeling from Ross’s disclosure. Not to mention his threat.

The room could hold two patients but the other bed was empty. One leg in a split cast that ran from midthigh to ankle, Merry was half sitting, staring out the fifth floor window at the pink dawn. With her face as pale as the white hospital gown, her dark hair pulled into a ponytail and her hands clasped, she could be a nun at morning prayers.

She didn’t look like a woman who’d cheated on her husband.

“Hey,” Viv called softly. “How are you feeling?”

Merry’s head swung around. Her first glance went to Harry, fast asleep, then she sank against the pillows. “Why do I have a text from Charlie thanking me for trying to save Linda’s life?”

Thank heavens. Breaking the news had been the part Viv dreaded the most. Everything else was reversible. “She didn’t suffer.”

Brown eyes widening, Merry covered her mouth. “So it’s true…she’s dead?”

“I’m afraid so.” Shrugging off the overnight bag she carried over her left shoulder along with the baby bag, Viv planted the car seat on the floor and stretched out her spine.

“And I always told Charlie his mother exaggerated her heart condition,” her twin whispered through her fingers.

“It wasn’t her heart.” Viv pulled up a chair and filled her in on the accident. Merry cried.

“She was a bitch but…”

Viv reached for her hand. “It’s a terrible way to go.”

“Poor, poor Linda.” Merry’s grip tightened. “And poor you, having to deal with her accident. But why would Charlie think I was there, too?”

Viv hesitated. “First, let me say that everything I did was to protect you.”

Merry dropped her hand. “What’s that supposed to mean?”

“Secondly, there’s no time for panic or recriminations. I have to be in Auckland by ten when Ross and Charlie are due to drop Tilly home.”

“Tell me!”

Viv took a deep breath. Maybe if she said it fast. “I met Ross arriving at Linda’s and he thought I was you and he was so hostile that I went along with it to show him you couldn’t be bullied. And then the accident happened and I fainted and when I came to, Ross had already told the cops I was Meredith Coltrane.”

Her twin gasped.

“And all I could think was how panicked you were about Charlie finding out you’d interviewed for a job out of town so I—” Viv sucked in air.

“Lied to the police!”

“Didn’t correct the misunderstanding.” She pinned her twin’s gaze. “And it worked. I bought us time to get you transferred to Auckland Hospital and come up with a cover story.”

Merry bit her lip. “Go on.”

“Unfortunately there isn’t an ambulance available for
elective private transfer and the hospital won’t consider the backseat of your car as an alternative. But—”

A bitter laugh interrupted her. “I thought telling Charlie I was considering relocating was going to be difficult, but telling him my twin was pretending to be me, a nurse, when his mother needed saving—”

“No one could have saved her, Merry, not even you,” Viv said sharply. “You think I planned any of this? That I’m having fun here? Let me tell you how my hell day ended, Miss Ungrateful. I looked after your toddler and ate organic baby food for dinner because I used all the steaks to placate your mad dog. When Harry finally settled I packed you a bag—” she kicked it “—and tried to organize an ambulance, then had a rental delivered so I could drive here in the middle of the night.”

The baby stirred in his car seat. Leaning forward she added in an accusing hiss, “Perhaps I wouldn’t have felt such an overwhelming need to protect you if you’d just mentioned that
you
were the adulterer, not Charlie!”

Merry pulled the sheet over her head.

“Damn right. Hide your face, lady!” For long seconds there was only the sound of her own breathing as Viv struggled to control her temper, and Harry’s soft snores. Then she heard faint sobbing from under the covers.

Viv sighed. “Mere, come out.”

Nothing moved.

Viv tugged back the thin bedspread and sheet and her sister covered her eyes with a slender arm. “I’m so ashamed,” she wept.

“Oh, honey.” Pity dissolved her anger. “Does anyone in the family know?”

“Only our brother.” Merry struggled to compose herself. “Ross told Dan.” Which figured, the two men were former
troop mates and it was through their friendship that Merry first met Charlie.

But Viv was in no mood to be fair. “Bloody Ross Coltrane!” She handed her sister a box of tissues. “Why can’t he mind his own business?” Aware her sister was barely coping, she kept his ultimatum to herself. “But don’t worry, I have another plan.”

Her twin gave a strangled laugh. “Of course you do.” She blotted her wet cheeks. “God, I am so sick of being a crybaby. I was coping until Charlie started dating Harry’s day-care teacher. I guess I still believed he’d forgive me.” Her composure crumbled.

“Here.” Unzipping the baby bag, Viv handed her sister a take-out coffee and pulled out her own, along with a couple of chocolate-filled brioches. “Real food, real coffee. Not that chicory crap you have in the pantry. So. Were you in love with this other guy?” Charlie had been Merry’s one and only; she wouldn’t have betrayed him lightly.

“Luke? No!” Merry swallowed. “But…he thinks he’s in love with me.”

“Naturally,” said Viv. “We’re irresistible. It’s our curse.” She was still trying not to be hurt by her twin’s secrecy. They’d never been close, but they phoned every couple of weeks and Viv always pretended her sister’s domesticity was interesting just like Merry pretended Viv’s work was important. Except it appeared domesticity was interesting.

“We never had sex,” Merry said hastily. “There was only one kiss.”

Viv frowned. “So who kissed what, exactly?”

For a moment, Merry stared uncomprehending, then blushed a fiery red. “Lips. We kissed lips…. Your mind, Viv!”

“C’mon, Mere, even a stick-in-the-mud like Charlie wouldn’t leave over a kiss.”

“What do you mean,
even
a stick-in-the-mud like Charlie?”

“Nothing. Your marriage always seemed so happy.” In a stage version of their marriage, Viv would have dressed Merry as a smiling 1950s housewife and given her brother-in-law a pipe and slippers to go with his smug expression.

“It was. But you can’t imagine how routine kills romance.”

“Oh, yes, I can. It’s not dumb luck I haven’t got hitched. Losing your identity to a couple. It’s bad enough being—” Viv took a sip of her coffee.

“An identical twin,” Merry finished flatly.

Viv dodged the bullet. “Brought up by unhappily married parents.”

“Except our trouble was that Charlie and I
weren’t
a couple anymore. We were parents, churchgoers, workers. I was a part-time nurse and full-time soccer mum. Our conversations revolved around kid pickups, clean laundry and what’s for dinner? I suggested date nights and Charlie said we were already overscheduled. And didn’t being married mean we could quit trying so hard?” Merry gave a small laugh. “I said I needed more intimacy and he thought that meant more sex. Even sex was becoming a chore…another thing to do before I could go to sleep.”

Speaking of sleep. Viv glanced at Harry, then her watch. He hadn’t settled until ten last night but at some point she’d have to wake him or he wouldn’t nap on the drive home. Why did babies have to be so complicated? She’d found a daily blog by a mother who chronicled her toddler’s every waking moment from bowel movements to teething to diet. And the woman had been almost hysterical with joy when Viv posted a question. It was like being dragged into a cult.

“Tell me about this Luke.” She needed to understand the emotional landscape to pull off Plan B.

“He was a colleague—a doctor—who became a friend. When our shifts coincided we’d lunch together in the staff canteen or later at a little deli a block away from the hospital. At the beginning there was a few of us, then gradually…” Merry began picking at her nails, cut short, unpolished, the nails of someone who never had time for small vanities.

“I knew I was skirting a line,” she continued, “but I thought Luke understood there was a line—that we were friends who flirted. When he kissed me, I could no longer pretend our lunches were innocent. I felt so guilty, so ashamed. I went home and told Charlie everything.”

Harry woke up, saw his mother and clamored to get into bed with her. Viv positioned him next to Merry’s good leg. Half-asleep, Harry cuddled against her with his blankie, sucking his thumb and looking the angel Viv had already learned he wasn’t.

“You named him after Houdini, didn’t you?”

“What?”

“Never mind. How did Charlie react to the confession?” As if she couldn’t guess.

“Angry.” Merry swallowed. “And so hurt. He knew those lunches constituted more intimacy for me than crazy monkey sex. He stormed off to Ross’s, and moved into his mother’s house a week later.”

“You mean that was it?” Harry started to squirm in his mother’s hold and Viv grabbed him off the bed before he could do any damage, distracting him with her half-eaten brioche. “What about when he calmed down?”

“He refused to discuss salvaging our marriage. You’d think after eight years and two kids I’d earned the benefit of the doubt.”

“Of course you’d earned it,” Viv asserted. “The way you
used to run after that—” Merry caught her eye and she shut up. “You still love him.”

“That’s why when he started dating Susan I knew I had to move out of Auckland. I don’t want to become a martyr like Mum.” Their parents had recently separated and Mum was currently “finding herself” on an extensive tour of Europe with a couple of girlfriends.

“Heavens, no. I wouldn’t let you. And you’re not throwing yourself on your sword now,” Viv added decisively, “which is why I’ll keep impersonating you until we can get a transfer. You’ll need to stay in Auckland Hospital at least one night to explain the cast to Charlie anyway. But we could say the break’s simpler, couldn’t we?”

“You be me?” Merry stared at her. “That’s crazy.”

“Exactly why it will work. It’s so insane no one will consider it.” When Merry protested, Viv leaned forward. “Think about it, Mere. I haven’t been home in two years. There’s been no opportunity for comparisons. And nobody knows I’m in the country. Ross saw the person he expected to see, even though I was dressed nothing like you. He was puzzled when I couldn’t tell him where Tilly’s camp was but all I had to say was something Merry-ish—you’d mentioned you were worried Tilly’s sleeping bag wouldn’t be warm enough—and we were back on track.”

“You might be able to fool Ross but you’d never fool Charlie.”

“Normally, I’d agree with you. But your grieving ex is going to be way too busy burying his mother to pay any attention to me—you. And let’s face it, you’ve already acted so out of character by having a flirtation—because that’s all it was, Mere, and Charlie’s an idiot for thinking otherwise—that you’ve paved the way for any slipups I might make.”

“What about the funeral? You won’t know any of Linda’s friends and relatives.”

“Sweetie, you’re the scarlet woman. You’ll be lucky if they say hello.” Her sister winced. “And Linda being such a tyrant has one upside—none of our family will feel compelled to go if you phone and say you don’t want them there.”

Merry straightened. “Harry!”

Viv turned to see her nephew break into a trot, crushing her brioche in his fist as he made a break out of the room. She caught up to him in the corridor and he squealed a shrill protest as she scooped him up. “I get exactly how you feel, honey, but Mummy needs us so suck it up.” Holding him away from her body to avoid being smeared with chocolate she returned to Merry’s room, nudging the door closed with her hip before putting the toddler down.

Harry threw himself on the floor and screamed, ignoring his mother’s soothing calls from the bed. A nurse poked her head in to remind Viv that “this was a hospital,” then did a double take between the twins. In desperation, Viv gave the toddler her cell.

He beamed at her through crystal tears and held it to his ear. “Dog?”

“Tell that mutt he better not be anywhere near my shoes,” Viv requested, and turned to her sister. “You can phone work, ask for a week’s bereavement leave. So what do you say?”

Merry was chewing her lip, a good sign. “Tilly will work it out. She’s highly intelligent.”

What parent didn’t say that about their kid? “I’m sure I can fool an eight-year-old.”
As long as I remember to say
mummy
not
mommy.

“Tilly’s seven! See how little you know about my life?”

“That’s why I have you on speed dial… Which reminds
me, we have to swap cells.” She tried to ignore Harry gumming hers. “You give me daily instructions and details of who I’ll encounter and if I get stuck I’ll sneak away and phone you.” Viv warmed to her theme. “I even booked a one-way rental so I can drive your car home. And if, by some remote chance, Tilly figures it out I’ll tell her the truth and swear her to secrecy.”

“You mean that Mummy’s lying to Daddy?” Merry folded her arms. “No, Viv, I’m not dragging my child into this.”

“It might not come to that, Mere, and look at the alternative. Charlie finding out is not a good thing right now. For him, for you or the kids.” She paraphrased Ross. “What if he decides to lobby for custody? With his inheritance, he’ll have more resources. I’m thinking of the greater good here.”

“By adding lie on lie?”

“Did the truth help when you told Charlie about Luke?”

“No,” Merry admitted reluctantly.

“Think big,” Viv encouraged. “Whenever I’m stuck it’s because I haven’t been thinking big enough.” She glanced at her watch. “I hate to rush you but if I’m getting back to Auckland by ten, you need to make a decision.”

Her twin’s cell started to buzz on the bedside trolley. Merry gulped as she checked the caller. “It’s Charlie.”

“We can do this, Mere.”

Her sister shook her head as she picked up the phone. “I have too much to lose.”

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