You are being provided with a book chapter by chapter. I will request you to read the book for me after each chapter. After reading the chapter, 1. shorten the chapter to no less than 300 words and no more than 400 words. 2. Do not change the name, address, or any important nouns in the chapter. 3. Do not translate the original language. 4. Keep the same style as the original chapter, keep it consistent throughout the chapter. Your reply must comply with all four requirements, or it’s invalid.
I will provide the chapter now.
22
For the next two weeks, all I can think about is the way Eddie kept creeping around the lake house,
and I find myself doing the same thing back in Thornfield Estates. Going down hallways, opening
closets, pacing.
Standing in front of closed doors.
For the first time since I started seeing Eddie, I feel lonely.
I imagine bringing it up to Emily or Campbell, power-walking around the neighborhood, all,
“Hey, girls, Eddie took me to the lake house where his wife died; weird, right?”
Fuck that.
But people are still talking, I know.
When I do manage to leave the house, even just to go to Roasted for a fancy coffee, I hear two
women I don’t even know talking about Bea.
Two older ladies, sitting at a table near a window, one of them with her phone in her hand. “I
ordered things from her website every Christmas,” she says to her friend. “She was such a
sweetheart.”
I edge closer just as the other one says, “It was the husband, you know it was.”
“Mmmhmmm,” her friend agrees, lowering her voice to whisper, “It always is.”
But which husband? There are two involved here, and one of them is about to be my husband.
Then the lady holding her phone says, “It’s just such a shame she got caught up in it. You know
that’s what happened. He probably didn’t want to kill both of them, but they were both there, and…”
“And what else could he do?” her friend says. “It was the only option.”
Like “murdering someone” is the same as saying, “Sure, Pepsi is fine,” when you order Coke.
These fucking people.
I keep listening, trying to discern whether they mean Tripp or Eddie, Bea or Blanche, so that the
barista has to call, “Hazelnut soy latte for Jane?” three times before I remember I’m Jane.
I can’t keep doing this.
I need to talk to someone. I need to know what happened out there on that lake.
Detective Laurent’s card is still in my purse, and I think about calling her, just casually checking in,
seeing if there’s anything I can do to help, but even I can’t fake that level of confidence.
No, the less I talk to the police, the better.
So, I decide to talk to someone I dislike nearly as much.
When Tripp accepted my text invitation to lunch, I’d been a little surprised, but now here we sit at
the pub in the village, the one I’ve never been to because it always seemed like the kind of place guys
like Tripp would frequent.
“I’m sure you’re wondering why I asked you to lunch,” I tell him, going for the whole “hesitant
college girl” thing. My hair is loose today so I can nervously tuck it behind my ears as I talk, and
while I’m not in the jeans and T‑shirts I always wore to work at his house, I’m in one of the more
casual outfits I picked up after the engagement, a plain beige shirtdress that I know doesn’t
particularly flatter me.
Snorting, Tripp picks up his Rueben and dips it in the extra Thousand Island he ordered. “Let me
guess,” he says. “Someone told you the rumors about Blanche and Eddie, and now you want to know
if it’s true.”
My shock is not feigned. I really am that blinking, stammering girl I’ve pretended to be so often.
“What?” I finally say, and he looks up.
Tripp’s gaze sharp. “Wait, it’s not about that?” He frowns a little, licking dressing off his thumb.
“Well, shit. Okay, then. So what, you just wanted to hang out?”
I sip my beer to buy some time, and I hate this, feeling like I’m out of control, that this thing I set
up is already fucked.
“I wanted to talk to you because I know you’re going through the same thing Eddie is, and I just
wanted to see how you were doing, to be honest.”
A little wounded sharpness in my tone, eyes meeting his then sliding back to the table. I can still
keep this on track, even if I do want to lunge across the table and shake him until he tells me
everything about Eddie and Blanche.
Some of Tripp’s smugness drains away, and he puts his sandwich down, picking up his beer.
“Yeah. It was … different when I thought she drowned. Now this, it’s … well, it’s a hell of a thing.”
He drains nearly half his beer, setting it back on the table with a not-so-discreet burp into his
napkin. “How is Eddie?”
Tripp’s stare is pointed, and I see now that he has his own reasons for accepting this invitation,
and they have nothing to do with being neighborly.
“I can’t really speak for him,” I reply, careful now, pushing my fries around my plate. “But I know
he offered to cooperate with the police. Anything he can do to be helpful.”
Which is true. Eddie’s gone down to the station twice now to answer questions, questions he’d
never told me the specifics of, and I wonder if that’s what Tripp is fishing for. Wondering how much
Eddie is saying, what is he saying, and not for the first time, I wonder if this was more dangerous than
I’d thought, arranging to meet him. And not just because someone might see us.
Drumming his fingers on the table, he nods, but his gaze is far off now, and we sit there in an
excruciating silence for too long before he says, “There wasn’t anything. Between Blanche and Eddie.
It was just your usual neighborhood bullshit. Eddie’s company was doing some work on our house, I
was busy, so I let Blanche handle it. They hung out a lot, but Blanche and I were good. And honestly,
even if I thought she’d cheat on me, she never would’ve fucked over Bea.”
He grimaces before adding, “Although Bea never deserved that loyalty if you ask me, but…”
His words just hang there, and I push, the littlest bit.
“You said that Bea took a lot of … inspiration from Blanche.”
“Basically took her whole life, yeah, but they both ended up in the same place, didn’t they?
Bottom of Smith fucking Lake.”
Tipping his head back, he sighs. “Anyways, if Emily Clark or Campbell or any of those other
bitches try to tell you Eddie and Blanche were sleeping together, it was just gossip. Maybe even
wishful thinking, since it’s not like I was ever all that popular with that crowd.”
Whatever I was going to get out of Tripp is gone now, I can tell. He’s slipping back into his
bitterness, and when he orders another beer, I make a big show of checking my watch. “Oh, shit, I
have a hair appointment,” I say.
“Sure you do.” His tone is sarcastic but he doesn’t press further, and when I try to leave a twenty
to cover my lunch, he waves it off.
Back at the house, I go back to my computer, pulling up Emily’s Facebook page, looking for any
pictures of Blanche with Eddie, but there’s nothing. Not on Campbell’s, either, and while Blanche is
clearly tagged in a few pictures, it’s a dead link to her page, which I assume someone in her family
took down.
I’ve been so fixated on Bea, it never occurred to me to look that closely at Blanche.
Now it seems that was a mistake.
Eddie doesn’t get home until late. I’m in the bathtub, bubbles up to my chin, but I hear him long before
I see him—the front door unlocking, his footsteps down the hall, the door to the bedroom opening.
And then he’s there, leaning against the door, watching me.
“Good day?” I ask, but instead of answering, he asks a question of his own.
“Why did you have lunch with Tripp Ingraham today?”
Surprised, I sit up a little, water sloshing. I fucking love this tub, so deep and long I could lie
down flat if I wanted to, but right now, I wish I weren’t in it, wish I weren’t naked and vulnerable.
Usually, the size difference between us is kind of a turn-on. Eddie is sleek, but brawny—he’s got real
muscle, the kind you get from actually working, not just going to the gym. He makes me feel even
smaller and more delicate than I am.
But for the first time, it occurs to me how easy it would be for him to hurt me. To overpower me.
“How did you know about that?” I ask, and I know immediately it’s the wrong response. Eddie
isn’t scowling, but he’s doing that thing again, that forced casualness, like this conversation doesn’t
really mean that much to him even though he is practically vibrating with tension.
“I mean, it’s a small town, and trust me, people were dying to tell me they saw you out with him.
Thanks for that, by the way. Really fun texts to get.”
Pissed off, I stand up, reaching for the towel hanging next to the bath. “Do you honestly think I
have any interest in Tripp Ingraham?”
Sighing, Eddie turns away. “No,” he acknowledges, “but you have to think about how things look.
Especially now.”
He moves back into the bedroom and I stand there, still naked, still holding the towel, dripping
onto the marble floor and looking after him.
I have worked so hard to present a certain version of myself to Eddie, to everyone, really, but in
that moment, it snaps.
“How it looks?” I repeat, following him into the bedroom, wrapping the towel around myself.
“No, Eddie, I didn’t think about how it looks.”
“Of course, you didn’t. Let me guess, you also didn’t think about how it might look for my fiancée
to be handing over wads of money to the guy she used to live with.”
I am frozen standing there in my towel, my stomach clenching. I’m too rattled to even try to lie.
“What?”
Eddie is looking at me now with an expression I’ve never seen before. “Did you think I didn’t
know, Jane? Did it never occur to you to come to me?”
How? How the fuck could he have known? That first time, the money I gave him was mine. The
second, yes, that was Eddie’s, but I was careful. I was so careful.
“He called me, too,” Eddie says, his hands on his hips, his head tilted down. “Some bullshit story
about people in Phoenix looking for you.”
This can’t be happening; he can’t know. I can’t breathe.
“Did he tell you why?” I ask, my voice barely above a whisper, and Eddie looks up at me again,
his eyes hard.
“I didn’t ask. I told him to go fuck himself, which is what you should’ve done the second he
called.”
He steps closer, so close I can practically feel the heat radiating off of him. I’m still standing
there, not even wrapped in my towel, just holding it in front of me, shivering with more than just cold.
“That’s what you do when people threaten you, Jane. When they try to fuck you over. You don’t
give in to them, you don’t give them what they want, you remind them that you’re the one in charge,
you’re making the rules.”
Eddie reaches out then, taking me by the shoulders, and for the first time since I met him, I stiffen
at his touch.
He feels it, and the corners of his mouth twist down, but he doesn’t let me go. “I don’t give a fuck
why someone in Phoenix is trying to find you. What I care about is that when he came to you with this
shit, you didn’t trust me enough to tell me about it.”
I don’t know what to say, so I just stand there, looking down, wanting him to let me go, wanting
him to leave, and finally, he sighs and drops his hands.
“You know what?” he says, stepping back and reaching into his jacket pocket. “Here.”
He pulls out a slip of paper and forces it into my hand.
My damp skin nearly smudges the ink, but I see it’s a phone number, one with a Phoenix area
code. “This is the number of whoever was calling John.”
I startle, blinking down at the paper. “He gave this to you?”
Eddie doesn’t answer that, saying, “The point is, Jane, I’ve had this number in my wallet for the
past month. Before I asked you to marry me. And I never called it. Not once. You know why?”
I shake my head even though I know what he’s about to say.
“Because I trust you, Janie.”
He turns, heading for the bedroom door, and then stops, looking at me. “It would be nice to get the
same in return.”
With that, he’s gone, and I sink to the edge of the tub, my knees shaking.
But it’s not because of the number I hold in my hand. It’s not knowing that Eddie’s had it all this
time, that at any point over the past month, he could’ve called it and learned … everything.
It’s because of what he said. How he looked.
That’s what you do when people threaten you, Jane.
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