is not up to giving a quote.”
“Mark, who’s at the door?” The woman’s voice grew louder, along with clipped footsteps.
Nikki recognized the petite blonde, who looked very much like the girl she had tried to interview eighteen years ago. Her body remained trim and fit, though her angled face had lost the softness of youth. “Mrs. Foster.”
“I’ve seen you on television before.”
“Nikki McDonald. I also talked to you years ago.”
“You flew out to Oregon.”
“Yes, I did.” She’d arranged to do a fifth-year anniversary piece, and Hadley had agreed to the interview. But when she had flown out to Portland, Hadley had refused to see her. She had changed her mind.
Instead of wallowing in the failed story, she pressed forward. “I’d still like to sit down with you and talk to you about your sister.”
Hadley’s cheeks flushed. “I have nothing to say.”
“Years ago, I remember you mentioned that you and your sister did not get along.”
“That’s not how I remember it,” Hadley said. “I loved my sister.”
“Some of her friends said that you two were fighting a lot that summer. Your parents had money for her education but not yours.”
“I was immature in those days. I should have been kinder to my sister,” Hadley said. “Ms. McDonald, our family has been through a terrible ordeal. We don’t need you digging into old wounds.”
“If not me, then it’ll be the cops. They won’t let this go.”
“Good night.” Mark moved to shut the door.
Nikki stepped forward and put her foot on the threshold so he could not shut it. “No other reporter knows as much about this case as I do. I’m the best person to tell your sister’s story.”
“She would not want her story told,” Hadley said, stepping forward. “She’d have hated the attention.”
Mark stepped between Nikki and Hadley. As he had been back in the day, he was her protector. “This is enough. Leave, or I’m calling the cops.”
“There are going to be other reporters,” she warned. “Talk to me. Tell me your story.”
“We’re going to ignore all the reporters, including you,” he said. “This is a private family matter.”
“There is nothing private about it,” Nikki countered.
“Just like before, the story will die, and it’ll be forgotten,” Hadley said.
“Do you really want Marsha forgotten?” Nikki said.
A girl appeared at the top of the stairs, and she regarded them for a beat before she began to descend. “Mom!”
“There’s not a day that goes by that I don’t think about my sister and what I could or should have done to save her,” she hissed. “But I can’t change the past.”
Nikki lowered her voice, leaning forward. “What is it about your past with Marsha that you want to change?”
Hadley pressed her fingers to her temples and turned from the door. “Leave me alone.”
Hadley’s last words had barely been spoken when Mark pushed Nikki back and closed the front door in her face.
Nikki stood on the porch, more irritated with herself than put out. As she walked down the steps, she heard shades snap shut behind her in window after window.
Her desperation for a story had gotten the better of her, and she had pushed Hadley too far and too fast. But she would regroup and return. This story was her ticket back, and she was not going to let it go.
Minutes before seven, he watched Skylar’s sappy boyfriend, Neil, pick her up, and then almost immediately, Hadley pulled out of the driveway.
He waited for Hadley’s car to go around the corner before he started his engine and followed. Normally, Hadley waited longer to leave and was careful about her speed in the neighborhood, but tonight she appeared in a rush.
He wasn’t worried, because she always went to the upscale hotel in Crystal City where her lover waited in the dimly lit bar. They would meet, flirt, and then find their way separately to his room. She always left by eleven and by midnight was home, showered, and in bed, curled on her side, likely pretending to sleep.
However, this Monday was different. The cops had come to her house. He didn’t need to see badges to know they were the law. The plain suits and the way they had moved had given them away. The camera he had mounted on a neighbor’s tree had alerted him. They were there to inform Hadley about the gift he had given Nikki McDonald.
God, if I could have been a fly on the wall. It would have been priceless to see Hadley’s expression when the cops told her