have a family.” White’s face took on a look of sympathy that seemed as unnatural as the makeup. “Trust me, my boy, you can’t. Neither of us can.”
He offered Ralph the gun.
All I could think: This was my fault. I had brought Titus Roe here.
I hadn’t looked any further than my gut reaction—to protect Maia by bringing her closer to me, to confront the man who’d dared to shoot at her. I hadn’t thought through the obvious: what would happen to the shooter once he was in Guy White’s grasp.
Water pipes shuddered. Somewhere above, someone was running a faucet, washing hands or scrubbing a wine stain from party clothes.
Ralph took the gun.
“Ralph, no,” I said. “Don’t.”
“I should return to my party,” White said. “Miss Lee, Mr. Navarre, accompany me.”
“Ralph,” I said, “wait—”
“Go on, vato.” He looked at the nine-millimeter pistol in his hand as if it were a new part of him, a prosthetic limb he’d have to learn to live with. “You don’t want to see what I’m cut out for.”
“You heard him, Navarre.” Alex smiled at me. He brushed his tuxedo jacket so I could see the other gun tucked in his cummerbund. No shortage of persuasion tools in the White household. “You need to enjoy the party.”
I left my best friend alone with the hit man, Ralph’s voice echoing richly against the tiles as he told Titus Roe he had five seconds to begin talking.
• • •
MAIA PUSHED PAST MR. WHITE BEFORE he could speak.
She stormed out the double glass doors, down the veranda steps into a throng of guests. Some of the tuxedoed men I recognized as business magnates, some politicians, some criminals. Mariachis strolled across the back lawn playing “Feliz Navidad.” Luminarias glowed along the walkways. The pavilion tent was lit up white. The woods glittered with Christmas lights.
“Fine woman you have,” White remarked.
I said nothing.
Alex hovered behind his boss. He kept a respectful distance, but near enough to hear every word.
White accepted a glass of champagne from a waiter. He held it up, studying the bubbles as if trying to remember the taste, but he didn’t drink. “What did your lady friend expect, Mr. Navarre, bringing Titus Roe to me? Did she believe I would turn him in to the police?”
“My fault,” I said. “I have trouble sometimes, thinking like you.”
“You lost someone close to you once, Navarre.” White’s eyes were as glacial blue as his daughter’s. “As I recall, you took revenge.”
He was right. White knew many things about my past that I’d prefer he didn’t.
“That wasn’t cold-blooded murder,” I said. “And I didn’t get someone else to pull the trigger.”
White smiled. “I understand Ralph Arguello. If you believe I gave him the gun because I did not want to do the killing myself, then I think I understand him better than you.”
“You’re a bitter old man.”
He gazed across the lawn. Madeleine was down there in a red evening gown, a crowd of young men trying to gain her attention. She was ignoring them, staring up at me with a baleful look.
“I understand people, Mr. Navarre,” White told me. “We only have two choices ever. To act, or fail to act. We feel better when we act. I have confidence Ralph Arguello is a man who will feel very good tonight.”
“And if Titus Roe isn’t the man who killed your son?”
“Oh, he isn’t,” White said. “One look at him, and I was certain of that. But if there’s anything to be learned from him, your friend will find it. After that, let him get some satisfaction from vengeance. Titus Roe is worth nothing.”
“The women Frankie murdered,” I said. “Were they worth nothing, too?”
No change in White’s eyes. No remorse. My comment wasn’t even worthy of anger.
“My son didn’t mean to kill anyone. He had trouble controlling his passions. I was much like him when I was young.”
“A monster, you mean?”
“Think what you like, Navarre. It doesn’t change the fact that some people are expendable. It’s always been so. My son’s life was worth more than any of the women he took.”
Took. In the back of my mind, behind the cloud of anger, I found it an interesting choice of verbs.
“Frankie wasn’t like you,” I said. “He was broken inside. You knew exactly what he was doing to those women, and why.”
“One thing about a terminal disease, Mr. Navarre. It makes you quite conscious of wasting time. If you’ll excuse me—”
“What about your daughter?” I asked.
Down below, Madeleine was hard to miss in her