up the keeping-room TV. “Red or white, red or white, like it was her house. Like she was the hostess. What happened after I left?”
I found myself telling her about Roux’s game, because she was Charlotte, and for seven years now I had told Charlotte almost, almost everything.
Char said, “I bet Tate won every round. She’s so competitive, and she hasn’t got the good sense God gave little fishes. She’d confess anything. Did you play?”
It was a casual question, but the words were tinged in green. Char must have felt how interested I’d been in Roux before it all went bad.
“Hell no,” I said staunchly, though I mouthed the first word. Ruby was singing along with the Muppets, waving her stuffed lamb at Oliver, but she was notoriously bat-eared and of an age to repeat every single thing she heard. “I stood by my stairs drinking too much gin and trying to look poisonous enough to make them leave.”
She laughed, reassured. “I can guess how well that worked. Honestly, it’s the stupidest game I ever heard of. I don’t want to know the worst thing every neighbor ever did, or even the worst thing they did last month. How far did they get? Did anyone give up something super juicy?”
“Not far. They were all so drunk,” I said. I didn’t much want to talk about the actual confessions. That road led right to Tate Bonasco and Phillip at the Back-to-School barbecue. “I missed most of it. I was upstairs with you, evacuating Mads from that front-lawn flirt session.”
“Oh, yeah! That kid Luca? Trouble. And I would say that even if I hadn’t met his awful mother. He’s way too cute,” Char said. “But I wouldn’t worry. He’ll find his own crowd, and it’s not going to be the honor-roll kids in marching band.”
“That’s what I thought, but then he gave Mads a ride to school this morning.” Char’s mouth popped open, and before she could ask if Davis and I had lost our minds, I explained, “Mads played me. I assumed ‘a ride’ meant Shannon’s mom. But no, she went roaring off in his completely inappropriate red sports car.”
“That’s not his. That’s Roux’s. Or anyway it’s the only car I’ve ever seen in their driveway. It’s brand-new, like this year’s model.” Char paused, sniffing the air. “Are you baking?”
Char had struggled with food issues as a teen, and I’d said enough for her to understand that I had, too. She knew I didn’t keep sweets in the house.
“Blondies. For Roux,” I said. I wasn’t going to lie to her about minutiae. Her eyes widened. “I printed her out a copy of our neighborhood directory, too. When I drop it off, I’ll very casually mention that most of the moms with teenagers go to bunco instead of book club.”
Char laughed then. “That’s brilliant. Pawn her off on them!”
The doorbell rang. Char looked a question at me, but I wasn’t expecting anyone. I shrugged, eyes too wide, because I knew that it was Roux. Had to be. Come back to finish her damn game, and this time with Charlotte as a witness.
“Watch the littlies?” I asked Char.
I turned away so she wouldn’t see how plastic my smile had gone. I went through the swinging door to the long hall, with its wide arches to the formal living room and dining room on either side. The walk to the front door at the end took about a thousand years.
It was only Tate Bonasco. She was actually the second-to-last neighbor I wanted to see this morning. Still, my breath puffed out with relief, and only then did I realize I’d been holding it. Tate had a white bakery box from Publix, and she was smiling so wide that all her teeth were showing.
“Hey, Tate,” I heard myself saying, as if this were perfectly normal. It wasn’t. I could count on my thumbs the times Tate had dropped by to see me all impromptu. Hell, I could count them on my wings—it had never happened.
“Hi,” she said, drawing the H out long. “Can I come in? Do you have a sec?”
As she spoke, she ran her free hand down her glossy ponytail, smoothing it. It did not need smoothing.
“Oh, I’m—” I said, and faltered, turning and gesturing behind me, supremely conscious of Char, right down the hall, through that flimsy swinging door. Tate took it as permission, ducking past me into the house. Before she could start talking, I called out, very loud, “Charlotte, Tate’s