was no place for our daughter. Perugia would have been so much safer.â
âShe wanted to go, darling,â said Winnie, who somehow managed to eat the heads off two ghost cookies. âThe biscuits are charming, Mrs. Kim. A traditional recipe, I imagine.â
Kim nodded, but didnât say that the cookies were traditional only if one shopped at Safewayâs bakery department. âThank you. Lee is my last name. Kim is my first name. Please call me Kim.â
Winnie patted her husbandâs slightly quivering knee to stop it from vibrating the deep red velvet camelback sofa. âOf course, Kim,â she said. âSorry.â
The clock ticked some more.
âEdward used to have a TV show in the UK,â Winnie said. âYouâd never know it right now, of course. Heâs let himself go, Iâm afraid. And whatâs more, heâs just so devastated by whatâs happened. I hope you will forgive him. Heâs normally not nearly this rude.â
Beth, who had remained mostly silent while the adults struggled to make polite conversation, didnât know what to say. But in her mind, she hurled insult after insult at the stuck-up woman.
YOU are the one whoâs rude, Mrs. Grant. Your daughter has been brutally murdered. You expect him to be a charmer right now? I can see why Olivia never said a freaking nice word about you, she thought.
âI love your bracelet,â Beth said, just to fill the gap in the conversation. She thought it was hideous.
Winnie jangled the loose chain around her wrist and murmured a thank-you.
Kim pointed to the teapot, but there were no takers for a refill. She tried to give her guests the benefit of the doubt and connect with them in the only way she thought she could. âIt is beyond devastating. Years ago, I lost a daughter, too.â
Winnie looked up from her cup. âIâm very sorry to hear that,â she said. âAt least you have another.â
Stunned into silence, Kim held her tongue. Without knowing exactly how much alike she and her daughter were at that very moment, she mentally picked up the teapot and dumped the hot liquid all over Winnieâs matching travel outfit. Imagining her guest drenched and in pain, Kim churned an internal response: Beth is not a spare for Christina!
Beth watched her mother for a reaction but saw none and chalked another notch on her belt of disappointment. The sixteen-year-old was certain that Christina had been her motherâs favorite daughter. It wasnât that Beth didnât think her mother loved her. She knew she did. Her mom showed her love every single minute of the day. Deep down, however, Beth was sure that if given the choice and the biggest do-over in the history of the world, her mom would have put her , not Christina, on that bus for the Girl Scout Daisies picnic that ill-fated day.
Beth returned the gaze of Edward Grant. âI packed all of Oliviaâs stuff for you. She might have some things at school,â Beth said. âI can check her locker tomorrow, if you like.â
Edward nodded. âThat would be nice. Thank you, Beth.â
âDo you want to see where she was staying?â she asked.
âPlease,â Winnie said.
They all got up and followed Beth down the hall to Christinaâs old bedroomâOliviaâs during her stay. On the floor next to the crisply made, canopy bedâa sunny yellow and white affair that was too young for a teenager but certainly appropriate for a little girlâwere Oliviaâs four Louis Vuitton suitcases. Stuck in the mirror frame above the dresser were magazine pictures of Hollywood stars, American singers, and a single photo of Olivia and Beth. It had been taken the day Olivia died, with Bethâs Polaroid camera, her momâs latest garage-sale find. In the photo, the girls were smiling, carefree, and utterly unaware of what the next eight hours had in store.
At the time it was snapped, Beth
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