“How do you know the ashes are gray?” she asked back.
“I can see them.”
“If you worked a little harder, Joanna, you could see more,” she said.
“I’m Anna, and I’m not psychic.”
“You’re an O’Neill and a girl. You have little choice.”
“All right, I’m not going to argue. Can you sense who killed Uncle Will?”
Her eyes widened for a moment, then narrowed again, becoming a defiant stare.
“Can you?” I persisted.
“Do him the courtesy of putting him back.”
“Can you sense where he was killed? Can you sense when?”
“I won’t,” she replied, pressing her lips together, then turned and headed into the house.
I pulled Erika’s cell phone out of my pocket. I knew I should give it to the sheriff immediately, but I wanted to check it out. The battery was shot, and my charger wouldn’t work with an iPhone. My iPod’s would. . except I’d lent it to Mom for vacation. So I’d spring for a charger — it was worth it.
I slipped the phone back into my pocket, then deposited
“Uncle Will” in the hole, finding it a lot easier to pile dirt in than to dig it out. When finished, I placed the stones back on the plot the way Audrey had arranged them. If I returned the stones to her, confronting her with her strange actions, or got rid of them by throwing them in the river, she would probably have to devise some other way to make herself feel safe. People do crazy things when they believe they are threatened, and I wasn’t going to encourage any more craziness than we already had around here.
THURSDAY NIGHT I wore the only glam sundress I had brought with me. At 7:45, I found Zack on the front porch talking with Aunt Iris. She was giggling, batting her eyelashes, and trying to pat her wild red hair into place.
When I stepped onto the porch, Zack turned to me. “Hey.
You look good.”
“Thanks. Where’s your car?”
“At home. I thought we’d leave from my house rather than
. . rather than block in Iris.”
Rather than lose your muffler, I thought.
“Rather than lose your muffler,” Aunt Iris said with a flirty laugh.
Zack blinked. “That, too,” he admitted, then turned and smiled into my eyes. “I’m glad you decided to go tonight.”
I drew back. Even though it was Erika, not you, who wanted me to come.
“Even though it was—”
“Aunt Iris,” I interrupted her.
She tapped me on the hand. “I wouldn’t let that kind of thing bother you.”
Zack glanced from her to me, trying to understand what had just passed between us, then his gaze dropped to my feet and he started smiling again. “I thought you looked taller. I’ll get the car. I didn’t know you’d be wearing fancy girl shoes.”
What did you think I’d wear, Uncle Will’s hip boots?
“William’s hip boots are in his boat,” Aunt Iris said to me with a sad shake of her head. “The police have them now.”
Zack looked bewildered.
I probably looked irritated by his response to my shoes, because he added suddenly, “What I meant to say is that you look really nice tonight, really nice in those shoes. Not that it’s unusual. I mean, you always look nice. But tonight you look. . fancy and nice and—”
“You told me the party was at a restaurant,” I said, feeling my cheeks get pink. “I thought people would dress up. You did.”
To my surprise, his cheeks grew pink.
“Can we just go?” I asked, removing my tall heels to carry them.
“Sure. Yeah. Let’s go.”
“Bye, Aunt Iris.”
“Have a wonderful time, Joanna.”
When we were out of earshot, he asked, “Is your full name Joanna?”
“No. Sometimes Aunt Iris thinks I’m my birth mother.”
We walked in silence to the edge of the O’Neill property.
As we passed through the gate, Zack leaned toward me.
“My dad’s on the terrace. If we stick close to the trees, we won’t have to stop and talk to him.”
“But I want dessert,” I whispered back.
Zack grinned.
“And, anyway, I think he’s nice,” I added.
“So do I,” Zack replied, his smile softening.
We skirted the house. I wanted to keep on walking with him — not go to the party, just walk with him and make him smile again. I reminded myself this was not a date, but a mission, for both him and me.
“How long has your dad been married to Marcy?”
“Two years. He built this house for her.”
“It’s new?” I turned to study it, walking backward a few steps.
“Yeah. Dad’s an architect. She wanted a new but colonial-looking mansion, and that’s what she got.”
“It’s beautiful.”
He shrugged. “I liked the old house where he and I lived the first year we came to Wisteria. This place is too Marcytoo perfect.”
I realized a perfectionist would be a tough stepmother.
“Do you have a mom somewhere?”
“She died from cancer when I was five. Dad and I did great for ten years, then he kind of went off the deep end.”
“Meaning?”
“He fell in love.”
I laughed out loud. “Love’s the deep end?”
“You don’t expect that to happen when your father is fortyeight. I mean, it was unbelievable. He acted like a teenager.”
“I think it’s awesome.”
Obviously, Zack didn’t. “Everything’s different now.”
“And you wanted things to stay the same, just you and him, even though you knew you’d be leaving for college one day.”
Zack didn’t answer right away, just pulled out his keys and opened the passenger door of his car. “Yeah, I’m selfish, if that’s what you’re getting at.”
I got in, and he closed the door. I wondered if his dad had trained him to do these polite little things.
“I’m even worse,” I said, when he got in on the other side.
“I didn’t want my mother to adopt Jack and the twins. I was going to be a freshman in high school. Everything was perfect — for me. I couldn’t understand why she’d want to start all over again with little kids. Talk about acting like a princess!”
Zack looked at me for a long moment, then switched on the ignition. “And how about now?”
“Now I can’t imagine life without them. I think I’m having SpongeBob withdrawal.”
His eyes crinkled. I liked it when his smile made his eyes crinkle.
As we drove to the party, we talked about college and what we hoped it would be like. Finally, we turned into a lot with a sign that read SIMON’S WHARF. “Didn’t we pass this place about fifteen minutes ago?” I asked, recognizing the bouquet of pink balloons attached to the sign.