She knew he was waiting for her to say the words back to him, but she couldnt do it.
Chapter Sixteen
Ruby had never been to her sisters house, but the address was imprinted on her brain. Caroline was the only person on earth who regularly received a Christmas card from Ruby. It was simply required. Ruby had long ago discovered that it wasnt worth the eleven months of sarcastic jabs. Better to mail off a damn card.
The traffic was stop-and-go as she exited Interstate 5 and crept toward the sprawling suburb of Redmond.
Not so many years earlier, this had been the sticks; hundreds of acres of unspoiled farmland nestled between two rivers. Now it was MicrosoftLand, the über suburbia of the geek set. The developments had tried to keep the rural flavor-lots were big; subdivisions had names like Evergreen Valley and Rainshadow
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bsp; Vista, and trees were preserved at all cost. Unfortunately, the houses all looked disturbingly similar. Step ford in a coat of Ralph Lauren paint. Ruby checked the handy rental car map and turned down Emerald Lane. One big, brick-faced house followed another; each built to the edge of its lot. New landscaping gave the neighborhood an unsettled look.
At last she found it: 12712 Emerald Lane.
She drove up the stamped blue concrete driveway and parked next to a silver Mercedes station wagon, then grabbed her purse from the passenger seat and headed up the path to a pair of oak doors trimmed in headed brass.
She knocked. From inside came a rustle of movement, then a muffled “Just a minute. ”
Suddenly the door sprang open and Caroline stood there, looking flawless at one oclock in the afternoon in a pair of ice-blue linen pants and a matching boat-neck cashmere sweater.
“Ruby!” Caroline pulled Ruby into her arms, holding her tightly. Ruby closed her eyes; for the first time in hours, she was able to draw a decent breath.
Finally, Caro drew back. “Im so glad you came. ”
“I didnt have a chance to go shopping. I meant to get the kids something-”
“Forget about that. ” Caroline yanked Ruby into the house.
Of course, it was perfect. Uncluttered and flawlessly decorated. Not a thing was out of place.
It didnt look as if a child had ever been in here let alone lived here.
They passed through a pristine kitchen, all gleaming metallic surfaces and black granite countertops.
Here was the first hint of the family. Pictures covered the Sub-Zero refrigerator. Above the double sinks, a bay window held on to a view of rolling, green lawn. A golf course.
Caro led her through the formal dining room, where Grandmas silver tea service glittered on a massive oak sideboard, and into the living room. Walls painted in a lovely faux marble finish dropped down to a wide-planked oak floor. Two wing chairs, upholstered in an elegant brandy-colored silk weave, flanked a gold-and-bronze tapestried sofa. A pair of crystal lamps sat on gilded rosewood end tables, pouring golden light onto the plush antique Chinese rug.
“Where are the kids?”
Caroline brought a finger to her lips and said harshly, “Sshh. We dont want to wake them up. ”
“Could I tiptoe upstairs and just-”
“Trust me on this. You can see them when they wake up. ”
Ruby got a glimpse of something-someone behind Caros perfect, smiling face, but it was there and gone so fast, it left no imprint behind.
She felt a little prickle of unease. Nothing was ever wrong with Caroline. She was the most balanced, well-adjusted person Ruby had ever known. Even during that horrible summer; Caro had moved along on an even keel, accepting what Ruby never would, smiling, forgetting, going on . . .
And yet now, impossibly, Caroline looked unhappy. “Somethings going on with you,” Ruby said, “what is it?”
Caro sat like a parakeet on the edge of the chair. Her perfectly manicured hands were clasped so tightly together the skin had gone pale. A Julia Roberts smile across her serene face. “Its nothing, really. Just a bad week. The kids have been acting up. Its nothing. ”
Ruby couldnt put her finger on it, exactly, but something was wrong here. Suddenly she knew. “Youre having an affair!”
This time there was no mistaking the genuineness of Caros smile. It showed how false the others had been.