Ten minutes later, Vicki sets a coffee cup down in front of me at her kitchen table. She has a nice houseâa family houseâin a development with green lawns and brick-paved driveways and swimming pools in yards lined with arborvitaes to have some privacy from the neighbors. Her kitchenâs huge, with mauve-colored walls and cream cabinets. There are framed pictures all aroundâsome of dark-haired little girls, some of Vicki and Brian Gunderson.
Brian was a student at Saint Arthurâs too. A tall, lanky kid who sagged his pants, listened to Snoop Dogg, and attended on scholarship. I remember seeing them together around campusâhe was her date the night of the senior dance . . . and it looks like theyâre married now.
In the den off the kitchen, thereâs a cluster of book covers with shirtless men in various stages of embracing equally hot, half-naked women. And the author is V. Russo.
âYouâre a writer?â I ask, sipping my coffee.
âYeah. I write romance.â
I glance at the pictures again. âBrianâs a lucky guy.â
She chuckles. âYes, he is.â Then her expression turns thoughtful. âA romantic hero with a prosthetic leg would make for an interesting story.â
âWell, if you need a technical advisor, give me a call.â Then I ask, âDo you still talk with Kennedy?â
She lifts one perfectly penciled brow. Then calls down the hallway, âLouise! Come here please.â
A tiny little thing, maybe about five years old, with long black messy hair walks into the kitchen and stands next to Vicki. âYes, Momma?â
Vicki crouches down next to her. âLouise, this is an old classmate of MommyâsâMr. Mason. Can you say hello?â
The little girl smiles, not at all shyly. âHello, Mr. Mason.â
âHi, Louise.â
âCan you tell Mr. Mason your full name, honey?â
âLouise Kennedy Gunderson.â
I nod in understanding. âThatâs a beautiful name.â
Vicki pats her daughterâs shoulder. âYou can go back and play now, baby.â
As Louise leaves the room, Vicki raises her coffee cup to her lips. âKennedyâs the godmother to all our girls. And she gets full custody if we kick the bucket, even though I have two married brothers and Brian has a sister.â
Thatâs going to make this conversation slightly more complicated, but it shouldnât be a problem.
âI assume Kennedyâs told you about our court case?â I ask.
âThe case where sheâs wiping the floor with you? Yeahâheard all about it.â She smiles a little too broadly for my liking, but I let it go.
âShe also told me about your chat last night. How you proclaimed your innocence.â Thereâs a bite to her words at the end.
âI didnât have anything to do with what happened to her at the dance.â
âYou had everything to do with it. Your girlfriend and her friends made life hell for Kennedy because of youâand you did nothing.â
âI didnât know it was that bad.â
âYou knew enough.â
And Iâve got no comeback. Because sheâs right. Itâs easy to look back, with the knowledge and confidence of an adult, and see everything that we should have done differently.
My words are strong and demanding. âThatâs why Iâm here. I need you to tell me what else I donât know.â
She tosses back, âWhy?â
My hand runs through my hair. âBecause I donât think she willânot all of it. Because I want to make it up to her. Because, I feel like a black-out drunk who just sobered up, and I need to hear about the chunks of time Iâm missing. Because . . . she was always the one.â
Vicki rolls her eyes. âThe one? Seriously? Iâm a romance writer and even Iâm about to gag.â
I shake my head, trying to be clearer. âDidnât you ever have someone that you compare every other person against? This oneâs nice, but not as nice . . . that oneâs smart, but not as smart . . .
âSheâs always been in my thoughts, even when I didnât realize it. The one every other woman has gotten compared to, and fallen short. And I . . . Iâve missed her, Vicki. I want to know her again.â
She stares me down, biting the inside of her cheek. And then she nods.
âOkay.â
â¢Â  â¢Â  â¢
For the next hour, Vicki Russo recounts two years of psychological and emotional torture. Some of it was schoolyard stuffâdirty looks and shoulder bumps. Some of it was more sinisterânotes slipped under dorm doors telling her to kill herself, calling her ugly, freak show, worthless. It was calculated, organized, and relentless.
âWhy the hell didnât she complain? Report Cashmere to the headmaster?â I ask, frustration in every word.
Vicki shrugs. âLots of reasons. Call it the Pretty in Pink SyndromeâKennedy didnât want Cashmere to think sheâd won, that sheâd broken her. Plus the bitch had her pack of mean girls behind herâif it came down to their word against mine and Kennedyâs, who do you think the headmaster wouldâve believed? And if she had reported it and the school sided with Cashmere, it wouldâve gotten so much worse. Things like that always do.â
Jesus fucking Christ Somebody needs to burn Saint Arthurâs to the ground. Scorch the earth and never rebuild.
My fists clench on the table. âWhy didnât she tell me?â
âBecause your head was so far up your girlfriendâs snatch, Kennedy didnât know if you wouldâve cared.â
I pin her with my eyes. âI would have.â
âShe was embarrassed. You have to understand . . . you were everything to her, Brent. When you started to drift away . . . even if she couldnât have your friendship anymore, she never wanted your pity.
âIt messed with her head for a long time,â Vicki says. âI mean, Kennedy knows who she is, but it knocked down her self-confidence. How could it not? And her ability to trustâafter what happened to her in collegeâthat was obliterated.â
I look at Vicki warily. âWhat happened in college?â
She flinches, not meaning to have said it.
Every statistic I know flickers through my head, and I go taut with preemptive rage. âWas she . . . was she raped?â
âI shouldnâtââ
My voice rises. âIf she was raped, Vicki, I swear to God Iâm gonna fucking kill someone.â
âShe wasnât raped,â Vicki assures me quickly. âShe had a boyfriend in collegeâher first ârealâ boyfriend if you know what I mean. A frat guy. They dated for a few months, and she thought they were in love. And then one day he told her that heâd started dating her because of a bet.â
âA bet?â
She nods. âA competition at the frat. Who could bag the most girlsâextra points if she was a virgin.â
I rub my eyes. I donât know how women do it. I donât know how they even like any of usâa significant portion of the male population deserves to have their dicks cut off. And donât think I say that lightly.
âThe sad thing is,â Vicki continues, âthe bastard genuinely ended up having feelings for her. Thatâs why he told herâhe didnât want to base their relationship on a lie. But after Kennedy knew, she broke up with him. And now, no one gets in. Me, Brian, and her sisterâweâre the only ones she trusts.â
â¢Â  â¢Â  â¢
Later, at her front door, I thank Vicki for filling in the gaps of information. Sheâs still unsure about me, reserving judgment, but I can live with that.
I say, âYouâre going to tell her I was here, arenât you?â
Vicki smiles. âIn the spirit of full disclosureâIâm going to be on the phone with her before you get to your car.â
â¢Â  â¢Â  â¢
On the drive back to DC, one thought sticks in my head like the blade of a knife: I never said I was sorry. All the shit Kennedy and I talked about last night, all the things we got straightened out . . . but I never said I was sorry. And I should have.
Because I am. And she deserves to hear it.
I didnât defend her when it mattered. I didnât stick my neck out for her. I didnât shield her. I didnât even try.
And itâs the biggest regret of my life.
I think about the things Vicki told me. The shit Kennedy dealt with and, on some level, still has to live with. Kind of like my leg: it is what it is, and it doesnât stand in my way. But itâs something I have to deal with every day. Part of what makes me who I am. A part Iâll never get back.
And I think thereâs a part of Kennedyâa piece of her childhood, her self-confidenceâthatâs forever altered because of Saint Arthurâs.
I need to tell her Iâm sorry. It canât wait another day.
Thatâs how I end up in the ballroom of one of DCâs poshest, most look-how-much-money-I-have-because-I-can-stay-here hotels. Itâs a fund-raiser for David Prince, ten thousand bucks a plate. I had to call a few cousins who know a few people to get the last-minute ticket, but I got one.
Wearing my tuxedoâand looking pretty fucking James Bond, if I do say so myselfâI weave through the tables, scanning the crowd, looking, looking. Prince stands at the front of the room, giving a speech. And I spot Kennedy in the back, near the bar. Sheâs wearing a snug, strapless white gown that ends at her calves, accentuating sexy, strappy silver high heels. Her hair is down, a shiny curtain of gold.
Sheâs talking to someone, smiling, just on the verge of laughing. And she literally takes my breath away.
As I walk toward her, she sees me approach. And she doesnât look anywhere else. When I reach her, the other person has stepped away, so itâs just her and me, standing a few inches apart.
âWhat are you doing here?â
âI had to see you.â
âI donât thinkââ
âIâm sorry, Kennedy.â
Whatever she was going to say is lost in a breath. And thereâs a softening in her features, the slight curve of her mouth, the relaxing of her jaw that tells me sheâs relieved. That even if she didnât realize it, sheâs been waiting for this. Wanting the words.
âI should have stuck up for you. And I will always be sorry that I didnât. I was selfish and stupid, and you deserved better.â
She looks away, like itâs all too much. But when her eyes turn back to me, thereâs a peace in them that I havenât seen for a very long time.
âThank you.â
And itâs only then that I notice whatâs different about her. Why every cell in my body is content to just stand here and watch her.
Itâs her eyes.
The turquoise contact lenses are goneâher gaze washes over me in pure, breath-stealing brandy-colored beauty.
And even though she didnât know Iâd be here tonightâIÂ want to believe itâs for me. Some kind of sign. Because those eyes are mineâthe girl behind them, once, was mine.
And maybe sheâs willing to be mine again.
While I happily drown in the eyes I havenât glimpsed in so long, all the other eyes in the audience are focused on Prince. Microphone in hand, he works the room, his white teeth gleaming beneath the lights.
âAnd I can think of no other announcement more precious to me than to proclaim that the beautiful Kennedy Randolph is going to be my wife.â
My head snaps up. âWhat did he just say?â
Kennedyâs head snapped even faster. âWhat did he just say?â
The room explodes into thunderous applause.
I lean in so she can hear me above the noise. âYouâre engaged?â
Her head tilts. âNo?â
âSure about that?â
She doesnât sound very sure, and it seems like the kind of thing she should have the inside track on.
âDavid flew out to speak with my father last week. He said they had to discuss something important,â Kennedy explains, her eyes squinting like sheâs trying to decode ancient hieroglyphics in her head.
âBut he didnât actually ask you?â
âNo. I guess he skipped that part.â
The crowd comes at us like a tsunami, and Kennedyâs swallowed up in a sea of well-wishers and carried away toward the front of the room.
I scowl so hard my face hurts.
The ever-elegant Mrs. Randolph appears beside me, in the spot her daughter just vacated, watching the hubbub with a smile.
âIt seems congratulations are in order,â I tell her.
âIt appears so.â
My gaze never wavers from Kennedy as sheâs ushered forward. And thereâs a pulling sensation in my chest, like my lungs have been snagged by a hook and theyâre being yanked out of my rib cage.
The feeling turns my voice scratchy. âDoes she love him?â
Mrs. Randolph thinks for a moment, then she answers smoothly, âDavid is a fine young man. I believe heâll be president one day. Heâs an excellent match for my daughter.â
âThatâs not what I asked.â
She sighs. âClaire and I have always been close; we understand each other. But Kennedy . . . I fear she will forever be an enigma to me. What do you think, Brent? Is that the look of a young woman in love?â
Kennedyâs standing next to Prince now. Black microphones are thrust at her, and bright lights illuminate her pale face and wide eyes.
In love? No.
Scared out of her mind? Absolutely.
She looks like a mouse caught in a trap, ready to chew its own leg off to escape.
I was a shitty friend to Kennedy in boarding school, I see that now. But you know something?
This isnât fucking boarding school.
I march forward, pushing and elbowing my way through the crowd. âPardon me. Excuse me. Coming through.â
Finally, I reach the unhappy couple. I nod to Prince. âHowâs it going, Dave?â
He looks a little confused. âUh . . . fine, thanks.â
âGood.â
Then I scoop Kennedy up into my armsâand I run.
The element of surprise is on our side, several moments pass before anyone behind us thinks to react.
âWhat are you doing?â Kennedy squeaks.
âSaving you.â
For a horrible second, I think maybe she didnât want to be saved. Until her arms tighten around my neck and her body presses closer. âHurry. Theyâre coming.â
I pick up the pace and smile. âRelax. Iâve got you.â