Part 127 (1/2)
Bless Marianne, Emma thought as the plane touched down. She hadn't
asked any questions once she had seen that the answers would be painful.
Instead, she had roused herself barely past dawn, tossed on a blond wig,
sungla.s.ses, and Emma's overcoat and had cabbed it to early ma.s.s at Saint
Pat's. With the guards trailing behind her.
That had given Emma enough time to dash to the airport and catch her
plane to the Coast. As far as Sweeney and his partner would be
concerned, Emma McAvoy would be spending a quiet weekend at home.
Marianne would have to do some fast talking if Brian or Johnno called,
but then Marianne was nothing if not a fast talker.
In any case, Emma decided while she deplaned, the die was cast. She was
here, and she would do what she had come to do.
She had to see the house again. It had been sold all those years ago,
so it was doubtful she could w.a.n.gle her way inside. But she had to see
it.
,,The Beverly Wils.h.i.+re,” she told the cab driver.
Exhausted, she let her head fall back, let her eyes close behind her
dark gla.s.ses. It was too warm for her winter coat now, but she couldn't
find the energy to shrug out of it. She needed to rent a car, she
realized, and let out an annoyed breath. She should have taken care of
that already. With a shake of her head, she promised herself she would
arrange it through the concierge as soon as she had unpacked the few
things she'd tossed into her bag.
There were ghosts here, she thought. Along Hollywood Boulevard, in
Beverly Hills, on the beaches at Malibu and throughout the hills looking
over the L.A. basin. Ghosts of herself as a young girl on her first