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Look Again - Lisa Scottoline [119]

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card. She’d never thought of it exactly that way.

Her father’s gaze shifted from Barbara to Ellen, suddenly very sad. He raked his thin hair with trembling fingers. “I’m sorry, El. I didn’t mean it.”

“I know, Dad.”

“It’s just that Will was my . . . chance.”

“What do you mean?” Ellen asked, mystified, and tears came to her father’s eyes. The only other time she’d seen him cry was at her mother’s funeral, and the sight caught her by the throat.

“He was my chance, El. My second chance.”

Ellen touched his arm, sensing what he’d say before he said it. She gave him a big hug, and he eased into her arms, with a little moan.

“Everything I did wrong with you, I was gonna do right with him. I wanted to make it up to you. To your mother.”

Ellen thought her heart would break, and in the next minute, her eyes brimmed with tears, and she found herself crying like a baby in her father’s arms.

“I’m so sorry, honey,” he whispered as Ellen sobbed and breathed in his expensive aftershave, and she drew real comfort from his embrace in a way she never had before. The deepest pain in her heart eased just a little, and she let herself feel how very powerful is something so simple, yet so profound, as a father’s love.

And she thanked God he was alive.

Chapter Eighty-nine


It wasn’t until they had gone and Ellen was rinsing their coffee mugs that the phone rang in the kitchen. She turned off the faucet, crossed the room, and checked caller ID, which showed the newspaper’s main number. She picked up. “Hello?”

“Ellen?” Marcelo asked, worried. “Are you okay? I’ve been calling your cell.”

“I think I left it in your car. I was going to call you, but my father and my new stepmother just left.”

“How are you?”

“Good, okay.” Ellen glanced over and saw that the Coffmans still weren’t home, their house dark. “You probably want me to look at that story, huh?

“Only if you feel up to it.”

“I’m not sure.”

“Then let it go. I loved what you wrote for the homicide piece.”

“Good, thanks.” Ellen felt a warmth she couldn’t deny.

“I’ll be done here around nine. Happily, there’s news besides you.”

“You’d never know it from the crowd outside.”

“Would you like company tonight? I don’t think you should be alone.”

“I’d like that.”

“I’ll be there.” Marcelo’s voice softened. “Take care of yourself, ’til then.”

“See you.” Ellen hung up and left the kitchen by the other exit, feeling an odd sensation when she reached the upstairs landing. It was exactly the spot where Carol had set Will down, before she’d made her final stand.

Ellen felt a tightness in her chest, then forced herself to step over the spot and climb the stairs. She caught a glimpse of the scene outside on the sidewalk, and the reporters were still there, smoking cigarettes and holding cups of take-out coffee against the cold. The afternoon sky spent its last hour before twilight descended, dropping purple and rose streaks behind the cedar shakes and satellite dishes, a suburban night in winter.

Ellen’s clogs clattered on the wooden stair, echoing in the silent house, and she wondered how long she’d go on noticing every noise that she’d never noticed before. She lived in a house of echoes now. She’d have to exchange her clogs for slippers if she wanted to keep her sanity.

She reached the top of the stair, which ended in front of Will’s room, and faced his door, which was closed. Not that it helped. Butterfly stickers, scribbled drawings, and a WILL’S ROOM license plate covered the door, and Ellen reached almost reflexively for the doorknob, then wondered if she should go in.

“Mrrp?” Oreo Figaro chirped, rubbing against her jeans, his tail curled around her leg.

“Don’t ask,” she told him, twisting the doorknob. She opened the door, and the Cheerios-and-Play-Doh smell caught her by the throat. She willed herself not to cry, and her gaze traveled around the room, dark except for the white rectangle of the window shade, bright from the snow and the TV klieg lights outside. She didn’t know how long she stood there, but it was long enough for the daylight to leak away, so stuffed animals

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