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“Me either.” He laughed.

“You holding up all right out there? How’s the food? How’s your leg?”

“Leg’s fine. Really, it was minor. Totally healed … you’ll see. Food’s fine, too. Stop worrying about me. I’m good. I’m writing. How was the thing?”

The thing. He meant the memorial.

“Oh, you know. Formal. I met Seth.”

“Mm.”

“You didn’t tell me he was in a band.”

“I didn’t think it was important.” In an instant, Matt’s voice went from warm and open to cold and closed. “I don’t know what your brother does.”

“Matt, my brother’s in high school.”

“Fine, he’s in high school.”

Laughter burbled out of me. I clapped a hand over my mouth, but the giggles slipped through my fingers. Oh, Matt …

“What’s so funny?”

“You. You’re adorable.”

He snorted. “Excuse me?”

“Nothing. Hey, I can’t wait to see you. Want me to bring anything special?”

“Mm … your cute little ass and a few thongs. That’ll do.”

“You’re turning into a sex-starved recluse out there, huh? Subsisting on ink and fantasies. And ramen noodles.”

“I was always a sex-starved recluse. And I’ll have you know I made SpaghettiOs today.”

I pinched the bridge of my nose. God, this was killing me. Matt couldn’t cook to save his soul, and now he couldn’t eat out. Left to his own devices, he was living on Pringles, Pop-Tarts, and SpaghettiOs—I just knew it.

“I’m going to cook for you this weekend, I swear. Every meal.”

“In an apron?” he said.

“Uh, sure. In an apron.”

“Mm … my little bird in just an apron.”

Just an apron? I laughed again, shaking my head.

We talked about my job. I asked about the weather. We avoided the lawsuit, Matt’s money, and Night Owl. I also decided not to mention Aaron Snow and his online magazine, No Stone Unturned. Maybe Matt already knew about that. The cabin had dial-up, though we never used the Internet to communicate. Too easy to trace, Matt said.

Finally, around two, I pushed myself off the bed and blew out my candles.

“Plans for the evening?” Matt tried to sound upbeat.

“Nah, I’ve got nothing. I might go to yoga. There’s a class at seven.”

“Don’t forget your little bird mat.”

I grinned and rubbed my neck.

“Yeah, can’t forget the mat. I dunno if I’ll really go.”

“Make yourself go. You’ll feel better.”

I paused by the window, my hand on the curtain.

“How do you know I’m not feeling good?”

“I know, Hannah. I know you like I know my own self.”

“How come I don’t know you like that?” I remembered the memorial guests relating stories about Matt. I remembered Nate discussing Matt’s faith. I even remembered the laughter I heard as I hid in Nate’s basement, which seemed to mock me for being an outsider. Outside of the mystery of the man I loved.

“You do, Hannah. You know me. Let’s not say good-bye. Say you’ll see me soon.”

“I’ll see you soon,” I said.

“So soon. I love you, Hannah.”

Matt hung up first. I tossed the phone onto the bed, but I picked it up immediately and returned it to the wall safe in the closet. Don’t leave this lying around, Matt told me the day he came home with two prepaid cells. Keep the minute cards in the safe too. No one can see these things. And we can’t use them all the time; we can’t talk every day. It’s too risky.

How did he know all that stuff?

Sometimes, I got a feeling that Matt had contemplated vanishing before.

I changed into my yoga pants and workout top.

I set my yoga mat and water bottle by the door.

Music. I needed music, or TV or maybe a movie. I needed noise and distraction—which reminded me.

I unpacked my laptop and booted it up. I sat cross-legged on the bed as I waited for iTunes to load.

Then, with a smile on my lips, I deleted every Goldengrove song in my library. Good-bye, Seth Sky, I thought.

I never expected to see him again, and I resented the swirl of confusion I felt when I thought about him. It was Matt I loved. Matt I wanted. I didn’t need anything from his dark-haired, cynical brother.

Chapter 14

MATT

Hannah sat on our bed, angled away from me. Her shoulders moved with quiet sobs. The room was dark, and I could just make out the silvery satin of her nightie.

“Hannah?” I reached for her. “Baby, why are you crying?”

“I miss you,” she whispered.

“Bird, I’m right here.”

“You’re not. You don’t want to be.”

Something tightened inside me. I didn’t want to be with Hannah?

“You’re the one who won’t run away with me,” I said. “You won’t leave Denver … won’t leave your life. You don’t want to be with me.”

“Matt … I miss you. Where are you?”

With that, Hannah slipped off the bed and rushed out of the room. I watched, mesmerized, as her little nightie shifted around her body, as her curls fanned across her back, and she disappeared out the bedroom door.

“Hannah!” I darted after her.

I reached the hallway in time to see her rounding the corner into the kitchen.

I heard the condo door opening.

When I got there, I found the door hanging open and no Hannah.

“Hannah!” I called. “Where the hell are you going?”

Barefoot, I dashed down the complex stairs and out into the Denver night. A wall of cold air crashed into me. Improbably, a crowd filled the street—masses of strangers milling and laughing. I glimpsed Hannah’s body vanishing into the mob.

Silver satin. Pale skin. Dark, thick, heavy hair.

Mine. Mine. Mine.

“Hannah!” I lunged after her. A commanding anger filled my voice. “Hannah, get back here!” The crowd on the street closed around me. Hannah slipped away effortlessly; I slammed into an immovable jam of bodies.

“M. Pierce!” someone shouted.

“Matt! Matthew Sky!” said another.

Strange hands touched me. Eyes staring. Voices rising.

“Hannah!” I roared. “Hannah!”

My eyes flared open.

I lay alone in the cabin bedroom, my arm outstretched and hand grasping air. Fuck. My heart pounded in my ears.

Was I screaming Hannah’s name? My throat was raw.

I sat up and checked the time. Seven at night. My cell and Jack Reacher novel lay at my side. I must have dozed after getting off with Hannah.

When I collected my breath, I forced myself out of bed and pulled on jeans. The wind had picked up. It gusted against the cabin—a lonely, howling sound—and I felt hollow.

I hardly needed to analyze my dream. I knew what it meant.

It meant that Hannah wasn’t mine, not truly, and that my best efforts to bring her to me were failing. It also meant that I couldn’t live without her, no matter what I’d thought. Wanting Hannah plagued me all day. Now it invaded my dreams.

And it wasn’t enough, getting off miles apart. It wouldn’t be enough, seeing her this weekend. I needed her with me—always.

That evening, I tried to get back into my writing, but the scene was closed to me. I flipped to a clean page and sketched Hannah.

I checked my phone periodically.

“Melanie, Melanie.” I sighed. “Where the f**k are you?”

She’d better be busy erasing Night Owl from the Internet—at least insofar as she could. I doubted Shapiro and Nate would go after torrents and forum posts. No e-book, no case.

I messed with my sketch a little more, and then, hurriedly, as if I could convince myself that I wasn’t doing it, I keyed in a Google search: Night Owl by W. Pierce.

I hit Enter.

The search results loaded with agonizing slowness. Agonizing because I had plenty of time to realize I was making a mistake. Sure, I read news and reviews of my other books, but Night Owl wasn’t like my other books.

Night Owl was about Hannah and me. It was precious.

Google found four hundred thousand results. I smirked and scrolled down, my eyes jumping from one link to the next. I saw Facebook pages, fan pages, forum posts, blog reviews, and URLs from Goodreads, Amazon, the iBookstore, Barnes & Noble. Damn …

And there was a link to the e-book, which wasn’t supposed to exist. I clicked it. Still available, still ninety-nine cents. I balked. Night Owl was number thirty-five on the digital bestseller list. It had six hundred reviews and a 4.6-star average rating.

My cursor hovered over the one-star reviews. I clicked.

The first was a refund request with “pornographic quotes.”

TERRIBLE, said another reviewer. Pure  p**n , no story!

The negative reviews went on like that, attacking my plot, my writing, my person. I was mentally disturbed. I was single-handedly sending women back to the Dark Ages.

By the time I got to the last one-star review, my hands were shaking.

“Hannah,” I said aloud. Her name was a talisman.

I forced myself to read the last review. I always twist the knife.

Don’t waste your money, it said. Matt is a psycho and Hannah is nothing but a slut.

My eyes widened.

Oh, it was one thing for me to call Hannah a slut. She was my slut. She was a slut for me. When we went mad together, when she got on her knees … only I called Hannah “slut.”

But this? This was a backhanded slap—a stranger calling my lover a whore.

I slammed my laptop shut. I nearly snapped my phone in two as I opened it.

When I rose, my chair tipped over with a crash. I found Mel’s number in my recent calls. “Answer,” I snarled as soon as I hit Send. “Answer!”

“Hello?”

At the sound of Mel’s voice, my anger erupted.

“Take it down, you bitch!” I snarled. “I told you to take it down. Take it down. Take that f**king book off the Internet now. Now!” Flecks of saliva wet my lips.

“I did!” Melanie’s voice was tiny.

“You. Did. Not.” I spat the words into the phone. The heat of my rage scalded my throat.

“Calm down,” Mel bleated. “It takes—it can take up to t-two days for the—”

“No!” I shouted over the small voice on the phone. “Don’t you try to f**king handle me! You have twelve hours—twelve f**king hours—”

My threat broke into silence. Twelve hours, or else what?

I ended the call.

My phone began to ring. It was Mel. I ended the call. It rang again. I hit End. Again, then again. Ring … end call, ring … end call.

I set the volume to mute.

The screen lit up. I ended the call. It lit again. She called again. Again and again, and I couldn’t walk away. Leave me alone!

I threw down the phone, which bounced off the floor with an unsatisfying pop. I drove my heel into it. The plastic plates snapped.

Implausibly, the mangled phone lit up. The cracked screen glowed with a new call.

I smashed my foot into it. I did it again.

Again, the frame cracking, fragments skittering across the floor. Shards of metal stabbed at my sole, but it didn’t hurt enough to make me stop. A mountain lion dragged my body off Longs Peak. That didn’t hurt enough to make me stop. I was living apart from the only woman I wanted. That didn’t hurt enough to make me stop.

When the phone was a shapeless mosaic of debris, I turned to the chair. I lifted it easily and swung it against the wall. I did it because I could, because I was as strong as any animal. A psycho, they called me. They were right. They were wrong. They couldn’t come close to my fire. They couldn’t touch my heart.

Chapter 15

HANNAH

When I strolled into work on Monday morning, I found my boss, Pam, dressed in a winter white skirt suit. I was wearing a too-bright blue turtleneck and dress slacks. Our outfits shouted: Not in mourning! I suppressed a grin.

Really, I was getting tired of being treated like a porcelain doll. The sad eyes, the lingering hugs, the artless dodges of Matt-related topics drove me crazy.

Maybe Pam knew the feeling.

“Come in here,” she called from her office to mine. “No, wait, stay there. One moment.” She typed and swore at her mouse. “There. Check your e-mail.”

Pam grinned and peered at me over her glasses.

I opened my work e-mail. A hideous number of queries loaded—my new duties included reading queries—and at the top was an e-mail from Pam: SURROGATE JACKET.

My heart skipped.

I opened the e-mail and then the attachment.

Pam moved to lurk in the doorway.

“Knopf sent it over this morning,” she said.

I took my first look at the book jacket for The Surrogate, Matt’s last novel. The title, in unadorned white type, hung on a backdrop of stars. Tall towers or tree trunks lined the sky like bars. Behind the bars, a dark figure. Visible and invisible. The surrogate. Matthew Sky.

Matt’s pen name was a splash of red, front and center. M. PIERCE. No blurbs busied the cover, no needless accolades announcing that Pierce was a bestseller everywhere.

I let out the breath I was holding.

“Beautiful,” I said.

“Yes.” Pam came to stand behind me and we admired the jacket in silence. After a time, she said, “This is the book jacket everyone will remember this year.”

I knew she was right.

I blinked rapidly to keep back tears.

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