I caught sight of Blanca who was staring at us, bacon fork pointed up, coffee mug in her other hand.

I blinked then blinked again but even so, the expression on her face didn’t change. She was watching me with a feminine, motherly version of the same soft, hard, possessive look that her son had just treated me to. I didn’t know what to make of that except it made that snugly, comfy, lovely feeling intensify.

“Blanca, can you teach me how to speak Spanish while you teach me how to cook?” I called to her.

Her body gave a start, she shook her head as if clearing it and then said, “Sí, mi hija.”

“Gracias,” I returned.

She grinned.

I grinned back.

Kitty Sue burst out laughing.

My eyes moved to her.

“What’s funny?” I asked.

“I just think it’s cute, after twenty-six years, you haven’t changed. I’d be over at your Mom’s having coffee in the morning and you’d get up, all sleepy, and come in and give her a snuggle just like you’re doing with Hector right now.”

I was blinking again, that snugly, comfy, lovely feeling blossoming, the warm glow starting in my chest.

“Really?” I asked Kitty Sue.

“Really, honey,” she replied, her eyes shifted to Malcolm then to Hector then to me then, her voice pitched lower, she told me, “Though, if your Dad was having coffee with us, you always went straight to him. Always.”

At her words, my body went ramrod straight and Hector’s arm went tight.

It occurred to my still waking brain that everyone being there wasn’t a social call.

Instantly, I looked up to Hector and declared, “I’m going to Vegas. I was hot yesterday playing Yahtzee. I’m taking the Rock Chicks with me and I’m going to win enough money for them to retire.”

“Not sure bein’ hot at Yahtzee translates in Vegas, mamita,” Hector told me.

“You weren’t there, it was huge. I got three yahtzees in one game,” I explained.

Hector grinned but his thighs tightened around me and he said softly, “Sorry, preciosa, hate to say it but you’re not gonna get out of this.”

I sighed.

I knew it.

I just knew it.

So, I was having some really good days.

But they were still mingled with some really bad times.

“That’s what I was afraid of,” I whispered to Hector, turned my back to him and faced the room. Hector’s arm went around my chest and he pulled my back to his front and I was glad. His body was warm, hard and strong and I had a feeling I was going to need it.

Malcolm asked my preference then brought me a cup of coffee.

“All right, sock it to me,” I said to the room after Malcolm handed me my coffee.

“After breakfast,” Blanca decreed.

For some bizarre reason (lack of sleep, a latent bent toward danger), I decided to go head-to-head with Blanca.

“I’m sorry, Blanca, but seriously, whatever it is, I’d rather get it over with.”

She gave me a good, long, Blanca stare.

I gave her a good, long Sadie stare.

This lasted awhile.

Then she said, whirling the bacon fork in the air, “Como quieras.”

I had no idea if I won or lost so I twisted my neck and looked up at Hector.

“What’d she say?” I whispered.

“As you wish,” he answered, his lips twitching.

I turned back to Blanca. “Oh. That’s pretty. Como quieras. As you wish. Nice.”

Blanca smiled, I felt Hector’s body move with laughter, Vance was grinning his arrogant grin at me and everyone else was chuckling.

I twisted back to Hector. “Did I say something funny?”

He burst out laughing.

Apparently, I did.

Whatever.

It was time to get back to the matter at hand.

I looked back at the room. “Can we please focus, people?” I asked.

The smiles and chuckles died away and immediately I wanted them back.

Too late because Tom started talking.

“Sadie, you remember a few days ago when we talked in Lee’s office?”

Oh my.

This was not starting out well.

Of course I remembered. How could I forget? It was when I found out my mother was probably murdered. Who would forget that?

“Yes,” I replied hesitantly.

“Well,” Tom went on. “Eddie asked Vance to look into things. Vance did and he found out what happened to Lizzie.”

My body lurched and a hand went out to Hector’s knee, fingers curling around it, gripping hard. Hector’s arm around my chest squeezed.

I looked at Vance.

“I’m sorry, Sadie,” Vance said softly and I knew I wasn’t going to get good news. Mom wasn’t waiting for me in a small agricultural village in the mountains of Peru where news was brought on foot through treacherous mountain paths so she didn’t know yet it was safe to come home.

I closed my eyes and on the backs of my eyelids I saw my Mom smiling at me.

I opened my eyes again and said to Vance, “Tell me.”

Vance’s gaze cut to Hector, came back to me and, without hesitating, he told me.

“Luther Diggs found out what your Mom was doin’. He ordered the hit. Mickey Balducci was one of his men back then. He carried it out.”

This hurt, like, loads.

I didn’t let it show.

“Where is she?” I asked and I was proud that my voice only held a little tremor.

Vance stared at me closely then said carefully, “You mean her body?”

That hurt even more.

Her body.

My Mom’s body.

Dumped somewhere, in a river, in a shallow grave, alone, unmarked, undiscovered, gone.

These thoughts penetrated my heart like a million little, sharp daggers.

I didn’t let this show either.

Instead, I simply nodded.

His eyes stayed gentle on me. “I don’t know.”

I nodded again.

“Your Dad didn’t know she was informing on him,” Malcolm cut in and my gaze moved to him.

“He didn’t?”

Malcolm shook his head. “No.”

“A couple of months after it happened, word got to Seth that Luther ordered the hit and why.” Tom entered the conversation. “You remember Bernie Watson?”

I nodded yet again. Bernie had been my father’s right hand man for years. He’d been around for as long as I could remember. Old enough to be my father’s father, he retired to Florida five years ago. He’d always scared me a little but I still always kind of liked him. We sent each other Christmas cards and he always sent me a birthday card, every year, with a five dollar bill in it just like he gave me when I was a kid.