herself.
Until that moment, sheâd been meaning to get around to calling the domestic agency her friend Heather Cottington recommended. But suddenly she couldnât bear the thought of bringing a new person into the householdâsomeone whoâd undoubtedly be well aware that this is Garvey Quinnâs family. Someone whoâd wonderâand maybe talkâabout the âepisodesâ Marin suffers with more and more frequency.
She figured she was perfectly capable of running the house herself, at least until this fall, after the move. What else did she have to do?
On good days, sheâs done a fairly decent job on the basicsâlaundry, emptying the dishwasher, running the vacuum. On bad days, the girls came home from school to drawn shades and toast crumbs still on the countertops, and their mother in bed.
On occasion, Marin even made her daughters help around the house, something theyâd never had to do and werenât particularly happy aboutâparticularly Caroline, who tends to make a scene over the smallest imagined slight.
âDonât you think youâre being too hard on them?â Heather asked when she heard. âTheyâve lost their father. Theyâve been through hell. Youâre planning to move them out of the only home theyâve ever known. And now you have them cleaning toilets?â
Maybe she was right.
Maybe not.
All Marin can do is feel her way through one day at a time. And now, with Realtors about to descend, every room has to be scrubbed from floor to ceiling.
Marin just doesnât have it in her. She spent all day yesterday boxing up every framed family photograph and most of the contents of Garveyâs home officeâanything that might negate the seller anonymity clause in the real estate contract and thus betray their identity to prospective buyers.
In the master bedroom, she smooths the lavender coverlet on her side and arranges the floral print European throw pillows. She bought new bedding after Garvey left; would have bought a whole new bed if she could have disposed of the old one privately. But she could just imagine photographers snapping photos of the California kingâsized mattress being moved out,and printing them above a caption like: The wishful widow Quinn purges her upscale digs of everything jailbird hubby touched .
Wishful widow â¦one of the tabloids gave her that nickname, assuming she thinks sheâd be better off if Garvey were dead.
Theyâre right. Bastards.
Anyway, public contempt is nothing compared to the rest of it: mourning her firstborn; helping her surviving children cope with the realization that their father is a criminal; preparing to sell an apartment thatâs too big, too expensive, and holds too many memories; looking Garvey in the eye through protective visitorsâ room glass and telling him sheâll never forgive him, and that even if he manages to be found innocent when the case goes to trial, he wonât be coming home to her.
She strips out of her nightgown and hangs it on a hook in her walk-in closet.
Beside it, Garveyâs closet door remains closed, as it has been for months now. His expensive suits and shirts, shrouded in dry cleanerâs plastic, are presumably still inside, along with dozens of pairs of Italian leather shoes and French silk ties.
What is she supposed to do with any of it? Burn it? Give it away? Save it? For what? For whom?
She has no idea, and doesnât have to make any decisions until the move, and so his clothes hang on in a dark limbo, like Marin herself.
In the large marble bathroomâher dream bathroom, she once told Garvey, when they were walking through as prospective buyers, a lifetime agoâshe showers, brushes her teeth, blows her hair dry.
Same routine every morning, yet today will be different. Still a living hell, but June has arrived. Finals are over for the girls, as are the latest round of lessons