of him, he couldnât quite stop the grin. âI bet that set her off.â
âShe was livid. Under other circumstances, I might get some satisfaction out of that. But now Iâve lost the project. Not only wonât I get credit, but the only way Iâll see that piece again is in a museum. Damn it, Andrew, I was so close.â
âYou can bet that when the bronze is authenticated and announced, sheâll find a way to get Standjoâs name in it.â He arched a brow at his sister. âAnd when she does, youâll just have to make sure yours isnât left out.â
âItâs not the same.â She took it away from me, was all Miranda could think.
âTake what you can get.â He rose as well, wandering over to the liquor cabinet. Because he would have to ask. âYou saw Elise?â
âYes.â Miranda slid her hands into the pockets of her robe. Because she would have to answer. âShe looks fine. I think sheâs well suited to managing the lab there. She asked how you were.â
âAnd you told her I was just dandy.â
Miranda watched him pour the first drink. âI didnât think you wanted me to tell her you were turning into a brooding, self-destructive drunk.â
âIâve always brooded,â he said, saluting her. âAll of us do, so that doesnât count. Is she seeing anyone?â
âI donât know. We never got around to discussing our sex lives. Andrew, you have to stop this.â
âWhy?â
âBecause itâs a waste and itâs stupid. And frankly, though I like her, sheâs not worth it.â She lifted her shoulders. âNo oneâs worth it.â
âI loved her,â he murmured, watching the liquor swirl before he drank. âI gave her the best I had.â
âDid you ever consider that maybe she didnât give her best? Maybe she was the one who didnât measure up?â
He studied Miranda over the rim of his glass. âNo.â
âMaybe you should. Or maybe you should consider that the best you had and the best she had didnât equal the best together. Marriages fail all the time. People get over it.â
He studied the liquor, watching the light flicker through the glass. âMaybe if they didnât get over it so easily, marriages wouldnât fail so often.â
âAnd maybe if people didnât pretend love makes the world go round, theyâd pick their partners with more care.â
âLove does make the world go round, Miranda. Thatâs why the worldâs so fucked up.â
He lifted his glass and drank deeply.
five
T he sky shimmered with a cold, gray, angry dawn. Restless, dark, and full of sound, the sea hammered against the rocks and rose up to punch its white fists into the raw and bitter air. Spring would have a fight on its hands before it could beat back winter.
Nothing could have pleased Miranda more.
She stood on the bluff, her mood as fitful as the churning water below. She watched it spew up from the rocks, ice-edged and mean, and drew in the ancient violence of its scent.
Sheâd slept poorly, tangled in dreams she blamed on temper as much as travel fatigue. She wasnât one for dreaming. It was still dark when sheâd given up on sleep, and had dressed in a thick green sweater and dun-colored slacks of soft wool. Sheâd scraped out the last of the coffeeâAndrew wasnât going to be pleased when he awokeâand had brewed herself half a pot.
Now she sipped that coffee, strong and black, out of a big white mug and watched dawn claw its way to life in the unhappy eastern sky.
The rain had stopped, but it would come back, shethought. And as the temperatures had dropped sharply through the night, it would likely come back as snow and sleet. That was fine, that was dandy.
That was Maine.
Florence, with its white, flashing sun and warm, dry wind, was an ocean away. But inside her, in