Part2: My oldest son called me at midnight. He works for …

Part 2

I nodded slowly and looked through the windshield at my house, my oak trees, my porch. 26 years of my life stood there in the November gray, looking the same as it had the day before and utterly different from anything it had ever been.

“Sienna’s coming to that dinner,” I said.

It was not a question. Delilah had mentioned it 2 days earlier.

Sienna is flying in from Atlanta. It’s going to be so fun, Dad. You should come.

I had said maybe.

I had no idea what maybe was going to become.

Dominic glanced at me sideways.

“She’s already been briefed.”

My eyebrows went up.

“Sienna knows?”

“Sienna has known for 6 months,” he said. “She’s been helping us verify documents. She remembered details about Mom’s original will that we couldn’t get from the paper trail alone.”

I thought about Sienna.

Sharp. Quiet. The kind of woman who remembered everything and revealed nothing. Marsha had always said Sienna was the most trustworthy person Delilah had ever brought home.

Marsha, as usual, had been right.

I did not know it then, but Sienna still had 1 role to play before the end, and it was not going to be quiet.

“Go get some sleep, Dad,” Dominic said. “Tomorrow night is going to be a long one.”

I got out of the Tahoe and stood on the sidewalk in my house slippers in the November cold. Before he pulled away, I looked back at him through the window.

“Dom.”

He looked up.

“She knew, didn’t she?”

His expression changed almost imperceptibly.

“Your mother,” I said. “She knew something was wrong with Tristan.”

Dominic held my gaze for a long moment.

Then he reached over and put the Tahoe in drive.

“Get some sleep, Dad.”

He pulled away before I could ask again.

Maybe that was its own answer.

I walked back into my house past Marsha’s cross-stitch.

Home is where the heart is.

Then I stood in the kitchen in the gray morning light. Somewhere down the hall, Tristan Hale was asleep in my guest bedroom, dreaming whatever men like him dream about when they believe no one has found the thing beneath the floor.

The next evening he would be having dinner with his wife, his colleagues, and the pastor who married them.

I was going to be there.

This time, I was not making anybody pot roast.

Some men spend their whole lives waiting for justice and die before it arrives.

I was not going to be one of those men.

On Saturday, November 14, I woke at 7:00 a.m. and made myself a full breakfast: eggs, toast, coffee, the works. My mother always said a man should never do anything important on an empty stomach. She had not been wrong often.

Tristan came downstairs at 8:15 in his robe, looking rested and unbothered.

“Any coffee left?” he asked.

I smiled and poured him a cup.

Enjoy it, I thought.

Last one you’ll drink as a free man.

He sat at Marsha’s kitchen table—the one she picked out from a furniture store on Capital Boulevard in 2003—and scrolled his phone with the casual confidence of a man who believed he had won.

And why wouldn’t he?

He had been winning for 8 years.

He had sent my son to prison. He had stolen from my dead wife’s estate. He had slept in my house, eaten my food, drunk my bourbon, and sat in my church pew at Christmas with his arm around my daughter like he belonged there.

“Big night tonight,” he said without looking up from his phone.

“Sure is.”

“Delilah has been planning this dinner for months. You coming?”

I turned from the counter and looked at him.

“I would not miss it for the world, Tristan.”

He finally looked up.

Something moved across his face.

Only a flicker, barely a quarter of a second, like a man hearing a sound he could not identify.

Then it was gone.

The smile came back, assembled and polished.

“Good,” he said. “Should be a great night.”

Great was 1 word for it.

Brasserie LaCroix sat on the corner of Fayetteville and Cabarrus in downtown Raleigh, the kind of restaurant where the menu did not list prices because if you needed to know the price, you probably should not be there. Dark wood. Candlelight. White tablecloths so starched they looked like they could stand on their own. It was exactly the kind of place Tristan loved because it came with an audience built in.

I arrived at 6:45.

Dominic had told me to be early.

The dining room was already half full. I spotted the reserved section in the back immediately: a long table, 8 chairs, flowers in the center, handwritten place cards at each setting. Delilah had done all of it herself. My daughter had spent weeks planning a celebration for a man who had been planning her family’s destruction before he ever put a ring on her finger.

I sat down, ordered water, and waited.

Sienna arrived at 6:52 in a burgundy dress and the expression of a woman who had been carrying a secret for 6 months and was ready to put it down. She spotted me, crossed the room, and sat beside me without a word. Then she reached over and squeezed my hand once.

“You okay?” she asked.

“Ask me in an hour.”

She almost smiled.

“Marsha would have loved this.”

“Marsha,” I said, “would have gotten here an hour early and already had the manager briefed.”

That earned a real smile. Brief and sad and true.

The rest of the table filled in by 7:05. Two couples from Tristan’s firm arrived first. I had met them at Christmas parties over the years. Nice enough people, as far as I knew, and they had no idea what they had walked into that night. Then came Pastor Gerald Webb, the man who married Tristan and Delilah 9 years earlier at First Baptist on Hillsborough Street, a man so decent it almost hurt to look at him.

Then Delilah arrived.

She wore a green dress that made her look like her mother. She was laughing at something Tristan said as they entered together, her hand resting lightly on his arm, her face open in the way a daughter’s face opens when she believes the night ahead will be something happy.

That was going to complicate things.

That was going to complicate them considerably.

Tristan worked the table like a politician. Handshakes. Back slaps. The easy laugh he deployed like a tool. He topped off everyone’s wine before the waiter could reach it. He told a story about a golf trip that had everyone leaning in.

He was magnetic in the way certain dangerous things are magnetic.

The way fire is magnetic.

You lean toward it right up until it burns you.

He sat at the other end of the table. Once, we made eye contact. He raised his glass slightly in my direction.

I raised mine back.

Enjoy the appetizer, I thought.

Dominic said you would enjoy the appetizer.

The appetizers came and went. Bread. Salads. Wine. Candlelight. The table warmed with conversation and 9 years of Delilah believing she had married a good man.

Pastor Webb told a story about their wedding day.

“I’ve done 400 ceremonies,” he said, smiling toward Tristan and Delilah, “and I’ve never seen a groom so calm. So composed.”

Composed, I thought.

Yes.

Because by then, he had already won.

My phone buzzed under the table.

A text from Dominic.

2 minutes.

I set the phone face down and lifted my water glass. Sienna beside me had gone very still.

The main course arrived while Tristan was mid-sentence, telling a story about some deal his firm had closed, some asset restructuring in the Carolinas. The kind of story that was really just a wealth display wearing narrative clothing.

Then the front door of Brasserie LaCroix opened.

Dominic Pierce walked in.

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