process.â
âIâve done nothing but what I was brought here to do. Iâve spoken to no one outside the organization, and to no one in the organization who didnât meet with your clearance specifications.â
Elizabeth drew a calming breath. Her decision had already been made, she reminded herself. There was no point in discussing it further. âYou will leave Italy today. You will not return to the lab, or contact anyone who works there. If you donât agree, Iâll be forced to terminate your position at the museum.â
âYou donât run the Institute anymore, and neither does Father. Andrew and I do.â
âIf you want that situation to continue, youâll do what I say. Whether you believe it or not, Iâm trying to save you embarrassment.â
âDonât do me any favors, Mother. We wouldnât want to spoil your record.â Banished, was all she could think. Cut off from the most exciting work of her life, and sent away as powerlessly as a child ordered to her room.
âIâve given you your choice, Miranda. If you stay, youâll do so alone. And you will no longer be welcome at any Standjo facility, including the New England Institute of Art History.â
Miranda could feel herself begin to shake, from both fear and rage. Even as she heard the inner screams of that fear and rage echo in her head, she spoke quietly. âIâll never forgive you for this. Not ever. But Iâll go, because the Instituteâs important to me. And because, when this is over, youâll have to apologize, and Iâll tell you to go to hell. Those will be the last words I ever speak to you.â
She took the snifter out of her motherâs hand. âSalute,â she said, and tossed back the brandy defiantly. Setting the snifter down with a crack of glass against wood, she turned and walked out. She didnât look back.
four
A ndrew Jones was thinking of marriage and failure as he sipped Jack Danielâs Black, straight up, from a short glass. He was well aware that everyone who knew him thought it was long past time for him to turn the page on his divorce and move on.
But he didnât feel like moving on. Not when it was so comforting to wallow.
Marriage had been an enormous step for him, and one heâd considered carefully even though heâd been wildly in love. Making that commitment, turning an emotion into a legal document, had given him many sleepless nights. No one on the Jones side of the family had ever made a successful run at marriage.
He and Miranda called it the Jones curse.
His grandmother had outlived her husband by more than a decade and had neverâat least in her grandsonâs hearingâhad a good word to say about the man sheâd lived with for thirty-odd years.
It was hard to blame her, as the late and unlamented Andrew Jones had been infamous for his affection for young blondes and Jack Danielâs Black.
His namesake was well aware that the old man had been a bastard, clever and successful, but a bastard nonetheless.
Andrewâs father preferred digs to home fires, and had spent most of his sonâs childhood away from home, brushing ancient dirt from ancient bones. When he was in residence, heâd agreed with everything his wife said, blinked owlishly at his children as if heâd forgotten how they came to be in his line of sight, and locked himself for hours at a time in his office.
It hadnât been women and whiskey for Charles Jones. Heâd committed his adultery and neglect with science.
Not that the great Dr. Elizabeth Standford-Jones had given a shit, Andrew thought as he brooded over what heâd intended to be one friendly drink at Annieâs Place. Sheâd left the child-rearing to servants, run the household like a Nazi general, and ignored her husband as sublimely as he had ignored her.
It always made Andrew shudder to imagine that at least twice, these
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