The Art of Deception

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Authors: Nora Roberts
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the other room he heard Kirby in a heated discussion with Isabelle. He was beginning to realize complication was the lady’s middle name. What should’ve been a very simple job was developing layers he didn’t care for.
    “Come on, Adam.” Kirby poked her head around the doorway. “I’ve told Isabelle she can come, but she and Montique have to keep a distance of five yards at all times. Papa—” she tossed her ponytail back “—I really think we ought to try raising the rent. She might look for an apartment in town.”
    “We should never have agreed to a long-term lease,” Fairchild grumbled, then gave his full attention to Kirby’s salmon.
    Deciding not to comment, Adam rose and went outside.

    It was warm for September, and breezy. The grounds around the house were alive with fall. Beds of zinnias and mums spread out helter-skelter, flowing over their borders and adding a tang to the air. Near a flaming maple, Adam saw an old man in patched overalls. With a whimsical lack of dedication, he raked at the scattered leaves. As they neared him, he grinned toothlessly.
    “You’ll never get them all, Jamie.”
    He made a faint wheezing sound that must’ve been a laugh. “Sooner or later, missy. There be plenty of time.”
    “I’ll help you tomorrow.”
    “Ayah, and you’ll be piling them up and jumping in ’em like always.” He wheezed again and rubbed a frail hand over his chin. “Stick to your whittling and could be I’ll leave a pile for you.”
    With her hands hooked in her back pockets, she scuffed at a leaf. “A nice big one?”
    “Could be. If you’re a good girl.”
    “There’s always a catch.” Grabbing Adam’s hand, she pulled him away.
    “Is that little old man responsible for the grounds?” Three acres, he calculated. Three acres if it was a foot.
    “Since he retired.”
    “Retired?”
    “Jamie retired when he was sixty-five. That was before I was born.” The breeze blew strands of hair into her face and she pushed at them. “He claims to be ninety-two, but of course he’s ninety-five and won’t admit it.” She shook her head. “Vanity.”
    Kirby pulled him along until they stood at a dizzying height above the river. Far below, the ribbon of water seemed still. Small dots of houses were scattered along the view. There was a splash of hues rather than distinct tones, a melding of textures.
    On the ridge where they stood there was only wind, river and sky. Kirby threw her head back. She looked primitive, wild, invincible. Turning, he looked at the house. It looked the same.
    “Why do you stay here?” Blunt questions weren’t typical of him. Kirby had already changed that.
    “I have my family, my home, my work.”
    “And isolation.”
    Her shoulders moved. Though her lashes were lowered, her eyes weren’t closed. “People come here. That’s not isolation.”
    “Don’t you want to travel? To see Florence, Rome, Venice?”
    From her stance on a rock, she was nearly eye level with him. When she turned to him, it was without her usual arrogance. “I’d been to Europe five times before I was twelve. I spent four years in Paris on my own when I was studying.”
    She looked over his shoulder a moment, at nothing or at everything, he couldn’t be sure. “I slept with a Breton count in a chateau, skied in the Swiss Alps and hiked the moors in Cornwall. I’ve traveled, and I’ll travel again. But…” He knew she looked at the house now, because her lips curved. “I always come home.”
    “What brings you back?”
    “Papa.” She stopped and smiled fully. “Memories, familiarity. Insanity.”
    “You love him very much.” She could make things impossibly complicated or perfectly simple. The job he’d come to do was becoming more and more of a burden.
    “More than anything or anyone.” She spoke quietly, so that her voice seemed a part of the breeze. “He’s given me everything of importance: security, independence, loyalty, friendship, love—and the capability

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