Home > Books > The Change(204)

The Change(204)

Author:Kirsten Miller

“It’s been taken care of,” Spencer said. “That’s why we need Rocca. No woman has the stomach to do what he does.”

Claude knew it wouldn’t stop there, and it didn’t. Spencer had Rosamund killed. Two dead girls were found at the bottom of the ocean. The disease was spreading.

So Claude googled aconite. Then she pulled up a few of the plants Harriett Osborne had mentioned and tossed them into her juicer. It was easy to replace the fluid used to sanitize Spencer’s helicopter—and she made sure the cleaning person wore a new set of gloves.

Burn It Down

Between the flowering bushes that had overtaken Jackson Dunn’s yard, Jo and Nessa waited for Claude to come up the stairs from the beach. Blood splatter decorated her shorts and white shirt, and a bright red smear stretched from one temple to the other where she’d wiped her eyes with the back of her hand.

“He knew,” she muttered, as though the fact still astounded her.

“You did what you had to do,” Jo assured Claude. “Nessa and I will help you dispose of the body.”

“Oh no, we won’t,” Nessa announced. She saw what Jo couldn’t. Her eyes were locked on the ghost of Faith Reid, who’d followed Claude up the stairs.

Nessa thought of the Polaroids of Faith posed in front of a mirror. Before she died, the girl had been dressed for something important. Someone took those photos. Someone wanted to make sure she chose just the right outfit.

“No?” Jo asked as Claude came to a stop in front of them, Faith beside her. “Why not?”

“Claude took the picture you found in the locker.” They stood silently, surrounded by the bright blast and heady scent of the flowers around them. Claude’s lips stayed sealed.

“How do you know?” Jo asked.

“Faith is telling me,” Nessa said. “Claude brought her here. Faith wouldn’t have trusted a man, but she went along with you, didn’t she, Claude?”

Claude’s face was grim. “I never expected Spencer to kill her,” she said.

The confession hit Jo like a blow to the gut. “Oh my God,” she gasped. “What did you expect?”

“I expected her to leave the Pointe with enough money to build a bright future. That’s how it was supposed to work.”

“How it was supposed to work?” Jo repeated.

“But instead, she was murdered,” Nessa said. “Like Mandy Welsh and a dozen other girls who were brought here.”

“I didn’t know anyone other than Faith had died. There were rules the men here were supposed to follow. They ignored me.”

“So you were in charge?” Jo felt rage building inside her.

“She supplied girls,” Nessa said. “They trusted her because she’s a woman. She betrayed them.”

“I made sure the girls I brought here weren’t harmed,” Claude argued. “Rocca was the one who changed all of that.”

“Let me get this straight—you were okay with the girls being raped, but you drew the line at murder?” Jo asked.

“They needed money, and they got it! I even made the men donate to charities that build schools for girls around the world. I got Leonard to hand over millions of dollars to train young women in self-defense.”

“So they could protect themselves from people like you?”

Nessa crossed her arms over her chest. “While girls were being raped and killed, this bitch was living like a queen. And the perverts got to call themselves philanthropists.”

“Nothing’s going to stop them from doing what they want to do,” Claude argued. “These are some of the richest men in the country. For God’s sake, they had the chief of police bringing them girls. The only thing I could do was make sure some good came out of it all. For fuck’s sake, Jo. Their money is helping us teach girls how to protect themselves from predators! Some of their money funded your husband’s new play!”