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Secretly he had loved her for years. But it was a love she could never return.

      How tiny she is! thought Eve in wonder, as the pathetic wooden box disappeared into the bowels of the earth. Kate Blackwell, who had loomed so large in life, fêted by presidents and kings. How insignificant she was, in the end.

       Not much of a feast for the worms of your beloved Dark Harbor, are you Granny?

      For years Kate Blackwell had been Eve’s nemesis. She’d done everything in her power to prevent her wicked granddaughter from achieving her life’s ambition – taking control of the family firm, the mighty Kruger-Brent.

      But now Kate Blackwell was gone.

      ‘Eternal rest grant to her, oh Lord, and may perpetual light shine upon her.’

      Good riddance, you vengeful old bitch. I hope you rot in hell.

      ‘May she rest in peace.’

      

      Danny Corretti looked miserably at the negatives in front of him. His back was still killing him after this morning, and now he felt a migraine coming on.

      ‘D’you get anything?’

      His friend tried to sound hopeful. But he already knew the answer.

      None of them had got the two-hundred-thousand-dollar picture.

      Eve Blackwell had outsmarted them all.

       2

      In the maternity unit at New York’s Mount Sinai Medical Center, Staff Nurse Gaynor Matthews watched the handsome, middle-aged father take his newborn child in his arms for the first time.

      He was gazing at the baby girl, oblivious to everything around him. Nurse Matthews thought: He’s thinking how beautiful she is.

      Nurse Matthews was pleasantly plump, with a round, open face and a ready smile that accentuated the twin fans of lines around her eyes. A midwife for more than a decade, she’d seen this moment played out thousands of times – hundreds of them in this very room – but she never tired of it. Besotted dads, their eyes lighting up with love, the purest love they would ever know. Moments like these made midwifery worthwhile. Worth the grinding hours. Worth the crappy pay. Worth the patronizing male obstetricians who thought of themselves as gods just because they had a medical degree and a penis.

      Worth the rare moments of tragedy.

      The father gently caressed his baby’s cheek. He was a beautiful man, Nurse Matthews decided. Tall, dark, broad shouldered, a classic jock. Just the way she liked them.

      She blushed. What on earth was she doing? She had no right to think such things. Not at a time like this.

      The father thought: Jesus Christ. She’s so like her mother.

      It was true. The little girl’s skin was the same delicate, translucent peach as the girl he’d fallen in love with all those years ago. Her big, inquisitive eyes were the same pale gray, like dawn mist rolling off the ocean. Even her dimpled chin was her mother in miniature. For a split second, the father’s heart leaped at the sight of her, an involuntary smile playing around his lips.

      His daughter. Their daughter. So tiny. So perfect.

      Then he looked down at the blood on his hands.

      And screamed.

      Alex had been so excited that morning, when Peter drove her to the hospital.

      ‘Can you believe that in a few short hours she’ll be here?’

      She was still in her pajamas, her long blonde hair tangled after a fitful night’s sleep, but he didn’t think she’d ever looked more luminous. She wore a grin wider than the Lincoln tunnel, and if she was nervous, she didn’t show it.

      ‘We’re finally going to meet her!’

      ‘Or him.’ He reached over to the passenger seat and squeezed his wife’s hand.

      ‘Uh uh. No way. It’s a girl. I know it.’

      She’d woken up around six with fairly mild contractions, and insisted on waiting a further two hours before she would let him drive her to Mount Sinai. Two hours in which Peter Templeton had walked up and down the stairs of their West Village brownstone sixteen times, made four unwanted cups of coffee, burned three slices of toast, and yelled at his son Robert for not being ready for school on time, before being reminded by the housekeeper that it was in fact mid July, and school had been out for the last five weeks.

      Even at the hospital Peter flapped around uselessly like a mother hen.

      ‘Can I get you anything? A hot towel?’

      ‘I’m fine.’

      ‘Water?’

      ‘No thanks.’

      ‘Crushed ice cubes?’

      ‘Peter …’

      ‘What about that meditation music you’re always playing? That’s calming, right? I could run to the car and get the tape?’

      Alex laughed. She was astonishingly calm.

      ‘I think you need it more than I do. Honestly darling, you must try to relax. I’m having a baby. Women do this every day. I’ll be fine.’

      I’ll be fine.

      The first problems began about an hour later. The midwife frowned at one of the monitors. Its green line had begun rising in sudden, jagged leaps.

      ‘Stand back please, Dr Templeton.’

      Peter searched the woman’s face for clues, like a nervous airline passenger watching the stewardess during turbulence … if she was still smiling and handing out gin and tonics, no one was gonna die, right? But Nurse Matthews would have made a first-class poker player. Moving surely and confidently around the room, a professional smile of reassurance for Alex, a brusque nod of command to an orderly – fetch Dr Farrar immediately – her dough-like features gave nothing away.

      ‘What is it? What’s the problem?’

      Peter struggled to keep the panic out of his voice, for Alex’s sake. Her own mother had died giving birth to her and Eve, a snippet of Blackwell family history that had always terrified Peter. He loved Alexandra so much. If anything should happen to her …

      ‘Your wife’s blood pressure is somewhat elevated, Dr Templeton. There’s no need for alarm at this stage. I’ve asked Dr Farrar to come and assess the situation.’

      For the first time, Alexandra’s face clouded with anxiety.

      ‘What about the baby? Is she all right? Is she in distress?’

      It was typical Alex. Never a thought for herself, only for the child. She’d been exactly the same with Robert. Since the day their son was born, ten years ago now, he’d been the center of his mother’s universe. Had Peter Templeton been a different sort of man, a lesser man, he might have felt jealous. As it was the bond between mother and son filled him with joy, a delight so intense that at times he could barely contain it.

      It was impossible to imagine a more devoted, selfless, adoring mother than Alexandra. Peter would never forget the time Robert came down with chicken pox, a particularly nasty attack. He was five years old, and Alex had sat by his bedside for forty-eight hours straight, so engrossed in her son’s needs that she had forgotten to take so much as a sip of water for herself. When Peter came home from work he’d found her passed out cold on the floor. She was so dehydrated she’d had to be hospitalized and placed on a drip.

      The midwife’s voice brought him back to the present with a jolt.

      ‘The baby’s fine, Mrs Templeton. Worst case scenario, we’ll speed things up

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