The room shifted the way rooms do around scandal even after everyone pretends to be civilized. Conversations thinned. Heads angled discreetly. Diana, to her credit or her training, carried herself beautifully. Camel coat, pearls, controlled smile. My father was not with her.

She saw me almost immediately.

For a moment I considered leaving. Then I remembered whose coast this was, whose house, whose life, whose spine.

I stayed exactly where I was.

She approached in slow measured steps, stopping just outside the range of intimacy.

“Rebecca.”

“Diana.”

Close up, she looked older. Not ruined. Not dramatically diminished. But strained around the mouth, the kind of strain that comes when charm has had to work too hard for too long and is beginning to resent the labor.

“I’ve thought a great deal,” she said.

I almost smiled. “That must have been difficult.”

Her eyes flashed. Some instincts never die.

“I wanted to say,” she began, then stopped, recalibrating. “Things went too far.”

“That’s one way to describe attempted theft.”

She inhaled through her nose. “You always had such a talent for making everything harsh.”

“No,” I said. “I had a talent for hearing harshness before it finished dressing itself.”