by Tana French
Nightmares, Rafe said, without looking up. Not bad dreams. Youre not six.
What kind of bad dreams? Abby asked. There was a tiny, worried furrow between her eyebrows.
I shook my head. I dont remember. Not properly. Just . . . I just dont feel like being out in the lanes alone.
But I dont either, said Justin. He looked really upset. I hate it out therereally hate it, not just . . . Its horrible. Eerie. Cant someone else go?
Or, Daniel suggested helpfully, if youre this anxious about going out, Lexie, why dont you stay at home?
Because. If I sit around in here any longer, Im going to go crazy.
Ill go with you, Abby said. Girl chat.
No offense, Daniel said, with a slight, affectionate smile at Abby, but I think a homicidal maniac might be less intimidated by the two of you than he should be. If youre feeling nervous, Lexie, you should have someone large with you. Why dont you and I go?
Rafe raised his head. If youre going, he told Daniel, then so am I.
There was a small, tight silence. Rafe stared coldly at Daniel, unblinking; Daniel gazed calmly back. Why? he asked.
Because hes a moron, Abby said, to her book. Ignore him and maybe hell go away, or at least shut up. Wouldnt that be fun?
I dont want you guys, I said. I was all ready for this, Daniel trying to join the party. I hadnt counted on Justin having some weird unexplained phobia of country lanes, though. All youll do is bitch at each other, and Im not in the mood. I want Justin. I never see him any more.
Rafe snorted. You see him all day, every day. How much Justin can one person take?
Thats different. We havent talked in ages, not properly.
I cant go out there in the middle of the night, Lexie, Justin said. He looked like he was actually in pain. I would, honestly, but I just cant.
Well, Daniel said to me and Rafe, putting his book down. There was a glint in his eye, something like a wry, tired triumph: one all. Shall we go?
Forget it, I said, giving them all a disgusted glare. Just forget it. Never mind. You can all stay here and bitch and complain, Ill go by myself, and if I get stabbed again, I hope youll be happy.
Just before I slammed the kitchen door, panes of glass trembling, I heard Rafe starting to say something and Abbys voice cutting across his, low and fierce: Shut up. When I turned back at the bottom of the garden, all four of them had their heads bent over their books again, in their pools of lamplight; glowing, enclosed, untouchable.
* * *
The night had turned cloudy, the air thick and immovable as a wet duvet dumped over the hills. I walked fast, trying to wear myself out, aiming for the point where I could fool myself that it was the exercise making my heart race. I thought of that great imaginary clock Id felt somewhere in the background, my first couple of days, urging me faster. Sometime after that it had faded away into nothing, left me swaying to Whitethorn Houses own sweet slow rhythms, with all the time in the world. Now it was back, ticking savagely and getting louder every minute, speeding towards some huge shadowy zero hour.
I rang Frank from down in one of the laneseven the thought of climbing my tree, having to stay in one place, made me itch all over. There you are, he said. What were you doing, running a marathon?
I leaned against a tree trunk and tried to get my breathing back to normal. Trying to walk off my hangover. Clear my head.
Always a good idea, Frank agreed. First off, babe, well done last night. Ill buy you a fancy cocktail for that one, when you get home. I think you may just have got us the break we needed.
Maybe. Im not counting chickens. For all we know, Ned could be bullshitting me about the whole thing. He tries to buy Lexies share of the house, she blows him off, he decides to give it one more go, then I mention the memory loss and he sees his chance to convince me we had a deal all along . . . Hes no Einstein, but hes no idiot either, not when it comes to wheeling and dealing.
Maybe not, Frank said. Maybe not. Howd you manage to hook up with him, anyway?
I had my answer to that one all ready. Ive been keeping an eye on that cottage, every night. I figured Lexie went there for a reasonand if she was meeting someone, that would be the logical place. So I thought there was a decent chance whoever it was would show up there again.
And Slow Eddie wanders in, Frank said blandly, just when Id told you about the house, given the two of you something to talk about. Hes got good timing. Why didnt you ring me, after he left?
My head was buzzing, Frankie. All I could think about was how this changes the case, how I can use it, what I do next, how to find out if Neds bullshitting . . . I meant to phone you, but it went straight out of my head.
Better late than never. So how was your day?
His voice was pleasant, absolutely neutral, giving away nothing. I know, I know, Im a lazy cow, I said, giving it an apologetic cringe. I shouldve tried to get something out of Daniel, while I had him to myself, but I just couldnt face it. My head was killing me, and you know what Daniels like; hes not exactly light entertainment. Sorry.
Hmm, said Frank, not very reassuringly. And whats with the stroppy-bitch act? Im assuming it was an act.
I want to unsettle them, I said, which was true. Weve tried relaxing them into talking, and it hasnt worked. What with the new info, I think its time to kick it up a gear.
It didnt occur to you to talk that over with me before you swung into action?
I left a small, startled pause. I just figured youd guess what I was at.
OK, Frank said, in a mild voice that started sirens rising in my head. Youve done a great job, Cass. I know you didnt want to get involved, and I appreciate the fact that you did it anyway. Youre a good cop.
It felt like something had hit me in the stomach. What, Frank, I said, but I already knew.
He laughed. Relax; its good news. Time to wind it up, babe. I want you to go home and start complaining that you feel like youre getting the fludizzy, feverish, achy. Dont mention the wound hurting, or theyll want to look at it; just feel crap all over. Maybe wake one of them up during the nightJustins the worrier, isnt he?and tell him its getting worse. If they havent taken you to the emergency room by morning, make them. Ill handle it from there.
My nails were cutting into my hand. Why?
I thought youd be delighted, Frank said, doing taken aback and a little miffed. You didnt want
I didnt want to go in to start with. I know. But Im in now, and Im getting close. Why the hell would you want to pull the plug? Because I didnt ask you before I rattled these guys cage?
God, no, said Frank, still all bland surprise. Nothing to do with that. You went in to find a direction for this investigation, and youve done that beautifully. Congratulations, babe. Your work here is done.
No, I said, its not. You sent me in to find a suspect, those were your exact words, and so far all Ive found is a possible motive with four possible suspects attachedfive, if you take into account that Ned could be lying his little head off. How does that move the investigation forwards, exactly? The four of them will stick to their story, just like you said at the beginning, and youre right back where you started. Let me do my fucking job.
Im looking out for you. Thats my job. With what youve found out, you could be at risk here, and I cant just ignore
Bullshit, Frank. If one of those four killed her, Ive been in danger since Day One, and it never bothered you one bit till now
Keep your voice down. Is that it? Youre pissed off because I havent been protective enough?
I could practically see his hands flying up in outrage, the wide offended blue ey
es. Give me a break, Frank. Im a big girl, I can take care of myself, and youve never had a problem with that idea before. So why the fuck are you pulling me out?
There was a silence. Finally Frank sighed. Fine, he said. You want to know why, fine. I no longer feel that youre maintaining the objectivity required to serve this investigation.
What are you talking about? My heart was hammering. If he had surveillance on the house after all, or if hed guessed that Id taken off the mikeI should never have left it for so long, I thought wildly, stupid, I shouldve gone back inside every few minutes and made some kind of noise
Youre way too emotionally involved. Im not stupid, Cassie. I have a fair idea what happened last night, and I know theres shit youre not telling me. Those are warning signs, and Im not going to ignore them.
Hed fallen for the Fauré; he didnt know Id been burned. My heart rate went down a notch.
Youre losing your boundaries. Maybe I should never have pressured you to do this. I dont know the ins and outs of what happened to you on Murder and Im not asking, but it clearly wrecked your head, and you obviously werent ready for something like this just yet.
I have a flash-bang temper, and if I lost it now, the argument was over; I would have proved Franks point. That was probably exactly what he was angling for. I kicked the tree trunk instead, hard enough that for a second I thought Id broken my toe. When I could talk I said, coolly, My head is doing just fine, Frank, and so are my boundaries. Every one of my actions has been directed towards achieving the goal of this investigation and finding a prime suspect in the murder of Lexie Madison. And Id like to finish the job.
Sorry, Cassie, Frank said, gently but very firmly. Not this time.
Theres one thing about undercover that no one mentions, ever. The rule is, the handler holds the brake: hes the one who decides when you need to pull back or come out. Hes the one with the overview, after all, he may well have info that you dont, and you do what he says if you value either your life or your career. But heres the part we never talk about, the grenade you carry with you always: he cant make you. I had never known anyone to throw that grenade before, but every one of us knows its there. If you were to say no, there would befor a little while, at least, and that might be all you neededfuck-all your handler could do about it.
That kind of breach of trust cant be repaired. In that second I saw the airport codes in Lexies date book, that hard, ruthless scrawl.
Im staying, I said. A sharp wave of wind ran through the woods and I felt my tree shiver, a deep judder going up into my bones.
No, Frank said, youre not. Dont give me hassle on this, Cassie. The decisions been made; theres no point in us fighting about it. Go home, pack your stuff and start playing sick. Ill see you tomorrow.
You put me in here to do a job, I said. Im not leaving till I get it done. Im not fighting about it, Frank. Im just telling you.
This time Frank understood. His voice didnt sharpen, but it had an undertow that made my shoulders go up. Do you want me to pick you up off the street, find drugs on you and throw you in jail till you pull yourself together? Because Ill do it.
No you wont. The others know Lexie doesnt do drugs, and if she gets dragged in on a bogus charge and then dies while in police custody, theyll kick up such a stink that this whole operation will go up in flames and youll be cleaning up the mess for years.
There was a silence, while Frank evaluated the situation. You know this could end your career, dont you? he said eventually. Youre disobeying a direct order from a superior officer. You know I could haul you in, take your badge and your gun, and fire you on the spot.
Yeah, I said. I know. But he wouldnt do it, not Frank, and I knew I was taking advantage of that. I knew something else, too, Im not sure how; maybe from the lack of shock in his voice. Sometime in his career, he had done this same thing himself.
And you know youre making me miss my weekend with Holly. Its her birthday tomorrow. You want to explain to her why Daddy cant be there after all?
I winced, but I reminded myself that this was Frank, Hollys birthday was probably months away. So go. Let someone else monitor the mike feed.
Not a chance. Even if I wanted to, I dont have anyone else. The budgets run out on this one. The brass are sick of paying officers to sit around listening to you drink wine and strip wallpaper.
I dont blame them, I said. What you do with the mike feed is your call; leave it to monitor itself, if you want. Thats your half of the gig. Im just doing mine.
OK, Frank said, on a long-suffering sigh, OK. Heres what were going to do. Youve got forty-eight hours, starting now, to wind this up
Seventy-two.
Seventy-two, on three conditions: you dont do anything stupid, you keep calling in, and you keep that mike on you at all times. I want your word.
Something prickled inside me. Maybe he did know, after all; with Frank you can never be sure. Got it, I said. I promise.
Three days from now, even if youre an inch away from breaking the case, you come in. Bywatch checkquarter to midnight on Monday, youre out of that house and in an emergency room, or at least on your way there. Until then, Im going to hang on to this tape. If you stick to those conditions and you come in on time, Ill erase it, and no one else ever needs to know about this conversation. If you give me one more iota of hassle, I will haul your arse in, whatever that takes and whatever consequences it has, and I will fire you. We clear?
Yeah, I said. Were crystal clear. Im not trying to fuck you around, Frank. Its not about that.
This, Cassie, Frank said, was a really, really bad idea. I hope you know that.
There was a beep and then nothing, just waves of static in my ear. My hands were shaking so hard that I dropped the phone twice before I managed to hit End.
* * *
The irony of it: he was millimeters from right. Even twenty-four hours earlier, I hadnt been working this case; Id been letting it work me, free-falling into it, full fathom five and swimming deeper. There were a thousand tiny phrases and glances and objects that had been scattered through this case like bread crumbs, going overlooked and unconnected because I had wantedor thought I wantedto be Lexie Madison so much more than I wanted to solve her murder. What Frank didnt know, and what I couldnt tell him, was that Ned of all people, without ever having a clue he was doing it, had pulled me back. I wanted to close this case, and I was readyand this isnt something I say lightlyto do whatever it took.
Probably you could say I came back fighting because I had been suckered, almost fatally, and this was my last chance to make up for that; or because the only way I would ever get my career backIts my job, I had said to Daniel, before I knew the words were going to come outwas if I got a solve here; or because our lost Operation Vestal had poisoned the air around me, and I needed an antidote. Maybe a little of all three. But this was the one I couldnt get away from: no matter what this woman had been or done, we had been built into each other since we were born. We had led each other to this life, this place. I knew things about her that no one else knew, in all the world. I couldnt leave her now. There was no one else to look through her eyes and read her mind, trace the silvery lines of runes she had left trailing behind her, tell the only story she had ever finished.
All I knew was that I needed the end of that story, that I needed to be the one who brought it home, and that I was frightened. I dont scare easy, but just like Daniel, Ive always known that theres a price to pay. What Daniel didnt know, or didnt mention, is what I said right at the beginning: the price is a wildfire shape-changing thing, and youre not always the one who chooses, youre not always allowed to know in advance, what its going to be.
The other thing hittin
g me over and over, with a horrible sick lurch every time: this could have been why she had come looking for me, this could have been what she had wanted all along. Someone to change places with her. Someone longing for the chance to toss away her own battered life, let it evaporate like morning mist over grass; someone who would gladly fade to a scent of bluebells and a green shoot, while this girl strengthened and bloomed and turned solid again, and lived.
I think it was only in that moment I believed she was dead, this girl I had never seen alive. Ill never be free of her. I wear her face; as I get older itll stay her changing mirror, the one glimpse of all the ages she never had. I lived her life, for a few strange bright weeks; her blood went into making me what I am, the same way it went to make the bluebells and the hawthorn tree. But when I had the chance to take that final step over the border, lie down with Daniel among the ivy leaves and the sound of water, let go of my own life with all its scars and all its wreckage and start new, I turned it down.