"Name's Pete Marino," he said laconically. "Richmond P.O., Homicide. This here's Dr. Kay Scarpetta, Chief Medical Examiner of Virginia. We sure as hell understand your insistence on confidentiality, and respect your hotel for that, Mr. Bland. But you see, Sterling Harper's dead. Her brother Gary Harper's dead. And Beryl Madison's dead, too. Gary Harper and Beryl was murdered. We're not too sure yet what happened to Miss Harper. That's what we're here for."
"I read the newspapers, Detective Marino," Mr. Bland said, his composure beginning to waver. "Certainly the hotel will cooperate with the authorities in any way possible."
"Then you're telling me they was guests here," Marino said.
"Gary Harper was never a guest here."
"But his sister and Beryl Madison was."
"That is correct," Mr. Bland said.
"How often, and when was the last time?"
"I'll have to pull Miss Harper's account," Mr. Bland answered. "Will you please excuse me for a moment?"
He left us for no more than fifteen minutes, and when he returned he handed us a computer printout.
"As you can see," he said, reseating himself, "Miss Harper and Beryl Madison stayed with us six times during the past year and a half."
"Approximately every two months," I thought out loud, scanning the dates on the printout, "except for the last week in August and the last few days of October. Then it appears Miss Harper stayed here alone."
He nodded.
"What was the purpose of their visits?"
Marino asked.
"Business, possibly. Shopping. Simply relaxation. I really don't know. It isn't the practice of the hotel to monitor our guests."
"And it ain't my practice to care about what your guests is up to unless they turn up dead," Marino said. "Tell me what you observed when the two ladies was here."
Mr. Eland's smile disappeared, and he nervously plucked a gold ballpoint pen off a notepad and then seemed at a loss as to what purpose the action served. Tucking the pen in the breast pocket of his starched pink shirt, he cleared his throat.
"I can only tell you what I noted," he said.
"Please do," Marino said.
"The two women made separate travel arrangements. Usually Miss Harper checked in the night before Beryl Madison did, and they often didn't leave at the same time, or, uh, together."
"What do you mean, they didn't leave at the same time?"
"I mean that they may have checked out on the same day, but not necessarily at the same time, and they didn't necessarily choose the same means of transportation. Not in the same cab, for example."
"Were they both headed for the train station?" I inquired.
"It seems to me Miss Madison frequently took the limo to the airport," Mr. Bland replied. "But yes. I think Miss Harper's habit was to take the train."
"What about their accommodations?" I asked, studying the printout.
"Yeah," Marino butted in. "It don't say nothing about their room on this thing."
He tapped the printout with his index finger. "They stay in a double or a single? You know, one bed or two?"
His cheeks coloring at the implication, Mr. Bland replied, "They always stayed in a double room facing the water. They were guests of the hotel, Detective Marino, if you really need to know that detail, and certainly it isn't for publication."
"Hey, what do I look like, a damn reporter?"
"You're saying they stayed in your hotel free of charge?" I asked, confused.
"Yes, ma'am."
"You mind explaining that?" Marino said.
"It was the desire of Joseph McTigue," Mr. Bland answered.
"I beg your pardon?" I leaned forward and stared hard at him. "The contractor from Richmond? You're referring to that Joseph McTigue?"
"The late Mr. McTigue was one of the developers of much of the waterfront. His holdings include substantial interests in this hotel," Mr. Bland replied. "It was his request that we accommodate Miss Harper in any way possible, and we continued to honor this after his death "
Minutes later I was slipping a dollar bill to the doorman and Marino and I were getting into a cab.
"You mind telling me who the hell Joseph McTigue is?" Marino asked as we took off into traffic. "I got a feeling you know."
"I visited his wife in Richmond. At Chamberlayne Gardens. I told you about it."
"Ho-ly shit."
"Yes, it's rather thrown me for a loop, too," I agreed.
"You want to tell me what the hell you make of that?"
I didn't know, but I was beginning to formulate a suspicion about it.
"Sounds pretty weird to me," he went on. "For starters, the bit about Miss Harper's taking the train while Beryl usually flew, when both of them was heading in the same direction."
"It's not so strange," I said. "Certainly they couldn't travel together, Marino. Miss Harper, Beryl, couldn't risk that. They weren't supposed to have anything to do with each other, remember? If Gary Harper routinely picked up his sister at the train station, there wouldn't be a way for Beryl to suddenly disappear if she and Miss Harper were traveling together."
I paused as it came to mind. "It may also be that Miss Harper was assisting with Beryl's book, giving her background information about the Harper family."
Marino was staring out his side window.
He said, "You want my opinion, I think the two ladies was closet lesbians."
I saw the driver's curious eyes in the rearview mirror.
"I think they loved each other," I said simply.
"So maybe the two of them was having a little affair, getting together every two months here in Baltimore where nobody knew 'em or paid 'em any mind.
"You know," Marino persisted, "maybe that's why Beryl decided to run to Key West. She was a fag-ette, would've felt at home there."
'Tour homophobia really is rabid, not to mention tiresome, Marino. You should be careful. People might wonder about you."
"Yeah, right," he said, not the least bit amused. I was silent.
He went on, "Point is, maybe Beryl found herself a little girlfriend while she was down there."
"Maybe you ought to check into that."
"No way, Jose. No way I'm getting bit by no goddamn mosquito in the AIDS capital of America. And talking to a bunch of queers ain't my idea of a good time."
"Have you gotten the Florida police to check out her contacts down there?" I asked seriously.
"A couple of them said they poked around. Talk about a sorry assignment. They was afraid to eat anything, drink the water. One of the queerbaits from the restaurant she wrote about in her letters is dying of AIDS even as we speak. The cops had to wear gloves the entire time."
"During the interviews?"
"Oh, yeah. Surgical masks, too-at least when they was talking to the guy dying. Didn't come up with nothing helpful, none of the information worth a damn."
"I guess not," I commented. "You treat people like lepers and they're not likely to open up to you."
"You ask me, they ought to saw off that part of Florida and send it drifting out to sea."
"Well, fortunately," I said, "nobody asked you."
There were numerous messages waiting on my answering machine when I returned home midevening.
I hoped one would be from Mark. I sat on the edge of my bed drinking a glass of wine and half-heartedly listening to the voices drifting out of the machine.
Bertha, my housekeeper, had the flu and announced she would not be able to come the next day. The attorney general wanted to meet me for breakfast tomorrow morning and went on to report that Beryl Madison's estate was suing over the missing manuscript. Three reporters had called demanding comment, and my mother wanted to know if I would prefer turkey or ham for Christmas- her not-so-subtle way of finding out if she could count on me for at least one holiday this year.
I did not recognize the breathy voice that followed.
"… You have such pretty blond hair. Is it real or do you bleach it, Kay?"
I
rewound the tape. I frantically opened the drawer of my bedside table.
"… Is it real or do you bleach it, Kay? I left a little gift for you on your back porch."
Stunned and with Ruger in hand, I rewound the tape one more time. The voice was almost a whisper, very quiet and deliberate. A white male. I could determine no accent, sense no emotion in the tone. The sound of my feet on the stairs unnerved me, and I turned on the lights in each room I passed through. The back porch was off the kitchen, and my heart was pounding as I stepped to one side of the picture window overlooking the bird feeder and barely parted the curtains, the revolver held high, barrel pointed at the ceiling.
Light seeped from the porch, pushing back the darkness from the lawn and etching the shapes of trees in the wooded blackness at the edge of my property. The brick stoop was bare. I saw nothing on it or the steps. I curled my fingers around the doorknob and stood very still, my heart hammering as I unfastened the dead bolt.
A scraping against the wooden exterior of the door was barely perceptible as it opened, and when I saw what was looped over the outer knob I slammed the door so hard the windows shook.
Marino sounded as if I had gotten him out of bed.
"Get here now!"
I exclaimed into the phone, my voice an octave higher than usual.
"Stay put," he said firmly. "Don't open the door for nobody until I get there. You got that? I'm on my way."
Four cruisers lined the street in front of my house, and in the darkness officers probed the woods and shrubbery with long fingers of light.
"The K-nine unit's on the way," Marino said, setting his portable radio upright on my kitchen table. "Seriously doubt the drone hung around, but we'll make damn sure he didn't before we book on out of here."
It was the first time I had ever seen Marino in jeans, and he might have looked casually stylish were it not for the pair of white athletic socks and penny loafers, and the gray sweatshirt one size too small. The smell of fresh coffee filled the kitchen. I was percolating a pot big enough to accommodate half the neighborhood. My eyes were darting around, looking for things to do.
"Tell it to me again real slow," Marino said as he lit a cigarette.
"I was playing back the messages on my answering machine," I repeated. "When I got to the last one it was this voice, a white male, young. You'll have to hear it for yourself. He said something about my hair, wanting to know whether I bleach it."
Marino's eyes annoyingly shifted to my roots. "Then he said he'd left a present on my back porch. I came down here, looked out the window and didn't see anything. I don't know what I was expecting. I don't know. Something awful in a box, gift wrapped. When I opened the door, I heard something scraping against the wood. It was looped over the outer knob."
Inside a plastic evidence envelope in the center of the table was an unusual gold medallion attached to a thick gold chain.
"You're sure it's what Harper was wearing at the tavern?" I asked again.
"Oh, yeah," Marino replied, his face tight. "No question about it. No question where the thing's been all this time either. The squirrel took it from Harper's body and now you're getting an early Christmas present. Looks like our friend's gotten sweet on you."
"Please," I said impatiently.
"Hey. I'm taking it serious, okay?"
He wasn't smiling as he slid the envelope closer and examined the necklace through the plastic. "You notice the clasp's bent, so's the little ring at the end. Looks to me like maybe it got broke when he yanked it off Harper's neck. Then he maybe fixes it with pliers. He's probably been wearin' it. Shit."
He tapped an ash. "Find any injury on Harper's neck from the chain?"
"There wasn't much of his neck left," I said dully.
"Ever seen a medallion like this before?"
"No."
It looked like a coat of arms in eighteen-karat gold, but there was nothing engraved on it except the date 1906 on the back.
"Based on the four jeweler's marks stamped on the back, I think its origin is English," I said. "The marks are a universal code indicating when the medallion was made, where, and by whom. A jeweler could interpret them. I know it's not Italian-"
"Doc-"
"It would have a seven-fifty stamped on the back for eighteen-karat gold, five hundred for the equivalent of fourteen - karat-"
"Doc…"
"I have a jeweler consultant at Schwarzschild's-"
"Hey," Marino said loudly. "It don't matter, all right?"
I was prattling on like a hysterical old woman.
"A friggin' family tree of everybody who ever owned this necklace ain't going to tell us the most important thing-the name of the squirrel who hung it on your door."
His eyes softened a little and he lowered his voice. "What you got to drink in this crib? Brandy. You got any brandy?"
"You're on the job."
"Not for me," he said, laughing. "For you. Go pour yourself this much."
Touching his thumb to the middle knuckle of his index finger, he marked off two inches. "Then we'll talk."
I went to the bar and returned with a small snifter. The brandy burned going down and instantly began to spread warmth through my blood. I stopped shivering inside. I stopped shaking. Marino eyed me curiously. His attentiveness began to make me conscious of many things. I was wearing the same rumpled suit I had worn on the train back from Baltimore. My pantyhose were biting into my waist and bagging around my knees. I was aware of a maddening compulsion to wash my face and brush my teeth. My scalp itched. I was certain I looked awful.
"This guy ain't into empty threats," Marino said quietly as I sipped.
"He's probably just jerking me around because I'm involved in the case. Taunting. It's not unusual for psychopaths to taunt investigators or even send them souvenirs."
I didn't really believe it. Certainly Marino didn't.
"I'm going to keep a unit or two staked out. We'll watch your house," he said. "And I got a couple rules for you. Follow them to the letter. No fooling around."
He met my eyes. "For starters, whatever your normal routines are, I want you to scramble them up as much as possible. If you usually go to the grocery store on Friday afternoon, go on Wednesday next time and pick a different store. Don't ever set foot outside your house or car without looking around. You see anything that catches your eye, like a strange car parked on the street or evidence anybody's been on your property, you haul ass out of there or keep yourself locked up tight in here and call the police. When you walk inside your house, if you sense anything - I mean if you so much as get a creepy feeling-get out of here, find a phone and call the police, ask an officer to accompany you inside to make sure everything's okay."
"I've got a burglar alarm," I said.
"So did Beryl."
"She let the bastard in."
"You don't let nobody in you're not sure about."
"What's he going to do, bypass my alarm system?" I persisted.
"Anything's possible."
I remembered Wesley saying that.
"No leaving your office after dark or when nobody else is around. The same applies to your coming in. If you usually come in when it's still pretty dark, the parking lot empty, start coming in a little later. Keep your answering machine on. Tape everything. You get another call, get hold of me immediately. A couple more and we'll put a trap on your line-"
"Like you did with Beryl?" I was beginning to get angry.
He didn't respond.
"What, Marino? Will my rights be honored in the breach, too? When it's too damn late to do me any damn good?"
"You want me to sleep on your couch tonight?" he asked calmly.
Facing the morning was hard enough. I envisioned Marino in boxer shorts, a T-shirt stretched taut over his big belly as he padded barefooted in the general direction of the bathroom. He probably still left the seat up.
"I'll be fine," I said.
"You've got a license for carrying a gun, don't you?"
&n
bsp; "Carrying a concealed weapon?" I asked.
"No."
He pushed back his chair, deciding. "I'll have a little chat with Judge Reinhard in the morning. We'll get you one."
That was all. It was almost midnight.
Moments later I was alone and unable to sleep. I downed another shot of brandy, then one more, and lay in bed staring up at the dark ceiling. If you have enough bad things happen to you in life, others begin to privately question if you invite them, are a magnet that attracts misfortune or danger or dysfunction. I was beginning to wonder. Maybe Ethridge was right, I got too involved in my cases and placed myself at risk. I'd had close calls before that could have sent me spinning off into eternity.
When I finally faded into sleep, I dreamed nonsensical things. Ethridge burned a hole in his vest with a cigar ash. Fielding was working on a body that was beginning to look like a pin cushion because he couldn't find an artery that had any blood. Marino was riding a pogo stick up a steep hill and I knew he was going to fall.
12
In the early morning I stood inside my dark living room, staring out at the shadows and shapes of my property.
My Plymouth wasn't back from the state garage. As I looked out at the oversize station wagon I was stuck with, I found myself wondering how difficult it would be for a grown man to hide under it and grab my foot as I unlocked the driver's door. He wouldn't need to kill me. I would die of a heart attack fust. The street beyond was empty, street lights burning dimly. Peering through the barely parted draperies, I saw nothing. I heard nothing. Nothing seemed out of the ordinary. Probably nothing had seemed out of the ordinary when Gary Harper had driven home from the tavern, either.
My breakfast appointment with the attorney general was in less than an hour. I was going to be late if I didn't muster up the courage to step outside my own front door and negotiate the thirty feet of sidewalk that would lead me to my car. I studied the shrubbery and small dogwoods bordering my front lawn, scrutinizing their quiet silhouettes as the sky lightened by degrees. The moon was roundly iridescent like a white morning glory, grass silver with frost.
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