The Final Victim
Page 26
We? As in Lianna?
Who the heck- Oh. It hits her, then, and she realizes who this Aimee is.
She's Royce's daughter.
Mom must have called her.
She called her, but she didn't call me.
"When did you get here?" she asks, trying to sound friendly.
"First tiling this morning. I had to fly in from N'Awlins, where I live."
It takes a moment for Lianna to decipher that-at least, most of it.
"From where?" she asks.
"N'Awlins."
"New Orleans," Mom clarifies with a laugh. "And you must be exhausted, Aimee. I know you didn't sleep any more than I did last night, and you spent the whole day with me at the hospital."
Lianna looks at the newcomer, further resenting her. Not just for the obvious closeness between the two of them after a day spent together, and a shared tragedy.
But also for her looks. Aimee is as beautiful as Mom is, with same kind of long, thick hair-except hers is golden-and the same perfect figure.
Lianna is conscious that her own hair is matted to her head-thanks to Mom and her sloppy tears-and that she's still wearing the ratty T-shirt she threw on when she found out Dad wouldn't be coming. Her beautiful sundress lies in a heap somewhere on the floor at the foot of her bed.
But Mom didn't say anything about that, or about the general mess in the room she told Lianna to clean yesterday.
Naturally, Lianna forgot about that until just now.
"Aimee is a nurse," Mom informs Lianna, as if that matters in the least.
"I started out as a hairdresser," Aimee says wryly, "but then I got caught up in an awful hurricane, and I realized what really matters. So now I can save people's lives, instead of just fixing their hair."
Lianna's hand goes instinctively to her own head, even as she notices that Mom is looking at Aimee though she's some kind of superhero.
"Have you eaten dinner, Lianna?" Mom asks, patting her hand, then her head, like she's a very young child or a cute pet. Or maybe she's just trying to fix Lianna’s hair without Aimee noticing.
"No," she says glumly.
I haven't eaten lunch, either.
She thinks longingly of her father.
Daddy, I wish you were here.
I wish you were here, and this Aimee person wasn't.
"I'm going to ask Nydia if she can make something for the three of us while I go take a shower and g cleaned up," Mom says, getting up off the bed.
The three of us ?
Does she have to eat with them, too?
"I'm really not hungry," Lianna says, folding h arms across her chest.
"I'm not either, but we have to eat," Mom tells he "And you can get to know Aimee. You always said you wanted a sister."
"I never said that."
Mom gives her a look that says don't be rude. Now she looks more like her usual self-the self she's been lately, anyway.
Lianna feels more like her usual self when she insists, feeling ornery, "Well, I didn't."
"You did. Maybe you don't remember." Mom laughs the nervous laugh she does whenever Lianna is embarrassing her in front of someone. "When you were little, it's all you used to talk about. You wanted me and your father to have another baby, a girl, so that you could have a sister."
"I don't remember that."
No, all I remember is wanting my big brother back.
Lianna looks away, toward the collection of antique dolls that line a bookshelf, and blinks annoying tears out of eyes.
But her mother is reaching out to touch her chin, forcing her to turn her head back.
"What?" she asks, humiliated to be caught crying, especially in front of an outsider.
To her credit, Aimee has drifted closer to the door again, and seems to be caught up in examining the fringed shade of an old lamp.
"Come on downstairs for dinner," her mother says in that kind tone again. "I want to spend some time with you. I've missed you all day."
I've missed you, too, Lianna thinks sadly. And for a whole lot longer than just a day.
The police station is bustling on this summer Sunday evening.
Mimi waits to speak to the jolly-looking desk sergeant, meanwhile nibbling her lower lip so fiercely she tastes blood.
Finally, it's her turn. She gives her name, feeling as though she's going to faint any second.
"How can we help you, Mrs. Johnston?"
"I need to speak to, um, somebody. About a case."
"About a report you filed?"
"No…"
He waits. Beneath brows raised in obvious question, his eyes are kind.
Nonetheless, she's paralyzed with fear, barely able to draw a breath.
This is it.
If she reveals anything to the police, she'll officially be involved. She doesn't need this complication in her life. Not right now.
But what else can she do?
Run out of here?
What if the sergeant comes after her, demanding that she talk?
Come on. That won't happen.
He doesn't even know which case I mean.
All right, so she can probably get away, if she flees the station right now, and nobody will ever be the wiser.
But how will she be able to live with herself?
You won't.
Besides, don't you remember what he did to you?
Don't you remember that day in the dormitory at Tellfair Academy?
Yes.
She remembers.
Sorry, Gib, she thinks now, steeling her nerve, payback can be a real bitch…
And so can I.
She leans toward the officer and confides, "I have some information about the shooting last night on Oglethorpe Avenue."
"Goodness, I'm so smart to have thought of picking up this hand truck at Home Depot the other day, don't you think? Oh, I forgot… you can't say anything. For a change. Well, silence is golden, as Mama used to say. Shoo!"
Another pesky insect is buzzing around the corpse lashed to the hand truck as the tires become bogged down, once again, in mud.
"Shoo… go away."
It takes a good five minutes to free the cart and its grisly cargo. The process entails repeatedly swatting at insects and juggling the flashlight from hand to hand, accidentally dropping it, several times, into the muck.
At last, the cart is on its way again, following the now-familiar path through the marsh, well lit by the flashlight's glare.
The brick cabin isn't all that far from the main house, really-but it remains as much a world away now as it did back in slavery times. God forbid the Remingtons find it necessary to associate with the household help.
"Here we are, home sweet home… what do you think? Oh, I keep forgetting… you can't tell me what you think anymore. Well, that's a darned shame but I have to say it was inevitable."
The handcart drops with a thud beside the old brick doorstep. The flashlight's beam pivots wildly over the darkened landscape, the flashlight
itself clenched ear to shoulder, leaving both hands free to work the padlock.
"Yoo-hoo, ladies, I've brought a visitor, just like I promised."
At that, the corpse is cut loose from the hand truck and dragged over the threshold.
Rigor mortis has set in; it takes quite a bit of effort to get it propped just right in the place of honor at the small table, positioned between the redheaded doll and the brunette. The blond doll sits across, seeming to stare at the newcomer, whose wide green eyes are frozen in an expression of eternal horror.
"It's like looking into a mirror, isn't it Pammy Sue? Oh, wait… there are two Pammy Sues now. And isn't it ironic? Neither of you can say a word!"
Laughter fills the old cabin.
But with it drifts the echo of a long ago voice. Mama's voice, scolding.
You naughty, naughty child. What have you done?
But Mama isn't here. She can't be here. Mama is dead.
The flashlight's beam bounces around wildly, revealing one reassuringly empty corner after another.
"See? Nobody here but me. And you, Pammy Sue. One, two, Pammy Sues."
Another wave of hysterical laughter.
Then the flashlight bounces from the redheaded doll to the brunette. "Oh, no, I didn't forget. You're both here, too. Now we can have our little doll tea party. Just like old times."
The tea set, delivered to the cabin on an earlier trip, is retrieved from its shopping bag and lain out on the table. It's the one that was purchased two decades ago at the Pigeon Creek five and dime, an extravagant birthday gift for Pammy Sue.
Those familiar green eyes seem to be following the action with unnerving intensity, almost as though they recognize the childhood relic.
But that's ridiculous, of course. They aren't really watching.
Pammy Sue is dead. She can't see any more than she can speak.
Which is why I get to do all the talking from now on. And that's just fine with me.
"Oh, look… one of the cups is chipped. How on earth can that have happened? Oh, wait, I remember!"
Yes, it happened on Pammy Sue's birthday, when she left the room to get her favorite doll, leaving the tea set spread out on the kitchen table. It was so pretty, the white china sprigged with little pink roses. It must have been expensive.
I never got such an expensive, beautiful birthday gift in my life. Not in that life, anyway.
That was why it was so tempting, that day-Pammy Sue's birthday-to snatch the nearest cup. It was hurtled to the floor in a sudden burst of rage, so hard that it should have smashed into tiny shards.
But it didn't. It hit the edge of the thick braided rag rug and bounced gently onto the linoleum.
Only a sliver of porcelain splintered off the rim, so. slight a break that Pammy Sue didn't even notice it when she came back into the room with her doll.
And when she finally did see the chipped spot, days later, she thought she must have done it herself somehow.
Stupid, stupid girl.
"Here you go." The chipped cup is placed in front of the corpse. "You won't mind. You probably won't even notice."
What fun this is. Just like old times.
"All right, now, we'll have to pretend there's tea in the cups." The little china spout is positioned over each of the four rims and the pot is tilted as if to dispense its steaming beverage. "And we'll pretend there are cookies on the plates, too… what's that, Pammy Sue? You don't like to pretend?"
Silence.
Of course.
Because Pammy Sue can't speak.
And she can't see.
Really, she can't.
But I can't help it. I need to make sure…
Rage sweeps in, the same as it did on Pammy Sue's long ago birthday. This time, it's a little silver teaspoon that is snatched abruptly from the table.
Then the corpse is grabbed roughly by its blond hair, now matted with coagulated blood.
The edge of the spoon is jammed into the socket beneath Pammy Sue's motionless right eye. It gouges mercilessly, in a seemingly futile effort until suddenly, the eyeball is severed.
Ah, there.
The gory orb plops, oozing, onto a small china plate. Its counterpart follows after another brief struggle with the spoon.
Then the corpse is returned to its position and the plate is set in the middle of the table like a gruesome centerpiece.
'’There… I'm afraid we're all out of cookies, but here's a delicious treat just for you, Pammy Sue. Go ahead, dig in. I'm sure you won't mind if I don't stay… I've got to be going now, before somebody misses me. But I'll be back soon for another visit. I promise."
CHAPTER 11
First thing Monday morning, Charlotte finds herself facing Detectives Williamson and Dorado once again.
But this time, it's on her turf: in the second of the double parlors at Oakgate, with the doors closed.
And this time, Aimee is at her side.
When the detectives showed up unannounced, Charlotte was just about to leave for the hospital with her stepdaughter.
They initially asked to speak to Charlotte in private. She quickly spoke up and told them she would feel more comfortable with her stepdaughter there.
"Aimee should hear anything y'all have to say-Royce is her father. She flew in yesterday from New Orleans and she's as concerned as I am."
To her relief, and frankly, her surprise, even Williamson didn't oppose her request.
"Do you know who did this?" Charlotte asks the foment they're all seated-on a cluster of circle-backed nineteenth-century chairs upholstered in yellow silk; Williamson's ample girth overflowing beneath the wooden arms on either side of his.
"Not yet" He doesn't elaborate.
Frustrated, Charlotte snaps, "Well, what did you find out?"
And why are you here? Don't you realize that I have to get back to my husband's bedside?
Dorado takes over. "Mrs. Maitland-and Miss Maitland, is it?" At Aimee's nod, the detective goes on, "Have y'all been here all night?"
"Ever since we left the hospital at around seven," Charlotte tells him, bristling at the question. Surely he doesn't consider her a suspect at this point, does he?
"Can you just tell us what you did here, and who all was in the house?"
Suppressing a sigh, Charlotte recounts the evening step-by-step: she talked to her daughter, spoke to the, housekeeper about dinner, then took a shower while Aimee settled into Grandaddy's room with Nydia's assistance…
"Nydia? She's the housekeeper who let us in just now?" Williamson interrupts, jotting something on his pad. 'The one you mentioned yesterday when we asked; who was living in the house?"
"Yes." 'We'll want to talk to her."
"Fine, but I don't know what she can possibly tell; y'all."
Keeping her gaze focused on the pair of antique andirons at the far end of the room so that she w
on't have to look at Williamson, Charlotte goes on with her; account of last night. She fails to mention that Nydia was silently disapproving when Charlotte asked her to; put fresh sheets on the bed; clearly, she doesn't think anybody should be moving into the room so soon after Grandaddy's death.