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Long Gone

Page 32

by Alafair Burke


  And he had answered, “I love you, Alice. I would sacrifice anything for you. Anything.”

  Sacrifice. To be with her meant he would not have children of his own flesh and blood. And she knew Jeff. He would always see that as a sacrifice.

  Those were details she would not share with Arthur. “It just wasn’t going to work out. We should have realized that a long time ago, but what can I say? We’re a couple of idiots. I’m fine now.”

  She wasn’t fine. She had lost her brother. And her best friend, Jeff. And her fake friend, Lily. And now she was here.

  “I’ve been thinking over everything that happened, Art, and there’s a couple points I keep coming back to.”

  “What’s that?” He took another bite of pork.

  “I know the DNA test said Dad wasn’t Mia’s father, but that doesn’t change the fact that she looked an awful lot like me.”

  “There was a certain resemblance. Mostly just your hair color, though, right?”

  “No. Our noses. And complexion. High foreheads.”

  “Seems like an overstatement, but what are you getting at?”

  “How is it possible that Christie Kinley believed my father was the father of her child, and the two of us look like each other but aren’t actually related?”

  “I don’t know, but my head’s starting to hurt thinking about it. This is all over, Alice. Be thankful—”

  “It hurt my head, too, Art. And that’s why I couldn’t let it go. You see, here’s what’s puzzling. Mia Andrews and I are related.”

  “What are you talking about? We did the postmortem DNA tests.”

  “Against my father, yes. But I contacted the NYPD. I had them test my DNA against Mia’s. We have genetic similarities consistent with being half sisters.”

  “That doesn’t make any sense. Wait—unless. Oh, my God. She was at the house during Ben’s party. Maybe she and Ben—”

  “I thought of that, too. That’s why the NYPD compared Mia’s DNA against Ben’s. There was no match. Mia’s related to me, but not to Ben.”

  “Obviously someone made a mistake. You’re not related to that woman.”

  “Here’s the thing: Ben used to joke that I must be adopted, with my red hair. Mom always told me that she and Dad both had redheads back in the family tree somewhere. Recessive genes etcetera. But then I remembered that picture you have in your office, the one of your nephew at the Yankees game. He also had red hair and a sloped nose, sort of like mine. And yours.”

  “Me? You think my nose is sloped?”

  “Stop this, Art. It won’t be hard to get a sample of your DNA. I hear we leave it behind everywhere we go. I’ll have your DNA compared against mine. And Mia’s. The truth is going to come out. You were staying in the guest cottage that night in Bedford. My father didn’t remember what happened because nothing did happen. He really was blacked out in the theater all night. Christie Kinley’s mother had brainwashed her to adore celebrities. What happened? She was drunk and asked if you were Ben’s famous dad?”

  Arthur slammed his fist against the table but then lowered his voice to deflect attention. “Alice, you’ve obviously gone through something terrible. But that does not justify these allegations.”

  “My mother said she hadn’t been a perfect wife. She obviously did something that made her feel guilty enough to suffer through my father’s transgressions all these years. How long did the affair go on? Was it a long-term thing, or was I the result of a drunken one-night stand?”

  “This is crazy.”

  He rose to leave, but she played her trump card. “The New York State Patrol is pulling camera footage from 684 on the night of Robert Atkinson’s car accident. Once they find proof of your car tailing Atkinson’s, it’ll be over, Arthur. My guess is they’ll also find a fingerprint or two in Mia Andrews’s apartment.”

  “Next you’ll be accusing me of being the second shooter in the Kennedy assassination.”

  “My guess is you were already in Mia’s apartment when you called me to say you were running late to Williamsburg. You talked your way inside, probably armed, then found the gun she used to kill Larson. All you had to do was fire a couple shots when the police showed up, then finish her off with her own gun and plant it in her hand. Danes wondered why she hadn’t simply run down the fire escape. I didn’t realize there was one until he said that. You ran out and met me on the street as if you had no idea what had happened.”

  “I love you. In fact, I love you as though you were my own daughter, but this is insane.”

  “You’re a lawyer, Arthur. You know how this will play out. The DNA tests will be run. Video of your car near Atkinson’s will be found. And now that the police know what to look for, they will find evidence that you were inside Mia’s apartment. And even if only one of those things happens, you will not be able to lie, or lawyer, or pay your way out of it. What did you tell me about those clients of yours who go fugitive: Are you ready to walk away from your home, family, and reputation? Oh, yeah, that’s right—you pretty much don’t have any of those without the Humphreys, do you?”

  “I’m leaving.”

  “I can’t believe you would hurt Ben. He loved you.”

  He breathed heavily, staring at her from across the table, then raised a single finger and pointed at her. “I did not harm your brother.”

  “How about it, Godfather? Now that I know your secrets, will I be the next one they find dead in my bathroom?”

  “Ben was using again. Ben was a spoiled junkie. And I would never, ever—no matter what—hurt you. I practically raised you.”

  “Because I’m your daughter. I’m your flesh and blood.”

  She could tell from his breathing that he was having a hard time maintaining his composure. He nodded, but she needed to hear him say it.

  “Mia and I were a DNA match,” she continued. “I already know. I just want to hear it straight from you. That’s all I want, Art. And then if you want to make a run for it, I’m not going to stop you. But the truth will come out.”

  When he finally spoke, he had regained the evenness of his breath. “I wanted Rose to leave him. When your mother found out she was pregnant, I mean. She said you could’ve been either of ours, but I knew how much he’d been gone. I could feel that you would be our child. And when you were born, oh, I was so certain. But Rose would never leave Frank. She worships your father. The artistry. The wit. The passion. She would taunt me with it when I pressed her too hard.”

  “And that night with Christie Kinley?”

  “That was not rape. And I had no idea that she was only fourteen.”

  “You allowed my father to believe all these years that he was the one.”

  “I also got the lawsuit settled with a confidentiality agreement. And, frankly, if it took a blacked-out night and a good scare to get your father to stop drinking, I might have done him a favor. Frank would’ve died by now at the rate he was going.”

  She realized that the man could justify anything. “Please tell me the truth about Ben.”

  “I swear to you, as God as my witness, I had nothing to do with that.”

  “Did it ever dawn on you that what he learned from Robert Atkinson about our father was the breaking point for him? Maybe you were the one who put the needle in his arm, but indirectly.”

  “I never meant to hurt either one of you.” He reached for his wallet, but she waved him off.

  “My treat, remember? What are you going to do?”

  He gave her a sad smile. “You know what? You would’ve made a good lawyer, Alice, because you’re right. I kept digging further and further, trying to bury the truth from twenty-five years ago, but I made too many mistakes. You got me. Maybe I’ll see you on the other side.”

  He was surprisingly peaceful as he made his way to the exit, like a man who had already weighed his options and come to terms with his choice. But Alice would never learn what that decision might have been, because undercover police officers—dressed as waiters, busboys, and c
ustomers—swarmed Arthur Cronin before he could leave the restaurant.

  Alice reached into her shirt and peeked at the microphone taped to her left breast. She could have sworn that Art threw her a wink as his handcuffs clicked shut.

  Epilogue

  Six Months Later

  Alice was panting by the time she reached her turnoff from Council Crest Drive. The view from the backside of her rental house had made the west hills irresistible, but she had not taken into account the labor that would be required for even a twenty-minute jog in this neighborhood. She slowed to a leisurely walk, allowing her heart rate to return to normal and the breeze to dry the thin layer of perspiration around her neck.

  Alice had always heard that the Pacific Northwest was the perfect place to spend a summer, but now she knew firsthand. She would never have dreamed of running outdoors in steamy New York City in August, but even uphill in Portland, Oregon, she had barely broken a sweat.

  She pulled her mail from the curbside box. A.J. Benjamin. She’d changed her name six weeks ago but was still getting used to it. A.J. for her initials, Alice Janine. And of course Benjamin. A.J. Benjamin seemed like she’d be a brunette, so it was back to the Temptation Brown in a bottle. At least for now. Memories were short, though. In another year or two, when people had forgotten about that time a girl who looked just like her was in the news, she could go back to her natural hue. Maybe she’d even go back to the name Alice Humphrey. Until then, a name was just a name, as interchangeable as her hair color.

  It was Tuesday, and she had just enjoyed an afternoon jog. In New York City, Alice had only been able to exercise in the middle of the day when she was unemployed. In Portland, she was now a once-a-week telecommuter. No pencil skirts and tailored blouses for this woman, at least not on Tuesdays. She ran her fingers across her laptop’s touchpad, bringing the screen back to life, and carried the computer out to the canvas chair she’d bought for her deck. Voilà, she was at work!

  For the seventh time, she checked the flyer she had designed for errors. The Portland Art Museum’s distribution list was only a tiny percentage of the Met’s, and this show—an overview of Edward Hopper’s images of Portland—would not even warrant its own publicity campaign back in the city. But it would be one of Portland’s most attended exhibits of the year. She wanted the flyer to be perfect.

  When she was absolutely certain she was satisfied, she e-mailed the file to her boss, reminding herself to sign the message A.J.

  She found a message from her father waiting in her in-box.

  She was still trying to convince him that the name change had not been a rejection of him. A.J. Benjamin on the West Coast was the fresh start she needed. Ironically, she actually spoke to her parents more now than she had when they’d lived in the same city. Maybe it was because they all knew they had to make an effort.

  “Alice”—A.J. was only for people in her new life—“I thought this might interest you.”

  It was a link to a wedding announcement from last weekend’s New York Times. Joann Stevenson to Jason Morhart. She was a medical billing technician. He was a police detective in Dover, New Jersey. These weren’t the kinds of top-tier pedigrees usually found in the Sunday Styles section, but no couple could top the poignancy of their backstory—falling in love as he risked his life investigating the tragic death of the bride’s daughter.

  “Get this,” her father added. “Ron Howard’s trying to buy movie rights. Love, Dad.”

  Her instant message account was blinking on-screen, one of the costs of telecommuting. But this message wasn’t from one of her coworkers at the museum. It was from Hank Beckman. His termination from the bureau was official. Brooklyn was a little pricey for the proportion of his pension he’d been able to salvage, but a friend had suggested Portland as a nice compromise between the big city and the Montana town where he’d been raised. He was thinking of flying out next week to check it out.

  “A ‘friend’ suggested this, huh?” She hit the send key.

  “Maybe you should’ve been the FBI agent.”

  They had seen each other a few times before she’d been offered the job in Portland. But a few get-togethers that weren’t even officially dates could not be the reason she turned her back on the opportunity for a new life she so desperately needed.

  “I’ll pick you up at the airport.” Send.

  She typed the next sentence and reread it twice: “I have a guest room. It’s yours if you want it.” Send.

  She tapped an impatient fingernail against the teak arm of her chair, waiting for his reply. “Sounds great. Thanks.”

  Maybe the fresh start didn’t need to be entirely new. She knew she still needed to work through the lessons gleaned in the past year. Her understanding of family had been shaken. When her brother had learned what he thought was the truth about their father and that night in Bedford, he’d fallen back into addiction rather than turn to her. Now Ben was gone. So was the half sister she’d never even known she had. Art was still fighting the charges against him, but would likely die in prison. She tried not to feel sorry for the man who had raped Christie Kinley, and taken the life of his own daughter. But then she’d remember that Mia was not Art’s only daughter. No, she did not feel sorry for Art, but she might never be able to accept that her biological father was capable of the sins Arthur Cronin had committed.

  And the only father she had ever known—having found forgiveness from his wife for so many transgressions—was still finding it in himself to forgive hers. But, no matter what DNA tests had to say about it, Frank Humphrey was still her father. She just had to find a way to convince him of that.

  Those months when she had been unemployed, when she had wanted so desperately to be free of her family, she had made herself miserable. She wanted a job. She wanted her own money. She wanted a man. She spent every second of every hour of every day craving what she did not have. Wanting states of being she could not even identify. Wanting something. Something else.

  Then two police officers showed up at her apartment with a photograph. That single image had been a wake-up call. In that singular moment, she had realized how much there was to appreciate in simplicity. Clean air. This view of Mount Hood. A pretty decent job in a nice place with good people, with one day a week when she could work on this deck in her jogging togs. Parents who loved her. A couple of new friends in Portland. Maybe another to add to the list if Beckman chose to move.

  Nothing could be more than this.

  A Special Note of Thanks to My Readers

  Once again, I want to thank my readers, without whom I would not have the privilege of being a published writer. Were it not for you, I might wake up one morning to find myself out of work like Alice Humphrey (albeit hopefully without the dead bodies and whatnot). Thank you for continuing to read and to support my work.

  I’ve gotten to know many of my readers through my Web site, Facebook, and Twitter. I’m so appreciative of the community we have built online and thank Holden Richards at Kitchen Media and Catherine Cairns of Cairns Designs for their technical assistance. If you read my books and haven’t yet connected to this community, I hope you’ll do so.

  Some readers have even accepted my ongoing invitation to serve as online kitchen cabinet, helping me think through decisions like Long Gone’s title and the always-stressful selection of a new author headshot. For their helpful (and fun) kitchen-cabinet comments during the writing of Long Gone, I thank the following readers: Alice Jackson, Alison Janssen, Alromaithi Mohammed, Amber McDonald, Amber York, Anastacia Kipp, Andrea Wilson, Andy Gilham, Angie Thomas-Davis, Ann Turner, Anne Madison, Anthony N. Smith, April Smith, Ashton Laurent, Aude Dupré de Boulois, Audrey Pink, Barb Juarez, Barb Mullen Gasparac, Barbara Bryan, Barbara Detwiler, Barbara Pease Claypool, Barbara Theroux, Barbara Vink, B. C. Creighton, Becky Cemper, Becky Doshier Gallimore, Becky Morganstern, Bert Shapiro, Beth Stack, Bev Murphree, Beverly Bryan, Beverly Vick, Bill Horn, Bill Strider, Bill Tipping, Billie Ruth Walker, Billy Bob Billy, Bob Campbe
ll, Bonnie D. Tharp, Bonnie Graham, Bonnie Powell Morningstar, Bren Sugar, Brenda LeSage, Brent Watson, Brian Fingerson, Brian Shrader, Bridget Cagan Herron, Bruce DeSilva, Bud Palmer, Candi Hartley-Hall, Candice Lamb, Carl Christensen, Carmen Munger, Carol Clark, Carol Johnsen, Carol Maddox, Carol O’Gorman, Carol Pennell, Carole Sauer, Carrie Weston, Cassie Ane, Catherine Kit Smither Norr, Cathy Carmouche, Chad Huckabaa, Charlotte Gray, Chaun Santoriello, Cheryl Boyd, Cheryl Fortune, Cheryl Gladen, Chris Cooper Cahall, Chris F. A. Johnson, Chris Knake, Chris Ozment, Chris Starkman, Chris Toft, Christel Verret Mollere, Christine Caillet, Christine Pernetti, Christopher Clarke, Chuck Palmer, Cindy Daniel, Cindy Marshall Sabin, Cliff Miller, Connie Ross Ciampanelli, Connie Williams Claus, Constance McClure, Courtney E. McIntyre, Craig Pittman, Curtis Ensler, Cyndi Sieber, Cynthia Poley Parran, Dani Leonor, Danny Nichols, Daphne Anne Humphrey, Darcy Lafferty Justice, Daryl McGrath, Dave Davis, David Bell, David Booker, David Hale Smith, David Hansard, David MacClure Conrad, David Maidstone, David Pinter, Dawn Lattimore, Deb Gravette Threadgill, Debbie Ballou Sladek, Deborah Burge, Debra Belmudes, Debra Manzella, Den Terwilliger, Dennis Leleux, Dennis Siler, Diana Bosley, Diana Taylor, Diane Griffiths, Diane Quilghini, Diane Simmons, Dianne Wisner, Dick Droese, Dodie Osbourne, Don Boynton, Don Nations, Donna Bagdasarian, Donna E. Stephenson, Donna Reed Enders, Douan Thomas, Dru Ann L Love, Dudley Forster, Dwayne K Workman, Dwight Lee Spencer, E.j. Copperman, Elaine Roberts Razo Videau, Elena Shapiro Wayne, Elizabeth A. Olesen, Elizabeth A. 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