I couldn't see Rosalia.
I didn't need to.
Anger raced through me.
I kicked open the door and plunged into the kitchen. I walked past a cowering Rosalia until I stood a scant foot from her husband.
"No."
His face flushed an ugly dark crimson. A pulse throbbed in his throat.
For an instant I knew he was going to strike me.
"Listen closely, Enrique. If you hurt Rosalia- now or in the future-you'll go to jail. I'll make sure of it."
He glared at me. His hands fell slowly to his
sides. "I don't know what you are talking about, Mrs. Collins."
My eyes dropped to the belt in his hands. "Put it back on. Keep it on."
I swung around. "Rosalia, I'm going to find Betty now. She will stay with you. She will help you move your things to one of the rooms near mine."
Rosalia's lips quivered.
Enrique blazed, "She is my wife!"
"She will do as Isay. I will speak to Mr. Prescott about this as soon as he returns."
Enrique shot his wife a look that made my blood run cold. Then he whirled and slammed through the doorway.
Tears seeped from beneath Rosalia's closed lids.
"Do as I say, Rosalia. Betty and I will protect you."
Slowly her eyes opened. The tears couldn't hide the terrible hopelessness.
"I'll send Betty. If he returns, run away. Come where there are people. I won't let him hurt you again."
I hated leaving her alone in the kitchen. Would Enrique return? Would it be worse for her because I'd intervened? Or would the fear of Chase's response stay his hand? I could only hope that Rosalia would do as I'd directed. But it is hard to break the shackles of fear and dominion.
I stepped back into the dining room, through the door eased open by the unseen observer. It took only a few steps and I was outside, stepping through French doors onto a bricked terrace. To my left was the line of willows screening the terrace from the
outer buildings. I glanced toward the empty tennis courts and the tangle of willows close to the track.
I didn't expect to see anyone and knew, if I did, that too much time had elapsed to connect the sighting to the listening presence in the dining room.
Instead, I stood thoughtfully for a moment, aware of the ominous clouds banking up in the south and of the Calcutta-like heat. A storm was coming. I didn't need the unmistakable, unerring ache of my bones (as accurate as any barometer and more impossible to ignore) to tell me that. But it was simply one more uncertainty in a situation so murky that I couldn't be sure what mattered and what was totally irrelevant.
Did it matter that Enrique beat his wife?
What had Rosalia meant to tell me about Chase? Was it important in finding out who wanted to kill him?
Who had pressed against that slightly opened door to listen to my questions to Enrique and Rosalia?
Was it the killer, nervous at my efforts?
Or was it a suspect, craven with fear of a false accusation?
I couldn't know. I only knew that I was plunged into an atmosphere dense "with suspicion and dislike, and that all of the contradictory, ill-understood relationships had to be sorted out.
And I'd damned well better hurry. I had less than twenty-four hours now.
But first… I found Betty in the laundry room. When she saw me, she stopped short, her eyes widening in alarm.
I told her what I'd said to Enrique and Rosalia
and what I expected of her. There was no surprise in her face. But she looked uncertainly at the half-loaded laundry basket.
"Let it be. I'll explain to Mr. Prescott. Go to the kitchen. Stay with Rosalia."
She walked back to the house with me. At the kitchen steps she said only, "Enrique will be like a madman."
"I can handle that."
"Yes, ma'am." I thought I heard satisfaction in her voice.
I wiped the sweat from my face and used the French doors to enter the house. When I reached the hallway, the crashing chords from the piano resounded with furious passion. The pianist attacked the music with a ferocity that I couldn't ignore. I ran swiftly up the stairs.
The decor of the music room offered a fitting setting for the dramatic performance. A huge black concert Steinway, two walls sheathed in crimson velvet, a third wall of mosaic - I recognized a replica of the central figure that adorns Barcelona's Palau de Musica-and a fourth wall of stained glass with glittering glass fingers of sunlight pointing to angelic faces, clearly patterned after the enormous circular central skylight of that opera house.
The pianist came to a thunderous conclusion, then rested her hands, the fingers powerful and graceful and tipped with scarlet nails, on the ivory keys. The huge mirror facing the piano reflected the woman and the instrument.
"Ah, the bitch." Icy blue eyes met mine in the mirror. "I've been expecting you."
A pale rose and cream Dresden clock chimed a melodious three o'clock.
She twisted on the seat to face me. "Do you like being a hired gun?" Her voice was laden with contempt.
I crossed to a green silk Victorian settee and dropped into it. "You interest me. Do you approve of murder?"
Valerie gave a short, dry laugh. "Perhaps of Chase's."
"Then you won't mind telling me who you think would like to kill him and why?" I moved uncomfortably on the settee, wondering if it still contained its original horsehair stuffing.
"My dear, SRO." She trilled a tattoo on the keys. "Or it would be if we weren't stuck on this asinine island. His enemies are legion. And well deserved." Lifting her chin, Valerie declaimed, "As it is, 'we few, we happy few, we band of brothers.' "
" 'For he today that sheds his blood with me / Shall be my brother…' " I smoothed some lint from the settee. "You have it rather backward, don't
o"
you/
"No." Her merciless face might have been carved from ivory. "Every person he touches withers. Did you know that? He's like phosphorus, a brilliant glitter but it burns at the touch. Everyone on this island has been damaged by him. Because he doesn't care for anyone but himself." She fingered the heavy gold links of her bracelet. "He married Elizabeth for her money. He was unfaithful to her from the very first. It doesn't take a woman long to know. I wonder how
long after she found out that the cancer started to grow."
"That's scarcely fair-" I began.
"You listen to me." Her eyes glittered with hatred. "How do I know? Because my baby sister fell in love with him-and he was still a married man. I told her and told her, but she wouldn't listen. Then Elizabeth died and Chase asked Carrie to marry him. But it wasn't because he loved her. Mr. Chase Prescott wanted a mistress for his big, expensive houses, a stepmother for Roger. He didn't really care about Carrie. When she finally real
ized that, she turned into a frenetic, driven woman, never satisfied with one place. She went down in a charter airplane. They shouldn't have taken off, not in that kind of weather. But she insisted. They found the plane the next day, after the storm ended. The pilot was still alive, but he died before they got him to the hospital. Now there's the new little wife, and maybe it's going to be hardest of all on her."
Surely I caught a hint of gentleness in Valerie's voice. "Funny, isn't it? Everybody always acts like it's men who lose their senses over women, but that's not the way I've seen it happen.»He's gone through life taking whatever he wanted and never giving a tinker's damn - and now the bill's come due. Well, I'll tell you straight, I hope he pays in full." She swung back to the piano.
I didn't know the music, but it was slow and heavy, the beat of a dirge, solemn and funereal. In my mind I could see black-draped horses with black shaker plumes, moving ponderously, pulling a coffin-laden bier.
8
Sweat stung my eyes,
filmed my face and arms. No-see-ums swarmed me. Chinch bugs rose from a mound of rotting grasses. Transparent-winged dragonflies looped and circled like Sunday-morning aviators. In the tangled underbrush on either side of the narrow path unseen insects hummed like violins warming up.
I stopped and looked at an old, old live oak. Live oaks aren't especially tall as eastern trees go. The biggest live oaks reach only forty to fifty feet. But this tree's venerable age was evident because its gnarled branches reached out so far, some butting ground-ward for further support. On a sloping branch I glimpsed a corn snake, its vivid red splotches bright against its tan body.
Corn snakes go after moles. But this one was climbing, inching higher and higher.
Some animals know when earthquakes are coming.
Some- like snakes-know when it's going to storm. Snakes are extremely sensitive to movement. They are deaf, but their capacity to analyze vibration is extraordinary.
The corn snake was seeking safety, high above the ground.
I picked my way carefully on the rest of the path through the forest. I didn't want to obstruct a snake. Snakes, contrary to their reputation, do not aggressively attack. They bite only when they feel threatened. But disturbing a snake is surely grounds for a swift response.
Tl^e thick, moist air was difficult to breathe. I was huffing by the time I came out of the woods. A weathered-gray boardwalk led to the dunes. I couldn't see the ocean yet, but I heard the thundering crash of surf.
The dunes were magnificent.
I stopped for an instant to hold that picture in my mind. I was looking at one of the few pristine beaches left. The only trace of man was the boardwalk. No dune buggies had wreaked their havoc here. No heedless walkers had trampled these dune plants underfoot. Delicate bright yellow flowers topped the prickly pear cactus. Sturdy, thick-leaved sandwort, sea rocket, and saltwort thrived. Seaside morning-glory vines spread over the sand like veins in marble. Jessamine, chickasaw plum, wax myrtle, and beach pea flourished, offering subtle and gorgeous touches of rust and rose, tan and gold.
These were dunes as dunes were meant to be.
As I hurried along the boardwalk, bent against the increasingly stiff wind, I realized that the roar of the surf was not an accompaniment io the beach; it was a clamor.
I reached the crest of the dune.
The surf that rolls in to the South Carolina coast is small beer compared to the waves off Hawaii or Australia. It's a surf that usually provides a perfect playground for children, little breakers, nothing too forceful. But the waves I saw this afternoon were awesome. Harbingers of greater to come, they hurled themselves ashore, six to seven feet tall, curling and cresting, foaming and churning.
Haskell buffeted his way out, the surfboard pushed before him. ^
I caught my breath. Dear God, that wave…
A mountain of water curled above Haskell, poised to descend with the rumble of an avalanche, the force of a thousand fire hoses.
Somehow- was it skill or foolhardiness or blind luck? -Haskell buoyed up, up, up and then his board curved over the spume, teetered for a heart-stopping instant on the edge of a watery green abyss, then triumphantly merged into the curling lip to ride the pounding, thunderous, churning surf toward shore. All I could see in that dangerous explosion of foam was his sleek, dark head, held high, and his fierce, sly smile.
I try not to engage in envy. It is perhaps the least attractive trait of homo sapiens. Of course, we share it with other mammals, from gorillas to chimpanzees to house cats.
I've never wanted to trade my existence for that
of any other soul, from the most brilliant academic to the wisest philosopher to the most gifted athlete. But, just for an instant, I wished that I was young and wild and free, that I could hurtle through time and space daring life and death with such glorious abandon, a part of the wind and waves and water.
Abruptly, the board upended in the whirling maelstrom of foam and Haskell was gone.
I ran toward the beach.
For a long, long moment I searched the water crashing ashore. And then he came, tumbling, rolling, struggling. Another wave flung him down. Again he disappeared. Then his dark head came up and he flailed toward shore, weaker now. Another wave crashed over him.
I staggered out in the water, wary of the surf, and reached out a hand to help him.
He tried to get up, fell, swore.
"Hurry. Another big one…"
We made it just in time.
Haskell dropped to the sand. His chest heaved. I sat down beside him, breathless.
"You're a damn fool," I remarked conversationally when I could speak.»
He tried to roll over, muffled a cry of pain. He massaged his right knee. "Banged it."
"You're lucky you didn't break your neck." I tried to sound stern.
His eyes blazed with excitement, though his face was pale. "I'll tell you something." He still pulled breath deep into his lungs. "I'll tell you something- now I can fucking well die happy."
I grinned at him. Dammit, I liked him. He was
untamed, perhaps untameable. I hoped he didn't have a murderer's heart, because I liked him.
I gave one last look back at the high surf as we walked up the boardwalk together. Those waves and the heavily overcast sky and the snake seeking sanctuary meant that the huge storm south of us was sweeping this way. I would talk to Chase when he and Trevor returned. This was a tiny island that could easily be washed over in a hurricane. We'd better get out while the going was good. No later than tomorrow, and perhaps tonight if the hurricane warnings were already hoisted.
Haskell and I didn't talk as we walked back through the gloom of the forest. I waited until we had re
ached the pool and he'd toweled off and was comfortably sprawled in a deck chair, his mouth still curved into a tiny bemused smile of exaltation.
"Haskell, who do you think shot at Chase?" I opened the wet-bar refrigerator, lifted out two Heinekens, and handed him one.
"Oh, yeah. Thanks. Great." His dark hair was plastered in ringlets close to his skull. He looked very young and, as always, sensually attractive with his olive skin, long-lashed brown eyes, and full lips.
I thought he wasn't going to answer.
He shrugged. "Ouch." He rubbed his left shoulder. "I kind of ache all over." It wasn't a complaint. He gave a more restrained shrug. "Who the hell knows? Maybe a little green man from Mars. Shit, I don't know."
Dead Man's Island Page 15