Acts of Mercy: A Mercy Street Novel

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Acts of Mercy: A Mercy Street Novel Page 14

by Mariah Stewart


  The Bureau had been her goal for so long, she’d known exactly what she needed to do to excel at the physical challenges. She worked out daily at a gym to build strength and stamina, and long before she was eligible to apply, she started spending several hours each week at a local firing range. Before she entered the academy, she’d become quite a marksman. The very few people who knew who she really was were impressed by her determination and her dedication. Of those few people, fewer still understood why she’d chosen the FBI. To Fiona—and those who did understand—it seemed the most natural thing in the world for her to do.

  Of course, there were many more who thought she’d lost her mind, and who could not understand why she’d give up what she could have had to play “cops and robbers,” as someone had put it.

  That that someone had been her mother still rankled.

  She made the turn onto Annie’s street slowly, so as not to jar the sleeping woman; better to wake her gently once the car was stopped. Fiona pulled up in front of the town house Annie shared with her husband, Evan Crosby, and turned off the engine.

  “Annie.” She leaned across the console. “Annie, wake up. You’re home.”

  “Hmmm?”

  “I said, you’re home.”

  “Home?” Annie’s eyes flew open. “As in … my home?”

  “Yes.”

  “Wow.” She tried to sit up but the seat was leaning too far back. “Talk about an ungrateful passenger. You should have poked me awake so I could keep you company.” She reached down and found the lever that moved the seat into a sitting position. “I’m so sorry.”

  “Don’t be. I’m used to traveling alone. It’s okay,” Fiona assured her.

  “At least come in and let me feed you.”

  “No, no. That’s not necessary. I’m not very hungry, but I am a little tired.”

  Annie got out and opened the rear passenger door and grabbed her briefcase. “Why don’t you bunk here for the night, rather than drive the rest of the way home tonight?”

  “It’s only another forty-five minutes. Besides, I have to meet Sam tomorrow morning. If I stay over, I’ll have to get up super early to get home and change my clothes. I’m better off just going now. But I do appreciate the offer.”

  “As long as you’re sure you’re not too tired to drive.”

  “I’m not. I’ll be fine.”

  “Well, if you think of anything else you want to talk about or if something else comes up on this case, give me a call.”

  “I will.”

  Annie was just about to slam her door when Fiona said, “Annie, did you know Sam’s wife?”

  “Carly? Sure.”

  “What was she like?”

  Annie set her briefcase on the ground and leaned into the car. “Oh, Carly … let’s see. Well, she had a good sense of humor. Liked to play practical jokes. Short and cute, blond and bubbly. Cheerleader type, if you know what I mean. Very perky. Impulsive. Lively.”

  “How long were they married before she was killed?”

  “I don’t know exactly, but I’d guess maybe five or six years.” Annie angled her head to meet Fiona’s eyes. “Is this professional or personal curiosity I’m hearing? Not judging, just asking.”

  Fiona could not look Annie McCall in the eye and lie. “A little of both.”

  Annie nodded as if she understood.

  “Carly and Sam knew each other slightly in college—he was three years older, and she was in the same sorority as his sister, Andrea. After he graduated, he went into the service. She went to graduate school. They met up again at his sister’s wedding.”

  “Did you like her?”

  “I liked her okay.” Annie seemed to be thinking it over. “Carly and Sam were so different. You’ve seen what he’s like. Very smart, very focused, very serious about what he does. She never seemed to take things very seriously. Sometimes she did things that struck me as, well, as not very smart.”

  Fiona couldn’t keep herself from asking, “Like what?”

  Annie slid back onto the seat, facing Fiona. “Okay, I’ve never said this to anyone, not even Evan, but you know how Carly died, right?”

  “A serial killer broke into their house and murdered her.”

  “Uh-uh.” Annie shook her head. “There was no break-in, no signs that he’d gotten into the house any way but through the front door. Which had either been unlocked, or she’d opened it to him.”

  The two women stared at each other, Fiona not sure what Annie was implying.

  “Fiona, her husband was an FBI agent who specialized in understanding the behavior of serial killers. That night, he was out of town, at the funeral of one of the victims of the killer he was tracking. She knew what’s out there, she’d been hearing about it for years. So the front door is unlocked at nine o’clock at night? Or you open your door to a stranger at that hour? That doesn’t strike you as reckless?”

  “How do you know the killer was there at nine?”

  “One of the neighbors saw a strange car park at the end of the street, and a few minutes later saw a man walking up the DelVecchio’s driveway.”

  “They didn’t call the police?”

  “Why would they? There hadn’t been any sign of anything being wrong. There’d been no screams for help, no call to the police.”

  “No description?”

  “Only that he was tall and well built. The neighbor later said she’d thought it was Sam, but at the time, it had been too dark to really see him.”

  “Sam said Donald Holland killed her.”

  “Don Holland admitted to having killed a lot of women, but steadfastly denied having killed Carly DelVecchio.”

  “Do you believe him? That he didn’t kill her?”

  “John does. I think it’s a possibility. One Sam will not entertain, by the way.”

  “Curious,” Fiona mused. “You’d think he’d want to find the truth.”

  “He thinks he already has.”

  “But you think it’s possible that this stranger the neighbor saw wasn’t Don Holland?”

  Annie nodded. “I think there’s a chance that Holland is telling the truth about this. He didn’t bother to lie about any of his other victims. Bragged about it, actually.”

  “What if it wasn’t a stranger that night?” Fiona said thoughtfully. “What if it was someone she knew?”

  “Well, if it wasn’t Holland, I suppose that would fit.”

  “Maybe she did have her door locked. Maybe she didn’t open it to a stranger.”

  “Well, that’s never been considered. They dusted the house for prints and found Holland’s. The MO was the same as Holland’s other victims. It looked like a duck, it walked like a duck …”

  “But maybe it wasn’t a duck at all.”

  “Are you interested in Sam, Fiona? As something other than a colleague?”

  “I was just curious about it all, you know.” Fiona tried to shrug it off, then laughed at her feeble effort. “Okay, yes, I am interested in Sam.”

  “He’s a great guy. I’d love to see him start to have a real life again.”

  “I guess what I really want to know is, has he been dating at all since Carly died?”

  “Not that I know of, but then again, I don’t know that he’d go out of his way to tell me. He was obsessed with bringing Holland to justice, obsessed with making sure her killer received the maximum sentence, which of course he would, having admitted to so many murders. Then, once the dust had settled, Sam quit the Bureau and took off on this trip to all different parts of the world. From what we could tell, he mostly roamed, like a nomad, from one place to another. What he did while he was wandering, and with whom …?” Annie shrugged. “Next thing we heard, he was back in the States and had been hired by the Mercy Street Foundation, which may be a good move for him. John was happy that it brought Sam back into our orbit. We’ve all missed him and some of us were a bit worried. I was relieved to see him looking well and getting back to work again.” Annie smiled. “Even if it isn
’t for us. Does that sum it all up for you?”

  “Quite nicely, yes. Thank you.”

  “Well, good luck.” Annie reached over and patted Fiona’s hand. “I’ve been where you are. Evan caught my eye the minute I first saw him. There’s never really been anyone else for me. It was as if I was waiting for him—and I knew right away that he was the one I’d been waiting for.”

  “Wow. Who’da thought cool, analytic, precise Anne Marie McCall …”

  “Would be the one to fall in love at first sight?” Annie laughed and got out of the car. She slammed the door, then leaned in the window and said, “Trust me when I tell you that no one was more surprised than I was. So again, I repeat, good luck.”

  “Thanks.” Fiona waved as she drove away from the curb, thinking that it would take more than luck for Sam to notice her.

  All the way home, she thought about Annie’s description of Carly. “Liked to play practical jokes. Short and cute, blond and bubbly. Cheerleader-type, if you know what I mean. Very perky. Impulsive. Lively.”

  Could Fiona be more different than Carly?

  Short and cute? Fiona was tall and leggy and hadn’t been called cute since she was ten years old.

  Blond and bubbly? Fiona was dark-haired and was positive that no one had ever described her as bubbly. Simmer was more her speed.

  Liked to play practical jokes, for God’s sake?

  Fiona had had enough played on her as a child that she cringed at that sort of humor. She knew that on the best day of her life, she’d never have been considered perky, nor was she impulsive. She was—had always been—serious and deliberate.

  The cheerleader type? Hardly. Fiona hadn’t had many friends in college. She’d made a habit of spending more time alone in her room or at the library than she’d really needed. She’d requested a single room her freshman year and after that lived alone off-campus, which practically eliminated her social life, which was fine with her. The fewer people she had contact with, the fewer times she’d have to answer the question, “Say, aren’t you the girl who …?” That too was fine. As long as people saw her only as the person she had been, she’d never be anyone else.

  So, yeah, she was about as different from Carly DelVecchio as night was from day.

  On the other hand, now at least she knew that she was not the sort of woman Sam was looking for, if in fact he was looking at all. Better to know now, she told herself, than run the risk of making a total fool out of herself later.

  She pulled into the driveway and turned off the engine, gathered the bag of Chinese takeout she’d picked up on the way home, then took a few files from the trunk and locked the car with the remote. There was no mail to be picked up—Irene Lentini, her thoughtful next-door neighbor, brought it in for her when she was away for more than a day—and no newspapers lying on the front porch or the lawn. If she wanted a paper, it was easier and more efficient to pick one up in the morning when she stopped for coffee. Most days, she read her news online.

  Next to the front door stood pots of pink petunias that cascaded over the rim in bright ribbons. Irene, who had been retired for ten years and widowed for six, planted and tended the flowers. In the winter, she hung a wreath on Fiona’s front door, and in the fall, she’d planted spring bulbs. “Otherwise,” she’d told Fiona, “folks will think the house is vacant. Then, next thing you know, we’ll have break-ins in the neighborhood because word will get out that there’s an abandoned house over on Forest Drive.”

  Fiona had laughed and cheerfully reimbursed Irene for whatever seasonal display was chosen to adorn the porch or the front door.

  The house welcomed Fiona home with hushed silence, as always. The light on her answering machine was blinking, but she ignored it. She went straight to the kitchen and turned on the overhead light, then dumped the mail on the counter. Later, she’d pick out the bills and toss the rest into the trash. She had no time for junk mail, and rarely got a personal letter. There were few bridges to her past that she hadn’t burned.

  She grabbed a fork from a drawer and a bottle of water, and went out onto the back porch with the carton of chicken lo mein. She sat on the back step and ate while she watched the light fade from the sky as the sun set behind the trees. She saw the first stars of the evening begin to twinkle overhead and closed her eyes and wished that either she hadn’t asked Annie about Carly DelVecchio, or that the answer had been very different.

  Sam pulled up in front of the one-and-a-half-story cedar-shake bungalow and checked the address Fiona had given him. Nineteen Forest Drive. This was it. Somehow the house looked cozier than he’d expected, with the pots of flowers on the front porch and the wreath of something colorful on the front door. Fiona hadn’t impressed him as being the cozy type. Which wasn’t a bad thing, he reminded himself as he walked to the front door. Not everyone did cozy. He sure didn’t.

  He rang the bell but hadn’t needed to. Through the glass pane of the oak door he could see her walking toward him. She was leggy and graceful and he wished the hall had been longer. He liked watching her walk.

  “Hey, you’re right on time.” Fiona opened the door with a smile. “Come on in and I’ll get my things.”

  Sam stepped inside and tried not to look around with as much curiosity as he felt, but he couldn’t help himself.

  “This is a great house,” he told her.

  “Oh, thanks,” she called from the kitchen, where he could see her closing a window.

  “How’d you find something like this?”

  “I just told the realtor what I wanted, and waited until they found it.”

  “Did you have to wait long?”

  “No. I got lucky. I just need to run upstairs to close a few windows. We’re supposed to get some rain this afternoon.”

  Sam waved her off. “Take your time.”

  He wandered into the living room, which was comfortably furnished with a deeply cushioned sofa and two overstuffed chairs that flanked a stone fireplace. An oriental rug that looked like a real antique covered the hardwood floor and a simple oak table held a leather-bound book and a stained glass lamp which looked like a Tiffany to Sam but must have been a knockoff. He’d lived on a special agent’s salary, and he’d never been able to afford a real Tiffany lamp. Or, he thought, a real Turkish carpet.

  A group of photos lined the mantel, and Sam stepped closer to look. Family photos, he guessed. A picture of a younger Fiona with a little girl and a younger boy—probably her siblings—and another of a very good-looking man and woman. Her parents? One of Fiona by herself, sitting on rocks overlooking the ocean, her hair swirling around her head in the breeze, and another that appeared to be a studio shot, the latter of a very different Fiona, this one with blond hair and makeup.

  “Ready?” she said from behind him.

  “Sure.” He turned but didn’t take a step. “Is this your family?”

  “Yes.”

  When she didn’t elaborate, he asked, pointing to the appropriate frames, “Your siblings? Parents?”

  “Yes. Are you ready?” she repeated.

  Feeling somewhat rebuffed but not understanding why, Sam walked to the front door and out onto the porch to wait while she locked the house.

  “Do you want me to drive?” he asked.

  “I’ll drive. You’ve already driven several hours today.”

  “Do you know how to get to the prison?”

  “Route 9 to Turner Highway.”

  “It’s faster to go through Sanderson than around it,” he told her as they got into her car.

  “I don’t know that way.”

  “You can stay on this road right into Sanderson,” he said.

  “All right.”

  “On my way down here this morning, I spoke with the assistant Warden. He said he’d meet with us out at the prison. I think he didn’t understand why we wanted to drive out there.”

  “And you told him …?”

  “Like the boss always says, you have to be at the scene yourself. Breathe the same
air the killer breathed. See what he saw.” He smiled. “Any boob …”

  Fiona laughed. “… can look at photographs, I know. I’ve heard it too.”

  “That’s John. Get out and get into it.”

  “Do you miss it?” She didn’t have to explain what it was.

  “I did at first. For a while, anyway. But I was traveling around so much that after a few weeks, that was my focus. The countries I traveled to. The people I met. The things that I saw.”

  “What countries did you visit?”

  “Ireland. Spain. Portugal. France. Poland. Greece. Turkey. Kazakhstan. And on the way back, I stopped to see my parents in Italy.”

  “Your parents live in Italy?”

  “They own a B and B there. It’s one of those places where you can go and take cooking lessons for a week, drink the local wine, that sort of thing.”

  “Your parents are chefs?”

  “Nah. They just own the place. They have a local guy do the actual teaching.”

  “Sounds very cool.”

  “It is very cool.” He looked out the window. “I’m really happy for them both. They’re having the time of their lives.”

  Fiona turned onto Sanderson’s main road and Sam felt a tightening in his chest. He’d avoided this ride for a long time, but he knew that sooner or later he’d have to do this. It might be better, he’d reasoned, if someone else was driving, someone who wouldn’t be tempted to pull over to the side of the road. This time, the first time, just a pass-by would be enough.

  “Take a right at the light,” he told her.

  “The prison is that way.” She pointed straight ahead. “Just about six miles down the road.”

  “I know,” he replied.

  She made the turn at the light.

  “Now another right,” he said after they’d gone several blocks.

  Fiona stopped at the stop sign, then made the requested turn.

  The street was narrow and there were cars parked here and there on either side, requiring her to slow down. The houses were small and cottagelike, with bay windows and leaded glass and flower boxes.

  “Cute street,” she said.

 

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