All That Remains ks-3

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All That Remains ks-3 Page 26

by Patricia Cornwell


  "I just said I needed to see her driver's license," Ellen said, and she sounded puzzled. "You know, I asked to see it."

  "Did she get it out of her purse?"

  "Sure. She had to get it out so I could look at it."

  "She handed it to you, then," I said.

  "Uh-huh."

  "Was it inside anything? Inside a plastic window?"

  "It wasn't in nothing," she said. "She just handed it over and I looked at it, then I gave it back to her."

  A pause. "Why?"

  "I'm trying to determine if you touched Deborah Harvey's driver's license."

  "Sure I did. I had to touch it to look at it."

  She sounded frightened. "I'm not in trouble or anything, am I?"

  "No, Ellen," I replied reassuringly. "You're not in any trouble at all."

  15

  Abby's assignment was to see what she could find out about Barry Aranoff, and she left for Roanoke in the morning. The following evening, she returned just minutes before Marino appeared at my front door. I had invited him to dinner.

  When he discovered Abby in the kitchen, his pupils contracted. His face turned red.

  "Jack Black?" I inquired.

  I returned from the bar to find Abby smoking at the table while Marino stood before the window. He had cracked the blinds and was staring sullenly out at the feeder.

  "You won't see any birds at this hour, unless you're interested in bats," I said.

  He did not reply or turn around.

  I began to serve the salad. It wasn't until I was pouring Chianti that Marino finally took his chair.

  "You didn't tell me you had company," he said.

  "If I had told you, you wouldn't have come," I replied just as bluntly.

  "She didn't tell me either," Abby said, testily. "So now that it's been established that we're all happy to be together, let's enjoy dinner."

  If I had learned nothing else from my failed marriage to Tony, it was never to engage in confrontations if it's late at night or time to eat. I did the best I could to fill the silence with light conversation. I waited until coffee was served before speaking my mind.

  "Abby's going to be staying with me for a while," I said to Marino.

  "It's your business."

  He reached for the sugar.

  "It's your business, too. We're all in this together."

  "Maybe you ought to explain what it is we're all into, Doc. But first" - he looked at Abby - "I'd like to know where this little dinner scene is going to show up in your book. Then I won't have to read the whole damn thing. I can just turn to the right page."

  "You know, Marino, you really can be a jerk," Abby said.

  "I can be an asshole, too. You ain't had that pleasure yet."

  "Thank you for giving me something to look forward to.

  Snatching a pen out of his breast pocket, he tossed it boss tile table. "Better start writing. Wouldn't want you t quote me wrong.

  Abby glared at him.

  "Stop it," I said angrily.

  They looked at me.

  "You're acting no better than the rest of them," I added

  "Who?" Marino's face was blank.

  "Everybody," I said. "I'm sick to death of lies, jealousy, power plays. I expect more of my friends. I thought you were my friends." I pushed back my chair.

  If the two of you wish to continue taking potshots at each other, go ahead. But I've had enough."

  Without looking at either of them, I carried my coffee into the living room, turned on the stereo, and closed my eyes. Music was my therapy, and I had been listening to Bach last. His Sinfonia Two, Cantata No. 29 began mid flight, and I began to relax. For weeks after Mark left, I would come downstairs when I couldn't sleep, put the, headphones on, and surround myself with Beethoven Mozart, Pachelbel.

  Abby and Marino had the sheepish expressions of a squabbling couple that have just made up when they joined me fifteen minutes later.

  " Uh, we've been talking," Abby said as I turned off the stereo "I explained things as best I could. We've begun W reach a level of understanding."

  1 was delighted to hear it.

  "May as well pitch in, the three of us," Marino said.

  "What the hell. Abby ain't really a reporter right now, anyway." The remark stung her a little, I could tell, but they were going to cooperate, miracle of miracles.

  "By the time her book comes out, this will probably be over with. That's what matters, that it's over with. It's been almost three years now, ten kids. You include Jill and Elizabeth, we're talking twelve."

  He shook his head, his eyes getting hard. "Whoever's whacking these kids ain't going to retire, Doc. He'll keep on until he gets nailed. And in investigations like this, that usually happens because someone gets lucky."

  "We may already have gotten lucky," Abby said to him. "Aranoff's not the man who was driving the Lincoln."

  "You sure?"

  Marino asked.

  "Positive. Aranoff's got gray hair, what little hair he has left. He's maybe five-foot-eight and must weigh two hundred pounds."

  "You telling me you met him?"

  "No," she said. "He was still out of town. I knocked on the door and his wife let me in. I was wearing work pants, boots. I told her I was with the power company and needed to check their meter. We got to chatting. She offered me a Coke. While I was inside, I looked around, saw a family photograph, asked her about the photo to be sure. That's how I found out what Aranoff looks like. It wasn't him, the man we saw. Not the man tailing me in Washington, either."

  "I don't guess there's any possibility you read the plate number wrong," Marino asked me.

  "No. Even if I had," I said, "the coincidence would be incredible. Both cars 1990 Lincoln Mark Sevens? Aranoff happens to be traveling in the Williamsburg - Tidewater area around the same time I erroneously record a plate number that just happens to be his?"

  "Looks like Aranoff and me are going to have to have a little discussion, Marino said.

  He called my office later that week and said right off, 'You sitting down?"

  "You talked with Aranoff."

  "Bingo. He left Roanoke Monday, February tenth, and hit-Danville, Petersburg, and Richmond. On Wednesday the twelfth, he was in the Tidewater area, and this is where it gets real interesting. He was due in Boston on Thursday the thirteenth, which is the night you and Abby was in Williamsburg. The day before that, Wednesday the twelfth, Aranoff left his car in long-term parking at the Newport News airport. From there he flew to Boston, was up in that area buzzing around in a rental car for the better part of a week. Returned to Newport News yesterday morning, got into his car, and headed home."

  "Are you suggesting someone may have stolen the tags off his car while it was in long-term parking, then returned them?" I asked.

  "Unless Aranoff's lying, and I don't see any reason for that, there's no other explanation, Doc."

  "When he retrieved his car did he notice anything that might have made him think it had been tampered with?"

  "Nope. We went into his garage and took a look at it. Both tags were there, screwed on nice and tight. The tags were dirty like the rest of the car and they were smudged, which may or may not mean anything. I didn't lift any prints, but whoever borrowed the tags was probably wearing gloves, which could account for the smudges. No tool or pry marks that I could see."

  "Was the car in a conspicuous place in the parking lot?"

  "Aranoff said he left it in pretty much in the middle of the lot, which was almost full."

  "You would think if his car had been sitting out there for several days without license plates, Security or someone would have noticed," I said.

  "Not necessarily. People aren't all that observant. When they leave their ride at the airport or are returning from a trip, the only thing on their mind is hauling their bags, catching their plane, or getting the hell home. Even if someone noticed, it's not likely he's going to report it to Security. Security couldn't do nothing anyway until the owner ret
urned, then it would be up to him to report the stolen plates. As for the actual theft of the plates, that wouldn't be very hard. You go to the airport after midnight and there's not going to be anybody around. If it was me, I'd just walk into the lot like I was looking for my car, then five minutes later I'd be heading out of there with a set of plates in my briefcase."

  "And that's what you think happened?"

  "My theory is this," he said. "The guy who asked you for directions last week wasn't no detective, FBI agent, or spook out spying. He was somebody up to no good. Could be a drug dealer, could be almost anything. I think the Oak gray Mark Seven he was in is his personal car, and to be on the safe side, when he goes out to do whatever he's into, he switches plates in the event his ride is spotted in the area, maybe by cops out on patrol, whatever."

  "Rather risky if he gets pulled for running a red light, pointed I out. "The license number would come back to someone else."

  "True. But I don't think he plans on getting pulled. I think he's more worried about his car being spotted because he's out to break the law, something's going to go down and he don't want to take the chance his own tag number's going to be on the street when it does."

  "Why doesn't he just use a rental car, then?"

  "That's just as bad as having his own plate number out there. Any cop knows a rental car when he sees it. All tag numbers in Virginia begin with R. And if you track it down, its going to come back to whoever rented it. Switching tags is a better idea if you're smart enough to figure out a safe routine. It's what I'd do, and I'd probably resort to a long-term parking lot. I'd use the tags, then take them off my car and put my tags back on. I'd drive to the airport, walk out into the lot after dark, make sure no one's looking, and put the tags back on the car I'd stolen them from."

  "What if the owner's already returned and found his tags stolen?"

  "If the ride's no longer in the lot, I'd just pitch the tags in the nearest Dumpster. Either way I can't lose."

  "Good Lord. The man Abby and I saw that night might be the killer, Marino."

  "The squirrel you saw wasn't no businessman who was lost or fruitcake tailing you," he said. "He was up to something illegal. That don't mean he's a killer."

  "The parking sticker…"

  "I'm gonna track that down. See if Colonial Williamsburg can supply me with a list of everybody who's been issued one."

  "The car Mr. Joyce saw going down his road with the headlights off could have been a Lincoln Mark Seven," I said.

  "Could have been. Mark Sevens came out in 1990. Jim and Bonnie was murdered in the summer of 1990. And in the dark, a Mark Seven wouldn't look all that different from a Thunderbird, which was what Mr. Joyce said the car he saw looked like."

  "Wesley will have afield day with this," I muttered, incredulous.

  "Yeah," Marino said. "I got to call him."

  March came in with a whispered promise that winter would not last forever. The sun was warm on my back as I cleaned the windshield of my Mercedes while Abby pumped gas. The breeze was gentle, freshly scrubbed from days of rain. People were out washing cars and riding bikes, the earth stirring but not quite awake.

  Like a lot of service stations these days, the one I frequented doubled as a convenience store, and I bought two cups of coffee to go when I went inside to pay. Then Abby and I drove off to Williamsburg, windows cracked, Bruce Hornsby singing "Harbor Lights" on the radio.

  "1 called my answering machine before we left," Abby said.

  "And?"

  "Five hang-ups."

  "Cliff?"

  "I'm willing to make a bet," she said. "Not that he wants to talk to me. I suspect he's just trying to figure out if I'm home, has probably cruised past my parking lot a number of times, too, looking for my car."

  "Why would he do that if he's not interested in talking to you?"

  "Maybe he doesn't know that I've changed my locks."

  "Then he must be stupid. One would think he would realize you would put two and two together when his series ran."

  "He's not stupid," Abby said, staring out the side window.

  I opened the sunroof.

  "He knows I know. But he's not stupid," she said again. "Cliff's fooled everyone. They don't know he's crazy."

  "Hard to believe he could have gotten as far as he has if he's crazy," I said.

  "That's the beauty of Washington," she replied cynically. "The most successful, powerful people in the world are there and half of them are crazy, the other half neurotic. Most of them are immoral. Power does it. I don't know why Watergate surprised anyone."

  "What has power done to you?"

  I asked.

  "I know how it tastes, but I wasn't there long enough to get addicted."

  "Maybe you're lucky."

  She was silent.

  I thought of Pat Harvey. What was she doing these days? What was going through her mind? "Have you talked to Pat Harvey?"

  I asked Abby.

  "Yes."

  "Since the articles ran in the Post?"

  She nodded.

  "How is she?"

  "I once read something written by a missionary to what was then the Congo. He recalled encountering a tribesman in the jungle who looked perfectly normal until he smiled. His teeth were filed to points. He was a cannibal."

  Her voice was flat with anger, her mood suddenly dark. I had no idea what she was talking about.

  "That's Pat Harvey," she went on. "I dropped by to see her before heading out to Roanoke the other day. We talked briefly about the stories in the Post, and I thought she was taking it all in stride until she smiled. Her smile made my blood run cold."

  I didn't know what to say.

  "That's when I knew Cliff's stories had pushed her over the edge. Deborah's murder pushed Pat as far as I thought she could go. But the stories pushed her further. I remember when I talked to her I had this sense that something wasn't there anymore. After a while I figured out what's not there is Pat Harvey."

  "Did she know her husband was having an affair?"

  "She does now."

  "If it's true," I added.

  "Cliff wouldn't write something that he couldn't back up, attribute to a credible source."

  I wondered what it would take to push me to the edge. Lucy, Mark? If I had an accident and could no longer use my hands or went blind? I did not know what it would take to make me snap. Maybe it was like dying. Once you were gone you didn't know the difference.

  We were at Old Towne shortly after noon. The apartment complex where Jill and Elizabeth had lived was unremarkable, a honeycomb of buildings that all looked the same. They were brick with red awnings announcing block numbers over the main entrances; the landscaping was a patchwork of winter-brown grass and narrow margins of flowerbeds covered in woodchips. There were areas for cookouts with swing sets, picnic tables, and grills.

  We stopped in the parking lot and stared up at what had been Jill's balcony. Through wide spaces in the railing two blue-and-whitewebbed chairs rocked gently in the breeze. A chain dangled from a hook in the ceiling, lonely for a potted plant. Elizabeth had lived on the other side of the parking lot. From their respective residences the two friends would have been able to check on each other.

  They could watch lights turn on and off, know when the other got up and went to bed, when one was home or not.

  For a moment, Abby and I shared a depressed silence.

  Then she said, "They were more than friends, weren't they, Kay?"

  "To answer that would be hearsay."

  She smiled a little. "To tell you the truth, I wondered about it when I was working on the stories. It crossed my mind, at any rate. But no one ever suggested it or even hinted."

  She paused, staring out. "I think I know what they felt like."

  I looked at her.

  "It must have been the way I felt with Cliff. Sneaking, hiding, spending half your energy worrying about what people think, fearing they somehow suspect."

  "The irony is," I sa
id, putting the car in gear, "that people don't really give a damn. They're too preoccupied with themselves."

  "I wonder if Jill and Elizabeth would ever have figured that out."

  "If their love was greater than their fear, they would have figured it out eventually."

  "Where are we going, by the way?"

  She looked out her window at the roadside streaming past.

  "Just cruising," I said. "In the general direction of downtown. " I had never given her an itinerary. All I had said was that I wanted to "look around."

  "You're looking for that damn car, aren't you?"

  "It can't hurt to look."

  "And just what are you going to do if you find it, Kay?., "Write the plate number down, see who it comes back to this time."

  "Well" - she started to laugh - "if you find a 1990 charcoal Lincoln Mark Seven with a Colonial Williamsburg sticker on the rear bumper, I'll pay you a hundred dollars."

  "Better get your checkbook out. If it's here, I'm going to find it."

  And I did, not half an hour later, by following the age-old rule of how you find something lost. I retraced my steps. When I returned to Merchant's Square the car was sitting there big as life in the parking lot, not far from where we had spotted it the first time when its driver had stopped to ask directions.

  "Jesus Christ," Abby whispered. "I don't believe it."

  The car was unoccupied, sunshine glinting off the glass. It looked as if it had just been washed and waxed.

  There was a parking sticker on the left side of the rear bumper, the plate number ITU-144. Abby wrote it down.

  "This is too easy, Kay. It can't be right."

  "We don't know that it's the same car."

  I was being scientific now. "It looks the same, but we can't be sure."

  I parked some twenty spaces away, tucking my Mercedes between a station wagon and a Pontiac, and sat behind the wheel scanning the storefronts. A gift shop, a picture-framing shop, a restaurant. Between a tobacco shop and a bakery was a bookstore, small, inconspicuous, books displayed in the window. A wooden sign hung over the door, with the name "The Dealer's Room" painted on it in Colonial-style calligraphy.

  "Crossword puzzles," I said under my breath, and a chill ran up my spine.

 

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