that Camille didn’t read the half-lie. All she knew, from Alaysha directly while Jac had been in the hospital, was that she did some ‘modelling’. Perhaps Alaysha didn’t know what Jac might have already said, and they’d have both got around later to telling her more.
Camille sighed heavily. ‘That’s where it all starts to go wrong, don’t you see? That initial deception. Two- timing poor Jennifer like that. And, for reasons that now become obvious, not telling
‘
Only a split-second pause, but Catherine could practically hear Camille’s flinch of surprise that she had dared to answer back. ‘No, of course not. But you can bet your bottom dollar that this girl had more than a little to do with putting Jac up to it.’ Camille snorted derisively. ‘Types like that.’
‘Like
‘Like,
‘She only takes her clothes off for money… no doubt to put groceries on the table for her little girl. There’s no sin in that.’
‘
‘And do you really think the likes of old-man Bromwell built up their fortunes by being squeaky clean? I hear he was involved in some messy low-rent housing early on. Complaints about rats, damp and unsanitary conditions, and strong-arm guys busting doors down and kicking whole families out in the dead of night when they complained too hard. Not exactly what he’d like to be quizzed about at one of your little dinner soirees.’
This time the surprise was clear at the other end; an audible gasp. ‘Sometimes, Catherine, you’re so…
Catherine wasn’t sure whether the comment was due to her laissez-faire attitude about people taking their clothes off for money, or her socialist-slanted dig at Tobias Bromwell — but she decided to take it as a compliment. ‘Thanks.’
‘And while we’re on the subject of low rents — don’t forget whose house you’re in!’ Camille hung up abruptly.
Catherine took a fresh breath, feeling strangely invigorated. Camille might soon put in the thin edge of the wedge about her and Jean-Marie moving on, finding their own place — one more problem she didn’t need now on top of all else — but all she knew was that at that moment, despite everything, she suddenly felt better. Freer.
‘
‘
‘
Jac stood twenty yards beyond the Roche house, where Larry would have been that night twelve years ago, and looked back to where he’d have seen the woman. Still dark, with just the first tinge of dawn light, the light values wouldn’t be far different to that night, Jac thought.
Jac rewound on his hand-held recorder and looked back towards the house.
‘
‘
Jac could see the side of the house from where he was, and closed his eyes for a second to picture the library from his visit two days ago, then shifted to how it would have been twelve years ago, Larry checking out the safe as Jessica Roche walked in behind him…
Something he was missing…
Jac eased out his breath after a moment, started to pace away.
He looked from side to side at the neighbouring houses and then along the street. If someone else had been there that night, then where…
‘You’re as bad as that Jac,’ Mack commented, ‘the last guy handling everything for Larry… asking me to remember things from twelve years back.’
‘I know. It ain’t easy.’ Jac laid on the Ayliss Southern drawl. ‘But now there’re a couple of notable things to hopefully remind you.’ Jac set the scene with the chicken guy and his friend in a sequinned suit, pressing him to remember what might have been so important on the TV that Mack would have asked him to shut up; and at that moment — as now, staring emptily into the first dawn light of the street where twelve years ago the murder had taken place, searching for answers — everything seemed to freeze around Jac, hang suspended as he stood in the middle of a strange hotel room, cell-phone in hand, breath held, because he knew that probably Larry’s very last chance depended on Mack’s next words.
But with a long, tired exhalation, Mack Elliott said that he just couldn’t remember what he might have been watching. ‘Can’t bring anythin’ to mind clearly… I’m sorry. Too long back.’
‘Will you keep thinking on it for me?’ Jac reluctant to let possibly the last door close. ‘Call me if you finally remember anything. Not long left now… only a few days.’
‘I know.’
Jac wound forward again on the tape.
‘
‘
Jac looked around. Carondelet was to the north, a block beyond St Charles Avenue, which meant Larry would have taken the next right on 4th Street to get there. Jac headed that way as the tape continued, following the same route Larry had twelve years ago as he’d run in panic from the Roche house.
‘
‘
Jac could almost hear the prison clock again in time with his footsteps breaking the quiet of the Garden District dawn.
‘
‘