the distance. There appeared to be three large houses, perhaps a quarter-mile apart. She continued down the access road, passing crypts, monuments, row after row of manicured graves and expensive headstones. This was a world apart from the Mount Olive cemetery.
At eleven-thirty she reached the far end of the cemetery, the area that abutted the rear of Christa-Marie Schцnburg's house.
Just as she was about to cross the field, to the rear of the property, her Maglite found a headstone bearing the legend:
DR. GABRIEL THORNE
HEALER AND FRIEND
The grave had recently been dug up.
As Jessica got closer she was overwhelmed by the size of the house. It was a three-story Tudor, half- timbered, with cross gables and a steeply pitched roof. Two massive chimneys rose at either end, both topped with chimney pots. A large deck jutted out over the backyard.
She could hear nothing but the rain.
Jessica studied the windows in the back of the house. There were faint lights in three of them. She watched for movement, for shadows. She saw none.
Jessica put her two-way handset on silent, crossed the backyard, and stepped onto the rear deck.
The sliding glass door was locked. Jessica walked down the steps, rounded the house to the east wing. She tried to lift the windows. All were shut tight.
She had no choice. She found a fist-sized rock in the garden, stood atop the air-conditioning unit, broke out the window in the first-floor bathroom.
Once inside, she ran a towel through her hair, wiped her face. She opened the bathroom door. Straight ahead was a long hallway, leading to a large foyer and the front door. She left the bathroom, walked slowly down the hallway. To the left was the entrance to a small pantry, beyond that the kitchen.
Soft music played somewhere in the house.
Jessica saw that most of the rooms were lit by candles, dozens of them casting a pallid yellow light in the cavernous spaces.
She made her way cautiously down the hallway, watched by the eyes of dead ancestors peering down from huge oil paintings overhead. In the dim candlelight, objects waxed and waned — the occasional sideboard, end table, armoire. Each held danger. Jessica drew her weapon, held it at her side.
She approached a room, its door ajar. There was only darkness within. She edged up to the room, slowly inched the door open with her foot.
In borrowed candlelight she saw shapes in the room. A pair of bookcases, a sewing machine, a chair. There were two other doors. She could not clear them. There was no time. She had to take the chance.
She moved deliberately, right shoulder to the wall, sweat trickling from her shoulders, down her back.
Before she turned the corner, into what she was certain was the main hall, she stopped, tuned her ears to every sound. The music continued: a string quartet. Beneath it she heard a woman's voice, humming the melody.
Jessica took a deep breath, rolled the corner, her weapon held low.
Someone stood at the foot of the grand staircase, not fifteen feet away from her. It took Jessica a moment to adjust her eyes.
Kevin Byrne.
He was at the base of the steps, splendid in a dark suit, white shirt and deep burgundy tie. Above him was an enormous crystal chandelier. Jessica looked at Byrne's hands. He held a single white rose.
No, Kevin.
Please, no.
Before she could speak, Jessica looked up to see Christa-Marie at the top of the stairs. She wore a long black dress and a simple strand of pearls. Her hair was soft and luminous, a brilliant silver. She was radiant. She descended slowly, her slight hand on the railing, never once taking her stare from the man at the foot of the staircase.
When she reached the final step Christa-Marie paused.
Kevin Byrne handed her the white rose.
Chapter 93
There is beauty so rare and ephemeral that it has confounded the poets for centuries. Byron, Shakespeare, Keats, Wordsworth — all failures. This is the beauty that is Christa-Marie. From the first moment I saw her she has owned my heart, taking it around the world, then into the deepest confines of hell.
I have never asked for it back.
I've always known that we would have this one last moment together, this moment when our hearts would once again be joined.
Chapter 94
Christa-Marie stood face to face with Byrne. Jessica watched, mesmerized by the tableau as Byrne took Christa-Marie by the hand and led her to the center of the hall, beneath the exquisite chandelier.
A new song began, a waltz. They danced.
As the strings played, Kevin Byrne and Christa-Marie Schцnburg moved in beautiful, fluid lines, as if they had danced together all their lives. When they were finished, Byrne took Christa-Marie in his arms and kissed her.
The scene was so surreal, so unexpected, that Jessica found she had been holding her breath the entire time. She snapped out of it. She had a job to do.
She opened her mouth to speak.
She didn't get the chance.
The front door burst open, the sound of the battering ram echoing through the cavernous space. A pair of SWAT officers rolled into the foyer, their AR-15 assault rifles high. They were followed by Russell Diaz and two of his men, all three of them with weapons drawn. They ran down the main hall toward Byrne and Christa-Marie.
Diaz reached the couple first, stopping a few feet away. He pointed his weapon at Kevin Byrne.
'Down on the ground!' Diaz shouted.
Byrne edged slowly away from Christa-Marie, his hands out to his sides.
'Get down… on the fucking… ground!' Diaz repeated.
Christa-Marie stepped back, a look of horror and confusion on her face. The house was suddenly filled with silence. Byrne eased himself to the floor, put his arms out to the side. Two uniformed officers pinned him down and pulled his hands behind his back. They handcuffed him.
Seconds later, more people streamed through the door — Michael Drummond and Dana Westbrook among them. A dozen more officers spilled into the house.
Byrne was read his Miranda rights. As they took him into custody, Jessica put her weapon on the floor. She stepped into the foyer, her hands held high.
Chapter 95
Lucy felt her way back to the long bench. She had stopped a few moments earlier, having heard muffled shouts from somewhere far away. Or had she? She didn't know. But all was silent now, and she had to get on with her business.