told him that he needed to speak with Ray Levine.
“I’m not sure where he is,” Fester said.
“He’s not in any trouble.”
“Uh-huh. Don’t tell me. He came into a lot of money, and you want to help.”
“I just need to talk to him. He may have witnessed a crime.”
There was noise in the background. Fester shushed someone. “Tell you what. I can call his cell for you.”
“Tell you what,” Broome countered. “How about you give me his cell number and I call him directly?”
Silence.
“Fester or whatever the hell your name is, you don’t want to mess with this. Trust me here. Give me his number. Don’t call and warn him or any of that. You won’t be happy with how it all turns out, if you screw this up.”
“I don’t like being threatened.”
“Deal with it. What’s Ray’s number?”
Fester postured for another minute or two, but eventually he gave it up. Broome wrote it down, warned Fester one more time not to say a word, and then hung up.
Dave couldn ’t think straight.
He took a break from the labor dispute he’d been working on and moved into his office.
“Do you need anything, Mr. Pierce?” the young associate asked him.
She was a recent Stanford Law grad and gorgeous and chipper and full of life, and you wondered when life would beat it out of her. It always did in the end. That kind of enthusiasm wouldn’t last.
“I’m fine, Sharon. Just finish up those briefs, okay?”
It was amazing what we could hide when we try, he thought. No one-neither his clients nor opposing counsel-had any idea that as he sat through the depositions, jotting notes and giving counsel, he was completely devastated by his wife’s lie. The lawyerly facade never gave way. He wondered now if we were all like that, all the time, if everyone in the other room was just putting on a mask to hide some internal pain, that all of them, everyone in that room, had also been crushed this morning and was as good at hiding it as he was.
Dave looked at his wife’s panicked text. She wanted to explain. Last night he had been so forgiving. He loved her. He trusted her. Whatever else there was in her or his life, well, everybody has something, right? No one is perfect. That core would always be there. But when morning came, despite the night’s bliss, that whole rationale had just felt wrong.
Now he felt adrift.
He would have to talk to Megan eventually, hear her explanation. He wondered what it would be and if he’d believe her. Dave was tempted to call her back now, but he’d let her stew another few hours. Why not, right? No matter what the explanation, she had lied to him.
Dave glanced at the computer monitor. Eventually, he guessed, Megan would want to know how he’d known about her visit to Atlantic City. He wasn’t sure he wanted to tell her. Last night he had detested tracking the GPS in her cell, but suddenly he liked the idea of being able to know where she was at his whim. That was the problem with crossing lines. That was the problem with losing trust.
He clicked the link to her phone’s GPS and waited for the map to load up. When it did, he couldn’t believe what he was seeing. Megan wasn’t home, crying or stewing or feeling bad about what she’d done.
She had gone back to Atlantic City.
What the…?
He took out his smartphone and made sure that he could see the GPS map on the app. He could. That meant that if Megan moved, he’d be able to see. Fine.
Maybe it was time to see for himself what she was doing.
Dave grabbed his car keys. He rose, pressing his office intercom button. “Sharon?”
“Yes, Mr. Pierce?”
“I’m not feeling well. Please cancel the rest of my day.”
Megan was pacing while Broome wrote down Ray’s cell phone number. She hadn’t asked for the number last night-hadn’t wanted it-but she casually glanced over Broome’s shoulder and memorized it. She debated calling Ray, warning him about Broome’s upcoming visit, but a voice inside her told her to leave it be.
Let the investigation take its natural course, she thought.
She didn’t believe that Ray was guilty of… of what anyway? Assault? Kidnapping? Disappearances? Murder? She had been persuasive in her arguments to Broome, defending Ray as best she could, but there was something that still gnawed at her. So much of this-Stewart Green, Carlton Flynn, the Mardi Gras Missing-didn’t add up, but the one thing she couldn’t shake was the feeling that Ray was keeping something from her.
There was more to what happened to him, more to what crushed him, than a girlfriend running away. Yes, they were lovers and all that and who knows what they might have been. But Ray was also first and foremost a photojournalist. He’d been independent and sarcastic and smart. A lover running out on him would hurt, sting, break his heart. But it wouldn’t do this.
Her cell phone rang. She could see from the caller ID that it was her mother-in-law calling from the nursing home. “Agnes?”
She could hear the old woman crying.
“Agnes?”
Through the tears, her mother-in-law said, “He was back last night, Megan.”
Megan closed her eyes.
“He tried to kill me.”
“Are you okay?”
“No.” She sounded like a scared child. It was obvious and a bit of cliche, but we don’t really age in a straight line. We age in a circle, curving back to childhood, but in all the wrong ways. “You have to get me out of here, Megan.”
“I’m a little busy-”
“Please? He had a knife. A real big one. The same one you keep in your kitchen, you remember, the one I got you for Christmas from that Home Shopping Network? It’s the same kind. Check your kitchen. Is the knife still there? Oh God, I can’t stay here another night…”
Megan didn’t know what to say. Another voice came on the phone. “Hi, Mrs. Pierce, this is Missy Malek.”
She ran the nursing home. “Please call me Megan.”
“Right, you’ve told me that, sorry.”
“What’s going on over there?”
“As you know, Megan, this behavior is nothing new for your mother-in-law.”
“It seems worse today.”
“This isn’t a disease that improves with time. Agnes will continue to get more and more agitated, but there are things we can do to help in these situations. I’ve spoken to you about this before, am I right?”
“You have, yes.”
Malek wanted to move Agnes to the third floor, out of “independent living” to the “reminiscent floor” for those with advanced Alzheimer’s. She also wanted authorization to use heavier sedatives.
“I’ve seen this kind of thing before,” Malek said, “though rarely this acute.”
“Could there be something to it?”
“Pardon?”
“To what Agnes is claiming. She still has plenty of moments of clarity. Could there be something to it?”
“Could a man be breaking into her room with your kitchen knife and threatening to kill her? Is that what you’re asking me?”
Megan wasn’t sure how to respond. “Maybe, I don’t know, maybe someone on your staff is playing a prank or she’s misinterpreting something…”
“Megan?”