He took off the mirrored glasses. His light eyes were clear and hard as bottle glass. 'So?'
'It reminded me that Ben's left-handed. I know because I saw him vaccinating the kids at the school. I read AnneMarie Valdos's file. Moreland said the killer was probably right-handed.'
'To me, 'probably' means not for sure.'
I didn't answer.
Laurent's arms tightened and his biceps jumped. 'Moreland's no forensic pathologist.'
'He was good enough for the Valdos case.'
He chewed his cheek again and shot me a close-mouthed smile. 'Are you his rent-a-sherlock, supposed to raise doubts about my investigation?'
'The only thing he asked me to do was give Ben moral support. If my being here's a problem, take me back and I'll catch up on my sunbathing.'
Another bicep flex. Then the smile widened, flashing white. 'Look at that, I pissed you off. Thought shrinks didn't lose their tempers.'
'I came to Aruk to do some interesting work and get away from city life. Since I got here it's been nothing but weirdness, and now you're treating me like some kind of sleazeball. I'm not Moreland's surrogate and I don't enjoy being placed under house arrest. When those boats pull up, I plan to be on one.'
I stood.
He said, 'Take it easy, sit down. I'll make coffee.' Switching on the hotplate, he pulled packets of instant and creamer and styrofoam cups out of his desk.
'It ain't Beverly Hills cafE au lait. That okay?'
'Depends on what kind of conversation goes with it.'
Grinning, he went through a battered rear door. I heard water run and he returned with a metal coffeepot that he placed on the hotplate.
'You want to stand, suit yourself.'
I waited until the pot bubbled before sitting.
'Black or cream?'
'Black.'
'Tough guy.' Deep chuckle. 'No offense, just trying to take the tension off. Sorry if I rubbed you wrong before.'
'Let's just get through this.'
He fixed two cups, handed me one. Terrible, but the bitterness was what I needed.
'I know damn well Ben's a lefty,' he said. 'But all Moreland said in AnneMarie's case was that the killer was right-handed
He shifted his weight.
'Yeah, I know what you're thinking. We dropped it before it was finished. But it's not like some big city, tons of money to follow every lead.'
'Hey,' I said, 'big-city cops don't always follow through. I watched thugs burn L.A. down while the police sat around waiting for instructions from brain-dead superiors.'
'You don't like cops?'
'My best friend is one- seriously.'
He stirred creamer into his cup and sipped with surprising delicacy. 'I've got a pathologist flying in. Looking at AnneMarie's file as well as Betty's. I don't know if she'll be able to make any determination about how Betty got cut, because her head was taken clean off. Maybe, though. I'm no expert.'
Shifting again, he got up and sat behind the other desk, propping his feet up.
'Does your gut tell you Ben's guilty?' I said.
'My gut? What the hell's that worth?'
'My friend's a homicide detective. His hunches have led him to some good places.'
'Well,' he said, 'good for him. I'm just one third of a dinky-shit three-man police force on a dinky-shit island. Ed's my main backup and my other deputy's older than him.'
'You probably never needed more.'
'Till now I didn't… Do I think Ben's guilty? It sure as hell looks like it, and he's not bothering to deny it. Only one who thinks otherwise is Dr. Bill, with his usual…'
He shook his head.
'His usual single-mindedness?' I said.
He forced a smile. 'My word was 'fanaticism.' Don't get me wrong, I think he probably could have won a Nobel Prize for something if he'd put his mind to it. He's helped my mother and me plenty, giving her a free lease on the restaurant till things get better, paying for my schooling. I felt like a
'Is the island near exploding?'
'Hotter than I've ever seen it- a lot worse than when AnneMarie got killed, and we had grumblings then.'
'The march up South Road?'
'No march, just a few kids shouting and waving sticks- but look where it led. Now some people think they were fooled into believing a sailor did AnneMarie, and they're doubly pissed.'
'Fooled by Ben?'
'And Dr. Bill. 'Cause Ben's seen as Dr. Bill's boy. And even though people admire Dr. Bill, they're also… nervous about him. You hear stories.'
'About what?'
'Mad scientist shit. Growing all this fruit and vegetables, bringing some into town, but rumor is he hoards it.'
'Is that true?'
'Who the hell knows? Guys who work the estate say he fools around with dehydration, nutritional research. But who cares? What's to stop anyone from growing their own stuff? My mother does. Dr. Bill set her up years ago with soil and seeds, and she grows her own Chinese vegetables for the restaurant. But people get dependent, they like to piss and moan. Doesn't take much to get their tongues flapping. AnneMarie was a newcomer, no roots here, but everyone liked Betty.'
'Including the sailors.'
He turned toward me very slowly. 'Meaning?'
'Moreland said she'd socialized with them. As had AnneMarie.'
'Socialized… yeah, Betty liked to party before she got engaged, but for your own safety I wouldn't repeat that.'
'Any chance Betty and Ben had an affair?'
'Not that I heard, but who knows? But whatever Betty did, she was a nice kid. Didn't deserve to be ripped up like that.'
'I know. I spoke to her the morning before she died.'
He put his cup down. 'Where?'
'At the Trading Post. I bought drinks and magazines. She told me about her baby.'
He arced his feet off the desk and they hit the floor hard.
'Yeah, her mom said she loved the idea of having a baby.' Real pain clouded his eyes. 'Anyone who'd do that should have his nuts cut off and stuffed down his throat.'
The phone rang. He grabbed it. 'Yeah? No, not yet. No, not before his lawyer- I don't know.'
He slammed the phone down. 'That was Mr. Creedman. Wants to do a story for the wire services.'
'Opportunity knocks,' I said.
'Meaning?'
'He's a writer. Now he's got a story.'
'What do you think of him?'
'Not much.'