“Hi,” he said. “Must be ESP. I just talked to a friend of yours. Gillian Sayre called.”
A wave of guilt hit me. I hadn’t contacted her since the day she came by the
“She was trying to reach you at the paper, but I guess your voice mailbox is full and the
“Oh.”
“I told her you were just taking a much-needed vacation.”
“Thanks, Frank. I know I should have called her before now, but . . .”
“She wasn’t calling to nag you. She saw the articles about the Jane Doe in the trash bin and was worried about you. And she said she never had a chance to thank you for talking to her on the day after you got back.”
“I’ll call her,” I said again. “I haven’t even tried to get in touch with her or Giles since those first days back.”
Frank knows me too well not to have heard my reluctance. “Take it easy on yourself,” he said. “You’ve had a lot to cope with. This might not be the best time to talk to the Sayres.”
“Maybe you’re right. I just don’t know. I don’t want to cower.”
He laughed. “Like you cowered before Wrigley?”
“Look what that got me.”
“Yeah — a few days off for yourself, instead of running your ass ragged for the paper. Wrigley’s had the work of three reporters out of you lately, and he knows it. By the way — how’d things go with Newly today?”
“Fine,” I said, “which reminds me why I called.” I warned him that I had destroyed his chances of a peaceful evening at home.
“I get the sense that this is a meeting, not a dinner. What’s on the agenda?”
“I think someone helped Parrish, Frank. I’m almost sure of it.”
“So are we. He couldn’t have managed to get out of that area unless someone gave him a ride. Idiotic thing for the driver to do, but that was undoubtedly before Parrish’s name and description were all over the news.”
“No, I don’t mean that a stranger gave him a lift. Why would he plan everything else out and leave something like that to chance?”
There was a silence, then he said, “I’m sure they’ve considered that.”
“I know you aren’t allowed to work on any cases that have even the vaguest connection to me—”
“Which is every case in those two meadows,” he said.
“Yes, but you talk to the other guys, right? The ones who are working on them?”
“As much as possible. To be honest, our resources are strained at the moment. All of Bob Thompson’s cases had to be picked up by other people; since I can’t work on the mountain cases that are connected to Las Piernas — and those are plentiful — guess who gets most of Thompson’s other cases?”
“You.”
“We’re all running around ass-deep in alligators, as Tom Cassidy might say, and I don’t hear as much about the Parrish cases as I’d like to. But let’s talk about your theories tonight — if I can’t get anyone to buy them, Ben might be able to — he’s consulting on some of them.”
So I was able to talk to Frank, Ben, and J.C. that night, which is why I had my husband and two friends with me when I received a gift from my not-so-secret admirer.
42
TUESDAY, LATE AFTERNOON,
SEPTEMBER 12
Las Piernas
In preparation for the evening’s gathering, I drove downtown to a map store. I purchased several topo maps of the area Parrish had used as a burial ground. Coming out of the store, just as I reached the van, I saw the green Honda again. It was speeding away.
I don’t know what made me feel so sure that it was the same car I had seen outside Phil Newly’s house. I couldn’t make out the license plate or clearly see the driver, but as the car turned left onto Elm, a one-way street clogged with traffic, I decided to settle the matter by following him.
I might have lost him already, of course. He could have turned down an alley and doubled back, or reached another intersection and turned, or pulled into a garage and parked.
I had to know. I had to at least try to find that car.
As I drove, I became convinced that I could smell bones; that the scent of bones was somewhere in the van, that if I looked in the rearview mirror I would see skeletons stacked like cordwood behind me, drying marrow their last perfume.
I watched the road, but I broke out in a cold sweat.
Find the Honda. Don’t think about . . . but I smelled bones.
How could there be bones in the van? I asked myself, gripping the wheel. There couldn’t be, could there?
It was possible, an inner voice argued.
