“Didn’t expect me to agree with you, did you?”
“No, frankly.”
“I’m not taking myself off the case. But you were right. I was nothing but a liability in there. I think maybe I need to leave the boots-on-the-ground work to you and stick to analyzing what you and the other guys bring in.” He pressed his lips together. The next thing he had to say was hard. “If we can, I’d like to limit the number of guys we have directly investigating this lead. If it turns out there’s something to all this… stuff that Meg Tracey says. I just-I don’t want to-”
“I understand.”
Russ relaxed against the seat. “Thanks.” He stared out the window. House, house, farm, house. Featureless fields, corn stubble and hay roots buried beneath December’s snows. “Where are we headed?”
“Back to the station. Look, as long as I’ve got you in a temporarily agreeable state, how ’bout you take my advice and go home for a while? You’ve had a hell of a morning.”
Funny how his mother’s place had become “home.” He wondered if he would ever be able to live in his own house again. “The autopsy report’s coming in,” he said.
“Dr. Dvorak won’t have anything until this afternoon at the earliest. You want to see it, right?”
There was nothing he had ever wanted to see less. “Yeah.”
“Then give yourself a break. Rest up, eat a meal, let your mom take care of you. You don’t want to be losing your cookies in front of the ME ’cause you’re overstressed.”
Russ grunted. It was as close as he could get to acknowledging Lyle was right.
“If I drop myself at the station, will you be able to drive home?” Lyle asked.
“Yes.” Jesus, he needed to get a grip, before his men slung him in a wheel-chair and started spoon-feeding him farina.
“Okay, then.”
The way from the Traceys’ brought them into town on Route 117, up the hill along the river, curving by the gazebo to where Elm and 117 converged onto Church Street.
Through the snowy silver maple trees, he could see the gray stone stronghold of St. Alban’s. She was in there, behind one of the diamond-paned windows, a block away and as far out of reach as the moon.
On his CD player, Natalie Maines of the Dixie Chicks was crooning,
If he lived through this mess, he was never listening to country music again.
TWELVE
Clare Fergusson looked at the glossy pine-green door and wondered why it was that a closed door was the most frightening thing in the world. In her day, she had hauled soldiers into the open bay of her helicopter with enemy fire splattering the sands around them. She had been held at gunpoint by an angry, terrified woman. She had crawled through snake-infested swamps to prove to her survival instructor that she was as tough as any man in his course.
Those things had never scared her like a closed door. The door to her sister Grace’s hospital room, the first time she had to enter, knowing there was no hope. The door to her colonel’s office, the day she told him she was resigning her commission to enter the seminary. The door between the sacristy and the nave, stepping through to celebrate her first Eucharist as St. Alban’s rector.
The door to Margy Van Alstyne’s house.
Okay. She would give Margy her condolences and see if there was anything she could do. That was, if Margy didn’t slam the door in her face. She took a deep breath. The cold air burned her lungs, and she coughed.
The door opened. “You gonna come in, or are you gonna stand out there until your feet freeze?”
“Take off your coat before you parboil,” Margy said. Clare shucked her parka and barely had time to drape it over one of the ladder-back chairs before she was caught in a fierce hug. “I’m glad you’re here, and that’s a fact,” Margy said. “Want some coffee? It’s shade-grown, fair-trade.”
Clare almost laughed at the normalcy of it all. “That sounds good,” she said.
“Help yourself to some of the coffee cake.” Margy waved at the table, where cellophane-and tinfoil-wrapped platters crowded against stacks of antiwar tracts. “The food started arriving this morning and hasn’t let up yet.”
Clare’s grandmother Fergusson reared up out of her head.
Margy finished scooping coffee into the machine and shook her head as she poured the water in. “Don’t worry. If I get any more casseroles, I’ll have to store ’em outside in a snowbank.”
She took two mugs out of the dish drainer and gestured for Clare to take a seat. “I didn’t know if I’d get to see you,” she said, at the same moment Clare blurted, “I didn’t know if you’d want to see me.”
They smiled uncertainly at each other.
“I’m sorry, Margy. I’m so very sorry.”
The older woman laid a cracked and mended sugar bowl on the table. Inside were brown crystals the size of fine gravel. “You may need to get a bit more specific with that.”
“I’m sorry about Linda’s death. I’m sorry I… came between her and your son. I’m sorry-” Clare’s voice broke, and she tried to stop the tears rushing into her eyes. “I’m sorry I made her last days unhappy.” She covered her mouth, but she couldn’t silence her crying. Margy rested her hands on Clare’s shoulders and rubbed her back. “I’m sorry…” Clare hiccupped. “I came here to comfort you. Not to…” A noisy sob cut her off.
“Seems like you’re sorry for an awful lot.”
Clare, wet-faced and choking, nodded.
“You let it all out.” Margy continued to rub her back. “Best thing for a body, to cry it all out.”
So Clare blubbered and wept at Margy Van Alstyne’s kitchen table until her sobs settled to shuddering breaths and her tears dried up.
Margy tipped her chin up. “That’s better, in’t it?”
“I deed to blow my dose,” Clare said.
Margy went to a basket next to the dryer and plucked a handkerchief from the mound of clean laundry. “You’re in luck,” she said, handing it to Clare. Clare blew lustily while Margy ran one of her dishcloths under the faucet. Then she mopped Clare’s face with cold water.
“I feel like a seven-year-old.”
“Everybody needs a little mothering now and again.” Margy poured two mugs of coffee and sat down kitty- corner from Clare. “I suppose you’d like to know how Russell is doing.”
Clare nodded. “Yes, ma’am.”
“He’s taking it hard, like you’d think. Of course, in his case, he’s trying to keep it all bottled up. I wish he’d sit down and have a good cry like you just did.” She spooned sugar into her coffee. “He’s at work now. Can you believe it? He thinks finding whoever’s responsible is going to make him feel better. My poor boy.”
“Is there anything I can do?”
Margy looked at her shrewdly. “I dunno. Is there?”
Clare examined the surface of her coffee. “I mean, any way I can help you out.”
“I guess I’ve got things well enough in hand. We can’t make any arrangements until her sister gets here-poor woman, if she didn’t take it some hard when I broke the news. She and Linda’s all that’s left of their family.”
“Who are you going to have do the service?”
“Well, Linda was a Catholic when she was young, but she never attended any church as long as I knew her. I figured I’d ask Dr. Tobin. He’s my pastor over to Center Street Methodist in Fort Henry. Of course”-and she suddenly sounded every one of her seventy-five years-“everything’s on hold until the medical examiner finishes up whatever he has to do. I told that to her sister, but she would fly up here. Janet’s husband’s gone to Albany to pick her