'You know I can't help you,' said Oren. 'You laid it out yourself back at the house. You told me-'
'What I said back there-that was for my deputy's benefit.'
High school grudges were long-lived, and Dave Hardy would never forgive Oren for beating him bloody and senseless in front of half the town.
Isabelle Winston, Ph.D., stood upon a wooden deck that encircled her mother's retreat, a tower room at the top of the lodge. The crisp, cool air was filled with spraying birdseed, loud caws, whistles and trills, and the rush of wings. Hungry birds landed at feeders hung all around the railing, and the sated ones took flight.
The ornithologist ignored them. Birds were not her passion today.
Her binoculars were trained on a helicopter landing in the Hobbs meadow. She could easily identify her father, Addison, as he crossed the tall grass, one hand extended to greet the reporters piling out of the aircraft. Overhead, a private jet was making a descent at the county airstrip. More media? Of course. First the local radio station had created a serial murder from the bones of one lost boy, and now the circus had come to town.
She moved around to the other side of the tower and set the binoculars on the railing, startling a cowbird into flight and a high whistle of
Isabelle looked back at the sleeping woman on the other side of the glass wall. How many years ago had that bed been moved up here? When had the tower room become Sarah Winston's whole world?
Turning back to the telescope, Isabelle shifted it, and kept the sheriff's jeep in sight until it made the turn onto the coast highway, carrying Oren Hobbs away. Keeping track of Oren had once been the schoolgirl hobby of summer vacations. And now that he was out of sight, her interest in voyeurism faded. She opened the sliding glass door and stepped inside.
The tower room offered shade from the midday sun but no greater sense of privacy. The northern and southern exposures were floor-to-ceiling panes of glass, and there were no curtains. The walls, east and west, were made of plaster and covered with framed drawings from her mother's sketchbook. There were also photographs taken by the judge's youngest son, Joshua Hobbs. They pictured the early birthday balls, a time when her mother had looked forward to that annual event. By Addison 's account, the festivities of later years had been stressful. On those nights, Sarah Winston had been allowed no alcohol until the last guest had departed, and then her own private parties would become drunken stupors lasting for days.
This morning's stress had been resolved not by the bottle but with sleeping pills.
Sleeping beauty.
In her middle fifties now, the woman lying on the bed was greatly changed by time. But in repose, wrinkles smoothed, the good bones of a fabulous face could still be seen. Her eyes fluttered open, so blue, so wide. 'Belle?'
'Yes, Mom, I'm here.' Isabelle reached down to stroke her mother's hair. Once, the blond tresses had been natural, so silky. Now they felt coarse. 'It's after one. You must be starved.'
Her mother sat bolt upright on the bed. 'Is it true? I wasn't seeing things?'
'You were right. Oren Hobbs came home. I ran into him in town this morning.'
More accurately, she had chased him down with a very fast car and an old grudge.
Oren Hobbs stood by the window and looked out on the Saulburg street. This town seemed like a bustling metropolis compared to his lethargic Coventry, where a dog on crutches could outrun every car. Behind him, a fly buzzed round the room, and Sheriff Babitt's fingers drummed on his desk blotter.
'Pull up a chair, son.'
Oren was more inclined to leave, but the judge had raised him to be well mannered, and so the gentleman in blue jeans and cowboy boots accepted the invitation to sit down. By his posture, no one would guess his military background, for he slouched low in the chair. By outward appearance, he had shaken off twenty years of soldiering, as if that part of his life had been lived by someone else. This might well be the day after Josh had gone missing, the last time he had sat down to a conversation in the sheriff's private office.
'So,' said Cable Babitt, 'we have a deal? This is an old cold case, and I don't-'
'It never was a case. You wrote my brother off as a runaway.'
'The hell I did.' The sheriff spun his chair around to unlock a drawer in his credenza. When the chair swiveled back again, the man held a stack of files in his hands, and he settled them on the desk. 'There must've been a thousand people combing the woods for Josh. And I'll bet you not one of them ever saw that boy as a runaway.'
To be fair, a search of the forest had gone on for a solid month, long after all hope of finding Josh alive was gone.
'It's always been an open case.' The sheriff slapped one hand down on his pile of paperwork. 'This is it, all the files. There are no copies. Now this is a one-way deal. I don't share anything with you. But everything you find, Oren-you bring that straight to me.'
No copies? Active files should be in the hands of a case detective. The sheriff had at least five of them to cover a county this size. Why would this man shut out his own investigators?
'I'm a civilian now,' said Oren,
'Son, this is between you and me. It's not like I'm gonna give you a deputy's star.'
As if the sheriff might be only half bright, Oren carefully measured out the words, 'I'm-the-
'Oh, hell, I never thought you had anything to do with Josh's disappearance, and neither-'
'When I was seventeen, you asked me for an alibi.'
'And your alibi's one thing that isn't in these files. It was a good one. I believed it… but I never put it down on paper.' He tapped his temple. 'It's all up here. So I guess you're working for me. Now that it's a homicide investigation, you might need that old alibi.'
'I never-'
'No, Oren, you never said a word. Someone else came forward to account for your time that day. You wouldn't tell me a damn thing when you were a kid. But now you'll work this case for me.'
A gang of ravens made an assault on the bird feeders surrounding the tower room, and the flight songs of smaller birds were fading in the distance. The ravens had no song. They croaked.
'I don't see Judge Hobbs. He must've gone inside.' Sarah Winston handed the binoculars to her daughter and then bowed her head to look through the eyepiece of a telescope. 'I see your father. He's in the middle of that crowd of reporters.'
'The sheriff asked him to handle the media. That's his job today.'
More reporters had joined the feeding frenzy below, where Hannah Rice was chasing a station wagon off the grass. When another helicopter descended to the meadow, the housekeeper threw up her hands and retreated to the porch.
'Oh, Christ,' said Sarah, one eye to the telescope. 'You see that yellow Rolls-Royce? That's Ferris Monty's car. You remember him, don't you?'
Yes, Isabelle had a vivid recollection of Monty, though he had only come to dinner once, never to be invited back. His yellow Rolls pulled into the judge's driveway. It was a beautifully restored vintage model. She loved the car, but the little man behind the wheel revolted her. She had never shaken off the first impression of him formed in her childhood. 'Wasn't he a
Her mother nodded, never lifting her eyes from the telescope. 'Thirty years ago, he was a literary star on the rise. But he turned out to be a one-trick pony.'
This slur was charity. The man had de-evolved into a celebrity muckraker, a writer of gossip columns and exposes in the form of true-crime books. As a frequent guest on television, he was known to millions of viewers who had never read nor even heard of his one good piece of art.
'So he still keeps a house in Coventry?'
'Oh, yes,' said her mother. 'And he's still the only one in town who's never invited to my birthday ball.'
Isabelle imagined that the gossip columnist left a trail of slime instead of footprints as he walked toward the Hobbs house. The first reporter had spotted Ferris Monty, and now they all ran toward the slander man like children who have heard the calliope music of the ice cream truck. She focused on Monty's face. The pasty white blot in her lenses was capped with a thatch of black that might have been made of fur or feathers. 'He still has the same bad toupee. He should give it a name and buy it a flea collar.'
Monty was holding court with the crowd of reporters, and a war of egos was predictable. Her famous father would not enjoy sharing the spotlight with another celebrity.
The sheriff only listened for a few seconds and then said, 'Thanks, Addison,' and slammed the telephone receiver down on its cradle. 'One more thing, Oren. Stay the hell away from Ferris Monty.'
'Who is he?'
'He's famous,' said the sheriff, as if this might help. It did not. 'Well, maybe he only shows up on TV in California. Ferris's trade is gossip. If you see a chubby little jerk, white as bug larvae, that'll be him. You might remember his yellow Rolls-Royce.'
Oren nodded. He never forgot a classic car. 'It belonged to one of the summer people.'
'And now he lives in Coventry year-round.' Cable Babitt gathered up his file holders-all but one-and locked them away in his credenza. Then he picked up his car keys and sunglasses. 'I'll be gone for a while.'
When the door had closed on the sheriff, Oren glanced at the remaining folder that had been overlooked. It would be rude not to open it-since the sheriff had gone to some trouble, all but decorating this file with a neon arrow and then providing time and privacy to read it.
The name on the first page was not familiar, though, according to the sheriff's notes, this man had been a citizen of Coventry for years before Josh had vanished. William Swahn was identified as a former police officer from Los Angeles, wounded in the line of duty after barely one year on the job. Disabled, he had been pensioned off at the tender age of twenty-one. Today this ex-cop would be in his late forties.
Penned in the margins were the sheriff's updates, noting that the man was not licensed as a private investigator, though Swahn had conducted many interviews around town, all of them related to Josh's disappearance. Handwritten words at the top of one page described him as uncooperative, refusing to divulge the name of his client. A margin note listed the most likely client as Oren's father. This would make sense from Sheriff Babitt's point of view. The relatives of crime victims commonly hired private police when a case went cold.
Oren recognized the address on Paulson Lane, a house so well buried in the woods that lifelong residents of Coventry might be unaware of it. That property was well beyond the means of an ex- cop on a disability pension.
Was Swahn bleeding his client dry to make the mortgage payments?
No one looked up as Oren passed by the desks in the outer room. Apparently the deputies and civilian staff had been told not to interfere with him. Once outside the building, he stepped into the street to flag down a ride. A woman stopped. Whenever he had occasion to hitchhike, it was always a woman who stopped for him.