soldiers looked. He nodded at something one of his men whispered to him, but he didn’t take his eyes off her. They were brown, but light brown, not the brown that most of the people she trusted had. They looked thoughtful and tired. He walked in the door past two men in dark blue golf shirts and khaki pants that Violet hadn’t noticed before, who were sprinkling black fingerprint dust on the furniture.
He sat down at the table across from her and stared into her eyes for a moment. “I’m Special Agent Marshall,” he said.
“Hi,” she answered in a small voice.
“You know that you’ve got a serious problem?”
“No,” said Vi. “I don’t.”
He pushed a few of the cards closer to her on the table. “You boarded an airplane under a false identity. You used these cards to rent a car, a hotel room, meals. That’s fraud. Forgery. Now, I know that you planned to pay the bills. Otherwise you would have no hope of fading back into being a law-abiding citizen when this was over. That was one of the reasons why my boss got tired of having people follow you around the country, and decided that I should have this talk with you.” He waited.
Violet watched with curiosity. He seemed to be waiting for her to say something important. If he knew she was going to deny it, then what was all of this about? No, he must be expecting her to admit it and say she was sorry.
She detected a subtle change in his eyes. She had been waiting for a change, but this wasn’t the one she had been expecting. She had assumed he would turn cold and cruel and contemptuous. Instead, he was like a man listening to a small, faraway sound. He knew something was wrong, the way Billy knew when he listened to the hum of their car’s engine. He must be very intelligent. For the first time, Violet was a little afraid of him.
He said, “What’s your name?”
She answered, “Violet Peterson.”
His eyes had a new intensity. “What’s your husband’s name?”
“William Tanaghrisson Peterson. He’s a professor of psychology at the University of Buffalo.”
“Jane McKinnon bought your plane ticket. Is she a relative? Are you related to Jane McKinnon?”
Violet nodded. “Not in the way you keep track of these things, but the way we do.”
“I see,” said Marshall. He stared at the table, where he had arranged her ID cards and licenses and tickets. He seemed to turn his mind inward, as though he had received a blow and he was testing how much it hurt. “I wish you hadn’t done this.”
“Done what?”
“She was under police surveillance. The F.B.I. thought it was following her around the country for over a week. You’ve been obstructing a murder investigation.”
“I flew out of Buffalo on a ticket with my own name on it. I’m here for a legitimate purpose. I don’t know anything about a murder investigation.”
“What legitimate purpose?”
“This week I was here for the Cherry Creek Powwow. Next I had planned to go to Wisconsin for another one.”
“You’re from New York. You must be some kind of Iroquois, right?”
“Seneca.”
“The people here are Cheyennes. In Wisconsin they’re what—Ojibway?”
“I was going to a Menominee celebration. You don’t have to be a Menominee. You could go, too. I’ve always wanted to make the powwow circuit, but there was always a reason why I couldn’t. This time I could.”
“Was that Jane’s idea?”
“Not really. Senecas made a point of traveling around to visit other nations a thousand years ago.”
“Has she done it?”
“Quite a few times, I believe. She used to be very political.”
Marshall’s face was sad. “You’re not afraid of what’s going to happen to you now, are you?”
Violet surprised herself. “I know you can make things very hard and unpleasant for me right now. But I know that if I wait, there’s a limit, an end. You have to let me out because I haven’t done anything wrong. At that point, my side gets to take its turn.”
“Your side?”
“My lawyers. I don’t know you, and I don’t know anything about this murder, and I don’t know how watching Jane would constitute an investigation. Maybe it does, but maybe it doesn’t. I don’t know what this really is, but I know what it will look like. It wouldn’t be the first time that police have used public safety as an excuse to harass members of a troublesome and politically active minority group who were going to a peaceful assembly.”
“Don’t worry,” said Marshall. “I’ve been around long enough to know better than to arrest people who want to be arrested.” He stared at her hard. “But that’s not the real penalty for obstructing a murder investigation.”
“What is?”
“Thousands of people get murdered in this country every year. We don’t catch all of the killers. Even if we find the man we’re looking for, get him convicted and put away, we’ll probably never know what else he did while we were looking for him. A body is being found somewhere tonight. Right now. We may not ever find out who that person used to be, let alone who killed her. Will you ever be absolutely sure that the man we’re looking for didn’t do it during the extra week you bought him?”
21
Jane flew to San Francisco as Julia Kieler, then boarded a flight in San Francisco for Rochester, Minnesota, using a driver’s license and credit card in the name Diane Fierstein. The old habits had come back almost too easily: never start in the direction of your real destination, never miss a chance to put a pursuer you haven’t yet seen at a disadvantage. She spent the flight lying back in her seat with her eyes closed.
What was Carey doing right now? He was probably asleep, even then holding the attention of the police at home. These days he had little possibility of getting himself into more trouble, but no possibility of freeing himself of suspicion. Jane’s practical purpose in going back there had been to present the police with a dull domestic scene that would make them lose interest in him. She supposed she should have known he would already be under surveillance, and that showing up would not change that. But the surveillance had a positive side: as long as the police were watching him, he was safe.
Was Violet Peterson safe? Jane had needed Vi as a decoy to break herself out, but that left Vi and Billy in the same state as Carey—frozen in place, watched and suspected, but not exactly in trouble because nothing they had done could easily be restated as a criminal charge.
She was more confident about placing Dahlman in the retirement home. As long as the money held out and he didn’t need the services of a doctor, he would almost certainly be safe. But the price of keeping him away from the police and his enemies was keeping him away from her too. Whatever else he knew would be of no use to her, because he was placed in storage like the others.
As she stepped off the plane into Rochester Municipal Airport, she wondered whether she had prudently provided for the safety of her family and friends, or simply locked in place everyone who might have helped her. She rented a car, drove it in a circular path to be sure she had attracted no attention at the airport, then committed herself to Route 52 and headed north.
She thought about her enemy, trying to feel for a solid, recognizable shape in the dark. She had asked Sid Freeman if he had ever seen any women or children among the clients sent to him. There had been few women and no children. Jane searched her memory again for a census of her own runners. After a few moments, she was sure: the people who were in jeopardy, but who had no relatives or friends or co-conspirators at hand ready to help them, were more often women or children than men. The people whose only option in times of danger was to run were the weak and the young. Most men would turn and fight unless the odds were absurd. They only came to her after they had tried on their own and failed. She didn’t have to spend any time wondering about the discrepancy. The one thing that few women and no children had was money, and Sid had said the face-changers were in it for