“They didn’t have to tear apart my place to find that check,” Lawrence said. “It was sitting right on the counter, in the kitchen, on top of some mail. I’d left it there so I’d remember to deposit it. They couldn’t miss it. It would have been the first thing they found.”
“Then why would they tear apart your office?” I asked. “And why would they want your folder on Trevor Wylie?”
But even as I said it, I knew Bullock and his crew would have had no use for the folder on Trevor Wylie.
But Trevor might have been interested in it.
And if Trevor knew that Lawrence Jones was investigating him, and had gone to get any incriminating evidence himself… After he’d turned back early on that drive out to Oakwood, he’d have had time to go to Lawrence’s before the detective and I were supposed to meet at Brentwood’s…
I looked at the cake and noticed that the carving knife I’d been using to cut slices was not there.
“Lawrence,” I said, “could Trevor have known that you were asking around about him?”
“I might have fucked up,” he said. “As I was walking away from the car, he was coming the other way, saw me. And then, if he noticed at some point the pictures were missing, well, he might have put it together.”
“And he knew where you lived,” I said. “Remember you gave him your card, told him to shove it up his ass when we found him in my backyard.”
“Yeah, that was mature.”
“Jesus, Lawrence, do you think it’s possible it wasn’t Bullock who tried to kill you that night in your apartment? I mean, Bullock said he didn’t do it, but at the time I didn’t think a denial from him meant much, but he wasn’t afraid to admit killing Stan, or…”
“Or what?” Lawrence said.
And I thought: Angie’s with him. She’s with him right now. She’s with the guy who attacked Lawrence and left him for dead.
39
I DROPPED THE PHONE and flew out the front door and down the steps of the porch. Sarah and Paul were standing in the driveway, the last of our guests gone, Paul making some derisive comments about the Virtue.
I must have appeared pretty alarmed, because Sarah, at the sight of me, looked horrified. “What?” she said.
“Which way did Angie and Trevor go?”
Paul pointed south. “That way,” he said. “What’s going on?”
I was running. Both Sarah and Paul were starting after me, and I shouted back to Sarah, “Call the police!” Sarah, bless her, didn’t ask questions, but ran straight into the house as Paul hung in with me.
We went past Trevor’s black Chevy, parked at the curb, Morpheus’s snout sticking out the half-rolled-down window. He jammed his entire head out, slobber dripping from his jowls, the sudden commotion of us running by sending him into a barking fit. He snapped at me and Paul as we ran by, scratched frantically at the windows with his long-nailed paws.
My eyes followed the sidewalk all the way down to the busy cross street, and there was no sign of either of them. I hadn’t gone all that far before I started feeling winded, but I wasn’t slowing down. Paul was keeping pace, and could easily have outrun me, but he didn’t know what, exactly, the mission was.
“What is it, Dad?” he asked.
“It’s Trevor,” I said, my arms and legs pumping.
“What about him?”
“It’s him. He’s the one who tried to kill Lawrence Jones.”
You could see it in his face, the flash of betrayal, how he’d accepted favors from someone who now presented a very real threat to our family.
“I’ll bet they’re at one of the cafes,” Paul said, and started to pull away from me. He got to the corner about ten seconds before I did, standing there, looking both ways, hoping for a glimpse of either of them. Not only was Paul younger and faster than I, but he had better eyesight, too. If anyone could spot Angie and Trevor, it would be him.
“There!” he said to me. “Come on!”
I followed him up the sidewalk, in and around people strolling and coming in and out of shops and cafes. And then we were upon them, Angie and Trevor standing outside a coffee shop, his hand on her elbow, trying to motion her inside, Angie pulling away, resisting.
“I don’t want to talk anymore, Trevor,” she said. “That’s it.”
“No, you listen!” Trevor said. “I’ve got things to say to-”
He glanced to his left, saw me and Paul standing there. “Daddy,” Angie said, and moved to join us, and Trevor yanked on her arm, dragging her back.
“Let her go, Trevor,” I said.
“Let go of my sister!” Paul shouted. I’d never heard him speak like that in his entire life.
“Shut up!” Trevor said. “Everybody just shut up!”
People who had been passing on the sidewalk quickly sensed there was an “incident” going on, and gave us a wide berth. Some had stopped to watch, but were hanging back.
With his free hand, he reached down into the pocket of his black coat and pulled out the knife that had gone missing from the kitchen. It was flecked with cake crumbs and frosting.
“Keep the fuck away!” he shouted, waving the knife in the air. Angie’s eyes were wide with fear.
Paul went to move forward, and I put my arm out, holding him back.
“Trevor,” I said, trying to be very calm, “put that knife away, and we’ll talk about things.”
He was moving his head slowly back and forth, looking at Angie, then at us and back to Angie. He spoke to her, the knife suspended in the air, none of us able to take a breath.
“I loved you,” he said. “I loved you so much.”
“Sure,” Angie whispered, a tear trailing down one cheek. “You’re a great guy, Trevor.”
“I don’t want to be some
“Trevor,” I said.
He paid no attention to me. “I couldn’t believe it, you with that other guy.
“Trevor,” I said again, softly. “Put down the knife.”
He shook his head angrily.
“Nothing really serious has happened so far,” I said. I hesitated, then added, “Even Mr. Jones is going to make it. I was just talking to him on the phone. He’s a hell of a lot better. So, right now, as of this moment, you’re in less trouble than you might think.”
Trevor’s cheeks turned crimson. “He was going to say bad things about me,” he said to me. “He took my pictures! He stole them right out of my car! He had no right to do that! And when I found them, he had all these notes written about me.”
“All anyone wants to do is help you, Trevor,” I said. “But you have to put down the knife and-”
Something brushed past my leg, and suddenly Morpheus was running up to Trevor, wagging his tail, leaping up with his paws, catching Trevor right in the stomach. He didn’t want to stab his own dog, so rather than push him off with his knife hand, Trevor released his grip on Angie’s arm to shove Morpheus’s head aside.
Angie bolted. Paul and I moved.
I went for the arm holding the knife, grabbing it with both hands as Paul grabbed Trevor around the middle,