“Is that what I said?”
“Look, I’ve taken enough heat on this deal. A year of putting up with this — this small-town crap. I’ve turned handsprings to make this project work, but I’m not going to be his fall guy.”
Chase stared at Graffam in confusion. What was the man babbling about? Whose fall guy?
“I was out of state when it happened. I have witnesses who’ll swear to that.”
“Who are you working for?” Chase cut in.
Graffam’s jaw suddenly snapped shut. Slowly he sat back, his expression hardening to stone.
“So you have a backer,” said Chase. “Someone who’s put up the money. Someone who’s doing the dirty work. Who are you fronting for? The mob?”
Graffam said nothing.
“You’re scared, Graffam. I can tell.”
“I don’t have to answer any of your questions.”
Chase pressed the attack. “My brother was set to blow the whistle on Stone Coast, wasn’t he? So you sent him one of your threatening letters. But then you found out he couldn’t be blackmailed. Or bought off. So what did you do? Pay someone to take care of the problem?”
“Meaning murder?” Graffam burst out laughing. “Come on, Tremain. A broad killed him. We both know that. Dangerous creatures, broads. Tick ’em off and they get ideas. They see red, grab a kitchen knife and that’s it. Even the cops agree. It was a broad. She had the motive.”
“And you had a lot of money to lose. So did your backer. Richard already had his hands on your account numbers. He traced your invisible partner. He could have exposed the deal—”
“But he didn’t. He killed the article, remember? I had it on good authority it was gonna stay dead. So why should we go after him?”
Chase fell silent. That’s what Jill had said, that Richard was the one who’d canceled the article, called off the crusade. It was the one detail that didn’t make sense. Why had Richard backed down?
He brooded over that last possibility as he left Graffam’s office and walked to the car. What did he know about Jill, really? Only that she’d been with the
He’d planned to return at once to Rose Hill Cottage. Instead, he drove to the
He found the office manned only by a skeleton crew: the summer intern, tapping at a computer keyboard, and the layout tech, stooped over a drawing table. Chase walked past them, into Richard’s office, and went straight to the file cabinet.
He found Jill Vickery’s employment file right where it should be. He sat at the desk and opened the folder.
Inside was a neatly typed resume, three pages, all the right names and jobs. B.A., Bowdoin, 1977. Masters, Columbia, 1979. Stints on the city desk,
Something about that resume bothered him. Something that didn’t seem quite right. It was enough to make him reach for the phone and dial the
Chase next called the
Still, that resume. What was it that bothered him?
The obits.
He dialed the
Ditto for San Francisco.
Half the resume was a fraud. Was it just a case of padding a thin work history? And what was she doing during those eight years between college and her job with the
Once again he reached for the phone. This time he called Columbia University, Department of Journalism. In any given year, how many students could possibly graduate with a master’s degree? And how many of these students would have the first name Jill?
There was only one in 1979, they told him. But it wasn’t a Jill Vickery who’d graduated. It was a Jill Westcott.
Once again, he called the
A few minutes later it slid out of the fax machine, sharp and clear.
A photo of Jill Westcott, now named Jill Vickery. And with it was a tale of coldblooded murder.
Miranda sat in the fading light of day and stared listlessly at her surroundings. She’d spent the afternoon rummaging through the bathroom and two bedrooms. Now she was hot, dusty and discouraged. Nothing of substance had turned up, only innocuous bits of paper — store receipts, a ten-year-old postcard from Spain, another typewritten note from M.
…I am not the weak little nothing I used to be. I can live without you quite nicely, and I intend to do so. I don’t need your pity. I am not like the others, those women with minds the size of walnut shells. What I want to know, what I don’t understand, is what attracts you to creatures like that? Is it the jiggling flesh? The cow-eyed worship? Well, it doesn’t mean a thing. It’s empty devotion. Without your money, you wouldn’t rate a second glance from those bimbos. I’m the only one who doesn’t give a damn how much you have in the bank. And now you’ve lost me.
The bitterness, the pain of that letter seemed to rub off on her own mood. She put it back in the drawer, buried it among the silky underclothes. Another woman’s lingerie. Another woman’s anguish.
By the time she’d straightened up the room again the afternoon had slid toward twilight. She didn’t turn on the lamp. It was soothing, the veil of semidarkness, the chirp of crickets through the open window. From the field came that indefinable scent of evening — the mist from the sea, the cooling grasses. She went to a chair by the window, sat down and leaned her head back to rest. So many doubts, so many worries weighed upon her. Always, looming over every tentative moment of joy, was that threat of prison. There were times, during these past few days of freedom, that she had almost been able to push the thought from mind. But in the moments like this, when the silence was deep and she was alone in her fears, the image of prison bars seemed to close around her.
She shuddered back to alertness.
Downstairs, the screen door had softly squealed open.
“Chase?” she called. “Is that you?” There was silence. She rose from the chair and went to the top of the stairs. “Chase?”
She heard the screen door softly tap shut, then there was nothing, only the distant chirp of crickets from the fields.
Her first instinct was to reach for the light switch. Just in time she stopped herself. Darkness was her friend. It would hide her, protect her.
She shrank away from the stairs. Trembling, she stood with her back pressed against the wall and listened. No new sounds drifted up from the first floor. All she heard was the hammering of her own heartbeat. Her palms