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Authors: Linwood Barclay

Tags: #Crime &, #Mystery

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BOOK: Clouded Vision
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Keisha

Keisha Ceylon was ready with her ‘I feel your pain’ smile. First impressions were everything. You had to come across, first and foremost, as sincere. So you couldn’t overdo the smile. It had to be held back. You didn’t want to show any teeth. No empty-headed, sweet and sickly smile that looked as if it had been pasted on. You had to get into the moment. You had to
believe
you were on a mission. Most of all, you had to look as though you were sorry to even be here, and that this really was the last place on earth you wanted to be.

Yet you were
compelled
to be here. You simply had no choice.

She saw the man pull back the curtain to get a look at her and gave him the smile. It was almost regretful.

Then the door opened.

‘Yes?’ he said.

‘Mr Garfield?’

‘That’s right.’ He leaned out of the door, looking past her down to the street.

‘My name is Keisha Ceylon. I’m so sorry to trouble you at a time like this.’ She extended a hand. The man hesitated before he took it.

‘Yes, well, this is a very stressful time. Who are you … who are you with?’

Keisha guessed, with those parrots dangling from her earlobes, that Wendell wasn’t going to take her for some plainclothes detective.

‘I guess I’m what you’d call a consultant,’ she said.

‘For who?’

‘I work for people who find themselves in situations such as yours, Mr Garfield.’

‘You’re, what, a private detective?’

‘No. Perhaps, if I could come inside, I could explain it better to you?’

When you were still on the front step, they could slam the door in your face. However, once you were in the house, it was harder for them to get rid of you. She could see he was thinking about it.

After a moment’s hesitation, he opened the door wide. ‘Of course, come in.’

He led her into the living room and invited her to take one of the chairs across from the settee, which was where he sat.

‘What was your name again?’ he asked.

‘Keisha Ceylon. Perhaps you’ve heard of me.’

Before she could sit down, she had to move a ball of green wool that was speared through with two blue, foot-long knitting needles. She tucked the bundle over to the edge of the chair.

‘I … I can’t say that I have. What is it that you do? I mean, what’s the nature of your consulting?’

‘As I said, I offer my services to people when they’re dealing with the kind of crisis that you’re currently going through.’

‘Missing wives?’

‘Well, any kind of missing person. Do you mind if I ask you a couple of questions first?’

‘I suppose not.’

‘I know you and your daughter made yourself available to the media yesterday to outline your concerns about Mrs Garfield.’

‘That’s right.’

‘What sort of tips have the police received since then?’

Wendell shook his head. ‘Nothing.’

Keisha nodded in sympathy, as though this was about what she expected. ‘And what other efforts have the police been making in trying to find Mrs Garfield?’

‘Well, they’ve been trying to trace her movements since she left here Thursday night. That’s the night she does the grocery shopping, but she never went to the store.’

‘Yes, I knew that.’

‘And her credit cards haven’t been used. I know they’ve been showing her picture in all the places she usually goes, as well as talking to her friends and people she works with. All the things you might expect.’

Another sympathetic nod. ‘But so far, there are no leads. Is that what you’re telling me, Mr Garfield?’

‘It would seem so,’ he said.

Keisha Ceylon paused for what she thought was a suitably dramatic period of time, and then said, ‘I believe I can help you where the police cannot.’

‘How’s that?’

‘The police have employed all the typical methods that you would expect,’ she said. ‘They do what they do, but they are not trained to – what’s the phrase? To think outside the box. What I offer is something more out of the ordinary.’

‘And what is that, exactly?’

She looked him in the eye. ‘I see things, Mr Garfield.’

His mouth opened, but he was briefly at a loss for words. Finally, he said, ‘I’m sorry?’

‘I can see things,’ she repeated. ‘Let me make this as simple and as clear as I can. Mr Garfield, I have visions.’

A small laugh erupted from him. ‘Visions?’

Keisha was very careful to maintain her cool. Don’t get defensive. Don’t overplay your hand. ‘Yes,’ she said simply. She would play for time and make him ask the questions.

‘What, uh, what kind of visions?’

‘I’ve had this gift – if you can call it that, I’m not really sure – since I was a child, Mr Garfield. I have visions of people in distress.’

‘Distress,’ he said quietly. ‘Really.’

‘Yes,’ she said again.

‘And you’ve had a vision of my wife? In distress?’

She nodded solemnly. ‘Yes, I have.’

‘I see.’ A bemused smile crossed his lips. Keisha had expected this. ‘And you’ve decided to share this vision with
me
, and not the police.’

‘As I’m sure you can understand, Mr Garfield, the police are often not receptive to people with my talents. It’s not just that they’re sceptical. When I’m able to make progress where they have not, they feel it reflects badly on them. So I directly approach the family involved.’

‘Of course you do,’ he said. ‘And how is it you get these visions? Do you have, like, a TV aerial built into your head or something?’

She smiled. ‘I wish I could answer your question in a way that someone could understand. If I knew how these visions come to me, I might be able to find a way to turn them off.’

‘So it’s a curse as well as a blessing,’ he said.

Keisha ignored the sarcasm. ‘Yes, a bit like that. Let me tell you a story. One night, about three years ago, I was driving to the shopping mall. I was just minding my own business when this … image came into my head. All of a sudden I could barely see the road in front of me. It was as though the view before me had turned into a movie screen.

‘I saw this girl, who couldn’t have been more than five or six. She was in a bedroom, but it was not a little girl’s bedroom. There were no dolls or playhouses or anything like that. The room was decorated with sports memorabilia. There were trophies, posters of football players on the wall, a catcher’s mitt on the desk, and a baseball bat leaning against the wall in the corner. This little girl was crying, saying she wanted to go home, pleading to someone to let her leave. Then there was a man’s voice, and he was saying, not yet, you can’t go home yet, not until we get to know each other a little better.’

She took a breath. Garfield was trying to look neutral, but Keisha could tell she had him hooked.

‘Well, I nearly drove off the road. I slammed on the brakes and pulled over to the hard shoulder. By then, this vision, these images, had vanished, like smoke that had been blown away. However, I knew what I’d seen. I’d seen a little girl in trouble, a little girl who was being held against her will.

‘So, in this particular situation, because I did not know who the actual people involved were, I made a decision to go to the police. I called them and said, ‘‘Are you working on a missing girl case? Is there perhaps something you haven’t yet made a statement about?’’ Well, they were quite taken aback. They said they really couldn’t give out that kind of information. And I said, ‘‘Is the girl about six years old? And was she last seen wearing a shirt with a Sesame Street character on it?’’ Well, now I had their attention.

‘They sent out a detective to talk to me, and he didn’t believe in visions any more than I would imagine you do. I think maybe they were thinking I might have actually had something to do with this girl’s disappearance, because how else could I know those kinds of details? But I said to him, talk to the family, find out who they know who’s really into sports, who’s won lots of trophies, particularly football trophies, maybe even baseball.

‘The detective said, yeah, sure, we’ll get right on that, as if he was humouring me. Then he left and made some calls. Within the hour, the police had gone to the home of a neighbour who fitted that description, and they rescued that little girl. They got to her just in time.’ Keisha paused. ‘Her name was Nina. And last week she celebrated her ninth birthday. She was alive, and well.’

Total bullshit
.

Keisha clasped her hands together and rested them in her lap, never taking her eyes off Wendell.

‘Would you like to call Nina’s father?’ she asked. ‘I think I could arrange that.’

Keisha didn’t think he’d take her up on the offer, but if he did, she had Larson, her boyfriend, on standby to take the call.

‘No, no, that’s OK,’ Garfield said. ‘That’s quite a tale.’

Keisha looked away and down at her hands, trying to be modest.

‘But I totally understand,’ she said, ‘if you’d like me to leave. Perhaps you think I am a con artist. There are plenty out there, believe me. I don’t know whether you’ve been contacted by a Winona Simpson, but she’s definitely one to watch out for. If you don’t want me to share my vision with you, I’ll leave right now and you won’t hear from me again. I just want to say, I hope the police find your wife soon, Mr Garfield, so that you and your daughter can get your lives back to normal.’

She stood up. Garfield was on his feet, too, and when Keisha extended her hand once again he took it right away.

‘Thank you for your time, and I’m so sorry to have troubled you.’

‘What will you do?’ he said. ‘I mean, if you’ve had this so-called vision, and I’m not the kind of person who believes in that sort of thing, what will you do now?’

‘I suppose,’ she said, ‘I’ll go and tell the police what I know, and see if there’s anyone there who cares. Sometimes, though, that has a way of backfiring. It doesn’t always work out the way it did with Nina. I’ve found that the police have a tendency to be hostile, and the tips you give them will end up being the last one they follow. I hope, for your wife’s sake, that they don’t take that attitude.’

‘So you’re going to the police,’ he said, more to himself than to Keisha.

‘Again, thank you for—’

‘Sit down. You might as well tell me how this works.’

Wendell

Wendell Garfield didn’t know what the hell to make of this woman. Did Keisha Ceylon really have visions? The story about that little girl was pretty convincing, but it wasn’t enough to persuade him Keisha was genuine. There was something about her, though, that was hard to dismiss.

His mind raced through the possibilities. The woman was trying to get money out of him, plain and simple. He had a feeling that, even though they hadn’t gotten around to the topic of money, it was coming. What better target than a husband desperate to find out what had happened to his missing wife?

Perhaps plenty of people in his position would be willing to engage a psychic, a medium – whatever this woman wanted to call herself. This might be so even if they believed, at best, that there was only a one in a million chance that she really knew anything. Isn’t that what someone who truly loved his wife would do?

Or maybe she wasn’t trying to con him. Maybe she really did have visions. Maybe she truly believed she had some kind of connection to people in trouble, and was here out of a sincere wish to help him. However, maybe what she had wasn’t a gift. Maybe she was a madwoman, with delusions. Her visions might be nothing more than the product of a twisted mind. In short, perhaps she was just hallucinating.

And then, of course, there was a third possibility: that she was the real thing.

Garfield considered that prospect highly unlikely. But what if, somehow, for reasons he did not yet understand, she was on to something? Did he want her talking to the police?

Not really.

The smartest course, for now, seemed to be to hear her out. He would hear what she had to say.

Once Keisha was back in the chair, with Wendell sitting across from her, he said, ‘First of all, let me apologise if I was at all rude earlier.’

‘Not at all. I understand that what I do, the talent I have, is difficult for many people to get their heads around.’

‘Yes, well, I have to admit, I have my doubts. But then again, I very much want to know what’s happened to Ellie. I need to find out where she is. I want her to come home. I suppose it doesn’t make sense to discount what you have to say until I’ve had a chance to hear it.’

Keisha smiled and nodded. ‘I think that’s very wise of you.’

‘So, if you want to tell me your vision, then, what the hell, let’s hear it.’

‘I truly value you being open-minded about this. I would have felt terrible, not being able to help you in your time of need.’

‘OK, then. Go ahead.’

‘There is one other matter to deal with first.’

Here we go
, he thought.

‘This gift that I have is also my livelihood,’ Keisha explained. ‘I’m sure, if you were to hire a private detective to assist you in finding your wife, you wouldn’t expect him to put in his time without being paid for it?’

‘Of course not.’

‘I’m pleased to hear you say that.’

‘And what sort of money are we talking here, Ms Ceylon?’ he asked.

‘One thousand dollars,’ she said, not being the least bit shy about it.

His eyebrows went up. ‘You’re not serious.’

‘I have a rare gift,’ Keisha said. ‘I believe it’s worth much more, but it would be my pleasure to help you for that sum, which I think is quite reasonable.’

He thought about it. ‘I’m not a rich man.’

‘I understand,’ she said. ‘I took that into account when I quoted that fee.’

‘I see. There’s a sliding scale? You take a look at the house and the kind of cars in the driveway, and if you see a BMW you jack the price up? You decide what the market will bear and so forth?’

Keisha started to get up. ‘I think I’ll just be on my way, Mr Garfield, if that’s OK with—’

‘How about this?’ he said. ‘You give me a hint of what your vision was all about, and if it sounds credible to me, then I’ll give you five hundred dollars. If the information you have leads to my finding Ellie, I’ll pay you another five hundred dollars.’

She considered his words for a moment, and then said, ‘I will tell you a bit about my vision, and if you wish to hear more, I will tell you everything for the full amount. One thousand dollars.’

He let out a long sigh. He could only imagine what she must be thinking. His wife is missing, and he’s going back and forth with her as if he’s buying a new Ford. He was worried how that might look, so he said, ‘All right then, we have a deal.’

‘I’m very pleased,’ she said. ‘Not just because we’ve reached a satisfactory arrangement, but because I do very much want to be able to help you.’

‘Yeah, yeah, fine.’

‘Do you have something of your wife’s that I might be able to hold?’

‘What for?’

‘It helps.’

‘I thought you’d already had your vision. I don’t understand why you need something of my wife’s to hold on to.’

‘It’s all part of the process. Some of the fuzzier details in my vision may come into sharper focus if I can hold something that belongs to the person, something that’s come into close contact with them.’

‘What do you need?’

‘An article of clothing would be best.’

‘Like her bathrobe or something?’

Keisha nodded. Garfield excused himself and went upstairs. A moment later he was coming back down the stairs with a pink robe in his hands. It was faded and tattered from many years of wear.

‘Thank you,’ Keisha said, placing the robe in her lap and laying both hands on it. She ran her fingertips over the material and closed her eyes.

Several seconds went by without her saying a word. Finally, Garfield interrupted her trance state and said, ‘Are you getting anything or what?’

‘Just a moment.’ She opened her eyes. ‘I’m feeling some … tingling.’

‘Tingling?’

‘It’s a little bit like when the hairs go up on the back of your neck. That’s when I know I’m starting to sense something.’

‘What? What are you sensing?’

‘Your wife, she’s …’

‘She’s what?’

‘She’s cold,’ Keisha said. ‘Your wife is very, very cold.’

BOOK: Clouded Vision
3.33Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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