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Authors: Catherine Coulter

BOOK: Double Take
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“Thank you.” Julia showed all of them out, then turned to face Cheney, who'd remained standing next to her. “I'll need your address, Agent, so I can return your clothes after they've been cleaned.”
He pulled out one of his FBI cards, wrote his address on the back as well as his cell number, and handed it to her. “You're looking a bit on the pale side, Julia. Get yourself to bed. I'll check with you in the morning. Oh yeah, turn on the alarm after I leave.” He turned back to her in the open doorway. “Rub Vitamin E on the bruise, it might help.”
“Will I see you again, Agent?”
“Oh yes, I'm sure you will, Mrs. Ransom.” He nodded to the officers in the patrol car, climbed into his Audi, and drove home to what he once thought was his good-sized Belvedere Street condo, nestled in among town houses and small apartment buildings not a quarter mile above Haight-Ashbury.
CHAPTER 7
MAESTRO, VIRGINIA
Sheriff Dixon Noble took the call from his father-in-law, Chappy Holcombe, at three twenty-five on a Thursday afternoon. It was a moment he knew he'd never forget until he was stretched out dead.
"Dix? Chappy here. I've got to talk to you. This is really important. Can you come out to Tara right now?”
There was something about his voice that kept Dix from telling his autocratic father-in-law whatever it was would have to wait, that he was a working stiff, that the people of Maestro expected their sheriff—“What is it, Chappy?”
All Chappy would say was, “It's about Christie. Hurry, Dix, hurry.”
Dix went cold. Christie, his wife, had been gone for well over three years, literally with him one day and gone the next. There had been no word of any kind, not a single lead in all this time. But Chappy wouldn't say anything more over the phone. “Get here, Dix, fast as you can.”
He made it to Chappy Holcombe's Tara, a southern mansion built along the lines of the fictional Tara as described by Margaret Mitchell, in under thirteen minutes. Dix was a mess by the time he pulled into the large circular driveway in front of the house.
Chappy's butler, Bernard, as old as the gnarly pine tree on Lone Tree Hill just outside of Maestro, or one of the sessile oaks in front of Tara, greeted Dix, his bald head shiny in the watery early spring afternoon sunshine. He said, his words spewing out fast, tumbling over one another, “Dix, he's in his study. Hurry, something's bad wrong, but I don't know what it is, just that it's about Christie.” Dix hurried after him, not saying a word.
Bernard opened Chappy's study door and stood aside for Dix to enter.
Chappy was so rich he could probably bankroll the state of Virginia single-handedly for at least two days, a man who knew his own power and used it ruthlessly in business and at home, to keep his heir, Tony, and his heir's wife, Cynthia, under his thumb. He was standing by his big antique mahogany desk, looking every inch the tall, lean aristocrat in a beautiful pale blue cashmere turtleneck sweater and black bespoke wool slacks. Dix always felt like a mutt standing next to him. Dix looked closely at his face. Chappy looked haggard, nearly frantic, not a sharp edge in sight, no malice brimming in his eyes, no hint he was a man who could blast a killing verbal blow in a smooth ironic voice. Chappy's pupils were dilated, his face pale with shock.
What was happening here? What had he heard about Christie? Dix's heart pounded hard and fast.
“Chappy.” Dix laid his hands on the older man's shoulders, steadying him. “What's wrong? What is this about Christie?”
Chappy shook himself, and Dix saw the effort it took to get himself together. “Jules saw Christie.”
“Jules?”
“Yes, you know Christie's godfather—Jules Advere. You've met him over the years, Dix, don't you remember? He's been living in San Francisco for the past year, claimed he wanted a big city with a slower pace. He lives in Sea Cliff, right on the ocean, his house looks toward the Golden Gate Bridge.”
“Yes, okay. You say he saw Christie?”
“He called me, said he saw her.”
Dix's hands fell away. He took a step back. He stared blindly at his father-in-law, shaking his head back and forth, his brain blank. He had to make himself breathe. He had to get spit in his mouth so he could talk. No, it wasn't possible.
Chappy grabbed Dix's wrist. “You know if anyone else had told me that, I'd have dismissed it out of hand, maybe even belted them, but not Jules. He was there when Christie was born. He knew her all her life. He might be older than I am but he's not senile, Dix, and he's still got the eyesight of an owl. Truth is, I'd trust him with everything but my money.”
And that was saying something indeed. Dix had met Jules Advere perhaps a dozen times before Christie had simply up and vanished that long-ago day. He pictured him in his mind the day Jules had flown into Richmond from some weird place like Latvia, a short, older man with a big dark mustache and a good-sized paunch on him that made Chappy razz him endlessly. He'd worked as hard as anyone trying to find Christie, did everything he could to comfort the boys. He'd even hired his own private investigator—but with no luck. No one had had an ounce of luck.
Jules had seen Christie? No, that was impossible. Dix had long ago accepted that Christie was dead, killed by some psychopath and buried in an unmarked grave somewhere, and it had sunk him deep into himself for too long a time, and nearly brought his sons into the pit with him. He thought about his sons, Rob and Rafe, what this news could do to them. He wasn't going to say a word about this to them. Not yet.
He was a cop and he had to take a step back, had to get it together. “Chappy, where did Jules say he'd seen her? In San Francisco? Did he speak to her? Come on now, get your thoughts together and tell me everything.”
Chappy slumped down onto a three-hundred-year-old Hepplewhite chair covered with what looked like the original green-and-white-striped brocade. He looked down at his Italian loafers. Dix saw his hands were trembling. Chappy said, “He was attending a fundraiser at one of those big yahoo penthouses on Russian Hill, given by a man supporting a senatorial candidate. Jules said it was this guy's wife—he said there was no doubt in his mind. She was Christie.”
“What's this guy's name?”
“Thomas Pallack. I've done business with him. He was here in Maestro once, maybe three and a half years ago, before Christie disappeared. He only stayed a couple of days. I don't think he met Christie, though. He's decades older than even the income tax laws, and he's wealthy, made his money in oil and diversified. Like I said, it's his wife, that's what Jules said—his wife is Christie.”
Dix said slowly, patiently, “You know that's impossible, Chappy. You know it.”
“I know it, but still, Dix, I'm just not as certain as you are. Yes, yes, I know she'd never have left you willingly. She loved you and the boys more than anything. Hell's bells, she even loved me, even tolerated her brother's idiot wife. But Jules swore it was her. It shook him so much to actually see her he told me he thought he was having a heart attack—searing pain all up his right side and he couldn't breathe. He said he whispered ‘Christie' to her and Thomas kneeled down beside him while they were calling 911. He said Pallack leaned close and said, ‘My wife's name is Charlotte. Do you understand? Don't forget it.' Jules said Christie looked down at him like a hostess would at someone who was ruining her party, a sort of polite forbearance because the last thing she wanted was for this old buzzard to die on her beautiful oak parquet floor. Admittedly he felt really sick at this point, even admitted he didn't see any recognition in her eyes when she looked at him, and that bothered him because, you see, he knew it was her.”
“So you're saying Jules never got to speak to this woman before he collapsed?”
“No, just the one look in the receiving line, and then he was lying on his back staring up at her. The paramedics arrived and whisked him off to the hospital. Turns out he hadn't had a heart attack, but the doctors wondered if he'd suffered some sort of temporary stroke, said it could paralyze your body and make you keel over, that it could happen to an old guy like him. He called me from the hospital a few minutes ago while they were still doing all their infernal tests, said you had to get out to San Francisco, find out what Christie is doing there.”
“It's not Christie, Chappy. She's dead. You heard what Jules said, the woman looked at him with no recognition at all.”
“Then who the hell is she?”
Dix only shrugged, but all the memories, all the faded pain was back again, almost bowling him over, as it had in those early months after she'd disappeared.
It isn't Christie!
He said, “We're all supposed to have a twin somewhere on this earth, a thought that should curdle your own blood, Chappy. Evidently Jules met Christie's twin, nothing more, nothing less. It wasn't her, Chappy, it couldn't have been Christie. So you know this guy Thomas Pallack, it's a coincidence, nothing more.”
“No, Dix, wait! What if Thomas Pallack's wife is Christie and she's lost her memory or something? She was in some sort of accident or had some sort of mental breakdown? Hell, maybe she escaped something terrifying that made her repress everything.”
“Chappy—”
“She might have ended up in San Francisco, met Thomas Pallack by chance, married him for whatever reason, I mean, the guy is older, and—if that's so then naturally she wouldn't recognize Jules. She had to have a name, so she called herself Charlotte. Dix, Jules is
so
certain. You'll go to San Francisco, won't you? Hell, no problem, both of us will go.”
Dix didn't pause, simply walked to the door of Chappy's study, and said over his shoulder, “Chappy, I'll tell you what. I'll go to San Francisco, find out what this is all about. I'll meet this Thomas Pallack and his wife. I don't want you to come with me, Chappy. I need you to stay here, see to the boys.” Then he stopped, turned. “Chappy,” he said very quietly to Christie's father—not to the man whose soggy morals sometimes drove him nuts, the man who wouldn't lift his foot off his own son's neck—“please don't get your hopes up. It simply can't be Christie. Deep down you know it. You know Christie is dead.”
Chappy didn't say a word.
“And don't say anything about this to anyone, all right? Not even to Tony or Cynthia. The last thing I want is for the boys to hear their mother might be alive, have them go through this pain again when I know it simply can't be true.”
“You got it, Dix. I won't say anything.”
When Dix reached the double front doors, Chappy's white face still stark in his mind, Bernard appeared at his elbow. Dix said, “Make sure you see to Chappy, Bernard. I think he needs a good shot of something. I know Mrs. Goss keeps a bottle of twenty-five-year-old single malt Scotch whisky. What's it called?”
Bernard said with reverence, “Lord of the Isles. She said she gave it to her husband for an anniversary gift, then he up and died the next week. She hoards it. I think it must be about thirty years old now, almost as many years as she's been the house-keeper here!”
Dix nodded. “Maybe she'll break it out this once.”
“Doubtful,” Bernard said, then blurted out, “Do you think it's Christie, Dix?”
So Bernard had been listening at the door. Dix would have been, too. He looked Bernard straight on, saw the concern in his dark eyes. Bernard had been with Chappy since the two of them were in their twenties. “No, it can't be. It's some sort of mistake. Bernard, like I told Chappy, this has to stay among the three of us. You understand? Not even Mrs. Goss.”
Bernard nodded. “Last thing I want is for Rob and Rafe to hear about this.”
“That's good,” Dix said. “I'll see you again soon, Bernard.”
CHAPTER 8
Two hours later, at the dinner table, Dix slipped Brewster, his four-pound white toy poodle, a sliver of chicken breast after he'd stripped off the deep-fried crust. He checked to see that both boys had eaten some of the fresh green beans on their plates, and lied cleanly. “I've got this meeting up in San Francisco that will last a couple of days. The FBI called me today, said they wanted me to talk on a panel about crime scenes. Truth be told, there's still lots of interest about our bizarre murder in Winkel's Cave. That'll be what everyone will want me to talk about.”
“Sure is short notice, Dad,” Rafe said, frowning down at his crispy chicken leg. Rafe was fourteen, still skinny as a rail, with eyes dark like Dix's. He was going to be a lady-killer, as Chappy told Dix whenever he saw his grandson. Just like Rob. Have you given them The Talk, Dix? Dix rolled his eyes now, remembering how he'd given them both The Talk, though they were as embarrassed as he was. It gave him a headache to think about it. Why wasn't Rafe eating? He was always eating. Dix saw the huge pile of bones on his plate and realized Rafe's tank was full. Dix pointed to the pile of green beans still on his plate, and watched his son pick one up and began chewing on it. “It's not like San Francisco is just across the state or something.”
“No, it's a long trip.”
“Isn't Ruth coming tomorrow?” Rob asked. “She said she wanted to see me pitch against the Panthers.”
Ruth Warnecki, a former Washington, D.C., cop and now an FBI special agent, worked in the Criminal Apprehension Unit at the Hoover Building. He'd known her since he'd saved her life a little more than two months ago. She was smarter than she had a right to be, as obstinate and persistent as he was, and she was endlessly kind. Fact was, he was crazy about her. Thinking about her made him grin at odd moments and sing in the shower, particularly when he pictured her on her back beneath him, her strong legs wrapped tight around him.

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