Five Scarpetta Novels (65 page)

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Authors: Patricia Cornwell

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“Benton, why don't you shower and then we'll talk more about our plans for the week,” I said, dismissing recollections I could not bear. “A few days alone to read and walk the beach would be just what you need. You know how much you love the bike trails. Maybe it would be good for you to have some space.”

“Lucy needs to know.” He got up, too. “Even if Carrie's confined at the moment, she's going to cause more trouble that involves Lucy. That's what Carrie's promising in her letter to you.”

He walked out of the kitchen.

“How much more trouble can anybody cause?” I called after him as tears rose in my throat.

“Dragging your niece into the trial,” he stopped to say. “Publicly. Splashed across
The New York Times.
Out on the AP,
Hard Copy, Entertainment Tonight.
Around the world.
FBI agent was lesbian lover of deranged serial killer. . . .”

“Lucy's left the FBI with all its prejudices and lies and preoccupations with how the mighty Bureau looks to the world.” Tears flooded my eyes. “There's nothing left. Nothing further they can do to crush her soul.”

“Kay, this is about far more than the FBI,” he said, and he sounded spent.

“Benton, don't start . . .” I could not finish.

He leaned against the doorway leading into my great room, where a fire burned, for the temperature had not gotten above sixty degrees this day. His eyes were pained. He did not like me to talk this way, and he did not want to peer into that darker side of his soul. He did not want to conjure up the malignant acts Carrie might carry out, and of course, he worried about me, too. I would be summoned to testify in the sentencing phase of Carrie Grethen's trial. I was Lucy's aunt. I supposed my credibility as a witness would be impeached, my testimony and reputation ruined.

“Let's go out tonight,” Wesley said in a kinder tone. “Where would you like to go? La Petite? Or beer and barbecue at Benny's?”

“I'll thaw some soup.” I wiped my eyes as my voice faltered. “I'm not very hungry, are you?”

“Come here,” he sweetly said to me.

I melted into him and he held me to his chest. He was salty when we kissed, and I was always surprised by the supple firmness of his body. I rested my head, and the stubble on his chin roughed my hair and was white like the beach I knew I would not see this week. There would be no long walks on wet sand or long talks over dinners at La Polla's and Charlie's.

“I think I should go see what she wants,” I finally said into his warm, damp neck.

“Not in a million years.”

“New York did Gault's autopsy. I don't have those photographs.”

“Carrie knows damn well what medical examiner did Gault's autopsy.”

“Then why is she asking me, if she knows?” I muttered.

My eyes were closed as I leaned against him. He paused and kissed the top of my head again and stroked my hair.

“You know why,” he said. “Manipulation, jerking you around. What people like her do best. She wants you to get the photos for her. So she can see Gault mangled like chopped meat, so she can fantasize and get off on that. She's up to something and the worst thing you could do is respond to her in any way.”

“And this GKSWF—something or other? Like out of a personal?”

“I don't know.”

“And the One Pheasant Place?”

“No idea.”

We stayed a long time in the doorway of this house I continued to think of singularly and unequivocally as my own. Benton parked his life with me when he was not consulting in big aberrant cases in this country and others. I knew it bothered him when I consistently said
I
this and
my
that, although he knew we were not married and nothing we owned separately belonged to both of us. I had passed the midline of my life and would not legally share my earnings with anyone, including my lover and my family. Maybe I sounded selfish, and maybe I was.

“What am I going to do while you're gone tomorrow?” Wesley got back to that subject.

“Drive to Hilton Head and get groceries,” I replied. “Make sure there's plenty of Black Bush and Scotch. More than usual. And sunblock SPF 35 and 50, and South Carolina pecans, tomatoes, and Vidalia onions.”

Tears filled my eyes again, and I cleared my throat.

“As soon as I can, I'll get on a plane and meet you, but I don't know where this case in Warrenton is going to go. And we've already been over this. We've done it before. Half the time you can't go, the rest of the time it's me.”

“I guess our lives suck,” he said into my ear.

“Somehow we ask for it,” I replied, and most of all I felt an uncontrollable urge to sleep.

“Maybe.”

He bent down to my lips and slid his hands to favorite places.

“Before soup, we could go to bed.”

“Something very bad is going to happen during this trial,” I said, and I wanted my body to respond to him but didn't think it could.

“All of us in New York again. The Bureau, you, Lucy,
at her trial. Yes, I'm sure for the past five years she has thought of nothing else and will cause all the trouble she can.”

I pulled away as Carrie's sharp, drawn face suddenly jumped out of a dark place in my mind. I remembered her when she was strikingly pretty and smoking with Lucy on a picnic table at night near the firing ranges of the FBI Academy at Quantico. I could still hear them teasing in low playful voices and saw their erotic kisses on the mouth, deep and long, and hands tangled in hair. I remembered the strange sensation running through my blood as I silently hurried away, without them knowing what I had seen. Carrie had begun the ruination of my only niece's life, and now the grotesque coda had come.

“Benton,” I said. “I've got to pack my gear.”

“Your gear is fine. Trust me.”

He hungrily had undone layers of my clothing, desperate for skin. He always wanted me more when I was not in sync with him.

“I can't reassure you now,” I whispered. “I can't tell you everything is going to be all right, because it won't be. Attorneys and the media will go after Lucy and me. They will dash us against the rocks, and Carrie may go free. There!”

I held his face in my hands.

“Truth and justice. The American way,” I concluded.

“Stop it.”

He went still and his eyes were intense on mine.

“Don't start again,” he said. “You didn't used to be this cynical.”

“I'm not cynical, and I'm not the one who started anything,” I answered him as my anger rose higher. “I'm not the one who started with an eleven-year-old boy and
cut off patches of his flesh and left him naked by a Dumpster with a bullet in his head. And then killed a sheriff and a prison guard. And Jayne—Gault's own twin sister. Remember that, Benton? Remember? Remember Central Park on Christmas Eve. Bare footprints in snow and her frozen blood dripping from the fountain!”

“Of course I remember. I was there. I know all the same details you do.”

“No, you don't.”

I was furious now and moved away from him and gathered together my clothes.

“You don't put your hands inside their ruined bodies and touch and measure their wounds,” I said. “You don't hear them speak after they're dead. You don't see the faces of loved ones waiting inside my poor, plain lobby to hear heartless, unspeakable news. You don't see what I do. Oh no, you don't, Benton Wesley. You see clean case files and glossy photos and cold crime scenes. You spend more time with the killers than with those they ripped from life. And maybe you sleep better than I do, too. Maybe you still dream because you aren't afraid to.”

He walked out of my house without a word, because I had gone too far. I had been unfair and mean, and not even truthful. Wesley knew only tortured sleep. He thrashed and muttered and coldly drenched the sheets. He rarely dreamed, or at least he had learned not to remember. I set salt and pepper shakers on corners of Carrie Grethen's letter to keep it from folding along its creases. Her mocking, unnerving words were evidence now and should not be touched or disturbed.

Ninhydrin or a Luma Lite might reveal her fingerprints on the cheap white paper, or exemplars of her writing might be matched with what she had scrawled to me.
Then we would prove she had penned this twisted message at the brink of her murder trial in Superior Court of New York City. The jury would see that she had not changed after five years of psychiatric treatment paid for with their taxes. She felt no remorse. She reveled in what she had done.

I had no doubt Benton would be somewhere in my neighborhood because I had not heard his BMW leave. I hurried along new paved streets, passing big brick and stucco homes, until I caught him beneath trees staring out at a rocky stretch of the James River. The water was frigid and the color of glass, and cirrus clouds were indistinct chalky streaks in a fading sky.

“I'll head out to South Carolina as soon as I get back to the house. I'll get the condo ready and get your Scotch,” he said, not turning around. “And Black Bush.”

“You don't need to leave tonight,” I said, and I was afraid to move closer to him as slanted light brightened his hair and the wind stirred it. “I've got to get up early tomorrow. You can head out when I do.”

He was silent, staring up at a bald eagle that had followed me since I had left my house. Benton had put on a red windbreaker, but he looked chilled in his damp running shorts, and his arms were crossed tightly at his chest. His throat moved as he swallowed, his pain radiating from a hidden place that only I was allowed to see. At moments like this I did not know why he put up with me.

“Don't expect me to be a machine, Benton,” I quietly said for the millionth time since I had loved him.

Still he did not speak, and water barely had the energy to roll toward downtown, making a dull pouring sound as it unwittingly headed closer to the violence of dams.

“I take as much as I can,” I explained. “I take more
than most people could. Don't expect too much from me, Benton.”

The eagle soared in circles over the tops of tall trees, and Benton seemed more resigned when he spoke at last.

“And I take more than most people can,” he said. “In part, because you do.”

“Yes, it works both ways.”

I stepped closer to him from behind and slipped my arms around the slick red nylon covering his waist.

“You know damn well it does,” he said.

I hugged him tight and dug my chin into his back.

“One of your neighbors is watching,” he said. “I can see him through sliding glass. Did you know you have a peeper in this ritzy white-bread place?”

He placed his hands over mine, then lifted one finger at a time with nothing special in mind.

“Of course, if I lived here, I would peep at you too,” he added with a smile in his tone.

“You do live here.”

“Naw. I just sleep here.”

“Let's talk about the morning. As usual, they'll pick me up at the Eye Institute around five,” I told him. “So I guess if I get up by four . . .” I sighed, wondering if life would always be like this. “You should stay the night.”

“I'm not getting up at four,” he said.

2

T
HE NEXT MORNING
came unkindly on a field that was flat and barely blue with first light. I had gotten up at four, and Wesley had gotten up, too, deciding he would rather leave when I did. We had kissed briefly and barely looked at each other as we had headed to our cars, for brevity at goodbyes was always easier than lingering. But as I had followed West Cary Street to the Huguenot Bridge, a heaviness seemed to spread through every inch of me and I was suddenly unnerved and sad.

I knew from weary experience that it was unlikely I would be seeing Wesley this week, and there would be no rest or reading or late mornings to sleep. Fire scenes were never easy, and if nothing else, a case involving an important personage in a wealthy bedroom community of D.C. would tie me up in politics and paperwork. The more attention a death caused, the more public pressure I was promised.

There were no lights on at the Eye Institute, which was not a place of medical research, nor called such in honor of some benefactor or important personage named
Eye.
Several times a year I came here to have glasses adjusted
or my vision checked, and it always seemed strange to park near fields where I was often lifted into the air, headed toward chaos. I opened my car door as the familiar distant sound moved over dark waves of trees, and I imagined burned bones and teeth scattered through black watery debris. I imagined Sparkes's sharp suits and strong face, and shock chilled me like fog.

The tadpole silhouette flew beneath an imperfect moon as I gathered water repellent duffle bags, and the scratched silver Halliburton aluminum flight case that stored my various medical examiner instruments and needs, including photography equipment. Two cars and a pickup truck began slowing on Huguenot Road, the city's twilight travelers unable to resist a helicopter low and about to land. The curious turned into the parking lot and got out to stare at blades slicing air in a slow sweep for power lines, puddles and muck, or sand and dirt that might boil up.

“Must be Sparkes coming in,” said an old man who had arrived in a rusting heap of a Plymouth.

“Could be someone delivering an organ,” said the driver of the pickup truck as he briefly turned his gaze on me.

Their words scattered like dry leaves as the black Bell Long-Ranger thundered in at a measured pitch and perfectly flared and gently descended. My niece, Lucy, its pilot, hovered in a storm of fresh-mown grass flooded white by landing lights, and settled sweetly. I gathered my belongings and headed into beating wind. Plexiglas was tinted dark enough that I could not see through it as I pulled open the back door, but I recognized the big arm that reached down to grab my baggage. I climbed up as more traffic slowed to watch the aliens, and threads of gold bled through the tops of trees.

“I was wondering where you were.” I raised my voice above rotors chopping as I latched my door.

“Airport,” Pete Marino answered as I sat next to him. “It's closer.”

“No, it's not,” I said.

“At least they got coffee and a john there,” he said, and I knew he did not mean them in that order. “I guess Benton headed out on vacation without you,” he added for the effect.

Lucy was rolling the throttle to full power, and the blades were going faster.

“I can tell you right now I got one of those feelings,” he let me know in his grumpy tone as the helicopter got light and began to lift. “We're headed for big trouble.”

Marino's specialty was investigating death, although he was completely unnerved by possibilities of his own. He did not like being airborne, especially in something that did not have flight attendants or wings. The
Richmond Times-Dispatch
was a mess in his lap, and he refused to look down at fast retreating earth and the distant city skyline slowly rising from the horizon like someone tall standing up.

The front page of the paper prominently displayed a story about the fire, including a distant AP aerial photograph of ruins smoldering in the dark. I read closely but learned nothing new, for mostly the coverage was a rehash of Kenneth Sparkes's alleged death, and his power and wealthy lifestyle in Warrenton. I had not known of his horses before or that one named Wind had sailed in last one year at the Kentucky Derby and was worth a million dollars. But I was not surprised. Sparkes had always been enterprising, his ego as enormous as his pride. I set the newspaper on the opposite seat and noted that Marino's
seat belt was unbuckled and collecting dust from the floor.

“What happens if we hit severe turbulence when you're not belted in?” I talked loudly above the turbine engine.

“So I spill my coffee.” He adjusted the pistol on his hip, his khaki suit a sausage skin about to split. “In case you ain't figured it out after all those bodies you've cut up, if this bird goes down, Doc, a seat belt ain't gonna save you. Not airbags either, if we had them.”

In truth, he hated anything around his girth and had come to wear his pants so low I marveled that his hips could keep them up. Paper crackled as he dug two Hardee's biscuits out of a bag stained gray with grease. Cigarettes bunched in his shirt pocket, and his face had its typical hypertensive flush. When I had moved to Virginia from my native city of Miami, he was a homicide detective as obnoxious as he was gifted. I remembered our early encounters in the morgue when he had referred to me as
Mrs. Scarpetta
as he bullied my staff and helped himself to any evidence he pleased. He had taken bullets before I could label them, to infuriate me. He had smoked cigarettes with bloody gloves and made jokes about bodies that had once been living human beings.

I looked out my window at clouds skating across the sky and thought of time going by. Marino was almost fifty-five, and I could not believe it. We had defended and irritated each other almost daily for more than eleven years.

“Want one?” He held up a cold biscuit wrapped in waxy paper.

“I don't even want to look at it,” I ungraciously said.

Pete Marino knew how much his rotten health habits worried me and was simply trying to get my attention. He carefully stirred more sugar in the plastic cup of coffee
he was floating up and down with the turbulence, using his meaty arm for suspension.

“What about coffee?” he asked me. “I'm pouring.”

“No thanks. How about an update?” I got to the point as my tension mounted. “Do we know anything more than we did last night?”

“The fire's still smoldering in places. Mostly in the stables,” he said. “A lot more horses than we thought. Must be twenty cooked out there, including thoroughbreds, quarter horses, and two foals with racehorse pedigrees. And of course you know about the one that ran the Derby. Talk about the insurance money alone. A so-called witness said you could hear them screaming like humans.”

“What witness?” It was the first I'd heard of it.

“Oh, all kinds of drones have been calling in, saying they saw this and know that. Same old shit that always happens when a case gets a lot of attention. And it don't take an
eyewitness
to know the horses would have been screaming and trying to kick down their stalls.” His tone turned to flint. “We're gonna get the son of a bitch who did this. Let's see how he likes it when it's his ass burning.”

“We don't know that there is a son of a bitch, at least not for a fact,” I reminded him. “No one has said it's arson yet, although I certainly am assuming you and I haven't been invited along for the ride.”

He turned his attention out a window.

“I hate it when it's animals.” He spilled coffee on his knee. “Shit.” He glared at me as if I were somehow to blame. “Animals and kids. The thought makes me sick.”

He did not seem to care about the famous man who might have died in the fire, but I knew Marino well
enough to understand that he targeted his feelings where he could tolerate them. He did not hate human beings half as much as he led others to believe, and as I envisioned what he had just described, I saw thoroughbreds and foals with terror in their eyes.

I could not bear to imagine screams, or battering hooves splintering wood. Flames had flowed like rivers of lava over the Warrenton farm with its mansion, stables, reserve aged whiskey, and collection of guns. Fire had spared nothing but hollow walls of stone.

I looked past Marino into the cockpit, where Lucy talked into the radio, making comments to her ATF copilot as they nodded at a Chinook helicopter below horizon and a plane so distant it was a sliver of glass. The sun lit up our journey by degrees, and it was difficult to concentrate as I watched my niece and felt wounded again.

She had quit the FBI because it had made certain she would. She had left the artificial intelligence computer system she had created and robots she had programmed and the helicopters she had learned to fly for her beloved Bureau. Lucy had walked off from her heart and was no longer within my reach. I did not want to talk to her about Carrie.

I silently leaned back in my seat and began reviewing paperwork on the Warrenton case. Long ago I had learned how to focus my attention to a very sharp point, no matter what I thought and in spite of my mood. I felt Marino staring again as he touched the pack of cigarettes in his shirt pocket, making sure he was not without his vice. The chopping and flapping of blades was loud as he slid open his window and tapped his pack of cigarettes to shake one loose.

“Don't,” I said, turning a page. “Don't even think about it.”

“I don't see a No Smoking sign,” he said, stuffing a Marlboro into his mouth.

“You never do, no matter how many of them are posted.” I reviewed more of my notes, puzzling again over one particular statement the fire marshal had made to me over the phone yesterday.

“Arson for profit?” I commented, glancing up. “Implicating the owner, Kenneth Sparkes, who may have accidentally been overcome by the fire he started? Based on what?”

“Is his the name of an arsonist or what?” Marino said. “Gotta be guilty.” He inhaled deeply and with lust. “And if that's the case, he got what he deserves. You know, you can take them off the street but can't take the street out of them.”

“Sparkes was not raised on the street,” I said. “And by the way, he was a Rhodes scholar.”

“Road
scholar and
street
sound like the same damn thing to me,” Marino went on. “I remember when all the son of a bitch did was criticize the police through his newspaper chain. Everybody knew he was doing cocaine and women. But we couldn't prove it because nobody would come forward to help us out.”

“That's right, no one could prove it,” I said. “And you can't assume someone is an arsonist because of his name or his editorial policy.”

“Well, it just so happens you're talking to the expert in weird-ass names and how they fit the squirrels who have them.” Marino poured more coffee as he smoked.
“Gore
the coroner.
Slaughter
the serial killer.
Childs
the pedophile.
Mr. Bury
buried his victims in cemeteries.
Then we got
Judges Gallow
and
Frye.
Plus Freddie
Gamble.
He was running numbers out of his restaurant when he got whacked.
Dr. Faggart
murdered five homosexual males. Stabbed their eyes out. You remember
Crisp?”
He looked at me. “Struck by lightning. Blew his clothes all over the church parking lot and magnetized his belt buckle.”

I could not listen to all this so early in the morning and reached behind me to grab a headset so I could drown Marino out and monitor what was being said in the cockpit.

“I wouldn't want to get struck by lightning at no church and have everybody read something into it,” Marino went on.

He got more coffee, as if he did not have prostate and urinary troubles.

“I've been keeping a list all these years. Never told no one. Not even you, Doc. You don't write down shit like this, you forget.” He sipped. “I think there's a market for it. Maybe one of those little books you see up by the cash register.”

 

I put the headset on and watched rural farms and dormant fields slowly turn into houses with big barns and long drives that were paved. Cows and calves were black-spotted clusters in fenced-in grass, and a combine churned up dust as it slowly drove past fields scattered with hay.

I looked down as the landscape slowly transformed into the wealth of Warrenton, where crime was low and mansions on hundreds of acres of land had guest houses, tennis courts and pools, and very fine stables. We flew lower over private airstrips and lakes with ducks and geese. Marino was gawking.

Our pilots were silent for a while as they waited to be in range of the NRT on the ground. Then I caught Lucy's voice as she changed frequencies and began transmitting.

“Echo One, helicopter niner-one-niner Delta Alpha. Teun, you read me?”

“That's affirmative, niner Delta Alpha,” T. N. McGovern, the team leader, came back.

“We're ten miles south, inbound-landing with passengers,” Lucy said. “ETA about eight hundred hours.”

“Roger. It feels like winter up here and not getting any warmer.”

Lucy switched over to the Manassas Automated Weather Observation Service, or AWOS, and I listened to a long mechanical rendition of wind, visibility, sky condition, temperature, dew point, and altimeter setting according to Sierra time, which was the most recent update of the day. I wasn't thrilled to learn that the temperature had dropped five degrees Celsius since I had left home, and I imagined Benton on his way to warm sunshine and the water.

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