Authors: Ayelet Waldman
“Ms. Applebaum, this is a murder investigation. You are hindering the investigation of a murder. Do you understand that?”
That really ticked me off. “Hindering? Hindering? How, exactly, is telling you something that you obviously don’t know and can clearly help you, hindering? Precisely the opposite, I would think.”
Realizing that the detective was more interested in finding out who my link to Wang was than finding out whether the information I had could provide a clue to what had happened to Abigail Hathaway, I decided to end the call.
“Listen, Detective, I’m not going to tell you who told me about the shrink. You’ll have to subpoena me for the information. I’m hanging up now.” And I did. So much for passing my information along to the police and letting them figure out what to do with it.
T
HE
next morning I woke up early and spent the first twenty minutes of my day hunched over the toilet seat, vomiting up not only last night’s dinner but also everything I’d eaten in the previous six weeks or so. Why do they call it morning sickness? It’s pretty much an all-day affair, and what’s worse, it can disappear for months and then suddenly rear its truly ugly head. During my pregnancy with Ruby, I had once been overcome by it on my way to work. There I was, walking up the front steps of the courthouse in my navy suit, holding my Coach briefcase and matching purse. I nodded a grave but courteous good morning to the jurors who were milling about, smoking their last cigarettes before heading inside to decide the fate of my cross-dressing bank robber. A few of them returned my greeting, then recoiled as I proceeded to lean over the balustrade and puke my guts out over the side. I then had the humiliating task of asking the judge to instruct the jurors that defense counsel’s tossing
of cookies should not be construed as an indication of her confidence in the strength of her client’s case.
This time around I threw up with Ruby standing behind me, her chubby arms wrapped around my legs and her head resting on my ample behind. It would have been the greatest luxury to be able to deal with my bathroom business unaccompanied. I couldn’t remember the last time I was allowed the extravagance of a closed door.
Cooking Ruby’s scrambled eggs almost sent me back to the bathroom, but I managed to restrain myself, cram her into her booster seat, and put her breakfast in front of her. I then tiptoed into my bedroom and retrieved Audrey Hathaway’s father’s Oxford shirt. I washed it in cold water on the most gentle cycle of my washing machine. I was terrified that I would somehow damage it. I imagined myself standing at Audrey’s front door, a shredded piece of stained cloth in hand, explaining to the poor orphan how my spin cycle had eaten her prized possession.
By the time the shirt was dried, fluffed, and folded, Ruby and I were dressed and ready to face the day. I didn’t particularly want to take a toddler with me on this errand, but Peter was still sound asleep, and I didn’t have much choice. We set off for the Hathaway house.
I pulled up in front of the Tudor palace and looked in the driveway. Both cars were there. Suddenly something occurred to me. Yesterday, when I’d visited Audrey Hathaway, the cars had been in the driveway. Yet, her stepfather hadn’t been home. The BMW, however, had to be his. So why hadn’t he been driving it? Los Angelenos like Daniel Mooney do not take public transportation or taxi-cabs. They drive. Moreover, they drive themselves. People don’t generally drive one another around. It’s not at all uncommon to see convoys of cars following one another as their occupants go to dinner and a movie
“together.” Maybe Daniel Mooney had
two
cars. Or, maybe, I thought, he had a friend. A very
close
friend.
I unsnapped Ruby’s car-seat straps and lifted her out of the car. Together, we walked up the path.
“Are we having a play date, Mommy?”
“No, peachy. We’re just dropping something off at this house. Then we’ll head over to the park.”
“Let’s go to the Santa Monica Pier!”
“Not today, Ruby. That’s a big outing. We’ll do that with Daddy soon.”
I glanced down and saw her fat lower lip begin to tremble ominously.
“Ruby,” I said, perhaps a bit too sharply, “no tantrums. I’m not kidding. If you throw a tantrum about the pier we’re not even going to go to the park.”
She mustered up every ounce of willpower in her three-foot body and calmed herself down.
“Maybe we’ll go to the pier tomorrow!” she said.
“Maybe. We’ll talk about it tonight. Good job holding it together, kiddo.”
By then we’d reached the front door. I let Ruby press the doorbell, grabbing her hand after she’d rung it six or seven times. Daniel Mooney opened the door. He was taller than I’d remembered, maybe six-foot-two or so. His long hair was gathered in a ponytail, a style I’ve never been that fond of, especially when sported by aging men with an outsized sense of “cool.” He was wearing a luxurious black shirt in a thick, soft-looking, sueded silk, and I had an almost irresistible urge to stroke it. Ruby had the same idea, and I had to jerk her arm back to keep her from fondling Abigail’s widower.
“Yes?” he said. “Didn’t you see the sign?” He pointed at the “No Soliciting” sign posted prominently on the door.
“Oh, no, I’m not selling anything. I’m just returning this to Audrey,” I said, holding out his stepdaughter’s folded shirt.
“Are you a friend of Audrey’s?” he asked suspiciously.
“Not really. I borrowed this shirt from her yesterday. I came over to drop off a lasagna and spilled most of it on myself. She lent me this since I had nothing else to wear. I knew your wife.” Babbling again. Terrific.
“Oh. You’re a friend of Abigail’s. Come in.” He opened the door and stepped back, making room for me to enter.
“I wasn’t really a friend,” I said as Ruby and I walked through the doorway. “I knew her from the school. I just wanted to bring something by for you two. You and Audrey, I mean.”
Mooney seemed to suddenly notice Ruby. “She’s a student,” he said.
“No, not yet.” I blushed. I decided that now wasn’t the time to tell him that his wife had rejected us.
“Please sit down.” He motioned toward an archway that led into the formal living room. “I’ll get Audrey.” He walked up the stairs. I noticed then that he was barefoot and that his toenails sported a decidedly glossy sheen. What kind of a man gets a pedicure?
Ruby and I walked into the elegant living room. The furniture was country French, and the chairs and couches were upholstered in a pale, pink silk. There were end tables everywhere, all of them covered with highly decorative and very breakable knickknacks. I grabbed Ruby just before she could send a collection of tiny music boxes crashing to the floor and sat gingerly in a spindly chair, holding her firmly in my lap.
“Honey, it’s too dangerous in here,” I said, wrapping her wiggling legs in my own. “I can’t let you touch anything. You might break something.”
“I
won’t
,” she whined. “I’ll be careful. Please. Please. Please.”
“I’m sorry, sweetie.”
We were distracted from our wrestling match by Audrey, who came down the stairs wearing blue-and-green plaid flannel pajamas, and rubbing sleep from her eyes.
“We woke you up! I’m so sorry, Audrey.”
“That’s okay, I’ve been sleeping a lot lately,” she said in a small voice. I inwardly cursed her stepfather for letting her sleep all morning instead of getting her up and distracting her from the depression into which she had clearly sunk.
“I brought back your dad’s shirt, honey,” I said. “Thanks so much for lending it to me.”
“That’s okay. Is this your daughter?”
“I’m Ruby. Who are you?” Ruby piped up.
“Hi, Ruby. I’m Audrey.” She had crouched down so that she was eye level with the little girl. Audrey clearly had a way with small children. Maybe that was something she inherited from her mother.
“Hey, Ruby, will you thank Audrey for lending Mommy her shirt?”
“Thanks, Audrey.”
“You’re welcome, Ruby.”
“Hey, Audrey, are you okay?” I asked.
“No. I mean, I guess so. I dunno.” Her face began to turn a blotchy red, and her eyes filled with tears. Once again, I found myself sitting on the floor holding Abigail Hathaway’s daughter while she sobbed. Within moments, Ruby, who hadn’t seen that many grown-ups, or almost grown-ups, in tears before, also began quietly crying. I stretched out an arm to my own daughter and rocked them both for a while. I kept looking over Audrey’s head
in the direction of the stairs, hoping that her stepfather would hear her and come offer his comfort. Nothing. Maybe I’m being ungenerous—maybe he didn’t hear her. But why wasn’t he there? Why wasn’t he with her? Why had he disappeared up the stairs to begin with?
Audrey soon gathered herself together.
“Sorry. I keep doing that to you,” she mumbled, extricating herself from my embrace.
“That’s okay. At least I didn’t spill anything on you this time,” I replied.
She smiled politely.
“I think I’m going to go back to bed.”
“Honey, do you really want to do that? Isn’t there someone you can call to spend some time with you? A relative? One of your friends?” By then I knew enough not to even bother mentioning her stepfather.
“I’m going over to my friend Alice’s house this afternoon. Her mom’s gonna come get me later.”
“Oh, okay,” I said, relieved. “Why don’t I leave you my number and you can call me if you need anything.” I handed her one of my old cards with my home phone number scrawled on it.
I gathered up a still distraught Ruby and headed to the door. Audrey walked me out. She surprised me by giving me a quick, almost embarrassed hug in the doorway. I hugged her back and carried Ruby to the car.
“She’s a sad girl,” Ruby said as I buckled her into her seat.
“Yes, she is.”
“Why is she a sad girl?”
“Well, Peachy, she’s sad because something terrible happened to her.”
“What happened?”
I dreaded having to say this, but I had no choice. “Her mommy died.”
“Did she get trampled by wild-a-beasts?”
“What?” I answered, shocked. “Wild beasts? No. Are you afraid of wild beasts?”
“No, not wild beasts. Wild-a-beasts. Like Mufasa.”
The Lion King.
Right. Life lessons brought to you by Disney.
“No, Ruby. Her mommy did not get trampled by wildebeests. She died in a car accident.”
“Oh.” Ruby seemed satisfied by that answer, and I closed her door and walked around to the driver’s seat.
I started the ignition and pulled out into the street. I had just stopped at the stop sign at the end of the block when Ruby announced, “We don’t have any wild-a-beasts, but we
do
have a car.”
I pulled over to the side of the road, stopped the car, and turned to her. “Ruby, I promise you Mommy is not going to die in a car accident.” I’m sure there are hundreds of child-development experts who would be horrified that I said that. After all, it is possible that I could die in a car accident. But, the way I figure it, the chances are pretty slim. And, if I do die, Ruby is going to have a lot more serious traumas to deal with than the fact that her mother promised she wouldn’t die. Sometimes you just have to tell your kids what you think they want and need to hear and hope for the best.
“Promise?” she asked in a tiny little voice.
“Promise.”
“Okay.”
“I love you, Ruby. You are my most precious girl in the whole wide world.”
I turned around and glanced in my rearview mirror
before pulling into the street. I was just in time to see a car come to a stop in front of Abigail Hathaway’s house. I couldn’t make out the driver of the cherry-red, vintage Mustang convertible. Curious, I idled at the side of the road.
The door to Abigail’s house flew open, and Daniel Mooney bounded out. He loped down the path and fairly leaped into the passenger seat, and the car pulled away from the curb with a screech. I didn’t have time to think about what I was doing—I just acted. As the Mustang blew by me I waited a moment and then gave chase.
Ruby and I followed the car all the way down the Pacific Coast Highway to Venice. I did my best to be discreet, keeping one and even two cars between us. Lucky for me, a bright red Mustang is maybe the easiest car in the universe to tail. It wasn’t hard to keep my eye on it. Luckily, also, Ruby fell asleep. I’d like to see Jim Rockford engaging in a car chase while handing juice boxes and Barbie dolls back to a demanding toddler. I certainly couldn’t have managed it.
Finally, the Mustang pulled up in front of a fourplex on Rose Street. It was one of the
faux
Mediterranean structures that had sprung up all over Los Angeles in the 1930s, all arches, plastered domes, and Mexican tiles. This one looked like it had seen better days, but it retained a kind of blowsy, overdone elegance.
I drove by the Mustang and pulled into a bus-boarding lane at the end of the block. Slouching down in my seat, I angled my rearview mirror so I could see the car. As I watched, the driver’s door opened and a woman got out. She was a tall, striking redhead, no more than twenty-five or twenty-six years old. Her hair hung in thick waves down her back, and she wore jeans and cowboy boots. She carried a large leather bag that looked artfully beat up.
Daniel Mooney got out of the passenger side, and the two of them walked into the building. Just as they reached her front door, I saw him grab her hand and press it to his lips. I gasped, although I’m not sure why, because by then I was sure I’d found his paramour and the motive for his murder of the woman I’d by then decided was a martyr in a miserable marriage to a selfish, heartless beast.
I circled the block and made sure I had the number of the apartment building correct. Then I drove quickly back home. I made it in record time.
Peter was sitting at the kitchen table, hunched over a cup of coffee, when I rushed in.
“You just get up?”
He grunted.
“Ruby’s asleep in the car. Will you go get her and put her in her crib?”
Grunting again, he got up and went out to get his sleeping child. I poured myself a glass of juice and drained it. Detective work made me thirsty.