RoseMarie worked for CIA and the UN before she was 20, took a tramp steamer to Istanbul, was confidential secretary to the assistant managing editor at The New York Times and, most recently, worked as a programmer in Paris rewriting the reservation system for the high speed trains and Eurostar. She has studied writing with Catherine Ryan Hyde, author of "Pay it Forward" and 15 other novels, Leslie Lehr, and Charlotte Cook. She tirelessly searches for agents to represent her seven novels — so far unsuccessfully, which is why she's
frustrated.
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Rose Marie is trying something a little different, serializing a book she has written — "The Evil Men Do." Each month she will be sharing a chapter with you. As the months go by, you will be able to go back and re-read previous chapters if you wish to. This book is presented here exactly as she has written it. We welcome your thoughts on both the book itself and the process we are trying. So — jump in!
If you missed previous chapters, they can be read here: Chapter 1, Chapter 2, Chapter 3, Chapter 4, Chapter 5, Chapter 6, Chapter 7, Chapter 8, Chapter 9, Chapter 10, Chapter 11, Chapter 12,
Chapter 13,
Chapter 14,
Chapter 15,
Chapter 16,
Chapter 17,
Chapter 18
The Evil Men Do
Chapter Nineteen
The parking garages in the center
of the city bore vacancy signs that sizzled red and
green in the eerie pre-storm light. The parking garage
which serviced Prudhomme's office building was empty
now except for a few stragglers. Stu pulled in,
recognized Suzanne's car in one of the slots. She must
have been in the city already to arrive so soon. He
parked next to it. The car, a blue Seville, surprised him. He
would have put
her into a sports car, something flashy and low. The
more substantial vehicle said something about her. He
didn't ask what. He felt glad she'd disregarded is
request for her to stay home.
It was evidence that she was worried about
George, whose green olds he didn't see, but Stu
figured George had arrived while the garage was still
full and had parked elsewhere. Or Stu was wrong about
everything, and George wasn't there, in which case
both he and Suzanne had made the trip for nothing, and
George was somewhere else. But where else would he go?
Stu pulled into a space, ran into the building and
took the elevator up to the twenty-third floor.
Reed's office looked deserted,
but the door was open so Stu knew he was there. Reed
was careful, never would have left the office without
locking up. He worked late every night. The joke was,
he never went home. Rose was gone as well. How was she
getting paid? She couldn't afford to work for nothing.
Stu thought that his father must have provided for her
other than in his will. He remembered hearing her
complain of not having enough to do and wondered if
Reed had fired her. Had dared to fire her. Rose knew
everyone's secrets.
Rose was another person whose
importance Stu had failed to realize. He had thought
of her as just another piece of furniture, vowed to
make it up to her, find a way to compensate her for
her years of loyalty.
The door to Reed's inner office
was closed. Stu knocked. "Come in," Reed shouted.
Stu opened the door. "Oh, it's
you," Reed said. "I thought it was the cleaning
people."
"We need to talk."
Reed lay down his pen. "What do
we need to talk about?"
Stu said, "why you suddenly agree
with Jenkins about developing the marsh for one thing.
You used to be against it." Stu waited for him to
answer, but Reed didn't say anything. "People used to
say bodies were buried there."
He noticed that Reed's body tensed. "What do
you think?"
"I wouldn't know."
Stu hazarded a question. "What
really happened to your wife?"
Reed looked down as if the answer
lay on his desk. "Is this a fishing expedition, Stu?"
"You could call it that," Stu
said, "but I think I know most of it. You killed your
wife, didn't you, the way you killed that guy in the
bar."
"You have proof?"
"It's not my concern," Stu said.
"I think you killed my father too."
"No." Reed shook his head and
said no again. "He killed himself."
"You know as well as I do he'd
never do that. If you didn't kill him, Reed, then who
did?
Jenkins? After you put him up to it?"
"Why would I do that after all
these years, Stu, why?"
"Then who did?"
"I don't know. Believe me, I'd
tell you if I did if only to get myself off the hook."
"And Sharon?" Stu asked. "What
about her?"
"Sharon," Reed said.
"My grandfather's housekeeper
says she hasn't been paid," Stu said, hoping to
surprise him by changing the subject. "Is that your
responsibility?"
"My responsibility? Of course
not." Reed gestured toward a chair.
"You better sit down." He waited for Stu to
comply. "The money's gone," he said.
"My grandfather didn't get
involved with the firm."
"Not at first."
Stu understood then. "You cleaned
him out. How'd you do it? What did you tell him? Did
he think he was bailing you out?"
"He's an old man."
"Not senile, though."
"As good as. Delusions of
grandeur. Liked the idea of more and more building.
Worthless now. Too many developments, too many empty
malls, empty office buildings."
Stu thought of the proud old man
alone in the forbidding pile of bricks he called a
mansion. Stu tried to pity him but couldn't. He had
been the source of the envy and hostility that
characterized Stu's family.
"You're affected too," Reed said.
"You still have your beach house, but that's all. What
do you intend to do?"
"I don't know yet," Stu said.
"I'm not worried.You didn't answer my question. What
about Sharon?"
Reed sighed. A voice came from
the outer office. "He killed her." Jenkins entered the
room.
Chapter 20
"I saw you from the street when I
came down to grab supper," Jenkins told him.
"He's lying," Reed protested.
"About Sharon? Are you lying?"
Stu asked.
"I'm not lying," Jenkins said.
"I know you're a liar. You lied
on your employment application," Stu said. "You never
went to college, or anyway you didn't graduate." He
glanced at Reed, saw confirmation. "Reed knew, but he
went ahead and hired you." Not just Reed. Prudhomme
had sanctioned it too.
"Tell him," Jenkins said,
pointing his chin at Reed.
"You know such a lot already,"
Reed said. "Maybe you know everything."
"I know you went to jail," Stu
said. "For murder. Manslaughter," he amended.
"Who told you, your grandfather?"
"He said it was self defense."
Stu didn't like the way Reed was looking at him,
steeled himself for his next words.
"I took the blame," Reed said. "I
had more to lose."
Jenkins looked more surprised,
more taken aback, than Stu. Why?
Reed said, "Your father killed
his father." Meaning Jenkins.
"Why didn't you tell me?" Jenkins
asked.
"How did it happen?" asked Stu.
"We were in a bar," Reed said.
"Your father and I. We were both drinking. We drank
too much.
We were talking, and suddenly this guy Jenkins
attacked your father. He had a knife, but your father
disarmed him before he could use it and used it on him
instead. I grabbed the knife."
"Witnesses," Stu said.
"Only the bartender, and he said
he wasn't looking, didn't want to get involved."
"Why didn't you tell the truth?"
Stu asked.
"Your grandfather persuaded me
not to, said he'd get me a good lawyer, and he'd make
it worth my while." Just like he intended to do for
George after George got rid of Reed, Stu thought, only
how could he make it up to George, who would be
shattered if he killed someone. "Later," Reed went on,
"I found out your father seduced my wife while I was
serving time in my minimum security installation.
Eventually I got out, sooner than either of them
expected. I threatened to divorce her, take Joyce away
and make sure she never saw her again. She blamed me
for taking the blame for your father—he must have told
her; I didn't. She came at me, and I pushed her. She
fell and hit her head. Do I have to say any more?" Stu
said nothing. "No--of course not. She's buried in the
marsh, Stu, and somehow Jenkins found out."
"Kept my eye on you," Jenkins
said. "I knew sooner or later you'd do something would
let me get my revenge."
"Revenge?" Reed laughed. "Didn't
you hear me? You took your revenge on the wrong man.
Didn't account for the fact I might be
innocent, whatever the verdict, did you?"
Jenkins, looking sullen, asked,
"whyn't you tell me?"
"Would it have made a
difference?" Reed asked.
"Maybe," Jenkins said.
There was still one question.
"What about
Sharon?" Stu asked. "She wasn't
mugged in the park.
She was killed elsewhere. By one of you." He
waited. "Which one? You, Jenkins? You were seeing her.
She told me."
Jenkins shook his head. "Not me."
Stu noticed the painting. His
father's painting, which had hung in Jenkins' office
was now hanging in this one.
"Your father hid something in the
back of it," Jenkins said. "A confession."
"Confession!"
"I suppose you read it," Reed
said.
"What do you think? He didn't
know what Reed had done till the plan to develop the
marsh, and then Reed had to tell him, but he had to
keep his mouth shut, didn't he, because hadn't Reed
done as much for him. But he wrote it all down, a
confession, what he did and what Reed did, and he
asked Sharon to pass it on to Reed after he made up
his mind to leave. To protect Reed in case somebody
else found and read it. Unfortunately—for her—she did
read it."
"You," Stu said, facing Reed.
"She wanted money," Reed
explained, "and I didn't have any money to give her."
At that moment George burst into
the office, Suzanne on his heels.
Chapter 21
George's hand shook.
He was holding a gun. "No, George,"
Suzanne shouted. She came up behind him and
knocked his hand as he fired. The bullet hit the wall
as Reed ducked.
"Wait!" Stu's voice rang out. "He
didn't kill my father. Listen to me. He didn't do it."
George's hand wavered. "He
didn't?" he asked, turning slowly and facing Stu, who
couldn't help noticing that he was now pointing the
gun at him. "Then who?"
"Put down the gun, George."
"Oh." George looked at the gun as
if surprised to see he still had it. "Are you sure,
Stu? Are you sure?"
Stu didn't want to feel sure, but
he was.
Sharon
dead as a result of his ill conceived investigation,
and he was no closer to knowing the truth.
"Then who," George asked again,
more to himself than the others this time. For the
first time he noticed Jenkins, standing beside Reed.
"You?" He raised the gun again, but Suzanne took it
away from him, and he let her.
"Not him either," Stu said. "His
quarrel was with Reed." His turn to question Reed.
"Do you know why my father died?"
Reed shook his head. "All I know
is it wasn't me. Though I came to hate him for not
owning up to what he did."
"No one twisted your arm," Stu
said.
"Sure, they did. They both did,
your father and your grandfather. They said they'd
make me rich, and, like a fool, I listened to them." A
pained expression crossed Reed's face. "My reward was
he made love to my wife."
"You didn't have to kill her,"
Stu said.
"Yes, I did. And ever since, all
these years I had to explain, make up stories, why I
was against digging up the marsh. Until he came
along," he added, gesturing at Jenkins.
"How did you find out?"
Jenkins only smirked, but Reed
answered Stu's question. "He was watching me. He saw
me do it. I didn't know who he was, I didn't know he'd
apply for a job with us, force me to hire him." Reed
looked up. "And after all that, now he wants everybody
to know. He thinks he'll wind up owning the firm.
That's why he wanted to be made partner. Who's left.
Your father's dead, I'd be in jail."
George made a grab for the gun,
but Suzanne moved away quickly. She stood next to the
window. Streetlights had just gone on, and the light
shone on her dark red hair. "You believe him?" George
asked of no one in particular.
Stu said yes. Reed regarded him
blankly. Suzanne moved away from the window. She
walked over to Stu. "Here, you take this." Next she
moved to George's side and from there looked at Reed.
"Why did you have to murder Sharon?" Her voice shook.
"I told you, she wanted money. I
didn't have it. She was blackmailing me."
"I'll call the police," Jenkins
said. Reed looked at him, looked away, blinked slowly,
as if slow motion were all he could muster.
"Are the notes still there?" Stu
asked.
"I destroyed them," Reed said.
"Are you going to tell them about
my father? Are you going to tell it like he killed
Jenkins' father, not you?"
Reed shrugged. "What's the
point?"
"Besides, there's no proof." Stu
wondered if proof existed that he murdered Sharon, but he guessed he didn't have to
wonder as Reed wasn't denying it.
"I watched her apartment, saw her
run, and I drove after her. I followed her into the
park and persuaded her to get in the car."
Remembering Sharon's intelligence, Stu
asked, "how did you manage that?"
"She knew me," he said. "We'd met
before, when she told me her demands. She thought I
was going to give her what she asked." His voice
turned beseeching. "You have the gun, Stu. You know
what I want you to do. You can say I was running away,
or you can say I attacked you if you prefer."
"Don't, Stu." It was George. "Let
the police handle it."
"Don't worry, George," Stu said
mildly. To Jenkins he said, "you saw what Reed did all
those years ago. That makes you an accessory." Jenkins
paled. Stu didn't know if what he said was true, but
he hoped so.
Ignoring him, George spoke to
Suzanne. "Stu's right. Let the police can handle it."
Suzanne, looking exhausted, nodded. "I thought killed
your father," he added, looking at Stu. "If it wasn't
the guys in
Las Vegas, it had to be him.
We'll probably never find out who did it, will we?"
"I don't know."
They were all very quiet.
Outside, the only light came from the street.
Since only businesses shared space on the
block, the windows opposite were black.
When Rose came in the next
morning, she wouldn't be able to tell what had
happened here. If she came in. Stu looked around. The
office would be dismantled, the furniture sold.
Nothing would remain of the former empire.
A few minutes later, they heard
the sirens, and two policemen arrived who looked far
too young to be out at night. One of them cleared his
throat and said, "we got a call," and Suzanne smoothed
her shining auburn head, automatically responding to
their appraising looks.
Stu explained what happened. He
had to repeat it more than once, Jenkins chiming in in
a way to absolve himself of any of the guilt, before
they understood what was being said. When they did,
they put handcuffs on Reed and led him out. Then Stu
took down the painting and carried it out with him,
Suzanne and George following him to the elevator.
Chapter 22
As Jenkins had left before him, Stu didn't
expect to see him again and was surprised to find him
waiting downstairs. "Time for a drink?" he asked.
What was Jenkins thinking? Stu felt suspicious,
opened his mouth to refuse, and Jenkins, anticipating
his refusal, said, "something you need to know."
"What's that?" Stu asked.
"Not in the street. I'll tell you over a
drink."
The bar around the corner the street was the
obvious place. Stu had driven past it after leaving
his father's office but had never been inside. "Okay,"
he said. George and Suzanne left the building behind
them. "You want them to come along?"
"Doesn't concern them," Jenkins
said.
Stu's reflection in the
building's polished bronze plague didn't reassure him.
He looked bewildered, hoped Jenkins could tell him
something about his father's death. But what could
Jenkins know?
A few pedestrians passed them by, hurrying
home, hurrying somewhere. Since this was the City, no
one so much as glanced at them. Stu wondered how many
of them, how many deadpan faces concealed dramas like
his own. Not many, he'd wager.
The bar, busy during the after work hours, was
nearly empty at close to eleven and so dark Stu had to
blink a few times before he could see anything. Murder
must be bad for business. Except no one
knew, not yet. They'd know tomorrow when the
newspapers got hold of the story. The murder would no
doubt eclipse the firm's bankruptcy. The only other
patrons were two men sitting at opposite corners of
the bar. Stu felt a chill: Was this the bar in which
Jenkins' father had made his attack and been knifed
instead?
"Let's get a table," Jenkins said, leading the
way to a table at the back. "What are you drinking?"
Stu told him, and he went off. Returning with the
drinks, he set them on the table and sat down.
"Well?" Stu prompted.
Caressing his glass, Jenkins said, "it's
about Joyce."
Stu hadn't expected that. Suddenly he didn't
want to know. He forced himself to ask, "what about
her?"
Jenkins drank, raised his eyes from the glass,
half empty now. "I waited for him to tell you, but he
didn't. Reed. Joyce is your sister."
Stu stared at him.
"My sister—my mother," he stammered.
"Not your mother. Reed's wife."
"Then how can she be my sister?" The answer was
obvious, but Stu refused to acknowledge it.
He waited for Jenkins' denial.
"Your father," Jenkins said, "was her father."
He drank, rattled the ice cubes in the empty glass.
Stu sensed it was the truth. He remembered
Reed's anger—and fear—when Joyce lied to him and said
that she and Stu were lovers.
"You believe me?" Jenkins asked. "I'm telling
you for your own good. In case you and Joyce—" he
didn't finish the sentence.
Stu walked out of the bar leaving Jenkins
staring at the empty glass. Jenkins' disclosure made
it likely that Reed, despite his denial, had murdered
Prudhomme. Stu made up his mind to question Reed some
more and drove to the police station, intending to see
him. To his surprise, Suzanne and George were sitting
on one of the benches in the waiting room. "What are
you two doing here?" Stu asked.
"It was the gun," Suzanne said. "It's not
registered. They took it away.
I think they'll let us go as soon as they
finish the paperwork. But why are you here, Stu?"
He told them what Jenkins had said. "I have to
talk to Reed."
"Don't tell me you believe it. How do you know
he wasn't lying?"
Unfortunately, Stu did believe him. The story
rang true, describing both his father and Reed.
One bent on conquest, the other on riches.
"They covered up for each other," he said,
choosing not to disclose his belief in what Reed had
told them. "But I'm not here for that reason." Why
shouldn't he tell them his real reason for being here?
"You heard Jenkins. Reed isn't Joyce's father. She's
my half sister."
He noticed that George wore a guilty look. "You
knew, didn't you?"
"Suspected," George said, "that's all, because
of the hair."
"So you guessed that my father had an affair
with Reed's wife, and Joyce was the result.
Suzanne, you know it too?" She shrugged. Stu
turned back to George. "Is that why you think he
killed my father?"
George nodded. "I thought, with the business
in trouble he had no reason not to. I mean, if my
brother told him he was leaving, and Reed saw
everything he'd worked for going down the tubes…" his
voice trailed off.
Stu said, "I think you're right."
"What are you going to do?" asked Suzanne.
"What can you do?"
Stu saw her point. It was too late to bring up
what happened over twenty years ago, and he'd never
prove that Reed killed his father. Even if he could,
did he want to, did he want the notoriety such a
scandal would bring?
George said, "my brother kept quiet about
Reed's wife because he knew he was partly—or
mostly--to blame."
"Reed's going to jail because of
Sharon," Suzanne said. "Isn't
that enough?"
"What about the guy in the bar," Stu said.
"Jenkins' father."
"That was self-defense," George said. "The guy
attacked him."
They each had a different way to justify his
father's actions, Stu thought. Jenkins father: A clear
case of self defense; Reed's wife: An attempt to take
care of her while Reed was serving time—for his
crime—which turned into something neither of them
could have envisioned. Just as Reed justified his Sharon's murder.
"He admitted killing her, didn't he?"
Suzanne was right.
"The scandal," George reflected, "if my brother
owned up to what he'd done."
"He never acknowledged her," Suzanne mused,
"yet he must have known."
"Another reason why he had to take care of Reed
so Reed could take care of her."
"To think I thought you and Joyce—" Suzanne
stopped in mid-sentence.
Stu nodded. "Reed thought so too. He phoned me,
all upset, because Joyce lied, told him we were seeing
each other."
"Reed had to tell my brother where she was
buried so he'd stop with the plans for developing the
marsh," George said. "I always wondered about that. It
was so unlike him, but when Reed confessed what was
buried there he couldn't let it happen."
"He didn't suddenly become an
environmentalist," Stu observed.
"Hardly," George said.
"The evil men do, etc., etc.," Suzanne said.
"I wonder if Joyce knows."
"She doesn't," Stu said.
"Does she have to?"
"She won't find out from me," George said. Poor
George, unwilling to face even someone else's reality.
Suzanne covered George's hand with hers.
"Sometimes the truth is better than what a person
imagines. She's never been happy and never known why.
Why don't we play it by ear for now, see what
happens." George kissed her hand. "You thought Reed
and I had something going together," she said.
People had spared her feelings all her life.
"You acted like you were attracted to him. He was
different from me, and I thought that's what you
wanted."
"Well, it wasn't.
It's not."
Stu listened but chose not to contribute to the
exchange. However, she wouldn't let him stay out of
it.
"Is that what you think too, Stu?" she asked.
"You don't approve of me, do you? Oh, yes, I know."
"I always liked you, Suzanne." He realized it
was true.
She blinked, changed the subject back to Joyce.
"I'm not sure it wouldn't be better to tell Joyce the
truth. We conceal too much because we're afraid
hurting people, but most of the time what they imagine
is worse. Much worse.
Who knows what the poor girl is going through?
And it's going to get worse."
"You may be right," Stu said, "but won't the
truth create more problems? She doesn't have to know
everything. I wouldn't let on what happened in the
past, the present is bad enough."
"Then let's let it go," she agreed, "play it by
ear. They're all dead now anyway. Almost all."
"Roy Jenkins," Stu said.
"Where does he come in?" George asked.
Stu shook his head. "You heard him, all he
wanted was to make Reed pay for what he thought Reed
did." Let Jenkins shoulder his own burden. If he
hadn't been hounding Reed,
Sharon
might still be alive. Reed's temper had been worn thin
by Jenkins' attempts at blackmail. It was a wonder
Reed hadn't killed him. Stu wished he had, wondered if
Jenkins would ever realize he'd had a narrow escape.
Suzanne was still worrying about Joyce. "I
could find a way to tell her that wouldn't be so
hurtful. Reed was in trouble financially. He didn't
know what he was doing. How about that?" The two men
just looked at her. "Well, somebody has to say
something."
"I'm through giving advice," Stu said.
She kissed him on the cheek, making him feel
worse than he already did. For he knew he had failed.
Failed to uncover proof of his father's murder, failed
to reconcile with him father before his death.
How could he forgive himself?
Chapter 23
Stu made one last effort to get Reed to admit
killing his father, but they kept telling him he had
an alibi, which they'd checked into right after the
death. At last, Stu gave it up and returned to his
beach house. He threw himself into the controversy
between the developers, still intent on putting up a
mall. The developers were winning since no arrests had
been made for the rapes, and locals had begun to think
that the area's development would solve the problem.
He hadn't been sleeping well so heard the first
noises, a car door slamming, voices. At first he
thought it was a dream, but the noises weres followed
by the sound of scuffling and a woman's scream,
carried across the watery green of the marsh in the
still night. He fell out of bed, pulled on a pair of
shorts and slid his feet into the sneakers by the
door. Opening the door quietly, he peered outside, saw
two figures struggling across the green expanse of the
marsh. They looked familiar—Jenkins? What would he be
doing here, now? Stu drew closer. Not Jenkins,
shorter, heavier. The woman looked familiar too, but
Stu was running by now, looking down, determined not
to trip on the thick reeds and random pieces of wood
strewn on the narrow beach long ago by ships broken up
on the hidden sandbanks beyond the cove.
Almost there, he looked up to gauge what was
happening, how he might best prevent another crime.
And recognized Anthony. Recognized Janet.
Anthony, seeing him, let her go, faced Stu,
nodded slowly. "I figured it would come to this. If
you want to know, I was even looking forward to it."
They circled each other warily. Stu was aware
that Anthony had studied martial arts. Stu had not.
"Get out of here," he yelled without turning
his head.
"See if the keys are in the car, and if they are get
away."
She ran to the car. "They're not there."
"Run!" Stu shouted as Anthony lifted his leg,
swung his foot at him. Stu managed to avoid it, danced
aside, Anthony assuming the classical attack position
and letting out the roar that was designed to instill
fear in his opponent. Which it did. Stu hoped that
Janet had run away but didn't dare look. If he was
lucky, she'd run into a police car. He watched the
leg, but peripheral vision revealed Anthony doing
something with his arms, preparing a different strike.
Stu almost avoided the flat edge of the hand but not
quite yet managed to deflect it. How long could he
keep avoiding him? Stu was winded already, but noticed
that Anthony was too. "What's the matter?" he taunted,
"too many beers, not enough exercise?
"Shut up!"
"Shoulda kept up with the practice," Stu
panted, but he wasn't quick enough to avoid Anthony's
strike this time, fell to the ground. He was up in a
minute, too late; Anthony was on him, his hands around
Stu's neck, pressing out the life.
Stu's eyes were closed so he didn't see the
blow, only heard a thump. Anthony relaxed his grip.
Stu opened his eyes. Janet, standing above
them, threw away the block of wood. "Oh, my God, I
think I killed him."
Scrambling to his feet, Stu put two fingers on
Anthony's neck. "No, you didn't. He has a pulse."
He tried to embrace her, but she stepped away.
"You didn't run."
"Did you think I was going to let him kill you?
He hates you."
"Hates me?" Stu didn't understand. "We've been
friends so long."
"He was never your friend," Janet said. "He
went around with you because of your father, because
of the freebies he was always handing out. He blames
you for not being able to sell the restaurant just
like he blamed your father. He said he went to see
him, and your father laughed at him, told him he'd be
better off staying where he was."
Stu stared at her. "He told you that? When did
he go to see him?"
She nodded. "Just now. We should have guessed.
We both know he has a temper. He admitted it."
"Killing him," Stu said.
"Yes."
"So he's responsible for the rapes." Neither of
them wanted to add, and the death. "How did he get you
to go with him?"
"Threw stones at the window," she said. "When I
went down he said you sent him. I believed him because
I thought you wanted to avoid the possibility of Per's
seeing you." She shrugged. "It seemed possible."
"But why you?" She just looked at him. "Because
he knows I care for you," he said, answering his own
question.
On the road behind his cottage a police car
stopped, and the officer, his hands on his belt,
slowly approached. "Are you going to tell them about
your father?"
"I don't know," Stu said. "They'll get him for
the other murder. That should be enough. If not, then,
yes, I'll tell them, let them check his alibi. If he
has one. Which he won't."
She faced him, hands on her hips. "After all
your, your, suspicions, after all the questions, you'd
let it go?
Now that you know?"
"I wish I'd left it alone," Stu said. "I got
more than I bargained for." She didn't understand, and
he wasn't about to tell her. Unspoken was his regret,
his guilt about
Sharon, whose death he surely
had caused. "Let me take you home."
But in a few minutes, the lone police car was
joined by several others, lights flashing, turning the
marsh into a lurid scene, and they had to stand around
and wait. First they questioned Janet, then, while
they questioned him, out of the corner of his eye, Stu
saw her driving off in one of the police cars.
Chapter 24
Stu woke up with unfinished business to attend
to. He drove straight to Janet's house, passing
Anthony's along the way. The restaurant had been
closed for a week and already looked abandoned. Stu
could imagine Anthony leaning over the counter.
Another business that could have ended differently had
he listened to his one-time friend when he complained
about being unable to sell. Surely he could have found
a buyer for Anthony's so Anthony could leave, get on
with his life. Instead, he had been blind to anyone's
need other than his own. As his father had been.
Anthony would sell it now, but the money wouldn't do
him any good unless he used it to hire a lawyer.
However, Stu had learned that Anthony had chosen to
use a public defender.
The lights were already on at the Mathiesen's,
and Stu hoped they didn't have company. He hoped Carl
wasn't there. When she opened the door, he heard the
television blaring and knew they were alone. A square
of embroidery fastened in a hoop dangled from her
hand. A look of alarm entered her eyes, and she asked,
"why are you here? I'll meet you somewhere—where?
Why didn't you phone?
Wait, I'll get a sweater."
"I came to see your dad."
"Dad! He hates you. The other night made no
difference. You thought it would?"
"I want to see him anyway."
For a minute he thought she'd close the door on
him. Instead she opened it further and stood aside to
allow him to enter. He followed her into the small
parlor where Per was watching masterpiece theater.
Although he had not been inside the house in years,
everything looked the same. Everything except the
chair in which Per sat, legs up, a new-looking
recliner. Janet turned off the television.
Mathiesen turned with difficulty and scowled.
"Mr. Mathiesen, before you get mad, I want to
tell you how sorry I am for--everything. I thought
you'd want to know I'm fighting the development, and I
want to rebuild the marina the way it was and give it
back to you."
Per looked from one to the other of them in
disgust. "I'm an old man.
What do I want with a marina?"
"Let Janet run it."
"My daughter is a willful girl. Who knows what
she wants?"
Well, what did he expect, tears and
reconciliation?
"Let's go for a walk," he said.
"Turn the TV back on," Mathiesen ordered.
Stu and Janet walked outside, taking the path
toward the beach. The air felt cool, but the water
would still be warm. It took all summer for the water
to warm up, and by the time it was warm the air was
cold. If you went in for a swim you didn't want to
come back out.
The beach looked the way it must have looked a
hundred years earlier. No doubt lovers had found hope
and solace by the turbulent waves, the desolate sand
dunes then too. "I didn't say I'd do it either," she
told him. "I'm not sure I want to. I have a job, you
know."
"Let's just keep walking."
The End
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