So, wearily, because she hadn’t gotten a lot of sleep the night before, Kate went back to the town house to lay in supplies, and trundled back up the hillside to park inside a stand of alder down the road from Charlotte and Emily’s house. It was a little after 8:30 in the morning. After two hours, she’d finished Last Standing Woman by Winona LaDuke and a bottle of water, watched a moose cow with two leggy calves graze on alder bark off her right front bumper, eaten a chicken sandwich, watched three magpies chase off the moose, peed in the bushes, read a quarter of Lamb by Christopher Moore, and seen a big brown dog trailing a leash come kiyüng out of the underbrush with a small but irritated black bear close on his trail.
“Stay,” Kate said.
Mutt, who had long since abandoned the Subaru for the shade it cast, yawned wide enough for Kate to hear it from Mutt’s sprawled position beneath the car, just like she’d never given any thought to adding a new parameter to that chase.
The sun beat down on the roof of the Subaru. Kate had all the windows open, but she was still sweating into the driver’s seat. In the distance, the sounds muffled by trees, mothers would call to children, men would call for dogs, car doors would slam and engines would start. Kate would peer hopefully through the foliage, only to sink back disappointed when whoever it was left from the wrong house.
At 2:30 in the afternoon, a gold two-door Eldorado came almost silently up the road and turned into Charlotte’s driveway. Kate got out of the Subaru and slipped through the trees to the edge of the clearing surrounding the house. Fifteen minutes later, Erland opened the door of the Cadillac for Emily. The Cadillac purred down the driveway and vanished.
Kate didn’t wait. “Mutt,” she said, and Mutt emerged from out of the bushes. “Guard,” Kate said, and headed for the house. The front door was locked. So was the back door. A sliding glass door that opened from the master bedroom onto the upstairs deck was not, and Kate, proud that she was barely breathing hard from the climb up the crossbars, stepped inside.
The bedroom held a king-size bed with a matching suite of furniture, including a vanity and a dresser. Kate rifled through all the drawers and then the closet without discovering anything more exciting than a cutout bra that looked like it would be awfully uncomfortable. The master bath was cluttered with various oils, ointments, creams, lotions, and every brand of makeup Kate had ever seen advertised in a magazine.
The guest bedroom down the hall was neat, clean, and impersonal. The closet had a shelf full of wrapping paper, ribbon, and items marked with sticky notes reading “Sandy for Christmas” and “Carolyn for her birthday” and “Cathy for her birthday” and “CathyO for the dinner.” Downstairs, the kitchen looked like it was used, and through it, aha, an office.
There was a desk in the middle of the room and file cabinets lined all the walls except one, which had a bookcase filled floor to ceiling with cookbooks. Kate remembered that Charlotte was a caterer. She went to the desk and opened the first drawer that came to hand and found a big red book of lined pages full of writing Kate recognized from Charlotte’s check. Each page was dated. Sometimes you just got lucky.
She sat down and found the date of Charlotte’s death. From there, she worked backward, slowly and methodically, one eye on the clock.
All the Monday entries began the same way: “Went out to Eagle River, tried to see Mom.”
Kate closed the diary and looked around. There was a shelf full of similar diaries. She pulled down a few and leafed through them. Every Monday began with the very same entry: “Went out to Eagle River, tried to see Mom.”
There were only twenty-two diaries on the shelf, so Kate couldn’t confirm that Charlotte had been trying to see her mother every Monday for the past thirty years, but it was a safe bet.
She went back to the current year and began reading steadily, with critical attention to detail, from the first of January. Some of it was personaclass="underline" “Emily and I talked. She’s working too much, too many late nights. I hardly ever see her anymore, and I don’t like it. She’s promised to cut back.” Some of it was business: “Catered the Williams-Lujon wedding. Everyone really liked the cheese puffs, so I’m including them in the A menu from now on.” Some of it was sociaclass="underline" “Took the governor’s wife to lunch in hopes of interesting her in establishing a culinary arts school at UAA. We could use a friend at court, and she actually admitted to cooking the occasional-meal, so fingers are crossed.” Some of it was trivial. “Shopping at Nordie’s with Chris, who always makes me buy more than I should. But oh, how could I resist that little black dress! Emily will drool!”
And then, suddenly, an unexpected entry in mid-July.
“Dad called. He wanted to meet so I went out there. He wanted Oliver to come, too, but Oliver said no. Oliver says no a lot. He’s like Dad-he doesn’t think Mom did it. I don’t know why he won’t go out there with me. Dad’s all we’ve got left.”
Oliver didn’t believe Victoria was guilty? Since when?
Well. Kate sat back. Charlotte, in spite of protestations to the contrary, had kept in contact with her father. Witnesses always lied-any cop could tell you that-but it always pissed Kate off when they did.
Only one other entry did Kate find of interest, the one the night before Erland’s party, and Charlotte’s last entry:
“Uncle Erland’s party is tomorrow. I hate those things. I hated them when Mom used to make us help out with the ones Grandfather used to have, and I hate them now. The boys were braver than me when they told her they wouldn’t go anymore. I wouldn’t except for Alice. Alice needs somebody there.”
Kate replaced the diary and went out the front door, locking it behind her. “Come on,” she told Mutt, and led the way back to the Subaru, where they waited another hour for Emily to come home. As before, the gold Cadillac hushed up the driveway, there was the sound of a car door opening, a moment of murmured conversation, the door closed, and the Cadillac purred back down the driveway and out onto the road.
Kate waited for ten minutes before starting the Subaru and driving up to the house. Emily took a long time answering the door, and when she saw Kate, she closed it again immediately. Kate put a hand up to catch it before it latched. “Emily? I need to talk to you.”
“I don’t want to talk to anyone.”
“Anyone, or just me?”
Emily tried to close the door again. Kate exerted a little muscle and Emily was forced back a step. “Emily, what did Charlotte tell you about hiring me?”
“Nothing.” Emily refused to meet Kate’s eyes.
“Driving to the Park takes at least a day. You didn’t ask her where she was going, or why?”
“No.”
Before her better self could take over, Kate said, “You and Charlotte were on the outs, weren’t you?”
Emily’s head jerked up. “What? That’s not true. It’s a lie. Where did you hear that? I-”
“You’d been working a lot of late nights, and Charlotte was tired of never seeing you. I can understand-no point in living together if you never see each other. Did she want you to move out?”
“No! She loved me! We loved each other. She would never have asked me to move out!”
“If you loved her so much, then help me find who killed her.”
Emily’s mouth opened, closed, opened again. Through stiff lips she said, “They caught the man who was driving the truck that hit her. He’s in jail.”
Kate waited until Emily looked up again, and said in a soft voice, “But you and I both know somebody paid him to do it. Who was it, Emily? And why? Am I getting too close to the truth of William Muravieff’s murder? Why didn’t Victoria fight harder? Why has she stayed in jail all this time without complaint?”