Concern in his round face, his startling blue eyes. “Something happen?”
“Letter from Erin.”
Puzzlement now. “She’s okay, then?”
Annie shook her head. “No. She’s not okay. I’ll explain later.” She forced herself to focus on work for a moment. “I’ve got two shipments coming in today-Pacific and Green Thumb. You’re authorized to sign for both… We need roses for the Strepman wedding on Saturday. Call Julio, tell him to send Blue Girls and Caribias, same quantity as our last wedding order. Make sure we get the bulk discount… We’re running low on gift baskets. Better order a dozen from Marasco’s. Half with dried fruit assortments, half with those fudge things… And balloons; we need more balloons, assorted colors; at least two bags’ worth. The big bags.”
“Got it.”
“Don’t leave the shop to make deliveries. Use the courier service for anything local. Did you get the centerpiece to Antonio’s before seven?”
“With time to spare. Closed up at six-thirty, and-zoom-I was there.”
“I owe you some overtime.”
“It took five minutes. Forget about it.”
“How’d the centerpiece go over, anyway?”
“They loved it. Said they may put in another order today.”
“Great,” she said without enthusiasm. “If they do, I’ll put it together as soon as I get back. If you have a chance, cut some foam for me. The green foam. And soak it.”
“I know what to do,” he said gently.
“Right. Sorry. Gotta go.”
“Good luck, Annie,” he called after her.
As she pulled out of the parking lot, she saw Harold still standing in the doorway, one arm lifted in a wave.
31
Gund watched Annie steer the Miata through a squealing U-turn and race onto Craycroft Road, speeding south.
The letter hadn’t fooled her, as he’d hoped. If anything, it had reinforced her suspicions.
But he doubted that the police would view it in the same light. An overworked detective would seize on any plausible excuse to discontinue the preliminary investigation into Erin’s disappearance.
Annie, of course, had failed to think of that. Her mind didn’t work that way. She was not devious. To her, the phoniness of the letter was self-evident; naively she assumed that others would agree.
She was in for a disappointment. Well, there would be a worse disappointment yet to come. Because Erin was never coming back.
Gund entered the shop, flicked on the lights. Stuffed animals and garish pinatas peeped at him out of the foliage like huddled creatures in a forest.
He wondered how Annie would deal with it, how she would react as it became clear to her-clearer each day, each passing week-that her sister was gone forever, her fate a mystery never to be solved.
The loss would age her, surely. Kill her, even.
He frowned, lips pursed. No, he decided. It would not kill her. She was strong. As strong as Erin, though she probably didn’t know it.
She would live through this.
Unless, of course, Gund should find it necessary to No.
That never had been part of the plan. Erin’s… disposal… always had been an option, albeit one he’d preferred not to exercise. But Annie wasn’t part of this. Annie need not be touched.
“Need not,” he whispered, rubbing his hands together. “Need not.”
He set about drawing the blinds, dusting the counter, sorting currency in the cash register. These were things he could do automatically; his mind was still on Annie.
In her haste and agitation she hadn’t even noticed the damage to his van, though she had parked directly beside it.
Last night he’d replaced the flat tire with a full-size spare, then hammered the door frame on the driver’s side back into shape so the door would open and shut. The rest of the damage would require the services of an auto-body shop.
The front quarter panel on the driver’s side had been crushed like a beer can. One headlight was gone. Ugly grooves were etched in the passenger-side panel where Erin’s Taurus had scraped the van in the barn.
Gund carried no collision insurance. That little bitch had cost him a bundle.
Well, he’d seen to it that she paid for her disobedience. She would never give him any trouble again.
He nodded grimly. Never again.
Though he hadn’t heard a weather report, the morning seemed warm, the shop stuffy. He found the thermostat and turned on the air conditioning.
The sudden whir of the duct fans, a dull, throbbing burr, reminded him of the roar of flames.
32
Annie found Walker at a desk in the detective squad room, eating a cruller and sipping black coffee. Crumbs littered his desk blotter.
He stood, wiping his mouth self-consciously, as she approached him. A smile brightened his face, then faded as he saw her obvious distress.
“What is it?” he asked.
“I heard from Erin.”
He remembered courtesy. “Sit down.”
She seated herself before the desk. Walker took his chair again, then leaned forward and studied her in the wan fluorescent glow.
“Was it a phone call?” he inquired gently.
“Letter.” She almost handed it to him, then hesitated. “Do you think it ought to be tested for fingerprints?”
“Fingerprints? Is it some kind of ransom note?”
“No, but…”
“Don’t worry about prints. Let me see it, please.”
He read it carefully, taking more time than he needed.
Other men in suit jackets hurried in and out of the room. It occurred to Annie that all of them, and Walker, too, had guns concealed beneath their jackets, sleek pistols or bulky revolvers. The thought struck her as obvious and, at the same time, somehow bizarre-like a child’s first realization that people were naked under their clothes.
Finally, Walker put down the letter. “This is your sister’s handwriting?”
“Yes.”
“Well, then… it’s good news. Isn’t it?”
She’d hoped he would see instantly how stilted and unnatural the phrasing was. Now she wondered, with a flutter of doubt, if she could convince him.
“No,” she replied, speaking carefully. “It’s not good news at all. It’s a trick.”
“A trick.” Though he said it evenly, not giving the words the inflection of a question, she heard his skepticism.
She swallowed. “I know it sounds… far-fetched. But Erin wouldn’t write this. I mean, she wouldn’t write it this way.” Was she making any sense? It had seemed so clear to her on the way over, but now she couldn’t find the words to express her thoughts. “I mean, she’d never be so impersonal and cold. It’s totally out of character for her.”
“So is running away.”
“She didn’t do that, either.”
“What you’re saying is that your sister was kidnapped and coerced into writing this letter.”
Hearing her theory stated so coolly in this orderly place, this place of gray metal desks and pea green filing cabinets and men with guns, Annie thought it sounded preposterous, absurd.
Gamely she stood her ground. “That’s exactly what I’m saying.” A pause, then a shrug. She might as well play the full hand she’d been dealt. “There’s this, too.”
She showed him the envelope. He examined it with cursory interest. “The address is wrong,” he said.
That surprised her; she hadn’t thought he would notice. “Yes. I live at 509, not 505.”
“I know. I booted up your M.V.D. file along with Erin’s.”
“You did? Why?”
“Just gathering information,” he replied vaguely. “So what are you telling me? That Erin couldn’t have filled out the envelope? You already said the handwriting is hers.”
“Yes, it’s hers. She wrote the wrong address on purpose.” She took a breath, fully aware that she was about to make a fool of herself in his eyes, plunging ahead anyway. “The fives are written to look like S’s. See? SOS.”
To his credit. Walker showed no reaction to her suggestion. His face remained politely impassive as he did her the courtesy of appearing to consider the idea.