“Mary Louise still isn’t home, and she’s not answering her cell. I was wondering if she’d shown up at your place?”
“I haven’t seen her. You’ve no idea where she might have gone?”
A pause. Too long.
“Mrs. Marcus?”
“Mary Louise and I had a little tiff this morning. Trivial, really. She wanted to wear her hair in this ridiculous upsweep, and I insisted she braid it as usual.” The chuckle sounded less genuine than earlier. “Perhaps I just don’t want my little girl to grow up.”
“Has she done this before?” I glanced at the window. It was now full dark outside.
“The little imp can hold a grudge.”
“I’m happy to look around Sharon Hall.”
“If it’s not too much bother. She often goes there to feed the birds.”
“It’s no bother.” Actually, I was glad for the diversion.
One slice of pepperoni and cheese, then I set off. Though I walked the grounds and called out repeatedly, my efforts yielded no sign of Mary Louise.
I phoned the Marcus home. Yvonne thanked me, apologized again. Reassured me there was no need to worry.
And I was back to mute phones and the silence of the annex. To the obstinate dossiers.
To subtle taunting by my subconscious.
Screw the files. I stretched out on the couch in the study. Crossed my ankles. Closed my eyes. Cleared my mind.
What had happened? What had been said? What had I read? Seen? Done?
I allowed facts and images to percolate in my head. Names. Places. Dates.
The files. The conference room boards. Gower. Nance. Estrada. Koseluk. Donovan. Leal.
The old cases in Montreal. Bastien. Violette. McGee.
The more I struggled, the more the subliminal needle lay flat on the gauge.
The interview with the Violettes. With Sabine Pomerleau. With Tawny McGee’s parents, Bernadette and Jake Kezerian.
Little blip there.
The photo. The realization that McGee had CAIS. The conversation with Lindahl.
Blip.
McGee was our perp. Though devastating, I knew it in my soul.
Where was she? Who was she?
I thought of the interviews with Slidell.
Hamet Ajax.
Ellis Yoder.
My higher centers touched something in the murky depths.
What?
Alice Hamilton.
The needle blipped higher.
Come on. Come on.
A dingy apartment on North Dotger.
The needle lifted, dropped as the thing slipped away.
Crap. Crap. Crap.
From nowhere, a comment by Slidell. Alice down the rabbit hole.
A name printed on a magazine. Alice Hamilton.
A name scribbled in a journal in a cellar. Alice Kimberly Hamilton.
The needle fired up and slapped over to the right.
CHAPTER 40
SAME DRILL.
I called Slidell. Got rolled to voicemail. Swore. Left a message that I hoped would goose his ass.
I called Ryan. Actually got him. Explained my theory. Asked him to check the evidence log from the house on de Sébastopol. To confirm.
Then I waited. Paced. Was my epiphany due to frustration? To the power of suggestion? A groundless leap triggered by a rabbit-hole quip?
No. I felt it in my soul.
When my cell finally rang, my whole body flinched. “Where the hell are you?” I barked.
A long moment.
“My cruiser.” Low and husky.
My agitated brain took a moment to process. Hen Hull. The investigator on the Estrada case.
“Sorry. I was expecting someone else.”
“I don’t envy the dude.”
I was too pumped to conjure a witty reply.
“Took some doing, but I finally located Maria Estrada,” Hull said. “Tia’s mother. She’s in Juárez and has no phone. But there’s a cousin living just outside Charlotte, in Rock Hill. I’ve got some free time, so I’m going there now.”
“That’s very generous.”
“The kid got shafted every step of the way. The family deserves the story firsthand.”
“You might want to hold off.”
“Hold off?”
“We’re thinking it wasn’t Ajax.”
“You’re thinking?”
“It wasn’t Ajax. And he didn’t kill himself.”
I gave an edited version of all that had happened. Felt a cold front coming my way from Wadesboro.
“Ajax’s tox results didn’t land on Larabee’s desk until yesterday.” Trying to justify leaving her out of the loop. “And I only talked to McGee’s doctor today.”
“Uh-huh.”
“I should have kept you better informed.”
“Yes.” Pause. “You really believe McGee is capable of this?”
“The therapist didn’t come right out and say it, but she implied that Tawny is very disturbed.”
Like Slidell’s, Hull’s mind went straight to intent. Because homicide demands it. Unlike robbery or fraud, the motive for murder is often unclear.
“Why kill?” she asked.
“I don’t know.”
Brief pause before Hull spoke again.
“Maybe McGee gets her charge out of dropping Pomerleau again and again.”
“If that’s the fantasy, why pick young girls?” Quick glance at my watch. Ten minutes had crept by since last I checked.
“Or maybe she’s symbolically killing herself. It’s a guilt thing. She survived while Pomerleau’s other victims died.”
Though the same questions had tormented me, at that moment I had no desire to play Freud. I wanted verification. Action.
“Maybe—”
The line beeped to indicate an incoming call. “Hold on.” Without waiting for Hull’s consent, I clicked over. It was neither Ryan nor Slidell.
Any pretense at calm was now abandoned. “Mary Louise never came home. It’s almost eight. Something has to be wrong. Oh my God! You see these things on the news, but oh my God!” Yvonne Marcus was frantic. “I’ve called everyone I can think of. Her teachers. Her friends. No one has seen her since school dismissal at three-thirty. My husband is out looking, but—”
“Mrs. Marcus—”
“What do I do? Shall I call the police?”
“Does Mary Louise ride a bus?”
“No, no. She attends Myers Park Traditional. It’s right up the block, so I allow her to walk.”
Directly past Sharon Hall.
I felt the tiny hairs rise on the back of my neck. Sensed my hand gripping the phone too tightly.
“I’m sure she’s fine.” Controlled. “But just to be safe, phone 911. I’ll also make some calls.”
“Oh my God!”
“It will be all right.”
“I should go out and—”
“No. Stay home. Be there when Mary Louise returns.”
As I reconnected with Hull, a terrible medley of images spewed from my neurons.
A gangly girl who loved fashion and hats.
Movement in the shadows of an enormous magnolia.
A photo of myself measuring a skull.
Why hadn’t I picked up the phone? Why hadn’t I returned the child’s call? How could I have been so selfish?
“McGee may have taken another child.”
“Are you serious?”
“Mary Louise Marcus left school four hours ago on foot. Still hasn’t arrived at her house.”
“The kid got any issues?”
“No.”
“Not likely a runaway?”
“No.”
“She fit the profile?”
“Yes.” Fourteen. Fair. Long brown hair center-parted and braided.
I heard Hull suck in a long breath. Then, “If it is McGee, you think she’s taunting us? Snubbing her nose at authority?”
“I think this time it’s personal.” I swallowed. “And I think I know where she is.”
A light drizzle was falling. I had the wipers on high. Not for the rain. To match the cadence of my heart.
I called Slidell. Rolled to voicemail. Of course.
Screw Slidell.
I called the MP division. Got a guy named Zoeller whom I’d heard was a dolt but didn’t know personally.
“Yep. Yvonne Marcus. Called twenty minutes ago to report her daughter missing.”