Выбрать главу

“Soon, my love,” he said, “soon.”

Bingle’s hackles went up, and he began barking at Parrish.

A warning we should have heeded.

16

THURSDAY MORNING, MAY 18

Southern Sierra Nevada Mountains

Ben and David soon began the next phase of their work, and with the same painstaking care they had taken at Julia Sayre’s grave. Duke and Earl decided to get a little shut-eye, but made Thompson promise to wake them if the anthropologists found anything.

Merrick and Manton took their prisoner some distance from the grave, where Thompson tried to question him, but Parrish was unwilling to say anything about this victim. That is not to say he was silent.

“Do you know why those coyotes died?” Parrish asked, staring at me again.

“No, tell me,” Thompson coaxed.

“For disturbing the peace,” he answered, not so much as glancing away from me. “Now, look at Dr. Sheridan and Dr. Niles. Are they any better than coyotes?”

“What do you mean?” Thompson asked.

Requiescat in pace.”

“What does that mean?”

“Ask Ms. Kelly. She grew up hearing Latin — at least on Sundays.”

Thompson turned to me.

“It means ‘rest in peace,’ ” I said. “The R.I.P. on old gravestones.”

“You see?” Parrish said. “Do you know the habits of coyotes, Ms. Kelly?”

I didn’t answer.

“They rob graves. They will steal bones and gnaw on them.”

“Coyotes aren’t the only animals that will do that,” Thompson said.

“I don’t like coyotes,” Parrish said, smiling.

I walked away, headed back toward the grave.

Bingle was pleased to see me, and David as well. “Would you mind dog-sitting again?” he asked. “He’s especially restless for some reason.”

I had already realized this. Bingle had been dividing his time between trying to sneak closer to David and turning to bark fiercely toward Parrish.

“Duke and Earl must be ready to kill me,” David said. “They probably managed to fall asleep just in time to have him wake them with all his racket. I don’t know what his problem is.”

“With J.C. and Andy here yesterday, he could command more of your attention.”

“He’s had to sit quietly while I worked on other cases. He’s not usually so unruly. And he seldom reacts to anyone the way he has to Nick Parrish.”

“They should make him a judge,” I said.

David laughed. He showed me that they had already reached a layer of large stones, and could see green plastic in some places. “If this grave wasn’t made by Nick Parrish, he has an imitator,” he said.

“David,” Ben said, on a note of exasperation. He was in one of his crankier moods, and had been frowning throughout the time he had been working on the grave. He didn’t scold me for getting too close to it, though. Progress, I supposed.

Bingle decided to bark at Parrish again.

“Maybe I should take Bingle for a walk,” I said. “Get him away from Parrish for a while. God knows, I’d like to get away from him.” And the smell of decomposition, I thought, but didn’t say so.

“That would be great!” David said. He stopped working and went to get a leash from the dog equipment bag.

“A good idea, Ms. Kelly,” Ben said, carefully scraping soil off the plastic. “I’d prefer to work without curiosity seekers this time.”

“Curiosity seekers?” I said, outraged. “I’m a professional here on a job. If you could just get that idea through your thick skull—”

“What a profession. You profit from other people’s suffering—”

“Excuse me, Saint Ben of the Bones, but—”

“—you’ll peddle the details of another person’s misery to anyone who’s willing to drop a coin at a newsstand—”

“Ben,” I heard a voice say behind me. “Please.” David was back with the leash.

Ben looked away, but couldn’t hide the effort required to keep his anger in check. He scowled at his gloved hands for a long moment, then went back to scraping soil.

David leashed Bingle and made sure that the dog would heel at my command, then he walked with us toward the forest. He seemed preoccupied.

“Bingle won’t stay with me without a leash?” I asked.

“Hmm? Oh — no, sorry. He understands that when I give his lead to someone else, he has to stay with that person. Otherwise, I couldn’t depend on him not to take a notion to come and see what I was up to. He might run off and leave you in the middle of the woods.” He smiled. “I could probably make him find you, of course, but it’s easier on everybody if we just give him the message ahead of time.”

“I see — so the leash is to make sure I don’t get lost.”

He laughed. “Exactly.”

I thought he would stop at the edge of the forest, but he continued a little way into it. “About Ben,” he said suddenly. “He has this problem with reporters. I know he can be abrupt—”

“Abrupt?”

“Rude.”

“Yes.”

“Okay, rude,” he admitted. “But you shouldn’t take it personally. I know that outside of your profession, he thinks you’re okay.”

“I’ll have to remember to congratulate myself!”

“I’m not doing a very good job with this, am I?”

“You’re doing fine. Sorry. I shouldn’t take my anger at him out on you. If you’re going to tell me that he’s good-hearted, I already know that.”

“You do?” he asked, incredulous.

“Yes, and not just because Parrish is here to hold up for comparison. I think I first really noticed it when Ben asked you to have Bingle sleep with me — on a night when I think he had come to borrow the dog to ease his own nightmares.”

David nodded.

“Besides, Judge Bingle likes Ben,” I said.

David went down to eye level with Bingle, and caressed the dog’s ruff and ears. Bingle lowered his head, butted it against David’s chest, and held it there, making soft, low sounds of pleasure. “Bingle’s a good judge,” David said. “He likes you, too.”

“The feeling is mutual. But I suspect you were going to try to make a few excuses for your other friend?”

“Not excuses, really. I just thought if you knew — he has his reasons for mistrusting the press.”

“Such as?”

“Just this year, he—” He halted, shook his head, then thought for a moment before saying, “A couple of years ago, when he was working on a plane crash, a TV reporter overheard Ben talking to someone — using one of those spy-type microphones.”

“A parabolic mike.”

“Yes. She went on the air, and misquoted him. That happens to all of us, but this was misinformation that led the victims’ families to hope that they’d be — that the remains would be relatively intact. Do you know what really happens — in a high-impact crash, I mean?”

“Yes,” I said. “The physics aren’t in anybody’s favor.”

“Right. Most of the time, we make identifications on fragments.”

“So the families were upset with him.”

“Yes. I don’t think the thing that bothered him most was that the families were angry with him. He just hated seeing them tormented. People who were grieving, already unable to really accept what had happened, and then this expectation — Ben said it amounted to a form of public torture. I think he was right.”

“So this one incident has tarred all reporters with the same brush?”

“I wish I could tell you it was one incident. There have been photos taken in temporary morgues by hidden cameras. Misinformation about missing persons — you can’t imagine how painful that is for the victims’ families!”

“If you want me to say that I’m proud of everyone in my profession—”

“No, no, of course not. I can tell you about colleagues of ours who make us shake our heads. I’m just trying to help you understand Ben, I guess. Like I said, I don’t want you to take it personally.”