There was also the problem of the car. At Gerald’s mobile home, he had pulled up in a pickup truck. Parking was limited near his trailer; I hadn’t seen an El Camino.
I kept looking at photos. At the end of the stack, I came to one that made my blood run cold.
Mary Kelly’s house.
Richmond-and Robert DeMont-knew where to find us.
29
“Mary!” I called, running into the backyard.
“For heaven’s sake-”
“Do you have friends you could stay with, someone else you could spend a few nights with?”
She looked puzzled, but said, “Yes, why?”
“It isn’t safe here for you, or for us.” I found myself looking toward Travis’s room, worrying that I would be too late to take him out of harm’s way. Hastily, I tried to explain, all the while distracted by my fears, wondering if even now the killer was watching this house, setting new plans in motion.
“What can I do to help?” she asked calmly, after I had told my disjointed tale.
She wasn’t going to challenge me, question me at length. Some of the panic lifted. “Help me wake Travis. Pack whatever you’ll need. Most of my own things are ready. You have Travis’s cell phone number?”
“Yes.”
“Take it with you. If you need to reach us, use that number.”
“Where will you be?”
“In the van. I’ll stay on the move. Safer for us, safer for our friends.”
I knocked on Travis’s door; he didn’t answer. I knocked louder, still no answer. “The pain pills,” Mary said, and opened the door.
He slept peacefully on his back, on top of the covers; except for stockinged feet, he was fully clothed. His hands lay palm up at his sides, his mouth slightly open, his face relaxed-but it was not the face of the puckish storyteller in the park. The young man before me had been marked by too much sudden grief, its signs apparent even as he slept.
Reluctantly, I tried to wake him; he opened his eyes, murmured something, fell asleep.
“Let him sleep until we’re ready to leave, then,” I whispered to Mary. I put his few items of new clothing in his trunk, packed up my own belongings and the cell phone, then took all of it out to the van. I made up the bed in the back.
When I came back in, Mary was ready to go. She gave me a slip of paper on which she had written information about where she would be staying. “Met her in my t’ai chi ch’uan class,” she said.
We managed to rouse Travis enough to get him into the van; he promptly fell asleep on the bed.
I hugged Mary, and she pulled me back into a second embrace, giving me a kiss on the cheek and telling me, “Be careful. I will never forgive you if you don’t outlive me.”
“I feel exactly the same way about you,” I said, making her laugh. I watched her walk over to the Mustang and called out, “Will you be able to park that thing in your friend’s garage?”
“That,” she called back, “was the first consideration in deciding where to stay!”
I watched to make sure no one followed her, then drove off, sparing one last, worried look at my Karmann Ghia. I supposed if Mary could leave her home behind, I could leave my car.
For a while I drove aimlessly, checking the rearview mirror often. I stopped at a gas station, filled up the tank. Travis slept through it all.
I picked up the cell phone and called Rachel. I asked her to meet me in the parking lot of a grocery store on the east side of town.
I got there first. I opened some windows and the roof vent, so that Travis wouldn’t suffocate in the afternoon heat, and stepped outside. I stayed next to the van, even after Rachel parked several spaces away.
She walked over and I explained what was happening. I told her she could look through the photos while I picked up a few things in the store.
I wasn’t gone long; I had no idea how many days we’d spend on the road, but being an optimist, I guessed on the low side. Besides, there wasn’t much room in the van’s little refrigerator.
We stepped outside to talk.
“What are your plans for these photos?” she asked in a low voice.
“I’m going to have a talk with your friend McCain.”
She didn’t comment on that, or shrug or gesture. That made me uneasy. “You’ve seen him lately?” I asked.
“Had lunch with him today.” After a moment she added, “Talked over old times.”
“No kidding.”
“Listen, you have something on your mind, say it.”
“And get my ass kicked? No thank you.”
“I won’t touch you, and you know it. So speak up.”
I didn’t say anything.
“All right, then,” she said.
After a long silence, during which neither one of us would look at the other, she said, “You need anything?”
“Just check on Mary once in a while.” I gave her the address and phone number. “And one other thing-a big favor.” I handed her my car keys. “Move the Karmann Ghia? Maybe Jack would help you out.”
“I’d rather stay with you, protect the two of you.”
I shook my head. “If anything happens to us, I’m depending on you and Mary to make sure Frank starts dating again.”
“Don’t talk like that.”
“Oh, I’m supposed to tell you that our boys spent Saturday night at a public library in Boise, Idaho, looking up that story on DeMont.”
She smiled. “The sad thing is, I believe it.”
She walked back to her car, then drove it over to where I still stood outside the van. She rolled down her window, said, “I shouldn’t have to tell you this, but I would never do anything to hurt him.”
She drove off, while I stood there, alone with my shame.
I called McCain.
I drove the van to a large park near the eastern side of town. Part of the park can be accessed for free; I went to the larger section, the side that charges a low admission fee. It was that time of day when picnickers were starting to leave, so when I paid the two bucks to go in, most of the other cars were going out.
I drove to the far end of the road, to a relatively treeless section that is mostly a large stretch of uneven ground. Not enough shade or tables for a picnic, nor level enough for games. We had it to ourselves. I would easily be able to see anyone approaching by car or on foot.
Travis still slept, but his sleep was more restless now. Once, I thought he had awakened, but he was only talking in his sleep, murmuring half-words that I couldn’t understand.
I opened up the side of the van, and set up its attached awning. This kept the van cool and made a shady spot to sit while waiting for McCain. I set up two chairs under the nearest tree, so that we could talk without waking Travis.
I heard the car even before I saw it, and noticed that McCain was approaching cautiously, as if driving into a possible trap. Suspicious son of a bitch. Not that I blamed him.
He parked some distance away, but that might have been because I had told him Travis was sleeping. I motioned him over to the chairs. He was in a suit, and he hung the jacket on the back of his chair. I offered him a can of iced tea, and he accepted. He seemed to be studying my every move. As I handed him the iced tea, it dawned on me that he hadn’t seen me at all the day before, so the bruises and swelling were new to him. He saw that I had caught him staring at me and said, “I didn’t realize that guy had roughed you up so much.”
I shrugged, and said, “There are worse things that can happen to a person.”
“Reed Collins tells me you know about some of those, too.”
I took a deep breath. “Not why I asked you over here.”
“Well, yes, but this is my awkward attempt at working up to an apology. Sorry I got so hot under the collar yesterday.”
“I was a little testy myself.”
Nobody had slammed me against a wall.“
“Okay, you win, you were the bigger asshole.”
He laughed. “Much better. What can I do for you?”
“I visited Robert DeMont today. You know who he is?”
“Cousin of Arthur Spanning’s first wife. We talked to him. Says what everybody says in this case-he hasn’t seen Briana Maguire in years.”