“Ben.” I acknowledged his presence with a curt nod. I no longer wanted to hit him, but he wasn’t at the top of my list for chatting with either.
“Listen, Row, I know ya’ don’t wanna talk ta’ me right now, but this is important,” he began, smoothing his hair back and bringing his hand to rest on his neck. He was thinking hard.
“I will leave you two alone,” Helen offered, making a move to stand.
“No, stay,” I told her.
I needed her to be here. As much as I didn’t want to admit it, everyone was correct. I was very close to the edge, and I had no compunction about jumping. Right now she was the only one standing between me and the sudden stop at the end.
“What is it?” I asked, trying to keep the bark out of my voice.
“It doesn’t look like Porter has anything ta’ do with this.” He blurted out the words as if he could no longer contain them. “There’s some shit that just doesn’t add up.”
“Excuse me?” I stared back at him like he’d grown an extra head. “What are you talking about? Of course he did this!”
“Hear me out, Rowan.” He rushed the request out as quickly as he could and moved down the steps toward me. “The only thing that really pointed ta’ Porter to begin with was the Bible, and he ain’t the one who left it…”
“How do you know that?” I demanded before he could continue.
“I made some calls,” he explained. “Everyone in Felicity’s charity group got one of those Bibles. They were gifts to ‘em from the kids at the children’s home they visited this afternoon.”
“W-W-What?” I stammered.
“Yeah,” he nodded as he spoke. “Everyone I talked to said Felicity didn’t have the heart not ta’ take it, ‘cause the kids were so excited about givin’ them somethin’. She’s the one who left it on the table, Row. Not Porter.”
“Okay, so then where the hell is she?!” I snarled the demand.
“I dunno yet, white man,” he returned. “But I’m gonna find ‘er.”
CHAPTER 27
Hope was ignited from a miniscule spark that set flame to a tiny candle somewhere deep inside me. Its glow was so incredibly faint so as to be almost beyond notice, but it was there-flickering defiantly into the face of the shadowy fear that threatened to extinguish it.
“It could still be Porter,” I announced.
“Maybe, maybe not,” Ben replied.
“Well I really doubt she just went for a walk,” I snapped. “Something obviously happened here.”
“Yeah, and we’re gonna find out what,” Ben told me. “Accordin’ to your monitoring service, the alarm was disabled usin’ Felicity’s code via the keypad in the kitchen at six-oh-seven p.m.”
“Then it had to have happened after she was already in,” I offered. “We have a duress code she would have used otherwise.”
My friend nodded agreement. “Figured as much. There wasn’t a trigger from the panic buttons either.”
“Then whoever took her must have been following her.”
“Maybe, but I’m workin’ a different angle. We’ve done a door to door. Nobody saw anything, but considerin’ what day it is, no big surprise there.”
“What about the people who were actually supposed to be watching the house?”
“That’s a cluster.” He shook his head. “Left hand didn’t know what the right hand was doin’. Locals thought the Feebs were on tonight, Feebs thought the locals were on, and…and well…there’s just no way ta’ sugar coat it, Row. Somebody fucked up, and there hasn’t been anyone watchin’ the house since about three this afternoon.”
I closed my eyes and shook my head. I wanted to explode, but logically I knew that doing so wouldn’t help. Still, just how much longer I was going to stay on the side of rationality remained to be seen.
“That doesn’t sound at all like Constance,” I said. “She’s meticulous.”
“That’s ‘zactly why it’s a cluster. Mandalay had ta’ go back down ta’ the scene in Cape, so she wasn’t even in Saint Louis.” Ben’s disdain for the FBI was almost legendary. Constance Mandalay was the only agent he trusted, and the events of this evening added just that much more evidence to his personal case file against the agency. “But let’s not go there, ‘cause it ain’t gonna get us anywhere with this. Now, movin’ on,” he continued. “The front door was unlocked. Did you do that?”
“No,” I shook my head vigorously. “They’ve already asked me that.”
“I’m just double checkin’,” he told me. “Since you two normally come in the back, that’d mean Felicity had ta’ have opened it since there was no sign of a forced entry.”
“The mail,” I offered.
“What?”
“The mail was on the dining room table,” I explained. “She probably got the mail.”
“Yeah, makes sense, but she left the door unlocked. Okay, what about the back? Was it open when ya’ got here?”
“Closed but unlocked. Although, the inner door was ajar.”
“What about the lights? Were any on?”
“I’ve been over this twice now!” I threw my hands up in exasperation. “What does it matter?”
“Calm down,” Ben appealed. “I’m just tryin’ ta’ get a handle on this.”
“Get a handle on what, Ben?! My wife is missing!”
“Listen ta’ me for a minute,” he ordered. “We’re talkin’ about Felicity here, she…”
“No shit!” I spat. “Did they give you your badge as a reward for recognizing the obvious?!”
His voice raised a notch. “Shut the fuck up and listen ta’ me goddammit!”
“Benjamin!” Helen admonished, breaking her self-imposed silence.
“Stay out of it, Helen!” he barked.
“Why don’t you quit screwing around and tell me something I don’t already know!” I almost screamed at him.
Without warning he lashed out. I flinched, fully expecting his fist to connect with my jaw. In retrospect, I certainly would have deserved it if it had. Instead, I felt his large hand twist into the collar of my shirt at the back of my neck, and I instantly felt myself being propelled forward. Less than a minute later I had been forced up the stairs, through the atrium, then the kitchen, and finally into the dining room.
The crime scene technicians had all but vacated the premises and were finishing up in front of the house. Helen had followed after Ben, and the three of us now stood before the spectacle that had so thoroughly thrust me into despair.
“Look at the scene, Rowan!” he demanded. “Stop actin’ like an asshole for just one goddamned second and take a good look at it!”
The bright incandescence of the artificial lighting cast a stark picture before me as my eyes fought to adjust. Just as it had been earlier, the dining room table was canted at an angle, pushed a few degrees from its original position in the room. The chairs were in minor disarray from the movement, and as before, one was on its side. The mail we’d just discussed was spread out toward one end, with a trio of #10 envelopes and a medium-sized box resting haphazardly on the floor below.
The Bible still stared back from dead center as if mocking me.
The only thing that had really changed was that a patina of graphite and lycopodium powders now enhanced the latent fingerprints throughout.
“Whaddaya see?” my friend asked, his voice stern but slightly calmer.
“I don’t know,” I shot back. “My dining room? A mess? What am I supposed to see?”
He let go of my collar and I immediately wheeled about to face him.
He thrust a finger at me. “Like I said, we’re talkin’ about Felicity here. This is a woman who once tackled a mugger an’ sat on ‘im ‘till a squad car arrived. Now take another look. Does this room really look like she put up a fight?”
I didn’t need to look again. He was correct. In reality, the disruption was minor in comparison to what it could have been. My wife was not one who would go quietly into the night without first extracting her own pound of flesh. She would have fought. She would have kicked. She would have screamed like a real Irish banshee. No matter how big or how strong her attacker, she would have wrecked the entire house trying to get away.