She disappeared for a moment and returned with a wrapped gift for me. She said, "I got it at the historical society gift shop. I didn't lift it, but I took forty percent off for myself."
"You didn't have to — "
"Just open it."
And I did. It was a book titled The Story of Pirate Treasure.
She said, "Open to the flyleaf."
I opened it and read, "To John, my favorite buccaneer, Love, Emma." I smiled and said, "Thank you. This is what I've always wanted."
"Well, not always. But I thought you might want to look it over."
"I will."
Anyway, the cottage was cute, it was clean, there was no cat, she had scotch and beer, the mattress was firm, she liked the Beatles and the Bee Gees, and she had two pillows for me. What more could I ask? Well, whipped cream. She had that, too.
* * *
The next morning, Sunday, we went out for breakfast at the Cutchogue Diner, then without asking me, she drove to church, a nice clapboard Methodist church. She explained, "I'm not a fanatic about it, but it gives me a lift sometimes. It's not bad for business either."
So I attended church, ready to dive under the pew if the ceiling caved in.
After church, we retrieved my car in front of Mr. Tobin's mansion, and Emma followed me back to my mansion.
While Emma made tea for herself, I called Beth at her office. She wasn't in so I left a message with a guy who said he was working the Gordon case. I said to him, "Tell her I'll be out all day. I'll try to speak to her tonight. If not, she should come to my place tomorrow morning for coffee."
"Okay."
I called Beth's house and got her answering machine. I left the same message.
Feeling that I'd done what I could to keep my promise, I went into the kitchen and said, "Let's take a Sunday drive."
"Sounds good to me."
She drove her car home and I followed, then we went to Orient Point in my Jeep and took the New London ferry. We spent the day in Connecticut and Rhode Island, visiting the mansions in Newport, having dinner in Mystic, then taking the ferry back.
We stood on the deck of the ferry and watched the water and the stars.
The ferry passed through Plum Island Gut, and I could see the Orient Point Lighthouse on the right. To the left, the old stone Plum Island Lighthouse was dark and forbidding against the night sky.
The Gut was choppy, and Emma remarked, "That storm's tracking this way. The seas get rough long before the weather moves in." She added, "Also, the barometer drops. Can you feel it?"
"Feel what?"
"The falling air pressure."
"Uh…" I stuck my tongue out. "Not yet."
"I can feel it. I'm very weather sensitive."
"Is that good or bad?"'
"I think it's a good thing."
"So do I."
"Are you sure you can't feel it? Don't your wounds ache a little?"
I focused on my wounds and sure enough, they did ache a little. I said to Emma, "Thanks for bringing it to my attention."
"It's good to get in touch with your body, to understand the relationships between the elements and your body and mind."
"Absolutely."
"For instance, I get a little crazy during a full moon."
"Crazier," I pointed out.
"Yes, crazier. How about you?"
"I get very horny."
"Really? During a full moon?"
"Full moon, half-moon, quarter-moon."
She laughed.
I glanced at Plum Island as we passed by. I could see a few channel lights and, on the horizon, a glow from where the main lab would be behind the trees. Otherwise, the island was as dark as it had been three hundred years ago, and if I squinted I could imagine William Kidd's sloop, the San Antonio, reconnoitering the island one July night in 1699. I could see a boat being lowered off the side with Kidd and maybe one or two others aboard, and I could see someone in the boat rowing toward the shore…
Emma interrupted my thoughts and asked me, "What are you thinking?"
"Just enjoying the night."
"You were staring at Plum Island."
"Yes… I was thinking about… the Gordons."
"You were thinking about Captain Kidd."
"You must be a witch."
"I'm a good Methodist and a bitch. But only once a month."
I smiled. "And you're weather sensitive."
"That's right." She asked me, "Are you going to tell me any more about this… this murder?"
"No, I'm not."
"All right. I understand. If you need anything from me, just ask. I'll do whatever I can to help."
"Thanks."
The ferry approached the slip, and she asked me, "Do you want to stay at my place tonight?"
"Well… I do, but… I should go home."
"I can stay at your place."
"Well… to tell you the truth, I was supposed to talk or to meet with Detective Penrose today, and I should see if I can sfill do that."
"All right."
And we left the matter there.
I dropped her off at her home. I said to her, "I'll see you tomorrow after work."
"Good. There's a nice restaurant on the water that I'd like to take you to."
"Looking forward to it." We kissed on her doorstep, and I got into my Jeep and drove home.
There were seven messages for me. I was in no mood for them and went to bed without playing them. They'd be there in the morning.
As I drifted off, I tried to figure out what to do about Fredric Tobin. There's sometimes this situation when you have your man, yet you don't have your man. There is a critical moment when you have to decide if you should keep stalking him, confront him, smoke him out, or pretend to lose interest in him.
I should have also been thinking that when you corner an animal or a man, he can become dangerous — that the game is played by both hunter and hunted, and that the hunted had a lot more to lose.
But I forgot to consider Tobin as a thinking, cunning animal because he struck me as such a fop, the same way I'd struck him as a simpleton. We both knew better, but we'd both been lulled a little bit by each other's act. In any event, I blame myself for what happened.
CHAPTER 29
It was raining Monday morning when I woke up, the first rain we'd had in weeks, and the farmers were happy even if the vintners were not. I knew at least one vintner who had bigger problems than a heavy rain.
As I dressed, I listened to the radio and heard that a hurricane named Jasper was off the coast of Virginia, causing unsettled weather conditions as far north as New York 's Long Island. I was glad I was driving back to Manhattan today.
I hadn't been to my Seventy-second Street condo in over a month, and I hadn't accessed my answering machine messages either, partly because I didn't want to, but mostly, I guess, because I forgot my access code.
Anyway, at about nine a.m., I went downstairs dressed in designer jeans and polo shirt and made coffee. I was sort of waiting for Beth to call or come by.
The local weekly was on the kitchen counter, unread from Friday, and I was not too surprised to see last Monday's murder on the front page. I took the paper out on the back porch with a mug of coffee and read the local hotshot reporter's version of the double murder story. The guy was imprecise enough, opinionated-enough, and was a bad enough stylist to write for Newsday or the Times.
I noticed an article about Tobin Vineyards in which Mr. Fredric Tobin was quoted as saying, "We will begin the harvest any day now, and this promises to be a vintage year, perhaps the best in the last ten years, barring a heavy rain."
Well, Freddie, it's raining. I wondered if condemned men are allowed to request wine with their last meal.
Anyway, I threw the local weekly aside and picked up Emma's gift, The Story of Pirate Treasure. I flipped through it, looked at the pictures, saw a map of Long Island, which I studied for a minute or so, then found the chapters on Captain Kidd and read at random a deposition of Robert Livingston, Esq., one of Kidd's original financial backers. The deposition read in part,