Louis went over a small rise and saw Scott standing, head bowed, hands in his pants pocket.
“You okay?” Louis asked, coming to his side.
Scott looked up. “What? Oh yeah. . yeah.” His voice dropped off and he looked away.
Louis followed his gaze down to the large granite headstone in front of them.
BRENNER
Charles 1914–1981 Vivian 1919-1953
“Your parents?” Louis asked.
Scott nodded.
“Your mother was a young woman when she died,” Louis said.
“Yeah, I was seven,” Scott said quietly. “At least I remember her. Brian doesn’t at all.”
Louis looked back at the headstone. “But you had your dad.”
“It was just the three of us,” Scott said. “Dad was away most of the time in Tallahassee and we were raised by the housekeeper. I ended up watching over Brian.” Scott looked back down at the headstone. “But my father was there when it counted.”
They fell silent. Louis looked at the Brenner headstone. It was only then that he noticed the three small markers set down in the grass.
Geraldine Infant Baby Girl Infant Baby Boy
1942–1944 1945 Stillborn 1948 Stillborn
Scott noticed Louis looking at the small markers. “Dad always wanted a big family, but my mother-she had a difficult time with her pregnancies.” He paused, looking at the marker. “Dad always called them blue babies,” he said. “That’s what they called stillborns in those days.”
The sound of a car door made Louis look back toward the grave site. They were loading Kitty Jagger’s casket into a county van. Louis turned back to Scott.
“Thanks for getting this done so quickly.” He extended his hand and Scott shook it.
“No problem,” Scott said.
Louis looked over at the crowd behind the tape. Bob Ahnert had disappeared.
“Aren’t you going with her?” Scott asked.
Louis turned to Scott. The sympathy in his voice had surprised him.
“Yeah,” Louis said quietly. “I guess I better.”
The door to the autopsy room opened and Octavius walked out.
“She’s on the table, Vince,” he said. The diener went back into the office, leaving Vince and Louis standing at the door. Louis was looking at the window, but he couldn’t see the table.
“Are you sure you want to do this?” Vince asked.
“Yes.”
Vince wasn’t wearing his Walkman or earphones. It was the first time Louis had seen him without them. But other things were different today too, like the whole place was muted somehow. No sounds, none of the usual numbing smells. Even the florescent lights seemed dimmer than usual.
“I don’t know what we’re going to get here, Louis,” Vince said. “If there was a lot of water damage or if the-”
“Her father bought her the best casket,” Louis interrupted.
Vince just looked at him for a moment, then pushed the door open. Louis followed.
A spot of pink. That was the first thing he saw. He moved closer.
She was wearing a dress. Pink, with a high white collar. White shoes. He hadn’t expected her to be dressed. He had expected. .
It hit him now. He had been expecting decay, putrified flesh and bone, like the corpses he had seen pulled from mangroves, or at least a shattered shell, like the bodies lifted from car wrecks.
Not this. .
Her skin was waxy and sunken, her long hair limp and bleached to ash from the decades of laying in darkness. But as she lay there, hands folded over her chest, Kitty Jagger looked almost as if she were asleep.
Louis felt a dullness in his chest, but he couldn’t look away.
“Man, whoever did this was a hell of an embalmer,” Vince said. “They don’t usually come out of the ground this well preserved.”
But Louis did not hear him. He was staring now at her hands. Small fingers, a silver ring on the right hand. She was holding a pink rose. It was shriveled but still intact, like a cherished prom corsage.
Louis realized he had been holding his breath. He let it out. Bones. . if it had been just bones, he could have stood that. He had seen bones before, like Eugene Graham, the young black man whose skeleton he had found in a Mississippi swamp with a noose still wrapped around the vertebrae. Eugene had been violated and brutally murdered just like Kitty. But this was different. Kitty was still here. A ghost of herself, but she was still here.
He stared at the pink rose. Something so beautiful. . so damaged. Something so alive. . so wasted.
He felt his throat tighten. A whisper in his head: Don’t be afraid, just let go.
Something broke deep in his chest. He was hearing her, just like Ahnert. God, he was hearing a dead girl talk to him.
Oh Jesus, am I going crazy?
“Send me your report when you’re done, Vince,” Louis said. He turned quickly and left.
Chapter Thirty-Four
When he got back to the cottage, Louis got a beer and went out to sit on the porch. He watched the waves curl in from the gulf, letting his mind drift. Issy rubbed up against his leg and, without thinking, he reached down and scratched the cat’s head.
There was an emptiness in his chest, and he couldn’t figure out where it was coming from. He took a long, slow drink of the beer.
It was Kitty. She wasn’t just his anymore. Now that her case had been reopened, other people would be involved-Vince, Mobley, Scott Brenner and who knew who else. He would still be a part of it. He was officially working for Brenner, Brenner and Brenner now, hired to help find evidence against Spencer Duvall to reopen the Cade case. He had signed a contract this morning and Scott had given him a check for $2,500 as a retainer.
Louis finished off the beer. He needed the money. And the fact that Scott was going to pick up Jack Cade’s civil case made him feel like he had helped Ronnie and Eric put their lives back together. But he still felt an emptiness, like he had left something incomplete.
He rose and went inside. The table still held the mess of papers, photographs and files he had accumulated from Kitty’s case. He picked up the blurry black-and-white class picture of Kitty.
Give her some peace, Ahnert had said. But it wasn’t up to him anymore.
Setting the beer bottle down, he went to the bedroom and came back with a cardboard box. He began to pack everything up, taking down the photos and note cards he had taped to the walls and kitchen cabinets. He slipped the picture of Kitty in a folder and put it away.
When he got to the old copy of Gulfshore Life magazine, he paused. He opened it to the paper-clipped page, the one with the society picture of Spencer and Candace Duvall.
How different Duvall looked to him in light of what he now knew about the man. Duvall’s expression no longer looked merely dour; now it looked cold and calculated.
What had happened? Why had he done it? Who was Spencer Duvall? The sand-in-the-shoes crusader revered by Ellie Silvestri-or a status-seeking shyster who bargained away Jack Cade’s life?
Louis looked at the society picture again. This time he focused on Candace Duvall. Her expression looked different now too-almost predatory.
There were eight other people in the photograph. There was a man standing next to Duvall, a man whose face looked vaguely familiar. Louis read the names in the caption.
Shit. . why hadn’t he noticed this before? He stared at the man’s face, and at the pained expression on Spencer Duvall’s face. He flipped over to the magazine’s cover to check the date: December, 1973. Maybe it was just a coincidence that the two of them were in the same picture. But his gut was telling him it wasn’t.
There was only one way to find out. He had to talk to Candace again. And Ellie Silvestri. If anyone knew if there was a connection between Spencer and this man, it was the two women in his life.