“No.”
“What about your caretaker, Stanley Snow?”
She gave me another of those imperious smirks. “Stanley is the gentlest person I’ve ever known.”
“He has the keys to your house.”
“And that somehow makes him a killer? Why don’t you accuse me of murdering them while you’re at it? You people really are a bunch of bumpkins.”
You people? I knew I shouldn’t let this unpleasant woman push my buttons, but if she held me in such contempt, I no longer felt protective of her feelings. “Well, someone raped and murdered Ashley Kim, and the evidence points to your husband.”
She squared her shoulders. “Get out.”
I opened the door. “Go talk to the detectives, Mrs. Westergaard. Tell them what you told me.”
“I intend to.”
I rested my hands against the cold roof of the SUV and peered back at her brittle mask of a face. “I hope you’re right, and that they find your husband safe and sound.”
“Do you? Do you really?”
17
I went back into the building and retrieved my truck keys without any rigmarole from the attending deputy, which was lucky for him. My blood was already boiling.
How had I ever pegged Jill Westergaard for a damsel in distress?
It was entirely possible she would rat me out to Detective Menario and AAG Danica Marshall, informing them that I had violated my duty as a material witness not to talk about the case. Christ, I was an idiot.
It would be better if I made myself unavailable for a while. As I drove back toward Sennebec, I punched in Charley’s number and waited for him to answer.
“Howdy do,” he said.
“I can’t believe you told that woman where to find me!”
He chuckled. “I’m assuming you’re referring to Mrs. Westergaard.”
“Of course I am.”
“I thought an encounter with her might be a good test of your tree fiber.” In the background, there was some soft murmuring that must have been Ora. “You and I need to talk, young feller.”
“I’d say so.”
“How about we get some lunch?”
The clock on my dashboard said it wasn’t even ten o’clock. But I knew that Charley rose religiously before dawn, so for him, this was already the middle of the day.
“Why don’t I meet you at the Square Deal,” I said. “That way, I can say good-bye to Ora before you drive home.”
“I was going to suggest the very thing.”
The sky had a gray and arbitrary cast. In March, the daily question was always whether the next batch of precipitation would fall as snow, ice, or rain. Every morning, Mother Nature rolled the dice.
I barely recognized my formerly messy truck. It was as if the cleaning fairy had waved a magic wand and transformed it from a pumpkin back into a proper law-enforcement coach. That’s one benefit of having your vehicle impounded for inspection, I thought.
As I drove, I summoned the courage to telephone my division commander. Lieutenant Malcomb was on his way to a meeting with the Warden Service colonel in Augusta. As such, he was already in a pissy mood. The two men disliked each other intensely from having worked together for twenty-plus years in the field. Or so my sergeant, Kathy Frost, had told me. Malcomb himself would never have confided his personal sentiments to a rookie warden, especially one as trouble-prone as me.
“How the hell did you get wrapped up in this investigation?” he demanded before I could squeeze in two words.
“I don’t know, Lieutenant. It just seemed to happen.”
“That’s always the way with you.” He was a chain-smoker, and you could hear the damage to his lungs in his every utterance.
When I mentioned how Charley Stevens had gone with me to the Westergaard house, the lieutenant let loose with a gravelly groan. He and the warden pilot were dear friends, but he believed that Charley and I goaded each other on to deeds of greater recklessness. We were mutually bad influences, in his opinion.
“If it’s any consolation,” I said, “the AAG says she’s pretty much done with me-until she goes to trial.”
“Good, because Frost is back tomorrow. She can be your liaison with the state police going forward. You’ve got enough on your plate.”
“Yes, sir.”
“Just do your job for once.”
That last comment stung. For all my occasional misadventures, I’d begun to consider myself a competent law-enforcement professional. I had a high conviction rate on my arrests. My activity reports were all up-to-date. And the only formal complaint against me-by an obnoxious boater from Massachusetts named Anthony DeSalle, who had accused me of harassing him and his son last summer-had collapsed under its own weight.
Of course, this glowing assessment of my character conveniently failed to take into account my maverick actions during the period of my father’s manhunt. Among the power players at the Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife, hearing that Warden Mike Bowditch had bumbled his way into another murder investigation would be nobody’s idea of a surprise.
At the Square Deal Diner, heads turned as I walked through the door, and every conversation in the room stopped. The gruesome murder on Parker Point was undoubtedly the topic of the day. And now who should arrive but the man of the hour himself.
Charley had settled down in a corner booth, as far from the lunch counter as possible. I’d expected that Ora would be with him, since the motel was just behind the diner, but he was alone. No one said anything to me as I crossed the room, but you could feel the curiosity quotient rise by ten degrees.
“Goddamn you, Charley,” I said in a hushed voice.
He rose to shake my hand-he always shook my hand when we met-and nearly crushed my metacarpals. “I am here to beg your forgiveness.”
“Granted.”
His expression turned solemn. “How did your interview go?”
“You mean my interrogation?” I unrolled the paper napkin from around the knife, spoon, and fork and spread it across my knee. “I’m assuming Menario brought you in earlier to go over your statement.”
“They showed me some video.”
“Me, too.”
“It’s a bad business, no doubt.” He studied me from beneath his bushy eyebrows. “You seem to have survived your encounter with Mrs. Westergaard with gonads intact.”
“The less said about that, the better.”
Ruth Libby came over with a coffeepot and a down-turned mouth.
“Everyone’s talking about what happened on Parker Point,” she said.
“What are they saying?” asked Charley.
“That a girl got killed in one of them new mansions. And that there was some gross sexual stuff.” She lowered her voice. “So you guys found the body, huh?”
“No comment,” I said.
She glanced at the men seated along the counter. “That’s what I’ve been telling the peanut gallery. I told them that cops are sworn to silence. But you know how those guys are.”
“What else are they saying?” It was predictable that Charley would throw discretion to the wind.
She turned our cups over and poured them full of black coffee. “Everybody’s talking about Erland Jefferts. They said this girl died the same as Nikki Donnatelli. Some people say it’s a copycat. Others say it just proves Erland was wrongfully accused the first time.” Her eyes flitted back and forth between us, looking for confirmation, but neither of us responded, so Ruth decided to take a new tack. “Those Westergaard folks come in pretty regular in the summer.”
Charley raised the cup to his mouth. “Do they now?”
“They always come in Sunday nights for pie and coffee. I guess they think we’re kind of quaint.”
“What makes you say that?” asked Charley.
“They told my mom we’re kind of quaint. That’s OK, though. In Maine, Mom says, being quaint is good for business.”
“How is your mother?” I asked.
Once again, Dot was nowhere to be seen. She was such a constant fixture at the diner that her absence seemed all the more unnerving.