Unless, by then, she no longer cared whether she got caught. I remembered the fearless, single-minded way she had crashed through the barriers onto the exit ramp. Maybe she had reached a point where being caught was no longer the issue. Now, with Candace Wynn dead, hope faded that I would ever learn the answers to those questions.
I turned back to my answering machine to play the next message. The eighth one was from Joanna Ridley, asking me to call her as soon as I could. She left her number.
The ninth and tenth messages were both from Ames, looking for me, wondering what was going on, and had I learned anything.
The machine clicked off. I dialed Joanna's number, but there was no answer. I poured myself a tumbler full of MacNaughton's and dialed Peters' number in Kirkland. Ames answered on the second ring.
"It's Beau," I said.
"It's about time. Did you find him?"
"Yes."
"It sounds bad. Is it?"
"He's in the hospital, Ralph. The doctors don't know whether or not he'll make it…"
"And…?" Ames prompted.
"Even if he does, he may be paralyzed. His neck's broken."
There was a stricken silence on the other end of the line.
"Are the girls in bed?" I asked eventually.
"Mrs. Edwards put them down a little while ago. I told them we'd wake them up if we heard any news."
"Don't get them up yet. Wait until I get there," I said. "I'm at home now. I need to shower. I'll come prepared to spend the night."
"Good," Ames said. "That sounds like a plan."
"I'll be there in about an hour," I told him. "Captain Powell was to give the hospital that number in case they need to reach us. Is there anything you need over there?" I asked as an afterthought.
"As a matter of fact, bring along some MacNaughton's."
"In addition to what's in my glass?"
"Bring me some that hasn't been used," he replied.
The shower helped some. At least it gave me enough energy to gather up a shaving kit and some clean clothes. I drove to Kirkland in the teeth of the roaring gale. Waves from Lake Washington lashed onto the bridge and across my windshield, mixing with sheets of rain and making it almost impossible to see the road ahead of me.
The storm's fury matched my own. J. P. Beaumont was in the process of beating himself up and doing one hell of a good job. What if I had called for help before I ever left Ballard? Was it possible that a patrol car could have reached the Scarborough house in time to keep Candace Wynn from getting away, from making it to the freeway? What could I have done differently so Peters' life wouldn't be hanging in the balance?
In the end, I couldn't ditch the singular conclusion that it was my fault. All my fault.
Ames met me at the door. He looked almost as worn and haggard as I felt. "Tell me," he commanded, taking the bottle of MacNaughton's from my hand and leading me into the kitchen.
Ames poured, and I talked. Off and on I tried Joanna Ridley's number, but there was still no answer. Between calls, I told Ames every detail of what had happened that day, down to the doctor's last words as I left the hospital. When I finished, Ames ran his hands through his hair, shaking his head.
"God what a mess! What are we going to do?"
"About what?"
"The kids."
"What do you mean? What'll happen to them?" I asked.
"That depends," Ames said quietly. "If Peters lives long enough to make his wishes known, he might have some say in it. Otherwise, with their mother out of the country, the state may very well step into the picture and decide what's best."
"You mean hand the girls over to Child Protective Services or to a foster home?"
"Precisely."
"Shit!" I had seen the grim results of some foster home arrangements. They weren't very pretty.
"Has Peters ever mentioned any plan to you? A relative of some kind. Grandparents maybe? An aunt?"
"No. Never."
Ames poured us both another drink. He looked at me appraisingly when he handed it to me. "What about you, Beau?"
"Me?" I echoed. I was thunderstruck.
"Yes, you. God knows you've got plenty of money. You could afford to take them on without any hardship."
"'You're serious, aren't you!"
"Dead serious. We've got to have some kind of reasonable plan to offer Peters at the first available moment, before the state drops down on him and grabs Heather and Tracie away. And we've got to have something to tell the girls in the morning."
"But, Ames, I'm not married."
"Neither is Peters, remember? But you've raised kids before, two of them. And from what I've seen of them, you did a pretty commendable job of it. You could do it again."
"I've just bought a place downtown," I protested. "No grass. No yard. No swings."
"Children have grown up in cities for as long as there have been cities. Besides, if they don't like it, you can move somewhere else."
Ames was talking about my taking on Peters' kids with the kind of casual aplomb that comes from never having raised kids of his own. People talk that way about kids and puppies, about how cute they are and how little trouble, only when they've never pulled a six-year-old's baby tooth or housebroken an eight-week-old golden retriever.
Ames spoke with the full knowledge and benefit of never having been in the trenches. His naiveté was almost laughable, but he's one hell of a poker player. He had an unbeatable wild card-my sense of responsibility for what had happened. And the son of a bitch wasn't above using it.
"So what do we do?" I asked. He read my question correctly as total capitulation.
"I'll draw up a temporary custody agreement," he replied. "As soon as Peters is lucid enough for us to talk to him about it, we'll get it signed and notarized."
"Signed?" I asked.
"Witnessed," he corrected.
"And what if that's not possible? What if he never is lucid enough to agree to it?"
"We use the same agreement. It just costs more money to put it in force, that's all," Ames replied grimly.
I knew from experience that Ralph Ames had the moxie to grease the wheels of bureaucracy when the occasion required it.
It was one-thirty in the morning when we finally called it quits. The decision had long since been made to wait until morning to tell the girls. There was no sense in waking them up to tell them in the middle of the night.
For a long time after Ames went to bed, I lay awake on the floor mulling our conversation. Ames was right, of course. I was the only acceptable choice for taking care of Heather and Tracie. I had the most to offer. And the most to gain.
It was probably just a sign of fatigue, but by five-thirty, when I finally fell asleep, it was beginning to seem like a perfectly reasonable idea.
Heather bounded into my room an hour later. "Unca Beau," she squealed, climbing gleefully on top of me. "Did you find him? Did you?"
It was a rude awakening. Tracie, more reticent than her younger sister, hung back by the door. I motioned to her. With a kind of delicate dignity, she sat down beside me.
I swallowed hard before I answered Heather's question. "Yes, I did," I said slowly.
"Well, where is he, then? Why isn't he in his bed?" Heather's six-year-old inquisitiveness sought answers for only the most obvious questions.
"He's in the hospital, girls."
Tracie swung around and looked up at me. "He's hurt?"