“Oh-I knew that,” she said, her second lie in less than a minute, but this one merely a cover for her embarrassment.
“It’s going to be a while, Kay. Hours. I assumed that I would drive Heather home.”
“But it’s so far out of your way. You live up here, and I’m over on the southwest side.”
“Kay…”
She should go home, Kay told herself. She was getting too close to Heather as it was, crossing all sorts of lines. The mere fact that Heather was in her home-well, technically not in her home, but on her property-could result in a reprimand, threats against her license. She was losing her way. But, having gone this far, she was not willing to go back.
“I have a book with me. Jane Eyre. I’ll be utterly content.”
“Jane Eyre, huh? I never could read her.”
Kay realized that Gloria had confused Brontë’s novel with the other Jane of nineteenth-century letters, Jane Austen. There probably wasn’t room for much in Gloria’s brain besides her clients, her work. Should Kay take her aside, tell her that they had visited the old mall? Would Heather volunteer this? Did it matter? Left alone, her eyes scanned blindly across the pages, following but not really absorbing Jane’s flight from Thornfield, the stiff proposal from St. John, the adorable, adoring sisters who turned out to be Jane’s cousins.
SHE WASN’T HAPPY to see a female detective in the room, although she tried to conceal her irritation and surprise.
“Are we waiting for Kevin?” she asked.
“Kevin?” the plump detective echoed. “Oh, Detective Infante.” As if she didn’t have the right to call him by his first name. She doesn’t like me. She resents me for being so much thinner, even though she’s a lot younger. She’s protective of Kevin. “Detective Infante had to go out of town. To Georgia .”
“Is that supposed to mean something to me?”
Gloria shot her a look, but she was beyond caring what Gloria thought. She knew what she was doing and what she had to do.
“I don’t know. Does it mean something to you?”
“I’ve never lived there, if that’s where you’re going.”
“Where have you lived, over the last thirty years?”
“She’s going to take the Fifth on that,” Gloria said quickly.
“I’m not sure the Fifth is relevant, and we keep telling you that we can get your client before a grand jury, grant her immunity on anything she did as far as identity theft goes, but-okay.” Fake easygoing.
I know you, Detective. You’re one of the good girls, the kind who gets to be class secretary, or maybe vice president. The one who always has a big jock boyfriend and fusses with his collar at lunchtime, already a little wife at age sixteen. I know you. But I know what it’s like to be a real teenage bride, and you wouldn’t like it. You wouldn’t like it at all.
“As we’ve said repeatedly, this isn’t about the legal side of things,” Gloria said. “It’s also the poking about, the prying. If Heather provides the details of her current identity, you’ll start talking to her coworkers and neighbors, right?”
“Possibly. We’ll definitely run it through all our databases.”
Who the fuck cares?
But Gloria said: “You think she’s a criminal?”
“No, no, not at all. We’re just having a hard time understanding why she never came forward until she was involved in a car accident and facing hit-and-run charges.”
She decided to challenge the detective head-on. “You don’t like me.”
“I just met you,” she said. “I don’t know you.”
“When is Kevin coming back? Shouldn’t he do the interview? Without him we’ll have to go over a bunch of stuff I’ve already covered.”
“You were the one who wanted to do this today. Well, here we are. Let’s do it.”
“Gary Gilmore’s final words-1977. Were you even born?”
“That very year,” Nancy Porter said. “And how old were you? Where were you that Gary Gilmore’s death made such an impact on you?”
“I was thirteen in Heather years. I was a different age on the outside.”
“‘Heather years’? You make it sound like dog years.”
“Trust me, Detective-I aspired to the life of a dog.”
CHAPTER 33
5:45 P.M.
“Sunny told me that I could go to the mall with her, but I couldn’t hang around her. And then, maybe just because she said that, I wouldn’t leave her alone. I followed her to the movie Escape to Witch Mountain. When the previews began, she got up and went out. I thought she might have gone to the bathroom, but when the movie started and she still wasn’t back, I went out to the lobby to check for her.”
“Were you worried about her? Did you think something had happened?”
The subject- Willoughby was not ready to call her Heather yet, if only out of self-protection, wary of investing too much hope in this woman, this resolution-the subject thought carefully about the question. Willoughby could see that she was someone given to thinking before she spoke. Perhaps she was simply a cautious person, but his suspicion was that she liked the drama created by her pauses and hesitation. She knew she was playing for a larger audience than Nancy and Gloria.
“It’s interesting that you ask that. The thing is, I did worry about Sunny. I know that sounds backwards, me being the younger one. But she was-I don’t know what the right word is. Naïve? I wouldn’t have had any words for it at the time. I just know I felt protective of her, and it worried me when she didn’t come back. It was unthinkable that she would buy a movie ticket and abandon the show.”
“She could have gone outside and asked for a refund.”
She furrowed her brow, as if considering this. “Yes. Yes. That never occurred to me. I was eleven. And besides, I found out right away why she left. She had sneaked into Chinatown , which was an R-rated movie. The way the lobby was set up-there were only two theaters-it wasn’t so easy to do that, and they watched for it. But if you used the bathroom on the other side-if you said the other one was full, or dirty-you could distract an usher and sneak in. We had done that before, to get two movies for the price of one, but not to see an R movie. It never occurred to me to try to see an R movie. I was a bit of a goody-goody.”
Sneaking into R-rated movies-did kids even have to do that anymore? And a movie such as Chinatown , what a disappointment that must have been if you were hoping for salacious kicks. Willoughby wondered if an eleven-year-old, back in 1975, could even grasp the big twist, the incest theme, much less follow the intricate land deal at the heart of the film.
“So I found her in the back row, watching Chinatown , and she got furious with me, told me to go away. Which attracted the usher’s attention, and we both got thrown out. She was really angry. Angry enough to scare me. Then she said that she was done with me, that she wouldn’t even buy me Karmelkorn as promised, and she didn’t want to see me again until our father picked us up at five-thirty.”
“So what did you do?”
“Walked around. Looked at things.”
“Did you see anyone, speak to anyone?”
“I didn’t speak to anyone, no.”
Willoughby made a notation on the legal pad they had provided him. This was key. If Pincharelli remembered Heather, she should remember him. It was one of the few things the music teacher had been forthcoming about, eventually. He’d seen Heather in the audience, watching him play.
Nancy Porter, bless her, caught it, too.