Eyes of a Child (32 page)

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Authors: Richard North Patterson

BOOK: Eyes of a Child
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Paget headed for the door. ‘Actually,' Caroline said, ‘there
is
one other thing.'
Paget turned to her. ‘What's that?'
‘When they give you back the Jaguar, put it in the garage. And mothball the Armani suits, or whatever they are. From now until you're off the hook, I'd like you to imagine yourself on camera and the television audience as jurors.'
When Paget raised his eyebrows, Caroline smiled. ‘You're a very attractive man, Christopher. I've always thought so. But for a prospective defendant, you're just a bit too elegant.'
Chapter
11
Terri sat on her living room couch, wearing a flannel nightgown and her first pair of reading glasses. Legal files were scattered around her, and the television news was on ‘mute.' The apartment itself was bare – worn couch and borrowed chairs, a cheap wooden breakfast table for Terri and Elena – and the one floor lamp she had gotten from Richie highlighted the room's bleakness. It was just past eleven.
‘We're a long way from Italy,' she said to Paget.
‘Not as long as I'd like.'
She gave him a look that mixed worry and inquiry. It was the first time they'd been able to talk since the police had searched their homes. Wary of the telephone, and tied up in trials, they'd been reduced to meeting at Terri's once Elena had fallen asleep. ‘What do you think is wrong?' she said.
Paget hesitated. ‘Politics is my guess. I think James Colt wants to stop me from running for the Senate.'
Terri frowned. ‘Do you have any proof of that?'
Paget felt a moment's discomfort. His mind and Terri's usually followed the same paths; tonight Tern's professional skepticism seemed to open a distance between them. As foolish as it was, what Paget most wanted was an accepting lover.
‘No proof,' he said finally. ‘Just logic.'
Terri shook her head. ‘Politics only takes you so far. They think Richie was murdered and that one of us has lied. Maybe, because of politics, someone hopes it's you.'
Paget considered her. ‘I don't think they even need
that
much. James Colt is clever enough to know that the stench of a criminal inquiry would scare most politicians and prejudice most voters. Particularly when the subjects are murder, adultery, and child abuse.' Pausing, Paget realized how trapped he felt. ‘Never, in his wildest dreams, would Richie have believed that his obsession with us would outlive him.'
Terri appraised him. Softly, she said, ‘Not unless he killed himself.'
Her watchful expressions, the few quiet words, hit Paget like a shock. ‘What does
that
mean?'
Terri placed her hand gently on his wrist. ‘That there's something you're not telling me, Chris. Perhaps more than one something.'
He withdrew his hand, as if from a flame. ‘Would you care to give me an example?'
Terri stared at his hand, then into his face again. ‘What I'd like, really, is for you to tell me.'
Suddenly Paget felt cornered. ‘All right,' he snapped. ‘I murdered the little bastard. So that you could afford new furniture.'
There was a first flash of resentment in Terri's eyes. ‘Do you think I
like
this? Wondering if there's something I don't know?' Her voice slowed. ‘My entire relationship with Richie – maybe my whole life – was based on questions I never asked and thoughts I told myself to stuff. You and I can't be like that . . .'
‘This isn't relationship counseling, damn it. It's a possible homicide, in which you and I are potential witnesses. And as long as we're not married, there's nothing I could say to you that Monk or McKinley Brooks or some hotshot assistant D.A. couldn't grill you about for hours.' Paget forced himself to speak more softly. ‘One of us might have to testify about anything we say to each other, perhaps against the person who says it. That's why I so seldom ask you where you found the gun.'
Terri gave him a startled look. ‘You don't think that
I
killed him.'
‘No, as it happens. But if we're ever forced to testify, even asking you the question could do great damage. Unless, of course, I simply lie about this conversation.' He paused. ‘Or, perhaps, forget we ever had it.'
Terri's gaze broke. ‘Jesus,' she murmured. ‘How can we
be
like this?'
Paget raised the hand that had been damaged. He kept it there, in front of Terri, until she looked up. ‘Isn't that what you've been doing? Forgetting things? Especially for Monk.'
Terri could only stare at him.
‘Forgetting isn't much fun,' Paget went on. ‘Is it Terri? Especially when your forgetfulness is just another form of lying.'
Terri's face composed itself, and then she looked at him directly. ‘And not talking,' she answered, ‘makes me feel dead inside.'
Paget turned away. ‘I know. About that and several other things, I'm very, very sorry.'
She searched his face for meaning. ‘You don't have to be sorry. Just tell me the truth, please. No one else will ever know it.'
Paget looked back into her eyes. ‘Only this, Terri.' He emphasized each word.
‘I did not kill Ricardo Arias
.'
Terri stared at him. ‘And you have no idea who did.'
‘None. Unless it was Richie. Just as you said.'
Terri glanced down the hallway to the bedroom, as if Elena might hear them. Paget saw a tremor run through her, half shudder and half sigh. Beside them, the television flickered silently: talking heads and news tapes – a fire, a double murder, an interview at a homeless shelter. Terri turned to him again. ‘But you think there's going to be a trial, don't you?'
To answer truthfully, Paget found, made him feel as if he were calling down a curse. ‘I don't know,' he said finally. ‘But I no longer assume there won't be. That's why I hired Caroline. And it's why, as much as I might want to, you and I can never talk about this.'
Terri sat back, as if absorbing this new reality, and then something at the edge of Paget's vision became part of his consciousness.
Turning to the television, he saw the face of James Colt, his lips moving without words. Terri had followed Paget's gaze; reaching for the remote, she switched on the sound.
‘I'm running for governor,' Colt was saying to a microphone, ‘on the basis of trust.' His voice was light but pleasant; his suntan and his white-gold hair brought a touch of southern California to the blue-gray eyes and cleft chin, a replica of his father's. ‘Private character is the key to public leadership. I believe that any person seeking high office in the state of California should live a private life that voters can respect and their children can admire. And no one who fails to meet that test has any place in
public
life.'
‘Maybe I'm paranoid,' Paget murmured, ‘but did you just hear a message?'
Terri looked at him as if about to ask a question, and then she seemed to think better of it. When they turned back to the television, Colt was gone.
Chapter
12
‘So Elena had the nightmare again,' Rosa said to Terri.
They sat on a bench in Dolores Park, where Terri and her sisters once had played. It was a sunny morning, and the rolling sweep of grass, sheltered by thick and leafy palm trees, did not look like the drug exchange and gang refuge it became after dark. There were swings and slides some distance away; Elena, active for once but plainly tired, had climbed a playground structure to the top and was gazing out at the park, alone. She showed no interest in the children playing beneath her.
Terri watched her daughter. ‘After Chris left,' she answered. ‘For a moment, when I came to her room, she thought I was Richie.'
‘How do you know that?'
‘She called out “Daddy.”' Terri shook her head. ‘Maybe she'd heard Chris's voice.'
When Rosa turned to watch Elena again, it was with a heightened attentiveness. After a time, she asked, ‘Did Elena say anything else?'
‘Not really. She seemed to realize where she was, and then she put her arms around me.'
Pensive, Rosa fell quiet, and Terri let the subject drop. She could not mention her conversation with Chris; whatever problems they had must stay between them, and Terri preferred that her mother believe the police to be satisfied and Richie's suicide a settled matter. As far as Terri knew, this was so: since Richie's death, her mother's concern had been its effect on Elena, not its status with the police.
Now, as usual, Rosa seemed to watch her granddaughter. Even sitting on a park bench, she was impeccable – a turtleneck sweater and wool slacks, earrings and makeup, a gold bracelet on her slender wrist. Looking at her, Terri sometimes imagined a second Rosa, an elegant woman who lived in the hills above Acapulco and flew to Europe when she wished to get away. A woman, Terri thought sadly, who would never allow a man to beat her.
‘And you?' Rosa asked finally. ‘Are you still having
your
dream?'
It was the closest Rosa came to speaking of Tern's father. All Terri had told her was that she was having her dream again – ‘the one from junior high school.' Terri did not have to tell Rosa whom the dream concerned. She had done that the first night it had come: Rosa, her husband barely two weeks dead, had held Terri close without speaking a word.
‘Every few nights now,' Terri said. ‘I've been wondering if I should talk it over with Dr Harris.'
Rosa grazed her hair with her fingers. ‘Do you think that's wise, Teresa. To stir things up inside you?'
It was, Terri knew, the credo by which her mother had learned to live. All at once, it struck Terri that there was too much silence in her life. Softly, she asked, ‘Why did you never leave him, Mama?'
In profile, her mother's eyes widened. But what cut to Terri's heart was the way her body became rigid; it was how she had held herself when Ramon Peralta slapped her. Only when the silence continued did Terri realize that Rosa meant to act as if she had not heard the question.
‘Mama?'
Rosa flinched, almost imperceptibly. Terri put a hand on her thin shoulder. ‘I love you, Mama. Talk to me, please.'
Slowly, Rosa turned to her. The look on her face was frightening; each line seemed etched with pain, and her eyes had a depth of passion that was almost fierce. ‘
You
ask why I stayed with him?'
The simple words carried the anguish of a life lived for others and, beyond this, of Elena's problems now. Their impact on Terri was like a blow.
‘I know,' she said quietly. ‘You stayed for us.'
‘For
you,
Teresa.' Her mother stared into her eyes. ‘I do not say that easily, and never to your sisters. But when I lay next to him at night, it was
your
face I saw.'
Terri felt this with the certainty of a girl who had watched her mother in the living room, her face bruised, silently urging her child up the darkened stairs as Ramon Peralta took her from behind. It was as if Ramon had bonded them for life; yet Terri, the woman, felt Rosa use the guilty underside of this unspoken bond to silence her. ‘I believe you,' she answered. ‘But what I need from you now is to help me understand my life.
Our
life.'
Her mother's eyes hardened. ‘For what?' she demanded. ‘So that we can wallow in something that's best forgotten?'
Terri gripped Rosa's shoulder. ‘The “something” is my
father
. And he's
never
been forgotten. I dream about him. Even our conversations, the ways we find not to speak of him, are like a memorial to what he did to us. Like how we used to whisper when he passed out on the couch, afraid that he'd wake up and hit you again.'
Rosa turned pale: suddenly Terri felt her mother's humiliation at being confronted with what their life had been. ‘Mama,' she said softly, ‘I don't judge you. I
never
will. You loved me, and you got me to where I am, a mother with a child we
both
love more than anything. But there's a part of you, a part of my life, that is lost to me. Sometimes I think, because of that, I've failed Elena without knowing why.' She looked into her mother's face. ‘Can you understand that.'
Rosa lowered her gaze and then slowly shook her head; Terri could not tell whether this was Rosa's answer or a plea to be left alone. But after a moment, Rosa asked in an ashen voice, ‘What is it you wish to know?'
‘Why, whether for us or for me, you stayed with him. And what happened to you because of that.'
In silence, her mother peered up at Elena. The little girl was sitting atop the play structure, doing nothing of note: Rosa watched her still. ‘Elena's so passive,' she murmured.
‘I know.'
Rosa exhaled slowly. ‘All right, Teresa. We will do this once. And never again.' She gazed off into the distance. ‘The answer is this: I stayed with him because a girl I barely remember now, but who in my mind seems much like you, thought that all Ramon Peralta needed to escape his fears was her. And because by the time she knew better, her first daughter had been born.'
Terri felt unspeakably sad. ‘What was he afraid of?'
‘Himself.' Rosa's voice was filled with irony. ‘His father used to beat him. Ramon was afraid of ending up like that.'
‘My God,
Mama.' Suddenly, Terri had the eerie sense of watching her mother head toward a fate that only Terri could see. ‘Before you were married, did you know that?'
‘You must understand the Ramon I met.' Rosa leaned back, smoothing her slacks; she did not face Terri. ‘He was just out of the navy, handsome and eager for life. I thought it nice just to watch him. But then I saw how uncertain his smiles were, how much he wanted me to like him – that was when my heart went out to him. This man, who could be so much, needed me to help him.' Her mouth set in a grim line. ‘I was right, Teresa. For as long as he lived, Ramon needed me.'

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