At first, Gregor thought he would have to go all the way back to the Toliver house to make sure Jimmy and Liz and the boys got away as they needed to, and that the ambulance for Liz's mother actually got hold of Liz's mother. In the end, he hadn't had to go to that kind of trouble. It was a good thing, because he was as tense as he could ever remember being. It was the lack of logic and of linear
thought that got to him. He hated states of unalloyed chaos, where decisions seemed to be made on the basis of hysteria or on no basis at all. He couldn't believe that any of the photographers trying to storm the Toliver home were thinking, logically or otherwise. At least some of them had to realize they were a disaster waiting to happen. He hated sitting in the gas station, listening to the men on the plastic chairs talk about local sports and national politics. He hated the rain, which was not letting up. At half past nine, when Jimmy Card's driver pulled in to the garage's parking lot to tell Gregor he was headed out to the house, the rain was coming down just as hard as it had been when Gregor had first called the police department. It was hard not to think about Noah and the forty days and forty nights. It was hard not to think about floods.
At quarter to ten, Jimmy Card's driver came back by the gas station, blowing his horn in three hard, sharp bursts, to let Gregor know that everything had gone well at the house and there was no need for him to return there to check on the inhabitants. Gregor watched as a dozen cars crowded up so close to the limousine's rear that there would have been a multicar pileup if Jimmy's driver had done as much as stop short at a traffic light. Then he went back to Luis and asked to be taken into town to the police station.
Luis had gone back to being uncommunicative. The town, once they got to it, looked like it had always looked. There were no signs of invasion by hordes of salivating celebrity journalists. Grandview Avenue was empty of people and nearly empty of cars. The one or two parked along the curbs were so wet they reminded Gregor of what it felt like going through a car wash.
The police station, when they got there, did not look inundated with reporters. Luis turned off onto Grand Street and pulled into the driveway and back into the parking lot.
Gregor got out of the car and pulled his suit jacket up over his head. He hunched his shoulders and made a run for the front of the building. The asphalt on the driveway was slick, and the pavement that led around to the front
was even slicker. He pounded up the steps and hurtled himself in through the front doors.
The vestibule just inside the doors was empty. It was only when Gregor went through the next set of doorsâplate glass; even if it was bulletproof glass, it wouldn't help, because bulletproof glass wasn't really bulletproofâthat he saw that Sharon had had some reason for being worked up. The big reception room was full of people, all on the right side of the counter for the moment, but all restless. Some of them were taking up the long waiting benches that lined the wall. The rest of them were pacing around, not doing much of anything.
When Gregor walked in, one or two of them perked up.
“Mr. Demarkian!” the youngest of them called out. “Have you been called in to consult on the Toliver murder case?”
“No,” Gregor said, quite truthfully. He hit the bell on the counter.
The men on the benches were restless. Gregor wondered why there were so few women. He rang the bell again and held his breath. Finally, Kyle Borden stuck his head out of one of the rooms at the back and looked relieved.
“It's you,” he said, rushing up to the counter to let Gregor through. “I thought you'd never get here.”
“Then you
have
been called in to consult on the Toliver case,” the young man said, jumping up to follow Gregor through the opening Kyle Borden had made in the counter, and being pushed back just in time.
“No,” Gregor said again.
Kyle grabbed him by the arm and dragged him along. “This is insane,” he said in a voice so low even Gregor had trouble hearing it. “I've never seen anything like it. Sharon is hiding in the bathroom. That's because I yelled at her.”
They were at Kyle's office door. He pushed Gregor through it, came through himself, and shut the door behind them. Gregor immediately began to feel claustrophobic.
“What happened to your man out at the Toliver house?”
Gregor asked. “I just came from there, and I didn't see a policeman anywhere.”
“There wasn't one,” Kyle said. “We don't have a whole department. That was a part-time deputy I left there yesterday evening and he had to go home at midnight. I didn't have anybody to assign until this morning, and it isn't usually a problem, and oh, for Christ's sake, this is such a mess.”
“I think you can safely assume that your crime scene is now thoroughly contaminated,” Gregor said. “I'd say it was now thoroughly destroyed. With any luck, you got everything you needed last night. When do you get an autopsy report?”
“They're promising us preliminary findings at noon.”
“All right. There isn't going to be a whole lot you can do until then, except maybe trace this woman's movements during the day. And keep your mouth shut. I wonder if any of them will figure it out.”
“Figure what out?”
“I may be wrong,” Gregor said, “but from what I remember of our discussions yesterday, the woman who died is the same woman who gave Michael Houseman his ride to work on the last day of his life, and would have given him a ride home that same day if he'd been in any shape to come home.”
Kyle Borden had been pacing around the office. Now he stopped still. “I hadn't thought of that.”
“It was the first thing I thought of. The question is, will
they
think of it?”
“How could they?”
Gregor shrugged. “I've got to assume that at least some of them have been through whatever newspaper archives exist on the Houseman murder. Granted, those will almost assuredly be the men from the supermarket tabloids, but once the information is out and confirmed, they'll all use it. Of course, it's a small detail, or it would have been, in that case. It only becomes important now because Miss InglerodâMrs. Barrâis dead. But trust me, in the next day
or so, they're going to go back to those archives and go over them half a dozen times, and eventually they
will
pick up on it. Even if that particular detail isn't in any of the newspaper reports, the fact that Miss Inglerod was in that park that night almost certainly will be.”
“Crap,” Kyle said. “Yeah, that'll be there, I remember it. It went around town for weeks, who had been out at the park that night and who hadn't. And who, you know, was involved in nailing Betsy into the damned outhouse.”
Gregor pulled out a chair and sat down. “So,” he said. “Do you think it's connected? The murder of Michael Houseman and the murder of Chris Inglerod?”
“How the hell do I know? It doesn't make too much sense, does it?” Kyle said. “Why would anybody bother to kill Chris over something that happened over thirty years ago?”
“There's no statute of limitations on murder,” Gregor said. “Somebody may still have good reason to fear being caught.”
Kyle Borden snorted. “Crap on that,” he said. “How'd we ever convict him? Thirty years will wipe out reasonable doubt faster than Windex will wipe out water spots.”
“Not necessarily,” Gregor said. “I've seen old cases end in convictions more than once. If you don't think the murders are connected, you're stuck with figuring out why Chris Inglerod was killed now, in that place, and in that way. Do you know of a reason why somebody would murder Chris Inglerod now?”
“She was an insufferable snot,” Kyle said. “But a lot of people are that, and we don't off them. Maybe we should.”
“Can you think of a reason why Liz Toliver would murder Chris Inglerod now?”
“Betsy Toliver?”
Gregor sighed. “There's a certain amount of logic to the idea Maris Coleman was putting forward yesterday. Michael Houseman was murdered when Liz was living here, and nobody else was murdered until Liz came back. Now that she is back, somebody is dead, and dead on her own
mother's lawn. The only problem is, there doesn't seem to be any reason for it, unless you're going to assume that Liz Toliver is secretly a sociopath carrying out some kind of vendetta against all the girls who hated her in high school.”
“There's also the fact that Betsy Toliver is the one person in this town who couldn't have murdered Michael Houseman,” Kyle said. “This is not a murder mystery. The outhouse isn't going to turn out to have had a back door or a crawl space she could have gone in and out of. She was nailed into that thing and by the time she was found, she'd lost so much blood, she had to be taken to the hospital for a transfusion. She spent the whole rest of that summer bandaged up like a mummy. It's a good thing Vassar didn't start classes until after Labor Day. She'd have missed the first week of school.”
“I know,” Gregor said.
“So what is it you're getting at?” Kyle said.
Outside, somewhere beyond the door, there was a sudden burst of loud, frantic activity. The bell on the counter rang out sharply. A hundred people seemed to be talking at once.
“Damn,” Kyle said.
Gregor moved out of the way. “You've still got a town here. Maybe there's some business today that doesn't have to do with Elizabeth Toliver.”
Kyle threw back the door and walked out, just as a woman wrapped in layer after layer of rubber poncho flipped back the counter's hinged opening and stepped through.
“You can't just walk in here,” Kyle shouted at her. “Visitors have to stay on the public's side of the counter.”
“Jesus,” Gregor said as the woman began to flip layers of rubber off her head and shoulders.
“Jesus yourself,” Bennis Hannaford said. “I've been driving all night. I got lost on the Pennsylvania Turnpike, my cell phone won't work, and I'm wet. The last thing I
need is a lecture on how I goddamned have to stay on the goddamned public's side of the goddamned idiot counter. If somebody doesn't give me a cup of coffee now, I'm going back to smoking cigarettes.”