Bones (30 page)

Read Bones Online

Authors: Jan Burke

Tags: #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Fiction, #Detective, #Fiction - Mystery, #Serial Murderers, #Suspense, #Mystery, #Mystery & Detective - Women Sleuths, #Kelly; Irene (Fictitious character), #Women journalists, #American Mystery & Suspense Fiction

BOOK: Bones
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"You did everything you could," Lydia went on, "and things still went bad."

"Straight to hell," I agreed.

"If you don't want to write about what happened," she said, "I'll stick up for you with John. We'll both walk out of here, if that's what it takes."

"Because newspaper jobs are in such plentiful supply right now," I said.

"Because nothing is worth that much."

I couldn't say anything.

"You don't want to write about it, because you think Nick Parrish was seeking attention all along."

"Yes."

"Irene, you idiot, make him the smallest part of the story."

I looked up at her.

"You know what Tom Cassidy's team is doing right now?" she asked.

"Holding CNN and Channel Five away from my front door."

"Yes, that's true. But you know how there's a sense of family in any police department, so he's also got crisis counseling crews that are trying to help the LPPD cope with the deaths of six of its men."

I looked over at Frank, who nodded.

"He's coordinating another group at the university," she said, "in case any of Ben's and David's colleagues or graduate students need to talk about what has happened."

"How do you know about all of this?"

"A fine city desk I'd be running if I didn't."

"What happened to Morry, by the way?"

"He moved to Buffalo. Got a job with the Buffalo News."

"What?"

She shrugged. "His mom lives in Kenmore--the suburb, not the brand name."

"He left without notice?"

She smiled. "My only regret is that you weren't here to see easygoing Morry tell Wrigley to shove it."

I laughed. "I can't believe it!"

She made an x over her heart. "Swear to it. After Wrigley stormed out of the room, I gave Morry a kiss for it. He turned red and kept blushing for about four hours, but he was grinning the whole time. We gave him a big send-off at Banyon's."

I shook my head. "Sorry I missed that. I would have liked to say good-bye."

"Sometimes you get to say good-bye, sometimes you don't. It's why you have to be good to people."

I was silent.

"Nick Parrish is going to get his glory," she said, "even if the Express never prints his name again. He'll get it from all those folks who have their satellite dishes pointed over your rooftop. He'll get it from every other paper in the country."

I knew what she was saying was true. After a moment, I said, "He chased me. Or let me believe he was chasing me."

"I figured that was why you met me with a knife and spear," Frank said.

I realized that I hadn't told him much about what had happened up there. He hadn't pressed me for details, and he probably had lots of questions. Even if he had talked to the detectives who interviewed me, given the state I was in at the time, I doubted he had a very clear picture. I resolved to have a long talk with him that evening, but for now, I said, "I was going to go after Parrish at that point. I didn't want him to kill whoever was arriving on the helicopter."

"What?"

"My thinking was a little muddled then--but now--I don't think Parrish ever intended to catch me," I said. "I didn't realize it then--I was too out of it to put my thoughts together. Now it hits me, you know--that it was too easy. Getting away from him. Like when you're little and the older kids tell you they want to play hide-and-go-seek, but then they go off somewhere together while you stay hiding. You've been ditched."

"So Parrish wanted you to escape," Lydia said.

"Yes, I think he wanted a reporter to survive, wanted someone to go out there and add to the legend. You know, tell the story as someone who feared his power."

Was that all there was to it? I wanted it to be true, but I couldn't quite believe my own sales pitch. He had said he would find me again. Julia Sayre and Kara Lane both had dark hair and blue eyes. Maybe Parrish had more than one purpose in mind after he learned I would be the reporter.

"And he singled you out," Lydia said, startling me until I realized she was referring to my last spoken comment.

"Yes."

"If you're right about that," she said, "and he's expecting something special from you, disappoint him. You're the only one who can really do that."

It took me about another half hour to get started. But once I was started, everything else ceased to exist. After one mention of him by name, if I had to refer to Parrish, I called him "the prisoner." I found I didn't have to write about him all that much.

I wrote about the last days of Merrick, Manton, Duke, and Earl, of Bob Thompson and Flash Burden, of David. I wrote about Earl's sense of humor, of Duke whittling a toy horse for his grandson--and remembered that I must take that carving to his family. I wrote about Flash taking photographs of wildflowers, of Merrick playing with Bingle, of Manton trying to get used to his wife's new haircut by studying a photo. I tried to convey a sense of them that would make them more than names on a list of victims. Perhaps John or some copy editor would cut it up, or use a "search and replace" command to change "prisoner" to "Nicholas Parrish."

It didn't matter. I could only do what I could.

I wrote about finding Julia Sayre, then stopped to search our files for Nina Poolman.

A photo of a dark-haired, blue-eyed, forty-two-year-old woman appeared on the screen. Missing. Three years ago.

Nothing saying she was ever found.

I sat staring at her photograph, knowing that Parrish would expect me to write that he had told me her name.

"Frank?" I said.

"Yeah?"

"The victim in the second grave--do you think any of the teeth survived the explosion intact?"

"I'm not sure. Teeth are pretty tough though, so maybe. Why?"

"If they did, and you can get a hold of this woman's dental records, I think you can close a case."

In the story, I wrote the truth--no positive identification of the victim in the second grave had been made.

I filed the story, stood up, and said to Lydia, "Tell John that if I open the paper tomorrow and see Nick Parrish's name all over that story, I will not be back in. Ever. Which might not be such a big loss to either one of us."

"Will do," she said. "Are you okay?"

I shook my head, drew a breath. "Tell John I've got more to write, but--"

"You'll be happy to take it elsewhere," she interrupted. "I think he'll get the picture."

I e-mailed a brief note to Mark, thanking him for sticking up for me the day before, and logged off.

The phone rang.

"Kelly," I answered.

"There's a . . . a person here to see you," the security guard at the front desk said.

"A person?"

"She says she has an appointment with you. Gillian Sayre."

Four o'clock.

"I'll be right down," I said.

"Want me to go with you?" Frank asked.

I shook my head. "This one I think I need to handle on my own."

** CHAPTER 31

SATURDAY, LATE AFTERNOON, MAY 20

Las Piernas News Express

"You look tired," I said, as I gestured her into a small meeting room off the lobby.

"I didn't sleep much last night," she said.

Of course not, I thought, wondering if I could avoid making any other clumsy remarks over the next few minutes.

The room was quiet, save for the combined overhead hum of fluorescent lights and air-conditioning. If there's a gray rainbow somewhere, the decor of that room--carpet, walls, chairs, and table--had tried to capture it. One color, assorted shades. It fit my mood.

When we were seated, Gillian said, "Do they know where Parrish is yet?"

"No. But I don't think he'll be able to stay hidden for long. I'm sorry he got away."

"I guess he had it all planned. From what they're saying on television, you were lucky to get out of there alive."

With an unexpected rush of relief, I realized that I did feel lucky, damned lucky! Lucky that I wasn't one of the ones who had been standing next to the grave, lucky that Parrish had let me go, lucky to have been spared.

These thoughts no sooner crossed my mind than I was horrified by them, ashamed to find myself rejoicing at all, no matter how silently, ashamed to be feeling good in any way about anything having to do with the last few days.

And worse, to think such thoughts while I sat next to a young woman whose mother had been murdered, tortured hideously by the man who had let me go. Christ, what a jerk I was to be calling that luck! Gillian must have wondered why--why her mother was dead and I was still alive. I had no children waiting for me to return. I looked down at the table, unable to meet her eyes.

She was silent for a moment, then said, "I was hoping you could tell me about finding my mother."

Instantly, I was staring at an uncovered, decaying corpse. Its smell filled the room.

"Irene?"

The tabletop came back into view. The room smelled of lemon furniture polish, and nothing worse. I drew a deep breath, then told Gillian a highly sanitized version of events up to the moment Bingle found the grave. I could not bring myself to talk about the coyote tree or the process of uncovering the grave itself.

She listened quietly, without comment, then said, "Was she . . . was the body . . . you know . . . just bones?"

Oh, Christ.

"No," I said unsteadily. I swallowed hard and forged ahead. "Apparently, she was buried not long after she died."

"But I've heard that animals sometimes--"

"No," I interrupted sharply. Forcing myself to speak in more even tones, I said, "No animals damaged the body."

"I know it sounds gross and weird to even be asking," she said, "but they haven't released her body to us yet, so--so I can't really deal with it. Do you know what I mean? I keep thinking about her being up there, and wondering what he did to her, but no one will tell me. Do you know?"

The Polaroids in the bag.

The hot wax. Julia's face twisted in torment, her mouth open on a scream.

I couldn't breathe. "Excuse me," I managed to say. "It's stuffy in here. I just need to open the door."

"I need someone to be honest with me," she said to my back, as I stood at the door, leaning on its frame, trying to get enough air. Her voice was as close to pleading as I had ever heard it. "I have to know. All along, you've been honest with me. You know the truth, don't you?"

I knew exactly. But damned if I was going to tell a child--even one who was now an adult child--what I had seen in those photos. I'd lie. She might think she wanted the truth, but she wasn't ready for it. No one was ready for that kind of truth.

It would be inhumane to hit her with all the brutal facts of the matter. That wasn't my job. Not even as a reporter. Newspapers of good repute didn't publish gruesome accident photos, or recount every gory detail of a murderer's work. One showed a certain amount of respect for the dead and their families.

Respect for the dead.

Julia Sayre--would you want me to tell her? This daughter of yours, who for four years has crucified herself over a flip remark? "I wish you were dead." Any details I gave her would only add to her guilt.

I turned to face her, saw her waiting for my answer.

Could I lie to her?

"The police and forensic scientists will know more about what happened to her after they've had a chance to study her remains," I began.

"But you saw the body," she insisted.

"It was wrapped in plastic," I said.

"Oh." She thought for a moment, then said, "But plastic--could you see--?"

"Nothing. It was dark green--completely opaque."

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