Death Through the Looking Glass (3 page)

BOOK: Death Through the Looking Glass
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“Where to?”

“Back to Snow's house. He's got a speedboat tied to his dock. Hurry, Rocco. Tom Giles just went down in the drink.”

2

Damon Snow stood at the helm of the motorboat as it bucked through the water at full throttle. As it pulled past the town pier, Lyon tapped him on the shoulder and pointed to the right.

“Straight out from here!” he yelled over the roar of the engines.

The boat swerved in a tight arc toward a new heading that took it directly away from the pier. The violent turn threw Lyon back against the seat as Rocco, standing next to Damon, gripped the windshield with both hands.

“How far out?” Damon yelled.

“Cut your speed at three thousand yards. We don't want to cut him in half if he's in the water.”

The bow rose and tide swells slapped the hull as the boat swept straight away from the dock. “Are you sure of your bearing?”

“The bearing, yes, but it's hard to estimate distance over water. He went down directly in front of me when I was over the pier. But the sun was in my eyes.”

The engine whine and hull slap decreased markedly as Damon pushed the twin throttles to a one-third-ahead position. Rocco indicated by hand signals that Lyon should search on the port side, he on the starboard, while Damon's position at the wheel would allow him to scan ahead. They were silent as they peered across the water, searching for a swimmer, an oil slick, or any sign of wreckage that would mark the small plane's grave.

After some minutes Damon turned to Lyon: “We're pretty far out. Suppose I go to port a hundred yards and sweep back toward shore?”

“Fine,” Lyon replied and pointed. “We're going to have help. That looks like a Coast Guard cutter.”

The cutter pulled alongside the motorboat, and while her commanding officer and Lyon held a shouted interchange, the two boats were joined by a Lantern City police launch. The cutter dropped a red marker buoy at the spot Lyon felt was the closest to the plane's crash point. They divided the area into grids and began a series of careful search patterns.

After two hours of fruitless search, a police officer in the launch signaled for Damon to head back to his dock. They turned back, followed by the police boat, as the cutter continued its methodical search.

As soon as they reached the dock, and before Damon had an opportunity to secure the mooring lines, Rocco stepped to the pier and strode toward the house. After the boat was docked, Lyon found him in the living room, hunched over the phone.

“This is Chief Herbert. Let me speak to the airport manager.… That you, Gary? Rocco Herbert here. No, I don't want a flying lesson. I need information. You know Tom Giles's plane?… A Piper with a crazy paint job.…” Rocco looked toward Lyon, who nodded affirmatively. “Who took it up?… Giles called you yesterday and told you to have it gassed and ready for takeoff.… Did it have a radio?… We think it might have gone down off Lantern City.” He slowly hung up and turned to Lyon.

“Well?”

“No radio. He always flew visual flight rules. It took off yesterday afternoon.”

“Yesterday afternoon?”

They both turned as a police officer standing by the doorway cleared his throat. Lyon recognized Lantern City's police chief, Will Barnes. He was a near replica of Rocco, although in a smaller version: a big man with massive shoulders and closely cropped hair.

“You still don't wear a gun,” Rocco said. “Or does your mother make you leave it at home?”

“At least I'm not a cat freak, like certain cops I could name.”

“Did you find the plane?” Lyon asked impatiently.

“Nope. You Lyon Wentworth?”

“Yes.”

“We've put divers down near the buoy marker. Are you sure it went down there?”

“Not positive, Chief. But it's the best estimate I could give the Coast Guard.”

Barnes sat in a straight chair and took a small pad from his breast pocket. “I'd like to get a statement from you, Mr. Wentworth. Give me as many details as you can.”

“Yes, of course. This morning, in fact early this morning, my wife and friends inflated my balloon, and I took it aloft.”

“At what time?”

“I can't give you the exact time. I don't wear a watch.”

“About 6:45,” Rocco said. “He called me on the radio immediately afterward.”

“And what time would you say the plane went down?”

“About seven,” Rocco said.

“I also believe the plane was owned by Thomas Giles, a Hartford attorney.”

“That seems to check out with the Murphysville airport,” Rocco added.

“Are you sure of the sighting you gave the Coast Guard?”

“I don't quite follow the question, Chief Barnes.”

Will Barnes closed his notebook and carefully replaced it in his breast pocket. “I don't know how to put this diplomatically, Mr. Wentworth, except to say that we can't find any airplane.”

“I've heard of planes going down without a slick or any wreckage floating to the surface.”

“Yes, so have I, but not usually in Long Island Sound, a couple of miles offshore. However, we'll continue, and the Coast Guard has a specially equipped cutter in New Haven that they'll have up here tomorrow morning. It carries various sensing devices that will determine whether or not a plane is down.”

“‘Whether or not?' I saw an airplane go down!”

“So far, we haven't been able to locate anyone else who did.”

“It was early.” Lyon realized that Will Barnes was trying to be as polite as the circumstances allowed, but he couldn't stop the foam of anger that rose within him. “Officer, I saw an airplane in difficulty, with what appeared to be smoke issuing from the engine cowling, and the airplane went into a power dive that took it into the water.”

“Of course. And we will keep searching, Mr. Wentworth. By the way, I assume that is your balloon on the town beach?”

“It is.”

“We'd be appreciative if you'd move it as quickly as possible. It's going to play havoc with the sunbathers.” Will Barnes stood up and walked to the door, then turned to face Lyon. “Had you been drinking this morning, Mr. Wentworth?”

“We had a little for breakfast,” Lyon replied as Rocco put a hand to his face.

“For breakfast,” Barnes said reflectively. “Tell me, Rocco, is there a charge for operating a hot-air balloon while under the influence?”

Rocco shook his head. “There ought to be.”

“YOU COULD BE MISTAKEN!” Bea said as she drove the pickup toward the town beach.

“Your battery's low again.”

“What?”

Lyon plucked the minute hearing aid from his wife's ear, banged it twice against the dashboard, then replaced it. “How's that?”

“I said, you could have been mistaken in what you saw.”

“The sun was in my eyes, and the visibility and lines of sight were not good—I'll grant that. But I've been up hundreds of times over the years, Beatrice.”

“Usually on my days off.”

He shook his head. “Be serious. Hundreds of times, and in my whole ballooning career I have seen only one multicolored single-engine airplane like that, and that was Tom Giles's. That's why I continued watching it.”

“Then it's down there in the water somewhere.”

“It's got to be.”

“Then they'll find it, won't they?”

“Eventually.”

They drove silently for a few moments before Bea turned to him with a look of mild puzzlement. “By the way, when is Robin going back down south?”

“I don't know. She hasn't said.”

“She came up to deliver the drawings and has turned into a permanent house guest.”

“I guess it's just a change for her.”

“I don't like the way she looks at you.”

“Come on, Bea. She's only eighteen.”

“That's the second thing.”

“You aren't serious?”

“Yep.” She turned the truck into the town beach parking lot. They walked over to where Lyon had so hurriedly left the balloon earlier in the day.

He stood over the tilted gondola and looked disconsolately down at the destruction. The altimeter had been torn from the wood paneling, the CB radio and compass were missing, and a long gash had been rent in the balloon envelope, as if someone had maliciously ripped the fabric with a jackknife.

“Sometimes it hardly pays to be a good Samaritan,” Bea said as she put a hand on his arm. “I'm sorry, Lyon.”

He sat on the end of the dock and let his feet dangle over the water. The sun waned to a red glow in the western sky. Out on the water the Coast Guard cutter had begun to move slowly down the sound, while the police launch retrieved the last scuba diver.

Tom Giles had disappeared into the darkening waters out there. The last cry of Lyon's childhood now whimpered into the black waters of the sound. So many others were gone, or he'd lost track of them; Giles's death would mark the end of a remembered time that would now fade into vague shadows. Their interests had diverged over the years, and often long spans of time had passed without their seeing each other, but at every reunion Lyon had always felt warmth for the long-ago boy who had offered friendship to a gangling adolescent. He sighed. Greenfield would have been years of living hell without Tom's friendship. Again he felt the hovering specter of age.

He heard someone behind him and then felt hands on his shoulders.

“It's turned out to be a lousy day for you.”

He looked up at Robin. “I guess I've had better. It had a great start.”

“Can I sit with you?”

“Do you always wear that?”

“What?”

“The bathing suit.”

She laughed. “In the summertime. It's almost like not having anything on.”

Lyon agreed and pointedly looked toward the police boat as it turned in the direction of the dock. “Won't your father be wondering about you?”

“Oh, no. I called last night, and he said for me to stay as long as I'm welcome. I hope I still am.”

“Of course you are, Robin. We love having you with us.”

She sat next to him and let her legs dangle over the edge of the dock. He felt the pressure of her hip against his, turned that over in his mind a moment, and decided it was accidental. The gentle bumping of her toes against his was not accidental. He inched to the side. The depression that had surrounded him as he moped alone at the dock had disappeared, to be replaced by feelings he preferred not to deal with. The situation had become ludicrous. He was years older than this near child.

He evoked an image of Bea at the house, standing on the long front porch, looking toward the water and dock, her eyes filled with hurt. He realized that he was trying to conjure up guilt for things not done, in order to cope with a nebulous situation. He laughed.

She cocked her head toward him. “What's so funny?”

“Nothing, really. I was thinking about how I almost made a fool of myself.”

“Over the airplane?”

“That's as good a thing as any.”

“I think you're a wonderful person, Lyon. In fact, I think you're one of the most marvelous men I've ever met.”

“I don't often kick sleeping dogs.”

“I'm serious. It shows in your books. Take
The Wobblies' Revenge
. It's more than a children's story. It's an allegory for the whole human condition.”

“Don't try to read too much into them, Robin. They're entertainment for children.”

“You're belittling yourself again. You're always doing that. You shouldn't do it, and she shouldn't do it, either.”

“She?”

“Beatrice.”

He thought of Bea, their years of marriage, the tragedies and triumphs, the accomplishments … how she had supported him while he was finishing college. Then he had gone on to teaching and, later, the first children's book; only then had she begun her own career—first her election to the State House of Representatives, then to the Senate, and last year to secretary of the state. He loved her and knew that she loved him.

“I love you, Lyon.”

“I love you, too.”

“I knew you did.”

“My God, Robin! I was thinking of someone else!” He saw the pain cloud her eyes. “I mean, it's not the same. Bea and I both care for you. We consider you almost as a replacement for the daughter we lost.”

“That wasn't how I meant it.”

“You need someone your own age. Someone with talent, a zest for life that will allow both of you to …”

“You have what I want.”

At full throttle the police boat turned toward the dock, throwing a sheet of foamy spray to each side of the prow. Chief Barnes stood in the cockpit and waved to Lyon. “I think we have company,” Lyon observed.

As the launch cut speed and pulled to the side of the dock, Lyon grasped the mooring line and cleated it around a stanchion. Will Barnes jumped to the dock from the still-rocking boat. “We can't find it, Wentworth.”

“I'm sure it's out there.”

“I know you are,” the police officer said, with a dubious quality to his voice. “But I've been out there all day, and the only thing I've gotten is a hell of a sunburn.”

“Damn it all, Barnes, I know what I saw!”

“Yeah, well … we've got to give it up for now. If it's out there, eventually something will surface.” He stepped back into the boat as Lyon cast off the line. The launch reversed engines, slid back from the dock, and made a tight turn toward the town dock.

“We had better go back to the house,” Lyon said.

Robin stared at him for a long moment; then her shoulders gave an almost imperceptible shrug. As he turned, her hand slid into his, and they walked back to the house, where Bea sat in a rocker on the porch, looking toward them with opaque eyes.

The day's events cast a pall over the dinner table that even Damon's sly witticisms over Lyon's ballooning failed to break. By mid-evening, excuses were being made and subdued farewells spoken, and the house party broke up.

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