Something Wicked (17 page)

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Authors: Lisa Jackson

BOOK: Something Wicked
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“I'll get that cab,” the bartender put in, saving Savvy from wanting to blast the worm.
DeWitt staggered outside and shivered, pulling the collar of his coat closer to his neck. “Gonna snow.”
Savannah wanted to pepper him with questions but knew he would just keep playing games. DeWitt was all innuendo and bluster. Except he did know about the baby.
“What do you think you know about my sister?” she asked quietly.
“A helluva lot more than you do, or her husband does. I saw her there a coupla times. With
him.

“Does he have a name?”
“Calls himself Charlie when he's trolling for a hot piece of ass,” he said. “A real rat bastard. She knew him, all right, and I do mean that in the biblical sense. I was there one night, looking around, feeling sick about the whole goddamn thing. Looking for the goddamn proof that they're all wrong.”
“You were at Bancroft Bluff, checking out the integrity of the dune?” she asked, trying to keep up with his rambling talk.
“Didn't I just say so? Hell. It's all political, anyway. Somebody gets pissed at somebody, and they condemn the whole area just because they can.” He waved an arm. “It's not my fault.”
She wasn't going to point out the obvious, that, well, yes, it was his fault for ignoring the signs that the dune was sloughing into the sea. It was, in fact, his job. “You saw my sister there,” she said, prodding him.
“Sure did. He had her up against the wall. Banging her like crazy, and she was . . . man . . . in ecstasy. Head thrown back and first making these little kittenlike sounds and then screamin'! She was riding him and lovin' it.” His smile was a leer.
Savvy fought back the urge to do him physical harm. She wanted to slap him silly, and he knew it, the bastard. “You saw my sister with someone in the Donatella house,” she reiterated.
“That's what I'm telling you. Doing the dirty right against that same wall. The one that was painted with ‘blood money.' You know.”
“Who is this Charlie?”
“I told ya. Good Time Charlie. You got questions, ask your sister. She knows him pretty good.”
A brisk wind ripped at Savvy's jacket, and she pulled it tighter around her. “You saw Charlie and Kristina St. Cloud together at the Donatella house.”
“Why don't you write it down,
Detective
?”
“Could you have been mistaken?”
“Look, I know you probably don't want to believe that your sister's screwing around on her husband, but I know what I saw. They were taking advantage of the fact that the Donatellas had skedaddled. Chickenshits. After they left the dune, everybody went. Oh, sure, they would pretend to be livin' there, just to get people to stay, but it was a lie and everybody knew it. Fuckin' scared they were gonna fall into the goddamn ocean.”
“Is Charlie connected to Bancroft Bluff?”
“He was fuckin' the boss's wife. Jesus, woman. How many ways I gotta say it? That's as connected as you get!”
“Kristina picked the venue for this alleged rendezvous?”
“How would I know?” He glanced around. “Christ, it's cold.”
Savvy looked up toward the darkening skies. She was going to have to get that room ASAP. “Where can I find this Charlie?”
DeWitt closed his eyes and lost his balance, taking a step backward before catching himself. “Stay away from him. That's my advice to you, pregnant lady. Far, far away . . .”
“Where have you seen him around?”
He waved an expansive arm to encompass the whole world as a cab pulled up in front of the restaurant and he staggered forward to get the door. “Don't charge me too much, man,” he whined to the cabbie as he climbed inside.
“What's Charlie's real name?” Savvy asked, raising her voice.
“Beelzebub,” he muttered, slamming the door behind him.
Savvy stared after the departing cab for a moment, fighting down a shiver. She thought DeWitt's brain might be alcohol soaked, but he'd definitely put a chill in her soul, and the weather wasn't helping. Walking back to her car, she placed a call to Kristina, whose phone went straight to voice mail again.
Damn it all to hell. Where are you?
Savvy hung up without leaving a message. Kristina would see she'd called from her missed-call list and maybe call her back.
Beelzebub
, she thought.
Ridiculous.
If anyone was a devil, it was more likely Owen DeWitt himself.
CHAPTER 13
M
ary's journal lay unopened on Catherine's nightstand, next to the oil lamp with its soft, shimmering flame. Knowing she would be drawn into Mary's world as soon as she opened its leather cover, Catherine walked into her bedroom but refused to look at it, just as she had refused to look at it every other time she'd entered the room. Yes, she needed to read it. Yes, she believed it held some of the keys to what had happened to her sister. And yes, there were bound to be clues to the past, the pieces that Catherine did not know herself, the ones Mary had deliberately hidden from her.
But there were also bound to be references to the things Catherine did know about . . . things she would sooner forget.
Still, she was only putting off the inevitable. She'd asked Detective Dunbar for a DNA test on the knife, hoping there would be some sign of the killer.
Yet she thought she might know who he was.
Her jaw clenched, and she forcibly relaxed it.
He
was like Justice. Determined and driven and filled with genetic anomalies that as often as not turned him into an evil monster incapable of living within social boundaries.
She needed to find the adoption records.
“Aunt Catherine?”
She nearly jumped out of her skin as she turned swiftly to the open door of her bedroom. Cassandra stood there, her eyes glimmering in the faint light.
“You scared me!” Catherine exclaimed, one hand over her chest. Her heart was thudding erratically.
“I think he's done something really bad.”
“Who?” she asked automatically.
“The man from the bones.”
“Cassandra . . .”
“He went to her,” Cassandra whispered urgently.
Catherine walked over and put her arms around Cassandra, holding her tightly, knowing how much her visions scared her. “What did he do?”
“Can you see it?”
“No, I—” Catherine paused, momentarily seeing a heavy block of wood.
“He killed her.” Cassandra hesitated a moment, her body quivering, and then she added in a voice so soft Catherine could scarcely hear it, even though her lips weren't far from her ear, “And then he watched her die, and . . . he liked the way it felt. He says it's . . . better than sex.”
Nothing is better than sex
, Mary said, eyeing her sister with that cat-and-cream smile.
“Who did he kill, Cassandra?” Catherine made herself ask, her throat tight.
The girl slowly pulled away from her, and she came back to herself, as if waking from a dream. She looked slightly confused. “Our mother?” she asked, as if Catherine held the answer. Then, “No, it was a different woman.” As if suddenly alarmed at being too near to Mary, she added, “And it's Maggie. My name is Maggie.”
She left the room in a rush, legs flying beneath her long skirts, as if she wanted nothing more to do with either Catherine or the visions that had plagued her—her gift—since she was young.
Catherine thought about Cassandra's vision. About the man from the bones. Forcing herself to the nightstand, she picked up the small volume and started at the beginning, but Mary's young girl ramblings held little interest for her. Thus she opened the book and held it flat, letting the pages fall to their natural breaking point.
With dread she read the passage.
Cathy thinks she's in love with a prince, but he's just like the rest of them. It's so easy to have any of them, it's laughable. I lean in and envelop them, and they're mine. I thought she was going to cry when she asked me, “Is it a scent?” She kept pestering me, and I told her, “It's just something you don't have. Sorryyy . . .” Should I let her have him, or put him in the trophy case?
Catherine slammed the book shut, only to open it again to a later page, a well-thumbed section, one that Mary had apparently gone back to time and again.
I saved Cathy from that rapist, but I wouldn't let her have happiness. That's what she says to me all the time. “You won't let me be happy.” There is no happiness. There's only conquest. I took him from her, and I'm not sorry. It's for her own good. She wasn't meant to have him.
They're all mine. From Parnell to Seamus to the devil who gave me D. The rapist. Back from the dead, but dead again.
Right, Cath? You're reading this, aren't you? You know who I'm talking about. Is it still a secret? Have you managed to keep your mouth shut? Or have you pointed your finger at him, like you always point it at me?
Catherine clamped the book shut this time with a soft
whump.
She thought about Mary out on Echo Island and all the years her sister had lived there in obscurity. Mary hadn't wanted to be taken. She'd gone there against her will. But once ensconced, she'd scarcely protested. In fact she'd changed from railing at Catherine whenever she brought supplies to showing her the herb garden she'd begun in the hardscrabble terraced backyard. She'd even asked for different seeds and plants to add to it. This had surprised Catherine greatly because up till then, Mary's single-minded, obsessive nature had seemed to have to do only with men.
Men . . .
They're all mine. From Parnell to Seamus to the devil who gave me D.
Catherine's eyes traveled to the closed book, and her jaw grew hard. She'd known Parnell well, how his taste for women had grown ever younger. She hadn't mourned his death one iota. And she'd known Seamus, who'd hung around Mary like a dog who smelled a bitch in heat, until he'd finally gotten his chance to mount her. He had been married, of course, and had gone back to his wife, who'd died of a heart attack not long after. Seamus himself had died a few years later, another one Catherine hadn't mourned. He, like so many of Mary's conquests, never knew he'd fathered one of her children. Maybe he'd suspected. Maybe they all had, but no one had stepped up and asked.
Bastards.
Catherine wasn't completely certain just which man had sired which child, though Mary had known. That information might be inside Mary's journal, and it might not. She suspected the key to whoever had killed her sister was related to one of them, however: the man from the bones. And she thought she could maybe narrow it down.
Still, the words her sister had written seemed to leap off the page. Powerful. Evoking memories of those long-ago days before Catherine exiled her sister and slammed shut the gates to Siren Song.
The devil who gave me D.
She certainly knew who that was.
Swallowing, she stared into the dark corners of the room while her mind's eye vividly recalled the devil Mary referred to: the only one of her sister's lovers that Mary had been unable to control. The sick bastard who'd forced Catherine into a closet and pressed himself upon her, stripping off her clothes and holding her down while she screamed behind his hand. A man twice her age who'd turned his laser blue eyes on her. Catherine had felt something grip her, something sexual, which she'd mentally fought, even while she was physically frozen. He would have had her, but suddenly Mary was there, slamming the butt of the shotgun from the gun closet downstairs into his skull. He went down hard, his cranium dented, his eyes fixed, and the spell broken. Catherine had been shaking uncontrollably. She'd still been in a daze when Mary said, “Help me,” and she'd obeyed, joining her sister in carrying his body from the closet downstairs and out to the graveyard, where he still lay inside the grave now marked with Mary's headstone.
“Who is he?” Catherine had asked her as that late summer's wind blew around them, and they had both cast anxious glances back to the lodge, worried one of the children would see them.
“Richard Beeman,” Mary had answered after a long moment. “My husband.”
“He's not your husband,” Catherine had whispered.
Her sister had smiled coldly. “And his name isn't Richard Beeman.”
And then she slammed the sharp end of the blade into the dirt fiercely until it hit something . . . his body . . . and Catherine gasped and turned away.
“Die, devil,” Mary spat through her teeth. Then she yanked out the shovel, the tip of the blade dark with the blood, and added conversationally, “We'll get a coffin made. Maybe we can ask Earl. . . .”
CHAPTER 14
H
ale pressed a finger to the end call button on his cell and tried to tamp down his concern.
Where the hell is she?
He'd been half annoyed most of the day, but now, as night fell, he crossed the threshold into low-grade alarm. For all her flightiness, Kristina had never walked out for this many hours with no contact whatsoever. He didn't know how many times he'd called her already, but he would be reaching serious “stalker” limits were he some stranger trying to make contact.
“Want another?” the bartender asked him, pointing at his empty beer glass. She was young, with long dark hair and a name tag that read
MINNIE
.
Hale was seated at the bar end of the Bridgeport Bistro in downtown Seaside. He'd left the office and thought about heading home, but he had a gut feeling Kristina wasn't there waiting for him and he didn't want his worries to escalate just yet. And if she did happen to be there, she could damn well wonder where the hell he was.
“No, thanks,” he said. Then, as she turned away, he said, “Maybe a Scotch on the rocks.”
“Any particular one?”
“Surprise me.”
“Dewar's?”
He nodded. He was almost sorry he'd asked for another drink now that she was pouring it for him. He wanted to
do
something. This sitting at the bar and wondering was making him crazy. As Minnie slid him his drink, the door blew open, sending in a swirl of frigid air, which made everyone in the place look up and frown.
“Brrr,” the newcomer said. “Sorry about that.”
“Well, get on in here, Jimbo, and keep the cold out,” Minnie said to him, playfully snapping a towel at him.
Jimbo was a big man in a plaid shirt with a thick beard and a thicker neck. He grinned at Minnie, and Hale caught a spark of romance between them. It left a dark sorrow in his heart in a way that made him angry at himself.
Damn it, Kristina. Where the hell are you?
Downing his Scotch, he rethought his plan to stay away from the house, deciding he was just being immature. As he climbed into the TrailBlazer, the skies suddenly opened and a deluge of cold rain mixed with snow shot down, sending icy fingers slipping beneath his collar. He shivered as he slammed the door shut, fired the ignition, and switched on the wipers.
His house was about ten minutes south of Seaside, depending on traffic and weather. Hale had just passed Cannon Beach on the way south when his cell phone began ringing through his car's speakers as Bluetooth picked up.
“Finally,” he muttered, flipping up his cell phone to view the number, but it wasn't Kristina's. The number was his client Ian Carmichael's. Disappointed, he waited till the phone connected and then said, “Hello, Ian?”
“Oh, Godddd!” came a woman's shriek, booming through his speakers.
The sound jolted Hale's heart. “Astrid?” he asked.
“She's . . . dead . . . dead. . . . She's dead! Oh, God. Oh, my God! She's dead!”
“Who? Astrid? Who's dead?” Hale asked as he slowed and pulled over to the side of the road, but in some dark region of his mind he jumped to only one conclusion, and just as quickly pushed that thought aside. This wasn't about him.
There was a sound of scrambling on the phone, as if someone had dropped it and then caught it, and a moment later Ian's voice came on the line. “Hale?” he asked in a strained voice. “Is that you?”
“Yes, Ian. I'm driving home, and—”
“She's not dead. Astrid grabbed the phone before I could call. We phoned nine-one-one when we found her. She was in the living room. There was blood on the wood, a heavy chunk like a beam. Must've fallen from above. I think she was hit with it.”
“Where are you?” he demanded, but he knew.
“We're outside the house. She came in through a window. We found her inside.”
Hale was already turning the TrailBlazer around, aiming for Seaside and the Carmichaels' house. His pulse was like a surf in his ears. “You found an injured woman inside your house?”
“You said they were going to demo soon and we stopped by and there she was.” He gulped audibly. “I think you should come. It might be . . .”
“I'm on my way. It might be what? Ian?” Hale demanded. Then, when Ian wouldn't or couldn't respond, he added, “You're saying a woman climbed through the window.”
“'Cause it was locked, I guess. The Seaside police should be here soon,” Ian answered distractedly. “Umm . . . we're just outside the front. We saw her and just . . . didn't go in. There was a window open, maybe.”
One window. The one that wouldn't close properly. Had some vagrant found it?
He experienced a horrifying, crystal-clear memory of standing with Kristina at their own house and watching rain race down the panes, and him saying, “This weather's hell on wooden window frames. Good thing we're redoing the Carmichaels' house, because it's a sieve.”
And then Kristina answering, “My parents' house has wood frames. They either swell shut or just won't latch.”
And him nodding, glad for once that they were having an actual conversation about something besides their relationship, and saying, “These windows are in the ‘just won't latch' category.”
Hale had a sudden vision of Kristina on the Carmichaels' living room floor, the back of her head a mass of blood.
“Ian,” he said, forcing the words past his lips.
It couldn't be. Couldn't! And yet . . .
“Do you think the woman is my wife?”
“I don't know, man. Just get here.”
Fear seized his chest like a vise, and he pressed his toes to the accelerator as he tore back through the dark night to the job site on the Promenade.
 
 
Savannah drove across the Willamette River, through the tunnel, then west on the Sunset Highway. The beams of headlights heading east shimmered on the pavement, and ahead of her pulsed a scarlet trail of taillights. Deception Bay lay over two hours west over the mountains. Her police band sputtered, and she was instantly tired. Damned pregnancy.
There was a Motel 6 coming up on her right, and it seemed as good a choice as any. She took the ramp off the Sunset and pulled into the lot. Zipping up her jacket and holding the collar close, she bent her head to the wind. Tiny flakes of snow swirled around her as she walked into the reception area, which smelled slightly of burned coffee.
She tried Kristina again as she waited for her key at the desk, but her cell phone went straight to voice mail for the dozenth time. She thought about calling Hale, but first Nadine's and then Owen DeWitt's condemnation of her sister was in the forefront of her mind, and she just didn't feel like talking to Kristina's husband right now.
Not that she believed a word of it. Kristina wanted Hale, and she was too determined that they should have a life together for her to blow it on an affair. Gretz and DeWitt were either lying or mistaken. Kristina wasn't a liar or a cheat. That just wasn't the way her sister was made.
“Where are you?” she muttered under her breath.
Her sister's supposed sexual encounters reminded her of Catherine and what she'd said about her own sister, Mary's “gift,” as well as her ability to draw men to her.
Weird.
Then there was Catherine's strange lesson in genetics and the boys, now men, who'd been born at Siren Song. Where were they? Did they exist? Had they ever? All questions that were going to have to wait until after she finished her part of the Donatella investigation and had her baby.
She rubbed her stomach, and Baby St. Cloud gave her hand a kick. Not as powerful as before. She was getting too big, and there wasn't the same amount of room for the little guy to move.
“Not much longer,” she told him softly.
Key in hand, she picked up her overnight bag and stepped carefully along the walkway, which was growing slippery, then up the exterior stairs to the second floor. Two-twelve was halfway down the balcony, and she let herself into a clean but cold room with a queen bed that, when she switched on the overhead, looked like it sagged a bit in the center.
She found the thermostat and turned up the heat, then, shivering, propped herself on the bed. Her brain was full of the events of the past few days. There were so many things to think about, she felt slightly ADD, her mind jumping from Catherine and the questions surrounding her sister's death to Bancroft Bluff and the Donatella murders, and how they impacted Hale St. Cloud and his family, to the growing worry she felt about Kristina and the allegations that she'd been having an affair with someone named Charlie, to the fact that she, Savannah, was about to go into childbirth and give her sister and husband a child.
And come Monday, she would be relegated to desk duty, which, although it wasn't a bad thing, made her feel cast aside and useless, and she supposed that was all just the baby-growing hormones at work, but she still felt it. Keenly.
She'd stuffed the pages of Bancroft Development's financials that Ella Blessert had copied for her into her messenger bag, and now she pulled out the thick pile and laid it on the bed, starting from the furthest date back and going forward. She'd barely started reading, however, when her eyes began watering from weariness and she began to yawn.
A brief nap. That was all she needed.
Lying back on the bed, she thought she should take her shoes off, but she was too tired to care. She tried to focus instead on only one aspect of the investigation, but for reasons unclear to her, all she could think about was Kristina and her joy when she'd learned Savannah was pregnant.
Call me
, she mentally ordered her sister as she drifted off.
As fast as he drove to the Carmichael house, the Seaside police and EMTs beat Hale to the site. Ian and Astrid were huddled on one side of the building as snow swirled around them and fluttered in the flashlight beams and squares of light from the windows. Hale slammed the TrailBlazer into park and leapt onto the ground, slipping a little in the dusting of snow. He rushed forward but was blocked by an officer, who told him they had a crime scene and he couldn't enter, and at that moment a gurney with a body on it was carried through the front door.
One look and he knew. Kristina.
“Oh, God. My God.” His legs threatened to buckle.
“Sir?”
He swam back to the present with an effort. A young officer wearing a Seaside police uniform and a name tag that read
MILLS
was standing in front of him. Hale blinked. “Where are they taking her?”
“I don't know, sir. You recognize the victim?”
“My wife. Kristina . . . St. Cloud.”
He brushed past the officer and asked the EMTs, “Where are you going?”
“Ocean Park Hospital.”
He turned to leave, but Officer Mills was in front of him again. “An officer will meet you at the hospital, Mr. St. Cloud.”
Hale barely heard him as he ran full bore and skidded to his vehicle. A thousand images swirled through his brain in an instant: meeting her at the coffee shop, sharing their first Christmas, a midnight kiss, making love to her . . . and then her sudden disinterest.
“Hale?”
It was Astrid Carmichael. Her voice a wavering plea in the cold night air. To both Astrid and Ian, he said tersely, “It's Kristina. I'm going to the hospital.”
Ian Carmichael nodded once, and his wife buried her face in her husband's chest.
The ambulance pulled out with full lights and siren, the wailing
woo-woo-woo-woo
screaming into the night, with Hale right on the emergency vehicle's bumper. He drove somewhat carefully, because of the worsening weather, though he wanted to rip down the highway. Nevertheless, he was only minutes behind the ambulance as they reached Ocean Park Hospital.
Slamming his car into park, he half ran, half jogged through the carpet of snow to the ER, where sliding glass doors shifted backward as he burst through. Kristina's gurney was just being pushed past double swinging doors controlled by a push button. Hale followed right after it, slipping inside before the automatic doors shut him out. Kristina's eyes were closed, and her face was white.
“Kristina,” he said.
“Excuse me, sir. Are you a relative?” A woman was suddenly standing in front of him—a nurse—blocking his view.
“That's my wife,” he said, holding on tightly to his control with everything he possessed. Dear Jesus, was she going to make it? What happened?
What happened?
“If you could wait over here . . .” She gestured toward a chair in a curtained bay that was empty.

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