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Authors: Patricia MacDonald

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Nelson turned his back on her and walked up the front porch steps, rummaging in his
pocket for the keys. He inserted a key into the front door and turned the knob.

“Mr. Abbott,” Tess said politely.

He turned to gaze at her, still standing beside the steps, and there was a chilling
little flash of cunning in his eyes. “Well, come in if you’re comin’,” he said abruptly.

Tess felt victorious and utterly wary at the same time. Where was that sudden, sly
satisfaction coming from? She climbed the steps and followed him into the parlor she
had viewed through the window earlier. Nelson Abbott took off his hat and his jacket
and hung them on a clothes tree by the front door. Tess started to take off her wet
slicker to hang it and her furled umbrella on the clothes tree, as well, but Abbott
interrupted her. “I didn’t say to make yourself at home,” he said.

“It’s just…I’m dripping,” she said.

Nelson Abbott made a face and then sighed, indicating his unwilling approval. Tess
hung up the umbrella and the slicker over it. Nelson pointed to one of the wooden
chairs and Tess sat down on it in the center of the dank room. Nelson remained standing,
his arms crossed over his chest.

Instantly, Tess realized that they weren’t going to be sharing a friendly drink. So
much for any hope of secreting away his drinking glass. He was staring at her, tapping
the palm of his hand impatiently on his upper arm. “Say what you come to say,” he
barked.

Make this good, Tess thought. Be appeasing. “Well,” she said, “I know that you and
Mrs. Abbott feel as if your son was the victim in this…whole thing. And of course
he was,” she said, nearly choking on the words. “But my sister was a victim, as well.
So I thought, maybe, instead of blaming each other, we should be placing the blame
where it really belongs…on the state and the…death penalty.”

Nelson looked at her in disbelief. “That’s what you wanted to say? That’s it?”

Tess felt flustered. “Well, I, yeah…”

Nelson rolled his eyes in disgust.

“I mean…I just thought we could talk,” Tess said.

Nelson snorted. “And here I figured you wanted to settle this thing. I thought you
come to make us an offer.”

“An offer?”

“A financial offer,” he said. Then he shook his head. “Avoid the court business. I
should have known. Just a lot of talk,” he said. “If that’s all you’re good for, get
out.”

Too late, Tess realized that she had missed her chance. Nelson would have been happy
to sit and bargain. He might even have made them both a cup of coffee. Now it was
too late to backtrack. He would not believe she was actually here to negotiate. In
fact, he looked as if he was going to lift her from the chair and toss her out. Tess
stood up, mindful that her last hope to obtain the sample was at hand. She knew that
what she was about to say might seem strange, but she had to do it. “Excuse me,” she
said, “but would you mind if I used your bathroom?”

Nelson stared at her in amazement. “The bathroom?”

Surely you have one, Tess thought. But she didn’t say it. “Yes,” she said.

“No need for that,” he said. “You’re leaving.”

“You won’t let me use the bathroom?” Tess said incredulously.

Nelson was unrepentant. “No. You’ve wasted enough of my time. Get out of my house.”

“All right,” said Tess, her scalp prickling. “Never mind.” She looked around the tidy
room, hoping that something, somehow would strike her. Some source of a sample.

“Let me tell you something,” said Nelson. “You
ought
to think about offering a settlement. Because if you don’t, a jury is going to make
you pay dearly. You’re not going to get out of this. You hear me? It is going to cost
you.”

She walked over to the clothes tree while Nelson planted himself behind her so that
there was no way for her to reenter the room. He grabbed the doorknob, pulling the
front door open. Tess reached out for her slicker, still shiny and wet, and then she
realized that all hope was not lost after all.

“Is it still raining?” she asked.

Nelson glanced out the front door. “Still coming down,” he said.

Tess nodded as she put on her coat and clutched her umbrella and her pocketbook to
her chest. “Well,” she said, “I’m sorry to have disappointed you. I guess we’ll have
to leave this to lawyers after all.”

“Don’t come back,” said Nelson. He barely waited until she was out the door to slam
it behind her and lock it. Tess pulled up her hood while she was standing on the porch.
Then she went down the front steps and hurried to her car.

Once she got inside the car, she turned on the ignition, set the windshield wipers
in motion, and locked the doors. Then she reached into her purse and pulled out one
of the plastic bags she had taken from the Fuller house. Wrapping the bag around her
hand like a mitten, she reached inside her slicker, under her arm and down the sleeve.
She extracted a worn, stained hat with “John Deere” written above the brim. It had
been hanging on the clothes tree beside her slicker and umbrella. When Nelson Abbott
had looked out the front door at the rain, Tess had stuffed the hat into her sleeve
as she pulled the slicker off its hook.

Now Tess folded the hat with the use of her plastic “glove,” pulled it into the plastic
bag, sealed the top, then placed it into the inner pocket of her slicker.

The hat in its protective plastic seemed to glow warm against her own thudding heart.
Hair, perspiration, a veritable treasure trove of Nelson Abbott’s DNA. Later, when
he went to get his hat, Nelson would frown and try to remember if he had worn it in
from the car. Perhaps he would assume that he’d left it somewhere. He’d probably check
his truck, to see if it was on the seat. Or look around at the places where he worked.
Tess backed out of the driveway, smiling at the thought. By the time he figured out
that she had taken it, the results would be in.

CHAPTER 17

C
hief Fuller scolded Tess soundly when she returned to his house with her treasure,
but he also called in a favor from an old friend—a technician at the police lab in
North Conway—who dispatched the lab’s courier for rush jobs to come and pick it. Aldous
Fuller assured Tess that he would let her know as soon as he received the results.

By the time Tess returned to the inn it was dark. Tess expected to find her mother
comfortably settled in for the night, but Dawn went to the closet to get her coat
as soon as Tess returned. “I have to go out,” she said.

“Where are you going?” Tess asked.

Dawn pressed her lips together. “I’m going to a CF meeting.”

Tess understood what meeting she meant. Compassionate Friends was a national organization
composed of parents who had lost a child. Members shared their grief and tried to
help other members come to terms with their devastating loss. Dawn had begun going
to the chapter in Boston after Phoebe’s death and occasionally attended meetings at
the local chapter when she moved to New Hampshire. “I didn’t know if you were still
attending meetings,” said Tess.

Dawn sighed. “This week brought it all back to me. I feel like…I need to…go tonight.”

“I understand,” said Tess. “Thanks for watching Erny. I’m sorry I was gone so long.
I hope I didn’t make you late.”

“Where were you all this time?” Dawn asked as she buttoned her coat.

Tess wanted to tell her mother about her hunch, about procuring Nelson Abbott’s DNA,
and about the fact that she was now waiting to hear the results. But’s Dawn’s eyes
were distant and distracted. Tess knew better than to detain her. Over the years,
talking with those people who truly understood her loss had helped her mother to survive.
“I’ll tell you later,” Tess said. “Go on. Don’t be late.”

“Erny’s watching TV. There’s some spaghetti sauce in there for you two,” said Dawn.
“Just cook up some pasta.”

“I will,” said Tess. “Thanks.” She kissed her mother on the cheek, saw her out the
door, and then went into Dawn’s cozy parlor to see her son. Erny was curled up on
Dawn’s couch under a blanket. Tess sat down beside him and he rested comfortably against
her as she absently stroked his curly black hair. “How do you feel now?” she asked
him.

“Pretty good,” he said, yawning.

“How about if I get you some supper after this?” she asked.

Erny’s eyes widened appreciatively. “Yeah,” he said. “I’m hungry.”

“Good,” said Tess.

Once the TV program was over he shuffled along with Tess to the kitchen where she
made them both spaghetti, using Dawn’s sauce, and they ate in the kitchen under the
glow of the stained-glass lamp that hung over the table.

Erny dug into his food eagerly.

“My mother makes the best spaghetti sauce,” said Tess as she handed him the cheese
shaker for the third time.

“Yours is better,” said Erny, polishing off his second helping. “But this is almost
as good as yours.”

“You are a born diplomat,” said Tess. She gazed at him, smiling.

“What?” said Erny, looking up at her.

“I’m just so glad you’re okay,” she said.

Erny yawned again. “Can I have ice cream?”

Tess gave him some ice cream and cleared the plates. By the time she was done, Erny
was resting his head in his arms on the table.

“You look like you’re ready for bed again,” she said.

Ernie yawned. “I’m tired,” he admitted.

“You’ve had quite a day,” said Tess.

“Will you read me more of
Unfortunate Events
?”

“Sure,” said Tess. Her son, like so many kids, relished the bestselling ghoulish tales
of orphans visited by every imaginable disaster. She sometimes wondered if Erny didn’t
relate to those orphans in a way that other kids might not.

She hung up the dish towel and together they went back to their room. Erny climbed
up under the covers and handed Tess the book from the bedside table. Tess nestled
down beside him on top of the covers and turned to the bookmarked page. She was no
more than three pages into the new chapter when she noticed that Erny had dropped
off to sleep again.

She closed the book and set it down, carefully got up off the bed, and kissed him
on the forehead. Leaving the night-light on, she closed the door to their room and
wandered down the hall.

Tess went into the library to look for something to read. She needed something to
get her mind off the results she was waiting for. One of the guests had his laptop
set up on the table by the front windows. He looked up at Tess and said hello politely
when she came in and then returned to his computer. As Tess perused the shelves, taking
out first one title and then another, she came across a framed plaque, propped up
between the books. It had been awarded, years ago, to the Phalens, by the Chamber
of Commerce for the improvements they had made to their property. As Tess pulled it
from its spot to look at it, a newspaper clipping that had been tucked behind it fluttered
to the floor. Tess bent down and picked it up. It was a picture of a beautiful young
girl with long, straight hair and sad, kohl-rimmed eyes beneath the headline “Middle
School Student, Lisa Phalen, 14, Dead from Drug Overdose.” Tess stared at the picture.
It was hard to believe this was the same little toddler who had careened through this
inn so many years ago. She had grown into a pretty but hard-looking teenager. The
article referred to several stints in rehab. What troubled you? Tess wondered, staring
at the photo. Once again, despite her conviction that she would be proved right about
Nelson Abbott, she found herself wondering if there was some connection between Lisa’s
death and Phoebe’s. And then she was chastened by the memory of her mother’s lament.
Why do we blame the people who’ve suffered the most?

Tess replaced the plaque, putting the article behind it, and found an old Ruth Rendell
hardback whose title she didn’t recognize. She took the book back to the main sitting
room. There were no guests in the comfortable room. Tess went over to the hearth and
put a match to the fire that Dawn had laid, flopped down in the corner of the sofa,
opened the book, and tried to read. But even her favorite author could not keep her
attention tonight. She glanced up at the rain-spattered windows, the phone on the
table by the door and wondered when Chief Fuller would have the results. “Rush job”
did not mean that the lab would be working ’round the clock. Tomorrow, perhaps. But
still, her gaze kept traveling to the phone. She got up and went around to the tray
of sherry and tiny glasses that her mother always put out in the evening on the table
behind the sofa. Several of the glasses on the tray were right-side up, having already
been used by guests. Tess turned a fresh glass over, poured herself some sherry, and
took a sip.

The phone rang and Tess jumped, nearly spilling the sherry. She set down her glass,
picked up the phone, and answered cautiously. “Hello.”

“Tess. It’s Becca.”

Tess was at once pleased and disappointed to hear her friend’s voice. “Hey.”

Becca knew her too well. “You sound disappointed. Who were you hoping to hear from?”

Becca’s question made Tess realize that there was someone else she was hoping would
call besides Chief Fuller. She had not even thought of Ben Ramsey since she left his
office, but now, as she waited by the phone, the image of his face had crossed her
mind more than a few times. “It’s a long story,” said Tess.

“We’ve been following the news,” said Becca. “It’s been all I can do to keep Wade
from hopping the next flight up there. He keeps talking about what a missed opportunity
it is.”

“NO,” said Tess. “I hope you keep reminding him that I expressly forbid him to try
and make a movie out of it. This is not a game.”

“I know. I’m keeping him under control,” said Becca. “How are you holding up? How’s
Erny?”

Tess sighed. “Well, let’s see. Erny fell out of a tree today.”

“You’re kidding,” said Becca. “Is he all right?”

“He got the wind knocked out of him. A slight concussion. My brother was in charge,
so naturally…there was an accident. But he’s okay. He’ll be fine. He was trying to
fish from a tree limb.”

“Well, at least he was having some fun. The papers make it sound so grim. Have you
two been able to do anything to escape it all?”

Tess frowned. “No. Not really. A couple of Sudoku puzzles. I was just reading to him
for a while. But I’ve hardly had a minute to spend with him.”

“Sudoku puzzles? You can do that here. You should go on a picnic or something. Get
away from all the madness.”

“We should,” said Tess.

“Or better yet, you should come home,” said Becca. “What’s keeping you there now?
Why stay there any longer?”

Tess shook her head. “Unfinished business. After all, I’m the one responsible for
Lazarus Abbott’s death.”

“I knew you were going to say that,” said Becca. “Tess, that is so not true. You’ve
got to stop thinking that way.”

“Thanks, Becca. I know you’re sincere when you say that.”

“No one blames you. All your friends feel the same way about it.”

“Well, I wish I could feel that way, but I have to try to…get a few answers while
I’m here.”

“Never mind answers. That’s the job of the cops. Hurry back. We need you here. Tell
Erny that Sosa is fine and Jonah is taking good care of him.”

“I’ll tell him,” said Tess.

Tess said good-bye to her friend and they hung up. She took another warming sip of
sherry, but felt even more warmed by the call, which reminded her of the good life
she had made for herself and her son. Almost immediately the phone rang again. Tess
picked it up, smiling. “What’d you forget?” she asked.

“Tess, you’re there,” a man’s voice said.

The sound of his voice coursed through her like a current. For a moment Tess felt
too surprised to reply. “Ben?” she said at last.

“I was thinking about you,” he said.

Tess felt happy but flustered at the same time. She didn’t know whether he meant it
in a business or personal way. “I’m glad you called,” she said.

“I ran into a friend of mine who works at the hospital. She said they treated your
son in the emergency room today.”

This is a small town, Tess thought. Word got around. “That’s right,” said Tess.

“What happened? You never mentioned it when you were in my office today. Is he okay?”

“He’s going to be fine,” said Tess. “Thanks for asking.”

“How did he get injured?”

Tess sighed. “My brother was supposed to be keeping an eye on him, but he was busy
working. Erny decided to fish from the branch of a tree and he fell off when the wind
blew up. He got a bit shaken up, but he’s okay.”

“Kids,” he said. “They can be a handful.”

His words surprised her. It was as if he were offering her a little opening into his
private world. “You say that like you know,” Tess observed carefully.

“Not from personal experience. I…just remember my own reckless youth.”

She was reluctant to pursue the topic of children since it would surely remind him
of his late wife and marriage—a subject that, he had made clear earlier in the day,
was off limits. She was casting about in her mind for another less personal conversational
topic when he said, “I always wanted them, though. Kids.”

Tess felt herself blushing, despite the fact that his statement had nothing to do
with her. “Really,” she said.

“My wife and I used to talk about it but we never got around to it.”

All right, Tess thought. You brought it up. “Do you wish you had?” she asked.

“No,” he said abruptly. Then he softened his tone. “No. I don’t think I could have
managed it on my own. I mean, I admire you for going it alone but…for me, it’s probably
better this way.”

“Well, it’s not like you couldn’t still have kids. You’re still young.”

“Ah, the silver fox look didn’t fool you?” he said.

Tess smiled. “The gray is obviously…premature.”

There was a hesitation at the other end of the line. “Well, I was one of those people
you hear about who go gray…almost overnight.”

“They say it can be caused by a shock,” Tess said.

“It’s true,” he said. “Mine was.”

“Your wife’s death?” Tess ventured.

“Yes,” he said. There was a steely note in his voice that forestalled another question.
But she was left wondering about his marriage. She felt suddenly, absurdly jealous
of a wife whose death was so traumatic that it turned a young man’s hair to gray.
Clearly it was a subject he couldn’t bear to think about. A subject that was now,
definitely, closed.

“So,” he said, “did you, um, give any more thought to what we talked about this afternoon?
About Nelson Abbott.”

The mention of Nelson Abbott reminded Tess of the call she was waiting for. Would
her suspicion be borne out by the facts, she wondered? She considered telling Ben
about it, but then decided against it. Even though he seemed sympathetic, she still
wasn’t quite ready to tell him what she’d done. He had made it clear this afternoon
that he would not approve.

“I have been thinking about it,” she said.

“And…?”

“And…I am certainly…on the trail of something,” she said. “We’ll see where it leads.”

“Do you have time to…follow a trail? What about your job?”

Tess smiled ruefully. “I’m trying to keep my job from coming to me.”

“What does that mean?” Ben asked.

“I work for a documentary film team in Washington. I’m a cinematographer. My partners
think this whole…situation would make a great film.”

“Isn’t it a little late? The main event already occurred when the DNA results were
announced,” Ben observed.

“Oh, that’s no problem. There is footage galore of that event. What they want is the
personal perspective on the whole thing. You know, interviews with the people involved,
as well as footage from both past and present.”

“You don’t sound enthused,” said Ben.

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