The Ice Cradle (19 page)

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Authors: Mary Ann Winkowski,Maureen Foley

Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Mystery Fiction, #Ghost, #Private Investigators, #Ghost Stories, #Clairvoyants, #Horror

BOOK: The Ice Cradle
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I nodded. “What does she look like?”

“She’s young. Early twenties. She’s wearing a red jacket and a denim skirt. Blond hair.”

“I’ll see if I can find her,” I said.

Aitana nodded and closed the door. I made my way across the foyer and into the living room, where I found a place at the very back of the crowd. I was actually able to sit on the windowsill, so deep were the walnut-framed enclosures into which the picture windows were set. I scanned the backs of the guests and found her almost immediately: the jacket wasn’t just red, it was bright red, almost fluorescent, the only red jacket in the crowd. I would have to wait until the speech was over, though, before I could try to talk to her.

Caleb turned out to be right about the reason for the party. Rawlings warmed up his neighbors and guests with amiable chitchat featuring tales of local characters, apparently all present, before moving on to the substance of his presentation: the results of an environmental impact study on the effects of the proposed wind turbine installation. At this point the lights were dimmed, and slides began to flash across a screen set up to the senator’s left.

For the next half hour, we heard ominous “proof” that construction of the windmills would be disastrous to just about everything that flew in the air, swam in the ocean, and nested in the dunes. I found this really annoying. You don’t invite people to a party and then hold them hostage while you hammer home some point, forcing them to stand there and pretend to be interested when they really want to be eating
hors d’oeuvres and listening to jazz. Then again, I hadn’t been to any parties given by senators. Maybe that was
exactly
what they did.

At the point at which I tuned back in, Rawlings was intoning the first of a series of chilling predictions. The 440-foot windmills would kill, harm, and “harass” dolphins, seals, and whales. They’d slice six million migratory birds into shreds, especially during stretches of bad weather, when birds abandoned their customary “Atlantic flyways” and flew at lower altitudes. The building of the electrical service platform was going to destroy all kinds of habitats, and tens of thousands of gallons of transformer oil would always be in danger of spilling into the ocean just off the island’s shores. At this point, a pathetic image of a tiny, oil-soaked duckling appeared on the screen.

And that was just the tip of the iceberg. Gray harbor seals would lose their “pupping sites.” Terns, sea ducks, and piping plovers would be driven right out of their nesting grounds. Leatherback, green, and loggerhead turtles would be in the market for new digs. Boats and ferries, search-and-rescue efforts, and even airplanes would be “endangered” by the wind farm.
Airplanes?
I thought. Couldn’t they just plan to fly around the 440-foot windmills? Last but not least, the wind turbines would have a deleterious and permanent effect on “beloved historic vistas.”

Bingo
, I thought.
Now we’re getting somewhere
.

Because it hadn’t escaped my notice that the Rawlings manse looked directly out onto the area of the sound where the
Larchmont
went down. Caleb had confirmed this earlier in the evening, pointing off into the distance when he and Sally and I rounded the edge of the point on which the senator had built
his home. But if that was where the
Larchmont
had gone down, it was also the very spot where the windmills would go up. Forty of them, smack-dab in the center of the senator’s “vista.”

Now, it’s not that I don’t care about dolphins and whales. Of course I do—everyone does. The thought of harbor seals losing their “pupping sites” is heartbreaking. But so are the prospects of the oceans warming and whole species disappearing, not to mention endless cycles of wars fought over access to fossil fuels.

And I couldn’t help wondering whether all these predictions were actually true, or completely true. Who had done this study? An impartial third party with rigorous scientific standards and no vested interest in the outcome? Or an allegedly progressive, “green” front of some kind, funded behind the scenes by people who claimed to be all about protecting birds and fish, but who were really looking out for their property values and ocean views.

I’d have loved to have asked right then and there, when the lights came back on, who had underwritten the study, but Rawlings’s self-important aide-de-camp was holding a stack of brochures and starting to pass them out to the people who were leaving. These would certainly identify the organization behind the study, so I decided to keep my mouth shut, snag a brochure on my way out, and do a little snooping on the QT.

As the senator was surrounded by neighbors with questions, I stepped back into the hall. Sally came into view, and just behind her was the girl in red; and she really
was
just a girl—no more than nineteen or twenty. As she made her way through the room full of guests, I tried to come up with a conversation opener. I had to hurry, though, because she was walking right toward me.

“I love your jacket,” I said.

She stopped short and looked at me. “Thanks.”

“It’s a great color,” I added. And it was. Maybe not for a jacket, but then again, maybe she was a performance artist from Brooklyn.

“I got it in Boston.” She smiled slightly. “At the Salvation Army.”

“You’re kidding!”

She shook her head. “The one on Berkeley Street.”

“Near the Mass. Pike there?” I asked.

She nodded. “You know it?”

“I know where it is. I live in Cambridge. Anza O’Malley.” I extended my hand and she shook it. Hers was cold and bony and I noticed deep, dark roots growing in beneath the blond curls that nestled inside her collar like baby birds.

“Elsa Corbett.”

“Do you live near Boston?” I asked.

“Kind of,” she answered evasively. I wondered whether she
kind of
lived there, or if where she lived was
kind of
near Boston. But she didn’t seem inclined to get chatty. She looked past my shoulder, as though scanning the crowd for a face.

“Are you here on vacation?” I prodded.

She met my gaze again and took in a breath, as though she was about to say something, but then she didn’t. She had apparently caught the eye of a guy across the room, whom I judged to be in his mid-thirties. He was wearing a retro golf jacket and a shirt that struck me as kind of dorky. But I think that dorky might be the new cool, now that I’ve gotten rid of all the clothes that might have qualified. Whatever fashion boat there is to miss, I somehow manage to miss it.

“I’m here for a couple of days,” she answered, before
whispering a breathy “Excuse me” and slipping through the guests to join up with the guy in the golf jacket.

I couldn’t let her get away. I hoped that they had walked to the party and not driven, because I was just going to have to follow them.

Chapter Fifteen

I
ALSO HOPED THEY
weren’t going too far, because I didn’t have a lot of time. I’d given Caleb and Sally the slip by ducking out through the Rawlingses’ back door, but the fact remained that Henry was at their house, waiting to be picked up. I could plausibly claim that I’d thought they had left, that we’d somehow missed each other in the crush to claim coats and say our good-byes, but I had to get back to the Wilders’ at about the same time they did. I didn’t want to take advantage of their babysitting largesse or raise any eyebrows about my whereabouts.

The night was chilly, and a few stars were beginning to appear. A low, hazy web stretched like a membrane between sea and sky, and veins of cloud glowed faintly blue, like capillaries on the eyelids of a sleeping infant. It was lucky for me that most people had walked to the party, so the road was thronged with dozens of departing guests. In the fading light, the saucy red of Elsa’s jacket waxed and waned in reflected radiance created by widely spaced streetlights.

Most of the walkers peeled off to the right, where the point jutted out from the mainland, but there were plenty of people
who turned to the left, as Elsa and her boyfriend did. I assumed he was her boyfriend. They held hands as they walked, though there wasn’t much chatting or laughing, especially for a boyfriend and girlfriend who had just been to a cocktail party. Their pace was purposeful and deliberate. I was relieved when they took a right turn onto an unpaved road marked Ballard’s Way. From exploring the island on Saturday with Henry, I knew that this street was only a few houses long.

A low stand of pines lined the road on my right and ended at a small cottage that looked deserted. Its shutters had been bolted closed, and a dilapidated brown sedan was on blocks in the driveway.
Perfect
, I thought: I could cut through here without arousing suspicion. But I was just past the trees when I was stopped in my tracks by one of the largest, and most outraged, dogs I had ever seen.

I caught my breath, stopped short, and tried to remain completely motionless. I say
dog
, but the blood that ran through this collarless creature’s veins could easily have been that of a wolf. He stood in my path about ten feet away, his eyes glittering, his head slung low between powerful shoulders, his gray lips pulled back in a ferocious snarl, the hackles on his back in full intimidation mode.

His low, throaty rumble was broken only when he stopped to draw a breath. I didn’t dare look him in the eye, because I couldn’t remember if that was what you were supposed to do or never supposed to do. Suddenly, his growling stopped. The dog looked up, and everything about his demeanor changed before my eyes: his shoulders relaxed and he began to make little submissive circles, glancing warily up to the left of me. Only when this had gone on for a while did I dare to glance around myself.

Just behind me stood Baden.

“Thank God!” I whispered.

Baden remained silent but began to advance on the animal. The dog paused briefly, but when Baden made a wild run at him, he turned tail and raced away.

My hands were trembling as I took the first deep breath I had taken in a while. I turned to Baden.

“Thank you,” I said. “You might have saved my life.”

“You might be right.”

I don’t know for sure if animals can actually
see
ghosts, but I absolutely know that they can sense them. They may feel a change of energy in the air, sense an unsettling aura of heat or cold, or even hear sounds that are out of the range of human hearing, like the sounds produced by dog whistles. I suppose it’s like the changes you feel on a sultry summer afternoon, when you can smell approaching rain in the air.

“Were you following me?” I asked.

Baden gave me a dismissive look, then turned back to the path. I’d probably missed my chance to learn where Elsa and her friend were staying, and there was no way I was going to leave Baden’s side, not with that creature on the loose. I’d telephone Aitana later tonight. Maybe we could come back in the morning.

Not one to let an awkward situation pass without trying to turn it to his advantage, Baden asked, “Why would I be following
you?”

“It’s a fairly unlikely place to run into someone.”

“One could say the same to you.”

Baden fell into step beside me as we walked back to the main road. Though I was dying to ask him what
his
reason had been, I remained quiet as an older couple approached us on
the road, leisurely making their way home from the party. I didn’t want to seem like a psychotic woman, talking animatedly to no one in particular on a dark and lonely street. I smiled and nodded when the man said, “Evening.” Baden kept pace beside me.

“I’m here on account of
your
family,” I whispered. “Lauren and Mark need my help. And they need yours.” The time had come for Baden to declare himself. His own personal history and desires aside, he seemed to really care about Lauren and Mark. But he had to do more than care. He had to jump in and help.

Suddenly, his expression softened. He squared his shoulders and addressed me, for the first time, with feeling and concern in his voice. “For them,” he said, “I will do anything.”

“Really?” I couldn’t quite believe it. Could it actually be this easy?

Baden nodded. “Tell me what you require of me. Tell me how I may help.”

“I’m not really sure,” I said. “I need your help even to figure that out.”

“Then you have it,” he said.

“Okay, then maybe we could begin by being honest with each other. I’ll tell you why I was here if you tell me.”

He gave a slight nod.

“Do you know who Aitana is?” I began. “Bert’s sister? She runs a catering company.”

“I do.”

“Okay, well, the night of the fire, she was working really late getting the food ready for the party at Senator Rawlings’s house. That’s where I was tonight.”

“Go on.”

“And when she was driving back home from the place where she cooks, a car practically ran her off the road. It was right around the time that the fire broke out, so we think the two might be related. Tonight, at the party, Aitana saw someone who she believes was in the car. Aitana was stuck in the kitchen, so I followed the woman and her boyfriend here. They turned off onto Ballard’s Way.”

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