“Yes, I'm sure. Could you identify him?” Eberhart's voice was insistent, honing in.
“Oh, no. I make it a firm policy never to get involved in my guests' private lives.”
That was the truth, Vicky thought. She hadn't even bothered to notice that a tenant was missing.
“We've got the messages,” Eberhart said, nodding toward the other detective. “Looks like three from you, Vicky. One from your friend Father O'Malley. We'll check out the others.” He took in a quick gulp of air. “What kind of car your friend drive?”
Vicky told him: a blue SAAB, she wasn't sure of the year. Not new. Then she said, “Her ex-boyfriend's Toby Becker, an English professor at the University of Colorado. Laura had just broken things off with him, and he followed her here. He's battered her in the past.”
Eberhart's expression remained the same. She knew he'd taken a bullet in the chest once. Nothing else could jolt him. He wrote something on the pad, then, peering at the manager: “You see what he was driving?”
“I believe so,” the woman said. “One of them sports cars. A black BMW, I'm pretty sure.”
“There's something else, Bob,” Vicky went on. “Laura had a manuscript of the biography she's working on and a red leather journal. They're not in the room.”
“They could be with her.”
Vicky flinched at the image of Laura, beaten, bleeding, clinging to the brown folder with the precious documents, forced down the stairs and into her car.
She said, “Laura was trying to find a man on the res who has an important document that she needed for the biography.”
“A man on the res? Give me a break, Vicky. You got a name?” Eberhart kept his eyes on her, pen stopped over the notepad.
“Toussaint.”
“First name? Last name?” The pen tapped impatiently.
“I don't know.” She told him about Charlotte Allen. There could be a connection.
It sounded preposterous, she thought, as flimsy as the last traces of snow dissolving in the wind. A man who may not even exist, breaking into Laura's apartment, attacking her, forcing her to go with him.
Eberhart drew back the front of the topcoat andâslowly, slowlyâtucked the notebook and pen in the inside pocket. His eyes mirrored her own doubt. The man who'd been here was Toby Becker. The manager had seen him.
“It's possible Laura and this Becker fellow had an altercation. He could've taken her to one of the hospitals,” he said, motioning toward the uniformed officer, who snapped to attention and walked over to his car. The officer perched on the driver's seat, boots still planted on the driveway, and lifted a small black microphone to his mouth. Radio static burst over the hush of his voice. In a moment he walked back. “No record, sir, of Laura Simmons at any hospitals. She might've gone to a private doctor.”
“She doesn't know anyone here,” Vicky said, urgency cutting through her voice. “You've got to find her, Bob. She's hurt.”
“Well, we'll get Becker's plate number,” Eberhart said. “If he's left the area, he could be heading back to Colorado. State patrol will pick him up before he reaches the border. We'll have a talk with the neighbors and other tenants. Try not to jump to conclusions till we sort it out. I'll let you know the minute we know anything.”
Out of the corner of her eye, Vicky caught sight of the tall figure coming up the driveway, the long strides, the easy, confident posture. She went to meet him. “Oh, God, I'm glad to see you,” she said.
“What happened?” Father John set his hand on her arm.
She told him about the room, the blood. She told him that Laura was missing.
She waited while John O'Malley explained to the detective that Laura had been at the Arapaho Museum late Wednesday afternoon, but she hadn't kept an appointment with Theresa Redwing on Thursday.
When he had finished, Vicky said, “Can we go somewhere?”
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“He could have killed her.”
“Start at the beginning,” Father John said.
Vicky sat across from him at the little round table, hands wrapped around a coffee mug, the black coat draped across her shoulders, her neck and face like polished copper in the overhead light. They were the only patrons in the coffee shop. From behind the counter, where the proprietor was wiping down an aluminum coffeemaker, came the late-night sounds of running water and clinking glass. The neon light had gone black outside.
Vicky shifted against the red Naugahyde chair, a hint of reluctance mingling with the fury in her eyes. The man's name was Toby Becker, she was saying. A brilliant writer, according to Laura, who just happened to be a batterer. She'd finally left him and was trying to reclaim her own life and finish her work. There was redemption in work. Did he understand?
Father John nodded slowly, his eyes on hers. He had lost himself in work. It was the choice he had made, the vow he had taken.
“Toby followed her here,” Vicky said. “It must have been Toby the landlady saw Tuesday night. He was determined to get her back. He wouldn't leave her alone. She could have been staying somewhere else for a couple of days to avoid him. When she came back to the Mountain House this evening, he could have been waiting. It's the most dangerous time for a woman, John, when the batterer figures out that the relationship is really over. Whatever happened, she took the manuscript and journal. They're not in the apartment.”
“The police will find him. Laura's probably with him. She could be hurt, but she may be okay.”
Vicky tilted her head back and stared at some point above his head. She was crying silently, the moisture glistening on her cheeks. He shifted sideways, pulled the handkerchief from the back pocket of his blue jeans, and handed it to her, feeling lost and helpless.
“Nothing ever works out the way you want it to, does it?” She was dabbing at the moisture. “Someone always wants to change you, wants you to be someone different, for them.”
Was she talking about Laura, he wondered, or about herself? Is that what Ben asked of herâto be someone other than who she was?
Suddenly he realized she could be talking about him. That he should be someone different. For her. Was that what she was saying?
He shoved the idea away. He was imagining things, hearing a melody that played only in his head. She was with Ben now.
“I'm thinking about moving to Denver,” she said, her expression blank with acceptance. “My old firm has an opening. It's the chance to handle the kind of cases I'd hoped to take on for my own people.”
He felt as if she'd thrown her coffee in his face. He had assumed she would always be here; that later, when he was gone, he would think of her here. “It takes time, Vicky,” he heard himself saying, as if she were the white person, he the Arapaho, explaining how things were on the reservation. “They're still getting used to you. A woman and a lawyer. You've broken the mold.” And then he understood what she'd been saying: her own people wanted her to be someone else.
She gave him a mirthless smile. “Exactly what I told Laura about Sacajawea. She'd stepped out, become like a chief, went ahead of the men. Not the way of an Indian woman. That was two hundred years ago, John. I'm not sure things have changed.”
“Somehow I don't see Ben living in Denver.”
She laughed at this. “Riding a horse down the Sixteenth Street Mall? Rounding up a herd of cattle in the suburbs?” She pushed her mug to one side. “I didn't ask him.”
Father John didn't say anything for a moment. Finally he told her that he was sorry it hadn't worked out for her.
“You can't reclaim the past, John,” she said, slowly pushing her chair back and getting up. “I mean, you can't live there anymore.”
The words burned through the turmoil in his own mind. The academic world, the student-crowded halls, the lectures and papers and endless round of meetings. How could he live there again? He threw a couple dollars on the table and followed her outside.
The air was heavy and cold with the expectation of snow. The wind whipped along the sidewalk and blew the skirt of her coat against his blue jeans as he walked her back to the Bronco, the
click-click
of their footsteps echoing off the brick-and-glass walls that lined the sidewalk. She seemed small beside him.
He held the door and waited as she settled herself behind the wheel of the Bronco. She said, “I'll go see Eberhart first thing in the morning.”
“Call me as soon as you hear anything,” he said, closing the door.
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Snow clouds obliterated the stars and moon as Father John curved east on 789, cutting through Hudson, then north onto the reservation,
Idomeneo
filling the cabâthe strange realism of Mozart. Father John's thoughts careened from Laura to Vicky. They were friends. Vicky would be awake all night, consumed with worry. She'd be at Eberhart's first thing in the morning. She wouldn't rest until she'd found her friend, the pale, blond woman clutching a brown folder.
She'd taken the folder with her, Vicky had said. He tapped one fist against the wheel, something gnawing at him, something not rightâthe rationality imposed on an irrational act, an attack on a woman. How in heaven's name did Laura have time to grab the folder? And why did she want it with her?
Unless, unlessâtapping the wheel in rhythm to the music now, ordering his thoughts. Laura didn't want to lose the manuscript and journal. She was trying to keep them safe. But if she had been worried about them, wouldn't she have put them somewhere else?
That was it, he thought, giving the wheel a hard jab. A logical explanation for the documents not being in the apartment. Laura hadn't grabbed them during the attack. She'd taken them somewhere else before Toby Becker had arrived.
And then the logic collapsed, like the farthest reaches of the headlights in the darkness. Why would Laura want to protect the manuscript and journal from a former boyfriend?
Suddenly he saw the problemâa false proposition. It wasn't Toby Becker from whom Laura had wanted to keep the documents. It was someone else, and Father John had a pretty good idea where she might have taken them.
18
F
ather John left the Toyota in front of the residence a few feet from the Harley and walked through the splash of light to the museum. On Wednesday, Laura's blue SAAB had been parked in front. Obviously Lindy had found the letters and called Laura. She would have seen at once that a museum devoted to the Arapahos was a safe place to store documents on the Shoshones. No one would look for them there.
He let himself in with the master key. Thin slivers of light fell across the entry and ran into the shadowy corridor, which he followed to the library. He turned on the fluorescent ceiling light. The pile of cartons along the wall had dwindled, and new boxes lined shelves that had been vacant a few days ago. Wedged on a middle shelf was a large gray box marked ORAL HISTORIES AND LETTERS, 1900-1910.
He tilted back the lid. The brown folder was almost obscured by the overstuffed folders in the front. He lifted it out and carried it over to the table. Inside he found the manuscript and the red leather journal.
On the top sheet of the manuscript, in large print, was the title:
Sacajawea: The Hidden Life
. Below, in smaller print:
By Charlotte Allen, Ph.D.
He couldn't read the entire manuscriptâfour hundred brittle pages. It would take all night. He started scanning the chapters, hunting for the gist of the story, the way he'd scanned hundreds of documents in the past when he was researching some question in history.
April 7, 1805
: the great adventure begins. The Corps of Discovery under the command of Captains Meriwether Lewis and William Clark sets forth from the Mandan villages. Thirty-one men, a woman, an infant. The woman digs roots and wild vegetables, gathers berries as they cross the mountains. She cares for her infant.
Toussaint was very brutal with her.
The woman maintains her presence of mind in a squall and saves the expedition's important scientific instruments after they are washed into the Missouri.
The woman is sick, and Captain Clark fears she will die.
The thoughtlessness of the husband; he didn't take care of her.
She holds her infant close in a flash flood. She weeps with joy at the sight of her brother, Chief Cameahwait, when the expedition reaches the Shoshones. She adopts her deceased sister's son, Bazil, whom she leaves in the village.
On and on the expedition goes, through the Bitter-roots and down the Snake and the Columbia to the Pacific. A winter camp is established seventeen miles inland. The men go on to the ocean and see a whale that has washed onto the beach.
The Indian woman was very importunate to be permitted to go, and was therefore indulged; she observed that she had traveled a long way with us to see the great waters, and that now that monstrous fish was also to be seen, she thought it very hard she could not be permitted to see either.
Clark arranges for Sacajawea to go to the ocean.
Spring, 1806:
the expedition starts the return trip. The familiar hardshipsâheavy snows, scarcity of meat and timber, the ever-present mountains.
I see the way
. Clark follows two routes that Sacajawea points out. They return to the Mandans.
Sacajawea has borne with a patience truly admirable the fatigues of so long a route encumbered with the charge of an infant, who is even now only nineteen months old.
“My little dancing boy,” Clark calls him.
August 20, 1806:
letter from Clark to Toussaint:
If you wish to live with the white people, and will come to me, I will give you a piece of land . . .