“We’re brainstorming. I’m not saying we’ve got all the answers,” she said.
“You don’t have any answers.”
Walker cut in. “Where you going to keep her?”
Destiny considered the issue and then shrugged. “I don’t know. Maybe a motel.”
“Who’s going to babysit the kid while the two of you walk around pretending to be innocent?”
“Maybe we’ll be gone by then.”
“Then how would you collect the dough?”
“We’d find a way,” she said, irritated with his persistence.
Jon said, “Why don’t you do the obvious? Tell them you have her stashed somewhere and you won’t turn her over unless they make it worth your while. They don’t pony up, they’ll never see her again.”
“I don’t think my dad would go for it,” Creed said. “So far he’s turned us down cold.”
“Don’t ask for forty. Ask for fifteen. That’s enough to get you out of the country.”
“Yeah, but what if they balk?” she asked. “I mean, what if they tell us to take her and shove off. Then what?”
“Then I guess you get your daughter back,” Jon said.
It was the weekend after that that their relationship changed. The last two weeks of June, Walker went to Hawaii on vacation with his folks. With Walker gone, Jon was at loose ends. The first couple of days he hung out at his place, watching TV. On day three he decided it was time to get out. He fired up his scooter and headed over to the Unruhs’, arriving just in time to see the family pulling out of the drive. Looked like Patrick at the wheel, Deborah in the front seat, and Creed, Rain, and Sky Dancer in the back. He wasn’t sure if Destiny was with them or not.
He parked the scooter and then peeked in the yellow school bus, which was empty. He could see her half-finished macramé lying in the grass. “Hey, Destiny? You here?” No response.
He shrugged and circled the house to the cabana, surprised at the pang of disappointment that shot through him.
“Is that you, Jon?”
He followed the sound of her voice and found her sitting on the edge of the pool, her gypsy skirt pulled up around her as she dangled her legs in the water. She wore a tank top, a white one, and he could see the freckles that covered her shoulders and chest. “Sun damage,” she said when she caught his look.
“Where’d everybody go? I saw Creed and his folks in the car with the kids.”
“It’s Sky Dancer’s birthday and he asked if he could go to the band concert in the pocket park on the hill. Deborah packed a picnic lunch. They’ll be gone for hours.”
“Why didn’t you go?”
“Because I was hoping to see you. You want to see me?” She lifted her skirt, showing him that she was naked from the waist down. She opened her legs, exposing herself.
Irritably, Jon said, “What’s the matter with you? Would you cut that out?”
She laughed. “Don’t be a stick in the mud. It’s just us.”
He scanned the surroundings, realizing how sheltered the area was from the eyes of neighbors. The trellised fencing that stretched out on each side of the cabana was overgrown with wisteria that obstructed the view into the Unruhs’ backyard.
“This is a very bad idea,” he said.
“I think it’s a very good idea.”
He put his hands in his pockets, his gaze restlessly searching the perimeter of the property. The air was hot and he could hear birds. Two houses away, a lawn mower buzzed, and even at that remove he could smell the cut grass.
She ran her hands down along her belly and between her legs. “What would you give for a piece of this?”
“I’m not going to pay you.”
“I’m not talking about money, shithead. I’m talking about what it’s worth to you.”
“What about Creed?”
“We have an open relationship.”
“He knows you’re doing this?”
“He probably has a pretty good idea. As long as we don’t rub his nose in it, so to speak, then what’s it to him? Creed doesn’t own me and I don’t own him.”
“Anyone could walk in,” he said. “What if the mailman comes by or the UPS guy, delivering a package?”
“If you’re so worried about being seen, why don’t we go into the cabana where we can talk and get to know each other a little bit. If you feel uncomfortable, all you have to do is say so. I’m not going to knock you down and jump your bones.”
She held a hand up, wanting him to pull her to her feet.
Jon ignored her.
“You’d prefer to do it all out here?”
“No.”
“Then help me up.”
Jon grabbed her hand and pulled her to her feet. Primly she shook her skirt down. “All nice and neat,” she said.
She moved toward the cabana. Jon followed her with a mounting sense of disbelief. This couldn’t be happening. Passing through the door, she lifted her crossed arms and pulled the tank top over her head.
Inside, she’d made a pallet of blankets. Two joints at the ready with a roach clip, a pack of matches, and an ashtray. She unbuttoned her skirt and stepped out of it. Her figure was womanly—generous ass, small breasts with brown nipples as big and flat as fifty-cent pieces. The thatch of hair between her legs was dark and bushy. She knelt on the blanket, picked up a joint, and lit it. She took two or three quick draws and held the smoke in. She closed her eyes and toked once more before releasing the smoke in a thin stream. “You’re wasting time, Jon. Don’t just stand there with your clothes on. You can do better than that.”
He hesitated, looking down at her as though measuring the drop from a ten-meter board. He stripped off his T-shirt and then stepped out of his pants. When he took off his jockey shorts, he saw the change come over her face.
“Oh my god, you’re beautiful. Incredible. I’d forgotten what eighteen looks like.” She crawled to the edge of the blanket and ran a hand along his bare flank and then looked up at him. He bent and kissed her upturned mouth.
28
Wednesday afternoon, April 20, 1988
Wednesday afternoon I took Cabana Boulevard up the hill to Seashore Park, a city-owned stretch of palm trees and grass that skirts the bluff overlooking the Pacific. That morning I’d called Michael and asked him to meet me there. In my shoulder bag I had the file folder of clippings about Keith Kirkendall and copies of the photographs his sister had given me the day before. My body hummed with dread, but there was no avoiding the conversation. I couldn’t bear to lay the revelation at his feet, but there was no escape.
The day was sunny and the air mild with scarcely any breeze at all. While I waited I walked the length of the chain-link fence that had been erected to prevent citizens from tumbling off the cliff. The drop to the ocean below was a good sixty feet. At high tide, the surf concealed the rocks. At low tide, the rocks were laid bare. Either way, a fall would be fatal. Looking down I could see the telltale muddy plume where a sandbar had formed, and the waves were breaking differently from how they did a hundred yards on each side. Most people think of the effluence as a riptide, but the proper term is “rip current.” Tides are the function of the moon’s gravitational pull. A rip current is a treacherous outflow that runs in a narrow line perpendicular to the beach, sometimes extending as far as twenty-five hundred feet. The term “undertow,” used to describe the same phenomenon, is a misnomer as well. A rip current moves along the surface of the water, a function of the hidden shape of the shore itself. This one, like the rip current that swept Sutton’s mother to her death, was an artifact of the same attempt by the city engineers to create a safe harbor where there was none before. As with so much in life, good intentions often generate unexpected results.
I heard Sutton’s MG approaching long before I saw him pull into the small parking lot. He had the top down and his hair had been whipped into an untidy thatch that he smoothed as he stepped out of the car. He wore a sweatshirt and shorts, and the sight of his knobby knees nearly br
oke my heart. As before, I was struck by his youthfulness. When he was fifty instead of twenty-six, he’d look the same. I couldn’t picture him portly or bald. I couldn’t picture him with heavy jowls or a double chin. As he aged, his face would shrink away from his skull, but it would otherwise retain its boyish cast.
On the phone I hadn’t specified the reason for the meeting. I felt badly about it now because he suspected nothing, which made him all the more vulnerable. Though I didn’t understand the psychological dynamic, I sensed that after the destruction he’d brought down on his family, he’d moved from villainy to victimhood. By rights, the family should have been the ones to lay claim to all the suffering. Instead the burden was his.
There was a bench situated at the halfway point between us. As he approached from the narrow parking strip, I crossed the grass and sat down, placing the folder beside me, saying, “Hi, Michael. I appreciate your meeting me.”
He sat down. “I was going into town anyway, so it was easy enough to swing by. How are you?”
“Not bad,” I said. “How’s Madaline?”
“Good. I’m on my way to pick her up, as a matter of fact.”
“Good? I heard she was arrested for public drunkenness.”
“She was, but the judge said he’d give her probation if she promised to straighten up her act.”
“I see. And what does that consist of?”
“AA meetings twice a week. She doesn’t have a car so I take her over and pick her up afterward.”
“Has it occurred to you she’s taking advantage of you?”
“This is just until she gets back on her feet. She’s trying to find a job, but there’s not a lot available here in her field.”
“Which is what?”
“She’s a model.”
“And in the meantime, you provide meals, housing, transportation, bail money, and Goldie’s dog food, right?”
“She’d do the same for me.”
“I’m not convinced of that, but let’s hope.”
His smile faded. “You don’t seem happy with me. What’s wrong?”
“I don’t even know where to start,” I said. I blew out a big breath, marshaling my thoughts. Try as I might, I couldn’t find a nice way of putting it. “Yesterday Ryan and Diana came to the office. She brought in a scrapbook that included memorabilia from your sixth-birthday party.”
“Memorabilia?”
“Yeah. You know, snapshots, ticket stubs, stuff like that.”
“Ticket stubs. What are you talking about?”
“July 21, you were all at Disneyland. Your mom and dad, Ryan, David, Diana, and you.”
I watched the animation draining out of his face. “That can’t be right.”
“That was my first response.”
“She’s making things up, trying to get me in trouble.”
I indicated the folder on the bench. “She made copies of the photographs. You can see for yourself.”
“She’s wrong. She has to be.”
“I don’t think so. She’s a reporter. She may be irritating, but she knows how to write a story and she knows she better get her facts straight. Take a look.”
“I don’t need to look. I was at Billie’s house. My mother dropped me off.”
“The Kirkendalls were gone by then. Billie’s dad stole a shitload of money. You said so yourself. He knew the police were closing in on him so he took his family and fled. The house was empty.”
“You think I lied?”
“I think you made a mistake.”
“I saw the pirates that day. The two of them were digging a hole. It could have happened before we left for Disneyland.”
“The timing is off. Whatever you saw, it must have been the week before. And as Diana so aptly pointed out, if you saw the guys on July 14 instead of July 21, it couldn’t have been Mary Claire’s body wrapped for burial. She wasn’t kidnapped until five days later.”
He stared off at the sky, rocking his body on the bench. It was the self-comforting motion of a kid whose mother’s an hour late picking him up from nursery school. He was almost beyond hope.
“Look, Michael. No one’s faulting you,” I said.
When dealing with someone else’s emotional distress, it’s best to gloss over the enormity of the disaster. It doesn’t change reality, but it makes the moment easier . . . for the onlooker, at any rate.
“Are you kidding? She must have had a good laugh at my expense. Ryan, too. They were always in cahoots.”
Shit. Now he’d turned it into a conspiracy. I kept my mouth shut. I’d already offered as much comfort as I could muster.
“What about Lieutenant Phillips? Does he know?”
I glanced away from him, which told him what he’d already guessed.
“She told him, too?”
“Michael, don’t do this. Yes, she told him. She had to. He was in on the story from the first. She gave him the same file folder she gave me, and so what?”
He blinked and put his right hand to his face, pulling down until his hand covered his mouth. “I saw the pirates. They knew I’d caught them in the act.”
“Okay, fine, but not when you thought you did. July 21, 1967, you and your family were a hundred miles away.”
“They were burying a bundle . . .”
“I believe you saw something, but it wasn’t Mary Claire.”
He shook his head. “No. They took the body somewhere else and put a dog in the hole. It was right where I showed you.”
“Let’s quit with the arguing and deal with what’s true instead of what you dreamed up.”
He lifted a hand. “Never mind. You’re right. I wasted your time and I misled the police. Now all parties concerned are fully aware of it. So much for me and anything I might say.”
“Would you stop that shit? I can’t sit here and sympathize when you’re wallowing in self-pity. I understand your embarrassment, but take your licks and move on.”
He got up abruptly and walked away.
Watching him, I could see how he wanted the scene to play out. My role was to hurry after him, offering reassurances. I was supposed to fling myself into the conflict to help him save face. I couldn’t do it. The bottom had dropped out. The search for Mary Claire was over and he knew it as well as I did. She might be buried somewhere, but it had nothing to do with him. While I understood his humiliation, his behavior was calculated to generate a response. He was the vacuum. I was meant to be the air rushing in to fill the space. Stubbornly, I stayed where I was.
I heard the car door slam. The engine roared to life. I looked over and watched him back out in a wide arc before he threw the car in first and drove off with a chirp of his tires.
To no one in particular, I said, “Sorry about that. I wish I could help you, but I can’t.”
I picked up the folder and returned to my car. I slid under the wheel and sat for a moment, watching pigeons pecking in the grass. I was only five blocks from home and my instinct was to run for cover. What I was facing wasn’t new. Past investigations had occasionally come apart in my hands and I hadn’t felt the need to fall on my sword. I’m an optimist. I operate on the assumption that if a question is legitimate, there’s an answer out there, which is no guarantee I’ll be the one to find it. While the current failing wasn’t mine, I couldn’t shake the sense that I’d messed up somehow.
It was midafternoon and I probably could have talked myself into quitting for the day, but one can only do that so often before it becomes habitual and, therefore, unprofessional. Playing hooky wasn’t the antidote to disappointment. Work was. I had a business to run and I needed to get back to it. Easier said than done.
When I reached the office I set up a pot of coffee and then I sat at my desk and did nothing. I’d chastised Sutton for feeling sorry for himself, but it wasn’t such a bad idea. When you’ve been dealt a blow, self-pity, like rationalization, is just another way of coping with the pain.
A sound penetrated my consciousness and I realized someone w
as tapping on one of the panes in my outer office door. I glanced at my calendar. I wasn’t expecting anyone and there was no note of an appointment. For a moment I had the bizarre sense of skipping back in time. I pictured myself getting up to look around the corner at the front door. Through the glass, I’d catch my first sight of Michael Sutton. It would be April 6 again and I’d be forced to relive the same series of events.
I left my desk and crossed to the inner-office door, where I peered into the reception area. There was a woman on my doorstep, pointing at the knob. For the second time in two weeks I’d locked up automatically after letting myself in. I turned the deadbolt and opened the door. “Sorry about that. Can I help you?”
“I wondered if I might talk to you.”
“Sure. I’m Kinsey Millhone. Have we met?”
“Not really. I’m Joanne Fitzhugh. Mary Claire’s mother. May I come in?”
“Of course.”
I stepped aside as though admitting an apparition. She was probably in her mid-fifties, with one of those lovely mild faces assigned to dead saints on Catholic calendars. She was half a head shorter than I, with shoulder-length blond hair worn in the sort of flip I’d longed for in high school. She wore a dark skirt and a matching cropped jacket with a green silk blouse under it. For having thought about her so often, I was unprepared for an encounter. What was I going to say to her? I’d come up against a blank wall. How could I explain where I’d started and where I’d ended up?
“Would you like a cup of coffee?”
“I’m fine. Don’t worry about it.”
She sat down in one of the guest chairs and pulled the other one closer, giving the seat a quick pat as a way of encouraging me to sit near her instead of on the other side the desk. She was clearly in charge. When I settled in the chair, the two of us were almost knee to knee.
Her features were finely drawn: small blue eyes, light brows and lashes, a straight nose, and lips thinned by age. Usually, I think of beautiful women in terms of the overblown—high cheekbones, big eyes, plump lips. Hers was a beauty of a different kind—soft, subdued. Her cologne smelled like fresh soap, and if she wore makeup at all, it was discreetly applied. I can’t make small talk with someone whose only child has been kidnapped and killed, so I left it up to her.