Crash & Burn
“That’s the place?” She flashed him a look. “It’s big. It’s . . . grand. You’d think the people lucky enough to live in a house that nice were good people. You’d think the kids there, the little girls, were happy.”
Wyatt continued to hold the drawing. After another moment, she shook her head.
He moved on to the sketch of Madame Sade. Much like his initial reaction, Marlene flinched. Then she did the unexpected. She reached out and jabbed the image.
“This is the woman who killed my girl?”
Wyatt didn’t say anything.
“Whatever happened, it was her fault. You heard Nicky, Chelsea, talking. This woman took Vero from the park. This woman locked her up, never let her go. This woman killed my child.”
“You recognize her from the park?”
“No.”
“Ever see her before? In your building, around your neighborhood?” Because Wyatt didn’t believe a woman like Madame Sade abducted girls at random. Especially given the physical similarities between Vero and Chelsea, it was clear she was looking for a specific type. Perhaps even filling a client’s request, which would take scouting on her part.
But Marlene shook her head. “No.”
“You’re sure?”
She regarded him sharply. “You think you could forget a woman this cold? Just looking at her picture churns my stomach.”
Wyatt had another thought. “Notice any boys in the park that day?” He did his best to describe a younger version of Thomas Frank, who had to fit into this puzzle somehow. But once again Marlene shook her head.
“It’s been a long time, Sergeant. And Nicky wasn’t lying. I was drunk that day. I shouldn’t have taken my girl to the park. I shouldn’t have sat on that bench. That’s on me. And I paid for it, paid as dear as any mother can.”
He tried a different tack. “Who knew about Vero’s scar?”
“Anyone who read the missing persons report, of course.”
“By that, you mean the official police report? Because it’s not on any of the flyers. Those just have her picture and the basics, height, weight, age.”
“True.”
“Friends and family?” he asked her.
She grimaced shamefully. “Didn’t really have those. It was just me, Vero, and Ronnie.”
“So Ronnie knew. Police ever question him about Vero’s disappearance?”
“Sure. But that was a long time ago, and he had an alibi—he was at work when she disappeared.”
“Okay.” But Wyatt was thinking again. In terms of general age and description, Nicky Frank really would make the perfect long-lost Veronica Sellers. If not for that scar, as Marlene said.
Which made him very curious. Because not many people would have the information on that particular detail. Certainly, police reports weren’t available to the general public. Meaning, if you wanted Nicky Frank to be Veronica Sellers . . . Even went so far, say, as to plant a missing girl’s fingerprints in Nicky’s car in order to try to get away with something . . .
Except how? And why?
Thomas had met Nicky that night. His half-drunk, thrice-concussed, extremely distraught wife. He’d handed her gloves. He’d put her car into neutral and shoved it down a hill toward a ravine. Had he somehow planted the prints? Because he wanted her to live as Veronica Sellers? Or die as a long-lost child? But why?
A collapsible shovel, a pair of bloody gloves. What the hell had the man been up to that night? And when would any of this case make sense?
Wyatt thanked Marlene for her time. Got the woman’s assurances she wouldn’t be talking to the press, then arranged for a deputy to drive her home.
Moment she left, Tessa appeared in the adjoining doorway. This room was a twin to its neighbor; she took a seat on the bed directly across from him.
“Well,” she said at last. “That didn’t go as planned.”
“Let me ask you something: Can you fake a fingerprint?”
“Don’t I wish.” Her tone was dry. He shot her a glance, but she merely smiled at him. “In theory, I guess it could be done. Lift it from one surface, maybe with tape, then try to transfer it to another. But . . . a latent print is nothing more than a microscopic film of skin ridges and natural oils. Transferring it back onto a second surface and managing to recapture the entire print . . . feels like something that might work better on a TV show than in real life.”
“You know what struck me about the vehicle?” he asked her now.
Tessa shook her head.
“How lucky we were to have such obvious prints. Think about it—most cars, you can’t even print. Surfaces are irregular, have been handled so often, all you get is a smeary mess. But Nicole Frank’s car. With my plain eyes, I could make out a thumb print left behind in blood. Lucky us.”
Tessa stared at him. “You’re thinking it was planted.”
“Annie the search canine swears there was only one person present at the crash site, and I don’t argue with a good dog’s nose.”
“But why?”
“I have no idea.”
“How would you get such a print?” Tessa continued. “Three decades later, who even has access to her case file?”
“Don’t need her case file for her fingerprints,” Wyatt said. “The Center for Missing and Exploited Children digitized all the records years ago for national distribution. To assist with matches.”
“So we don’t know why or how, but under the who column, you’re thinking someone with access to the national database.”
Wyatt stared at her. In the back of his head, something finally clicked. “Of digital prints,” he stated. “Digital files.”
“Yes?”
“You know what else you can do with digital images?”
“Um . . . E-mail them, text them, share them—”
“Import them into AutoCAD and create a digital model.”
“A digital model of fingerprints?”
“Yes. Which could then be downloaded to a three-D printer, which would create a three-D mold of the distinct ridge patterns, used to, say, create a latex glove cast from a perfect handprint.”
Tessa’s eyes widened. “A glove alone can’t leave fingerprints. You’d have to spray it with an oily substance such as cooking spray—”
“Or blood.”
Tessa shuddered slightly, but nodded. “The bloody gloves, the ones you collected from Thomas Frank’s car.”
“That’s what he handed Nicky that night. A pair of . . . fingerprint gloves . . . he’d made himself on his three-D printer. So she’d cover the car in Veronica Sellers’s fingerprints. So she’d be mistaken as Veronica Sellers.”
Tessa asked the next logical question. “But why?”
Wyatt shook his head. “I don’t know. He’s got to be part of it, right? According to Nicky, she found that photo of . . . herself, I guess, in Thomas’s possession. Taken while she was in the dollhouse.”
“How’d she get away?” Tessa said suddenly. “I mean this whole, got Vero to OD then took the place of her roommate’s dead body. So Nicky gets herself buried alive, then heroically claws her way back to the land of the living in the midst of a storm . . . and then what? Walks all the way to New Orleans?”
Wyatt saw her point. “She must’ve had help. Enter Thomas Frank?”
“In that scenario, he saved her. And he must’ve cared for her to end up spending the next twenty-two years together. Just rescuing her one dark and stormy night doesn’t require a lifetime plan. And if he’s in cahoots with Madame Sade, maybe assigned as, what, Nicky’s watcher all these years, that doesn’t necessitate marriage. It feels like . . . he must genuinely care for her, at least in some manner.”
Wyatt remained skeptical. “He crashed his wife’s car, with her in it. He burned down their house, with all their belongings in it. If this is love, I’m sorry I’ve
been wasting my time buying flowers.”
Tessa rolled her eyes. She rattled off their case: “Thirty years ago, six-year-old Veronica Sellers was abducted from a park and locked away in a high-end brothel. Twenty years ago, roughly, she died in that same house, but her roommate, Chelsea, managed to escape and, all these years later, has kept Vero’s memory alive.”
“Chelsea spent all her time in the dollhouse internalizing Vero’s stories. Which she now has a tendency to confuse as her own? Or maybe just wishes were her own?” Wyatt decided it was a moot point. “Either way, Vero is always with her. She can’t let her go.”
“Which leads us to six months ago, when Chelsea, who’s been trying to live happily ever after with her husband, I-will-always-take-care-of-you Thomas Frank, decides she can’t keep running anymore. She wants answers to her troubled memories, trauma, depression, et cetera. She demands they move to New Hampshire.”
“And suffers her first accident almost immediately. A fall down the basement stairs of her new home. Followed by wiping out on her front steps.”
“Followed by,” Tessa continued, “Wednesday night. When she meets Marlene Bilek, who she’s obsessed with as a living link to Vero. Unfortunately, Nicky then discovers Vero’s beloved mom has a whole new family and isn’t mourning Vero nearly as much as Nicky-slash-Chelsea is.”
“Nicky calls Thomas. And he puts his own plan in gear? Turn his confused wife into Veronica Sellers?” Wyatt stared at Tessa. “Now, see, this is where things break down for me.”
Tessa nodded. She eyed him thoughtfully. Opened her mouth, paused, then shook her head. “No. I agree. It makes no sense.”
“I’m gonna get Kevin on the phone. Have him start comparing prints and analyzing those rubber gloves. Then you and I are gonna run through this all over again. We’re missing something.” Wyatt glanced at his watch, noting it was now nearly midnight. “We have about nine hours left to find it.”
Tessa nodded in agreement. “Where do you think Thomas is now?” she asked him.
Wyatt had no doubt: “Somewhere close.”
Chapter 31
VERO AND I are fighting.
“I don’t want to do this anymore,” I tell her. “I want my life back.”
“What life? You don’t have a life.” Vero sits calmly at the wooden table in the tower bedroom. She has finally put on clothes, that dreadful floral dress, though her skin is hanging from her skull in leathery flaps.
“I didn’t know about the scar!”
“Should’ve. Lived with me long enough. Not my fault you weren’t paying attention.” She holds out her left arm, but she’s gone all skeletal again, revealing only the twin bones radiating from her elbow down to her wrist. “Oops,” she says. “Maybe I forgot something after all. But again, not really my fault. I am you, you know.”
I rub my forehead. In my mind’s eye, in real life? The lines are too blurred; I don’t know anymore.
“I want to be free.”
“No. You want to be me. Always have. Again, not my fault you’re so jealous. First time I told you about my mother, that someone out there actually loved me, that someone out there actually cared about me.” Her tone is mocking. “You’re the one who set out to make my life miserable.”
She’s right. There are other images in my mind. Deeper, darker memories I never visit, because I prefer Vero’s stories. From the very beginning, hearing about the magical queen, the evil witch. Vero might have ended up in the dollhouse, but for six years prior to that, six long, glorious years . . .
A mother who hugged her. A mother who let her crawl on her lap. A mother who once slept with her on the floor and begged her to live.
I have none of those memories. Not even three concussions later. I have only Vero, whom once I hated and then . . . grew to love in my own way. Incarceration can have that effect on people. Her stories became my stories. Her hope, my hope. Because all those years we were together, Vero never stopped talking about one day seeing her mother again.
Except, of course . . .
“You shouldn’t have killed me,” she says now, voice conversational. She is pouring herself a cup of tea, a shot of scotch. “If you hadn’t killed me, maybe you would’ve escaped me in the end.”
“That’s not fair.”
“Who hoarded her drugs? Who left them someplace you knew your roommate was bound to find?”
I finally stop pacing, do my best to take a stand.
“Vero wants to fly,” I state flatly. “And that’s what you did. You gave up. You shot up, anything, everything, the entire supply. If you hadn’t done that . . .”
Vero grins at me. “If I hadn’t done that . . . ,” she goads.
I try to stay on track. “You had someone out there who loved you. You should’ve put the drugs back. If not for yourself, then at least for her.”
She is definitely in a mood now. “Then what? I would’ve lived happily ever after? You and me, best friends forever in the dungeon of the dollhouse?”
Abruptly, the room grows hazier. The rose mural nearly disappearing. As if the room is suddenly filling with smog. Or smoke.
In my mind, in real life, I feel myself automatically reach out my hand.
But of course, Thomas isn’t there.
“Tell me,” Vero demands now. “Tell me what would’ve happened if I hadn’t taken the drugs.”
“I don’t know!”
“Yes, you do.”
“I don’t! I never—”
“Yes, you do. Yes, you did!”
And of course she’s right. More dark shapes shift. Memories I can’t afford to have. Willful ignorance I’m still waiting to bring me bliss. Except now I can feel them, looming larger, darker, chilling the very corridors of my mind. Sergeant Wyatt had been right; none of this is about Vero. It’s about me. It’s always been about me and, three concussions later, the past I’m still not ready to face.
“Go away,” I order now. “I don’t want to talk to you anymore!”
“Can’t. I’m you. Only one talking here is you. Only one arguing here is you. Only one who can’t handle the truth is you. I’m not just a pretty little ghost, you know. I’m your fucking conscience.”
She holds out her arm. Her skin is back, and now the left arm’s scar stands out prominently, a thick, jagged pucker ripping savagely down smooth white skin. Proving once and for all what I did know, even if I later chose to forget. Vero smiles, except this time her mood isn’t antagonistic. Her ghost, my conscience, appears sad.
“I wanted to fly,” Vero says quietly. “Once. A long time ago. A little girl who didn’t know any better. Then Ronnie picked me up and hurtled me into a coffee table. There are many ways to die, Chelsea. And not all of them happened in that dollhouse.”
“I’m sorry.”
“You wanted the princess to have a happy ending. You wanted her to reunite with the magical queen and everything to turn into sunshine and rainbows. In your own way, you believed in me long after I stopped.”
I don’t say anything.
“But you also know, Chelsea,” she continues soberly, “deep down inside, why that couldn’t happen; my story was only a work of fiction. Now you can visit me as much as you want and resurrect me in your head for as long as you’d like. But there’s still no going back. There’s just you: the lone survivor.”
“I loved you,” I whisper.
“I know. But take it from me, love alone can’t save you in the end.”
Abruptly I feel more shifting in the dark corridors of my mind. Memories I swear I didn’t stir up, and yet . . . I look up sharply. Vero is watching me, her look cunning.
“Stop,” I tell her.
“Can’t. I’m you, remember?”
“I’m not ready for this.”
“For what? The smell of smoke? The heat of flames. Fire, fire, everywhere. Why’d your husband
burn your house, Nicky? Why? And better yet, when did Thomas get so good with flames?”
“Shut up!”
But she won’t. Vero shoves away from the table. She marches across the room. Her dress is gone. Her skin is gone. Now she is nothing but decaying flesh, marching closer and closer, reaching out with her bony hands.
“Thomas,” she singsongs. “Handsome Thomas. Caring Thomas. Thomas who’s always been there. Is it your past you’re trying to escape, Nicky? Or is it the man you married?”
Her skeletal hands reach my neck, scrape across my collarbone.
Abruptly, the door to the tower bedroom crashes open behind me. But I don’t turn. I keep my eyes on Vero’s grinning skull. Because I already know I don’t want to see who’s standing there.
“What have you done, Nicky?” Vero whispers to me. “Who else do you have to fear?”
* * *
I JERK AWAKE with a gasp. My head is on fire; my entire body aches. For a second, instinctively, reflexively, I lock down each muscle. Willing myself not to move. Old habits, back from the days when you never knew who else might be present. Waiting to hurt you next.
A first careful inhale. Followed by a long, slow exhale. I listen, registering voices, coming through the wall, from the room next door. I search closer, for the sound of another person’s presence nearby. Only when I’m absolutely, completely convinced that I’m alone do I finally open my eyes, allow my muscles to relax.
The room is dark. I can see a thin streak of light on the far wall, coming from the cracked doorway between the two hotel rooms. Bits and pieces return to me. My current hideaway in the form of a nondescript New Hampshire hotel room. The disastrous meeting with Marlene Bilek, who turned out to not be my mom, because of course, my real mom died of an overdose years ago, before I even escaped from the dollhouse. Someone I once looked up to, only to forget again, because what was the point? I was never the princess with a magical queen. My entire life, I’ve only ever been in the service of an evil witch.
My eyes burn. Stupid tears, I think as I roll over, eye the second bed. It’s empty, as I’d suspected. Tessa must be in the adjacent room, talking to Wyatt.