Flowering Judas (25 page)

Read Flowering Judas Online

Authors: Jane Haddam

One of the reasons a local police department might ask in a consultant when it didn't want to was that it might otherwise be required to ask in the FBI, which it
really
didn't want to.

Gregor considered all of this sitting in the backseat of his hired car, feeling like something of an idiot being driven around like a debutante in the wilds of western New York state. He looked at the back of Tony Bolero's head and wondered if the man shaved it. He thought about calling Bennis, or Tibor, or even the hospital. Then he got out his notebook and looked at the notes he had made about the billboard.

They'd gone a meandering half a mile when he couldn't stand it anymore.

“Could you pull over?” he asked Tony Bolero.

Tony Bolero looked curious, but he pulled over. “Is there something you need to see, Mr. Demarkian? I've got to admit, I didn't notice a thing, but if there's something you think is important, you just tell me where you want me to stop.”

“Stop as soon as it's safe,” Gregor said. “Stop anywhere at all.”

Tony Bolero pulled the car over to the soft shoulder of the road and cut the engine. Gregor got out and came around to the front. Then he got into the front passenger seat and slammed the door. Then he grabbed the seat belt.

“That feels better.”

Tony Bolero frowned. “I don't know,” he said. “I don't know if I'm supposed to—”

“Look,” Gregor said. “My wife grew up on the Philadelphia Main Line in a house that could be turned into a boarding school if her brother ever felt like it. I grew up in a tenement slum area that's gotten a little better over the years.”

“Oh, Cavanaugh Street is more than a little better, Mr. Demarkian. I'd say it's one of the nicest streets actually in the city. As nice as anything on the Main Line, if you ask me.”

“Yes, well. It wasn't when I was growing up. The thing is, I feel like an idiot sitting back there like that, as if I'm some sort of—I don't know what. And then there's talking to you. I do have to talk to you. I have to talk to somebody, and right now I can't talk to Howard Androcoelho. And I don't want to be shouting things from the backseat and having to explain them three times before you understand them.”

Tony Bolero considered this. “All right,” he said. “Mrs. Demarkian did say I should give you any assistance you needed.”

“That'll do it,” Gregor said. “And we don't have to tell her anything about me sitting up front if it would make you feel better. Right now, I
think
I want to go to the police department. I'm not sure. So, in the meantime, do you think you could drive me around the long way, give me about half an hour to think?”

“You mean take the scenic route? Sure.”

“Good,” Gregor said.

Tony pulled the car back onto the road, and Gregor began flipping through page after page of his notebook, the same kind of spiral stenographer's notebook he'd been using since his first days as a Federal agent. He didn't even know if there were stenographers anymore. Certainly, fewer people had secretaries. Everybody had cubicles now, with their own computers in them.

Computers.

He had a computer with him. He had one that could connect to the Internet, if he found something called a “Wi-Fi” connection.

He put the notebook down on his lap.

“Something wrong, Mr. Demarkian?”

Gregor looked up. “You have to keep all the questions separate, that's the problem,” he said. “The natural inclination is to see them all as connected. That's the way the human brain is built to run. That's why there are so many conspiracy theorists. But you have to keep the questions separate, or you could end up making an idiot out of yourself.”

“What questions, Mr. Demarkian?”

“Didn't I do this for you before? I might have been doing it for Howard Androcoelho. It doesn't matter. The more I go over it, the better off I am. Well, first, there's why Chester Morton left. Because we know now, of course, that he did leave. He wasn't murdered twelve years ago. And I have two pieces of information I didn't have yesterday. The first is that there were fights between Chester Morton and his family, and especially his mother, which led to his moving out of the family home and into the trailer park.”

“Fights about what?”

“We don't know that,” Gregor said. “I'll ask Charlene Morton, but I'm not sure I'll get anything like an accurate answer. But there were fights, not just Chester's need for independence, that led him to move out. In fact, I wonder if there was anything going on about independence at all, because the other thing I know that I didn't before is that Chester wanted to reconcile with his family, at least enough to get some financial support.” Gregor tapped his fingers against his knees. “You know, that doesn't make any sense.”

“What doesn't?” Tony Bolero asked. “I mean, it makes sense to me, you know. Kids used to picking up pretty good change from not much work, doesn't have to kiss the butt of a boss, doesn't like being out on his own where things are different.”

“Oh, I agree,” Gregor said. “But the story, from everybody—from Howard Androcoelho, from Darvelle Haymes, even from Kenny and Charlene Morton—has been that Chester had a mind of his own, he was independent, he was going to move out if he wanted to, and he was going to date the girl he wanted to and he didn't give a damn about the family. But is that really the case? Does he sound like somebody who would do that?”

“Well, he did it, didn't he?” Tony Bolero said.

“I don't know,” Gregor said. “There were fights, and he moved out of the house. He wasn't forced out. That is, they didn't tell him he had to leave. Everybody agrees on that. And yet—And what is it with Darvelle Haymes? Supposedly he was so in love with Darvelle Haymes, he was willing to do anything not to give her up. Even go through with that ridiculous plan of buying a baby so that he could have his cake and eat it, too. But maybe that's wrong. Myabe he didn't give a damn about Darvelle Haymes at all, except that she was the kind of person he thought he could talk into the things he wanted to talk a girl into.”

“You've gone to the moon, Mr. Demarkian.”

“No, I haven't,” Gregor said. “The impression I got from Howard Androcoelho was that Chester Morton moved out of his family's house because he wanted to date Darvelle Haymes without getting a lot of hassle about it. But that isn't true. He started dating Darvelle after he moved out. The arguments at home were about something else. What if he started dating Darvelle because he thought she was the kind of girl he could get to go along with, say, getting royally pregnant out of wedlock and then keeping the baby?”

“You mean he was looking to knock somebody up.”

“I mean I think he was looking for somebody to have his baby because he thought the baby would bring his mother around on—on whatever it actually was that the problem was. Which brings me right back to the problem I had when I started talking to you. If Chester Morton's primary motivation in the months between the time he left his family's house and the time he disappeared was to make some kind of peace with his family and get taken back into the fold—presumably on his own terms, there was something he wanted a concession for, I don't know what—but anyway, if that was his primary motivation, why did he leave at all? Well, okay, that was always the question. Why did he leave at all. And if he cared so much about being in his family's good graces, or good enough graces, maybe I should say, then why disappear?”

“If I keep going the way I'm going, I'm going to be at the police station in a minute or two. Do you want me to circle around some more? Or are you ready to go in?”

“No,” Gregor said. “Find me one of those places—you know, where they let me plug the computer in and get on the Internet.”

2

Tony Bolero's GPS found a coffee shop one town over with unlimited Wi-Fi access. Gregor didn't know if he'd gone out of his way to pick something away from Mattatuck proper, or if this was just the closest place that had what they needed. Gregor didn't think it was the closest place. He was pretty sure there was a Barnes & Noble in Mattatuck, and pretty sure that Barnes & Nobles had coffee shops that let you plug into the Internet.

“They don't let you plug in,” Tony said, as he helped Gregor set up at a table along the back wall. “So, you know, your battery runs out and that's it. Of course, we could have just stayed at the hotel, but I figured you had to have some reason. So we came here.”

“Here” was nice enough. Gregor hadn't asked to go back to the hotel because he hadn't thought of it. You got up, you got dressed, you got out of the house—there seemed like there was something essentially wrong with going back again, as if you weren't really working. He looked at the big menu over the counter where coffee was being ordered and being served.

“I don't suppose they have actual coffee in this place,” he said. “You know, no caramel, no whipped cream, no chocolate sprinkles. Why do people drink this stuff, anyway? It isn't coffee. It's a milk shake. Milk shakes. Whatever.”

“You just sit and I'll find you something,” Tony Bolero said. “You care if it's fair trade or not?”

“There's a politics of coffee?”

Tony shook his head and went off over to the counter where he was third in line. The two people ahead of him were both women in their forties with their hair pulled back off their faces and Coach bags.

Gregor opened up and turned the laptop on. He was much more comfortable with the computer now than he used to be, and the more he got used to doing searches, the better he liked using the thing. He opened Internet Explorer and got online. Then he went to Google and typed in “Chester Morton.” The first link that came up was “Justice for Chester,” the Morton family's official Web site on Chester and what might have happened to him.

Gregor looked at the big picture of Chester that was the first thing under the site's title. It was the same picture that appeared on the billboard near Mattatuck–Harvey Community College. He scrolled down a little and found a page of more pictures: Chester with Charlene Morton and a little crowd of other people that Gregor thought must be the Morton family; Chester on a lifeguard's chair at a beach somewhere; Chester with a jacket and tie at somebody's wedding. Gregor moved around from page to page. There were no other pictures. The first picture, the one from the billboard, kept appearing over and over again.

Gregor found a link that said, “About Chester,” and tried that. It turned out to lead to a page with long paragraphs of type, all presented on a slightly beige background with pictures of leaves scattered across it, red and orange leaves, the kind that fell in the fall. Gregor had no idea why somebody would choose to use a background like this for a page like this. He wondered who had designed the site. He wondered when it had been designed.

He read down the page about Chester, but found out very little. There was a line or two about Chester Morton's fascination with the state of Wyoming, and with Montana, and with living near really tall mountains. This was a fascination he was supposed to have picked up when the family went on vacation to Wyoming when he was eight. There were references to other things Chester was supposed to have liked. Some were the names of bands Gregor had never heard of. Some were obvious things for a young man of that age: Harley-Davidson motorcycles; pumpkin pie with whipped cream; the World Wrestling Federation; NASCAR.

Gregor went back to the Google search page. There was a link to the episode of
Disappeared
that was going to tell his story—that wasn't going to air for another month. There were links to a couple of amateur sites that used the Chester Morton case as an item of interest for conspiracy nuts of various kinds.

Tony came back with two coffees and put a big one down next to Gregor's laptop. Gregor opened the inevitable plastic top—why they did that when they knew you were going to drink the stuff in the car, he didn't know—and stared down into what looked like plain black coffee.

“Not bad,” he said.

Tony settled himself across the table. He had a tall pink-looking thing with a straw in it. Gregor didn't ask.

“So,” Tony said, “have you found anything out?”

“Not really,” Gregor said. “The case has been a minor item on a couple of the true crime shows, but there hasn't been anything major. Until just about now. There's going to be an episode of
Disappeared
about it. But maybe not, now that he's been found.”

“Yeah, well,” Tony said. “There's going to be some interest now from some of those shows, don't you think?”

“Probably, but hardly to the point.” Gregor tried the coffee. It wasn't bad. In fact, it was better than not bad. “It's frustrating, though. I can't get any real sense of this man. Darvelle Haymes says he wanted her to help him buy a baby. His brother Kenny says he remembers Chester as someone who did drugs and drank alcohol at least some of the time. That
MOM
tattoo on his chest was put on after death, but he had other tattoos, on his arms, that had been there for years. There was a snake, I think. And there were piercings. The holes for that nipple ring. The penis ring. I'd think anybody willing to get a penis ring would have to be fairly hard-core something. Hard-core crazy, if nothing else.”

“What're you getting at?”

“I don't know,” Gregor said. “I guess that it just doesn't sound, to me, like the description of a guy who was enthralled by the outdoors, a guy who wanted to go live in a state with nearly nobody in it and spend his time looking at mountains. First he went away, and then he came back. Why?”

“I keep telling you not to ask me,” Tony said. “I'm not even Watson. I'm just a fly on the wall.”

Gregor got out his cell phone. He thought cell phone address books had to be one of the greatest inventions ever. They not only kept your numbers for you They let you dial them with a single punch of a button.

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