Authors: Lisa Scottoline
She watched Alix climb the next dune. As soon as Alix disappeared over the far side, Marta stood up and sprinted down the dune, half tumbling and half sliding. She reached the bottom of the white bowl between the dunes and ran ahead to the next, climbing up, up, up the side, running as fast as she could in Alix’s footsteps, spraying snow behind her. When Marta scuttled to the crest, she threw herself down on the elbows until her chest stopped hurting.
Steere’s mansion in the dunes stood stately and graceful, especially close up. It had stature, style, and class; qualities Steere could only buy. A vast expanse of incandescent snow encircled it like a warm cloak, and beyond the mansion churned the black Atlantic. Snow sprinkled from the sky like superfine sugar from a spoon and dissolved on contact with the dark, angry ocean. A light snapped on at the back entrance to the mansion, drawing Marta’s attention. There was a security light mounted at the house’s back entrance and one over a three-car garage. The lights must have been motion-sensitive and they illuminated the entire back of the house.
Marta watched as Alix fumbled with a key chain and let herself in the back door. The back door slammed closed with a sound lost in the roar of wind and surf. Marta stood up and ran toward the beach house, the wind drumming in her ears.
M
ayor Walker’s staff called his private bathroom the Frank L. Rizzo Memorial Can, but not in public. The bathroom had been built with donations from friends of the former mayor, who evidently wanted their hero to dump in style. The walls were covered in white marble veined with gold and the toilet was elevated on a matching pedestal. The counter surrounding the sink was marble, too, and all the fixtures were gold-plated. The total effect was Rome under Nero, a good analogy for Philly under Rizzo.
Mayor Walker hated the bathroom, but detonating the Rizzo head would cost him every vote in South Philly. He closed his eyes to the white marble and washed his face with cold water, trying to stay alert even though it was well past midnight. “Talk to me, Jen,” he said between splashes. “What’s the latest?”
“Steere’s lawyer, DiNunzio, is in the hospital.” Jen stood in the doorway and rested on the marble jamb for support. She’d barely taken her Imitrex in time and her head hurt worse than a hangover. Jen had so much to do, but all she wanted was to lie down.
“DiNunzio gonna live?”
“Doubtful. I drafted an obit and put it in the podium with your speech. It’s Insert A. If she’s dead by showtime, put it in.”
The mayor paused. Jen could be so cold. “It’s too bad. Local boy?”
“Local girl.”
“Oh, right. Where was she from?”
“South Philly. Went to Penn Law, yadda yadda yadda, friend to all, yadda yadda yadda, sorely missed. It’s in the bio, on the podium. DiNunzio was the one with that stalking thing a while ago.”
“She was? I won’t mention it.” The mayor let cold water run down his cheeks. “Did you double-space the speech?”
“Of course.”
“You used the font I like, the big one?”
“Humanist.”
“Thank you.”
“No, Humanist is the font.”
The mayor colored. “Good. Now what else?”
“Richter is still missing, and they haven’t picked up the suspect in the security guards’ murder. The other lawyer is fine.”
“Judy Carrier, right?”
“Right.”
The mayor grinned. When you’re hot, you’re hot. “So Carrier can proceed with the Steere case.”
“Yes.”
“Excellent.” He rinsed his face and slurped water from cupped hands. He didn’t know why everybody hated Philadelphia tap water. They called it Schuylkill Punch, but it tasted great to the mayor. “Carrier a Philadelphian, too?”
“Not native.”
“Then she doesn’t count, not with these voters.” He straightened up, snapped off the gold faucets, and snatched a fluffy white hand towel from the marble rack. He felt better already. If Steere still had a lawyer, his chances of a mistrial were low, considering that the case had already been submitted to the jury. Maybe he’d be convicted after all.
The mayor toweled off, deep in thought. Steere’s lenders must be getting nervous. When would they call his notes? If Steere’s properties went at auction, the city could buy them back at bargain prices. Or maybe the banks would sell them to reasonable businessmen; thieves he could deal with, not a prick like Elliot Steere. “Steere’s a prick, you know that?” the mayor said.
“I know.” Jen nodded. She’d listened to variations on this theme for years. The mayor was obsessed with Elliot Steere. He’d insisted the D.A. charge Steere with murder and ask the death penalty. The mayor always let his emotions get the best of him. That was why Jen was hedging her bets.
“Take the Simmons Building, for example. A hundred-fifty-year-old building, one of the most beautiful in this city. Historic building, all sorts of history. Important history,
Philadelphia
history, you know? Nice white arches, like the old Lit Brothers. Steere buys the building for two mil, watches it fall apart, then sells it to Temple for ten mil.”
“Sounds like a good deal to me,” Jen said, but she knew the mayor wouldn’t agree. Not that she cared. She had to get out.
“Maybe so. Maybe it was a good deal. But you know what? The man didn’t love the building,” the mayor said, wagging a wet finger. “The man did not love the building. If you’re gonna own a building like that, you gotta love it. It’s not like toilet paper. That’s a prick for you. You understand? Only a prick would do that.”
“Yes.”
The mayor wondered if Jen were really listening. “Can you put that in a speech?”
“That Elliot Steere is a prick? I don’t think so.”
The mayor shook his head. That wasn’t what he meant and she knew it. Sometimes he didn’t like Jen very much at all. She did good things for the city, though. The literacy program, the blood drive, the organ donor thing. All on her own initiative, back when they were at the D.A.’s office.
“Are we done yet?” Jen asked. “The press is out there waiting.”
The mayor rubbed his face red. “Where’s our friend Alix Locke?”
“Gone, thank God.”
“She has a hard-on for me, Jen. She won’t quit until I’m a civilian again. She’s trying to screw up my chances for reelection, single-handed. What did I ever do to her?” The mayor dropped his towel on the edge of the marble sink, and Jen picked it up and hung it on the marble towel rack.
“Don’t start with this, okay?” Jen ran her manicured nails through her dark hair. She was drained. She had to go. It was getting later and later. “The reporters are waiting. There’s more of them since the DiNunzio shooting. Let’s feed the animals and go home.”
“Any national press, or just local?” The mayor leaned close to the mirror and fingered the stubble on his chin, trying to decide whether he had to shave.
“Local so far. CNN is on the way, but they’re having trouble in the snow. You should shave.”
“Again? I shaved twice today. My face is killing me. I get those little red bumps.” The mayor shuddered, but Jen plucked a disposable razor off the shelf and handed it to him.
“Shave. We have company. Come on. We have to go. They’re waiting.”
“If CNN shows up, I’ll shave. How’s that for a deal?”
Jen sighed. “Listen, we have to go. I have to go.”
The mayor was appraising his reflection. He saw a strong, vibrant man, full of energy and passion. A figure of commitment, intelligence, and integrity in the prime of his political life. Courtney called him a total stud, but his wife didn’t use words like that. Maybe because she was a different generation. “Jen, I have to ask you something.”
“What?”
The mayor tilted his head down slightly. “Am I going bald?”
J
udy slumped in a chair in the hospital waiting room and stared at the stale blood on her palms. She felt sick to her stomach. She couldn’t get all the blood off when she’d washed. It had dried to black and caked in the lines and creases of her palms, limning each wrinkle with a line as fine as a sable brush’s. Her lifeline was painted with the blood of her best friend.
Judy stuck her hands between her legs so she wouldn’t look at them anymore. It didn’t help. Mary’s blood stained her snowpants, from where she had cradled her in the snow. Judy looked around the room for distraction. A TV was on, mounted high in a corner of the empty waiting room, which was reserved for surgeries. The volume was turned off on the TV, but Judy could see it was a never-ending update on the blizzard. The snow fell on the TV screen just as it fell outside. A reporter interviewed a bureaucrat in a tie and a ski hat. Then the screen showed a picture of huge dump trucks salting the highway.
Judy couldn’t focus on the screen. Her thoughts kept returning to Mary. Lying on the ground, bleeding. She was in surgery now. They were doing everything they could, a doctor had told her, as had one of the nurses, an older woman. Everybody was doing everything they could, Judy kept telling herself over and over, like a mantra. She would repeat it to Mary’s parents and her twin when they came. But the DiNunzios were old, and Judy worried they couldn’t take a shock like this.
Judy tried to settle down. She’d have to have it together if she was going to see the DiNunzios. She eased back into the chair and crossed her legs, avoiding the stain on her pants. She laced her fingers together, then folded her arms. She would have called her parents but they were traveling again. Judy looked around the room. Her gaze had nowhere to rest.
Judy caught sight of the TV and sat bolt upright in disbelief. The screen said
SPECIAL REPORT
above a photo of Marta, superimposed against the offices of Rosato & Associates. There was a photo of blood smeared on the elevator at the office, then two quick photos of the security guards in the building. What? What was happening? Judy couldn’t believe what she was seeing.
A TV anchorwoman came back on. Her lip-sticked mouth was moving but no words came out. The TV was on mute. Judy leapt from her chair and hurried to the TV. She was tall enough to reach it but she couldn’t find the buttons. Where was the volume control? She yanked a chair under the TV and clambered up on it.
Up close, the anchorwoman’s face was flat and large, the colors the ersatz hues of television. Her eyes were the blue of sapphires, her lips a supersaturated pink. She kept talking silently, opening and closing her mouth. Judy looked everywhere on the TV console. Where was the volume?
Film of Marta came on, talking in front of the Criminal Justice Center. Behind her was its modern stained glass. It must be file footage from the Steere trial. Judy was panic-stricken. Had something happened to Marta? Was she shot, too, like Mary? What about the security guards? Judy searched frantically for the TV buttons. No controls. She groped the console. Cool, seamless plastic. Fuck! Where was it?
“Where’s the volume?” Judy shouted, though she knew the floor was empty. There hadn’t even been a receptionist at the desk when she came up to the floor. “HEY!” she shouted. No one came running but she didn’t want to leave the TV. Maybe it was remote-controlled. Judy twisted on the chair and scanned the room for the remote. The coffee tables, the end tables, and the seats were bare.
On the TV screen, Mayor Walker was giving some sort of press conference. His face looked grave behind the microphones and a podium with the city seal. To his left stood his chief of staff, looking equally somber. At the top of the screen it said
LIVE
. What were they saying? Did it have to do with Marta? With Mary?
Judy spotted a small plastic panel under the screen and hit it to see if it would pop open. It didn’t. She hit it again but the panel still wouldn’t open. She hit it harder, pounding with her fist until the lid came up. Tiny dials protruded from a recessed compartment, and Judy twisted them back and forth with bloodstained fingers. The fake colors on the TV switched from flesh tones to hot orange, from royal blue to black. Judy still couldn’t hear the TV. Where was the fucking volume?
On the screen, the police inspector was being interviewed, standing in front of the Roundhouse in the snow. What was going on? A commercial came on. The news report was over. No! Was someone shooting them all? Who was behind this? Steere? Judy couldn’t let him. She’d fight back. She needed to hear. She hit the TV panel until the lid broke off, then pounded it harder, cracking it into sharp plastic shards, straight through the fucking panel. Smashing it, destroying it, obliterating it. Killing all the phony colors with the force of her might and her will and her pain. Raging until her hand was covered with blood and finally it was her own.
Judy sat in her chair with her hand packed and bandaged with gauze. She’d taken three stitches and refused a sedative. She’d scrubbed her snowpants and washed her face and hands. A nurse had brought her an antibacterial soap and it had taken off most of the blood on her good hand. She felt drained, her emotions spent. She watched the scene around her with an odd detachment.
Bennie Rosato had arrived, in jeans and a sweater, her large face un-madeup and drawn. She made sure Judy was okay, then sat trying to comfort Mary’s mother, an elderly, birdlike woman with teased hair. The mother sobbed as she sat with Mary’s father, a short, bald man whose laborer’s body had gone soft. His eyes were red-rimmed, but he was comforting his wife.
With them sat Mary’s sister, Angie. Angie was Mary’s identical twin. Her hair, though shorter, was the same dirty blond, and her eyes were as brown and large as Mary’s. Her mouth was a perfect match, full and broad. Judy liked looking at Angie. It was as if Mary were in the waiting room, whole and healthy again.
Angie was speaking in low tones to her parents and to Bennie. The four of them sat huddled close together, a nervous, weepy circle. Judy couldn’t hear from where she was sitting, but she watched Angie’s lips move like the anchorwoman’s on TV. The DiNunzios were on mute, in two dimensions. Everything around Judy seemed distant. She wanted to keep it that way. Let Bennie comfort Mary’s parents, she would know what to say. Judy had to figure out what to
do
.