Read Scared to Death Online

Authors: Wendy Corsi Staub

Scared to Death (14 page)

Dad has always adored Garvey, and until recently, frequently exercised bragging rights that his only daughter married into the illustrious Boston Quinn family. He liked to wait until someone—preferably, as many people as possible—happened to be in earshot before he'd ask, “How's my son-in-law, the congressman?”

Marin felt obligated to explain to him, last September, what was going on with Garvey. But she waited until no one was around to overhear, and she left out as many of the details as possible. She knew her father didn't really comprehend. Sure enough, he'd forgotten all about it by the next visit, and she didn't bother to reiterate.

Today, as she bypasses the exit leading to Interstate 95 and New England, she promises herself that she'll get back up to Brighton soon. Or someday maybe even to Groton, to meet Elsa Cavalon.

She wonders whether Lauren would think that's a good idea. Then she wonders whether it's even a good idea for her to visit Lauren in Glenhaven Park.

Maybe exposing herself to the scene of one of Garvey's many crimes will be another healthy step in the healing process.

Or maybe
, Marin thinks grimly,
it'll convince me to leave well enough alone
.

 

“Please, Mommy…I want to get off!”

“I know, I know…shh, it's okay.” As she tries to settle Renny into the window seat, Elsa wonders how on earth she could have thought the train was a good idea for a claustrophobic kid.

She
wasn't
thinking when she made the decision—that's the problem. Back at the house, reacting to the frightening series of photos, she was in full flight
mode. Driving to New York seemed like a terrible idea. But maybe this is worse.

Still, the alternative would have been…what? A commuter flight between Groton–New London airport and New York is half an hour at most—Maman always flies in when she visits, sans luggage, of course—but Renny trapped in the cabin of a tiny plane several miles above the ground? Forget it.

Staying at home, waiting for someone to snatch Renny away? Not an option.

Brett wanted to drive them to Manhattan himself, but Elsa talked him out of it.

“I'd feel safer going to New York on public transportation,” she told him. “Someone might be lurking around here, waiting to follow our car. But there's no way anyone can follow a train.”

He looked at her for a long time before saying, “Someone could follow us from here to the train station, and it wouldn't be very hard to figure out where you're going from there.”

“But even if they saw us get on a southbound train, they wouldn't be sure where we were getting off. It could be anywhere from Old Saybrook to Washington, D.C.”

Again, he gave her a probing gaze before nodding.

She was right, of course. Unless whoever was following them managed to hop on the train, too…and then follow them through the city to Sylvie's doorstep…and then—

No. She refuses to let her mind go there. Everything is going to be okay.

But it wasn't okay before, with Jeremy…

That's why it
has
to be okay this time.

“Mommy! I don't like this!”

“Here…do you want to sit in the aisle?” Elsa had given her the window, thinking she'd feel less trapped
if she could look out. But maybe it only makes her feel boxed in.

She stands to let Renny slide over into the aisle seat…but Renny keeps right on sliding.

“Renny!”

Elsa chases after her, catching up at the end of the car.

“There's no doorknob!” Panicking, Renny claws at the closed door that leads to the next compartment. By chance, her hand hits the flat panel that unlatches the door. It slides open and she lurches forward into the vestibule between the cars, nearly crashing into an older woman carrying a cardboard tray from the snack bar.

Elsa grabs onto flailing Renny and apologizes to the woman, who stands back against the bathroom door, raised on her tiptoes like there's a rodent on the loose.

“Mommy, open the door and let me off,” Renny begs, pointing to the exit where they boarded less than five minutes ago.

“I can't do that, the conductor has to open it when the train stops.”

“I want it to stop now!”

Elsa pulls her back, worried this door, too, might open somehow and Renny would be thrown from the speeding train.

Beside them, the older woman purses her dry, pink-lipsticked lips, probably thinking that Renny is an out-of-control brat who needs a good spanking.

Oh, lady
, Elsa thinks, helplessly holding her frightened daughter fast against her.
If you only knew.

 

The moment she walks into Starbucks, Caroline wishes she hadn't come.

She'd been thinking she could just get lost in the
crowd, but there
is
no crowd today. As she steps up to the counter, she realizes she's already been recognized by the baristas. Not as Garvey Quinn's daughter, but as the girl who had the rat in her purse.

After a brief, whispered consultation with her coworkers, a pale, fashionably ugly goth girl approaches the register. “Do you want to talk to the manager?”

“What?” Caroline frowns. “No, I wanted to order something.”

The girl's pierced eyebrows shoot toward her squared-off, too-short black bangs. “Really?”

“Umm…yee-aahh,” she says in an isn't-it-obvious? tone, and asks for a tall coffee.

“Just coffee?”

“Right. Make it black.” She's never had black coffee—or any coffee—in her life, but when Jake shows up, she doesn't want to be drinking one of those milk shake drinks again. She may not be in college yet, but she's not a little kid.

There are plenty of empty tables to choose from today. Caroline sits at one closest to the door, facing it, then decides that makes her look too expectant. She moves to a more distant table, sits with her back to the door, and realizes that Jake could very easily come and go without either of them seeing each other. She switches to the opposite chair, facing the door, so that she'll spot him when he walks in.

If
he walks in.

Something tells her that he will.

 

For a long time after he landed in California, Jeremy saw no one but Papa. It wasn't so bad, other than at night, or when Papa had to punish him for something. When things were going well, he got to eat candy all
the time, and watch as many movies and cartoons as he wanted—only on video, though, and later, on DVD.

It took him years to even comprehend that there was such a thing as live television—let alone to speculate why Papa might refuse to let him watch it.

Maybe it was, like everything else the man did, about control.

Or maybe Papa was afraid he'd catch a glimpse of himself on the news.

Or maybe he worried that Jeremy would stumble across some crime drama—an episode about pedophiles or missing kids—and it might trigger something in him.

Who knows?

All Jeremy cared about back in the early days was that he could watch movies and cartoons to his heart's content. Immersing himself in familiar fictional characters was an escape from his frightening new reality.

After a few weeks—months?—Papa started to take him out shopping, or to get something to eat. The first time, he told Jeremy that if he said a word—one single word—while they were out in public, he would be sorry.

A nice man at the Chinese restaurant at the food court in the mall was handing out chunks of chicken on toothpicks. He put one into Jeremy's hand as he and Papa walked by, and Jeremy thanked him.

Not
one
word, two words: “Thank you.” Jeremy spoke them automatically—and paid dearly for them later.

It was the last time he ever spoke to anyone in public when Papa was around.

Papa always introduced Jeremy as his son, said he was painfully shy. No one ever questioned the relationship.

After a while, Jeremy himself started to believe it. In
an enormous world filled with strangers, Papa was all he had. He stopped asking questions, and his old life faded away at last.

 

The rain has stopped by the time Brett turns onto his block after dropping Elsa and Renny at the station. He groans as he turns into the driveway and spots his next-door neighbor walking through her side yard with a shovel. Meg Warren isn't the type to simply wave and retreat.

Sure enough, by the time he's parked the car, she's coming across the wet grass, dragging her feet a little, as always. He learned the hard way never, ever,
ever
to ask about her limp.

“What are
you
doing home at this time of day, Mr. Brett?” she asks cheerfully as he steps out. She always calls him Mr. Brett, in a cutesy, singsong voice. Once, she asked if that bothered him. It probably shouldn't, but it does. He told her it didn't, of course. Meg means well, as Elsa likes to say.

“I'm actually on my way to the office, but I had to stop home to shower and change first.”

“Really? I saw that you were home a little while ago. But then you went out again, with luggage.”

He sighs inwardly.

“And you weren't here overnight.”

“No. Not overnight,” he tells her, hoping she can't see the tension in his jaw. All he wants to do is go into the house, draw the shades, and wait for something else to happen.

But that's not an option. His secretary called his cell phone a few minutes ago as he was driving back from the station. When it rang, he snatched it up, assuming it was Mike, who hadn't answered when Brett called him.

“Lew's looking for you,” Cindy said. “What should I tell him?”

“Remind him that I called in earlier—I said I'll be in at noon.” He'd lied about having to accompany Renny to a doctor's appointment this morning.

“He knows…he said to tell you it's past noon and they already rescheduled the conference call twice. Now it's at one. You need to get here, Brett.”

He bites back the urge to tell Cindy that he's not coming in at all. That might just push Lew over the edge. Anyway, maybe it's better to go into the office, do the conference call, and tie up some loose ends in case he really does have to take some time off.

“Tell Lew I'll be there in fifteen minutes.”

“Really?”

“Twenty.”

There's no way, he acknowledges now, glancing at his watch. Maybe he can get there within the half hour, though, if he hurries.

“I noticed that the house was dark all night,” Meg is saying. “You guys always leave the outside lights on when you're not going to be home. And you know, Elsa didn't even mention that you were all going someplace when I saw her and Renny outside yesterday.”

Wow. That Meg really doesn't miss a trick.

“It was a last-minute thing,” he tells her, and nods toward her muddy shovel, needing to change the subject. “So what are you up to? Burying dead bodies in the petunia patch?”

She laughs like that's the funniest thing she's ever heard. “No! I just dug a new bed out back. The ground is nice and soft from all the rain. I'm moving my herb garden. Like I was telling your wife, someone trampled it.”

“Really? Because—” He thinks better of saying
anything about the footprints in their own yard. Why even drag her into it?

Because she sees everything
, he reminds himself,
so maybe she saw…something. If there was something to see.

“Because…what?” she prompts Brett.

“Ah, I was wondering whether you've noticed anyone hanging around our yard when we're not home.”

“Like who?”

“I don't know…anyone who shouldn't be here, I guess.”

“Why? Did something happen?”

Brett weighs how much to admit, and decides on as little as possible. “There were some footprints in our yard, and we thought maybe kids were cutting through. If anyone got hurt on our property, we'd be looking at a lawsuit, so…”

“You mean
my
kids? Because they're not even around right now. They're with their father this week, and—”

“No, that's not what I—”

“—believe me, if I ever caught them sneaking around in your yard, I'd have their keisters in a sling.”

Brett murmurs an appropriate reply, almost relieved he's put her on the defensive regarding her kids, rather than have her start asking questions he'd rather not answer. “Well, I'll let you get back to moving your herb garden,” he tells Meg.

“Oh, I'm finished for today. I'll dig up the plants over the weekend. The ones that didn't get crushed, anyway.”

“Yeah? Where are they now?” he asks as casually as possible.

“Right over there.” She points to a small garden plot along the dividing line between their two yards—almost directly adjacent to Renny's bedroom window.

Brett nods thoughtfully. “Well, if you do see anyone around, let me know.”

“And you do the same, there, Mr. Brett.”

“Believe me, I will.”

 

Glenhaven Park is one of those picture-perfect, leafy suburban towns that look like the set of a television drama series. Even a lifelong city girl like Marin is wistful, driving past big old houses with front porches and hanging geraniums, set back along brick-paved streets that are shiny from this morning's rain.

What would it be like to live here?

For a brief, deluded moment, she imagines that things would be different now if she and Garvey had chosen a simple, low-key life here, because nothing bad could ever happen in a place like this.

Oh, come on. Who are you kidding?

Look at what happened to Lauren here.

Anyway, Garvey is who he is. He would have been a monster anywhere. Married to him, no matter where she lived, her life would have eventually been disastrous.

She turns onto Elm Street and looks for the painted lady Lauren described over the phone. There it is, about halfway down the block: a tall mustard-colored Queen Anne Victorian with brick red gingerbread trim.

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